Ludlum, Robert – The Janson Directive

Twenty-three. I’ll be there to make introductions.”

Janson nodded and started to peel off large-denomination drachmas, keeping his

hands under the counter. “The other half when I meet you in the morning.”

The seaman’s eyes danced. “Fair enough. But later, if the captain asks what you

paid me, leave a zero off. OK, my friend?”

“You’re a goddamn lifesaver,” Janson said.

The sailor wrapped his fingers around the roll of bills, appreciating their heft

and thickness, and smiled. “Anything else I can do for you?”

Janson shook his head distractedly, gripping his ring finger. “I’ll tell her I

was mugged.”

“You tell your wife an Albanian mugged you,” the seaman counseled. “Who wouldn’t

believe that?”

Later, at the Izmir airport, Janson couldn’t help but reflect on the curious

pattern of such ruses. People gave you their trust when you proclaimed just how

untrustworthy you were. Someone victimized by his own greed or lust was a

readier object of sympathy than someone who came on his bad luck honestly.

Standing shamefaced before a British tour guide, he trotted out a version of the

story he’d told the seaman.

“You shouldn’t have been cavorting with those dirty girls,” the tour

guide—pigeon-breasted, with shaggy, white-blond hair—was telling him. His grin

was less sporting than sadistic. “Naughty, naughty, naughty.” The man wore a

plastic badge with his name on it. Above it, printed in garish colors, was the

name and slogan of the cut-rate tour company that employed him: Holiday Express

Ltd.—a package of fun!

“I was drunk off my arse!” Janson protested, slipping into a lower-middle-class

Home Counties accent. “Bloody Turks. This girl promised me a ‘private show’—for

all I knew she was talking about belly dancing!”

“I’ll just bet,” the man replied with a leering smirk. “Such an innocent you

are.” After several days of having to jolly along his paid-up wards, he was

relishing the opportunity to stick it to a customer.

“But to leave me here! It was a packaged holiday, all right—but that wasn’t

supposed to be part of the package! Strand me here like they couldn’t give a

toss?”

“Happens. Happens. One of the lads goes on a binge or gets lost. You can’t

expect the whole group to miss the flight home because of one person. That’s not

reasonable, now, is it?”

“Sodding hell, I’ve been a complete bleedin’ idiot,” Janson said, remorse

creeping into his voice. “Lettin’ the little head do the thinking, not the big

one, if you see.”

” ‘Who among us?’ like the Good Book says,” the man replied, his tone softening.

“Now tell me the name again?”

“Cavanaugh. Richard Cavanaugh.” Lifting the name from a Holiday Express manifest

had taken him a full twenty minutes at a cybercafe on Kibris Sehitleri Street.

“Right. Dicky Cavanaugh takes a dirty holiday to Turkey and learns a lesson in

clean living.” Needling the hapless customer—one whose misadventures left him in

no position to file a complaint—seemed to amuse him no end.

Janson glowered.

The platinum-haired man called the Izmir affiliate of Thomas Cook Travel on his

Vodaphone and explained the customer’s predicament, leaving out the interesting

parts. He repeated the name twice. He remained on the line for ten minutes,

doing progressively less talking and more listening.

He shook his head, laughing, after he hung up. “Hah! They think you’ve arrived

at Stansted two hours ago, with your group.”

“Bloody hell?” Janson looked incredulous.

“Happens,” the man said philosophically, savoring his own worldliness. “Happens.

The manifest says a tour group of twenty is arriving, nobody wants to redo all

the paperwork, so the computer thinks all twenty’s accounted for. Couldn’t

happen on commercial service, but charter airlines are a bit dodgier. Oops—don’t

tell the boss I said that. ‘Cut-rate prices for a top-rate experience,’ is what

we like to say. If the computer was right, you’d be larking about in your

optician’s shop at Uxbridge, instead of quaking in your boots in bloody Izmir

and wondering if you’re ever going to see home and hearth again.” A sidewise

glance. “Any good, was she?”

“What?”

“The bird. Was she any good?”

Janson was abashed. “That’s the tragic part, see. I was too pissed to remember.”

The man gave him a quick squeeze on the shoulder. “I think I can fix things for

you this time,” he said. “But mind you, we’re not in the dirty-holiday business.

