Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

her face seemed to be pushing through her skin, her eye sockets

hollowing right in front of her. A centimeter of skin between her and

nothing. Her grand vision, the way out for them both, had suddenly

become a free fall of insane, dizzying proportion. Her wayward father

would have just packed up and fled into the night. What was his

daughter supposed to do?

CHAPTER 5

LEE PULLED OUT HIS PISTOL AND POINTED IT AHEAD of him as he moved

through the hallway. With his other hand he swung the flashlight in

slow, steady arcs.

The first room he peered into was the kitchen, containing a small

1950s-era refrigerator, GE electric range and tattered

black-and-yellow-checked linoleum flooring. The walls were discolored

in places by water damage. The ceiling was unfinished, the joists and

the subfloor above clearly visible. Lee gazed at the old copper pipes

and the newer grafts of PVC as they made a series of right angles

through the exposed, darkened wall studs.

There was no aroma of food here, only a smell of grease, presumably

hardened in the stove-top burners and in the bowels of the vent, along

with probably a few trillion bacteria. A chipped Formica table and

four bent-metal, vinyl-backed chairs stood in the center of the

kitchen. The counters were barren, no dishes visible. There were also

no towels, coffeemaker or condiment canisters, nor any other item or

personal touch that might have suggested the kitchen had been used in

the last decade or so. It was as though he had stepped back in time,

or happened upon a bomb shelter put into service during the hysteria of

the fifties.

The small dining room was across the hallway from the kitchen. Lee

looked at the waist-high wood paneling, darkened and cracked over the

years. He had a sudden chill, though the air was stale and oppressive

inside. The house apparently had no central heating, nor had Lee seen

any wall-mounted air conditioners. There had been no heating oil tank

outside either, at least aboveground. Lee eyed the chill-chasers

bolted along the bottom of the walls, their power cords plugged into

electrical outlets. As in the kitchen, the ceiling here was

unfinished. The electrical line to the dust-ridden chandelier ran

through holes bored in the exposed joists. Electricity, Lee deduced,

must have come to the home after it was first built.

As he moved down the hallway toward the front of the house, Lee was

unable to see the invisible trip beam, positioned at knee height, that

stretched across the hall. He pierced this security perimeter, and

from somewhere in the house a barely audible click was heard. Lee

jerked for a moment, pointing his gun in wide circles, and then

relaxed. It was an old house, and old houses made lots of noises. He

was just being jumpy, yet he had a right to be. The cottage and its

location were right the hell out of a Friday the 13th movie.

Lee entered one of the front rooms. There, under the sweep of his

flashlight, he saw that the furniture had been moved up against the

walls, and there were footprints and drag patterns in the layers of

dust on the floor. In the center of the room were a number of folding

chairs and a rectangular-shaped table. A stack of Styrofoam coffee

cups rested at one end of the table next to a coffeemaker. Packets of

coffee, creamer and sugar lay next to the coffeemaker.

Lee took all this in and jerked when he saw the windows. Not only were

the heavy drapes drawn tight, but also the windows had been boarded

over with big sheets of plywood, the drapes dangling from underneath

the wood.

“Shit,” Lee muttered. He quickly discovered that the small square

windows set in the front door had been covered over with cardboard. He

pulled out his camera and snapped some shots of all these puzzling

items.

Wanting to complete his search as soon as possible, Lee hurried up the

stairs to the second floor. He cautiously opened the door to the first

bedroom and peered in. The bed was small and made, and its smell of

mildew hit him immediately. The walls here were unfinished as well.

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