TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

The man’s photo was some years old, but there was no mistaking the face.

His name was now revealed to her: Edward Page. He had been a local

private detective for five years after spending ten years in New York

City as a police officer. He had worked solo, his firm bearing the name

Private Solutions, the story stated. Page had been the victim of a

fatal robbery at a National Airport parking lot. Divorced, he left

behind two teenage children, the paper reported.

The familiar eyes stared at her from the depths of the page, and a chill

went through her body. It was more obvious to her than to anyone else,

other than Page’s killer, that his death was not the result of a search

for cash and credit cards. A few minutes after talking to her, the man

was dead. She would have to be damn foolish to dismiss his death as a

coincidence. She jumped out of the truck and raced into the house.

She took out the gleaming silver metal Smith & Wesson Slim-Nine she had

kept locked in the metal box in the bedroom closet and quickly loaded

it. The Hydra-Shok hollowpoints would be highly effective against

anyone wishing to perpetrate a deadly attack.

She checked her wallet. Her concealed-weapon permit was still valid.

When she reached up to return the box to the top of the closet, the

pistol slipped out of her pocket and hit the nightstand before settling

on the carpeted floor. Thank God she’d had the safety on.

As she picked it up, she noted that a small corner of the hard plastic

grip had broken off from the impact, but everything else was intact.

Pistol in hand, she returned to the garage and climbed back into the

Ford.

She suddenly froze. A sound floated toward her from inside her house.

She flipped off the pistol’s safety, keeping one eye and the barrel of

the Smith & Wesson on the door leading back into the house. With her

free hand she struggled with her car keys. One of the keys slid across

her finger, gashing it. She hit the garage door opener clipped to the

truck’s sun visor. Her heart pounded while she waited for the damn door

to finish its agonizingly slow ascent. She kept her eyes glued to the

door to the house, expecting any moment for it to burst open.

Her mind darted back to the news story detailing Edward Page’s demise.

Two teenagers left behind. Her features grew deadly in their own right.

She was not leaving her little girl behind. Her grip tightened on the

butt of the pistol. She hit a button on the driver’s-side armrest and

the passenger window slid down. Now she would have an unobstructed

firing line at the door leading into the house. She had never used her

weapon on anything other than shooting range targets. But she was going

to do her best to kill whoever was about to come through that door.

She did not notice the man bending low to come through the garage door

as it was opening. He stepped quickly to the driver’s-side door, pistol

drawn. At that instant, the door from the house into the garage started

to open. Sidney’s grip tightened even more on her weapon until the

veins rode high on her hands. Her finger started to descend on the

trigger.

“Jesus Christ, lady! Put it down. Now!” The man next to the car

yelled, his pistol pointed right at the driver’s window and through it

to Sidney’s left temple.

Sidney whirled around in the car and found herself eye to eye with Agent

Ray Jackson. Suddenly the house door to the garage was thrown open and

crashed against the wall. Sidney jerked her head back in that direction

and watched the massive bulk of Lee Sawyer hurtle through the door, his

arm making wide arcs in the direction of the vehicles. Sidney slumped

back in her seat, sweat streaming off her forehead.

Ray Jackson, gun still in hand, threw open the door of the Explorer and

eyed both Sidney Archer and the gun that had almost taken a considerable

hole out of his partner. “Are you crazy?” He leaned across her lap and

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