Authors: Thomas Greanias
“Try to keep up with me, Quinn,” Marshall said as he started up the steps.
Marshall worked his way through the main deck’s various compartments—a command work area, conference room, briefing room, an operations team work area, and a secondary communications compartment — and acknowledged the salutes and greetings of the admiring crew with a confident smile.
Inside the communications center, Major Tommie Banks lit up when Marshall entered, Quinn right behind.
“General Marshall, sir,” the curvy redhead said.
“Major Tom,” Marshall acknowledged. “Threat alert status?”
She handed him a report. “Orange, sir.”
Marshall looked over the report, trying not to notice how nicely Major Tom filled her jumpsuit. “Flight forecast?”
She looked him in the eye. “Clear skies, sir.”
Marshall nodded, aware of Quinn’s frown. Marshall followed Quinn’s eyes to the window. It was dark and snowy.
“The President,” Marshall continued. “Give me his twenty.”
Major Tom said, “Back in Washington with everybody else for tonight’s State of the Union.
“Not everybody,” Marshall said, handing back the report.
She nodded and said softly, “You deserve better, sir.”
“Don’t we all?” Marshall said and marched off.
Two armed Looking Glass officers were already waiting in the battle staff compartment when Marshall entered and sat down in his general’s swivel chair.
“Harney, Wilson.” Marshall nodded to the men. “Welcome to Air Armageddon. Please present your boarding passes.”
The young officers dutifully surrendered the nuclear authenticator codes they were carrying.
Marshall removed the key he wore around his neck and inserted it into one of two locks in the red steel box next to his seat. “Colonel Quinn?”
“Sir.” Quinn, who was hurrying in behind Marshall, produced his own key and inserted it into the second lock.
Marshall opened the double-padlocked safe.
“As you gentlemen know, a Looking Glass plane like ours is always in the air.” Marshall paused to look each officer in the eye. “In the event of surprise nuclear attack, we can command American forces from the air and launch our ICBMs by remote control. Colonel Quinn, as my second officer, you are watching me place the nuclear authenticator codes in here for safekeeping.”
Marshall placed the code cards that Harney and Wilson had given him inside the safe, next to the two launch keys that together could unleash the Apocalypse. He locked the double padlocks with the safe keys. He hung the long chain of his key to the safe around his neck again. He then pocketed Quinn’s second key.
“God forbid we’ll ever need these.”
Marshall turned his attention to a pre-flight checklist. Wilson and Harney stood like statues on either side of him, emotionless. But he could feel Quinn’s stare.
Quinn cleared his throat. “Sir.”
“Yes,” Marshall said without looking up. But he could hear the uncertainty in Quinn’s voice.
“The other key, sir.”
Marshall played it cool. “What about it, Quinn?”
“Regulations state that both keys are not to be in the possession of a single officer,” Quinn said, sounding forced.
Marshall knew that this kind of situation could throw even the most seasoned officer, and Quinn was hardly that. “I know the regulations,” Marshall replied evenly. “I think we have too many regulations these days, don’t you?”
At that moment Major Tom appeared. “General Marshall,” she said, “the tower has cleared us for take-off.”
Marshall handed her his checklist and locked eyes with Quinn. “Who’s our pilot today, Quinn?”
Quinn did his best not to look at his clipboard. It took a few seconds, but he got it right. “That would be Captain Delany, sir. And Rogers is co-pilot.”
Marshall nodded. “Trained them myself. Just like the rest of the crew. Everybody but you, Quinn. We don’t just look out for each other. We’ve made a pact. You know the kind of loyalty I’m talking out, Quinn?”
Quinn said nothing. His eyes were wide, his lips pressed tightly.
“I didn’t think so.” Marshall turned to his crew and smiled. “To your stations, officers.”
Wilson and Harney did as they were told. As did Major Tom.
Marshall heard Quinn unlock his sidearm holster, and when he looked up again he saw the barrel of Quinn’s.38 mm pistol pointed at him.
Quinn said, “Sir, I’m going to have to ask you for that key.”
Marshall smiled. His voice turned softer. “You’re new to Looking Glass, aren’t you?”
“My first flight, sir. But I’ve flown several times with Colonel Kozlowski aboard the Nightwatch plane.”
