TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

this ghastly conspiracy.”

“You may have been the one to introduce them, but that’s not to say Page

and whoever was funding him couldn’t have helped that introduction

occur. Moving in the right circles, helping publicize Page’s financial

brilliance to the right people.”

“Go on.”

“So Page and Lieberman hit it off. The third party may believe that

Lieberman may one day run the Fed. So Page and his backer bide their

time. The backer pays Page to keep up the romance. They would’ve

documented the relationship every which way from Sun-day–taped phone

calls, video, still photos–you can believe that.”

“Then Steven Page was all part of a setup. He never actually cared for

Arthur. I… I can’t believe this.” The little man sounded terribly

depressed.

“Then Page gets HIV and allegedly commits suicide.”

“Allegedly? You have doubts about his death?”

“I’m a cop, Charles, I have doubts about the Pope. Page is gone, but

his accomplice is still out there. Lieberman becomes Fed chair man, and

barn, the blackmail begins.”

“But Arthur’s death?”

“Well, your comment about him seeming almost happy that he had cancer

tells me one thing.”

“Which is?”

“That he was about to tell his blackmailer to take a flying leap and was

going to go public with the scheme.”

Tiedman rubbed his brow nervously. “It all makes perfect sense.”

Sawyer lowered his voice. “You haven’t mentioned ‘any of what we’ve

discussed to anyone, have you?”

“No, I haven’t.”

“Well, stick to that habit, and never let your guard down.”

“What exactly are you suggesting?” There was a sudden catch in Tiedman’s

voice.

“I’m just recommending in the very strongest possible terms that you be

very careful and do not tell anyone–not any of the Fed members,

including Walter Burns, your secretary, your assistants, your wife, your

friends–anything about this.”

“Are you saying that you think I’m in danger? I find that very hard to

believe.”

Sawyer’s tone was grim. “I’m sure Arthur Lieberman thought that tOO.”

Charles Tiedman gripped a pencil on his desk so hard that it snapped in

half. “I’ll certainly follow your advice to the letter.”

Thoroughly frightened, Tiedman hung up.

Sawyer leaned back in his chair and longed for another cigarette as his

mental engine went into overdrive. Somebody had obviously been paying

off Steven Page. Sawyer thought he had a reasonable answer for why:

setting up Lieberman. The question nagging at him now was who? And

then the biggest question of all: Who had killed Steven Page? The FBI

agent was now convinced, despite evidence to the contrary, that Steven

Page had been murdered. He picked up the phone. “Ray? It’s Lee. I

want you to give Lieberman’s personal physician another call.”

CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE

Bill Patterson looked at the dashboard clock and stretched out his large

body. They were traveling southbound about two hours north of Bell

Harbor. Next to him, his wife was sound asleep. It had been a far

longer trip to the market than they were expecting. Sidney Archer had

been incorrect. They had not stopped on the drive up to Bell Harbor,

and had reached the beach house barely ahead of the storm. Having piled

their luggage in the back bedroom, they headed out for food before the

storm worsened. The market in Bell Harbor was sold out, so they were

compelled to drive north to the far larger grocery in Port Vista. On

the way back, their route had been closed off by a jackknifed tanker

truck. Last night had been spent very uncomfortably in a motel.

Patterson now checked the backseat; Amy was also napping, her little

mouth forming a perfect circle. Patterson looked at the heavily falling

snow and grimaced. Fortunately, he had not been privy to the latest

news flashes proclaiming his daughter to be a fugitive from justice. He

was sick enough with worry as it was. In his anxiety he had chewed his

fingernails until they had bled and his gut was full of acid. He wanted

to be protecting Sidney now, as he had dutifully done when she was a

little girl. Ghosts and bogeymen had been his chief foes back then. The

current ones were far more deadly, he had to assume. At least he had

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