A Frightened Peace
By
Anne Callanan and Kathleen E. Lehew
Part One
Summary: Nobody, least of all Jed, is having a very good day. As
it always happens, things go from bad to worse in very short
order.
Spoilers: Everything. Seriously. We think we've managed to drop a
hint about all and sundry from seasons one through three, with
special emphasis on 'The Two Bartlets' and 'Night Five'. Consider
yourself warned.
Rating: PG-13, probably. Some language (but we think you'll agree
the characters were entitled at that point <G>), a touch of
violence and lots of emotional angst. Sorry, we couldn't help
ourselves.
Characters: Jed, Leo, Abbey - towards the end, and Ron
Butterfield. (We like Ron, and if we thought writing this fic,
and a possible follow-up had anything to do with AS suddenly
resurrecting both him and Fitz for the end of season three, we'd
have done it months ago!)
Archive: Sure, just let us know where and drop us a line first.
We've a very good two part MS WORD file we can send to make
things easier on you.
Disclaimer: Of course they're not ours. We wish! This is just a
bit of an exercise in creative mayhem. We promise to put them
back when we're done with them. Really. IF we're ever done with
them <G>.
Feedback: If you must <G>. Any and all comments are not
only welcome, but strongly encouraged. Send to:
nithehowl@livingston.net
or
annemcal@gofree.indigo.ie
Authors' Note: Apologies all around, but we just couldn't resist
<VBEG>. This may be an unlikely scenario but it was a blast
to write and, if you're willing to suspend any disbelief, we hope
you'll have a lot of fun in the reading too. Hey, if Hollywood
can do it, why can't we?
Dedication: To Sheila, who writes such wonderful WW crisis fics,
and to Sam, who broke the ice and gave us the courage to try this
sort of fic with her amazing 'Not Everything's Black and White'
story.
"Mr. President, it's time." Face professionally bland,
the secret service agent stood by respectfully.
President Josiah Bartlet's previously relaxed smile faded
slightly and he gave the waiting helicopter a sour look. His step
faltered a bit as he shoved his hands into his coat pockets and
nodded a curt and unenthusiastic acknowledgement to the agent.
The President's Chief of Staff, Leo McGarry, shot a knowing
glance at his Commander in Chief and friend. His lips twitched
and he was unable to entirely suppress a grin of amusement that
was tinged with just a hint of sympathy. He was well aware that
the high spirits the President usually exhibited while flying
were noticeably subdued during trips on Marine One, or any craft
significantly smaller than the majestic 747, Air Force One.
McGarry suspected that a great deal of that exuberance stemmed
from the fact that traveling aboard the huge executive aircraft
was one of the few times in his life when the President was
actually able to relax sufficiently to enjoy the experience of
flight. There --apart from the fact that he usually traveled with
more than sufficient work to keep his mind fully occupied-- the
greater size and the freedom to move around was much more
comfortable for him. It enabled him to conquer the latent
claustrophobia that the more cramped and confining restrictions
of commercial flight had always triggered.
Bartlet had struggled with that fear for as long as McGarry had
known him. He'd never been able to find out its origins --but he
had his suspicions-- and at times had seen the phobia border on
the crippling. It was at such times he was more than impressed
with Bartlet's sheer stubborn strength of mind.
Well aware of what was going through his Chief of Staff's mind,
Bartlet ignored McGarry's look with studied dignity and faced the
patiently waiting agent. "Thanks, Donny." He recovered
enough of his composure to grace the young man with a quick
smile. "You along for the ride this time?"
"Yes, sir!" Agent Donny Sandler nodded smartly, more
than a little pleased that the President had remembered his name
correctly.
Bartlet smirked and nudged McGarry with his elbow. "Ron
wants him along to hold our hands, eh Leo?"
McGarry rolled his eyes heavenward in exasperation. "Well,
thank you for the thought, Mr. President, but I was under the
impression we already had that covered ourselves."
He chalked up a mental 'score!' as he saw the President's head
jerk back slightly and the narrow-eyed glare scorch him. An
expression of mildly guilty amusement was the only satisfaction
that Bartlet received in return. Only McGarry, with the
confidence of a forty-year friendship of mutual trust and
affection, could have gotten away with reminding the leader of
the free world of that particular moment of personal
embarrassment.
Over a year before, another flight on Marine One had been hit by
a considerable amount of turbulence. As always, Bartlet had
remained outwardly calm, but his hands had instinctively grasped
at the armrests of his seat. He was mortified afterwards to
realize that what his left hand had clutched in a convulsive grip
was not the chair seat but his Chief of Staff's arm, which had
been lying along the common armrest of their adjoining seats.
Fortunately, there had been no bruising, but the sleeve of
McGarry's normally pristine suit had been irreparably creased for
the remainder of the trip.
McGarry had been frankly amused by the incident and never passed
up the opportunity to remind his friend whenever he got the
chance. Emphasizing the end result seemed to distract his friend
from the initial causes, exactly what he needed. The phobia
McGarry understood, but not the reasons. He had crammed himself
into far smaller cockpits than the passenger area of a Sea King
helicopter and had certainly encountered far worse turbulence as
a fighter pilot in Vietnam. It had been intriguing and more than
a little entertaining to see his normally self-confident and
mischievous friend's composure momentarily fractured.
Sandler had been waiting patiently, apparently oblivious to this
by-play. Now he stepped forward again. "Mr. President, Agent
Butterfield would like me to inform you that our departure is
scheduled for five minutes' time. He requests that both you and
Mr. McGarry take your seats."
"Yeah, yeah" muttered the President, giving the
helicopter and the agent a dark look. "C'mon, Leo. You know
how upset Ron gets when I throw out his schedule."
"I can't think why," McGarry commented dryly, following
his President's rather unenthusiastic progress towards the idling
helicopter. "Anyone would think you made a habit of running
late. And as for lecturing him on the history of past
assassinations, both attempted and actual
" skirting
the protocol line, he fought back a grin and finished with
perfect deadpan aplomb, "I really don't understand why he
isn't more relaxed in your presence."
Bartlet glowered at his friend. "You're very uppity
today," he complained, although a glint of reluctant
amusement flickered in his eyes. "Isn't it enough that
you're forcing me to take the weekend off, to say nothing of
traveling aboard that
" He waved his hand in the
direction of their transport as words failed him.
McGarry's amusement faded and he regarded the President with
genuine concern. "Sir, I am truly sorry about the
helicopter, but you know that a motorcade would take too long.
And using Air Force One would involve too much manpower for what
is supposed to be a quiet and discrete break. And you know that
right now you really need this time away. If only to get some
rest."
Bartlet muttered something under his breath that was lost in the
swish of the rotor blades.
"What?"
Catching yet another glare, McGarry reflected that the recent
sleepless nights he had been suffering from had seriously damaged
Bartlet's normally sunny disposition.
"I said," the President enunciated with elaborate
distinctness, "That I'm sleeping again now."
"Yeah, but only for a couple of hours at a stretch, and
never for more than five hours a night" McGarry pointed out
reasonably. Weighing his words carefully, he added, "Not
only is that barely enough to keep going on your schedule, it's
nowhere near enough to make up for all those nights that you
missed entirely. And, if you'll excuse my saying so, Mr.
President, I'd really rather not have you dropping off in the
middle of another security briefing. For some reason, it tends to
disconcert your advisors, not to mention what'll happen if you do
it next week with that Russian missile specialist."
The President growled something unintelligible, although McGarry
had a strong suspicion it was neither complementary to his Chief
of Staff nor the Russians. Yet another reason to give the man a
much needed break. Sleeplessness was one thing, but he didn't
think the Russians or their ambassador would quietly put up with
another dressing down like the one he'd given them over their
shoddy missile program the previous year.
And with Bartlet in the mood he was in now, McGarry strongly
suspected that civilities were going to be strained to the limit.
Sighing, he pointed out, "With all due respect, sir, you did
start this. You made the offer. The specialist is
only
"
"Malinoff."
"What?"
"The specialist's name is Malinoff. Gregori Malinoff."
The tight smile Bartlet gave McGarry offered neither humor nor
apology, merely frustrated annoyance at the badgering. "See?
I was awake. Where were you?"
"Getting the coffee."
Bartlet paused for a moment and with hunched shoulders, hands
jammed deep into his trouser pockets, studied the tips of his
shoes. Though he didn't answer McGarry's pointed remark, his face
and the far away look in his eyes spoke for him.
A concerned Chief of Staff respectfully observed him for a
moment, then leaned in. "Sir" he said quietly and
discreetly, "Abbey's worried about you. Hell, I'm worried
about you. I don't know what happened that night between you and
Toby, and Stanley's been playing the doctor/patient
confidentiality card for all it's worth. Maybe it's not important
that I know. But this I do know; you need a break. Maybe only for
a day or so, but you do need it."
Bartlet glanced up sharply in surprise, and what looked
suspiciously like a hint of relief. "Stanley didn't tell you
what we discussed? I thought that
"
McGarry shook his head. "He said that the actual cause of
the problem was not related in any way to your job and so was
none of my damn business. At least unless it actually continued
to affect you to the point where you were diminished in your
capacity to perform that job. He saw no evidence of that yet and
felt that the worst of the sleeplessness would ease soon, if only
because you would be too exhausted to resist it. He did say that
he felt a few more sessions might be beneficial, but that was
entirely up to you."
Bartlet was regarding him oddly. "Toby didn't say anything
either?"
McGarry snorted. As if Toby would ever open up on that subject!
"Apart from acknowledging that you two have been avoiding
each other as much as possible, a not so easy task when you
consider he is your communications director, Ziegler has been
about as communicative as you'd expect."
"I really thought one of them would have told you. I was
waiting for someone to say something." Bartlet shook his
head abruptly and turned away.
"Something about what?"
For a brief moment, a look of withdrawal came over the
President's face. Then he laughed shortly, putting the matter
aside with sudden good humor. "Nothing. Come on, Leo. I can
see Ron from here. He's just looked at his watch for the third
time and glared at me. Do I have any skin left?"
"Are you telling me that you're afraid of your own
agent?" McGarry needled good naturedly, making a mental note
to find out whatever it was Bartlet seemed so reluctant to reveal
at a more opportune moment.
Bartlet regarded his Chief of Staff with open amazement.
"Afraid of Ron? Are you insane?" Suddenly that impish
grin that McGarry was surprised to realize he had missed in
recent times broke out. "Of course I am! Do you know, that
man once picked me up and carried me by the scruff of my neck
during an emergency evacuation? I make it a basic rule never to
annoy people who can do that."
Grinning, McGarry followed the President towards the waiting
agents. His amusement bubbled up even further as he watched his
friend instinctively duck as he passed under the wash of the
blades, which cleared his head by at least six feet. Shaking his
head, he wondered idly exactly where that particular habit had
originated.
"Ron!" Bartlet enthusiastically greeted the tall, lanky
head of his security detail, raising his voice over the roar of
the motors. The two members of the accompanying Marine detail
saluted the President smartly as he passed.
"Good day, Mr. President." Butterfield allowed his
charge to precede him up the steps into the Sea King's passenger
area. "You'll be pleased to know that we are proceeding more
or less according to schedule. Our ETA at Concord is in
approximately three hours time. A secret service detail will be
waiting and the motorcade will then take you and Mr. McGarry to
the Manchester farm."