“Flying with the chauffeur of the president’s Air Force limo isn’t the same as flying with me, Colonel. So, if you don’t mind, I’m going to keep your key.”
“Regulations, sir,” said Quinn as his hand holding the pistol trembled slightly.
“I thought you were a team player, Quinn.”
“I am, sir. But I insist you surrender the key, or I’ll be forced to shoot you.”
“Go ahead, Quinn. Make my day.”
Quinn looked bewildered. But he took a firmer grasp of his pistol. “On the count of three, sir. Three…”
Marshall stared a hole through him and said nothing.
“Two…”
Quinn’s voice started to shake again. But Marshall had to admit to himself that the kid could stand his ground.
“One…”
Marshall’s face broke into a wide grin.
“Congratulations, Colonel.” Marshall removed the second key from his pocket and dangled it in front of Quinn. “You passed the test.”
Quinn grabbed the key with one hand and with his other holstered the sidearm and wiped his forehead. “For a minute there, sir, I thought…”
“Yeah, I know,” Marshall said. “You thought I was flipping out. Next time pull the trigger.”
“Yes, sir, “ Quinn said. “I will, sir.”
Marshall tapped his armrest comlink and said, “Captain Delaney.”
The pilot’s voice came through on the speaker. “Yes, sir.”
“Let’s roll.”
The engines roared to take-off speed as the Looking Glass plane began to barrel down the runway. A minute later they lifted off the ground and soared into dark skies.
At last
, thought Marshall, the National Airborne Military Command Post was in the clouds where she—and he—belonged.
T
he headline in the
Washington Post
read “No Sachs Education for Kids.” A photo showed a beleaguered U.S. Secretary of Education Deborah Sachs at a meeting of the nation’s governors in Washington. Her deer-in-the-headlights look said it all.
Sachs frowned at the picture of herself. It was above a smaller story about a slain Metro security guard whose body was found in a railyard. She adjusted the phone to her ear as she sipped her morning coffee while the TV blared.
“The President is expected to announce the resignation of his outspoken and controversial Secretary of Education after tonight’s State of the Union address,” Matt Lauer was saying on the Today show, and proceeded to recite her most recent run-ins with the Administration. Then Lauer said, “Moving on to the crisis in the Far East…”
She lowered the volume as her friend Lauren at Commerce took the call and immediately offered her condolences.
“No, he hasn’t given me my resignation yet,” Sachs said, flicking her freshly cut black hair from under her chin, which pinned the phone to her shoulder. She was going to grow it out, she decided, now that she no longer required the Beltway cut of a Cabinet secretary. “I have to give it to him this morning. Then he’ll accept it tomorrow. Tonight is all about him, remember? All I know is that Nadine has been a super assistant.”
Blah, blah, blah. Lauren was such a spin doctor with the excuses.
“Well, could you see what you could do for her just the same? Thanks.”
Sachs hung up and stared out the windows at the falling snow. Her Georgetown rowhouse until now had been her sole refuge from the nonsense of Washington. The hunter green walls, white trim and oils over the fireplace had offered an illusion of security and tradition in her otherwise uncertain life.
But it couldn’t shield her from urban Democrats who made a federal case for public education while their own children attended private schools. Or from suburban Republicans whose children enjoyed quality public schools and who demanded vouchers for private schools. Or from the nagging reality she had no home to go back to again because Richard was gone forever, and without him it just wouldn’t be home. But in the process she was depriving Jennifer.
She was mulling over this last painful thought when her assistant Nadine emerged from the front hallway, immaculate in her latest fashionable suit beyond her pay grade, ready to tackle lobbyists, teachers unions and Congress. Her dark hair was slicked back. She smiled broadly, keeping up a good front.
“Morning, boss.”
“For some Americans,” Sachs replied.
“Told you being a public servant isn’t worth the cost after two years,” Nadine said, and then stopped. “What’s this?” She was pointing to the packed overnite carry-on by the door.
“I’m grabbing the shuttle to see Jennifer,” Sachs said. “You book my ticket like I asked?”
“Uh, no,” Nadine said. “You’re going to see the President and tell him why you should keep your job.”
