Charlotte Kramer.

Madam President.

Nicolle Wallace.

For Mark and Liam.

CHAPTER ONE.



Melanie.

Are my latest changes to the speech in the version that"s in the teleprompter?" Charlotte asked as she held up a draft with her edits marked in black ink.

"Yes, Madam President. I input your final revisions myself," Melanie replied in her usual calm manner.

"What time are we doing this?" Charlotte was tapping her perfectly polished fingernails on the desk and swinging one of her legs back and forth underneath it as she reread her remarks. Melanie recognized both behaviors as two of Charlotte"s relatively well-disguised nervous tics.

"You"ll go on the air at eleven-oh-two to give the anchors a couple of minutes to set things up and announce that you are addressing the nation live from the Oval Office."

"What time is it now?"

"It"s ten minutes before eleven, Madam President."

Charlotte nodded and looked down at the text once more. After about twenty seconds, she looked up again.

"I"m sorry, Mel, how much time until we go live?"

"About ten minutes, Madam President. Can I get you something to drink?"

"I"m fine."

For the first time since they"d met nearly six years earlier, Melanie worried about Charlotte"s ability to perform her official duties with her trademark steadiness. They were alone in the Oval Office, and it was Melanie"s job to get the president through the next twenty-five minutes.

It wasn"t Melanie"s actual job, but this wasn"t a typical day. Melanie served as the secretary of defense, a post she"d held for the last eighteen months, ever since Charlotte had been reelected for a second term as the country"s forty-fifth president. Melanie"s Oval Office a.s.signment was as unexpected as the events of the previous twelve hours.

The sound of jets patrolling the airs.p.a.ce above the White House and the beams of light from the helicopters hovering nearby weren"t helping with Charlotte"s unusually high levels of agitation and impatience.

"Madam President, I need you to relax a little bit, or you"re going to scare people more."

"Jesus Christ, Melanie!" Charlotte exploded.

Maybe it"s good that she"s blowing off a bit of steam, Melanie thought.

"Without any of our guys having a G.o.dd.a.m.ned clue or hint of warning, terrorists attacked five cities. Hundreds, maybe thousands, of people are dead. And we don"t have any idea if there are more plots under way or where the attacks originated. People should be scared."

"I crossed that section out of your speech. Thought it might be a little too much straight talk for tonight," Melanie deadpanned.

Charlotte didn"t smile. She stared down at the pages of her speech, but Melanie could tell she wasn"t reading them. Melanie moved toward one of the sofas in the middle of the Oval Office and ran her hand back and forth across the smooth linen fabric that she"d selected when Charlotte had tasked her with renovating the room at the beginning of her first term. The president hadn"t given her any direction other than to stick to one color. She had a thing for monochromatic dressing that extended to her interior-decorating preferences. The fabric was so pale and delicate that the sofas needed to be recovered quarterly, but Charlotte said that they sent a strong signal to everyone to keep their feet off the furniture. She"d thwarted several attempts to recover them in a more practical material.

The down-filled couches were inviting, but Melanie knew that if she sat, her twenty-four-hour day would catch up with her, and she"d never be able to muster the energy to get back up. She glanced down at her BlackBerry. Her executive a.s.sistant made fun of her for still carrying the antiquated device, but she"d had a BlackBerry (at times, she"d had two or three of them) since her first days at the White House almost two decades earlier. Now she also carried an iPhone that her husband, Brian, had given her the year before and that she used for personal communications with him and with their friends and family. Melanie scrolled through the e-mail messages on the iPhone and opened a message from Brian. He was in the White House briefing room, about forty feet away from the Oval Office, with the rest of the White House correspondents. His message simply said, "Good luck with the speech. Call when you can. Love you." Melanie skimmed what looked like hundreds of unopened e-mails. They"d have to wait until after Charlotte"s address. When she looked up, she was surprised to see the president standing in front of the two televisions in her private dining room. Melanie walked toward the side of the Oval Office that opened into the dining room and watched Charlotte closely for a couple of minutes. She was wearing a perfectly tailored black Armani jacket with matching pants. A pale blue silk blouse peeked out from under the jacket, and the initials of her twins, P and H, hung from a white-gold chain around her neck. Her thick blond hair was tucked behind her ears. She had stepped out of her black heels, and in her bare feet, she looked diminutive. Her makeup artist was highly skilled, but Melanie thought she"d been a tad heavy-handed with the blush. Charlotte wouldn"t tolerate another touch-up on a night like this, though. Melanie shifted her weight from one foot to the other and moved closer to the door so that Charlotte would know she was there.

