TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

looked out the window. Finally he looked over at her. “We’ll go to

Boston together and then we’ll talk about it. If you still want to

split up then, so be it.”

While Sidney sat outside in the van, Patterson went in to rent a car.

When he came out a few minutes later and walked over to the van, Sidney

rolled down the window.

“Did you rent a car?” Sidney asked.

Patterson nodded. “They’ll have it ready in about five minutes. I got

us a roomy four-door. You can sleep in the back; I’ll drive.”

“I love you, Dad.” Sidney rolled the window back up and drove off. Her

stunned father ran after her, but she was quickly out of sight.

“Christ!” Sawyer peered out the window into near-zero visibility.

“Can’t we go any faster?” he yelled through the window to the trooper.

They had already seen the devastation of the Patterson beach house and

were now desperately looking everywhere for Sidney Archer and her

family.

The trooper yelled back, “We go any faster, we’re going to end up dead

in some ditch.”

Dead. Is that what Sidney Archer is right now? Sawyer looked at his

watch. He fumbled in his pocket for a cigarette.

Jackson was looking at him. “Damn, Lee, don’t start smoking in here.

It’s hard enough to breathe as it is.”

Sawyer’s lips parted as he felt the slender object in his pocket. He

slowly pulled the card out.

As Sidney headed out of town, she decided to keep her emotions in check

and let longtime habits take over. For what seemed like forever, she

had been merely reacting to a series of crises, without the opportunity

to think things through. She was an attorney, trained to view facts

logically, look at the details and then work them into an overall

picture. She certainly had some information to work with.

Jason had labored on Triton’s records for the CyberCom deal. That she

knew. Jason had disappeared under mysterious circumstances and had sent

her a disk with some information on it. That, also, was a fact. Jason

was not selling secrets to RTG, not with Brophy in the picture. That

also was clear to her. And then there were the financial records.

Apparently Triton had simply handed them over. Then why the big scene

at the meeting in New York? Why had Gamble demanded to talk to Jason

about his work on the records, particularly after he had sent Jason an

e-mail congratulating him on a job well done? Why the big deal of

getting Jason on the phone? Why put her in an impossible situation like

that?

She slowed down and pulled off the road. Unless the intent all along

was to put her in an impossible situation. Making it appear as though

she had lied. Suspicion had followed her from that very moment.

What exactly had been in those records in the warehouse?

Was that what was on the disk? Something Jason had found out?

That night Gamble’s limo had whisked her to his estate, he had obviously

wanted some answers. Could he have been attempting to find out if Jason

had told her anything?

Triton had been a client for several years now. A big, powerful company

with a very private past. But how did that tie in to all the other

things? The deaths of the Page brothers. Triton beating out RTG for

CyberCom. As Sidney thought once more of that horrible day in New York,

something clicked. Ironically, she had the same thought Lee Sawyer had

experienced earlier but for a different reason: A performance.

My God! She had to get in touch with Sawyer. She put the van in drive

and got back on the road. A shrill ring interrupted her thoughts. She

looked around at the interior of the van for the source until her eyes

alighted on the cellular phone resting on a magnetized plate against the

lower dashboard. She hadn’t noticed it until just that moment. It was

ringing? Her hand went instinctively down to answer it and then pulled

back. Finally she picked it up. “Yes?”

“I thought you weren’t interested in playing games.” The voice was

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