The Bourne Supremacy by Robert Ludlum

sides of the great house, the sterile house, were weatherboard above an imposing lower border of stone. Delta shoved the assassin into a cluster of roses, stripped off the plastic and heaved the firebomb into the boarding far above and to the left of the french doors thirty-odd feet away. It stuck to the wood, the rest was waiting for the seconds to pass while the rifle fire – hesitant now, diminishing – ceased altogether.

The wall of the house blew apart. A gaping hole revealed a formal Victorian bedroom, complete with a brass bedstead and ornate English furniture. The flames spread instantly, shooting spokes of fire from a central hub, spewing along the weatherboard and spitting inside the house.

An order was given, and again there was an eruption of rifle fire, bullets spraying the flowerbeds away from the rear garden wall and the contingent of marines who had raced in the direction of the previous explosion. Commands and counter commands were shouted in anger and frustration as two officers appeared, sidearms in their hands. One rounded the circle of protecting guards, checking their positions and their weapons, peering in front of each. The other headed for the sidewall and began retracing the route of the first squad, his eyes constantly shifting to his inner flanks, to the succeeding rows of flowers. He stopped beneath the willow tree and studied the wall, then the grass. He raised his head and looked over at the arbour of bougainvillaea. His weapon now steadied by both hands, he started towards the arbour.

Delta watched the soldier through the bushes, his own gun still pressed into the commando’s back. He removed another plastique, set the timer, and threw it over the bushes far forward towards the sidewall. ‘Go through there!’ ordered Bourne, pivoting the assassin by the shoulder and sending him into the row of bushes on the left. Jason plunged through after the commando, cracking the barrel of his automatic into the killer’s head, stopping him as he lurched for the knapsack. ‘Just a few more minutes, Major, then you’re on your own.’

The fourth explosion tore away six feet of the sidewall and, as though they expected enemy troops to pour through, the marine guards opened fire on the collapsing stone. In the distance, on the roads of Victoria Peak, two-note sirens wailed in counterpoint to the sounds of carnage taking place within the grounds of the sterile house. Delta pulled out his next to last plastic packet, set the timer for ninety seconds and heaved it towards the corner of the rear wall where the grounds were deserted. It was the beginning of his final diversion, the rest would be cold mathematics. He removed the tear gas launcher, inserted a canister and spoke to the commando. Turn around.’ The assassin did so, the barrel of Bourne’s gun in front of his eyes. Take this,’ said Delta. ‘You can hold it with one hand. When I tell you, fire it into the stone to the right of the french doors. The gas will spread, blinding most of those kids. They won’t be able to shoot, so don’t waste bullets, you haven’t got that many.’

The killer did not at first reply. Instead, he raised his weapon level with Bourne’s and aimed it at Jason’s head. ‘Now we’re one-on-one, Mr Original,’ said the commando. ‘I told you I could take a bullet in the head. I’ve been waiting for it for years. But somehow I don’t think you can take the idea of not getting inside that house.’ There was a sudden roar of voices and yet another fusillade of gunfire as a squad of marines rushed the collapsed side wall. Delta watched, waiting for the instant when the assassin’s concentration, would break for that split second. The instant did not come. Instead the commando continued quietly, his voice tense but controlled as he stared at Jason Bourne. They must be expecting an invasion, the silly geese. When in doubt attack, as long as your flanks are covered, isn’t that right, Mr Original…? Empty your bag of tricks, Delta. It was “Delta”, wasn’t it?’

There’s nothing left.’ Bourne cocked the hammer of his automatic. The assassin did the same.

Then let’s have a feel around,’ said the commando, his left hand slowly reaching out, softly touching the knapsack strapped on Delta’s right hip, their eyes locked. The killer felt the canvas, squeezing the harsh cloth in several places. Again slowly, he withdrew his hand. ‘With all the “shalt-nots” in the bloody big Book, none ever mentions a lie, does it? Except false witness, of course, which isn’t the same. I guess you took the lapse to heart, sport. There’s a shell-framed automatic repeater in there and two or three clips, I judge by the curves, holding at least fifty rounds a piece.’