"Three hours?" Bartlet paused abruptly on the way to
his seat, something unreadable flickering in the back of his
eyes. "Surely that exceeds the normal flight time?"
"Yes, sir. But Colonel March thought that, as this was a
vacation trip, you might like a more scenic route. Accordingly,
he has filed a flight vector that will take us slightly further
inland, along the east side of the Catskills."
McGarry saw the President swallow a bit convulsively and grimace.
He didn't have to ask why. He raised his eyebrows in silent
inquiry to ask if Bartlet wanted him to veto the suggestion.
Bartlet gave his worried friend a quick shake of his head,
refusing the offer. "That was very thoughtful of the
Colonel, Ron," he replied instead, surprised that he
actually meant it. "Tell him I appreciate the gesture."
"I will, Mr. President. Colonel March's co-pilot for this
flight is Captain Johnston. The only passengers are you and Mr.
McGarry, accompanied by Agent Sandler and myself and the Marine
detail." Satisfied that this information had been passed on
as efficiently as possible, Butterfield turned to the Chief of
Staff and said, "Mr. McGarry, I would like to take this time
to discuss some of the security details relating to the upcoming
campaign schedule, if you can spare me a moment."
"Sure Ron." McGarry nodded and turned to Bartlet. With
sympathy for the man's predicament, he offered a bit lamely,
"Mr. President, Ron and I are just going to sit over here
and go over some stuff."
Bartlet, who was buckling himself into his seat, waved him away
distractedly. Sandler was just sitting down next to him in the
adjoining seat. Taking his glasses from his coat pocket he
slipped them on and picked up the book he'd brought along. He
doubted he was actually going to be able to read and enjoy it -he
never had before, not on Marine One- but it was worth a try.
McGarry shrugged at the somewhat curt dismissal and settled into
a seat that would allow him to converse with Butterfield over the
noise of the engines. The President may have been on a short
vacation, but his Chief of Staff and the head of his security
detail never really got that chance. Still, he didn't begrudge
him that, or the answers his friend wouldn't give up.
The President of the United States would talk when he was ready.
He always did and McGarry had the patience to wait.
A considerable time later, McGarry looked up from the schedule he
had been going over with Butterfield and glanced at the clock set
into the forward bulkhead. They were over halfway into their
flight time and rain clouds were plunging the cabin into
premature dusk. He reflected ruefully that the Colonel's
well-meant gesture had turned out to be a little pointless. What
little he could see of the mountain range through the cabin
window was shrouded in a thick mist of rain and dark, low hanging
clouds.
Glancing across the cabin at the President, he couldn't help but
smile at the sight. At least Bartlet wasn't missing much, which
all things considered was a bit of a blessing. Drifting in and
out of sleep, the President's chin was resting on his chest, his
book precariously balanced on crossed knees. As usual when he
wasn't really paying attention his reading glasses had slid
almost to the end of his nose.
McGarry frowned slightly and found himself openly studying the
man with some concern. Bartlet looked a little better than he had
during that stressful week when they all had begun to fear he
would break down under the accumulated weight of the MS
disclosure, the censure, the campaign and his wife's unresolved
problems with the Medical Board.
However, McGarry couldn't help but note that his face still had a
few lines too many, and the shadows had not faded from under his
eyes. The man still needed to make up a considerable amount of
sleep and he'd finally laid down an ultimatum; either Bartlet
took a weekend to rest and recuperate or his Chief of Staff --as
was his right-- would drastically reduce his schedule. To say
that the President's initial agreement had been unwilling was to
put it mildly.
Given no other choice, McGarry had finally wheeled in the big
guns and conscripted the First Lady to his cause only to find
himself reluctantly co-opted into the weekend vacation as Bartlet
flatly refused to go alone and Abbey had several appointments in
the capital.
Still, he didn't regret it. It was worth the price paid to his
ego and the layer of skin he'd lost to Abbey's sharp tongue.
Protesting that the President didn't need a babysitter to his
concerned wife hadn't been one of his most sterling moments.
Truthfully, he was relieved. It had been a long time since he and
Bartlet had been able to spend some time together. McGarry hadn't
realized till now how much he missed that. He was determined to
use the opportunity and see if he could discover just what had
been going on with his friend --over and above all the other
crises-- in recent days. He had no idea just what wound Toby
might have inadvertently opened, but the President's reaction had
been unusually troubled.
Even now, his fitful napping was an indication of just how
exhausted he must be. As much as he tried to, Bartlet never slept
while flying, as McGarry knew from painful personal experience.
Either tension or excitement always guaranteed that he would be
wide-awake and talkative throughout any flight. Even on the huge
747 the claustrophobia didn't help either. The senior staff had
quickly learned the necessity of catching a catnap before
embarking on long trips with their President.
Suddenly, a muffled boom reverberating from somewhere forward
interrupted McGarry's meditations. A manic thought,
'Mechanical?" was all he could manage when, almost
simultaneously with the ominous noise, he found himself rising
bodily into the air as his seat dropped sickeningly away from
beneath him. The brief moment of weightlessness ended when his
safety belt slammed him back into place with his stomach still
churning.
Across the cabin, the President's book crashed to the floor as he
was jerked violently awake. For the moment more surprised than
frightened, he stared wordlessly across the aisle at his Chief of
Staff.
"What the hell
" McGarry glanced instinctively
upwards as old, near forgotten habits enabled him to detect the
fearful sound of unevenly beating rotors.
"Ron?" The President's voice blended authoritative
inquiry with ruthlessly controlled fear.
"Please remain as you are, Mr. President, Mr. McGarry."
Butterfield grimly unbuckled and stood up, making his way across
the swaying floor towards the cockpit door. He had barely passed
McGarry before a second, much louder bang caused the craft to
swing and dip violently, sending him stumbling to his knees.
McGarry reached down and managed to snag Butterfield's arm as the
helicopter went into a steep sideways dive. Somehow, he was able
to swing the agent around until he was able to grab the arm of
his seat and scramble back into it.
"Sandler!" Butterfield bellowed as he struggled to
refasten his seatbelt.
McGarry saw Sandler reach out and snatch the glasses from
Bartlet's nose, then twist in his seat and fling his arm across
the President's chest, pinning him against the backrest.
Bartlet's lower face was buried in the crook of the agent's
shoulder, but the Chief of Staff could clearly see his eyes;
wide, fixed, almost silver discs in his face.
Clinging desperately to his seat, half-deafened by the
high-pitched whine of laboring engines, McGarry risked a glance
out his window to see a mountain face approaching with
distressing rapidity. For a second, the treetops disappeared only
to be replaced by sky as their descent momentarily halted and
they began to climb laboriously above the ridge once again. Then
the nose of the craft tilted and they plunged past the top of the
ridge.
McGarry had a brief, dizzying view of rock and greenery and heard
a swishing sound --were they actually scraping the treetops? --
before the whole craft suddenly jarred violently and whipped
totally around, throwing everyone against their seat belts. Then
came a confusion of whirling sight and tearing metal.
Then nothing.
~ooOoo~
"Mr. McGarry? Mr. McGarry! Can you hear me?"
McGarry roused himself reluctantly from the pleasantly warm
cocoon he inhabited. Reality proved to be far less beguiling. He
felt chilled and achy all over and there was an uneasily familiar
ringing in his ears. For a moment memory failed and panic seized
him. What had he been doing to get into this state? Surely, oh
God, no
surely he hadn't
not again
"Mr. McGarry!"
"Ow! Alright, alright!" McGarry jerked upright with a
suddenness that turned the ringing in his ears into an outright
clamor. Stopping himself just short of swinging, he growled,
"I'm up! What the
"
Blinking, his voice trailed off when he recognized his tormentor.
Butterfield's suit was torn and smudged and a small trickle of
blood was curling down around his nostril from the bridge of his
nose. McGarry stared at the agent blankly for a moment, then
sucked in a breath in remembrance.
"Sir, are you alright?" Eyes narrowed, Butterfield
regarded him intently. "Headache? Any nausea or
unsteadiness?"
Trained to quickly assimilate events, he watched as the Chief of
Staff gingerly shook his head mutely. Satisfied with his
assessment of McGarry's physical well being, Butterfield winced
and rose stiffly to his feet, holding his right arm tightly to
his side. "Then I could really use your help here."
"Huh?" With that rather brilliant response and holding
his hand tenderly to what felt to be a very respectable knot at
the back of his head, McGarry looked around vaguely.
The cabin floor lay at a steep incline and the windows above them
were cracked, seeping rainwater down onto the men below. The
other side of the helicopter seemed to lie on a bed of rock, with
mud oozing into the interior. Broken tree limbs projected through
the shattered lower windows into the cabin itself.
Blinking, he noted that the chairs he and Butterfield had been
seated in and the area in which they rested had fared pretty
well. However, across the cabin
"God! No!" McGarry abruptly flung himself forward, only
to be blocked and held back by Butterfield.
"Take it easy, sir! We can't rush into this!"
"The hell we can't!" McGarry was nearly trembling with
shock and anxiety. The fear was lodged in his throat. "The
President
is the President alright?"
"I don't know yet, sir. As I said, I need your help."
"You mean he's in there somewhere?" Regarding the scene
of devastation in front of him, McGarry was appalled.
The opposite bulkhead appeared to have totally crumpled on
impact, folding down over itself and against the adjoining cabin
wall. To McGarry's eyes it appeared as though everything on that
side of the cabin had been swept and compressed into a single
corner: metal sheeting, reinforcing struts, seats
and their
occupants.
A deep and unaccustomed pain settled in his chest. McGarry knew
its source. Josiah Bartlet was under that somewhere.
With Butterfield's help, McGarry climbed unsteadily to his feet.
Following Butterfield's lead, he carefully eased his way across
the slanting floor to the jumbled mass on the other side.
Dropping to his knees, he tried to see through the tangle of
warped metal, hoping to catch a glimpse of a white shirt or
familiar thatch of dark hair.
Butterfield leaned over McGarry's shoulder and directed the beam
of a flashlight, recovered from one of the few remaining intact
equipment lockers, into one of the gaps along the base of the
pile.
"There!" The agent's hand tightened suddenly on
McGarry's shoulder and he directed the man's attention towards a
small flash of color in the flashlight's beam. Color that
transfigured itself into a red tie; the same color tie the
President had been wearing that day.
"Mr. President?" McGarry ducked his head from side to
side, desperately squinting along the path of the flashlight
beam. "Can you hear me?"
No response.
"Mr. President? For God's sake, please?" Abandoning the
protocol that had ruled him the last three years, he raised his
voice and shouted frantically, "Jed?" He reached out
impulsively to rip away the barrier separating him from his
oldest friend, only to have Butterfield's cautionary hand come
down again on his shoulder.
"Take it easy, sir," Butterfield warned, a flash of
fear momentarily breaking through his usual bland and hard
countenance. It was quickly replaced by an expression of grim
determination when he said, "We have to proceed with care.
That metal is extremely sharp, and we have no gloves or cutting
equipment. If you lay your hands open, you won't be of any use to
me, or to the President. Until we know their situation, we can't
afford to scrabble around in here haphazardly."
Feeling Butterfield's hand tighten briefly on his shoulder,
McGarry nodded stiffly, firmly beating down the panic rising in
his throat. Working carefully, forcing himself to keep an even
pace, he cautiously began to remove items from the barrier. The
sound of rain and dripping water joining the creak of broken
metal as he and the agent worked.
