Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
the frontier, but she had to stay out of sight. Prodding Bashkim’s
body with her hiking boot, she pulled out her passport, her
money and his wallet. She also took a small black notebook with
notations in Albanian and Arabic. Lastly she got the gun. She had
never touched one before, but she knew they had safeties. She
clicked it on and off a few times to familiarize herself with how
it worked, then shoved the gun into her waistband. The cold
metal felt reassuring against her skin. For two hours she marched
uphill, crouching behind rocks whenever she heard a car. She
didn’t dare stop, terrified that her legs might lock up for good.
In the long gaps between vehicles, Jane kept her mind rigidly
focused on the moment she’d hand the guard her passport and
306
slip across to safety. She didn’t see the olive-green truck that said
STALIN until she was right above it, in full view of the road. The
truck was parked and the young men from earlier were arrayed
around, eating. Jane froze, then instinct kicked in and she darted
off. With any luck they wouldn’t follow. Instead, she heard excited voices, then the truck wheezing into reverse as it began
backing up to a spot where it could turn off the highway and
come after her.
Jane ran, adrenaline powering a burst of speed, her breath
coming in great gulps of despair. She’d never outrace them. But
she couldn’t let them catch her. She’d seen the sporting look in
their eyes, knew how the game would end. She had to hide before they came into view and hope they’d barrel past, consumed
by the chase. She folded herself behind an insubstantial rock,
praying the afternoon shadows would conceal her, and watched
the truck bounce by just twenty feet away, ribald laughter erupting from within. Slipping from bush to rock, she followed them,
until the truck turned and headed back to the road, figuring she
had doubled back and they’d catch up with her before passport
control. That meant she’d have to go cross-country. She was so
weary but she forced herself to keep going. Another half mile and
she reached the saddle between two summits. Below her
stretched the water, dark and gloomy. Lake Ohrid. On the other
side of the lake was Macedonia, and freedom.
She scanned the shore, looking for a boat, anything to carry
her across. It was too far to swim. In the blue dusk, she made
out a solitary figure mending a net. She heard the roar of the
truck, the shouts of the Albanian men, and knew they had spotted her once more. But they’d have to follow the road’s hairpin
curves down to the lake, whereas she could plunge straight down
the mountain. The lake stretched for miles, most of it unguarded.
It was her only hope. She ran, dislodging avalanches of pebbles
and dirt, sliding on her ass and once somersaulting head over
heels to plow the ground with outstretched arms before righting herself and continuing her descent.
307
She could see the figure on the shore now. It was an old man.
She felt the steel against her skin and knew she’d kill him if she
had to. He watched her. As she drew closer, she saw a head of
white hair, blackened teeth, a map of brown wrinkles. His face
betrayed no surprise, as if deranged Western women tumbled
down the mountain every day.
“Please,” she said, sliding to a halt before him, scraped and
bleeding. “You must take me across.” She gestured to the other
side of the lake. “I can pay.
Valuta.”
She pulled out Bashkim’s wallet, thrust greenbacks and euros and Albanian dinars at him.
“For you.”
To her surprise, the fisherman shoved the money back at her.
She panicked, screaming at him in fragments of four languages.
Ignoring her, he shuffled to a bush and pulled out a rowboat that
lay hidden underneath. An ancient, frayed rope lay curled inside.
He began dragging it to the lake and she ran to help him, thanking him in every language she knew.
“But we must hurry,” she said, looking over her shoulder to
pantomime running and pursuers.
“Ska problema,”
the old man said. “No problem.”
“Besa?”
she asked. The
besa
was a solemn promise, or oath,
handed down from feudal times. Albanians would die before violating a
besa
. But did the old ways still hold?
The Albanian side of the great lake was moving into twilight.
The few houses clinging to the slopes had never known electricity. Across the water, the Yugoslav coastline sparkled in warm,
inviting twinkles of red and yellow.
She helped him push off and scrambled in.
They were about a hundred yards out when the truck came
bouncing across the side of the mountain, the men angry as a
swarm of bees. Several had already loosened their clothing. They
ran to the water’s edge and waded in, firing. She and the old man
ducked, bullets sizzling past, skimming the water. The old man
grunted and kept rowing, the ropy muscles of his arms straining against his skin.
308
Jane had the gun ready, just in case, but the fisherman seemed
oblivious to her, lulled by the repetitive strokes, the plash of the
oars in water. The cries and shouts grew distant, then ceased altogether. The wind kicked up and she shivered. They were suspended in nothingness, floating between worlds. Then the lights
began to draw nearer. She watched in greedy hunger as the resort hotels and vacation homes appeared in the twilit murk.
Then she heard a
scritch
as the rowboat hit the pebbly bottom.
“Bravo Yugoslavia,” the fisherman said. Again she tried to
press money on him but he waved it away, then placed his hand
over his heart. The
besa
fulfilled.
The old man helped her clamber into the icy, thigh-deep water.
She waved goodbye and stepped onto the shingle, legs like jelly,
and watched the rowboat already easing back into the inky
depths. Then she hiked up to the nearest hotel, got herself a room
and ordered
cvapcici
and rice from room service.
The knock, when it came, startled her.
“Who is it?” she called.
When a Slavic voice answered, she cracked the door and saw
a waiter with a tray. She opened the door wider for the food and
out stepped two men in windbreakers. Before Jane could slam
the door shut, one of them had his foot inside. The other passed
the waiter a bill. “Thanks. You can go now,” the man said in
American English.
They came inside and closed the door.