"You"re the one who"s not having a normal reaction, Melanie. No one should be as stoic as you are right now. Frankly, it"s jarring," Charlotte said without looking away from the carnage on the screens.

"Madam President, you"ve mistaken my jet lag for tranquillity. I woke up in Iraq this morning, and with the time change, I think that was about twenty-four hours ago."

"That was this morning?" Charlotte"s eyes were still glued to the screens.

"Doesn"t it seem like a thousand years ago?"

Charlotte muted the televisions and turned to face Melanie.

"I think it"s safe to say that everything has changed since then, don"t you?"

Before Melanie could conjure up an appropriate response, the network producer who was directing the live coverage of Charlotte"s speech knocked on the door of the Oval Office. Melanie had instructed him to do so when they were two minutes out so she could get Charlotte seated and check the camera shot.

The president had insisted that they be left alone in the Oval Office after the hair and makeup people left. It was unheard of to leave the president alone in the Oval Office for a televised address to the nation without someone who was trained in video production, but Melanie had held just about every job in the White House communications and press departments during her decade and a half of service in the executive branch of government.

"That was your two-minute warning, Madam President. You"re going to do this just as we rehea.r.s.ed it. As you requested, it"s just you and me in here, so please do not fidget in your seat. I can keep you in focus, but if you move out of the camera shot, there"s not much I can do to reframe you with my limited TV-production skills. Don"t move your chair or stand up. And try not to do any forced smiling. You want to appear somber but not alarming."

"Anything else?" Charlotte snapped. She took her seat behind the desk and held up one hand to shield her eyes from the glare. Lighting the Oval Office for an evening address was one of the trickier production feats. The production staff had set up freestanding stadium lights on either side of the president"s desk to illuminate her properly for the TV audience. As she read through her speech one final time, Melanie thought she looked surly, but she didn"t want to stoke her ire with any more instructions.

Melanie checked the shot and confirmed that it looked OK with the professionals by opening the door a crack. The director gave her a thumbs-up, and Melanie shut the door.

"We"re all set, Madam President. You look great."

Melanie took a deep breath and smiled rea.s.suringly at her boss. They hadn"t been alone in the Oval Office together in months, and until today, Melanie hadn"t worked with her on a speech since she"d left her post as White House chief of staff at the end of Charlotte"s first term as president. Despite the current tragic, catastrophic circ.u.mstances, it wasn"t uncomfortable to be with each other like this. Melanie and Charlotte had worked together long enough to take exactly what they needed from one another. Melanie was acting cooler than she felt because she sensed in Charlotte a hotness that would not translate well on camera. For her part, Charlotte was using these few precious moments to process what had happened before packing away her horror and fear and projecting strength and resolve to the entire world.

Melanie suspected that Charlotte had chosen her for this a.s.signment because she was the one person with whom there was no pretending. The extraordinary step had been taken to transport Melanie from Andrews Air Force Base, where she"d landed an hour earlier, to the South Lawn of the White House in one of the helicopters typically designated as Marine One and used to transport Charlotte. Melanie a.s.sumed that it also had something to do with the fact that she"d been through something like this before. After all, she"d worked in the press office on September 11, 2001.

"You"re sure about the Longfellow poem?" Charlotte asked.

"Most presidents quote from scripture on occasions like this. You said that you didn"t want that, so I included the Longfellow quote. We are sixty seconds out, and I can"t replace it at this point, but if you want to drop it, the speech works fine without it."

"No. I like it. It"s powerful. And you don"t think we use the word toward too much? It"s in here at least three times." They"d chosen every word in the address with care.

"The speech is good, Madam President."

Charlotte nodded. "I"ve got this," she promised.

"I know you do." Melanie smiled and said a silent prayer.

At that moment, the light on the camera started flashing. When the flashing stopped, Charlotte would be seen instantly by millions of people.

Melanie checked the teleprompter one last time to make sure the speech had loaded properly and then counted down with her fingers.

When the light stopped flashing, Melanie mouthed, "Go."

CHAPTER TWO.

Dale.

Quiet, everyone," Dale ordered. She was in the White House briefing room, where the entire White House press corps had crammed in, minus a few of the correspondents who were filming live shots on the North Lawn.

"The president is starting, people. Please stop talking," she urged.

The image of the president sitting at her desk in the Oval Office silenced everyone. Dale turned to watch on a monitor that had been set up next to the podium where she conducted her daily briefing. Dale"s deputy turned the volume up as high as it would go.

