Page 45 of Shall We Tell the President? (Kane & Abel 3)
âOf the United States.â
âWhy would she want to see me, sir.â
âYesterday I killed you, but today Iâve made you a hero and she wants to congratulate you personally on trying to save Senator Harrisonâs life.â
âWhat?â
âYouâd better read the morning papers. Say nothing for now; Iâll explain my actions later.â
âWhere do I go, what time, sir?â
âYouâll be told.â The line clicked.
Mark replaced the phone and thought about the conversation. He was just about to call Elizabeth to ask if the morning paper had come when the phone rang again.
âAnswer it will you, Mark darling. Now that the lovers have found your whereabouts, itâs bound to be for you.â
Mark picked it up.
âMr. Andrews?â
âSpeaking.â
âHold the line one moment, please. The President will be with you in one moment.â
âGood morning. Florentyna Kane. I just wanted to know if you could find time to drop into the White House this morning at about ten oâclock. Iâd like to meet you and have a chat.â
âIâd be honored, Madam.â
âThen Iâll look forward to it, Mr. Andrews, and the chance to meet you and congratulate you personally. If you come to the West Entrance, Janet Brown will be there to meet you.â
âThank you, Madam.â
One of those legendary phone calls that the press so often wrote about. The Director had only been checking where he was. Had the President been trying to reach him since eight last night?
âWho was it, darling?â
âThe President of the United States.â
âTell her youâll call back; sheâs always on the line, usually calls collect.â
âNo, Iâm serious.â
âYes, of course you are.â
âShe wants to see me.â
âYes, darling, your place or hers?â
Mark went into the kitchen and attacked some Wheaties. Elizabeth came in brandishing the Post.
âLook,â she said. âItâs official. Youâre not a villain, youâre a hero.â
The headline read: SENATOR HARRISON KILLED ON STEPS OF CAPITOL.
âIt was the President, wasnât it?â she said.
âYes, it was.â
âWhy didnât you tell me?â
âI did, but you didnât choose to listen.â
âIâm sorry,â said Elizabeth.
âI love you.â
âI love you too, but letâs not go through this every week.â
She continued to read the paper. Mark munched his Wheaties.
âWhy would someone want to kill Senator Harrison, Mark?â
âI donât know. What does the Post say?â
âThey havenât figured out a reason yet; they say he was known to have many enemies both here and abroad.â She began to read from the paper:
âSenator Robert Harrison (D-South Carolina) was shot by an assassin on the steps of the Capitol yesterday morning at 10:06.
âThe assassination took place only moments before President Kane was due to arrive for her final assault on behalf of the Gun Control bill, which had been scheduled for a vote in the Senate yesterday. Because they had been warned of a demonstration on the steps of the Capitol, the Secret Service diverted the Presidentâs car to the Russell Senate Office Building.
âThe bullet lodged in Senator Harrisonâs brain and he was pronounced dead on arrival at Woodrow Wilson Medical Center. A second bullet grazed the shoulder of FBI Agent Mark Andrews, 28, who threw himself on the Senator in an effort to save his life. Andrews was treated at the same hospital and later released.
âThere was no immediate explanation of the fact that a second presidential motorcade did arrive at the Capitol steps a few moments before the assassination, without the President.
âVice President Bradley ordered an immediate recess of the Senate out of respect for Senator Harrison. The House then voted unanimously to extend the recess for seven days.
âThe President, who arrived at the Capitol via the congressional subway from the Russell Building, first learned the news of Harrisonâs assassination when she reached the Senate. Visibly shaken, she announced that the luncheon to discuss gun control would continue as planned but asked the assembled Senators to observe a minute of silence in honor of their dead colleague.
âThe President went on to say, âI know we are all shocked and saddened by the tragic and horrifying event which has just occurred. This senseless killing of a good and decent man must, however, only strengthen our determination to work together in making our country safe from the easy access of arms.â
âThe President plans to address the nation at nine oâclock tonight.â
âSo now you know everything, Liz.â
âI know nothing,â she replied.
âI didnât know very much of that myself,â Mark admitted.
âLiving with you is going to be difficult.â
âWho said I was going to live with you?â
âI took it for granted from the way youâre eating my eggs.â
At the Fontainebleau Hotel a man was sitting by the side of the swimming pool reading the Miami Herald and drinking coffee. At least Senator Harrison could cause no more trouble which made him feel a little safer. Xan had kept his part of the bargain.
He sipped the coffee, a little hot, it didnât matter, he was in no hurry. He had already given new orders; he couldnât afford any further risks. Xan would be dead by the evening; that had been arranged. Matson and Tony would be freed for lack of evidence, so his lawyer, who had never let him down yet, had assured him, and he would not be visiting Washington for a while. He relaxed and settled back in his beach chair to let the Miami sun warm him. He lit another cigarette.
