The Last President: A Novel of an Alternative America (24 page)

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Authors: Michael Kurland,S. W. Barton

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #General, #Science Fiction, #Alternative History

BOOK: The Last President: A Novel of an Alternative America
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CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

Miriam came home to find Kit sprawled on top of her velour bedspread, fast asleep. His jacket was hooked over a chair, and his shoes and tie were on the floor by the bed. One sock was off, but that was where he had run out of energy. He hadn’t even unbuttoned his shirt.

She sat down on the bed beside him, silent and motionless so as not to wake him. For a long time she sat looking at him. The tension and anger that had become a part of him while he was awake, lining his face beyond its years, were washed away by sleep. She hated to disturb him, to bring him from his peaceful sleep to the nightmare that reality had become.

After a time he rolled over, and his hand fell on her knee. He groaned slightly and opened one eye. “Huh,” he said, closing the eye and wrapping his arm around her leg. In a little while the eye opened again. “Hello, love,” he said, slurring the words. “You home already?”

“It’s after eleven,” she told him. “Not that I object to finding you in my bed, but what are you doing here?”

“Waiting for you,” he said. “Taking a nap.” He sat up and rubbed his eyes. “Had a hard day.”

“It’s good to see you,” she said.

He kissed her. “It’s good to be seen,” he said. “Hungry?”

“No,” she said, “but I’ll fix you something.”

“Don’t bother.” He started putting his shoes on, looked surprised to find one sock missing, and fished around by the side of the bed for it. “Let’s go to that coffee shop on K Street. My treat.”

“I don’t mind fixing you something,” Miriam said.

“Apple pie,” he told her, “à la mode. I crave apple pie à la mode.”

“You win,” she said. “I’ll get my coat.”

It was cold outside, and Miriam shivered and clutched Kit’s right arm as they crossed to his car. “I’m sorry,” she said.

“What?” He focused his attention on her. It had clearly been a long way off.

“I’m sorry I didn’t pick up your cue faster,” she said. “You want to tell me something.”

“That’s right.”

“I can’t get used to living in a house that might be bugged,” she said. “I think that’s the worst part: not knowing for sure whether it is or not. Wondering every time I say anything whether or not someone else is listening.… Speaking of which, you’re not exactly listening yourself, are you? To me, I mean.”

He opened the car door for her. “We can talk in here,” he said. “I had it checked out this afternoon.”

She slid into the freezing car and unlocked his side while he went around. When he got into the car he sat hunched over the steering wheel, staring off in some private world of his own.

“Start the engine,” Miriam said, “and turn on the heater. It’s freezing in here. What are we going to talk about? Hadn’t we better drive to that coffee shop, in case anyone’s checking?”

“It’s tomorrow,” Kit told her.

“What?”

“Its tomorrow. Jubilee is tomorrow.”

“You mean—” She sat there staring at him, unable to say anything and feeling like an idiot because the words wouldn’t come.

“I spent the afternoon with Laszlo setting things up,” Kit said.

“Laszlo?” Did they know anyone named Laszlo? Perhaps she’d misunderstood him. Perhaps they were talking about something else. Tomorrow couldn’t be the tomorrow they’d been planning for months, the tomorrow she’d prayed deep in her heart would never really come. If they failed she’d probably stand trial, and God knew what they’d do to her. She didn’t care so much about that. But if Jubilee had come, then win or fail, Christopher Young, her Kit, whom she loved more than breath, would most probably be dead before the long tomorrow was over. She held her breath and felt the air from the car’s heater, still cold, whip under her skirt.

Kit turned the car’s headlights on and pulled away from the curb. “We’re conspicuous sitting in a parked car,” he said. “Might as well head toward the coffee shop.”

“Who’s Laszlo?”

“Colonel Laszlo Kovacs,” Kit said. “The Special Forces man.”

Miriam remembered Laszlo now. “The Special Executive Police,” she said. “St. Yves’ men.”

“That’s what he thinks,” Kit said.

“Damn, Kit,” Miriam said, “this whole thing’s insane!” She wanted to grab Kit, and hold him, and shake him; but instead she hugged herself tightly and stared through the windshield. They were approaching the traffic light on Wisconsin Avenue. “I love you,” she said, irrelevantly.

“I love you, Miriam,” Kit said. “I’ve been thinking about that. After this—”

”After this?” she started laughing. “What do you mean, ‘after this?’ You’re going to be killed, you idiot. Don’t you know that? The Secret Service isn’t going to let you get anywhere near the President. They don’t care what kind of a bastard the man is, their job is to guard him. And that’s exactly what they’re going to do.”