He clenched his teeth in frustrated anger when thunder, far in
the distance, began to rumble an ominous accompaniment to their
careful work. Forcing himself to remain calm, McGarry knew what
that sound meant. Their problems were about to get worse.
As if they already didn't have enough to deal with.
The bulkhead had folded over to produce a tent-like effect but
the upper edge had stopped its descent a little short of the
floor, at one point by as much as two feet. It left what looked
like a possible access point to the debris-filled area beneath.
It was at this point that the two men began to work more rapidly,
in hopes of finding that the 'tent' had created sufficient space
to protect the missing men --one man in particular--from being
crushed.
As they worked, Butterfield kept up a running commentary. To hear
the sound of his own voice, for his own benefit or his
companion's, McGarry wasn't quite sure. He suspected a bit of
both. In a strange way, the normally taciturn agent's need
provided a bit of reassuring comfort. Wincing as the jagged edge
of metal sliced into his fingers, he listened.
"As nearly as I've been able to determine since regaining
consciousness, our tail section more or less folded over, causing
the inner bulkhead to collapse." Pausing to catch his
breath, Butterfield waved a tired hand in illustration.
The secret service agent's expression stilled and, although
McGarry had thought it a physical and emotional impossibility,
grew even more serious. Hope and fear warred for dominance as he
listened to the following words.
"I was unable to raise a response from either President
Bartlet or Agent Sandler." Butterfield swallowed
uncomfortably and continued. "The door to the cockpit is
badly warped in the frame and impassable, but I was able to see
through a space at the top of the frame. I'm afraid I have to
report that it looks as though neither Colonel March nor Captain
Johnston survived impact."
McGarry closed his eyes momentarily, hands painfully gripping a
torn bit of wreckage. Taking a steadying breath, he asked,
"Are you sure? I mean
you weren't able to get in to
check."
Butterfield said nothing, but regarded him steadily.
McGarry looked away, for the moment unable to face the dire
certainty in the agent's gaze. "Of course you're sure",
he muttered. "Sorry, stupid question." He took a deep
breath and determinedly bent to his task. "So it's just us?
What about the Marine detail?"
Butterfield looked back at the remains of the rear cockpit, the
tangled mess of metal and bulkhead blocking the way to the far
end of the passenger area. Again, he didn't need to say anything.
His eyes, bleak and tired, said it all.
McGarry closed his eyes and whispered a short prayer for all the
dead. "So it is just us?"
"For the moment, yes sir." Butterfield pulled away yet
another jagged section of metal and carefully laid it aside.
Grunting with the effort, he continued, "Because I can't
reach the cockpit, I'm unable to access the radio. But this is
Marine One. Intelligence and the US Navy always have an exact
pinpoint on her location whenever she's in the air. I'm pretty
sure that we came down on the other side of the ridge to that
displayed on our flight plan. Given the scale of the assistance
that will be mobilized on our behalf, I don't anticipate there's
much chance of their missing us. We will be located very soon.
Any delay after that will depend on the nature of the terrain,
and ease of access to our location."
The worsening storm, as if to add it's own terrible voice to the
play, chose that moment to rumble its presence. Both men started
involuntarily at the sound, exchanging worried glances.
"Or the storm," McGarry spat out, frustrated and angry
at circumstance.
"That too, sir." Settling back for a moment,
Butterfield slipped his hand under his jacket and closed his
eyes.
"So, help's on the way even now, but we still don't know
just when it'll get here", the Chief of Staff summarized
grimly, pulling away another sheet of metal, all the while hoping
to catch a glimpse of Bartlet or Sandler. "We're perfectly
well able to wait and those poor devils in the cockpit don't care
anymore. But we have no idea how long these two may be able to
afford to wait until we get to them."
Butterfield's lack of response signaled his fear that such a
concern might well be moot when they finally reached their
targets. He continued to work in grim silence, pausing every now
and then to add his voice to McGarry's and call out to the
trapped men.
Getting a good grip on the edge of one over turned seat,
Butterfield pulled then nearly doubled over, grunting as he
pressed a hand to his side.
"Hey!" Concerned, McGarry reached out and grasped the
agent by the arm. "You alright?"
Shrugging off the hand, Butterfield hitched in a quick breath,
grabbed another bit of debris and stated flatly, "It's
nothing."
"Ron
"
"I said," he leveled McGarry with a narrow eyed glare
that dared him to push the issue further, "It's
nothing."
McGarry watched for a moment as Butterfield struggled with a torn
bit of seat cushion, favoring his right side as he tossed it
aside with a barely contained grunt. The man was in pain. How
much or how badly, he knew if he asked he'd get the same
response. Nothing. He wasn't a doctor, but a mad list of
possibilities ran through his mind. Ribs, internal injuries,
nothing good came to mind.
Somehow, McGarry didn't think their luck would hold that it was
just a bad bruise, but he could hope. Without Butterfield, their
chances of survival were markedly reduced.
Suddenly, Butterfield paused. Eyes narrowing, he leaned in closer
and cocked his head to one side, listening intently.
McGarry looked at him, startled and alarmed. "What?"
The agent threw up a hand for silence, but McGarry had already
heard a muffled groan sounding from behind the barrier. Hope
sprang in his chest, almost suffocating him and his concerns for
the agent were replaced with another. "Jed?"
The groan repeated and McGarry winced at the confusion evident in
the sound, the bewildered fear in the broken cough that
accompanied it. There was silence for a moment, only the sound of
breathing and dripping water. Then he heard an abrupt gasp,
followed by the sound of frenzied scrabbling as if someone were
clawing frantically at something with their bare hands.
"Jed?" Leo was rewarded with even more panicked
scratching and shallow, panting breathing. "Jed! Damn
it!"
For the first time, Butterfield wore an expression of open alarm.
"What's happening? Do you know what's wrong?"
"Not for certain, no!" McGarry nearly snarled his
response to the agent's concern. "But I'll bet you dollars
to donuts it's that damned claustrophobia kicking in again,
admittedly with good cause. It sounds as if he's having a panic
attack." He raised his voice again. "JED! Listen to me!
Calm down, you'll only hurt yourself or hyperventilate and pass
out or something. And you know I'll never let you live that down!
We're right here. We're coming for you and we'll have you out in
no time. Now listen to me and stay still!"
He strained anxiously for a response, anything that would let him
know he'd gotten through to the trapped man. The scrabbling
noises slowed until only the sound of heavy breathing remained.
Finally, forced out between gulping breaths, a shaky voice called
out, "Leo?"
McGarry went limp with relief and he saw a huge, uncharacteristic
grin split the face of the taciturn security chief. He could feel
a similar smile cracking the tense muscles of his own face.
"Yeah, Mr. President. I'm here. How are you doin'?"
An explosive snort of shaky amusement rewarded him. "Leo,
would you really like to know what I think of that question right
now?"
"Normally, I think you'd know my answer, Mr. President. But
right now, I'd welcome a lecture on the inappropriateness of my
semantic choices."
"You would?"
McGarry almost grinned at the surprise of the involuntary
response. "Yes, sir. Because a lecture right now would
reassure me that you've got the whole breathing thing back under
control."
He was rewarded with a hoarse laugh, more a cough but still
filled with sarcastic humor. Even the crack of thunder, now
nearly overhead, failed to still his joy at the sound. Things
just might work out.
McGarry gave the man a moment to catch his breath, listening to
the breathing in question and waiting for it to calm further.
Careful not to set off another panic attack, he inquired gently,
"Mr. President? You okay now?"
A few more deep breaths, then "Yeah
yeah, Leo. I'm
okay."
"Good." He exchanged a relieved glance with Butterfield
before asking, "What can you tell us about your
situation?"
McGarry could hear the President struggling to control his
incipient panic. Never more than at this moment, he marveled at
the man's self control.
"Well, I can't really move
my right leg hurts
and
there's something pressing down on my chest and head." A
creak of metal and a muffled grunt as Bartlett shifted as best he
could under the weight pinning him down. "Feels like it
might be a seat or something."
"Okay." McGarry actually felt himself relax just a bit.
It wasn't much, but things were looking up. Gesturing to
Butterfield, he started once again to shift the rest of the
wreckage and to work on clearing the gap.
"Leo?"
At the hesitant, still slightly breathless call, McGarry paused
again. "Yes, Mr. President?"
"You, ah
you couldn't hurry, could you? Only, I'm not
sure how long I can stay on top of
you know?"
McGarry softened his voice sympathetically. "I know, sir.
You're doing fine. If it starts to get too much, call out to us,
talk to us. We're coming. We'll be with you real soon."
"Thanks, Leo". A pause, then the voice returned with a
definite quaver in it. "Ron?"
"Yes, Mr. President?" Butterfield leaned towards the
voice.
"Are the pilots alright?"
Butterfield sat back on his heels and glanced at the Chief of
Staff. He watched him struggle for a moment with the decision and
hesitate, then grimly nod his assent for the agent to answer the
question honestly. Equally grim, knowing full well how the truth
would affect the man trapped under the wreckage, he leaned
forward again and answered, "I'm very sorry, Mr. President.
I'm afraid that they didn't make it."
"The Marines?"
"No, sir."
There was a short silence. "You and Leo alright?"
Butterfield almost smiled, although his hand strayed to his side
and a slightly guilty look shadowed his eyes. "Yes, Mr.
President. Nothing some aspirin and a new suit wouldn't
cure."
"I'm glad to hear that, Ron. Keep an eye on Leo, won't you?
He's not very good at taking care of himself."
McGarry shot a look of long suffering exasperation at the pile.
"I will, sir." This time the agent did smile, if only a
little.
"Ron?" Slightly more hesitantly.
"Yes, sir?"
"Agent Sandler
" Bartlet's voice tailed off
momentarily, "I'm sorry."
Butterfield's eyes closed. "So am I, sir."
McGarry had no problems following that bit of dialog and what it
meant. Upset, he spoke impulsively. "Are you certain, sir? I
mean, you're not really in a good position to judge." Almost
immediately, he kicked himself. Not again.
"I'm pretty sure, Leo." Bartlet's voice shook slightly.
A long pause, then, "I can just feel his head when I stretch
down my hand, and it's
" the words seem to catch in
his throat.
The words may have remained unspoken, but not the terrible
meaning. Exchanging a horror-stricken look with Butterfield,
McGarry could hear the President's breathing starting to stress
again. "God, I'm sorry!" Redoubling his efforts to
shift the twisted metal blocking the way, he said, "Mr.
President, please listen. Concentrate on my voice. Concentrate on
breathing slowly. We're nearly there."
The two men intensified their efforts, McGarry all the time
keeping up a flow of inconsequential conversation, demanding
responses from his trapped friend. Finally, he watched as, with a
grunt that was both triumph and pain, Butterfield managed to haul
loose a sizeable remnant of storage locker that had been blocking
the gap. Dropping to his knees, McGarry wriggled under the
overhang into the small space thus provided.
Butterfield passed him the flashlight and he quickly examined his
surroundings. He was relieved to find that here, near where the
bulkhead folded towards the cabin wall, it was possible to stand
almost upright. The area around him was a jumbled mass of cabin
fittings and structural materials. The space narrowed sharply as
he played the torch further along, creating an eerie, cone-like
effect. However, at this point the mass did not rise to meet the
metal wall curving above, leading him to hope that it would
indeed be possible for them to free the trapped man themselves.
