TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

“In spite of her old man, you probably want to add.”

record in the world with my two, Lee, you know that. You weren’t the

only one who missed all those birthdays.”

“I think you recovered a lot better with your kids than I did.”

“Yeah? Well, Stanford isn’t cheap. Think about my offer. Might speed

up your recovery. Here we are.” Hardy passed through elegant glass

doors etched with the shape of an eagle, the glass sliding noiselessly

open at their approach. The executive secretary, a nice-looking woman

with an efficient, firm manner, announced their arrival into her

headset. She pressed a button set in a panel on top of a sleek wood and

metal console that looked more like a piece of modern art than a desk,

and motioned Hardy and Sawyer to move toward a massive wall of lacquered

Macassar ebony wood. A section of the wall opened up when they

approached. Sawyer shook his head in amazement, as he had done many

times since entering the Triton building.

In a few moments they were standing in front of a desk, although a more

apt description would have labeled it a command center, with its wall of

TV monitors, phones and other electronic gadgetry neatly built into

shining tables and impressive wall units. The man behind the desk was

just putting down the phone. He turned to them.

Hardy said, “Special Agent Lee Sawyer of the FBI, Nathan Gamble,

chairman of Triton Global.”

Sawyer could feel the strength of the grip when Nathan Gamble’s fingers

closed around his own and the two men exchanged perfunctory greetings.

“Do you have Archer yet?”

Sawyer was halfway to his chair when the question hit him. The tone was

clearly that of a superior to a subordinate and was more than sufficient

to raise every hair on the agent’s thick neck. Sawyer finished sitting

down and took a moment to study the man before answering. Out of the

corner of his eye, Sawyer caught the apprehensive look on his former

partner’s face from where he stood rigidly near the doorway. Sawyer

took another moment to undo the button on his suit coat and flip open

his notebook before resting his steady eyes back on Gamble.

“I’ll need to ask you some questions, Mr. Gamble. I hope it won’t take

all that long.”

“You haven’t answered my question.” The chairman’s voice was a notch

deeper now.

“No, I haven’t and I don’t intend to.” The two men’s eyes locked, until

Gamble finally broke it off and looked over at Hardy.

“Mr. Gamble, it’s an ongoing bureau investigation. The bureau doesn’t

usually comment–”

Gamble cut Hardy off with an abrupt wave of his hand. “Then let’s get

this over with. I have to leave to catch a plane in one hour.”

Sawyer didn’t know who he wanted to belt more–Gamble, or Hardy for

taking this kind of crap.

“Mr. Gamble, perhaps Quentin and Richard Lucas should be in on this

discussion.”

“Maybe you should have thought about that before scheduling this

meeting, Hardy.” Gamble punched a button on his console.

“Find Rowe and Lucas, right now.”

Hardy touched Sawyer on the shoulder. “Quentin heads up the division

Archer was in. Lucas is head of internal security.”

“Then you’re right, Frank, I’ll want to speak with them.”

A few minutes later the broad portal opened and two men stepped into

Nathan Gamble’s private domain. Sawyer ran a penetrating eye over them

and quickly discerned who was who. His grim demeanor, his look of

competitive reproach at Hardy, and the slight hump under his left breast

labeled Richard Lucas as Triton’s head of security.

Sawyer pegged Quentin Rowe as early thirties. Rowe’s face held a ready

smile underneath a pair of large hazel eyes that were more dreamy than

intense. Sawyer concluded that Nathan Gamble could not have had a more

unlikely colleague. The expanded group adjourned to the large

conference table housed in one corner of Gamble’s mammoth office.

Gamble stared at his watch and then looked over at Sawyer. “You have

fifty minutes and counting, Sawyer. I was hoping you’d have something

important for me. However, I feel disappointment looming.

Why don’t you prove me wrong?”

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