ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

after the votes were counted.

Except for one person.

In saying his good-byes the President leaned into Walter Sullivan to

embrace the older man and say a few private words. Sullivan smiled at

the President’s remarks. Then the old man stumbled slightly but righted

himself by grasping the arms of the President.

After his guests had gone, Sullivan smoked a cigar in his study. As he

moved to the window, the lights from the presidential motorcade quickly

faded from view. In spite of himself, Sullivan had to smile. The image

of the slight wince in the President’s eye as Sullivan had gripped his

forearm had made for a particularly victorious moment. A long shot, but

sometimes long shots paid off. Detective Frank had been very open with

the billionaire about the detective’s theories regarding the case. One

theory that had particularly interesfed Walter Sullivan was his wife

having wounded her assailant with the letter opener, possibly in the leg

or arm. It must have cut deeper than the police had thought. Possible

nerve damage. A surface wound certainly would have had time to heal by

now.

Sullivan slowly walked out of the study, turning off the light as he

exited. President Alan Richmond had assuredly felt only a small pain

when Sullivan’s fingers had sunk into his flesh. But as with a heart

attack, a small pain was so often followed by a much larger one.

Sullivan smiled broadly as he considered the possibilities.

FROM ATOP THE KNOLL WALTER SULLIVAN STARED AT THE LITtie wooden house

with the green tin roof. He pulled his muffler around his ears, steadied

his weakened legs with a thick walking stick. The cold was bitter in the

hills of southwest Virginia this time of year and the forecast pointed

unerringly to snow, and a lot of it.

He made his way down across the, for now, iron-hard ground. The house

was in an excellent state of repair thanks to his limitless pocketbook

and a deep sense of nostalgia that seemed to more and more consume him

as he grew closer to becoming a thread of the past himself. Woodrow

Wilson was in the White House and the earth was heavily into the First

World War when Walter Patrick Sullivan had first seen the glimmer of

light with the aid of a midwife and the grim determination of his

mother, Millie, who had lost all three previous children, two in

childbirth.

His father, a coal miner-it seems everyone’s father was a coal miner in

that part of Virginia back then-had lived until his son’s twelfth

birthday and then had abruptly expired from a series of maladies brought

on by too much coal dust and too little rest. For years the future

billionaire had watched his daddy stagger into the house, every muscle

exhausted, the face as black as their big Labrador’s coat, and collapse

on the little bed in the back room. Too tired to eat, or play with the

little boy who each day hoped for some attention but ended up getting

none from a father whose perpetual weariness was so painful to witness.

His mother had lived long enough to see her offspring become one of the

richest men in the world, and her dutiful son had taken great pains to

ensure that she had every comfort his immense resources could provide.

For a tribute to his late father, he had purchased the mine that had

killed him. Five million cash. He had paid a fifty-thousand-dollar bonus

to every miner in the place and then he had, with great ceremony, shut

it down.

He opened the door and went inside. The gas fireplace threw warmth into

the room without the necessity of firewood. The pantry was stocked with

enough food for the next six months. Here he was entirely

self-sufficient. He never allowed anyone to stay here with him. This had

been his homestead. All with the right to be here, with the exception of

himself, were dead. He was alone and he wanted it that way.

The simple meal he prepared was lingered over while he stared moodily

out the window where in the failing light he could just make out the

circle of naked elms near the house; the branches waved to him with

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