Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

law firm that was doing pro bono work for one of Buchanan’s clients. He

had given up hope of the damn beeper ever sounding. When it did, he

thought he would suffer a stroke.

Now Buchanan’s dilemma was apparent. How to check the message and call

back without Thornhill knowing about it. Then he thought of a plan. He

called his driver. It was Thornhill’s man, of course. It always was.

They drove downtown to the law firm.

“I’ll be a couple of hours. I’ll phone when I’m done,” he told the

driver.

Buchanan went into the building. He had been here before, knew the

layout well. He didn’t go to the elevator bank, but instead went

through the main lobby and passed through a door in the back that also

served as a rear entrance to the parking garage. He took the elevator

down two levels and stepped off. He went through the underground lobby

area and out into the parking level. Right next to the door leading

out from the lobby was a pay phone. He put in his coins and dialed the

number that would allow him to check the message. His reasoning was

clear: If Thornhill could intercept a random hard-line call under a

thousand tons of concrete, he was the devil himself and Buchanan had no

chance of beating him anyway.

On the message Lee’s voice was tight, his words few. And the impact on

Buchanan was enormous. He had left a number. Buchanan dialed it. A

man answered the phone immediately.

“Mr. Buchanan?” Lee asked.

“Is Faith all right?”

Lee gave a sigh of relief. He was hoping that would be the man’s first

question. That told him a lot. But still, he had to be cautious.

“Just to verify it’s really you: You sent me a package of information.

How did you send it, and what was in it? And let me have the answers

fast.”

“Personal courier. I use Dash Services. The packet had a photo of

Faith, five pages of background information on her and my firm, the

contact phone number, a summary of my concerns and what I wanted you to

do. It also had five thousand dollars in cash in denominations of

fifties and twenties. I also called you three days ago at your office

and left a message on your machine. Now please tell me that Faith is

all right.”

“She’s fine, for now. But we have some problems.”

“Yes, we do. For starters, how do I know you’re Adams?”

Lee thought quickly. “I have a great Yellow Pages ad with a corny

magnifying glass and everything. I have three brothers. The youngest

works at a motorcycle shop in south Alexandria. He goes by Scotty, but

his nickname in college was Scooter because he played football and

could run so damn fast. If you want you can call him, check it out and

call me back.”

“Not necessary. I’m convinced. What happened? Why did you run?”

“Well, you would have too if someone tried to kill you.”

“Tell me everything, Mr. Adams. Leave nothing out.”

“Well, I know who you are, but I’m not sure I trust you. What can you

do about that?”

“You tell me why Faith went to the FBI. That much I do know. And then

I’ll tell you who you’re really up against. And it’s not me. When I

tell you who it is, you’ll wish it were me.”

Lee debated this for a moment. He could hear Faith getting up and

heading probably to the shower. Well here goes. “She was scared. She

said you had been acting strangely, jumpy for a while. She had tried

to talk to you about it, but you blew her off, even asked her to leave

the firm. That made her even more fearful. She was afraid the

authorities were on to you. She went to the FBI with the idea of

bringing you in to testify too. Against the people you were bribing.

You both cut a deal and walk.”

“That would never have worked.”

“Well, as she’s fond of telling me, it’s easy to second-guess.”

“So she’s told you everything?”

“Pretty much. She thought maybe you were the one who tried to kill

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