ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

“I’m not looking to make this a battle.”

“Jack, you’ve made your decision. It’s a little late for this now.”

His face curled -into disbelief “Excuse me? My decision? I made a

decision to marry you over four years ago. That was my decision. Ii was

your decision to end it.”

She pushed wet hair out of her eyes. “Okay, it was my decision. Now

what?”

He turned to face her, gripped both her shoulders.

“Look, it suddenly occurred to me last night. Oh what the hell! It’s

been every night since you left. I knew it was a mistake, goddarnmid I’m

not at PD anymore. You’re right, I don’t defend criminals anymore. I

make a good, respectable living. I, we. . .” As he looked at her

astonished face, his entire mind went blank. His hands were shaking. He

let go of her, slumped back in the ‘seat.

He stripped off his drenched tie, stuffed it in his pocket, and stared

at the little clock on the dashboard. She checked out the motionless

speedometer, then glanced at him. There was kindness in her tone,

although the pain was evident in her eyes.

“Jack, lunch was very nice. It was good to see you. But that’s as far as

we can go. I’m sorry.” She bit her lip, a movement he didn’t see because

he was getting out of the car.

He poked his head back in. “Have a good life, Kate. You ever need

anything, call me.”

She watched his thick shoulders as he walked through the steady rain,

got in his car and drove off. She sat for several minutes. A tear traced

its way down her cheek. She angrily flicked it away, put the car in gear

and drove off in the opposite direction.

THE NEXT MORNING, JACK PICKED UP THE PHONE AND THEN slowly put it back

down. What was the point really? He had been in the office since six,

wiped out his backlog of highpriority work and moved on to projects that

had been on the back burner for weeks. He looked out the window. The sun

ricocheted off the concrete and brick edifices. He rubbed the glare out

of his eyes and pulled the blinds down.

Kate was not going to suddenly plunge back into his life and he had to

adjust to that. He had spent the night turning every possible scenario

over in his head, most wildly unrealistic. He shrugged. Things like this

happened to men and women every day in every country in the world.

Things sometimes did not work out. Even if you wanted them to more than

anything else. You couldn’t will someone to love you back. You ‘ had to

move on. He had plenty to move on to.

Maybe, it was time for him to enjoy the future he knew he did have.

He sat down at his desk and methodically moved through two more

projects, a joint venture for which he was doing low-level, no-brain

grunt work, and a project for the only client he had other than Baldwin,

Tarr Crimson.

Crimson owned a small audiovisual company, was a genius with

computer-generated graphics and images, and made a very good living

running AV conferences for companies at area hotels. He also rode a

motorcycle, dressed in cutoff jeans, smoked everything including an

occasional cigarette, and looked like the biggest burnt-out druggie in

the world.

Jack and he had met when a friend of Jack’s had prosecuted Taff for

drunk and disorderly, and lost. Tarr had come in dressed in a

three-piece suit, briefcase and neatly trimmed hair and beard, and

argued persuasively that the officer’s testimony was biased because the

bust was outside a Grateful Dead concert, that the field test was

inadmissible because the cop had not given the proper verbal warnings

and lastly because an improperly functioning piece of equipment had been

used to administer the test.

The judge, burdened with over a hundred D&Ds from the concert, had

dismissed the case after admonishing the officer to adhere strictly to

the rules in the future. Jack had watched the entire affair In

amazement. Impressed, Jack walked out of the courtroom with Tarr, had a

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