Ludlum, Robert – The Janson Directive

“Feel like shit,” was her cotton-mouthed reply.

She drank it greedily.

“I’ve seen worse,” he said.

She covered her face with her hands and rolled over, turning away from him, as

if embarrassed to be seen. A few minutes later, she asked, “Did you drive here

in the limo?”

“No. That’s still in Amsterdam. Don’t you remember?”

“We put a ‘bumper beeper’ on it,” she explained. Her eyes roamed across the

ceiling, which was covered by an elaborate baroque painting of cherubim

gamboling among clouds.

“I figured,” Janson said.

“Don’t want them to find us,” she whispered.

Janson touched her cheek gently. “Remind me how come.”

For a few moments she said nothing. Then she slowly sat up in the bed. Anger

settled onto her bruised countenance. “They lied,” she said softly. “They lied,”

she repeated, and this time there was steel in her voice.

“There will always be lies,” Janson said.

“The bastards set me up,” she said, and now she was trembling, with cold, or

with fury.

“No, I think I was the one being set up,” Janson said levelly.

He refilled her glass, watched her raise it to her cracked lips, drink the water

in a single swallow.

“Comes to the same thing,” she said. Her voice was distant. “When it’s your own

team does it to you, there’s only one word for it. Betrayal.”

“You feel betrayed,” Janson said.

She covered her face with her hand, and words came out in a rush. “They set me

up to kill you, but I don’t feel guilty, somehow. Mostly, I just feel … so

pissed off. So angry.” Her voice broke. “And so damn ashamed. Like a goddamn

dupe. And I’m starting to wonder about everything I think I know—what’s real,

what isn’t. Do you have any idea what that’s like?”

“Yes,” Janson said, simply.

She fell silent for a while. “You look at me like I’m some kind of wounded

animal,” she finally said.

“Maybe we both are,” Janson said gently. “And there’s nothing more dangerous.”

While the woman rested, Janson was downstairs, in the room that the house’s

owner, Alasdair Swift, used as a study. Before him was a stack of articles he

had downloaded from online electronic databases of newspapers and periodicals.

These were the lives of Peter Novak—hundreds of stories about the life and times

of the great philanthropist.

Janson pored over them obsessively, hunting for something that he knew he would

probably not find: a key, a clue, an incidental bit of data with larger

significance. Something—anything—that would tell him why the great man had been

killed. Something that would narrow the field. He was looking for a rhyme—a

detail that would be meaningless to most people, yet would resonate with

something that his subconscious mind had stowed away. We know more than we know,

as Demarest liked to say: our mind stores the impress of facts that we cannot

consciously retrieve. Janson read in a zone of receptivity: not trying to puzzle

out a problem but hoping simply to take in what could be taken in, without

preconception or expectations. Would there be a fleeting allusion to an

embittered business rival? To a particular current of buried animus in the

financial or international community? To a conflict involving his forebears?

Some other enemy as yet unsuspected? He could not know the kind of thing he was

looking for, and to imagine that he did would only blind him to the thing he

must see.

Novak’s enemies—was he flattering himself to think this?—were his enemies. If

that were so, what else might they have in common? We know more than we know.

Yet as Janson read on ceaselessly, his eyes beginning to burn, he felt as if he

knew less and less. Occasionally he underlined a detail, though what was

striking was how little the details varied. There were countless renditions of

Peter Novak’s financial exploits, countless evocations of his childhood in

war-torn Hungary, countless tributes to his humanitarian passions. In the Far

Eastern Economic Review, he read:

In December of 1992, he announced another ambitious program, donating $100

million in support of scientists of the former Soviet Union. His program was

designed to slow down that country’s brain drain—and prevent Soviet scientists

from taking up more lucrative employment in places like Iraq, Syria, and Libya.

There’s no better example of Novak in action. Even while Europe and the United

States were wringing their hands and wondering what to do about the dispersal of

scientific talent from the former superpower, Novak was actually doing something

about it.