“I think we can get closer than they expect,” Kit said, mildly. “Believe me, Miriam, I have no intention of getting killed tomorrow. It will take luck, but if things go right, not an awful lot of luck. And it’s time we had a little luck.”

Miriam took a deep breath and her hand sought Kit’s arm. “I’m sorry,” she said.

They drove around for a while, neither of them saying anything, and then stopped at the all-night coffee shop. Miriam went to the pay phone and called the two women she had recruited to help, an associate professor of linguistics and a graduate student in the political science department who was completing a thesis on Roosevelt and the city bosses. Tomorrow the three of them would become telephone operators for the day at the risk of life and liberty. If Jubilee succeeded, their minor but essential jobs would receive at most a footnote in the histories of the coup; if it failed, they would stand in the dock with the rest.

Miriam and Kit drank coffee. Kit ordered a piece of apple pie and pushed it around the plate before giving up.

“Let’s go home,” Miriam said after a while.

“I don’t think I can sleep,” Kit said.

“I’ll hold you,” Miriam said. “Maybe you’ll sleep. I don’t think I can do anything else tonight, but I want to hold you.”

Kit paid the check, and they left.

General Tank MacGregor turned off the eleven-o’clock news and stared bleakly at the television set. It had been a long time since he had heard anything on the news to bring him pleasure, but he found himself watching compulsively. Some deep-seated masochistic impulse, he surmised, or a trace of the childhood belief that the good guys always win in the end.

He got up and walked slowly around his den, touching and examining the memorabilia of his long career. The walls were flocked with framed photographs that formed a bridge to the past—his past: a youthful Captain MacGregor standing at attention in front of his battle-worn Sherman tank while Generals Eisenhower and Bradley strolled by: a cigar-chomping, two-star general shaking hands with Major MacGregor outside a demolished Wehrmacht command post, inscribed “To the only sonofabitch I ever had to tell to slow down—from his CO, George S. Patton”; a picture of his wife, Maggie, standing in front of the gray fieldstone cottage in Scotland that had been their honeymoon cottage—if a three-day pass the week before D-day could be called a honeymoon. And then she hadn’t seen him for eight months, and had twice been told that he was taken prisoner and once that he was dead.

There was a photograph of Lieutenant General Tank MacGregor pointing what looked like an accusing finger at Colonel Clement Moor, USMC. It had been taken by an alert war photographer outside of Inchon, and had been published in
Stars and Stripes
over the caption, “Tank tells it to the Marines.”

He stopped before the flag standing in the corner by the door: a tattered American flag with a field of thirty-three stars. His grandfather, legend had it, had three horses shot from under him carrying that flag from Atlanta to the sea. Attached to the tip of the staff were a pair of battle streamers that had once been stiff gold brocade, but were now limp with age. He held them out and could still make out the faded motto embroidered thereon:

Harrah! Harrah! We bring the Jubilee!

Harrah! Harrah! The flag that makes you free!

MacGregor smiled to himself and turned to go upstairs to join his always patient, very dear wife. But as his foot touched the first step, the phone rang. He turned back to answer it.

Harrah! Harrah! We bring the Jubilee!

It was a quarter to midnight and the President of the United States still sat behind his great desk in the Oval Office. He was signing papers. He took great pride in his often-quoted claim that he served the people of this great country “sixteen hours a day, seven days a week.” And he meant to keep to that schedule. It was an inspiration to the Youth of America, an example to his staff—which he fully expected them to emulate—and a prod to the lazy career bureaucrats that still cluttered the lower levels of government.

A soft chiming noise startled the President, and he looked up to see that the red phone on one side of his desk was blinking a subdued red bulb at him. He snatched the handpiece from the cradle and glared at it for a long moment before putting it to his ear. “Yes?”

“Mr. President?”

“Yes?” Who the hell did that idiot think it would be?

“This is Beadle, sir, in the Special Situations Room.”

“Yes?”

“Jubilee has been activated, sir. The Comint staff intercepted the go parole on two separate nets in the past half hour, sir. We’ve put the Special Situations Room onto full alert status, as per standing orders, sir. Do you wish us to notify the Pentagon, or the Special Executive Police, or the FBI, sir?”

“Jubilee?”

“Yes, sir. We’ve notified Mr. Vandermeer, sir. He said to call you immediately. Standby procedure Bull Run has been called up, sir, but we need your okay to continue.”

“You’re sure?”

“What’s that, sir? You mean about Jubilee? Yes, sir. We’re sure, sir.”

“Okay,” the President said. “Vandermeer’s in charge. You do whatever he tells you.”

“Yes, sir.”

