ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

It was a countenance totally without remorse or caring or any other

positive emotion. It was also a face without hope, an observation

substantiated by his background history, which read like a horror story

of a childhood. But that was not her problem. It seemed like the only

one that wasn’t.

midnight. She went to pour some more coffee; her focus was starting to

wander. The last staff attorney had left five hours ago. The cleaning

crew had been gone for three. She moved down the hallway in her stocking

feet to the kitchen. If Charlie Manson were out and doing his thing now,

he’d be one of her milder cases; an amateur compared to the monsters

roaming loose today.

Cup of coffee in hand, she walked back into her office and’ paused for a

moment to look at her reflection in the window.

With her job looks were really unimportant; hell, she hadn’t been on a

date in over a year. But she couldn’t pull her eyes away. She was tall

and slender, perhaps too skinny in certain areas, but her routine of

running four miles every day had not changed while her caloric intake

had steadily dwindled.

Mostly she subsisted on bad coffee and crackers, although she limited

herself to two cigarettes a day and was hoping with luck to quit

altogether.

She felt guilty about the abuse her body was taking with the endless

hours and stress of moving from one horrific case to another, but what

was she supposed to do? Quit because she didn’t look like the women on

the cover on Cosmopolitan? She consoled herself with the fact that

their job twenty-four hours a day was to make themselves look good- Hers

was to ensure that people who broke the law, who hurt others, were

punished. Under any criteria she reasoned she was doing far more

productive things with her life.

She swiped at her own mane; it needed to be cut, but where was the time

to do that? The face was still relatively I that much Ion er. And like

so many things you took for granted or dismissed as unimportant, being

able to quiet a room by your mere entrance was one she knew she was

going to miss.

That her looks had remained strong over the last few years was

remarkable considering she had done relatively little to preserve them.

Good genes, that must be it; she was fortunate. But then she thought of

her father and decided that she wasn’t very lucky at all in the genes

department. A man who stole from others and then pretended to live a

normal life. A man who deceived everyone, including his wife and

daughter. A man you could not depend on to be there.

She sat at her desk, took a quick sip of the hot coffee, poured in more

sugar and looked at Mr. Simmons while she stirred the black depths of

her nighttime stimulus.

She picked up the phone, called home to check messages.

There were five, two from other lawyers, one from the policeman she

would put on the stand against Mr. Simmons and one from a staff

investigator who liked to call her at odd hours with mostly useless

information. She should change her telephone number. The last message

was a hang-up. But she could hear very low breathing on the end, she

could almost make out a word or two. Something in the sound was

familiar, but she couldn’t place it. People with nothing better to do.

The coffee flowed through her veins, the file came back into focus. She

glanced up at her little bookshelf. On top was an old photo of her

deceased mother and ten-year-old Kate.

cut out from the picture was Luther Whitney. A big gap next to mother

and daughter. A big nothing.

“JESUS FUCKING CHRIST!” THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED States sat up, one

hand covering his limp and damaged priivates, the other holding the

letter opener that a moment before was to have been the instrument of

his death. It had more than just his blood on it now. “Jesus Fucking

Christ, i Bill, you fucking killed her!” The target of his barrage.”

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