Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

there, she would tell no one. She would continue to investigate why

Newman was using an alias, but that would be done on her own time. She

wasn’t going to destroy his memory without a very compelling reason.

She owed the man that.

She left Anne Newman sitting on the sofa, the photo album open in her

lap. The ironic thing was, if Newman was the leak on the Lockhart

case, he had probably helped himself to an early death. Now that

Reynolds thought about it, whoever might have hired him had probably

hoped to eliminate the mole and the main target in one efficient

thrust. Only a slug deflecting off a pistol barrel had saved Faith

Lockhart from joining Ken Newman on a slab. And perhaps the assistance

of Lee Adams as well?

Whoever had orchestrated it clearly knew what he was doing. Which was

bad for Reynolds. Contrary to popular fiction and film, most criminals

weren’t that accomplished and couldn’t so easily outmaneuver the police

at every turn. The majority of murderers, rapists, burglars, robbers,

drug dealers and other felons were usually uneducated or scared; or

drugged-out punks or drunks terrified of their own shadows when off the

needle or bottle, yet demons when high. They left many clues behind

and were usually caught, or turned themselves in, or were ratted on by

their “friends.” They were prosecuted and did jail time or, in rare

cases, were executed. They were in no sense of the word

professionals.

Reynolds knew that this was not the case here. Amateurs didn’t find

ways to pay off veteran FBI agents. They didn’t hire hit men who

lurked in the woods waiting for their prey. They didn’t impersonate

FBI agents with credentials so authentic they had scared off the cops.

Sinister theories of conspiracy swirled in her head, sending a shiver

of fear down her back. No matter how long you did this, the fear was

always there. To be alive was to be afraid. To not be afraid was to

be dead.

* * *

As she walked out, Reynolds passed under a blinking fire detector that

was in the hallway. There were three other such devices in the house,

including one in Ken Newman’s office. While they were plugged into the

home’s electrical wiring and did function as designed, they all also

housed sophisticated surveillance cameras with pinhole lenses. Two of

the wall outlets on each level were similarly “modified.” The

modifications had taken place two weeks ago when the Newmans had taken

a rare three-day vacation. This type of surveillance mode was based

upon PLCs, power line carrier technology favored by the FBI. And the

Central Intelligence Agency.

Robert Thornhill was on the prowl. And his attention would now turn to

Brooke Reynolds.

As she climbed in her car, Reynolds understood very clearly that she

was perhaps at the crossroads of her career. She would probably need

every bit of ingenuity and inner strength she could muster to survive

this. And yet the only thing she really wanted to do right now was

drive home and tell her two beautiful children the story of the three

pigs, just as slowly, accurately and colorfully as she possibly

could.

CHAPTER 31

THE WIND, IT TURNED OUT, WAS BLOWING HARD along the beach, and the

temperature had dropped drastically. Faith buttoned her over shirt

then, despite the cold, she took off her sandals and held them in one

hand.

“I like to feel the sand,” she explained to Lee. The tide was low, so

they had a broad beach on which to meander. The sky held scattered

clouds, the moon almost full, the stars winks of light staring down

upon them. Far out on the water they saw the blink of what was

probably a ship’s light or stationary buoy. Except for the wind, it

was completely quiet. No cars, no blaring TVs, no planes, no other

people.

“It’s really nice out here,” Lee finally said as he watched a sand crab

do its funny sideways scuttle into its tiny home. Stuck in the sand

was a piece of PVC pipe. Lee knew that fishermen would stick their

poles in the hollow tube when they were fishing from the beach.

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