Absolute Power (43 page)

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Authors: David Baldacci

Tags: #United States, #Murder, #Presidents -- United States -- Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Political fiction, #Presidents, #Presidents - United States, #General, #Literary, #Secret service, #Suspense, #Motion Picture Plays, #Thrillers, #Mystery Fiction, #Fiction, #Espionage, #Homicide Investigation

BOOK: Absolute Power
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“I said I’ll handle it.”

Lord turned to look back out the window. Kirksen’s hurt pride was of absolutely no consequence to him. What concerned Lord was the fact that someone had tried to kill the man accused of murdering Christine Sullivan. And no one could reach Walter Sullivan.

*   *   *

J
ACK PARKED HIS CAR, LOOKED ACROSS THE STREET AND
closed his eyes. That didn’t help since the vanity plates seemed to be imprinted on his brain. He jumped out of his car and dodged traffic as he made his way across the slippery street.

He inserted the key in the lock, took a quick breath, and turned the doorknob.

Jennifer sat in the small chair by the TV. Her short black skirt was matched by black heels and patterned black stockings. A white blouse was open at the collar where an emerald necklace fired dazzling color into the little room. A full-length sable was draped carefully on the sheet covering his ragged couch. She was clicking her nails against the TV set when he walked in. She looked at him without speaking. The thick ruby lips were set in a firm, vertical line.

“Hi, Jenn.”

“You’ve certainly been a very busy boy the last twenty-four hours, Jack.” She didn’t smile, her nails continued to click.

“Gotta keep hustling, you know that.”

He took off his coat, undid his tie and went into the kitchen for a beer. He reemerged, and sat across from her on the couch.

“Hey, got a new piece of business today.”

She reached in her handbag and tossed across the
Post.

“I know.”

He looked down at the headlines.

“Your firm won’t let you do it.”

“Too bad, I already did it.”

“You know what I mean. What in God’s name has gotten into you?”

“Jenn, I know the guy, okay? I know him, he’s a friend of mine. I don’t believe he killed the woman, and I’m going to defend him. Lawyers do that every day in every place where there are lawyers, and in this country that’s basically everywhere.”

She leaned forward. “It’s Walter Sullivan, Jack. Think about what you’re doing.”

“I know it’s Walter Sullivan, Jenn. What? Luther Whitney doesn’t deserve a good defense because somebody
says
he killed Walter Sullivan’s wife? Excuse me but exactly where is that written?”

“Walter Sullivan is your client.”

“Luther Whitney is my friend and I’ve known him a lot longer than I’ve known Walter Sullivan.”

“Jack, the man you’re defending is a common criminal. He’s been in and out of jails all his life.”

“Actually he hasn’t been in prison for over twenty years.”

“He’s a convicted felon.”

“But he’s never been convicted of murder,” Jack fired back.

“Jack, there are more attorneys in this city than there are criminals. Why can’t another lawyer handle it?”

Jack looked at his beer. “You want one?”

“Answer my question.”

Jack stood up and hurled the beer bottle against the wall.

“Because he goddamn asked me!”

Jenn looked up at him, the frightened look that had crossed her face passing as soon as the glass fragments and beer hit the floor. She picked up her coat and put it on.

“You’re making a huge mistake and I hope you come to your senses before you do
irreversible
damage. My father almost had a coronary when he read that story.”

Jack put his hand on her shoulder, turned her face to his and said quietly, “Jenn, this is something I have to do. I would’ve hoped you could support me on this.”

“Jack, why don’t you stop drinking beer and start thinking about how you want to spend the rest of your life.”

When the door closed behind her, Jack slumped against it, rubbing his head until he thought the skin would start to peel away under the pressure his fingers were exerting.

He watched from the tiny, dirty window as the vanity plates disappeared into the blur of snow. He sat down, looked at the headlines again.

Luther wanted to cut a deal but there was no deal to cut. The stage was set. Everyone wanted to see this trial. The TV news had given a detailed analysis of the case; Luther’s photo must have been seen by several hundred million people. They already had public opinion polls about Luther’s guilt or innocence, and he was running far behind in all of them. And Gorelick was licking his chops thinking that this was the vehicle to catapult him into the Attorney General’s office in a few years. And in Virginia, Attorneys General often ran for, and won, the Governor’s Mansion.

