TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

Sunday afternoon. It had seemed a terrific place to raise kids, they

had both decided. So much they had wanted to do. So much.

She felt another wave of sobs climbing diligently toward the surface.

She sped up and turned on to a main road. In ten more minutes she was

looking at the red and yellow colors of the neighborhood McDonald’s. She

pulled into the drive-through and ordered a large coffee. As she

pressed the window button, she was staring into the freckled face of a

gangly teenage girl, her long, auburn hair tied back in a ponytail, who

would more than likely grow up into a lovely young woman, just as Amy

would. Sidney hoped the girl still had her father. It jolted her again

to think that Amy was now fatherless.

Within an hour she was headed west on Route 29, a narrow black strip of

road that split gentle rolling Virginia countryside as it cut a roughly

forty-five-degree angle through Virginia and on across the North

Carolina border. Sidney had traveled the road many times while she

attended law school at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville.

It was a beautiful drive past long-silent Civil War battlefields and old

yet still functioning family farms. In the fall and spring the colors

of the foliage rivaled any painting she had ever seen. Names like

Brightwood, Locust Dale, Madison and Monrpe-lier flashed by on the road

signs, and Sidney thought back to the many trips she and Jason had taken

to Charlottesville to attend some function or other. Now no part of the

familiar road or countryside felt comforting.

The night swept on. Sidney looked at the dashboard clock and was

surprised to see it was nearing one in the morning. She accelerated and

the truck flew down the empty road. Outside, the temperature continued

to drop as she headed into higher elevations. Thick clouds had settled

in and the spread of her headlights was the only contrast to the

pitch-blackness. She turned up the truck’s heat even more and hit her

high beams.

An hour later, she glanced at the map resting next to her on the front

seat. Her turnoff was coming up. She held her body rigid as she drew

nearer to her destination. She started to count the miles on her

odometer.

At Ruckersville she headed west. She was now in Greene County,

Virginia, rustic and rural, far removed from the pace of life Sidney

knew and had thrived in. The county seat was the town of

Stan-dardsville, whose emotional climate Was now anything but, with an

impact crater and scorched earth appearing on television screens all

over the world.

Sidney finally pulled off the road and peered around to try to fix her

location. The darkness of the countryside enveloped her. She flicked

on the reading light and held the map close to her face. Getting her

bearings, she continued down the slash of road another mile until she

rounded a bend of partially naked slender elms, knotty maples and

towering oaks, after which the vista opened up to stark, fiat farmland.

At the end of the road, a police cruiser was parked near a rusted,

leaning mailbox. To the right of the mailbox was a dirt road that

snaked its way back, with full, well-tended evergreen hedges bordering

the dirt road on either side. In the distance the earth seemed to glow

like a huge phosphorous cave.

She had found the place.

In the swirl of the Explorer’s headlights, Sidney noticed that it was

lightly snowing. As she pulled up closer, the door of the police car

opened and a uniformed officer wearing a neon-orange all-weather slicker

stepped from the vehicle. He walked over to the Ford, pointed his

flashlight at the license plate and then swept it over the Explorer’s

exterior before its beam came to rest on the driver’s-side window.

Sidney took a deep breath, hit the window switch and the glass slowly

slid down.

The officer’s face appeared at her shoulder. His upper lip was

partially covered by a bushy mustache streaked with gray, the corners of

his eyes were heavily stacked with wrinkles. Even under the orange

raincoat, the bulky strength of his shoulders and chest were evident.

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