Nadine walked over to the desk and picked up what looked like a student term paper awash in red corrections. In the upper right hand corner was a big, fat “B.”
“And what’s this, Madame Secretary?”
Sachs said, “My speech for Jennifer school assembly.”
“You graded yourself?”
“I’ll do better on the next draft,” Sachs replied without a trace of embarrassment.
“Next draft?” Nadine looked at her Rolex. Sachs had told her to stop with the bling as they were trying to help inner city schools, but it was no use. “Hey, we canceled that speech. You have a meeting at the White House this morning. Why are we still talking?”
“I rescheduled,” Sachs told her. “I’m not going to disappoint Jennifer again. Besides, the President is going to cancel on me anyway. He always does. This time permanently. Just text him my resignation.”
Sachs grabbed her carry-on and rolled it behind her down the hallway and out the front door into the wintry day and the waiting government limousine, leaving Nadine to lock up after her. The driver popped the trunk and dropped her bag inside, then opened the rear door for her to get inside where it was warm.
Nadine finished a call at the curb, then climbed in and shut the door, incredulous. “Only you, boss,” she said as the limo pulled into the street.
“Meaning what?” Sachs asked her.
“Meaning here you are losing your job on national TV and all you can do is worry about your assistant’s ass and some speech nobody’s going to hear.”
“Jennifer and her friends are going to hear it,” Sachs said. “You have a better suggestion?”
“Lecture circuit,” Nadine replied.
Sachs laughed. “If nobody listened to me when I was Secretary of Education, why would they listen to me afterward? Besides, the whole silver lining is that my New York-Washington commuting days are over. I can spend more time with Jennifer.”
Nadine grimaced. “She’s what, ten? Give her a year and she’ll want you out of her life for good.”
“Thank you, Nadine, that’s comforting,” Sachs said. “She’s thirteen and needs me more than ever. Two years is a long time for a girl to live with her aunt. She hates me. If I’m going to be living in New York again, I’m going to be living with my daughter.”
Nadine said, “We’ll work something out. Now let’s go see the President. Maybe he’s changed his mind.”
Sachs was firm. “Look, did you book me on the shuttle to New York or not?”
Nadine flashed the email confirmation on her BlackBerry. “I’ve got you out of Reagan National in forty minutes.”
“Nadine, I don’t know what I’m going to do without you.”
“You go to New York and we’re both gonna find out,” Nadine warned her. “Because if you don’t make it back tonight for the State of the Union, you’re gonna piss off the president.”
“That’s my job, remember?”
“Was your job,” Nadine huffed.
Sachs smiled. “I’ve got a better one now.”
U
SAF Colonel Joseph Kozlowski woke up and shifted under the huge down comforter that covered the king-size bed. He reached to feel for Sherry, but she was gone, without so much as leaving a warm spot.
Kozlowski turned onto his back and blinked his eyes open. He could hear the hair dryer in the bathroom. He held up his watch and squinted. Then he slipped out of bed and plodded toward the curtains and pulled them back. The bleak January light seeped in as he looked across H Street at the White House. The snow was still coming down, burying the Rose Garden and Ellipse. He could barely make out the towering spike of the Washington Monument beyond.
He smelled coffee and saw that Sherry had room service bring up breakfast for one. All that was left was some picked-over fruit and a pile of newspapers screaming about yet another crisis in the Far East. He fished out a melon cube with his fingers and poured himself some lukewarm coffee.
He was halfway through his cup when Sherry emerged from the bathroom with her blow-dried blonde hair draped over her terrycloth robe with the Hay-Adams Hotel logo on it, which she left open just enough to remind him why he never turned her down for these hotel hideaways.
Kozlowski said, “Leaving so soon?”
“Got to finish Vanderhall’s reaction to the State of the Union address,” she said, sliding open the closet door to reveal her Armani suit next to his uniform. The same uniform he had been wearing for eight years now, still a colonel.
“So where am I going, Sherry?”
“You’re going nowhere, Koz.”
Kozlowski watched her dress. “You finally figured that out?”
“The snow, silly.” Sherry helped herself to his Purple Heart medal from his uniform.
“What are you doing?”
“The colors go with my jacket,” she said as she pinned it beneath the lapel of her blazer.