The President hung up the phone and stared down at the mass of papers on his desk. Suddenly he found them all very offensive, and with the back of his hand he pushed them off the side of his desk and onto the floor. It was beginning. The biggest crisis of them all. And he was ready, by God, he was ready for it! Only why hadn’t Vandermeer called himself instead of letting some flunky do it? It was very bad for staff discipline to have the chain of command broken like that. Besides, Vandermeer knew how he depended on him, how he needed him to make the crucial decisions that had to be made. Not that he wasn’t fully capable of handling the job by himself; not that he didn’t have the breadth of intellect, the decisiveness, the almost instinctive grasp of world and national affairs that made a truly great president. Gildruss might get the credit; Gildruss might get the peace prizes; but if Gildruss was the quarterback, he was damn well the coach. And in the long run it was the coach who was remembered. And as for national affairs, well, another chapter in that book would be written tomorrow. And they’d see whether he could handle himself in a crisis or not.

Only where the hell was Vandermeer? Tomorrow they were going to try to take it all away from him. It was those shitty Eastern Jew intellectuals. They always had hated him. But it would all come out right in the end. He would triumph, as he always had—in the end. Vandermeer had it completely under control. But—

The corridor door opened and Vandermeer came in. “I’m here, Mr. President,” he said.

“Damn good thing,” the President said. He looked at his watch. It was two minutes past twelve. His sixteen-hour work day was over. “I’m going to bed now, unless you need me for anything.”

“No, sir,” Vandermeer said, taking his accustomed seat to the right of the desk. “The activation of Bull Run is right on schedule. I’m holding off calling in the camera crews. We don’t want to let this peak prematurely. With any luck we’ll hit prime time tomorrow night.”

The President shook his head. “Be careful,” he said. “We don’t want to preempt a football game. You know how the people hate it when we preempt a football game.”

“This is big enough,” Vandermeer assured the President. “We won’t have any backlash on this.”

“Good, good,” the President said. “Do you think there’s any chance of these Jubilee people starting anything tonight?”

“Highly unlikely, sir,” Vandermeer said. “The troops we believe them to be depending on are not on ready status. Our experts estimate it will take them at least six to eight hours after the go code is sent to be ready to move. That means the coup attempt can’t begin before six tomorrow morning at the earliest.”

“Okay,” the President said. “Stay on top of it.”

“I have a cot in the bomb shelter right next to the Special Situations Room,” Vandermeer told him.

“Very good,” the President said. “Call me if anything breaks.” He put his jacket on, buttoned it, and left the office. He walked past the Secret Service guards without acknowledging their “Good evening, Mr. President.” That was one thing about being president; you didn’t have to say a damn thing to a damn person if you didn’t feel like it.

Upstairs in the family quarters, the President paused at the door to his bedroom and looked over to the door to his wife’s bedroom. He felt a no longer familiar urge. Perhaps it was the excitement. He went into his bedroom and took off his clothes, hanging the suit carefully over the clothes horse and folding the rest of his garments neatly on a chair. Then he went to the connecting door between his bedroom and his wife’s and opened it. His wife was asleep. He went over and climbed on top of her. She stirred but, as usual, she did not fully awaken.

Vandermeer stood up as the President left the office. When the door had closed behind the President, Vandermeer sat back down and looked around the room at the great oval of the walls as though he expected to find someone hiding in one of the shadows. He stared down at the great presidential seal woven into the rug at the foot of the President’s desk as though he had never seen the device before. “You’ll see,” he told the empty air. “It will all work out, just as I promised you it would.”

Vandermeer got up and went outside through one of the French windows. Off to one side of the Rose Garden a small, two-seat helicopter was parked on the White House lawn. He went over to it and methodically began checking it out, detail after detail, working from a complex preflight check list.

When he returned to the Oval Office, St. Yves had just entered. “They told me you were in here,” St. Yves said. “I have something for you.”

“What?” Vandermeer asked.

“I understand Jubilee is go,” St. Yves said.

“That’s right. For the morning, presumably.”

“Then I’ll sack out in the guard room,” St. Yves said. “If you want me, I’ll be there.”

“Right,” Vandermeer said. “See you bright and early. I think I can promise you that it’s going to be quite a dayl”

Senator Malcolm Chaymber rolled over irritably and switched on his night light to peer at the clock. It was ten past one. Who the hell would be calling him now? He picked the handset off the receiver to stop the ringing and then paused a minute to wake up before putting it to his ear. “What?” he demanded.

“Malcolm? Adams here.”

“Yes?” He was fully awake now; his heart was pounding.

“I hope you’re ready for the Jubilee, Senator. We’re bringing it tomorrow morning.”

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