"Good evening. Today we witnessed five separate and nearly simultaneous attacks on American cities. Together they make up the most brazen terror attack in our country"s history. The numbers are still being confirmed, but we know that several hundred people have lost their lives. Others were wounded, many of them while trying to help the victims. At this moment, hundreds of our fellow citizens are searching for news about loved ones and praying for the best while bracing themselves for the unthinkable.

"And just as we did more than a decade and a half ago in New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, Americans confronted today"s violence with bravery and heroism. In New York, just more than a mile away from the tender scars of September eleventh, the pedestrian parks in Times Square were targeted with bombs. The images of men and women from the surrounding businesses charging toward the explosions to help those who were hurt in the attack were the first ones we saw of a city that knows the devastation of indiscriminate terror all too well.

"In South Florida, where terrorists targeted a pa.s.senger ship at the Port of Miami, people abandoned their cars on the freeways and rushed to the burning ships to help people they"d never met. The majority of those victims were families embarking on cruises."

Charlotte stopped for a second, and it looked to Dale like she was getting choked up. Don"t cry, Dale silently pleaded. Charlotte took a breath and seemed to regain her composure.

"In Los Angeles and Chicago, suicide bombers detonated their explosives in front of crowded ticket counters while pa.s.sengers checked in for flights. And finally, here in our nation"s capital, terrorists placed bombs on the National Mall. For those of you not familiar with the nation"s capital, the National Mall is home to the Smithsonian museums, including the Air and s.p.a.ce Museum, which was the target of today"s attack."

Charlotte paused again. She appeared to be gathering herself. The itemized recitation of the destruction had a physical impact not just on the president but also on the journalists gathered in the briefing room. Dale glanced around the room and could see that many of the very same reporters who projected toughness, objectivity, and a studied indifference were struggling under the weight of the news.

"In each of these cities, Americans responded in the manner to which we"ve grown accustomed. They rushed toward danger and did whatever they could to help friends and strangers at an hour of catastrophe and tragedy. The search for survivors will not stop until everyone is accounted for.

"Now all of us are wondering the same thing: who would commit such vicious and brutal attacks, and why? We don"t have as many answers tonight as I"d hoped, but we will learn all the facts. We always do. And we will not delude ourselves with a discussion about delivering justice to these barbarians. Today"s acts were not crimes; they were acts of war. Sadly, this is not the first battle on our soil in this young century. America has come under attack before by people who hate us because of our freedoms and seek to change our way of life through acts of terror. Let me be clear: nothing will be spared or compromised in our effort to hunt down those responsible for today"s devastation. Every American can rest a.s.sured that we will answer today"s attacks with the full force of the United States government, including our unmatched military, diplomatic, and intelligence capabilities."

Dale thought she could see Charlotte"s face redden slightly. A few of the cameramen in the back of the briefing room whistled, and others clapped. Dale watched Charlotte look down at the pages in front of her and then look back into the camera with even greater intensity.

"I speak to you tonight not only as your president and commander in chief but also as a mother and wife with a family of my own. In the coming days, we will learn all of the names of those who perished, and we will hear their stories. To their families, they will not be names or stories. They will be sons and daughters, mothers and fathers, husbands and wives, sisters, brothers, aunts, uncles, and grandparents. We may hear their final voice-mail messages to loved ones or learn about the victims" final days from those who have been left behind. To those of you who are dealing with the immeasurable grief of the sudden loss of a spouse or a parent or, heaven forbid, a child, please know that we all stand with you in your despair. We will all do our part to honor your monumental loss. In this hour of immense sadness, I am reminded of a Henry Wadsworth Longfellow pa.s.sage that I first read years ago." Charlotte looked down again and took another deep breath. When she looked up, her eyes were gla.s.sy.

""And the mother gave, in tears and pain, the flowers she most did love; she knew she should find them all again in the fields of light above.""

Dale thought she could hear someone sniffling near where the radio reporters sat.

"May G.o.d bless all of you tonight, and may G.o.d continue to bless the United States of America."

At the exact instant that Charlotte stopped speaking, the TV correspondents were on their feet, talking to the network anchors back in New York, while pressing their earpieces into their ears with their fingers to hear above the din of other correspondents doing the same thing. Dale found it disorienting to hear only one side of the conversation, so she headed back toward her office to watch the coverage.

"Dale, are you leaving?" shouted an AP reporter.

"Just going to my office," she called over her shoulder.

"Will the briefing room be open all night so we can file our stories from here? Our editors are going to expect that our copy is updated hourly at least through the morning and probably for the next several days."

"Yes, I"m sure we can leave it open all night tonight, but don"t expect to get briefed through the night. We will let you know if there are any developments."

"How about the North Lawn? We will need to go live with any breaking news."