Short, balding, big-voiced, Gorelick was as deadly as a rattler on speed. Dirty tactics, questionable ethics, just waiting to bury the knife in your back at the first opportunity. That was George Gorelick. Jack knew he was in for a long, tough fight.

And Luther wasn’t talking. He was scared. And what did Kate have to do with that fear? Nothing was adding up. And Jack was going to walk into court tomorrow and plead Luther not guilty when he had absolutely no way to prove that Luther wasn’t. But proof was the state’s job. The problem was they probably had just enough to put them over the top. Jack would peck and chip, but he had a three-time loser as a client, even though the record said Luther had remained clean for the last two decades. They wouldn’t care about that. Why should they? His guy made for the perfect ending to a tragic story. A poster boy for the three-strikes rule. Three heavies and your life is over, starring Luther Whitney.

He tossed the newspaper across the room and cleaned up the broken glass and spilled beer. He rubbed the back of his neck, felt the underused muscles in his arms and went to his bedroom and changed into sweats.

*   *   *

T
HE
YMCA
WAS TEN MINUTES AWAY
. A
MAZINGLY
J
ACK
found a parking space right in front and went inside. The black sedan behind him wasn’t as lucky. The driver had to circle the block several times and then pull down the street and park on the other side.

The driver wiped his passenger-side window clear and checked out the front of the Y. Then he made up his mind, climbed out of his car and ran to the steps. He looked around, glanced at the gleaming Lexus and then slowly walked inside.

Three pickup games later, the sweat was pouring down Jack’s body. He sat down on the bench as the teenagers continued to run up and down the court with the inexhaustible energy of youth. Jack groaned as one of the lanky black kids dressed in loose gym shorts, tank shirt and oversized sneakers tossed the ball at him. He tossed it back.

“Hey man, you tired?”

“No, just old.”

Jack stood up, rubbed the kinks out of his aching thighs and headed out.

As he was leaving the building he felt a hand on his shoulder.

*   *   *

J
ACK DROVE
. H
E GLANCED AT HIS NEW PASSENGER
.

Seth Frank looked over the interior of the Lexus. “I’ve heard great things about these cars. How much it run you, if you don’t mind my asking?”

“Forty-nine-five, loaded.”

“Like hell! I don’t even come close to making that in a year.”

“Neither did I until recently.”

“Public defenders don’t make the big bucks, I’ve heard.”

“You heard right.”

The men fell silent. Frank knew he was breaking more rules than they probably had written down and Jack knew that too.

Finally Jack looked at him. “Look, Lieutenant, I’m assuming you didn’t just come out here to check my taste in automobiles. Is there something you want?”

“Gorelick’s got a winning case against your guy.”

“Maybe. Maybe not. I’m not throwing in the towel if that’s what you’re thinking.”

“You pleading him not guilty?”

“No, I’m gonna drive him down to the Greensville Correctional Center and inject the shit into him myself. Next question.”

Frank smiled. “Okay, I deserved that. I think you and I need to talk. Some things about this case don’t add up. Maybe it helps or hurts your guy, I don’t know. You willing to listen?”

“Okay, but don’t think this flow of information is going to be a two-way street.”

“I know a place where you can actually cut the meatloaf with a butter knife and the coffee’s passable.”

“Is it an out-of-the-way place? I don’t think you’d look good in a deputy’s uniform.”

Frank looked over at him, grinning. “Next question.”

Jack managed a smile and then drove home to change.

*   *   *

J
ACK ORDERED ANOTHER CUP OF COFFEE WHILE
F
RANK PLAYED
with his first. The meatloaf had been terrific and the place was so isolated, Jack wasn’t even sure where they were. Rural, southern Maryland he thought. He looked around at the few occupants of the rustic dining room. No one was paying them any undue attention. He turned back to his companion.

Frank looked at him in an amused fashion. “I understand you and Kate Whitney had a thing going a while back.”

“Did she tell you that?”

“Hell no. She came down to the station a few minutes after you left today. Her father wouldn’t see her. I talked with her for a while. Told her I was sorry about how things had gone down.”

Frank’s eyes glistened for a moment and then he continued. “I shouldn’t have done what I did, Jack. Using her to get to her old man. Nobody deserves that.”

“It worked. Some people would say don’t argue with success.”

“Right. Well anyway the subject got around to you. I’m not so old yet that I can’t see a gleam in a woman’s eyes.”

