No Corner to Hide (The Max Masterson Series Book 2) (18 page)

CHAPTER 46

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nce they had reached the security gate, there was a glitch. The gate was powered by an electronic mechanism which locked automatically in a power outage, and their means of access was sealed for the time-being. Without hesitation, Max

and Rachel propped the bikes against the fence and Max turned to hoist her over the top.

“I can do it, oh gallant one,” she said with exuberance. The exercise had buoyed her spirits, and she was feeling less like a fixture at his side, which had made her feel unnatural and plastic. “I have been hopping fences all my life.”

“I’ll bet you didn’t try this in a designer dress, though” he replied. “Don’t any of you even think of trying to help,” he announced to the security detail. “Secure the perimeter and address the crowd,” he ordered.

The Secret Service turned their backs to them as Rachel placed her hands on the top rail and did a neat pirouette over the top. The crowd burst in raucous applause as Max approached the fence. In similar fashion, he vaulted the fence, landing on his heels hard, followed by an unceremonious fall to the grass, creating a grass stain on his inaugural coat. He recovered quickly, bouncing to his feet and looping his arm in Rachel’s. They bowed simultaneously and ran to the front door, where the Vice President and the White House staff awaited.

CHAPTER 47

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carlett looked rumpled, but she had been able to find a comb and makeup and was busy reassembling her image in a large, ornate mirror in the main hallway. She was simultaneously barking orders to the assemblage, who would periodically run in

the direction of their assigned tasks. Max immediately realized that in a city that had been rendered powerless, the lights in the White House were still lit. Scarlett turned from her mirror, anticipating Max’s question.

“I know, I was surprised too, but it seems that all of the essential government buildings have been hardened against this kind of attack, and it’s only the civilian grid that went down. We won’t have any way of restoring power to the full area for a few days, but we should have the Metro running by the time people decide to head home. If they drove here and parked their car inside the blast zone, they are going to be looking for a ride, though…what a mess!”

uuu

Andrew Fox and Bill Staffman were breathless with excitement. They had been monitoring the festivities from the Situation Room when the flash occurred and the screens went dark. From the shelter beneath the White House, they had been unable to determine the source of the outage, and had been forced to return to the first floor by a seldom-used stairwell.

“The subway is still down. So are the elevators, but I’m told we should have them repaired within a few hours. We are maintaining a perimeter around the White House, and we will continue to do so,” explained Staffman.

“Communicators are being re-issued to the agents in the field, and we should have full restoration of our electronics inside of fifteen minutes. Those unlucky souls outside won’t be able to call home anytime soon, though, and all audio-visual equipment on scene has been rendered useless. The press is going to have a conniption, not being able to report the excitement,” piped in Andrew, Max’s young chief of staff. He knew his last comment would provoke a smile from Max, and he was not disappointed.

“I didn’t really think about it, but for the next few hours, we control the media, don’t we?”
If brain activity created smoke, the Diplomatic Reception Room where they stood would have activated the fire alarms.
“Yeah, sorta,” replied Andrew. “The Press Room is sheltered from EMP radiation just like the rest of the building. They had a Faraday cage built into the walls many years ago.”
“Faraday cage? What’s that?”
“I thought you knew. There’s one in your garage at Fairlane. I noticed it the moment I walked in the door,” replied Andrew.
“I remember my dad talking about this possibility when I was just a kid,” Max recalled. “He would go on these tirades against his enemies in government and tell me how Congress had compromised our security by failing to use foresight. I was immersed in it so much that I didn’t think about how he had taken his own precautions. You would have liked him, Andrew. Dead ten years and he’s still taking care of me.”

NO CORNER TO HIDE

Andrew stayed on task. “A Faraday cage or Faraday shield is an enclosure formed by a mesh of conducting material. It blocks out the external electric fields that took out our electronics when the EMP device was detonated. We tracked the source to the Arlington House over near Arlington National Cemetery. Our security measures weren’t good enough, I guess. We scanned every object in the Capitol, but nothing on the other side of the Potomac. Robert E. Lee’s house has been closed for repairs for the past month, and nobody thought to go over there,” Andrew explained.

