TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

exactly how you plan to solve the problem.”

“Do you really care about the method, or just the results?”

“Indulge me with your brilliance. I recall you often enjoy doing that.

Just don’t sound so damn professorial when doing so. I have been out of

university many years now.”

Goldman raised an eyebrow at the CEO’s remark. “You seem to know me all

too well.”

“You are one of the few attorneys in my acquaintance who thinks like a

businessman. Winning is king. Fuck the law!” ‘

Goldman accepted one of the cigarettes from Porcher and took a moment

lighting it. “A very recent development has occurred that has given us

a golden opportunity to gain firsthand, almost real-time information

about Triton’s proposed deal with CyberCom.

We’ll know Triton’s best and final offer before they even have a chance

to communicate it to CyberCom. Then we march in a few hours earlier,

present our proposal and wait for Triton’s deal to come in. CyberCom

rejects it and you become the proud owner of another jewel in your

far-flung empire.”

Porcher slowly withdrew the cigarette from between his lips and stared

wide-eyed at his companion. “You can do this?”

“I can do this.”

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

Lee, let me warn you, he can be a little abrasive at times, but that’s

just the man’s personality.” Frank Hardy glanced back at Sawyer, and the

two men walked down a long corridor after exiting a private elevator

onto the top floor of the Triton Global building.

“Kid gloves, I promise, Frank. I don’t usually pull out my brass

knuckles on the victims, you know.”

While they walked, Sawyer reflected on the results of the airport

queries about Jason Archer. His men had dug up two airport personnel

who had recognized Jason Archer’s picture. One was the Western Airlines

employee who had checked in his bag on the morning of the seventeenth.

The other was a janitor who had noticed Jason sitting and reading the

paper. He remembered him because Jason had never let go of his leather

briefcase, even while reading the paper or drinking his coffee. Jason

had gone into the rest room, but the janitor had left the area and had

not noticed him coming back out. The FBI agents could not question the

young woman who had actually collected boarding passes from the

passengers on the in-fated plane, since she had been one of the flight

attendants on Flight 3223. A number of people recalled seeing Arthur

Lieberman.

He had been a regular at Dulles for many years. All in all, not much

useful information.

Sawyer refocused on Hardy’s back; he was moving quickly down the plushly

carpeted hallway. Gaining entry to the technology giant’s headquarters

had not been easy. Triton’s security had been so zealous that they had

even wanted to call the bureau to verify the serial number on Sawyer’s

credentials until Hardy sternly informed them that that would be

unnecessary and that the veteran FBI special agent deserved a lot more

deference than he was being shown.

None of that had ever happened to Sawyer before in all his years with

the bureau, and he jokingly let a sheepish Hardy know it.

“Hey, Frank, these guys hoarding gold bullion or uranium 235 in here?”

“Let’s just say they’re slightly paranoid.”

“I’m impressed. Usually we FBI types scare the crap out of everybody.

I bet they thumb their noses at the IRS guys too.”

“Actually, a former head of the IRS is their top tax guru.”

“Damn, they really do have all the bases covered.”

An uneasy feeling crept over Sawyer the more he thought about his chosen

profession. Information was king these days.” Access to information was

ruled by and large through computers. The private sector was so far

ahead of the government realm that there was no possible way the

government would ever catch up. Even the FBI, which in public sectors

had state-of-the-art technology, would have existed far down the

technological sophistication list in the world where Triton Global did

battle. To Sawyer the revelation was not a pleasant one. One would

have to be an imbecile not to realize that computer crimes would soon

dwarf all other manifestations of human evil, at least in dollar terms.

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