TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

Ms. Archer.”

When the plane was descending into Washington National, the man turned

again to Sidney. “Couple of things, Ms. Archer. When I listened to

the tape of you and your husband talking on the phone, I picked up some

background noise. Like water running. I can’t be sure, but I think

someone was listening on another line.” Sidney’s face froze. “Ms.

Archer, you had better assume the Feds know Jason is alive too.”

A little while later the plane thudded to a landing and the cabin became

alive with activity.

“You said you wanted to tell me a couple of things. What’s the other

one?”

The man leaned down and pulled out a small briefcase from under the seat

in front of him. When he sat back up, he looked her directly in the

eye. “People who can bring down a jetliner can do just about anything.

Don’t trust anyone, Ms. Archer. And be more careful than you have ever

been in your entire life. Even that might not be enough. I’m sorry if

that sounds like shitty advice, but it’s all I have to give you.”

In another few minutes the man was gone. Sidney was one of the last

passengers off the plane. The airport wasn’t crowded at this hour. She

made her way toward the cab stand. Remembering the man’s advice, she

looked carefully around, trying not to be too obvious.

Her sole comfort was the fact that amid all the people probably tracking

her, at least some of them were FBI.

After leaving Sidney Archer, the man boarded an airport shuttle bus that

deposited him at the long-term parking lot. It was almost ten o’clock.

The area was deserted. He carried a bag that he had checked onto the

flight from New Orleans. Its orange sticker proclaimed that it carried

an unloaded firearm. As he reached his car, a late-model Grand Marquis,

he opened the bag to extract his pistol with the intent of reloading it

and placing it in his shoulder holster.

The stiletto blade first hit his right lung, was pulled free, and then

the savage process was repeated on the left one, collapsing both and

forestalling any cry for help he might otherwise have managed.

The third thrust sliced neatly through the right side of his neck. The

bag dropped to the concrete floor, the firearm now useless to its dying

owner. In another moment he was down on the ground, his eyes already

glassing over, staring up at his killer.

A van pulled alongside and Kenneth Scales climbed in. In another moment

the dead man was alone.

CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

Lee Sawyer sat at the conference table in the FBI building going over

numerous reports. He put one hand through his rumpled hair, tilted back

in his chair and put his feet up on the table while he mentally sorted

through the new facts. The autopsy report on Riker indicated that he

had been dead about forty-eight hours before his body had been

discovered. Because the room temperature had hovered around freezing,

however, Sawyer knew the postmortem putrefaction of the body was not

nearly as accurate as it otherwise would have been.

Sawyer looked at photos of the Sig P229 auto pistol that had been

recovered at the crime scene. The serial numbers on the pistol had been

sanded down and then drilled out. He next looked at photos of the slugs

recovered from the body. Riker had been on the receiving end of eleven

more of the hollow-point projectiles than had been necessary to kill

him. The lead barrage bothered the FBI agent greatly. Riker’s murder

had most of the hallmarks of a professional kill. Professional

assassins rarely needed more than one shot. The first shot in this case

had been instantly fatal, the medical examiner had concluded. The heart

had not been pumping when the other bullets had entered the body.

The blood spatters on the table, chair and mirror indicated that Riker

had been shot from behind while seated. The killer had apparently

dragged Riker out of the chair, thrown him face down in the corner of

the bedroom and proceeded to empty his clip into the dead body from

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