ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

be there right at four. And it was too late for her to change any of it.

Too damned late for anything.

But she was doing the right thing, despite the guilt she was feeling,

despite breaking down like that after calling the detective. She angrily

squeezed her hands together. She was about to hand her father over to

the police, and he deserved it. She was through debating it. She now

just wanted it to be over.

MCCARTY DID NOT Luce rr. NOT AT ALL. His usuAL RouTtNE was to follow his

target, sometimes for weeks, until the assassin understood the victim’s

patterns of behavior better than the victim did. It made the killing so

much easier. The additional time also allowed McCarty to plan his

escape, to allow for worst-case scenarios. He had none of those luxuries

on this job. Sullivan’s message had been terse. The man had already paid

him an enormous sum on his per them, with another two million to follow

upon completion. Under any yardstick he had been compensated-now he had

to deliver.

Except for his first hit many years ago, McCarty could not remember

being this nervous. It didn’t help matters that the place was crawling

with copg.

But he kept telling himself things would be okay. In the time he had he

had planned well. He had reconnoitered the area right after Sullivan’s

phone call. The row house idea had hit him immediately. It was really

the only logical place.

He had been here since four in the morning. The back door to the house

opened into an alleyway. His rental car was parked at the curb. It would

take him exactly fifteen seconds ftorn the moment the shot was fired to

drop his rifle, make his way down the stairs, out the door and into his

car. He would be two miles away before the police even fully understood

what had happened. A plane was leaving in forty-five minutes from a

private airstrip ten miles north of Washington. Its destination was New

York City. It would carry one passenger, and in a little over five hours

McCarty would be a pampered passenger on board the Concorde as it

descended into London.

He checked his rifle and scope for the tenth time, automatically

flicking away a grain of dust on the barrel. A suppressor would have

been nice, but he had yet to find one that worked on a rifle, especially

one that was chambered with supersonic ammo as his weapon was. He would

count on the confusion to mask the shot and his subsequent departure. He

looked across the street and checked his watch. Almost time.

McCarty, while being a very accomplished killer, could not have possibly

known that another rifle would be trained on his target’s head. And

behind that rifle would be a pair of eyes as sharp if not sharper than

his own.

T)M COLLIN HAD QUALIFIED AS AN EXPERT MARKSMAN IN THE Marine Corps, and

his master sergeant had written in his evaluation that he had never seen

a better shot. The focus of that accolade was now sighting through his

scope; then he relaxed. Collin looked around the confines of the van he

was in. Parked down the street on the curb opposite from the cars, he

had a straight shot to the target. He sighted through his rifle again,

Kate Whitney appearing fleetingly in the crosshairs. Collin slid open

the side window of the van. He was under shadow of the buildings behind

him. No one could notice what he was doing. He also had the added

advantage of knowing that Seth Frank and a contingent of county police

were stationed to the right of the cafd while others were in the office

building lobby where the cafe was located. Unmarked cars were stationed

at various locations up and down the street. If Whitney ran he wouldn’t

get far.

But then Collin knew the man wasn’t going to run anywhere.

After the shot Collin would quickly disassemble the rifle and secrete it

in the van, emerge with his sidearm and badge and join the other

authorities in pondering what the hell had happened. No one would think

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