Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

joint and the three billy goats gruff trounced the evil troll and lived

happily ever after in their new pasture of grass. Sounded nice. Where

could she buy some? And then, undressing for bed, Reynolds would

endure spasms of crushing guilt. The reality was that her kids would

be grown and gone before she blinked her eyes twice, and she routinely

shortchanged them on three short fairy tales because she wanted to do

something so unimportant as sleep. Sometimes it was better not to

think too much. Reynolds was a classic overachiever and a

perfectionist, to boot, while a “perfect parent” was the world’s

greatest oxymoron.

“I’ll try my best. I promise.”

The disappointed look on her daughter’s face made Reynolds turn and

flee the room. She stopped at the small room on the first floor that

served as her study. From the top of a cabinet she removed a squat,

heavy metal box, which she unlocked. Removing her SIG 9mm, she loaded

in a fresh mag, pulled the slide back to chamber a round, clicked the

safety on, slid the weapon in her clip holster and was out the door

before she could think any more about another interrupted meal in a

long string of disappointments for her children. Superwoman: career,

kids, she had it all. Now, if she could only clone herself. Nice.

CHAPTER 29

LEE AND FAITH HAD MADE TWO STOPS ON THE WAY to North Carolina, once for

a late lunch at a Cracker Barrel and another at a large strip mall in

southern Virginia. Lee had seen a billboard off the highway

advertising a week-long gun show. The parking lot was packed with

pickup trucks RVs and cars with fat tires and engines erupting through

their hoods Some of the men were dressed in Polo and Chaps, and others

in Grateful Dead T-shirts and ragged jeans. Americans of all

backgrounds apparently loved their guns. “Why here?” Faith asked as

Lee got off the bike. “Virginia law requires that licensed gun dealers

conduct on-the-spot background checks on people trying to buy weapons,”

he explained. “You have to fill out a form, have your gun permit and

two forms of identification. But the law doesn’t apply to gun shows.

All they want is your money. Which, by the way, I need.” “Do you

really have to have a gun?” He stared at her as though she had just

hatched from an egg. “Every body coming after us has them.” Unable to

dispute this devastating logic, she said nothing more, gave him the

cash and huddled on the bike as he went inside. Leave it to thetman to

say something that would paralyze her very soul. Inside, Lee purchased

a Smith & Wesson double-action auto pistol {with a fifteen-round mag,

chambering 9mm Parabellums. The auto pistol tag was misleading. You

had to pull the trigger each time to fire. The “auto” term referred to

the fact that the pistol automatically loaded a new round with each

pull of the trigger. He also bought a box of ammo and a cleaning kit

and then returned to the parking lot.

Faith watched closely as he packed the gun and ammo away in the

motorcycle’s storage compartment.

“Feel safer now?” she asked dryly.

“Right now I wouldn’t feel safe sitting in the Hoover Building with a

hundred FBI agents staring at me.”

“Gee, I wonder why.”

They made Duck, North Carolina, by nightfall, and Faith gave Lee

directions to the house in the Pine Island community.

When they pulled up in front, Lee stared at the immense structure,

tugged off his helmet and turned to her. “I thought you said it was

small.”

“Actually, I think you referred to it as small. I said it was

comfortable.” She climbed off the Honda and stretched out her body.

Every bit of her, especially her butt, was one solid knot.

“It must be at least six thousand square feet.” Lee continued to stare

at the three-story, wooden-shingle-siding house that had dual stone

chimneys and a cedar shake roof. Two broad veranda-style porches ran

across the second and third floors, which gave it a plantation feel.

There were gabled turrets and walls of lattice and glass; and immense

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