Max was becoming impatient with Andrew’s pedantic focus. “Thanks for the science lesson, but I need answers. Are you saying that the cars in my garage at home, and all of the audio-visual equipment in the press room were not affected by the blast?”

“Yeah, why?”
“Do you know how to operate one of those cameras?” “Yeah, sure. Any idiot can do it. I took a video class in college,

and I—”
“Andrew, I want you to go to the Press Room, get all of the
equipment you need, and start recording smiling faces and upbeat
words,” Max interjected. Get another camera set up at the far end
of the mall, and put a third at the podium. No other cameras are to
be made available, and all recordings are to be kept from the press
until we edit the material and give it to them. They will have to use
what we give them.”
Max scanned the room, looking for his press secretary, Bill
Staffman. He spotted him at the back of the room, looking rumpled
and alienated. “Bill, I have ten Secret Service agents milling around
on the lawn, and I need them to bring their bikes down to the
kitchen immediately. If they ask why, tell them because I said so.”
Staffman looked puzzled and dejected, but turned to carry out orders.
“And Bill, I need for you to do the narrative on the images we will
release to the press, digitize the whole thing, and get copies to all major networks as soon as I am through with my speech.” Staffman turned to Max and beamed. “That’s what I’m talking about,” he intoned. “I think I’m beginning to understand you, Mr. President. I can give them a clear message of vitality and optimism that they will never forget.”

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CHAPTER 48

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s Max and Rachel made their way to the kitchen in the White House basement ahead of the entourage of security and staff, Rachel finally had the opportunity to ask questions. “Have you lost your mind? Why are we going down to the

kitchen? What’s so all-fired important that you are ordering everyone around? Talk to me!”

“If you let me get a word in edgewise, I’ll tell you. Remember that surprise I promised? It’s down here. Luke showed it to me last week. He has been keeping it a secret since Dad died, and you and he are the only living people in the world to know beside me, at least for the next minute or so.”

Max opened the utility closet and stepped inside. He pulled out the floor buffer and moved it aside, leaving the small space unobstructed. Then he pulled Rachel inside and closed the door. He turned on the light switch and pushed hard on the hidden panel at the back of the closet, and it swung open with a hiss. Rachel gasped in wonderment as the lights illuminated the tunnel, extending into the darkness. The EMP pulse had not penetrated to damage the electronics, and the power source was provided by the White House’s shielded emergency generator. They stood behind the electric car, plugged into its charger inside of a metal cage.

“Another Faraday cage,” Max exclaimed.
I’m beginning to see them everywhere
.“This is our private passageway to Fairlane.”
Max and Rachel scrambled into the electric car. Max turned the key, and the headlights shone brightly. He turned to his Secret Service contingent. They were busy mounting their bikes after a tight squeeze in the kitchen closet.

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“You know how I hate speeches, so I’ll be brief. This is a secret, and I’ll have your balls surgically removed if you breathe a word of this to anyone. Clear?”