The North Lawn was where the TV reporters stood to film their reports from the White House. It provided the iconic background of the White House residence for the journalists who were fortunate enough to cover the president for their respective networks and cable channels. It hadn"t dawned on Dale that the networks would want their correspondents to update their coverage through the overnight hours. It was almost midnight, and most of them would be back on the air at seven A.M. or earlier.

"I"ll check with the Secret Service," she promised.

Dale rushed back toward what was referred to as "upper press." Marguerite had a.s.sembled their small staff in Dale"s office. She took a seat at her desk and pulled a Diet c.o.ke out of the small refrigerator behind it.

"How are you guys doing?" Dale asked.

They a.s.sured her that they were fine, but it had been a harrowing day. While she had been escorted by the Secret Service to a fortified underground bunker, her staff had been evacuated when the first bombs went off on the Mall. They were called back to the West Wing, only to be evacuated from the complex a second time when the second bomb went off. Edgy Secret Service officers had hara.s.sed a few of her deputies while they were escorting the press back into the White House. Dale had walked out to the newly erected perimeter herself to vouch for her staff and the credentialed press. She"d been shocked by the scene. Downtown Washington looked like a war zone. Uniformed military in armored Humvees filled the streets around the White House. Secret Service agents in black jumpsuits held machine guns as they rode in SUVs with the back windows open. Soldiers in fatigues directed all traffic - human and vehicular - away from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Heavy smoke hung in the air from the bombings on the Mall, and the sound of sirens was constant. Men and women dressed mostly in business suits moved like swarms of bees alongside slowly moving lines of cars toward the residential neighborhoods that rimmed downtown Washington.

"You were all tremendously brave and professional today," Dale said. "Thank you for coming back twice after being evacuated and for doing everything that you did to make things run smoothly. I know the president is grateful to you for your service, the press is indebted to you until the end of time, and I am so impressed by how you handled yourselves."

Her deputies were staring at her, unblinking. A couple of them looked like they were in shock. She should have called them into her office sooner.

"If you guys hadn"t come back here and helped to fill that briefing room with our press, the people who needed to hear from the president tonight would not have had the opportunity to do so. I"m proud of all of you."

"Dale, what should we do with Richard and Lucy?" a press a.s.sistant named Danner asked. Richard and Lucy were the evening anchors from CBS. They"d been preparing to do a sit-down interview with the president earlier that morning as part of a special they"d been filming, but when news broke about the first attack, the interview was postponed.

Dale"s staff had taken part in weeks of painstaking preparations for what they all referred to as the "Day in the Life" special, because it was intended to chronicle every detail of a "typical" day in the life of the president of the United States and her staff. Dale had convinced the president to pull back the curtain and reveal the inner workings of the White House to show the public how much thought and effort and collaboration went into an ordinary day at the White House. No one could have antic.i.p.ated that close to twenty news crews - each including a cameraman, a sound technician, and a producer - would be embedded with the most senior White House staff members when news of the five bombings started to trickle in.

Most of the crews were respectful of the limits the disaster had placed on their access, and they"d simply waited in the lobby areas or in the press briefing room. But the two anchors hadn"t taken no for an answer. They felt ent.i.tled to the access they"d been promised, regardless of the extraordinary turn of events. Dale and her deputy had determined earlier in the day that throwing them out would confirm that the president was hunkered down, which would send the worst possible message to the public. The decision had been made to try to accommodate the news crews and the anchors without compromising any aspect of the government response, by leaving the press office solely responsible for them and freeing up the rest of the senior staff to respond to the crisis.

"They"ve been reporting from their cell phones in the West Wing lobby all evening. The other TV correspondents are furious. The bureau chiefs from NBC and ABC are demanding access to the West Wing lobby as well."

Dale had incorrectly a.s.sumed that Richard and Lucy would have returned to their network"s Washington bureau to anchor its coverage of the president"s remarks, but they had decided to take advantage of their unusual access instead.

"Oh, another thing. Richard and Lucy are insisting that all of their crews be permitted to embed again with the senior staff tomorrow because we canceled everything today," Danner added.

"Jesus, those two are unbelievable. Are they in the lobby right now?"

"Yeah, I think they"re on the air."

Dale turned her TV to CBS, and sure enough, they were broadcasting from their cell phones from the West Wing lobby about everyone they"d seen come and go since the speech ended minutes earlier.

Dale pressed her thumbs into the bones above her eyes and took a deep breath.

"Do you want me to come with you?" Danner offered.

"I"ve got it. Stay here and handle our press corps. Tell them that no one is going to be broadcasting from the West Wing lobby. I will get rid of Richard and Lucy," she promised.

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