“You did very well, Jane,” the first man said. “We were watching from this side, in case anyone made it across. You understand, of course, why we couldn’t risk an incident in international
waters.”
“Who are you? How do you know my name?”
“It’s safe to stop running now. Paul was online with us, right
before the connection went dead. Why don’t you tell us the
whole story.”
He turned to his companion. “Nick, please relieve Jane of her
burden. It must have been so heavy. Where is it, Jane?”
309
But she had left the bags of white powder behind on a desolate Albanian mountainside, next to what she feared was a
corpse. How could they be so stupid to think she’d cross an international border with millions of dollars’ of heroin stuffed into
a backpack?
Jane fingered the gun at her side and considered her options.
She was a sensible girl. Not one of those high-strung ones that
fell apart at the drop of a hat.
“There’s a lot you don’t know,” she said evenly. “And I’m the
only one who can fill you in. But first I need a square meal and
a shower. Then we can cross back over and I’ll show you where
the drugs are. There’s also a notebook that may interest you. Once
we take care of business, I’d like one of you gentlemen to drive
me to Skopje. There’s a conference I really don’t want to miss.
But I’ll be graduating soon. And I can’t see myself teaching Balkan
literature in some U.S. backwater the rest of my life. So I think
we should talk about a job. I understand you have an opening
in Tirana.”
When Eric Van Lustbader was asked by the estate of the late
Robert Ludlum to continue Ludlum’s series of thrillers featuring Jason Bourne, he told them he wanted free rein to take
the character in new directions. At the time, Lustbader was
grappling with the loss of his father. So, understandably, the
basis of
The Bourne Legacy
revolved around the thorny relationship between Bourne and the son he’d for many years assumed to be dead.
Similarly, in Lustbader’s latest novel,
The Bravo Testament,
a father-son relationship fuels the high-powered action and
emotional responses of the main characters. This familial
emotional resonance will be familiar to Lustbader’s fans, as it
stretches all the way back to his first thriller,
The Ninja.
The Other Side of the Mirror
deepens and broadens this
theme, but in other ways it’s a departure for Lustbader. He
wrote the story after one day rediscovering
The Outsider,
by
philosopher/novelist Colin Wilson, in his library.
The Outsider
had been a seminal book, one Lustbader had devoured during his college days. Reading it again he found new meaning
in his own work, which is reflected in
The Other Side of the
Mirror,
a story about a spy—an outsider, if ever there was one—
312
and the terrible toll secrecy and lies take on him. Lustbader,
who thinks of himself as an outsider, seems drawn to his sense
of apartness. If you’ve ever wondered what it would be like
to be outside society, or if that’s precisely how you feel, this
story is for you.
He awakens into darkness, the darkness at the dead of night—
but it is also the dread darkness of the soul that has plagued him
for thirteen weeks, thirteen months, it’s impossible now to say.
What he can say for certain is that he has been on the run for
thirteen weeks, but his assignment had begun thirteen months
ago. He joined the Agency, propelled not so much by patriotism
or an overweening itch to rub shoulders with danger—the two
main motivations of his compatriots—but by the death of his
wife. Immediately upon her death he had felt an overwhelming
urge to hurl himself into the dark and, at times, seedy labyrinth
in which she had dwelled for a decade before he had discovered
that she did not go off to work in the manner of other people.
And now, here he is, twenty-three years after they had taken
their vows, sitting in the dark, waiting for death to come.
It is hot in the room what with all the piles of magazines he’s
amassed, ragged and torn, beautiful as pink-cheeked children.
Joints cracking, he rises, pads over to the air conditioner, moving like a wader through surf of his own making. It wheezes pa-
314
thetically when he turns it on, which isn’t all that surprising since
even five minutes later nothing but hot air emerges from its
filthy grille. Not that Buenos Aires is a Third World city, far from
it. There are plenty of posh hotels whose rooms are at this moment bathed in cool, dry air, but this isn’t one of them. It has a
name, this hotel, but he’s already forgotten it.
In the tiny bathroom, full of drips and creeping water bugs the
size of his thumb, he splashes lukewarm water on his face. Cold
is hot and hot is cold; does anything work right in this hellhole?
He wants to take a shower, but the bottom is filled with more
magazines, stacked like little castles in the sand. They comfort
him, somehow, these magazine constructs, and he turns away, a
sudden realization taking hold.
Curiously, it is in this hellhole that he feels most comfortable.
Over the last thirteen weeks he has been in countless hotels in
countless cities on three continents—this is his third, after North
America and Europe. The difference, besides going from winter
to summer, is this: here in this miserable, crumbling back alley
of Buenos Aires, death breathes just around the corner. It has
been relentlessly stalking him for thirteen weeks, and now it is
closer than it has ever been, so close the stench of it is horrific,
like the reek of a rabid dog or an old man with crumbling teeth.
The closer death comes, the calmer he becomes, that’s the
irony of his situation. Though, as he stares at his pallid face with
its sunken eyes and raw cheekbones, he acknowledges that it
very well may not be the situation at all.
He stares for a moment at the pad of his forefinger. On it is
imprinted part of a familiar photograph—from one of the magazine pages, or from his life? He shrugs, uses the forefinger to
pull down his lower lids one at a time. His eyes look like pebbles, black and perfectly opaque, as if there is no light, no spark,
no intelligence behind them. He is—who is he today? Max
Brandt, the same as he was yesterday and the day before that. Max
Brandt, Essen businessman, may have checked into this dump,
but it was Harold Moss, recently divorced tourist, who had come
315
through security at Ezeiza International Airport. Moss and