A faint, odd smell tickled McGarry's nose and his memory. It was
barely there, shifting and fading as he moved his head. He
couldn't place it and felt somewhere deep down that he should.
A weak, broken cough issued from beneath the wreckage.
"Mr. President?" Heart in his throat, McGarry angled
the light and peered in the direction the voice had seemed to
come from.
"Here
I'm here!" Bartlet's voice sounded muffled,
hope fighting with the panic riding just below the surface. A
section of the pile shifted slightly, as if the man beneath had
heaved upwards with all his strength.
McGarry abandoned caution and advanced the necessary step or two
hastily. Behind him he heard Butterfield grunt as he squeezed his
long frame into the gap they had created. Taking a deep breath
and eyeing the twisted debris in front of him, the President's
Chief of Staff noted grimly that he and the secret service agent
had their jobs cut out for them. This was not going to be easy.
Nearly laughing at the thought, McGarry choked it back. As if
anything he'd done or contemplated in the White House these last
three years could be considered easy. It all amounted to a warped
game of mission impossible and somehow he'd always managed to
find a way to win. Grimly, he set himself the task of figuring a
way out of this one.
Losing was not an option.
As if the elements were laughing at him, a peel of thunder rolled
almost directly overhead. Looking up, he listened as the rain
beating down on the outer bulkhead increased its tempo, starting
to come down in sheets.
Anxiety and fear for his friend cooled his thoughts, though he
found it impossible to steady his erratic pulse. Playing the
light along the wreckage, he noted that several rather heavy
sections of metal, including the remains of yet another locker
lay on top of and almost entirely concealing what did indeed
appear to be one of the helicopter's passenger seats.
McGarry's lips tightened. Somewhere beneath that chaos was his
friend. He called out, "Mr. President?"
"Yes!"
The tense lines of his face relaxed and McGarry felt the knot in
his stomach release. Bartlet's voice now seemed to rise from
directly beneath the remains of the seat. Kneeling down, he put
his hand on the back of the seat, willing the man trapped beneath
to feel his presence. He called again, "Mr.
President
"
"Leo?" Bartlet's voice was deceptively calm, a faint
tremor of mocking humor covering the thread of panic still
fighting for dominance. "I warn you; the next words you
utter had better not be 'are you there?' Could you please see
about getting me out of here? Now?"
Swallowing hard, McGarry found his voice and replied thickly and
with pride, "You know our staff motto, sir. We serve at the
pleasure of the President. Be right with you." He glanced up
and exchanged a determined look with the waiting agent. Giving
the man a curt nod, he said, "Ron? Can you squeeze in here
beside me; I'm going to need a hand."
Butterfield eased alongside McGarry and the two of them once
again began to slowly and methodically lift away metal fragments,
awkwardly moving the pieces behind them and to one side.
Gingerly handling the jagged edges, McGarry was conscious of a
sense of profound gratitude that Bartlet had been shielded by the
padding of the chair. If not, he might well have been cut to
ribbons.
Eventually, they had cleared enough to be able to get a good grip
on the leather back of the upended seat. Satisfied at their
progress, McGarry paused and called out hopefully, "Mr.
President?"
"Yeah?" The note of stress had returned to Bartlet's
voice. With the prospect of freedom so close to hand, he was
having a hard time trying to control his emotions and desist from
attempting to fight his way through the last of the barrier
separating him from his rescuers.
"We've reached the seat you say is weighing down on you.
We're about to attempt to lift it off."
"Good. Fine. Whatever. Just get it off me, Leo. It feels
like forever since I've been able to take a deep breath."
"That's not such an unusual feeling for you, surely?"
McGarry couldn't help but smile as he said that.
The somewhat peevish response from the President of the United
States didn't disappoint him in the least.
"Leo, if this is your way of bringing up Toby's criticism of
my delivery of that speech to the DC Law Society last month, that
was not my fault! You know Sam loves long sentences. He calls it
imagery."
"I think Toby called it 'forgetting to inhale', sir."
A brief grunt, somewhat resembling what McGarry might have called
a laugh, issued from the granite-faced agent trying to get a good
grip on the back of the passenger seat. A quick glance reassured
the Chief of Staff that no, the laws of the universe had not been
suspended and Butterfield was as stoically reserved as ever.
"Leo." The mild humor had leached from the President's
voice again.
"Yes, sir?" McGarry turned his attention back to the
job at hand.
"I want you to know that I appreciate the distraction and
all, but I really need you to get me out of here. Please?"
"We're just maneuvering for a good angle," McGarry
spoke reassuringly. "We don't want to jolt you when we lift
it away, or have anything else fall down on top of you." He
looked across at Butterfield, who nodded, and gripped his side of
the seat firmly. "Ready?
Making sure his own grip was secure, Butterfield nodded again.
"Now!"
The two men heaved at the seat. For a brief, terrible moment, it
stuck awkwardly in place, and then it abruptly yielded to their
frantic tugging. They swiftly manhandled it to one side and then
waited to see if their actions had caused a dangerous shift in
the remaining wreckage. The sound of their heavy breathing, the
constant drip of water, were the only things to be heard.
When nothing happened, McGarry breathed a sigh of relief. And for
once the storm left out its mocking comments. Dragging out his
flashlight, he shone it down into the dark space they had created
at their feet.
President Bartlet blinked dazedly in the sudden blinding light,
one hand coming up to cover his eyes. His face was dusty and had
a deep bruise on one cheekbone. Another bruise darkened the line
of his jaw. Blood coated the side of his head and matted his hair
from a deep scalp wound just above his hairline, which was still
bleeding profusely. His chest heaved convulsively as he struggled
to bring his breathing under control.
Butterfield dropped to a crouch beside his charge, wadding a
handkerchief against the head wound in an effort to stop the
bleeding.
McGarry carefully lowered himself down on the other side and
placed a reassuring hand on his friend's shoulder. Afraid of what
he might see, he played the flashlight down over the President's
body.
Bartlet's torso was visible to just below his chest. At that
point his body disappeared beneath a heavy steel girder, clearly
what was left of one of the bulkhead's main supports. To
McGarry's vast relief, the weight of the girder was held off the
President's midsection by the debris on either side. One of
Bartlet's arms was free and now lay across his chest, fingers
nervously clenching and unclenching. The other arm disappeared
beneath the girder. The trapped man had plainly been unable to
withdraw it because of the awkward angle at which he lay among
the rubble.
McGarry scowled as he looked at the point where that arm vanished
beneath the debris. Somewhere under that pile, just within reach
of Bartlet's fingertips lay
he pushed the mental picture
firmly from his mind, swallowing his deep regret for the young
agent dead beneath the rubble.
Kneeling down, he gently touched his friend's shoulder. He nearly
swore out loud when Bartlet turned a strained and slightly dazed
face towards him.
"Sir?" he asked softly.
Shifting as best he could under the weight pinning him down,
Bartlet coughed and grimaced slightly. "Think
I may
have bruised my ribs," he explained. Catching his breath, he
summoned up a weak smile. "Thanks, Leo. I was starting to
feel a little confined, and you know how much I like to have room
in which to expand my considerable personality."
McGarry smiled down at him. The humor, however weakly given, was
a good sign. "We'll see if we can't find you a little more
room, Mr. President." He looked inquiringly at Butterfield.
Butterfield looked up from his rudimentary first aid. The
handkerchief was already soaked crimson. Catching the Chief of
Staff's alarmed expression, he nodded reassuringly. "It's
not as bad as it looks, Mr. McGarry. Head wounds always bleed a
lot. It needs stitches and if I can't stop it, the blood loss may
make him nauseous and light-headed, but it's not exactly
life-threatening."
The agent shifted his position slightly to better view his
President's situation. His eyes narrowed and his mouth thinned
into a bleak line.
From the look on the man's face, McGarry knew he didn't like what
he saw.
"There's no way we can move that girder, or access under
it," Butterfield was saying, giving the remaining wreckage
pinning his charge a supremely sour look, as if it had dared to
offend him somehow. Shaking his head, he asked, "Mr.
President, do you feel any weight on your legs? If the girder has
created a pocket of space for your body, and nothing is pressing
down on you, we may be able to drag you back out from beneath
it."
Closing his eyes, Bartlet grimaced again and frowned in
concentration. "My left leg is fine
can even move it a
little. Just feels like the time that Michigan linebacker stomped
on it at that college game. My right leg
I don't know. It
hurts pretty badly, and there seems to be some kind of
pressure
" His voice trailed off and he paused.
Uncertainty clouding his voice, he finally answered, "No, I
don't think there's anything heavy lying on it though."
McGarry regarded him with some concern and more than a little
suspicion. He hadn't missed the hesitation and what it meant. He
knew Josiah Bartlet far too well. He was a terrible liar.
"Sir, are you sure? I mean, I know you want to get out of
this, but we can't afford to take chances
"
"I do want out of this!" Bartlet interrupted
vehemently, his voice laced with a desperate determination.
Although his expression changed very little, Butterfield looked
on helplessly and waited, watching the two men. The President's
breathing had started to become labored again and he saw the
Chief of Staff squeeze the man's shoulder reassuringly. This call
was out of his hands.
Stopping just short of pleading, Bartlet took a deep, gasping
breath and said softly, "Leo? I need to get out of this.
Just
try."
"Okay, okay. We'll try. Please, sir, relax." McGarry
patted his arm helplessly. There wasn't much more he could do.
"You won't do yourself or us any good if you tense up or
pass out. Now, slow breaths, remember? Get it back under control
and then we'll try."
He held his friend's hand, feeling the fingers cold in his grasp
as Bartlet fought valiantly to get the panic back under control.
His clothes were slightly damp. Rainwater was trickling in
beneath him from the cracks in the fuselage and dripping off the
twisted girders. That wasn't going to help if he started to slip
into shock.
And that smell. There it was again. McGarry turned his head,
trying to capture it and the memory. He was so close. He started
as a particularly nasty peal of thunder cracked overhead, chasing
away the memory he was so close to catching.
Turning his attention back to the President, McGarry watched in
powerless silence as Bartlett slowly calmed and regained his
control. He mentally cursed the phobia that was making things so
much harder for his friend.
When he was sure Bartlet was as calm as he could get under the
circumstances, he nodded to Butterfield and they both eased up to
slide their hands under the President's arms.
Keeping his voice as even as he could, McGarry said, "Sir,
we're going to try to draw you straight back and out from under
the girder. There's just enough room behind you. You ready?"
Swallowing hard, Bartlet nodded his assent and braced his free
hand on McGarry's upper arm. He felt Butterfield's hand slide
beneath his armpit on the other side and lift him slightly. He
winced at the sudden pain the movement caused. Tensing in
anticipation, he looked up just as the agent signed his readiness
to McGarry.
Lips pressed tightly shut so no sound could escape, he braced
himself as the two men pulled and together drew back on his arms.
Both men stopped abruptly, shocked as a sharp cry burst from the
President. McGarry winced as the man's fingers closed
convulsively on his arm. Panicked, he looked down. Bartlet's eyes
were closed and his lips drawn back over his teeth in a grimace
of pain. His body held rigid, and then suddenly deflated as the
worst of the throe passed.
