ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

usable information.

The staffs of each of the neighbors had also been tboroughly questioned.

There was nothing there. Telephone interviews had been conducted of

Sullivan’s household staff, who had accompanied him to Barbados, with

nothing earthshattering to report back. Besides, they all had ironclad

alibis. Not that that was insurmountable. Frank filed that away in the

back of his mind.

They also did not have a Pood snapshot of Christine Sullivan’s last day

of life. She was murdered in her house, presumably late at night. But if

she had indeed been murdered on Monday night, what had she been doing

during the day?

Frank believed that information had to lend them something to go on.

At nine-thirty in the morning on that Monday, Christine Sullivan had

been seen in downtown Washington at an upscale salon where it would cost

Frank two weeks’ pay to send his wife for a pampering. Whether the woman

was gearing up for some late-night fun or this was something the rich

did on a regular basis was something Frank would have, to find out.

Their inquiries had turned up nothing on Sullivan’s whereabouts after

she had left the salon around noon. She had not returned to her

apartment in the city, nor had she taken a taxicab anywhere that they

could determine.

If the little woman had stayed behind when everyone else went to the

sunny south, she had to have a reason, he figured. If she had been with

someone that night, that was someone Frank wanted to talk to, and maybe

handcuff.

Ironically, murder in the commission of a burglary did not constitute

capital murder in Virginia, although, interestingly enough, murder

during the course of an armed robbery did. If you robbed and killed, you

could be sentenced to death. If you burgled and killed, the most you’d

be looking at was life, which wasn’t that great of a choice given the

barbaric conditions of most state prisons. But Christine Sullivan had

worn much jewelry. Every report the detective had received indicated she

was a great lover of diamonds, emeralds, sapphires; you named it, she

wore it. There was no jewelry on the body, although it was easy enough

to see the marks on the skin the rings had made. Sullivan had also

confirmed that his wife’s diamond necklace was missing.

The beauty salon owner also remembered seeing that particular piece on

Monday.

A good prosecutor could make out a case of robbery on those facts, Frank

was sure of it. The perps were lying in wait, premeditation the whole

way. Why should the good people of Virginia have to pay thousands of

dollars a year to feed, clothe and house a cold-blooded killer?

Burglary?

Robbery? Who the fuck really cared? The woman was dead. Blown away by

some sick goon. Legal distinctions like that did not sit well with

Frank. Like many law enforcement people, he felt the criminal justice

system was weighted far too heavily in favor of the defendant. It often

seemed to him that lost in the entire convoluted process with its

intricate deals, technical traps and ultrasmooth defense attorneys was

the fact that someone had actually broken the law.. That someone had

been hurt, raped or killed.

That was just flat-out wrong. Frank had no ‘Way to change the system,

but he could peck around its edges.

He pulled the report closer, fumbling with his reading glasses. He took

another sip of the thick, black coffee.

Cause of death: lateral gunshot wounds to the cephalic region caused by

high-velocity, large-caliber firearm(s) firing one expanding, softnose

bullet causing a perforating wound, and a second slug of unknown

composition from an unidentified weapon source causing a penetrating

wound.

Which, in ordinary English, meant her brain had been blown apart by some

heavy-duty hardware. The report also stated that the manner of death was

homicide, which was the only clear element Frank could see in the entire

case.

He noted that he had been correct in his conclusion of the distance from

which the shots had come. There were no traces of powder in the wound

track. The shots had come from over two feet away; Frank surmised that

the distance was probably closer to six feet, but that was only his gut

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