ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

headed back out. She stretched the cramps and kinks out of her long

limbs in front of the Ulysses S Grant statue and started her run.

She headed west, past the Air and Space Museum, and then by the

Smithsonian castle that, with its towers and battlements and

twelfth-century-style Italian architecture, looked more like a mad

scientist’s home than anything else.

Her easy, methodical strides took her across the Mall at its widest

point and she circled the Washington Monument twice.

Her breath was coming a little quicker now; the sweat began to seep

through her T-shirt and blot the Georgetown Law sweatshirt she was

wearing. As she made her way along the fringes of the Tidal Basin, the

crowds of people grew thicker. The early fall brought plane-, bus- and

carloads of people from across the country hoping to miss the summer

crush of tourists and the infamous Washington heat.

As she swerved to avoid one errant child she collided with another

runner coming the other way. They went down in a tangle of arms and

legs.

“Shit.” The man rolIed over quickly and then sprang back up. She started

to get up, looked at him, an apology on her lips, and then abruptly sat

back down. A long moment went by as camera-toting clans of Arkansans and

Iowans danced around them.

“Hello, Kate.” Jack gave her a hand up and helped her to a spot under

one of the now bare cherry blossom trees that encircled the Tidal Basin.

The Jefferson Memorial sat big and imposing across the calm water, the

tall silhouette of the country’s third President clearly visible inside

the rotunda.

Kate’s ankle was starting to swell. She took off her shoe and sock and

began to rub it out. , “I didn’t think you’d have time to run anymore,

Jack.”

She looked over at him: no receding hairline, no paunch, no lines on the

face. Time had stood still for Jack Graham.

She had to admit it, he looked great. She, on the other hand, was an

absolute and total disaster.

She silently cursed herself for not getting that haircut and then cursed

herself again for even thinking that. A drop of sweat plunged down her

nose, and she brushed it away with an irritable swipe of her hand.

“I was wondering the same thing about you. I didn’t think they let

prosecutors go home before midnight. Slacking Off?”

“Right.” She rubbed her ankle, which really hurt. He saw the pain,

leaned over and took her foot in his hands. She flinched back. He looked

at her.

“Remember I used to almost do this for a living and you were my best and

only client. I have never seen a woman with such fragile ankles, and the

rest of you looks so healthy.”

She relaxed and let him work the ankle and then the foot, and she soon

realized he had not lost his touch. Did he mean that about looking

healthy? She frowned. After all, she had dumped him. And she had been

absolutely right in doing so.

Hadn’t she?

“I heard about Patton, Shaw. Congratulations.”

“Aw shucks. Any lawyer with millions in legal business could’ve done the

same thing.” He smiled.

“Yeah, I read about the engagement in the paper too. Congratulations

twice.” He didn’t smile at that one. She wondered why not.

He quietly put her sock and shoe back on. He looked at her. “You’re not

going to be able to run for a day or two, it’s pretty swollen. My car’s

right over there. I’ll give you a lift.”

“I’ll just take a cab.”

“You trust a D.C. cabbie over me?” He feigned offense.

“Besides, I don’t see any pockets. You going to negotiate a free ride?

Good luck.”

She looked down at her shorts. Her key was in her sock.

He had already eyed the bulge. He smiled at her dilemma.

Her lips pressed together, her tongue slid along the bottom one. He

remembered that habit from long ago. Although he hadn’t seen it for

years, it suddenly seemed like he had never been away.

He stretched out his legs and stood up. “I’d float you a loan, but I’m

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