TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

captain came on the loudspeaker to make her perfunctory greetings while

the flight attendants went about their normal routine–a routine that

was about to be interrupted.

All heads turned to the red flash that erupted on the right side of the

aircraft. Those sitting in the window seats on that side watched in the

starkest horror as the right wing buckled, metal skin tearing, rivets

popping free. Bare seconds passed before two-thirds of the wing sheared

off, carrying with it the starboard-side Rolls-Royce engine.

Like savaged veins, shredded hydraulic lines and cables whipped back and

forth in the fierce headwind as jet fuel from the cracked fuel tank

doused the fuselage.

The L500 immediately rolled left over on its back, making a shambles of

the cabin. Inside the fuselage every single human being screamed in

mortal terror as the plane whipped across the sky like a tumbleweed,

completely out of control. Passengers up and down the aisle were

violently torn from their seats. For most of them the short trip from

the seats was fatal. Screams of pain were heard as heavy pieces of

luggage, disgorged from compartments torn open when the shock waves of

air pressure gone wild exceeded their locking mechanism’s strength

limits, collided with soft human flesh.

The old woman’s hand slipped open and the rosary beads slid down to the

floor, which was now the ceiling of the upside-down plane. Her eyes

were wide open now, but not in fear. She was one of the fortunate ones.

A fatal heart attack had rescued her from the next several minutes of

sheer terror.

Twin-engine commercial jetliners are certified to fly on only one

engine. No jetliner, however, can fly with only one wing. The

air-worthiness of Flight 3223 had been irreversibly destroyed. The L500

settled into a tight nose-to-ground death spiral.

On the flight deck the two-member crew struggled valiantly with the

controls as their damaged aircraft shot downward through the overcast

skies like a spear through cotton. Unsure of the precise nature of this

catastrophe, they nevertheless were well aware that the aircraft and all

lives on board were in significant jeopardy. As they frantically tried

to regain control of the aircraft, the two pilots silently prayed they

would collide with no other plane as they hurtled to earth.

“Oh, my God!” The captain stared in disbelief at the altimeter’ as it

raced on its unstoppable course to zero. Neither the most sophisticated

avionics system in the world nor the most exceptional piloting skills

could reverse the startling truth facing every human being on the

fractured projectile: They were all going to die, and very soon. And as

happens in virtually all air crashes, the two pilots would be the first

to leave this world; but the others on board Flight 3223 would only be a

fraction of a second behind.

Lieberman’s mouth sagged open as he gripped the armrests in total

disbelief. As the plane’s nose dropped to six o’clock, Lieberman was

looking face down at the back of the seat in front of him, as if he were

at the very top of some absurd roller coaster. Unfortunately for him,

Arthur Lieberman would remain conscious until the very second the

aircraft met the immovable object that it was now racing toward. His

exit from the living would come several months ahead of schedule and not

at all according to plan. As the plane started its final descent, one

word escaped from Lieberman’s lips. Though monosyllabic, it was uttered

in one continuous shriek that could be heard over all of the other

terrifying sounds flooding the cabin.

“Noooo!”

CHAPTER TWO

WASHINGTON, D.C., METROPOLITAN AREA, ONE MONTH EARLIER

Jason Archer, his starched shirt dirty, his tie askew, labored through

the contents of the piles of boxes. A laptop sat beside him. Every few

minutes he would stop, pull a piece of paper from the morass and, using

a hand-held device, scan the contents of the paper into his lap-top.

Sweat trickled down his nose. The storage warehouse he was in was hot

and filthy. Suddenly a voice called out to him from somewhere within

the vast space. “Jason?” Footsteps approached. “Jason, are you here?”

Jason quickly closed up the box he was working on, shut down his laptop

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