ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

object minutely. He wasn’t a trained forensic specialist, and thus he

didn’t register that the black crustings on the handle and blade were

actually very old, dried blood. Nor was he aware of the fingerprints

that existed within the leather.

He lay the bag carefully down and leaned back in the chair. This had

something to do with the woman’s murder.

Of that he was certain. But what? He looked at it again. This was

obviously an important piece of physical evidence. It hadn’t been the

murder weapon; Christine Sullivan had been shot. But Luther had thought

it critically important.

Jack jerked straight up. Because it identified who had killed Christine

Sullivan! He grabbed the bag and held it up to the light, his eyes

searching every inch of space. Now he could dimly make them out, like a

swirl of black threads.

Prints. This had the person’s fingerprints on it. Jack looked at the

blade closely. Blood. On the handle too. It had to be.

What had Frank said? He struggled to recall. Sullivan had possibly

stabbed her attacker. In the arm or the leg with a letter opener, the

one in the bedroom photo. At least that was one of the detective’s

theories he had shared with Jack.

What Jack held in his hand seemed to bear that analysis out.

He carefully placed the bag back into the box and slid it under the bed.

He went over to the window and again looked out. The wind had picked up.

The cheap window rattled and shook.

If only Luther would have told him, confided in him. But he was scared

for Kate. How had they made Luther believe Kate was in danger?

He thought back. Luther had received nothing while in prison, Jack was

certain of that. So what then? Had whoever it was just walked up to

Luther and told him flat out: talk and your daughter dies? How would

they even know he had a daughter? The two hadn’t been in the same room

with each other for years.

Jack lay down on the bed, closed his eyes. No, he was wrong about that.

There was one time when that would have been possible. The day they had

arrested Luther. That would be the only time that father and daughter

would have been together. It was possible that, without saying anything,

someone could have made it crystal-clear to Luther, with just a look,

nothing more. Jack had handled cases that had been dismissed because

witnesses were afraid to testify. No one had ever said anything to them.

It was solely intimidation by the unspoken word. A silent terror, there

was nothing new about that.

So who would’ve been there to do that? To deliver the message that had

made Luther shut up like his mouth was stapled closed? But the only

people who were there, as far as Jack knew, were the cops. Unless it was

the person who had taken a shot at Luther. But why would he hang around?

How could that person just waltz into the place, walk up to Luther, make

eye contact, without anyone becoming suspicious?

Jack’s eyes shot open.

Unless that person were a cop. His immediate thought hit him hard in the

chest.

Seth Frank.

He dismissed it quickly. There was no motive there, not a scintilla of

motive. For the. life of him he couldn’t imagine the detective and

Christine Sullivan in any type of tryst and that’s what this boiled down

to, didn’t it? Sullivan’s lover had killed her and Luther had seen the

whole thing. It couldn’t be Seth Frank. He hoped to God it wasn’t Seth

Frank because he was counting on the man to get him out of this mess.

But what if tomorrow morning Jack would be delivering the very thing

Frank had been desperately searching for?

He could have dropped it, left the room, Luther comes out of his hiding

place, picks it up and flees. It was possible. And the place sanitized

so clean a pro had to be behind it. A pro.

An experienced homicide detective who knew exactly how to cleanse a

crime scene.

Jack shook his head. No! Dammit no! He had to believe in something,

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