The waitress brought Jack’s coffee. He sipped it. Both men looked out the window where the snow had finally stopped and the whole earth seemed to be covered with a soft, white blanket.

“Look, Jack, I know the case against Luther is just about all circumstantial. But that’s sent plenty of people to jail.”

“I’m not arguing with that.”

“The truth is, Jack, there’s an awful lot of shit that doesn’t make any sense.”

Jack put down his coffee and leaned forward.

“I’m listening.”

Frank looked around the room and then back at Jack. “I know I’m taking a chance doing this, but I didn’t become a cop to send people to jail for crimes they didn’t commit. Plenty enough guilty people out there.”

“So what doesn’t add up?”

“You’ll see some of it for yourself in the reports you’ll get in your discovery, but the fact is I’m convinced Luther Whitney burgled that house and I’m also convinced that he didn’t kill Christine Sullivan. But—”

“But you think he saw who did.”

Frank sat back in his chair and stared wide-eyed at Jack. “How long have you thought that?”

“Not long. Any ideas on the matter?”

“I’m thinking your guy almost got caught with his hand in the cookie jar and then had to actually hide in that cookie jar.”

Jack looked puzzled. Frank took a few minutes to explain about the vault, the incongruity of the physical evidence and his own questions.

“So Luther’s in the vault all this time watching whoever gets it on with Mrs. Sullivan. Then something happens and she gets popped. Then Luther watches whoever wipe away all traces.”

“That’s how I got it figured, Jack.”

“So he doesn’t go to the cops because he can’t without incriminating himself.”

“That explains a lot.”

“Except who did it.”

“The only obvious suspect is the husband, and I don’t believe it was him.”

Jack thought back to Walter Sullivan. “Agreed. So who’s not so obvious?”

“Whoever she was meeting that night.”

“From what you’ve told me about the deceased’s sex life, that narrows it down to a couple million.”

“I didn’t say it would be easy.”

“Well, my hunch is it’s not some ordinary Joe.”

“Why’s that?”

Jack took a swallow of coffee and looked at his slice of apple pie. “Look, Lieutenant—”

“Make it Seth.”

“Okay, Seth, I’m walking a fine line here. I hear where you’re coming from and I appreciate the info. But . . .”

“But you’re not absolutely sure you can trust me, and in any event, you don’t want to say anything that might prejudice your client?”

“Something like that.”

“Fair enough.”

They paid the bill and left. Driving back the snow started again with such velocity that the wipers were having a hard time keeping up.

Jack looked over at Frank, who stared straight ahead, lost in thought or maybe just waiting for Jack to start talking.

“Okay. I’ll take the chance, I don’t have a helluva lot to lose, do I?”

Frank continued to stare straight ahead. “Not that I can see.”

“Let’s assume for the moment that Luther was in the house and saw the woman murdered.”

Frank looked over at Jack; there was relief in the detective’s features.

“Okay.”

“You’ve got to know Luther, know how he thinks, to understand how he would react to something like that. He’s about as unshakable a person as I’ve ever met. And I know his record doesn’t indicate it, but he’s about as trustworthy and dependable as you can get. If I had kids and needed to leave them with someone I’d leave them with Luther because I know absolutely nothing bad would happen to them on his watch. He’s incredibly capable. Luther sees everything. He’s a control freak.”

“Everything except his daughter leading him into a trap.”

“Right, except for that. He wouldn’t have seen that coming. Not in a million years.”

“But I know the kind of guy you’re talking about, Jack. Some of the guys I’ve busted, except for the little habit of taking other people’s property, they’re some of the most honorable people I’ve ever met.”

“And if Luther saw this woman killed, I’m telling you he would’ve found some way to deliver the guy to the cops. He wouldn’t have let it go. He just wouldn’t!” Jack stared grimly out the window.

“Except?”

Jack looked over at him. “Except for a helluva good reason. Like maybe he knew the person or knew
of
him.”

“You mean the kind of person people would have a hard time believing could do something like that so Luther figures why even bother?”

“There’s more to it than that, Seth.” Jack turned the corner and pulled up next to the YMCA. “I’ve never seen Luther scared before this all happened. And he’s scared now. Terrified in fact. He’s resigned himself to take the rap for the whole thing and I don’t know why. I mean he left the country for godsakes.”

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