"What happened?" McGarry heard his own voice, high with
fear.
The President shook his head, unable to answer.
Grim faced, Butterfield seized the flashlight and ran its beam
over the President's body, looking for injury. He almost snarled
his frustration when he failed to see anything obvious.
Finally the pain subsided enough to allow Bartlet to speak.
"My leg!" He gritted out between his teeth,
perspiration gleaming wetly on his face.
Butterfield crouched down further, his head nearly resting on the
President's chest and shone the flashlight into the tiny space
between the man's body and the girder. He stayed in position for
some moments, carefully peering into the limited field of vision.
Finally he drew back, shaking his head in angry self-disgust.
"What is it?" McGarry had eased an arm under his
friend's head and was cushioning it in the crook of his elbow. It
was a useless question and from the look on Butterfield's face,
one he really didn't want the answer to.
Bartlet lay still with eyes closed and face pale, his breathing
punctuated by short gasps. Occasionally his throat moved as he
swallowed convulsively against the bile rising in it as the pain
in his leg burned and clawed at him.
"I should have checked before we tried anything."
Butterfield shook his head, for the moment unable to answer
further.
The agent was as angry as the Chief of Staff had ever seen him.
That anger was no less intimidating for being directed at
himself. McGarry could also see the pain hovering behind his eyes
as he explained further. More problems added to the growing list.
"It's barely visible, but it looks as if one of the metal
spars from the interior wall has embedded itself deep into his
leg just above the knee. I can see blood welling up around the
shaft, so we must have aggravated the hell out of the injury when
we tried to pull him out of there."
Shocked, McGarry looked down at his friend. "We can't get
him out?"
Butterfield shook his head. "I definitely wouldn't like to
try it. There's no way we can reach the spar and we have no means
to cut or extract it. We try to just haul him out, no telling
what damage we could do. As it is, we may have already done more
than enough harm. I just hope the bleeding slows, and that we
didn't tear a major vein."
"And if we did?" McGarry already knew the answer, but
had to ask.
"Then you had better hope that help comes very soon, Mr.
McGarry." Butterfield was painfully blunt, his professional
mask once again in place, his own pain and discomfort disguised
by the concern for his charge. "At the moment I can't even
reach the wound to try to place any kind of effective compress on
it to slow the bleeding."
McGarry sat in stunned silence as the wind whistled noisily
around the wreck, driving rain into the cramped interior. He
looked down abruptly as the President stirred in his arms.
Bartlet's eyes fluttered open and the Chief of Staff winced to
see them dull with pain. This shouldn't be happening. It tore at
his heart when the man smiled weakly up at him.
"Guess I called that badly, huh Leo?" Bartlet's voice
was thin, a weak shadow of the vibrant instrument that could
weave spells with words. "I'm
sorry, old friend. I had
a feeling something was wrong, but I wanted out so much, I just
hoped it wasn't anything major."
McGarry tightened his arm around his friend reassuringly, felt
the cold hand grip that arm tightly in return. "It's okay,
sir. We'll deal with it. Don't we always?"
Butterfield looked away.
"You'll have to be the one Leo
you and Ron. I'm afraid
I'm not going to be much help." Bartlet laughed weakly and
he flashed a pale imitation of that impish grin. "The worst
I have to worry about is maybe not making it. You on the other
hand will be stuck with the joyful task of explaining to my
loving spitfire of a wife just why you allowed her jackass of a
husband to talk you into trying to haul him out of wreckage with
a spar of metal through his leg."
McGarry froze, the implication of those words washing over him in
an icy wave of powerless terror. If Bartlet himself honestly did
not expect to come through this ordeal
he forced the
thought away from him with violent anger. Damn it, no! He had
faced the possibility of losing his friend too often since he had
taken office. First the stunning news that his friend was
suffering from a chronic disease that might one day rob him of
his tremendous vitality and that alert intelligence, perhaps even
his very life.
Then that dreadful night at Rossyln, the first panic and the
false relief when he heard the President was on his way back to
the White House. Fleeting release only, to be followed by that
terrifying moment in the car when the agent told him he was
sorry, but they had orders to divert instead to GW Hospital. The
mad dash down the corridors to finally burst through the exam
room doors and see
He closed his eyes and swallowed, then looked down again at his
President. Bartlet's face had a grayish tinge, and the hand that
once again rested inside McGarry's was cold and clammy. However,
those pain-drawn features continued to gaze up at him quizzically
and the blue eyes still retained their usual sparkle of
intelligence, mingled with a faintly self-depreciating humor.
McGarry's face felt stiff, but he forced the muscles into a
smile. "Yeah, right! Don't think you're going to get away
with landing me with that task. This one you're going to have to
explain for yourself."
Bartlet's lips quirked up on one side. "Are you telling
me," he teased gently, "that the man who told a House
Disciplinary Committee that it was his job to take a bullet for
the President
oh, yes." At Leo's abashed look he
tightened his grip momentarily in unspoken gratitude. "I
heard about that
is still afraid to face the President's
wife?"
McGarry swallowed and spoke with deliberate lightness. "Sir,
with all due respect, a bullet can only kill me. The First Lady
tends to maul her victims rather badly, especially those who have
been careless enough to damage her husband in any way. I'd much
rather die with all my limbs intact."
He was rewarded with a low snort of laughter and a faint murmur
of, "Chicken!" before the President's eyes closed and
his head rolled to one side to rest against the Chief of Staff's
chest.
Alarmed, McGarry looked up at Butterfield, who had remained
silent throughout the exchange.
The agent leaned forward to touch his fingers lightly beneath the
President's jaw. McGarry's eyes widened at the gesture and he
sucked in a breath of relief when Butterfield pulled back and
reassured his anxious audience with a slight nod.
"It's alright, Mr. McGarry, he's just passed out for the
moment." Butterfield began efficiently ripping a long strip
from the lining of his jacket. "We'll need to wake him again
in a minute. Between the leg injury, the bleeding and the wound
to his head it would be dangerous to allow him to sleep. He's
already in danger of slipping into shock and we have no means of
determining whether or not he may have a concussion."
"Oh God," McGarry swore softly. A curse or a prayer, he
wasn't sure. A wave of apprehension, sheer dread, swept through
him and he snapped, "Wake him, now!"
"In a moment, sir. I want to take advantage of the
circumstance. This might hurt him otherwise." Butterfield
understood McGarry's fear, shared it. But he couldn't afford to
let it rule him or his actions. He held out his hand. "Can I
have your handkerchief?"
"Huh?" McGarry blinked and gave the man a blank look,
totally caught up in the feeling of the weight lying against him.
"Your handkerchief," Butterfield repeated patiently.
"I want to put a compress on his head wound. See if I can
halt the bleeding there at least, given that we can't do much
about his leg."
"Oh!" Flushing at his own stupidity, McGarry balanced
Bartlet's head as well as he could while digging through his coat
pocket. He became aware of an oddly warm, clammy patch on his
shirtfront that cooled rapidly as he shifted position. He
swallowed convulsively when he realized that the blood still
streaming from the injured man's head had soaked right through
the lining of his jacket.
Gritting his teeth, he silently handed the handkerchief to
Butterfield and watched as the other man added it to his own
soaked linen, pressing both down firmly on the wound, and started
to wind the strip of jacket lining tightly over them and around
the President's head.
"Ow!" Bartlet was awake now, startled by the
manhandling and managing to throw a pretty good elbow into
McGarry's stomach.
Grunting and catching the flailing arm, McGarry pressed down
gently on his friend's chest to prevent him moving suddenly. He'd
wanted the man awake, but not like this. "Sir
"
"Damn it, that hurts!"
"Sorry, Mr. President," Butterfield did not pause in
his task. Truthfully, he was rather pleased Bartlet had the
strength to grouse and complain. "Almost done." He
reached down and snagged the pin from Bartlet's tie, using it to
secure the rough bandage in place.
"Careful with that", the President growled irritably.
"Abbey gave me that for our anniversary three years ago and
I copped hell when I mislaid it for a week."
"I remember the search, sir." Butterfield's voice may
have contained just a trace of ironic amusement. "I'm sure
the First Lady would understand in the circumstances and
approve."
"Whatever. Just so long as you know you'll be the one doing
the explaining this time." The President's voice trailed off
and his head began to loll back against McGarry's chest again.
"Mr. President?" Worry clouding his voice, Butterfield
tried to regain the man's attention. "I'm sorry sir, but you
can't fall asleep."
The only reply the agent received was a slightly peevish mumble.
"Mr. President?" McGarry tapped his friend's cheek
gently, this time easily evading the feeble swatting motion that
Bartlet made in response.
"Leave me 'lone
tired."
McGarry sighed heavily. "I know sir, but we really need you
to stay awake until help gets here. You could have a concussion
and we have no idea how badly your leg may be wounded. How does
it feel?"
"Hmmm?" Bartlet roused himself with an effort. He
shifted slightly, before freezing with a stifled groan.
McGarry tightened his arms around him instinctively, felt the
man's muscles tense, then relax. But only a little.
"Sir?" He prodded, trying again for an answer.
"It hurts, Leo
a lot. And it's cold. My foot seems
numb, can hardly feel it. In fact," Bartlet's whole body
suddenly shook in an involuntary shiver, "I feel pretty cold
all over."
McGarry shivered slightly in sympathy and suddenly became aware
once again of the sound of wind and rain playing through the
cracks in the damaged fuselage. If at all possible, the storm had
become worse. The constant drip of water around them, the
frequent and alarmingly close rumbles of thunder were testament
to that unwelcome fact.
Gritting his teeth to stifle a grunt of pain, Butterfield rose
abruptly to his feet. "I'm going to see if I can find
blankets in the lockers remaining in the cabin. I'll be back in a
moment. Please keep him talking, Mr. McGarry." He twisted
around and ducked under the cleared area of overhang.
McGarry watched him leave, then looked down at the man resting
against his arm and sighed. Bartlet's eyes had already closed
again and his breathing had softened as he hovered precariously
close to sleep. He gently joggled the arm on which his friend's
head was laying.
Forcing himself to keep the alarm out of his voice, he said
loudly, "Hey!"
Bartlet's eyes snapped open and he snarled angrily,
"What!"
For a moment, the full force of the President's formidable temper
left McGarry speechless. Then he grinned and said, "You
know, I'm getting a whole new appreciation for Charlie's hatred
of waking you up in the mornings."
"Ha, funny." Bartlet countered with a cynical curl of
his lip. Shifting as much as he was able, he thrust his free hand
impatiently against the heavy girder imprisoning him.
"Careful." McGarry gently captured the wavering hand.
"You'll cut yourself and you can't afford to lose any more
blood."
"Whatever."
McGarry was dismayed at the weary, pain-laced tone of the
President's voice. Underneath that was a hint of something he'd
never heard before. Resignation. That more than anything sent a
chill up his spine.
"I feel like it's weighing down on me, Leo. Like I can't
fill my lungs."
Closing his eyes briefly, McGarry tried to ignore the dull ache
of foreboding those exhausted words produced. Bartlet was riding
the ragged edge and there was nothing he could do to help. How
did you cope with an irrational yet very real fear, especially
under these circumstances?
