The Innocent - By David Baldacci Page 0,115

Vance, I get your point.”

She pointed toward the house. “Let’s go work on the plan. All of us.”

Robie didn’t say anything, but he started to walk toward the house. Vance fell into step beside him.

He said, “Whatever happens, Julie is going to survive this.”

Vance said, “And for what it’s worth, I’ll do all I can to make sure you do too.”

CHAPTER

81

JEROME CASSIDY.

Elizabeth Claire Van Beuren. Her maiden name was Elizabeth Claire and she had incorporated that into her married name, Van Beuren.

Gabriel Siegel.

Those were the three names on the list.

Robie stared down at them as he drank his coffee at the kitchen table of the farmhouse.

It was eight-thirty. The sun was well up. He could hear the shower running upstairs and figured Vance had just stepped into it. Julie was already up. She was in the back room, no doubt brooding about their last encounter.

Fifteen minutes later Vance was seated across from him, her hair still wet, her pants and shirt wrinkled but presentable.

“If we have to be off grid much longer,” she said, “I might have to get a few things.”

He nodded, rose, and poured her a cup of coffee.

She spun the pieces of paper around and eyed the list of names.

“Who do we go after first?” she asked.

Robie handed her a cup of coffee right as Julie walked in. Her eyes were puffy and her clothes were even more wrinkled than Vance’s. She obviously had not bothered to undress when she had gone back to sleep.

Robie held up the cup. “Want some?”

“I can get it,” she said irritably.

She took down a cup and poured out her coffee. They sat at the table, not making eye contact.

Robie pushed the pieces of paper at Julie and said, “Recognize any of these names?”

She took her time looking at the list.

“No. My parents never mentioned any of them to me. Do you have pictures of them?”

“Not yet,” answered Robie. “You sure, though? None of them ring a bell?’

“None.”

He took the list and eyed it.

“Gabriel Siegel is closest distance-wise. Lives in Manassas. We’ll go there first, find out what we can.”

Vance said, “If we’re doing it geographically, Van Beuren will be next and Cassidy last. But they might be at work. I’m assuming these are the home addresses.”

“I thought about that too. But if they’re not at home and someone else is, we can flash our creds and get the work addresses.”

“Once we hit one of these addresses we could pick up a tail, Robie,” said Vance. “And they could follow us right back here.”

“Well, we just have to make sure they don’t do that.”

“How about we call the people on the list first?” said Julie. “That way we don’t have to expose ourselves.”

“Or how about I call the Bureau in and get them picked up for questioning?” said Vance. “They can’t have bought off everyone at the FBI.”

“That’s what we thought last time,” noted Robie. “It didn’t work out too well.”

“Come on, you know what I mean.”

“I’d prefer we do this alone,” he said.

“Okay, so we go with this Siegel guy first,” said Vance. “I’ve looked at his military history. What does that tell us about him?”

“He was the staff sergeant. The leader of the squad. Fifty years old now. Out of the service for years. Don’t know what he does now. My source didn’t have that info.”

Julie pulled out the phone Robie had given her. “Let me plug in his military history and address and see if Google can tell us anything.”

She looked at Robie’s sheet and then typed away on her miniature keyboard. She waited for the data to load.

“Mr. Siegel has a Facebook page.” She turned the phone around so they could see it. An image of a jowly man with graying hair stared back at them.

“Do we know it’s the right guy?” asked Vance.

Julie said, “His Facebook says he was in the Army during Gulf One, and he’s even listed the name of the Army squad he was in.”

She showed this to Robie, who nodded. “He’s the right Siegel.”

Julie continued. “According to his profile he works at SunTrust Bank as a branch manager.”

“Lots of SunTrust branches around here,” said Vance. “Does it say which one?”

“No. But his likes are guns, football, and chili cook-offs. He has twenty-nine friends, which isn’t a lot, but I don’t know how long he’s been on Facebook either. And he’s a really old guy.”

“He’s only fifty,” Vance pointed out.

Julie shrugged. “Like I said, he’s a really old guy. And I don’t see anything

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