“I find it easier to make money than to spend it, to tell you the truth,” says

Novak with a big grin. He remains a man of simple tastes.

Every day starts with a spartan breakfast of kasha, and he pointedly eschews the

luxury resorts and high-living ways favored by the plutocratic set.

Even Novak’s small, homey eccentricities—like that unvarying daily breakfast of

kasha—cycled from one piece to another: a permanent residue of personal “color,”

PCBs in the journalistic riverbed. Once in a while, there was a reference to the

investigation of Novak’s activities after Great Britain’s “Black Wednesday,” and

the conclusion, as summarized by the head of MI6, in the line that Fielding had

quoted: “The only law this fellow has broken is the law of averages.” In another

widely repeated quote, Peter Novak had explained his relative reticence with the

press: “Dealing with a journalist is like dancing with a Doberman,” he had

quipped. “You never know if it’s going to lick your face or rip your throat

out.” Testimonials from elder statesmen about his role in rebuilding civil

society and promoting conflict resolution were woven through every profile.

Soon, paragraphs of journalistic prose seemed to blend into one another; quotes

recurred with only minor variations, as if struck from boilerplate. Thus, the

London Guardian:

‘Time was you could dismiss Peter Novak, ‘ says Walter Horowitz, the former

United States Ambassador to Russia. ‘Now he’s become a player and a major one.

He’s very much his own man. He gets in there and does it, and he has very little

patience with government. He’s the only private citizen who has his own foreign

policy—and who can implement it.’ Horowitz voices a perspective that seems

increasingly common in the foreign-policy establishment: that governments no

longer have the resources or the will to execute certain kinds of initiatives,

and that this vacuum is being filled by private-sector potentates like Peter

Novak.

The U.N. Under Secretary-General for Political and Security Council Affairs,

Jaako Torvalds, says, ‘It’s like working with a friendly, peaceable, independent

entity, if not a government. At the U.N., we try to coordinate our approach to

troubled regions with Germany, France, Great Britain, Russia—and with Peter

Novak.’

In Newsweek, similar tributes echoed:

What sets the Magyar mogul apart? Start with his immense sense of assurance, an

absolute certainty that you see in both his bearing and his speech. “I don’t

deal with affairs of state for the thrill of it,” says Novak, whose exquisitely

tailored wardrobe doesn’t distract from his physical vigor. Yet by now he has

matched himself against the world markets and won so frequently that the game

must not feel like much of a challenge. Helping rebuild civil society in

unstable regions such as Bosnia or the Central Asian republics, however,

provides as much challenge as any man could hope for, even Peter Novak.

Hours later, he heard quiet footsteps, bare feet on terra-cotta tile. The woman,

wearing a terry-cotton robe, had finally emerged from the bedroom. Janson stood

up, his head still a blur of names and dates, a fog of facts as yet undistilled

into the urgent truths he sought.

“Pretty swank place,” she said.

Janson was grateful for the interruption. “Three centuries ago, there was a

mountainside monastery here. Almost all of it was destroyed, then overgrown by

the forest. My friend bought the property and sank a lot of money into turning

the remnants into a cottage.”

For Janson, what appealed wasn’t so much the house as the location, rustic and

isolated. Through the front windows, a craggy mountain peak was visible, rising

from the nearby forest. Streaks of gray, naked stone interrupted its green

textures—the distance made the trees look like clinging moss—and the whole was

outlined against the azure sky, where small black birds wheeled and circled and

plunged, their movements coordinated but seemingly aimless. An iron pergola,

draped in vines, stood in the back not far from a centuries-old campanile, one

of the few vestiges of the old monastery.

“Where I come from,” she said, “this isn’t a cottage.”

“Well, he discovered a lot of frescoes in the course of renovation. He also

installed a number of trompe l’oeil paintings taken from other villas. Went a

little wild with the ceiling art.”

“Damn bat babies got into my dreams.”

“They’re meant to be little angels. Think of them that way. It’s more soothing.”

“Who’s this friend anyway?”

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