“I think so, sir,” Hammond said as they walked.
“But when the South finally conceded the War, Lincoln let his enemies go home. He could have crushed them, rooting out all militant elements while he had the upper hand. And so, while Lincoln was planning on enjoying his first evening at the theatre in years, John Wilkes Booth was plotting to throw the country into upheaval. When your enemies are down, it’s not enough just to shame them. You have to exterminate them.”
“Yes, sir. I understand.”
Wainewright was still thinking about the opera glasses as they entered the elevator. “Fact,” he said. “John Wilkes Booth had the presence of mind to shoot Lincoln after the play’s funniest line, when the entire house was laughing. If he hadn’t jumped onstage like a fool, he would’ve gotten away with it.”
“What was the line, sir?” Hammond asked.
“You sockdologizing old man trap.”
Hammond laughed, but it sounded forced. Wainewright suddenly turned and grabbed him by the necktie. He lifted the tie up, as if to lynch him there in the elevator. Hammond gasped for breath, let go of the luggage and groped at the General’s massive hands.
“You don’t even know what sockdologizing means!” Wainewright roared. “Why did you laugh? Why?”
Hammond sputtered. “I–I don’t know, sir.”
Wainewright released the necktie and watched the red-faced Corporal cough until he got his legs under him. “Don’t ever be insincere with me again.”
Hammond straightened. He tucked his shirt in, picked up the General’s luggage and followed Wainewright toward the rooftop helipad.
Camp David
4:45 p.m.
Speers drove slowly toward the Camp David checkpoint. The rental car’s hood and rooftop were pockmarked with blackened softball-size dents from the exploded church’s debris. Through the cracked windshield, Speers saw a razor wire barrier and a pair of Bradley armored vehicles parked in a defensive posture. It was hardly the cozy Camp David greeting he had grown accustomed to. Then again, he hadn’t been to the executive retreat since last year, when the elite Marines had been replaced by Ulysses MPs.
A voice came over a loudspeaker: “The facility is closed to visitors. Turn back.”
Speers did not heed the warning. He parked the car and got out slowly, holding his White House ID Badge above his head. There was no wind, and there was no birdsong. As he stepped toward the Ulysses MPs, he became suddenly and inexplicably conscious of his own appearance. His pants, shirt and tie were sullied by black ash. The grime was even under his nails. He could only imagine what his face and hair looked like.
The Bradley machine gunner released the safety on his weapon. The sound of provocation was unmistakable on such a still, noiseless day.
“Wait!” Speers yelled. “I’m Julian Speers! White House Chief of Staff!”
A helmeted Ulysses soldier rose up from the Bradley’s gun turret.
“Get in your car and turn back,” came the directive over the loudspeaker.
“The President asked me to come,” Speers insisted. “Come look at my credentials. Please.”
Another Ulysses soldier bobbed up from the Bradley. With his weapon at the ready, he came to Speers to inspect his identification, which he read in full before handing it back to Speers.
“What happened to you?” the soldier said as he regarded Speers’ grubby appearance.
“I was in Monroe.”
The soldier scrunched up his nose. “Don’t you know to never walk up to a checkpoint? You got lucky. We shoot first and ask questions later.”
Speers didn’t like the soldier’s attitude. “Well, the President is waiting for me. You’re wasting his time as well as mine.”
“The POTUS isn’t here.”
“What? Well what about the Iranian delegation?”
“There ain’t no delegation,” the soldier said. He spat yellow phlegm dangerously close to Speers’ feet.
This made zero sense. Speers whipped out his cell phone and said “CIC” into the receiver. The phone’s voice recognition software dialed the President’s mobile, but the call went straight to voicemail. He dialed the Vice President. It also went straight to voicemail. Next, he tried Dex Jackson and got the same result. He was about to try Eva when the Ulysses soldier snatched the cell phone from his hand, removed the battery, and returned the now-useless handset to Speers.
Following his long-held practice not to piss off anyone with a gun, Speers didn’t dare protest further.
“Wait here,” the soldier said. He went back to the Bradley. Speers saw him pull up the vehicle’s black jumbo-size phone receiver and talk into it. Several minutes went by. Speers leaned against the hood of his rental car. He longed for a shower and change of clothes.
One of the soldiers lit a cigarette. Speers’ lips actually puckered. It had been the President himself who had given him the discipline and motivation to quit during the first term. The President had given him six cases of lollipops for Christmas that year to keep his mouth occupied. “Suck on these,” the President had said, playing into Speers’ weakness for sweets.
“I’ll have to marry a dentist,” Speers told him.
“Better her than the undertaker.”
Finally, the soldier called to him and waved him toward the gates. “That was DOD,” the soldier said, moving aside a row of razor wire so that Speers could pass. “We’re relocating you to Site R.”
Knowing nothing of the other attacks, Speers wondered what had prompted the President to take to the bunker, and weirder still, why he was finding out about it from a lowly Ulysses MP. He was on the first-team evac list. “Okay then,” he said, “Let’s go. Where’s my chariot?”
“You’re lookin’ at it,” the soldier said, pointing at the Bradley.
The other soldier popped his head up. “He ain’t riding in here,” he told his colleague, eyeing Speers’ clothes. “Check out those blast clothes. Guarantee if you take that tie to the lab you’ll find fifty people’s DNA on it.”
Speers hadn’t thought of this. He had conveniently assumed the ash covering his clothes, body and car was nothing more than tiny bits of exploded masonry, insulation, wood and the like. But the soldier was right. Much as it horrified him to think of it, the ash was undoubtedly composed not only of building materials, but also tiny bits of human skin, bone and blood.
“Here ya go,” the other soldier said as he mercifully tossed a gym bag at Speers. “There’s a pair of sweats and a t-shirt in there. Go on. It’s okay. Those clothes ain’t been worked out in yet.”
Baltimore
Hamilton Arms Apartment 309
5:35 p.m.
They were going to kill her. Of that, Angie Jackson was certain. She sat tied up with her back against the wall. Mrs. Defense Secretary Dexter P. Jackson wasn’t scared. She was far too angry to feel any fear. Dear God, she thought. Do what you want with me. Make sure LeBron is safe. Do what you want with my husband. He’s yours to judge.
Apartment 309’s windows were covered in tin foil. There was no furniture in the living room except for a couch that had been found in a dumpster outside, and the little TV, which sat on top of a rusted milk crate. CNN played endless live coverage of the crisis, which the network had already branded: A Day of Terror, complete with an animated red, white and blue logo that played the opening notes of “Battle Hymn of the Republic” each time it swooshed onscreen. The tag line: America Mourns.
Elvir sat next to her eating from a can of sardines while Ali slept in the next room with the rest of the crew. Angie sized up Elvir’s lean frame, which was wrapped in a too-tight wife beater t-shirt, and guessed his weight at about a buck sixty. Her eyes searched his arms and shoulders for some recognizable tattoo or mole, but all she saw was black hair. Elvir had to be the hairiest man she had ever seen. She took in all these details and committed them to memory. In the event that God spared her life, Angie vowed do her best to identify her captors and bring them to justice.