David Baldacci - Saving Faith
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- Название:Saving Faith
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Reynolds remembered that the closet at the cottage containing the video equipment had been found open.
"Okay, how could they have done it?"
"Well, there's a wide variety of specialized equipment available."
Reynolds shook her head. "No, we're not talking a lab setting. We're looking at doing it on site, where the equipment was set up. And maybe whoever did it wouldn't have even known there was video recording equipment there. So assume that whatever they happened to have with them would have been what they used."
The techs thought for a moment. "Well," one of them said, "if the person had a powerful magnet and passed it over the recorder a number of times, that could distort the tape by rearranging the metallic particles, which would, in turn, remove the previously recorded signals."
Reynolds took a deep, troubled breath. A simple magnet could have blown away her only clue. "Is there any way to get it back, the images on the tape?"
"It's possible, but it will take some time. We can't make any guarantees until we get in there."
"Do it. But let me make this real clear." She stood, towering over the two men. "I need to be able to see what's on that tape. I need to be able to see who was in that house. You have no higher priority than that. Check with the AD if you have a conflict, but whatever it takes, twenty-four hours a day. I need it. Understood?"
The men looked at each other briefly before nodding.
When Reynolds got back to her office, a man was waiting to see her.
"Paul." She nodded at him as she sat down.
Paul Fisher rose and closed the door to Reynolds's office. He was her liaison at Headquarters. He stepped over a pile of documents as he sat back down. "You look like you're overworked, Brooke. You always look like you're overworked. I guess that's what I love about you."
He smiled and Brooke caught herself smiling back.
Fisher was one of the few people at the FBI whom Reynolds looked up to, literally, as he was easily six-foot-five. They were about the same age, although Fisher was her superior in the chain of command and had been at the Bureau two years longer. He was competent and assured. He was also handsome, having retained the tousled blond hair and trim figure of his California days at UCLA. After her marriage had started to disintegrate, Reynolds had imagined having an affair with the divorced Fisher. Even now, his unexpected visit made Reynolds feel fortunate she'd had the opportunity to go home, shower and change her clothes.
Fisher's jacket was off, his shirt draped gracefully over his long torso. He had just come on duty, she knew, although he tended to be around at all hours.
"I'm sorry about Ken," he said. "I was out of town, or I would've been there last night."
Reynolds played with a letter opener on her desk. "Not as sorry as I am. And neither of us is anywhere near where Anne Newman is on the sorry meter."
"I've talked to the SAC," Fisher said, referring to the special agent in charge, "but I want you to tell me about it."
After she told him what she knew, he rubbed his chin. "Obviously the targets know you're on to them."
"It would seem so."
"You're not that far along in the investigation, are you?"
"Nowhere near referring it to the U.S. attorney for indictment, if that's what you mean."
"So Ken's dead and your chief and only witness is MIA. Tell me about Faith Lockhart."
She glanced up sharply, being equally disturbed by his choice of words and the blunt tone he had used to say them.
He stared back at her, his hazel eyes holding a definable measure of unfriendliness, Reynolds concluded. But right now, she knew, he was not supposed to be her friend. He represented Headquarters.
"Is there something you want to tell me, Paul?"
"Brooke, we've always shot straight with each other." He paused and tapped his fingers against the arm of the chair as though trying to communicate with her in Morse code. "I know Massey authorized some leeway for you last night, but they're all very concerned about you. You need to know that."
"I know that in light of recent developments—"
"They were concerned before this. Recent developments have only heightened that level of concern."
"Do they want me to just drop it? Christ, it could implicate people who have government buildings named after them."
"It's a question of proof. Without Lockhart what do you have?"
"It's there, Paul."
"What names has she given you, other than Buchanan?"
Reynolds looked momentarily flustered. The problem was Lockhart hadn't given them any names. Yet. She had been too smart for that. She was saving that for when her deal was completed.
"Nothing specific yet. But we'll get it. Buchanan didn't do business with local school board members. And she told us some of his scheme. They work for him while in power, and when they leave office he lines up jobs for them with no real duties and mega-dollars in compensation and other perks. It's simple. Simply brilliant. The level of detail she's provided us could not be made up."
"I'm not disputing her credibility. But again, can you prove your case? Right now?"
"We're doing everything we can to prove it. I was going to ask her to wear a wire for us when all this happened, but you can't rush these things, you know that. If I pushed too hard, or lost her confidence, we'd end up with nothing."
"Do you want my coldly reasoned analysis?" Fisher took her silence as assent. "You've got all these nameless but very powerful people, many of whom may have things lined up in the future or currently have nice post—public service careers. What's so unusual about that? It happens all the time. They get on the phone, have lunches, whisper in ears, call in some favors. That's America. So where are we?"
"This is more than that, Paul. A lot more."
"Are you saying you can trace the actual illegal activity, how the legislation was manipulated?"
"Not exactly."
'"Not exactly' is right. It's really like trying to prove a negative."
Reynolds knew he was right on that point. How did you prove someone didn't do something? Many of the tools Buchanan's people would have used to further his agenda were probably tools every politician used, legitimately. They were talking motivation here. Why somebody was doing something, not how they were doing it. The why was illegal, the how wasn't. Like a basketball player not trying his best because he'd been paid off.
"Is Buchanan a director in these unknown firms where the former, unknown politicians get jobs? A stockholder? Did he put up the money? Does he have any ongoing business with any of them?"
"You sound like a defense lawyer," she said hotly.
"That's exactly my intent. Because those are the sort of questions you'll need answers for."
"We have not been able to uncover evidence directly tying Buchanan to any of it."
"Then what are you basing your conclusion on? What's your evidence that there is a connection at all?"
Reynolds started to speak and then stopped. Her face flushed and in her agitation she broke in half the pencil she was holding.
"Let me answer that for you," said Fisher. "Faith Lockhart, your missing witness."
"We'll find her, Paul. And then we're back in business."
"And if you don't find her? What then?"
"We'll find another way."
"Can you determine the identities of the bribed officials independently?"
Reynolds desperately wanted to say yes to that question, but she couldn't. Buchanan had been in Washington for decades. He'd probably had dealings with just about every politician and bureaucrat in the city. It would be impossible to narrow down the list without Lockhart.
"Anything's possible," she said gamely.
He shook his head. "Actually, it's not, Brooke."
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