He had always admired his friend's strength of will, but never
more so than now. He knew it was taking every shred of Josiah
Bartlet's self control to prevent himself from trying to rip that
metal spar right out of his leg in a frantic struggle for freedom
from his coffin-like confinement. Even now, he could feel the
man's chest laboring slightly under his hand and hear the uneven
breathing. With frightful certainty he knew that the rigid
tension of his friend's muscles came almost as much from that
effort for control as from the terrible pain emanating from his
leg.
"I'm sorry." He gave his friend's hand a gentle little
shake. "You're doing really well. I'm proud of you. Just try
to hang on a little longer. Help will be here soon."
He silently prayed those words were true.
Bartlet nodded weakly, for one of the few times in his life
without words. A heavy, tense silence fell for a moment, only to
be broken when the wind howled mournfully through a crack in the
fuselage. He nearly smiled at nature's rather snide commentary on
the whole proceedings.
"You know," McGarry tried for a light tone, "When
we get back I'm probably gonna kill Jonathan."
Bartlet twisted his head slightly to regard his chief of staff
with puzzled surprise. "Jonathan
as in my brother?
Why?"
"For the steamer trunk." At Bartlet's blank expression,
McGarry continued, still trying to keep his words and mood easy,
"That comment you made, about Jon locking you in one when
you were kids. I asked Abbey if you had told her about it,
thought it was funny, he being your kid brother and all. She told
me you'd said that you actually passed out."
McGarry paused for a moment, unsure as to whether he had the
right to continue. Another time, another place and he would
simply ask. But this was the President of the United States. How
far do you push?
Thunder roared outside and made the decision for him. He had to
know. "Wasn't that what started the claustrophobia? You've
had it for as long as I've known you."
"It wasn't Jon's fault, he didn't know it would affect me
like that. Besides, he was only a kid. He was just
imitating
" Bartlet broke off abruptly.
McGarry regarded him sharply and with some surprise.
"Imitating who?"
He was stunned by the expression he saw steal over his friend's
face just before it went carefully blank. It was a chaotic
mixture of anger, sadness and remembered fear and shame.
"Nothing." Bartlet shifted and grimaced slightly. His
voice became deceptively light. "Practicing psychotherapy
without a license, Leo? For shame. Seems to be becoming a bad
habit for everybody lately."
McGarry frowned, a sudden sense of revelation overcoming him.
"Was that what Toby did that night, Jed?" For a brief
moment he once again forgot protocol, the rigid and unbending
rules he'd lived by for three years. This was his friend and he
was in pain. "Try to play mind games? What on earth did he
say? Because I've never seen you
"
"Leo!" Weak though the voice was, there was no
mistaking the tone, the sudden anger that flashed and clouded his
eyes. Thunder chose that moment to rumble a spiteful
accompaniment overhead and Bartlet let out a short, bitter laugh.
"Thanks for the assist," he muttered ironically,
feeling a bit put out that the director of this whole piece felt
it necessary to add his two cents in.
The Chief of Staff practically ground to a halt. Forty-year old
friendship or not, and despite Bartlet's normally open nature, he
was plainly walking a line that his instinct told him Toby had
stomped all over with trademark Ziegler doggedness in pursuit of
an ideal.
"Jed, please." McGarry pressed forward, trying to force
the issue. He could be as dogged as Toby on any day and he sensed
he was hovering on the edge of discovering just what had wounded
Bartlet so deeply that night.
It had troubled him more profoundly than he could easily express
to watch his friend over the course of that week. In fact, he had
been the direct instigator of Dr. Stanley Keyworth's involvement
in the whole affair and had been frustrated beyond belief by that
gentleman's refusal to be forthcoming about matters.
Bartlet's lips twisted and he opened his mouth to utter a curt
response when he was interrupted by the sound of Butterfield
endeavoring to worm his way back into the small space with a
couple of blankets in tow.
Bartlet turned his head away as the agent approached, closing his
eyes and feigning sleep.
It was a poor ruse and McGarry knew at that point the
conversation, unsatisfactory as it had been, was officially over.
He sat there for a moment, shoulders slumped and with a worried
expression on his face he made no attempt to hide. Wearied by
events and indecision, he reluctantly let it go, for now at any
rate.
There would be another time.
"Here," Butterfield handed him the blankets.
Uncertainty crept into his expression as he looked down at his
sleeping charge. He wasn't fooled by the act any more than
McGarry was. He hesitated; measuring the situation for a moment,
then asked quietly, "Can you handle things here, sir?"
"Why?" Accepting the blankets and shaking one of them
out, McGarry gave the waiting agent a curious look. "Is
there a problem?"
The corner of Butterfield's mouth twisted slightly in what might
have been described by someone who didn't know him as a mocking
-albeit only slightly-smile.
"Okay, okay," McGarry growled, glad of the semidarkness
that hid his embarrassed wince. "Is there another problem I
should know about? 'Cause I'll tell you right now my plate is a
little full."
A snort and a low chuckle of familiar though tired executive
amusement greeted that rather loaded statement.
Eyes narrowed with profound and long-suffering irritation,
McGarry looked down and gave his friend a supremely sour look.
"No comments from the peanut gallery."
One Presidential eye opened. "Peanut gallery?"
"Yeah. As in annoying, sir."
"Lucy?"
"Shut up."
Butterfield shifted, becoming more uncomfortable by the minute.
Most of the secret service had that reaction when these two
started going at it. As the senior agent was doing now, most only
half listened to the absurd byplay, wondering exactly where or
when it would leave off and things could get back to normal.
'Back to normal?' He nearly did smile openly at that thought.
Having served under two previous sitting Presidents, Butterfield
and his staff had quickly come to the realization that nothing in
the Bartlet administration could be considered normal.
Truthfully, most found it a refreshing, if slightly
disconcerting, breath of fresh air.
Still, there was a time and place for everything and the
President's senior agent had a job to do. "Mr.
McGarry?"
"Yeah, Ron?"
"I'm going to head forward. One of the hatches is clear of
debris and I might be able to get it open."
McGarry nodded, not trusting himself to speak. Caught up in the
nightmare, he'd forgotten about that possibility. His fingers
clutched the blanket in his hand, twisting the heavy cloth. They
might be able to get one of the hatches open. But then what? What
choices did they have?
Two of them could leave and find relative safety. One couldn't.
And McGarry knew with the certainty of over forty years
friendship what the man who couldn't leave would order them to
do.
One thing was certain. There was always a first time and McGarry
had always wondered what it would be like to defy a direct
executive order.
Not waiting for an answer, some of the same thoughts chasing each
other through his own mind, Butterfield crouched low and began to
scramble back through the opening.
"Ron?" McGarry called softly.
Pausing, Butterfield turned back. "Sir?"
"How long?"
Caught off guard by the question, knowing what the Chief of Staff
wanted to hear in reply, Butterfield hesitated. What to tell him?
The storm was still raging outside, thunder and lightning
contemptuously joining the howling wind in an insane mockery of
circumstance. He tried weighing the whole structure of events, to
find something that would satisfy McGarry and not cause the
trapped man any more anxiety or pain.
Reluctantly, he realized that a loaded silence was the only
answer he could give.
"I understand," McGarry said softly, accepting the
unspoken answer and what he felt was the inevitable. Had he truly
expected anything to go right?
Unfortunately, it wasn't an answer that Bartlet found in any way
satisfying. "Answer him, Ron."
"Mr. President
"
Bartlet opened his eyes and drilled the agent with a demanding
glare. "Answer him!" he snapped, for the moment
frustrated anger driving away the pain and demons haunting him.
Thunder and lightning flashed overhead and the President bit back
a curse. He was starting to get just a little tired of the
ridicule being tossed at him like so much cheap stage decoration.
A tiny, self-depreciating smile and he had to candidly admit that
by now he should be used to it.
Under Bartlet's steady and unwavering scrutiny, Butterfield had
no choice but to answer. "Under normal circumstances, given
the location of several air bases
"
"Cut to the chase."
"Ten, maybe fifteen minutes at the most."
"But?"
Butterfield sighed heavily, though his expression remained as
stoically blank as ever. "The storm, sir. Even with the
locator beacons, any rescue crew is going to have to be able to
see the wreck."
"And they can't see us." Assailed by a terrible sense
of bitterness, Bartlet gave a choked, desperate laugh. What else
was there left to do? "Thank you, Ron."
"Sir."
The determination he heard in Butterfield's voice gave Bartlet a
strange, numbed comfort. He'd always been amazed at the man's air
of calm and self-confidence. Some things in this world never
changed, or allowed to the world to change them.
Inclining his head towards the narrow opening leading forward,
the President of the United States told his senior agent,
"Go."
Determined not to fail, Butterfield nodded and without further
word scrambled through the gap.
Watching him go, McGarry felt a bit of that same resolve. This
wasn't over yet. Draping one of the blankets over his friend, he
said firmly, "They'll see us."
"Always the optimist, Leo."
"Me? An optimist?" McGarry's brows rose with open
amazement, caught off guard by the absurdity of that statement.
"You really did bang your head a good one, didn't you?"
"One of us has to be."
McGarry's mouth snapped shut, stunned by the obvious resignation,
the glaring lack of humor in Bartlet's voice that had been there
only moments before. Not for the first time, he realized that the
complex man he dared to call friend was an ever changing and
uncategorized mystery. He'd always wondered how much of the man's
cutting wit was simply a personal shield, or his way of shielding
others.
Unable to form a reply, McGarry chose to ignore whatever was
being implied and leaned over the prone man to tuck one of the
blankets around his shoulders as best he could, the other behind
his head for support. It wouldn't help much, not in the position
he was in, but the comfort would be as much psychological as it
was physical. He cringed when his hand came away wet from under
Bartlet's shoulders, felt the cold, soaked fibers of his suit
jacket heavy with moisture.
Holding his hand up to his eyes, something else struck him.
Bringing his fingers closer to his face and wrinkling his nose,
he caught it again. That smell. Faint and familiar, it once again
began to clutch at some half forgotten memory.
A shadow of annoyance crossed the President's face when he got no
response. "Leo
"
"Sir, please
" McGarry's voice trailed off, trying
desperately to put the odor in its proper place. It was
important. Once, long ago, he'd known it. It was thin, heavily
diluted with rainwater, but he knew it
Unused to being told to shush, however indirectly, Bartlet opened
his mouth to issue as scathing a rebuff as he could manage under
the circumstances. Then the look on McGarry's face registered,
the absolute concentration. Lifting his head from the rough
pillow, he reached out with his free hand and grabbed his
friend's, felt the muscles of the man's forearm tighten beneath
the sleeve of his coat.
"What is it?"
For a brief moment, he saw McGarry close his eyes. Then he opened
them and the flash of near panic he saw for a moment in their
depths had Bartlet wishing he hadn't asked.
McGarry let out his breath and swore, "Aw, shit."
A long, brittle silence stretched between the two men, far too
long for Bartlet's tastes. Blinking slowly in the near darkness,
he let the moment draw out a beat longer, as much as he dared,
then asked quietly, "Is it a secret? Or do I have to
guess?"
McGarry felt as if a hand had closed around his throat. For a
brief moment, he considered not telling the President, of
hollering instead for Butterfield. But what good would it do?
Neither the lie nor the secret service agent's presence would
change anything.
"It's fuel, sir," he answered with a calm detachment
that left him wondering as to its source. "Aviation fuel.
