ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

her family and circle of social and business acquaintances. People at

that level of sophistication apparently didn’t have mere friends they

hung with. Everyone served a particular function, the whole being

greater than the sum of the parts. Or at least that was the intent,

although Jack had his own opinion on the matter.

Industry and finance had been well represented, brandishing names Jack

read about in the Wall Street Journal before he chucked it for the

sports pages to see how the ‘Skins or Bullets were doing. The politicos

had been out in full force, scrounging future votes and current dollars.

The group was rounded out by the ubiquitous lawyers of which Jack was

one, the occasional doctor to show ties to the old ways and a couple of

public-interest types to demonstrate that the powers that he had

sympathy for the plight of the ordinary.

He finished the beer and flipped on the TV. His shoes came off, and the

forty-dollar patterned socks his fiance had bought for him were

carelessly flung over the back of the lamp shade.

Given time she’d have him in two-hundred-dollar braces with matching

hand-painted ties. Shit! Rubbing his toes, he seriously considered a

second beer. The TV tried but failed to hold his interest. He pushed his

thick, dark hair out of his eyes and focused for the thousandth time on

where his life was hurtling, seemingly with the speed of the space

shuttle.

Jennifer’s company limo had driven the two of them to her Northwest

Washington townhouse where Jack would probably move after the wedding;

she detested his place. The wedding was barely six months off,

apparently no time at all by a bride’s standards, and he was sitting

here having severe second thoughts.

Jennifer Ryce Baldwin possessed instant head-turning beauty to such a

degree that the women stared as often as the men. She was also smart and

accomplished, came from serious money and was intent on marrying Jack.

Her father ran one of the largest development companies in the country.

Shopping centers, office buildings, radio stations, entire subdivisions,

you name it, he was in it, and doing better than just about anyone else.

Her paternal great-grandfather was one of the original Midwest

manufacturing tycoons, and her mother’s family had once owned a large

chunk of downtown Boston. The gods had smiled early and often on

Jennifer Baldwin. There wasn’t one guy Jack knew who wasn’t jealous as

hell of him.

He squirmed in his chair and tried to rub a kink out of his shoulder. He

hadn’t worked out in a week. His six-foot-one body, even at thirty-two,

had the same hard edge it had enjoyed all through high school where he

was a man among boys in virtually every sport offered, and in college

where the competition was a lot rougher but where he still managed to

make first-string varsity as a heavyweight wrestler and first-team

All-Academic. That combination had gotten him into the University of

Virginia School of Law, where he made Law Review, graduated near the top

of his class and promptly settled down as a public defender in the

District of Columbia’s criminal justice system.

His classmates had all grabbed the big-firm option out of law school.

They had routinely called with phone numbers of psychiatrists who could

help coax him out of his insanity. He smiled and then went and grabbed

that second beer. The fridge was now empty.

Jack’s first year as a PD had been rough as he learned the ropes, losing

more than he won. As time went on, he graduated to the more serious

crimes. And as he poured every ounce of youthful energy, raw talent and

common sense he had into each of those cases, the tide began to turn.

And then he started kicking some serious ass in court.

He discovered he was a natural at the role, as talented at

cross-examination as he had been at throwing men much bigger than he

across a two-inch-thick mat. He was respected, liked as an attorney if

you could believe that.

Then he had met Jennifer at a Bar function. She was vice president of

development and marketing at Baldwin Enterprises. Dynamic in presence,

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