Part 39 (1/2)

The Third Twin Ken Follett 50760K 2022-07-22

She picked up the overturned cup and took it into the kitchen. She came back with the Dustbuster and vacuumed up the cake crumbs. Patty finished mopping up the coffee.

”I don't deserve you girls, I know that,” Daddy said as he sat down again.

Patty said: ”I'll get you another cup of coffee.”

The TV surgeon said, ”Let's go away together, just the two of us, somewhere wonderful,” and the woman said, ”But what about your wife?” and the doctor looked sulky. Jeannie turned the set off and sat beside her father.

”What do you mean, you've lost your nerve?” she asked, curious. ”What happened?”

He sighed. ”When I got out of jail I cased a building in Georgetown. It was a small business, an architecture partners.h.i.+p that had just reequipped the entire staff with fifteen or twenty personal computers and some other stuff, printers and fax machines. The guy who supplied the equipment to the company tipped me off: he was going to buy it from me and sell it back to them when they got the insurance money. I would have got ten thousand dollars.”

Patty said: ”I don't want my boys to hear this.” She checked they were not in the hallway then closed the door.

Jeannie said to Daddy: ”So what went wrong?”

”I reversed the van up to the back of the building, disarmed the burglar alarm, and opened the loading bay door. Then I started to think about what would happen if a cop came along. I never used to give a d.a.m.n, in the old days, but I guess it's ten years since I did something like that. Anyway, I was so scared I started to shake. I went inside, unplugged one computer, carried it out, put it in the van, and drove away. Next day I came to your place.”

”And robbed me.”

”I never intended to, honey. I thought you'd help me get on my feet and find a legitimate job of some kind. Then, when you were out, the old feeling came over me. I'm sitting there, I'm looking at the stereo and thinking I could get a couple hundred bucks for that, and maybe a hundred for the TV, and I just did it. After I sold it all I wanted to kill myself, I swear.”

”But you didn't.”

Patty said: ”Jeannie!”

Daddy said: ”I had a few drinks and got into a poker game and by the morning I was broke again.”

”So you came to see Patty.”

”I won't do it to you, Patty. I won't do it to anyone again. I'm going to go straight.”

”You better!” Patty said.

”I have to, I got no choice.”

Jeannie said: ”But not yet.”

They both looked at her. Patty said nervously: ”Jeannie, what are you talking about?”

”You have to do one more job,” Jeannie said to Daddy. ”For me. A burglary. Tonight.”

42.

IT WAS GETTING DARK AS THEY ENTERED THE J JONES F FALLS campus. ”Pity we don't have a more anonymous car,” her father said as Jeannie drove the red Mercedes into the student parking lot. ”A Ford Taurus is good, or a Buick Regal. You see fifty of those a day, n.o.body remembers them.” campus. ”Pity we don't have a more anonymous car,” her father said as Jeannie drove the red Mercedes into the student parking lot. ”A Ford Taurus is good, or a Buick Regal. You see fifty of those a day, n.o.body remembers them.”

He got out of the car, carrying a battered tan leather briefcase. In his checked s.h.i.+rt and rumpled pants, with untidy hair and worn shoes, he looked just like a professor.

Jeannie felt strange. She had known for years that her daddy was a thief, but she herself had never done anything more illegal than driving at seventy miles an hour. Now she was about to break into a building. It felt like crossing an important line. She did not think she was doing wrong but, all the same, her self-image was shaken. She had always thought of herself as a law-abiding citizen. Criminals, including her father, had always seemed to belong to another species. Now she was joining them.

Most of the students and faculty had gone home, but there were still a few people walking around: professors working late, students going to social events, janitors locking up, and security guards patrolling. Jeannie hoped she would not see anyone she knew.

She was wound up tight like a guitar string, ready to snap. She was afraid for her father more than herself. If they were caught it would be deeply humiliating for her, but that was all; the courts did not send you to jail for breaking into your own office and stealing one floppy disk. But Daddy, with his record, would go down for years. He would be an old man when he came out.

The street lamps and exterior building lights were beginning to come on. Jeannie and her father walked past the tennis court, where two women were playing under floodlights. Jeannie remembered Steve speaking to her after the game last Sunday. She had given him the brush-off automatically, he had looked so confident and pleased with himself. How wrong she had been in her first judgment of him.

She nodded toward the Ruth W. Acorn Psychology Building. ”That's the place,” she said. ”Everyone calls it Nut House.”

”Keep walking at the same speed,” he said. ”How do you get in that front door?”

”A plastic card, same as my office door. But my card doesn't work anymore. I might be able to borrow one.”

”No need. I hate accomplices. How do we get around the back?”

”I'll show you.” A footpath across a lawn led past the far side of Nut House toward the visitors' parking lot. Jeannie followed it, then turned off to a paved yard at the back of the building. Her father ran a professional eye over the rear elevation. ”What's that door?” he said, pointing. ”I think it's a fire door.”

He nodded. ”It probably has a crossbar at waist level, the kind that opens the door if you push against it.”

”I believe it does. Is that where we're going to get in?”

”Yes.”

Jeannie remembered a sign on the inside of it that read THIS D DOOR Is A Is ALARMED. ”You'll set off an alarm,” she said.

”No, I won't,” he replied. He looked around. ”Do many people come around the back here?”

”No. Especially at night.”

”Okay. Let's go to work.” He put his briefcase on the ground, opened it, and took out a small black plastic box with a dial. Pressing a b.u.t.ton, he ran the box all around the door frame, watching the dial. The needle jumped in the top right-hand corner. He gave a grunt of satisfaction.

He returned the box to the briefcase and took out another similar instrument, plus a roll of electrician's tape. He taped the instrument to the top right-hand corner of the door and threw a switch. There was a low hum. ”That should confuse the burglar alarm,” he said.

He took out a long piece of wire that had once been a laundry s.h.i.+rt hanger. He bent it carefully into a twisted shape, then inserted the hooked end into the crack of the door. He wiggled it for a few seconds, then pulled.

The door came open.

The alarm did not sound.

He picked up his briefcase and stepped inside.

”Wait,” Jeannie said. ”This isn't right. Close the door and let's go home.”

”Hey, come on, don't be scared.”

”I can't do this to you. If you're caught, you'll be in jail until you're seventy years old.”

”Jeannie, I want want to do this. I've been a rotten father to you for so long. This is my chance to help you for a change. It's important to me. Come on, please.” to do this. I've been a rotten father to you for so long. This is my chance to help you for a change. It's important to me. Come on, please.”