Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

risk that?”

Massey rubbed his smooth chin, thinking it over. When he looked up at

Buchanan, his expression was wary but interested.

“Do you really think you can nail this guy?”

“I’m prepared to die trying. And I need to work the phones. Call in

some very special help.” Buchanan smiled to himself A lobbyist to the

very end. He turned to Lee. “And I need your help, Lee. If you’re

willing.”

Lee looked surprised. “Me? What can I do to help anybody?”

“I spoke with Faith about you last night. She told me about your

‘special’ abilities. She said you were a good man to have in a bad

situation.”

“I guess she was wrong about that. Otherwise she wouldn’t be lying up

there with a hole in her chest.”

Buchanan put a hand on Lee’s arm. “I can barely function with the

guilt I have, for her having stepped in front of that bullet. But I

can’t change that now. What I can do is try to make sure she didn’t

risk her life for nothing. There’s great danger for you. Even if we

get this man, he has many at his back. There’ll always be some out

there.”

Buchanan settled back in his chair and watched Lee closely. Massey and

Reynolds stared at the PI too. Lee’s muscular arms and broad shoulders

were in stark contrast to the fragility of the look deep within his

eyes.

Lee Adams took a deep breath. What he really wanted to do was stand

next to Faith’s bed and never leave until she woke up, saw him, smiled,

said she’d be okay. And then, so would he. But, Lee knew, one rarely

got what one wished for in this life. So instead, he looked at

Buchanan and said, “I guess I’m your man.”

CHAPTER 54

THE BLACK SEDAN PULLED UP TO THE FRONT of the house. Robert Thornhill

and his wife, dressed in formal evening clothes, came out the front

door. Thornhill locked the house, then the two got in the car and were

driven away. The Thornhills were attending an official dinner at the

White House.

The sedan passed the phone-line control pedestal belonging to the

community where the Thornhills lived. The metal box was large, bulky

and painted light green. It had been placed there about two years ago

when the phone company had upgraded the communications lines for this

old neighborhood. The metal box had been a sudden eyesore in an area

that prided itself on splendid homes and high-dollar landscaping. Thus,

the residents had paid for a number of large bushes to be planted

around the aboveground pedestal. These bushes now hid the box

completely from the road, which meant that the telephone servicemen had

to approach it from the rear side, which faced the woods. Aesthetically

pleasing, the bushes were also very welcome to the man who had watched

the sedan pass by and then had opened the box and begun delicately

picking his way through its electronic guts.

Lee Adams identified the line going to the Thornhills’ residence with a

special piece of his own customized equipment. His background in

communications hardware was serving him well. The Thornhills’ home had

a good security system. However, every security system had an

Achilles’ heel: the phone line. Always the phone line. Thank you, Ma

Bell.

Lee went through the steps in his head. When an intruder broke into

someone’s home, the alarm went off and the computer dialed the central

monitoring station to inform him of the break-in. Then the security

person at the monitoring station called the home to see if everything

was okay. If the owner answered, he had to give his special code or

else the police would be sent. If no one answered the phone, the

police would be sent automatically. Simply put, Lee was making sure

that in this home security system the computer’s phone call would never

reach the monitoring station, yet the computer would think that it had.

He was accomplishing this by building an in-line component or phone

simulator. He had dropped the Thornhill * home from the landline feed,

effectively severing outside phone communication. Now he had to trick

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