‘Forty, to be exact.’

That’s a lot of firepower. That little beast could get me out of here. Give! Or one of us goes right here. Right now.’

The fifth plastique explosion shook the ground; the startled assassin blinked. It was enough. Bourne’s hand shot up, deflecting the killer’s gun, crashing his heavy automatic into the commando’s left temple with the force of a hammer.

‘Son of a bitch!’ cried the impostor hoarsely as he fell to his left, Jason’s knee on his wrist, the killer’s gun wrenched free.

‘You keep begging for a quick demise, Major,’ said Bourne as pandemonium reached its height within the grounds of the Victorian sterile house. The squad of marines that had charged the collapsed sidewall were ordered to assault the rear of the gardens. ‘You really don’t like yourself, do you? But you’ve got a good idea. I will empty my bag of tricks. It’s almost time now.’

Bourne removed the straps and upturned his open knapsack. The contents fell on the grass, the flames from the ever-expanding fire on the first floor of the sterile house illuminating them. There was one firebomb and one plastique left, and, as accurately described by the assassin, a hand-held repeating MAC-10 machine pistol that needed only its stock frame and a clip to be inserted in order to fire. He inserted the frame of the lethal weapon, cracked in one of the four clips and shoved the remaining three into his belt. He then released the spring of the launcher, put the canister in place and reset the mechanism. It was ready to go – to save the lives of children, children called to die by the ageing egos of manipulators. The firebomb remained. He knew where to direct it. He lifted it up, tore off the shield, and threw it with all his strength towards the A-framed apex above the french doors. It clung to the wood. It was the moment. He pulled the trigger of the launcher, sending the canister of gas into the stone to the right of the french doors. It exploded, bouncing off the wall to the ground, the vapours spreading instantly, clouds of gas swirling, choking men within its billowing periphery. Weapons were clung to, but free hands rubbed swollen, watery eyes and covered inflamed nostrils.

The second firebomb exploded, tearing away the elegant Victorian facade above the french doors, shattering the panes of glass, whole sections of the upper wall plummeting down into the tiled foyer beyond. Flames spread upward towards the eaves and inside, firing curtains and upholstery. The marine guards scrambled away from the thunderous explosion and the flames into the clouds of tear gas, A number now dropped their rifles, as all lurched in every direction, colliding with another, trying to get away from the fumes; gagging, coughing, seeking relief.

Delta rose to a crouch, the machine pistol in his hand, yanking the assassin up beside him. It was time; the chaos was complete. The swirling gas in front of the shattered french doors was being sucked in by the heat of the flames; it would dissipate sufficiently for him to make headway. Once inside, his search would be quick, over in moments. The directors of a covert operation that required a sterile house in foreign territory would stay within the protective confines of the house itself for two reasons. The first was that the size and disposition of the attacking force could not be accurately estimated and the risk of capture or death outside was too great. The second was more practical: Papers had to be destroyed, burnt not shredded, as they had learned in Teheran. Directives, dossiers, operational progress reports, background materials, all had to go. The sirens in Victoria Peak were growing louder, nearer, the frantic race up the steep roads was nearly over.

‘It’s the countdown,’ said Bourne, setting the timer on the last plastique explosive. ‘I’m not giving this to you, but I’ll use it to advantage – both yours and mind. Thirty seconds, Major Allcott-Price.’ Jason arced the packet as far as he could towards the right front wall. ‘My weapon!. For Christ’s sake give me the gun!’ ‘It’s on the ground. Under my foot.’ The assassin lurched down. ‘Let go of it!’ ‘When I want to – and I will want to. But if you try to take it, the next thing you’ll see is a cell in the Hong Kong garrison, and – according to you – a scaffold, a thick rope and a hangman in your immediate future.’

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