ABSOLUTE POWER By: DAVID BALDACCI

just want to talk to her, and to see her. That was all. He kept telling

himself that.

He went to the bathroom, plunged his head into a sink of cold water,

grabbed a beer and went up to the rooftop pool and sat there in the

darkness, watching the planes as they made their approach up the Potomac

into National. The twin bright, red lights of the Washington Monument

blinked consolingly at him. Eight stories down the streets were quiet

except for the occasional police or ambulance siren.

Jack looked at the calm surface of the pool, put his foot in the now

cool water and watched as it rippled across. He drank his beer, went

downstairs and fell asleep in a chair in the living room, the TV droning

in front of him. He did not hear the phone ring, no message was left.

Almost one thousand miles away, Luther Whitney hung up the phone and

smoked his first cigarette in over thirty years.

THE FEDERAL EXPRESS TRUCK PULLED SLOWLY DOWN THE isolated country road,

the driver scanning the rusty and leaning mailboxes for the correct

address. He had never made a delivery out here. His truck seemed to ride

ditch to ditch on the narrow road.

He pulled into the driveway of the last house and started to back out.

He just happened to look over and saw the address on the small piece of

wood beside the door. He shook his head and smiled. Sometimes it was

just luck.

e weathered aluminum window awnings, popular about twenty years before

the driver had been born, sagged down, as if they were tired and just

wanted to rest.

The elderly woman who answered the door was dressed in a pullover

flowered dress, a thick sweater wrapped around her shoulders. Her thick

red ankles told of poor circulation and probably a host of other

ailments. She seemed surprised by the delivery, but readily signed for

it.

The driver glanced at the signature on his pad: Edwina Broome. Then he

got in his truck and left. She watched him leave before shutting the

door.

THE wALiuE-TALKm CRACKLED.

Fred Barnes had been doing this job for seven years now.

Driving around the neighborhoods of the rich, seeing the big houses,

manicured grounds, the occasional expensive car with its mannequinlike

occupants coming down the perfect asphalt drive and through the massive

gates. He had never been inside any of the homes he was paid to guard,

and never expected to be.

He looked up at the imposing structure. Four to five million dollars, he

surmised. More money than he could make in five lifetimes. Sometimes it

just didn’t seem right.

He checked in on his walkie-talkie. He would take a look around the

place. He didn’t exactly know what was going on.

Only that the owner had called and requested a patrol car check.

The cold air in his face made Barnes think about a hot cup of coffee and

a danish, to be followed by eight hours of sleep until he had to venture

out again in his Saturn for yet another night of protecting the

possessions of the wealthy. The pay wasn’t all that bad, although the

benefits sucked. His wife worked full-time too, and with three kids,

their combined incomes were barely enough. But then everybody had it

tough.

He looked at the five-car garage in back, the pool and the tennis

courts. Well, maybe not everybody.

As he rounded the corner, he saw the dangling rope and thoughts of

coffee and a creamy danish disappeared. He crouched down, his hand

flying to his sidearm. He grabbed his mike and reported in, his voice

cracking embarrassingly.

The real police would be here in minutes. He could wait for them or

investigate himself. For eight singles an hour he decided to stay right

where he was.

Barnes’s supervisor arrived first in the stark white station wagon with

the company’s logo on the door panel. Thirty seconds later the first of

five patrol cars pulled down the asphalt drive until they were stacked

like a waiting train in front of the house.

The window was covered by two officers. It was probable that the perps

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