“Yes, Mr. President!” They had been well-trained.
“You are about to embark on a high-speed bike ride beneath the Potomac to my house. This is a test of your fitness level and your devotion to your elite status as my protectors. I want five riders ahead, and five behind. Your assignment is to clear the way to Fairlane at the far end of this tunnel, and I have no idea what waits for us when we get there. You will establish communications with your team on site and with the White House, and you will equip every car in my garage with communicators that have a direct link to both locations. I have been advised that we can assume that there may be other EMP devices out there somewhere, so we will only be driving cars that were built before 1970,” Max announced.
“Why?” Justin Armstrong was the first to speak. His puzzled look betrayed a lack of knowledge of nuclear weaponry, and he silently cursed his ignorance. It was a huge gap in his training, and he knew his lack of knowledge could place the president in danger. He vowed to become an expert before another device wreaked havoc.
“No electronics to fry,” Max replied. “The same gamma radiation that comes from solar flares was emitted when that EMP device was detonated, and if you were lucky enough to get a newer car going again, another detonation would stop you dead in the middle of the road.”
“Mr. President, we will have those cars delivered to your front door, gassed up and ready to go. Which one will you be riding in?”
“I’m partial to the red, ’66 Vette, and I’ll be doing my own driving,” Max replied.
Max pressed the accelerator pedal and the electric car lurched silently forward. Around the first curve, the cyclists encountered a spider web that spanned the width of the tunnel, the large spider situated in the center of the passageway. The lead cyclist broke through ahead of the pack, parting the web with his head. A portion of the web, together with its builder, stuck to his black suit, and he sputtered, frantically trying to brush the arachnid away with his right hand.
“Max, this is creepy,” whispered Rachel.
“Yeah, we’ll have to do something about those things when I get half a chance,” he replied, intent on the planning. “I encountered a big one last week when I was down here. I didn’t know that they could spin a web that fast.” Rachel moved closer to Max and held his arm tightly. Her fright was peaking. “You need to know that I was briefed on possible terrorist activity a few days ago, and again last night, and I ordered that they keep me in plain sight. The terrorists are homegrown, and I’m betting that they are staring at a black TV screen somewhere, just like the rest of the world. Any image they have is of me standing at the podium. Even if they have people on the ground communicating to them, the only idea they have of our whereabouts is that I holed up in the White House about ten minutes ago.”
Under the well-established protocol of protecting the president, Max would have been whisked away to a secret command center under a mountain outside of Washington, along with a contingent of every available member of Congress, his cabinet, and military decision-makers. He had ordered that protocol be abandoned. He was safer being unpredictable, appearing in public at times and places that could not be anticipated. If he was correct in his assumptions, his enemy not only knew of the protocol for protecting the president, he had established it.
“Rachel will lead the way with the helicopter, and I want an agent to accompany her to communicate with our people on the ground and in the air. By the time we get back to the Capitol, I imagine our military will be everywhere, and I would appreciate it if you told them we are coming their way. I’d hate for some field commander with his finger on the button of a surface to air missile to see us as a threat, if you know what I mean.”
Armstrong rode powerfully alongside the electric car, relaying commands to his subordinates in rapid succession. Max chuckled when he yelled, “Whatever you do, don’t shoot at us, and don’t shoot at Flygirl’s helo. We’ll be coming across the Theodore Roosevelt Bridge in fifteen clicks, and I want a path cleared direct to the steps of the Capitol.”
Rachel remained nervous and unsure, her mind leaping forward in time. She had not received combat training, and evasive maneuvers would be a challenge if she encountered anything that remotely resembled ground fire. She shuffled in her seat and looked at Max with concern. “I’m not sure I’m ready for this,” she whispered. He stared ahead, confident. ”Don’t worry, you’re going to be fine. The last thing they will expect is to have us come back there from the opposite direction like some big magic trick,” he replied.
Max knew that his ultimate goal would be to avoid mass panic, and to do that, he would need to be back at the Capitol quickly. Fear of the unknown was the immediate enemy. Without contact with the outside world, the public rumors would spread rapidly, and his ability to lead effectively would be lost. Above all, he had to be visible to America, and to lead. He couldn’t do that from a bunker, hidden for his protection from that same unknown danger.He began to relay messages back to the White House through Armstrong, who dutifully dictated the words verbatim. They spoke in intense staccato sentences as the advance riders increased their speed to provide a security buffer ahead.