At 9:45, the Director was met at the White House by Janet Brown, the Presidentâs Chief of Staff. They waited and chatted. The Director briefed her on Special Agent Andrewsâ background. Brown made careful notes.
Mark arrived just before 10:00. He had only just managed to get home and change into a new suit.
âGood morning, Director,â he said nonchalantly.
âGood morning, Mark. Glad you could make it.â Slightly quizzical but not disapproving. âThis is the Presidentâs Chief of Staff, Janet Brown.â
âGood morning, maâam,â said Mark.
Janet Brown took over. âWill you be kind enough to come through to my office, where we can wait. The President will be videotaping her address to the nation for this eveningâs television broadcast so that she can fly to Camp David at 11:15. I imagine you and the Director will have about fifteen minutes with her.â
Janet Brown took them to her office, a large room in the West Wing with a fine view of the Rose Garden through a bow window.
âIâll get us some coffee,â she said.
âThatâll be a change,â murmured Mark.
âIâm sorry?â said Janet Brown.
âNothing.â
The Director and Mark settled down in comfortable chairs where they could watch a large liquid-crystal monitor screen on one of the walls, already alive with comings and goings in the Oval Office.
The Presidentâs forehead was being powdered in preparation for her speech and the cameramen were wheeling around her. Janet Brown was on the phone.
âCBS and NBC can roll, Janet, but ABC is still fixing things up with their OB unit,â said an agitated female voice.
Janet Brown got the producer of ABC on the other line.
âGet a move on, Harry, the President doesnât have all day.â
âJanet.â
Florentyna Kane was on the middle of the screen.
She looked up. âYes, Madam President?â
âWhereâs ABC?â
âIâm just chasing them, Madam President.â
âChasing them? Theyâve had four hoursâ warning. They couldnât get a camera to the Second Coming.â
; âNo, maâam. Theyâre on their way now.â
Harry Nathan, ABCâs producer, appeared on the screen. âWeâre all set now, Janet. Ready to record in five minutes.â
âFine,â said Florentyna Kane and looked at her watch. It was 10:11. The digits changedâand were replaced by the rate of her heartbeatâ72; normal, she thought. They disappeared again, to be replaced by her blood pressure, 140/90; a little high; sheâd get it checked by her doctor this weekend. The digits were replaced by the Dow-Jones index, showing an early fall of 1.5 to 1,409. This disappeared and the watch showed 10:12. The President rehearsed the opening line of her speech for the last time. Sheâd gone over the final draft with Edward that morning, and she was satisfied with it.
âMark.â
âSir?â
âI want you to report back to Grant Nanna at the WFO this afternoon.â
âYes, sir.â
âThen I want you to take a vacation. I mean a real vacation, some time in May. Mr. Elliott is leaving me at the end of May to take up the post of Special Agent in Charge of the Columbus Field Office. Iâm going to offer you his job, and enlarge it to your being my personal assistant.â
Mark was stunned. âThank you very much, sir. I would be delighted.â Bang goes the five-year plan.
âYou said something, Mark?â
âNo, sir.â
âIn private, Mark, you must stop calling me âsir,â if weâre going to work together all the time; itâs more than I can stand. You can call me Halt or HoratioâI donât mind which.â
Mark couldnât help laughing.
âYou find my name amusing, Mark?â
âNo, sir. But I just made $3,516.â
âTesting: one, two, three. Loud and clear. Could you give us a voice test, please, Madam President?â asked the floor producer, now less agitated. âWhat did you have for breakfast?â
âToast and coffee,â said the President resonantly.
âThank you, Madam. Thatâs fine. Ready to roll.â
All the cameras were focused on the President, who sat behind her desk, somber and serious.
âWhen youâre ready, Madam President.â
The President looked into the lens of Camera One. âMy fellow Americans, I speak to you tonight from the Oval Office in the wake of the bloody assassination of Senator Harrison on the steps of the Capitol. Robert Everard Harrison was my friend and colleague, and I know we will all feel his loss greatly. Our sympathy goes out to his family in their distress. This evil deed only strengthens my determination to press for legislation early in the new session strictly limiting the sale and the unauthorized ownership of guns. I will do this in memory of Senator Robert Harrison, so that we may feel he did not die in vain.â
The Director looked at Mark; neither of them spoke. The President continued, repeating her belief in the importance of gun control and why the measure deserved the full support of the American people.
âAnd so I leave you, my fellow citizens, thanking God that America can still produce men who are willing to risk their own lives for public service. Thank you and good night.â
The camera panned to the Presidential Seal. Then the Outside Broadcast units took over and switched to a picture of the White House with the flag at half-mast.