Saving Faith By: David Baldacci

the alarm computer into thinking it had phone service. To do this, he

installed the in-line component and threw the switch, effectively

giving the Thornhills’ home a dial tone and phone line that went

absolutely nowhere. He had also found out that the Thornhills’ alarm

system had no cellular backup, just the regular landline. That was a

big hole. A cellular backup was incapable of being fooled, since it

was a wireless system with no way for Lee to access its feed line.

Virtually all alarm systems in the country had the very same backbone

land- and data-lines. And, thus, they all had back doors in. Lee had

just completed his. He packed up his tools and made his way through

the woods to the rear of the Thornhills’ home. He located a window

that was not visible from the street. He had a copy of the Thornhills’

floor plan and alarm layout. It had been provided to him by Fred

Massey. By accessing this window, he could reach the upstairs alarm

panel without passing any motion detector points. He pulled a stun gun

from his backpack and held it flush against the window. The windows

were all wired, even the second-floor ones, he knew. And both top and

bottom window components had contacts. Mosthomes only had contacts at

the bottom window casement; if that had been the case here, Lee would

have simply picked the window lock and slid down the top window,

without breaking any contacts. He pulled the trigger on the stun gun

and then moved it to another position on the window where he thought

the contact elements were probably located. In all, he fired eight

shots into the window frame from the stun gun. The electrical charge

from the gun would melt the contacts, fusing them together and

rendering them inoperable. He picked the sash lock, held his breath

and slid the window up. Noalarm sounded. He quickly climbed through

the window and closed it. Pulling a small flashlight from his pocket,

he found the stairs and headed up The Thornhills, he quickly observed,

lived in extremely comfortable luxury. The furnishings were mostly

antique; real oil paintings hung on the walls; and his feet melted into

the thick and, he assumed, expensive carpet.

The alarm panel was where all such alarm panels were located; on the

upper floor in the master bedroom. He unscrewed the plate and found

the wire for the sound cannon. Two snips and the alarm system had

suddenly developed laryngitis. Now he was free to roam. He went

downstairs and passed in front of the motion detector, waving his arms

in defiance, even giving it the finger, pretending it was Thornhill

there scowling at him, helpless to do anything about the intrusion. The

red light came on and the alarm system was activated, although the

system no longer could scream its warning. The computer would soon be

dialing the central station, only its call would never get there. It

would dial the number eight times, get no answer and then it would stop

trying and go back to sleep. At the central station, everything would

seem perfectly normal: a burglar’s dream.

Lee watched as the red light on the motion detector disappeared. Each

time he passed in front of it, though, it would go through the same

routine, with the same result. Call eight times and then stop. Lee

smiled. So far, so good. Before the Thornhills came home he would

reattach the wires for the sound cannons: Thornhill would be suspicious

if the normal beeping sound didn’t occur when he opened the door. But

for now, Lee had work to do.

CHAPTER 55

THE WHITE HOUSE DINNER WAS VERY MEMORABLE for Mrs. Thornhill. Her

husband, on the other hand, was working. He sat at the long table and

made inconsequential conversation when called upon, but spent most of

his time listening intently to the guests. There were a number of

foreign visitors tonight, and Thornhill knew that good intelligence

might come from unusual sources, even a White House dinner. Whether

the foreign guests knew he was with the CIA, he wasn’t sure. That was

certainly not public knowledge. The guest list that would be printed

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