Bob.”
“I’m serious too. And I assure you we had nothing to do with it. I’m shocked you would even think it. Ridiculous!”
“Check it out, Bob. I want to be damned certain. Rosenberg did not believe in national security. He made thousands of enemies in intelligence. Just check it out, okay.”
“Okay, okay.”
“And I want a report by five today.”
“Sure. Okay. But it’s a waste of time.”
Fletcher Coal moved to the desk next to the President. “I suggest we meet here at five this afternoon, gentlemen. Is that agreeable?”
They both nodded and stood. Coal escorted them to the door without a word. He closed it.
“You handled it real well,” he said to the President. “Voyles knows he’s vulnerable. I smell blood. We’ll go to work on him with the press.”
“Rosenberg is dead,” the President repeated to himself. “I just can’t believe it.”
“I’ve got an idea for television.” Coal was pacing again, very much in charge. “We need to cash in on the shock of it all. You need to appear tired, as if you were up all night handling the crisis. Right? The entire nation will be watching, waiting for you to give details and to reassure. I think you should wear something warm and comforting. A coat and tie at 7 A.M. may seem a bit rehearsed. Let’s relax a little.”
The President was listening intently. “A bathrobe?”
“Not quite. But how about a cardigan and slacks?No tie. White button-down. Sort of the grandfather image.”
“You want me to address the nation in this hour of crisis in a sweater?”
“Yes. I like it. A brown cardigan with a white shirt.”
“I don’t know.”
“The image is good. Look, Chief, the election is a year from next month. This is our first crisis in ninety days, and what a wonderful crisis it is. The people need to see you in something different, especially at seven in the morning. You need to look casual, down-home, but in control. It’ll be worth five, maybe ten points in the ratings. Trust me, Chief.”
“I don’t like sweaters.”
“Just trust me.”
“I don’t know.”
5
________
DARBY SHAW awoke in the early darkness with a touch of a hangover. After fifteen months of law school, her mind refused to rest for more than six hours. She was often up before daybreak, and for this reason she did not sleep well with Callahan. The sex was great, but sleep was often a tug-of-war with pillows and sheets pulled back and forth.
She watched the ceiling and listened to him snore occasionally in his Scotch-induced coma. The sheets were wrapped like ropes around his knees. She had no cover, but she was not cold. October in New Orleans is still muggy and warm. The heavy air rose from Dauphine Street below, across the small balcony outside the bedroom and through the open French doors. It brought with it the first stream of morning light. She stood in the doors and covered herself with his terrycloth robe. The sun was rising, but Dauphine was dark. Daybreaks went unnoticed in the French Quarter. Her mouth was dry.
Downstairs in the kitchen, Darby brewed a pot of thick French Market chicory. The blue numbers onthe microwave said it was now ten minutes before six. For a light drinker, life with Callahan was a constant struggle. Her limit was three glasses of wine. She had neither a law license nor a job, and she could not afford to get drunk every night and sleep late. And she weighed a hundred and twelve pounds and was determined to keep it there. He had no limit.
She drank three glasses of ice water, then poured a tall mug full of chicory. She flipped on lights as she climbed the stairs, and eased back into the bed. She flicked the remote controls, and suddenly, there was the President sitting behind his desk looking somehow rather odd in a brown cardigan with no tie. It was an NBC News special report.
“Thomas!” She slapped him on his shoulder. No movement. “Thomas! Wake up!” She pressed a button and the volume roared. The President said