One of the tanks has ruptured. It's leaking into the cabin."
The President's reaction to that revelation wasn't exactly what
McGarry had expected.
He laughed.
There was nothing hysterical about it, nothing bitter or cynical.
For a confused moment McGarry couldn't place it or the reason,
but when he did he couldn't help but laugh himself. It was a
joke, a cruel, unending, twisted and mean play on fate, but still
a joke and they both had finally caught the punch line.
Wincing as his laughter broke off into a rough cough, Bartlet let
his head fall back against the makeshift pillow. Sighing wearily,
he offered his companion a tired smile. "It's all getting a
bit ridiculous, isn't it, Leo?"
Truthfully, McGarry felt like hitting something. Ridiculous or
not and in spite of himself, he chuckled and replied dryly,
"I'm not about to argue with you, sir."
"Is it bad?"
"It could be worse."
The President blinked slowly, then asked very carefully,
"How?"
"Do you want me to tempt fate and ask?"
"Given my track record the last few years?" Bartlet's
mouth twisted wryly, "That would be pushing it."
Settling back against what remained of the bulkhead, McGarry put
his arm around his old friend's shoulders and gave a gentle snort
of sympathetic agreement. "There's not much we can do about
it."
"Is that supposed to cheer me up?"
"Does it?"
A short brittle laugh. "No."
"Not much longer now, sir. The rescue teams must be nearly
here by now. Ron was right, if it weren't for the storm they
probably would be here already, but all this heavy rain must be
playing hell with visibility and flying conditions."
Bartlet's mouth pulled into a sour grin. "This is wisdom
from a man who hasn't flown a plane in nearly thirty years?"
McGarry ignored the somewhat cynical presidential teasing with as
much dignity as he could muster under the circumstances. He
cocked his head slightly as the ever-present background creaking
of the wreck suddenly increased in intensity. "Wind seems to
be picking up, too."
Prepared to accept being forced to stay awake but not to do it
meekly, Bartlet started to offer a reply when the wreck resettled
itself with a sudden lurch. Clutching helplessly at the girder
laying across his chest, he felt something move, tear at the leg
he'd thought too cold and numb to feel anything anymore. Bile
rose in his throat at the agony and he arched his back, mouth
opening in a wordless cry of pain.
McGarry clutched at him in panic, trying to hold him still,
prevent him from damaging himself further. For God's sake, what
now? "What is it?"
The President subsided with a low hiss of pain. Through tortured
gasps for precious air, he managed, "My leg
something's
happening to my leg
" his voice broke off in
mid-sentence and he arched up again in a spasm of agony.
"Ron!" McGarry bellowed, holding tight to Bartlet's
tense shoulders. He could barely hear his own voice over the
sounds of the storm and the man's tortured breathing. The roar of
adrenaline in his ears nearly drowned out everything but the
hammering beat of his own heart.
Butterfield slid under the overhang and hastily scrambled across
the debris, adrenaline rendering him indifferent to the stabbing
pain in his side and the new cuts as the sharp metal sliced
through his hands and knees. Dropping down beside the Chief of
Staff, he demanded breathlessly, "What?"
"Leg". McGarry was equally succinct, battered by the
intense emotions this new crisis had engendered.
Butterfield seized the flashlight and directed its beam into the
narrow gap between the girder and the President's body. The
wind's howling seemed to increase its derision and the creaking
of torn metal added a counterpoint that almost drowned out the
sound of the agent's hissed intake of breath.
"What's happening?" McGarry supported his friend's
head, reaching his hand around to press the palm against the
President's forehead in a hopeless attempt at comfort. The
fingers of his other hand were being crushed between Bartlet's
own as the man tried to ride out another wave of agony.
Butterfield sank back and rested his hand supportively on his
charge's shoulder, squeezing lightly in empathy. He briefly met
the President's pain-glazed eyes in mute sympathy and apology for
his inability to do his job and protect this man from harm. He
was rewarded with a faint smile of understanding before the
President's eyes once again slid closed and he seemed to deflate,
panting and exhausted.
Butterfield looked up to meet a gaze of helpless entreaty that
mirrored his own emotions. His expression darkened further and he
said, "Wind and rain are giving us another problem besides
merely delaying rescue. Add in mud and torn up trees, a position
on a steep mountain ridge and it doesn't give us anything
good." He waited for realization to dawn in the other man's
eyes, and nodded curtly. "The wreck is shifting."
McGarry shook his head in numbed disbelief. This was just too
much. Maybe the President really had been right about a divine
Providence being out to get him. Events certainly seemed to be
stacking up that way. "And when the wreckage
moves
"
"
the spar is moving around in the wound, tearing it
up." Butterfield finished the thought. "Mr. McGarry, it
is further aggravating his injury, to say nothing of being
painful beyond belief. Add in the fact that we have a dangerous
drop below the wreck site
"
McGarry's head snapped up, giving the agent an incredulous look.
"A drop? You've seen this?"
"No, sir. But
"
"Then how
"
"Leave him be, Leo," a weak though still forceful voice
grated out. Bartlet swallowed, then managed to offer with a hint
of sarcastic humor. "He's learning his lessons."
McGarry blinked. "Sir?"
"What else would there be below the wreck?"
"What else," McGarry sighed. The logic, however
twisted, was inescapable. Despite his fears, he felt an awful joy
at those words. If Bartlet could still manage to point out the
ridiculous, then all wasn't completely lost. "Good point,
Mr. President."
Butterfield's logic hadn't been quite that attuned to the
unreasonable demands of fickle and spiteful fate, but rather to
his last view of the ridge before they went down. But still,
either point had been well made, if the one was being somewhat
paranoid. What else could they have expected?
He wondered briefly if that sort of thinking was contagious,
before calmly pointing out the inevitable. "Mr. President,
Mr. McGarry, we may not have the luxury of waiting here for
rescue."
That statement's meaning wasn't lost on McGarry, or the
implications. "You mean, just pull him out?" He shook
his head in protest. "That's insane! What if we can't stop
the bleeding? And do you know how much that's going to hurt
him?"
As if to underscore the irony of that concern the wreck shifted
again and Bartlet suddenly let out another sharp cry, twisting
helplessly under McGarry's hands. The Chief of Staff watched as
Butterfield added his support and tried to hold the President
still. Dreadfully aware that it made little difference, he gave
what small comfort he could, praying it would end quickly.
Finally, and to his unspoken relief, he felt the man relax
slightly, a sheen of perspiration breaking out anew on his pale
features.
Bartlet licked dry lips and forced his eyes open to meet the
worried gaze of the two men leaning over him, whose features
evinced their own peculiar brand of agony. He smiled
unconvincingly and said, "Things just keep getting more and
more interesting, don't they Leo?"
The wreckage creaked again, and Bartlet tensed, drawing in his
breath with a hiss in anticipation of yet another session of that
hideous tearing, burning sensation. He relaxed slightly when this
time it did not materialize. "So
what's next? Are
you
" he closed his eyes and swallowed painfully at the
prospect, "
going to haul me out of here?" He
smiled faintly up at his Chief of Staff. "You know
I
can't believe I'm saying this, but I'm not sure I exactly relish
the idea, even for the prospect of getting out of this box."
"It's just a last resort, Mr. President." Butterfield
spoke reassuringly; amazed that even now the man could find
something to joke about. "Hopefully, the debris will stop
moving and we can wait for the professionals to do it properly,
and more comfortably for you."
"But you're afraid that may not be possible."
It was a statement, not a question. Bartlet watched as both men
exchanged troubled glances, blinking slowly and unable to offer
any kind of hopeful rebuttal. The President's mouth curled wryly
at the somewhat comic sight. "No positive thoughts? Oh,
fellas! And after this truly impressive streak of luck we've been
enjoying so far?"
McGarry regarded the trapped man with a touch of incredulity. He
would never, never be fully prepared for the odd ways and times
Josiah Bartlet's sense of humor chose to manifest itself. Still,
he gladly seized on the momentary lessening of tension to offer
his friend a genuine smile and a squeeze to the hand that had
finally relaxed enough to release its crushing hold on his
fingers.
Suddenly, the wind rose to a positive howl and the whole wreck
creaked ominously. All three men tensed in agonized anticipation.
McGarry gasped in shock as he felt the entire cabin jerk and move
slightly, before coming again to rest.
His attention was wrenched back to his immediate surroundings by
the screeching, groaning sound of shifting metal, followed by a
cry of helpless rage from Butterfield and a frightened gasp of
pain from Bartlet.
McGarry saw to his horror that the debris on which the girder had
been resting its full weight had moved and slid, causing the
heavy metal bar to come down against the President's chest.
Bartlet was breathing in short gasping pants, restricted by the
weight bearing down on him, and his eyes were wide with
unshielded fear.
Butterfield had his hands under the bar and was struggling
valiantly to lift some of its weight off the man beneath. McGarry
flung himself forward to join efforts with the agent, but it was
like trying to hold back an entire mountain face.
The two men struggled in frantic silence, aware of the
increasingly desperate and shallow breathing of the man at their
feet, whose free hand pushed hopelessly at the weight pinning him
down.
"Ron!" McGarry blinked some of the perspiration from
his eyes. The moisture felt cold on his skin. "What can we
do? He'll be crushed!"
Butterfield's lips were drawn back from his teeth in rage and
physical effort. He snatched a second to shake his head in
despair.
No! The word screamed inside McGarry's disbelieving mind. He
looked down at his friend. Bartlet's respiration was growing ever
more painful and strained. His eyes were slits, and his hand now
simply rested on the girder, bracing against it as if somehow
attempting to banish its reality.
McGarry glanced up in terror as he felt the cabin shudder and
jerk again. He forced himself to look back down, sickly certain
that he would see the girder had settled even further, crushing
his friend's chest.
Instead, he found himself gaping stupefied at the sight before
him. Somehow, with the second shift, something in the tangled
mass before him must have weighed down on one end of the girder,
see-sawing it up into the air. It still partly pressed down on
Bartlet's side, but was now clear of his chest and torso.
"Hurry!" Butterfield had dropped down to a crouch and
slid his hand under the President's arm. "Before it moves
again!"
McGarry seized the man's other arm, but felt impelled to voice an
objection. "But
his leg."
"The lesser of two evils! If that girder comes down on him
again, we won't have to worry about the leg. Now, move!"
Butterfield was at his most pragmatic, focused on removing his
charge from the greater danger.
Following the agent's lead, McGarry gritted his teeth and hauled
back on the President's arm. He heard Bartlet give out a
bellowing cry of agony, then his head fell back and he went limp
in McGarry's hands.
Both men hauled him backwards frantically, finally clearing his
body of the beam. They dragged him back towards the entrance and
Butterfield slipped under the overhang, reaching back to drag the
limp body through the opening and out into the cabin.
McGarry scrambled hastily out behind.
Butterfield eased the body into the angle formed by the cabin
wall and the floor. Bartlet was still and ashen and his leg was a
bloody mess of torn material and flesh. Grimly, the agent began
to rip away the damaged trouser leg in an attempt to put pressure
on the wound underneath.
"Compress
I need something to form a compress on the
wound." Butterfield peeled back the sides of the rip in the
material and carefully probed the damaged flesh underneath.
At the touch, the President tensed, his eyes fluttering open, and
groaned.
