TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

After instructing her on what was wanted, they watched as she lugged

over a battered, bulky crime scene kit, opened it and began preparations

to perform a gunshot residue test, a GSR. However, time was running

out: Samples optimally had to be collected within six hours of the gun

having been fired, and Sawyer was afraid they were about to miss that

deadline.

The tech dipped a number of cotton swabs in a diluted nitric acid

solution. Separate swabs were rubbed over the front and back of each

corpse’s hands. If any of them had fired a gun recently, then testing

would reveal deposits of barium and antimony, primer charge components

used in the manufacture of virtually all ammo. It wasn’t conclusive. If

a positive result came back, it wouldn’t necessarily mean any of them

had fired the murder weapon, only some firearm within the last six

hours. In addition, they could have merely han died the firearm after

it had been fired–for instance, in a struggle-and gotten the residue

from the exterior of the weapon after it had just been fired. But a

positive GSR result could conceivably help Sidney Archer’s cause, Sawyer

figured. Even though all the evidence seemingly pointed to her

involvement in the homicides, Sawyer was dead certain she hadn’t pulled

the trigger.

“One more favor?” Sawyer asked Detective Royce. Royce’s eye brows shot

up. “I’d like a copy of that tape.”

“Sure. Whatever.”

Sawyer rode the elevator back up to the lobby, walked to his car and

phoned in for the FBI’s forensics team. While he waited for them to

arrive, one thought beat relentlessly through Sawyer’s head.

Where the hell was Sidney Archer?

CHAPTER FIFTY

Usually eschewing any except the most modest makeup, Sidney now took

great pains to stencil in her face with considerable detail, holding up

her compact as she stood in the stall in the women’s rest room at Penn

Station. She had concluded that the man pursuing her wouldn’t have

figured her to come back here. She then put on a tan leather cowboy

hat, pulling the brim down low over her forehead.

With enough artificial color on her face to almost qualify for hooker

status and her bloody clothes in a shopping bag destined for a Dumpster,

she walked out of the rest room attired in an assortment of garments she

had spent the better part of the day acquiring: tight stone-washed blue

jeans, pointy beige cowboy boots, thick white cotton shirt and a heavily

insulated black leather bomber jacket. She looked nothing like the

conservative Washington, D.C., attorney she had recently been and whom

the police would soon be hunting down for murder. She made certain the

.32 was carefully hidden away in an inner pocket. New York’s gun laws

were among the stiffest in the country.

A half-hour ride northeast on the commuter train took her to Stamford,

Connecticut, one of a string of bedroom communities feeding the working

New Yorker’s desire to live outside the hyper-kinetic metropolis. A

taxicab ride of twenty minutes took her to a lovely white brick home

with black shutters nestled in a quiet neighborhood of similarly

high-priced residences. The name PATTERSON was stenciled on the

mailbox. Sidney paid the cabdriver, but instead of going to the front

door she walked around back to the garage area. Next to the garage door

hung a large, ornate wooden bird feeder. Sidney looked around and then

stuck her hand into the feed, pushing through the rough particles until

she got to the bottom of the feeder. She pulled out the set of keys

buried there, went over to the back door, put a key in the lock and the

door opened. Her brother, Kenny, and his family were in France. He was

incredibly bright, ran a very successful independent publishing

business, but was also absentminded as hell. He had locked himself out

of every home he had ever owned, hence the keys in the bird feeder, a

fact well known to every member of his family.

The home was old, solidly built and beautifully decorated, with large

rooms and comfortable furnishings. Sidney did not have time to enjoy

the surroundings. She went into a small study. Against one wall was a

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