Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

feverishly high pace.

He jumped off the boardwalk, squatted low behind some saw grass and

peered at the back of Faith’s beach house. What he saw chilled him to

the bone. The two men were dressed all in black and were sliding over

the rear wall of Faith’s courtyard. Were they the Feds? Or were they

the men who had been prepared to assassinate Faith at the airport?

Please, God, don’t let it be them. The two men had already disappeared

over the wall. In seconds they would be in the house. Had Faith reset

the alarm system after she let him out? No, he thought, she probably

hadn’t.

Lee jumped up and dashed toward the house. As he crossed the

boardwalk, he sensed something coming at him from the left as the

darkness began to lift even more. That sensation was probably the only

thing that saved his life.

The knife plunged into his arm instead of his neck as he ducked and

rolled. He came up bleeding, but the rigid material of the bike suit

had absorbed a good deal of the blow. His attacker didn’t hesitate but

leaped straight at him.

However, Lee timed it just right, managed to raise his good arm, pushed

hard, levered the man over him, throwing him into the saw grass which

was about as unpleasant as having a sharp knife driven into your flesh.

Lee lunged for his gun, which he had lost when the guy had slammed into

him. Lee had no qualms about shooting the guy down and raising a

ruckus. Right now he would welcome any assistance the local police

cared to provide.

His opponent made a stunning recovery, however, bursting out of the saw

grass with startling velocity and colliding with Lee before he could

retrieve his pistol. The two men landed at the edge of the steps. Lee

saw the knife thrust coming again but was able to grip the man’s wrist

before the blade hit him. The guy was strong; Lee could feel the

steely tendons in the man’s forearm and in the rocklike triceps as he

grabbed the man’s upper arm in an attempt to force the knife out of his

hand. But Lee wasn’t exactly a weakling either. He hadn’t shoved tons

of barbells around for years for nothing.

The guy he was battling was an experienced fighter as well because he

managed to get in two or three efficient gut punches with his free

hand. After the first one, though, Lee tightened his abdominals and

obliques and felt little pain from the other jabs. He had spent over

two decades doing stomach crunches and having medicine balls slammed

into his belly. After that punishment, the human fist offered very

little difficulty for him, no matter how hard it was thrown.

Thinking that two could play at that game, Lee let go of the man’s

upper arm and landed a body uppercut to the diaphragm. He felt the

wind go out of the guy, but the grip on the knife remained unbroken.

Then Lee landed three successful kidney punches, about the most painful

ones you could throw and still leave your opponent conscious. The

knife fell from the man’s hand, clattering down the steps.

Then both men rose to their feet, breathing hard, still clinging to

each other. Like a burst of wind, the man executed a nifty loop kick

that knocked Lee’s legs out from under him. He went down with a grunt

but popped right back up when he saw the guy go for his pistol. Being

seconds from death gave Lee’s body resiliency he could never summon in

less dangerous times. He hit the guy low and hard, linebacker to

running back in a textbook impact, and they both went over the edge of

the steps, bouncing painfully down each pressure-treated plank and

landing in a pile of twisted arms, legs and torsos in the sand and then

eating mouthfuls of salty water as they rolled into the water, the

rising tide being almost up to the steps.

Lee had seen the pistol tumble away during the fall, so he kicked

himself free and stood in ankle-deep water. The guy rose too, but not

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