TOTAL CONTROL By: David Baldacci

He took the metal steps two at a time after making a visual sweep of the

building’s interior with his night-vision goggles. He opened the door

to a room, illuminating the small space with his flashlight.

He unlocked the filing cabinet and removed the surveillance camera.

He placed the videotape in one part of his knapsack, reloaded the camera

and replaced it in the cabinet. Five minutes later, the area was once

again quiet. The guard had not yet finished his last cup of coffee.

At the crack of dawn, a Gulfstream V lifted off from the Seattle

airport. The black-clad figure was now dressed in jeans and a

sweat-shirt and was fast asleep in one of the luxurious cabin chairs,

his dark hair falling into his youthful face. Across the aisle, Frank

Hardy, head of a firm specializing’ in corporate security, and

counter-industrial espionage, intently read every page of a lengthy

report as the plane soared through the now clear morning sky; the last

vestiges of the previous night’s storm system had finally pushed on.

Inside a metal briefcase was the videotape that had been removed from

the camera in the file cabinet. The case was within easy reach of his

hand. A steward appeared and poured out another cup of coffee for the

plane’s one awake passenger. Hardy’s eyes rested on the metal

briefcase. His brow wrinkled and, from long habit, his fingers traced

and retraced the worry lines stamped across his forehead. Then Hardy

put the report down, leaned back in his seat and stared out the cabin

window as the aircraft headed east. He had a lot to think about. He

was not a happy man right now. Both his jaw and his gut clenched and

unclenched as the sleek jet raced on.

The Gulfstream hit its cruising altitude on a flight that would

culminate in Washington, D.C. The rays of the rising sun reflected off

the familiar company logo emblazoned on the aircraft’s empennage. The

soaring eagle represented an organization like no other.

More recognized worldwide than even Coca-Cola, more feared than most of

the world’s largest conglomerates–which, by comparison, were aging

dinosaurs aware of the constant pull of extinction. It was the complete

package as the twenty-first century hurtled toward them, just like the

bold eagle symbol that was rapidly making its way into the four corners

of the world and everywhere in between.

Triton Global would have it no other way.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

A uniformed security guard escorted Lee Sawyer through the massive lobby

of the Marriner Eccles Building, the Constitution Avenue home of the

Federal Reserve Board. Sawyer thought that the premises were in keeping

with the enormous clout of their occupant.

After walking up to the second floor, Sawyer and his escort stopped at a

thick wooden door and the escort knocked. The words “Come in” filtered

out to them. Sawyer moved through the doorway to a large, cozily

furnished office. The floor-to-ceiling bookcases, dark furniture and

ornate moldings made a somber impression. The thick drapes were closed.

A green banker’s lamp glowed on the large, leather-topped partners desk.

The smell of cigars hovered everywhere; Sawyer could almost see gray

wisps of smoke hanging in the air like ghostly apparitions. It reminded

him of the scholarly studies of some of his old college professors. A

small fire burning in the fireplace threw both warmth and light into the

room When a man of massive girth swiveled around in the chair behind the

desk, Sawyer’s attention was instantly riveted upon him. A corpulent

red face housed light blue eyes hiding behind lids reduced to slits by

sagging facial skin and the overgrowth of a pair of eyebrows as thick as

Sawyer had ever seen. The hair was white and abundant, the nose was

wide and the tip was even redder than the rest of the face. For one

brief moment, Sawyer jokingly wondered if he was confronting Santa

Claus.

The man rose from behind the desk, and his big, cultured voice flowing

across the room to envelop Lee Sawyer dispelled all such thoughts.

“Agent Sawyer, I’m Walter Burns, vice chairman of the Federal Reserve

Board.”

Sawyer moved forward to grip the flabby hand. Burns matched the

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