Keep it in your trousers, mate. Like my girl says, careful you don’t poke

someone’s eye out.” He roared with laughter at his own coarse wit. “And you with

a bloody spectacles shop!”

“We prefer to call it a ‘vision center,’ ” Janson said frostily, settling into

the role of the proud shopkeeper. “You sure I’m not going to have any problems

getting off in Stansted?”

The tour director spoke in a low voice. “No, see, that’s what I’m trying to tell

you. Holiday Express is going to make sure there’s no snags. You take my

meaning? We’re going to help you out.”

Janson nodded gratefully, although he knew what was really motivating the sudden

show of altruism—the dismay that the tour guide’s call must have precipitated in

the firm’s offices. Janson’s stratagem, as it was meant to, had put the company

in a bind: officials of a packaged-holiday company had plainly misinformed

British customs that one Richard Cavanaugh, of 43 Culvert Lane, Uxbridge, had

arrived in the United Kingdom. The only way to avoid an audit of its activities

and a review of its license was to make sure that Richard Cavanaugh did arrive

in the United Kingdom, and without the sort of data trail that could lead to

awkward questions about careless business practices. The temporary papers that

the pigeon-breasted man was drawing up for him—Urgent Transport/Airline

Personnel—were a crude recourse, normally reserved for transportation involving

medical emergencies, but they would do the job. Holiday Express would tidy up an

embarrassing little slipup, and “Dickie” Cavanaugh would be home by suppertime.

The tour guide chuckled as he gave Janson the sheath of yellow-orange pages.

“Too bloody pissed to remember, what? Makes you want to break down and cry,

don’t it?”

A small chartered plane took them to Istanbul, where, after a two-hour layover,

they changed to a bigger charter plane that would carry three separate Holiday

Express tour groups to Stansted Airport, just north of London. At each junction,

Cavanaugh waved the yellow stapled pages he’d been given in Izmir, and a

representative of the packaged-holiday company personally escorted him on board.

The word had plainly come down from the head office: take care of this berk, or

there would be hell to pay.

It was a three-hour flight, and the Uxbridge optician, sullied by his offshore

adventure, kept to himself, his look of hapless self-absorption repelling any

attempts at conversation. The few who heard his story saw only a tight-assed

shopkeeper vowing that his indiscretions would be left behind in the Orient.

Somewhere over Europe, eyes shuttered, Janson drowsed, and eventually let

himself succumb to sleep, even though he knew well the old ghosts that would

stir.

It was three decades ago, and it was now. It was in a jungle far away, and it

was here. Janson had returned from the debacle of Noc Lo to Demarest’s office in

base camp, without even stopping to clean up. He had been told that the

lieutenant commander wanted to see him immediately.

The stench and stains of battle still on his clothing, Janson stood before

Demarest, who sat pensively at his desk. A medieval plainsong—an eerily simple

and slow progression of notes—emerged from small speakers.

Finally, Demarest looked up at him. “Do you know what just happened out there?”

“Sir?”

“If it doesn’t mean anything, it happened for no reason. That’s not a universe

you want to live in. You’ve got to make it mean something.”

“As I told you before, it was like they knew we were coming, sir.”

“Seems pretty clear, doesn’t it?”

“You didn’t—don’t—seem surprised, sir.”

“Surprised? No. That was my null hypothesis—the prediction that I was testing.

But I had to know for sure. Noc Lo was, among other things, an experiment. If

one were to file plans for an incursion with the local ARVN liaison to Military

Assistance Command-Vietnam, what consequences could one expect? What are the

information relays that lead back to the local insurgency? There’s only one way

to test these things. And now we’ve learned something. We have an enemy that is

committed to our root-and-branch destruction—committed with all its heart and

soul and mind. And on our side? A lot of transplanted bureaucrats who think

they’re working for the Tennessee Valley Authority or some damn thing. A few

hours ago, son, you narrowly escaped with your life. Was Noc Lo a defeat, or a

victory? It’s not so easy to say, is it?”

“Sir, it did not taste like victory. Sir.”

“Hardaway died, I said, because he was weak. You lived, as I knew you would,

because you were strong. Strong like your dad—second wave of the landing on Red

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