McGarry looked around blankly, then dived back under the overhang
to snag one of the blankets he had wrapped around Bartlet. Using
the jagged edge of a piece of metal he started a tear and
awkwardly ripped away a long strip of the thick material and
handed it to Butterfield, who then began to wrap it swiftly
around the President's thigh.
"How bad does it look?" McGarry was almost afraid to
ask. He swallowed his nausea at the memory of what they had just
done to his friend, and the tortured sound of Bartlet's cry.
Butterfield was unbuckling his trouser belt and sliding it out of
the loops. Incredibly, the grimness of his features had eased
slightly. He looked up at the Chief of Staff and actually gave
him a small smile of reassurance.
"Unbelievable as it may be, I don't think it's critical. The
bleeding's fairly heavy, but not excessive. I think I can slow
it. The wound's pretty torn up, but doesn't look to be as deep as
we feared. No major veins seem to be severed. There's a fair
amount of muscle damage; I don't know what the prognosis will be
there. At least he isn't in immediate danger of bleeding
out." Butterfield paused to loop the belt over the blanket
compress and, with a quick jerk, pull it tight. "Still very
painful though."
A sharp yelp of protest from the President as the belt tightened
seemed to lend credence to that particular diagnosis.
"Sir?" McGarry leaned forward, feeling the first real
sense of hope in a long time. The President was free of the
debris, if not the wreck itself, and they were now in a position
to do something, however little, about his injury. Surely things
were looking up?
Seeing the baleful expression just visible in his chief
executive's blearily cracked eye, he wondered if he would shortly
have to revise the injury count. Bartlet was still woozy and
disoriented from cold and pain, but there was no mistaking that
glint. His oldest friend was fighting mad.
"That's it! That is absolutely it!" Bartlet angrily
tried to hike himself up a little along the wall he was resting
against, only to stop short with a groan as he jarred his leg. He
paused for an instant to catch a pained breath, then let fly with
all the pent-up fury, hurt and fear engendered by this ordeal.
Caught off guard by the strength and sheer ferocity of Bartlet's
outburst, McGarry drew back in stunned surprise. To say that his
old friend's reactions to any given situation were -at the very
least-unpredictable was an understatement. But this? He could
only stare wordlessly at the clearly enraged man, astonished and
more than a bit uneasy. What followed next bordered on
revelation.
The President of the United States was just getting started.
"I don't know what the hell I've done to piss You off
recently, You malicious thug, but I can't think of anything worth
a vengeance on this scale!"
There was no mistaking the target of Bartlet's diatribe. The very
elements seemed to calm momentarily as if impressed, despite
themselves, at this mortal's challenge to Providence.
"So I kept the MS a secret. I never deliberately set out to
lie, never intended to hurt anyone. I just wanted some privacy,
to avoid having people look at me and see the condition, not the
man. Wanted to deny its existence. Was that hubris? If so, I've
been paying for it ever since, and not just me but every one I
care about." Never one to keep his hands still when on a
righteous roll, Bartlet's left hand came down on the cabin floor
with a resounding smack. "Isn't that enough for You?"
McGarry winced at the sound and shot an alarmed glance at
Butterfield, whose attention seemed fully engaged in further
tightening the bloodstained lining that was covering the
President's head wound. He couldn't help but note that the agent
was carefully avoiding direct eye contact with his charge. They
both were.
Finding himself in a situation with no precedent, the Chief of
Staff could only listen. On the one hand the evidence of mental
awareness and energy on the President's part relieved him. On the
other, the display of uncharacteristically raw, naked emotion was
disturbing. Bartlet was obviously running on sheer nerves and
adrenaline brought on by pain and fear. It was sustaining him for
the moment, but McGarry dreaded the crash that would surely
follow.
"All my life I've respected Your name, honored Your
teachings," Bartlet continued to rant, although his voice
was hoarse and his energy visibly beginning to flag. "I've
kept Your Commandments; hell, yes, even the fourth and even You
have to acknowledge that one wasn't easy."
The President's oldest friend stirred in uneasy surprise. McGarry
felt more and more that he was eavesdropping on a conversation of
which he had no part. Clearly dazed and in discomfort, Bartlet
was being unusually unguarded in his speech, and the implications
he was garnering from this catharsis both confused and distressed
McGarry. Adding it to the small store of impressions he had
already gathered, he was getting a faint picture whose outline
left him oddly reluctant to strain for detail.
He wasn't even sure he should stop it. And if so, how?
Without looking up, Butterfield skillfully ducked one waving
presidential hand and brought the tirade and McGarry's clear
indecision to an end by bringing his own hand down gently on
Bartlet's shoulder. For the first time making eye contact, he
waited for the man to take a deep breath and calm down.
Blinking slowly, the President took that deep breath, added a few
more for good measure and nodded.
McGarry relaxed as well.
Satisfied that his charge had replenished his oxygen supply, if
not his emotional balance, Butterfield stopped just short of
pleading and said, "Please, sir, take it easy. Try to relax.
We need you alert but getting worked up will only tire you out,
to say nothing of causing your injuries to bleed more." As
if in illustration, he gently dabbed with his fingertips at a
small trickle of blood that had escaped from under the sodden
compress on the President's head to run down his temple.
Seeing the blood --his blood-- on the agent's fingertips, reality
reared its ugly head and the small world he was trapped in began
to close around him. Bartlet drew another ragged gasp, grimacing
and wrapping his arms around his chest. The girder might not have
crushed him, but it had left a more than adequate reminder of how
closely he had approached that fate. Even now the sharp pain
across his ribs and sternum offered an almost tangible
recollection of its presence, and filling his lungs was almost as
difficult as when he had lain imprisoned beneath it.
Fury dying as the adrenaline in his system leveled off, Bartlet
let his head fall back against the cabin wall and sighed wearily.
Without the rage pumping through his veins, he was becoming more
aware of the blinding throbbing in head and leg, and the dull
ache that assailed him all over. He regarded his Chief of Staff
tiredly.
"I swear to God, Leo, I am never taking a vacation again. I
don't care if I have to run the rest of this administration
sleepwalking." Acknowledging the absurd, a glint of dark
humor flickered in his eyes. The accompanying laugh had a sharp
edge to it. "Hell, why not? The opposition claims that I do
it with my brains dribbling out my ears."
McGarry winced at that off the cuff statement. That was one topic
wherein he had never been able to find any humor, not even of the
black nature his friend sometimes indulged in at his own expense.
It was far too easy to visualize that possibility, the loss of a
friend not through a clean ending but gradual mental degradation.
It hadn't happened yet, might never happen, but just the very
thought gnawed away at his spirit.
The President easily read the unhappiness on the features that
were as familiar to him as his own. Reading his mind was just as
easy. McGarry had proved even more reluctant to accept the
possibility of that grim future than Bartlet himself, and he felt
a twinge of guilt for having brought it up, however casually.
Drawing on his rapidly depleting inner reserves, he offered his
friend a whimsical smile.
"Cheer up, Leo. You guys got me out of that makeshift
coffin, and with my leg still relatively intact." He brought
his hand down on the limb, and then hissed as the incautious
gesture reminded him that the crucial qualifier had been
relatively. "Assuming my little attack of snippiness just
now didn't totally queer our pitch with fate, we're over the
worst."
McGarry couldn't help but grin in reply. "Snippiness?"
He arched an eyebrow in amused query.
Bartlet smirked. "That's how Mrs. Landingham would dignify
even the most righteous ranting on my part." His smile faded
as he reflected on the memory of his deceased secretary, who had
known him even longer than his Chief of Staff and had done so
much to influence the man he had become. "I think it was her
way of reminding me that there is a fine line between
constructive anger and self-indulgent rage."
McGarry sobered in turn. Of all the bad tidings he had been
forced to bear to his friend in recent months, the news of that
indomitable old lady's death, that grand dame, had been the
worst. He was pulled from those dark memories by the sound of
Butterfield patiently clearing his throat.
"Yes Ron?" The President peered up from under the
makeshift bandage crossing his brow. The usually expressionless
agent had a surprisingly puzzled look on his face.
"Sir
" Butterfield paused, clearly at a loss as
how to express himself. Finally, he asked with perfect deadpan
composure, "Queer our pitch?"
McGarry's mouth twitched with ill concealed disgust at the
question and he shot the President one of the dirtiest looks he'd
thrown the man in three years. "He's been hanging around
Marbury again."
"Oh my God." For a brief moment a look of absolute
horror crossed Butterfield's face, to be quickly replaced with
one of calculating resolve. "Not on my watch," he
growled under his breath.
Neither Bartlet -who was laughing as best he could with bruised
ribs, nor McGarry -who, by the look of loathing on his face
Butterfield figured had just come to the realization that he had
clearly understood the euphemism, heard his ill advised grumbled
oath.
A situation the stoic agent considered all well and good. He did
have a reputation to maintain after all and eccentric ambassadors
were not going to ruin it. Not if he had anything to do about it.
Getting back to the business at hand, he said, "Mr.
President, if you have no objection, I'd like to ask for Mr.
McGarry's assistance in forcing the forward hatch." Once
again professional to the core, the agent had been assessing both
the storm levels and the slight rocking of the wreck and was not
happy with his conclusions. "Now that you're free of the
debris, I think we should seriously address the question of
evacuating the craft."
McGarry looked up in sudden trepidation as the wind's howling
increased, amazed that he had managed to forget even for an
instant those heart stopping shifts from earlier. He scrambled to
his feet with alacrity. "Ron's right, sir. Now that we can
move you we need to get you out of here while our luck continues
to
"
He broke off abruptly and fell to his knees as the cabin
shuddered and bucked beneath him. Cursing, he grabbed what was
left of a nearby seat as the wreck started to roll, then slide at
a sickening angle. He heard the sound of branches snapping, rocks
scraping against the battered fuselage.
Butterfield seized the President's shoulders and pressed him back
against the wall, leaning over him protectively. For a few
seemingly endless seconds, the wreckage continued to slide
sickeningly downward and he gritted his teeth in agonized
anticipation. Not on my watch! He held on to that thought,
determined to do his duty.
All the while, the thunder raged outside. The lightening danced
and rain beat against the wreck.
Their progress finally halted an eternity later. The remains of
the craft continued to creak and sway gently but for that instant
final disaster seemed to have been postponed. Although it was
several long moments before any of those inside dared to move.
Finally, Butterfield gingerly eased himself off the President and
looked down at his main responsibility in concern.
Bartlet's eyes were closed, his mouth drawn into tense lines. His
face appeared even paler, if that were possible, and he seemed to
be holding his breath. Feeling the weight lift off him and
realizing that their motion had stopped, he cautiously opened his
eyes and exhaled explosively.
Looking up, he met McGarry's anxious gaze. The Chief of Staff's
complexion was pasty and he was panting slightly from strain and
tension. Bartlet cast an importuning eye heavenwards. "I
suppose saying I'm sorry would be classed as 'too little too
late'?" he murmured, only half-ironically.
A sudden snort of involuntary amusement from his friend assured
him that he had at least succeeded in one of his objectives. Now
it remained to see if fate had a similarly receptive sense of
humor.
The President gestured to his security chief. "Ron? Forcing
that hatch is sounding more and more like a plan I can get on
side with. What say you go see what you can do? Leo," he
turned his head towards McGarry. "Do you feel up to giving
him a hand?"
To
be continued