“Tell Andrew to get those cameras from the press room in the hands of the press, but to keep filming without broadcasting. I want the scenes to be edited before the rest of the country sees them. Tell him that I only want positive images. Control the content. Staffman needs to immediately get a press release out, explaining that a power failure has delayed the broadcast, accompanied by still pictures of happy faces and parade scenes, if he can find any. Scarlett needs to get a sound stage ready for her speech, but she is not to start until I get there…and oh, tell her to stick to her original script. She’ll love that. Keep the bands playing loud and continuously. Is the path cleared for us yet? I want all flyovers to look like we planned them from the start. Don’t we have the Blue Angels as part of the program? Move them up. Get them in the air now.”
“We’re headed back to the inauguration fifteen minutes after we arrive at Fairlane, and I want this operation to be flawless in the execution,” Armstrong announced to his subordinates. Calling ahead to the skeleton crew left at the house during the inauguration, he verified that the grounds were secure and directed them to prepare for their arrival. The advance team reached the end of the tunnel and dispersed through the metal door in pursuit of the assigned tasks. Max and Rachel were only two minutes behind, but by the time they reached their destination, the helicopter had been removed from storage.
Five classic cars stood idling, their rumbling exhausts projected the sound of power not often heard since Detroit stopped producing muscle cars. Their paint had been recently polished to a mirror finish, each one looked better than the day it had been driven off the assembly line. In the front of the pack was a1966, candy apple red, Corvette Stingray convertible. Behind it, a green 1967 Mustang convertible rumbled, followed by a Shelby Cobra, blue with its characteristic racing stripe. They led the only two hardtops in the collection: a bronze 1968 Camaro Super Sport and a 1957 T-Bird hardtop, in turquoise, not driven since Adrianna died. The sight of it tugged at his heart; it was his mother’s favorite car. All of them had been made in America in the heyday of the United States auto industry, and all of the vehicles chosen lacked the electronics that EMP radiation could immobilize.
Rachel ran into the house and emerged three minutes later in her flight suit, carrying her flight helmet. The helo, a two-person Baby Belle, had already been wheeled from a tiny hanger next to the massive garage. “Can you fly this thing in a straight line?” Max asked, shaking his head. He had always been envious of Rachel’s talent for flying. It seemed that she could fly anything, and she took to it naturally. He, on the other hand, knew the limits of his abilities. Where he excelled at many activities that were beyond the grasp of others, flying was not one of them, and Rachel took silent pride in her ability to do something that Max lacked in his repertoire of talents.
“What do you think?” She batted her eyelashes and put her hand on her hip, doing an inept bimbo imitation, which provoked a laugh from Max. “Do you think I just lie around and eat bon-bons by the pool while you’re out running the country?” She smiled and slid into his arms like fingers into a glove, content for a brief hug before they set off across the Potomac for their grand return to the inauguration. There was no time for more.
“I have been practicing while you neglected me,” she teased. “Not only have I become good at it, I have trained your Secret Service detail to prepare Baby Belle for flight, do the pre-flight check, and call in my flight plan, but I suppose there’s no time for that today. I assume there is nothing but military aircraft flying in my airspace right now.” She paused at the sound of the Blue Angels flying over the Capitol far in the distance. It was accompanied by the unmistakable thrup-thrup of military helicopters beyond the horizon. The sounds underscored the need to get back in a hurry, and the revving of engines in Max’s personal inaugural parade would soon be drowned out by the roar of her take-off.
She broke the embrace and looked into his eyes. “You had me from the first time you smiled in my direction, and I had you from the time you first saw me in a bikini, boytoy,” she bantered. “Get back to work.” Rachel turned to finish her pre-flight check, and Max’s smile dissolved as his mind returned to the many tasks that lay before them. There would be time for passion once they had survived the day.
“Armstrong, notify the White House over our secure channel that I want every operable camera pointed in our direction when we come across the bridge, and tell Andrew Fox and Bill Staffman that I will need our footage edited, copies made, and distributed to the press. Then, I will need official copies delivered to all of the major networks by every means possible. Tell Andrew to splice me together a message of hope and leadership using my words, and I want it done by the time I finish speaking at the inauguration. Oh, and tell him this: No speeches. He’ll know what that means.”
By controlling the message and keeping it short, Max was assured that the press wouldn’t have the opportunity to distort the meaning or put their editorial spin on it. He had to convey hope and leadership, or whoever had committed this despicable act of terrorism would have succeeded at severing him from the base of his power: the people.

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