'Absolutely.' He nodded toward Callister. 'Marie, this is Mr. Callister.'
Callister smiled. 'Hello, Marie.'
Managing a faint 'hi,' Marie sought refuge from her shyness by sitting in Kerry's lap. 'Hello,' Lara said from behind them.
As Callister turned, Kerry noticed—as he often did—the effect Lara's beauty and self-possession induced in others. When she extended her hand, he took it with a certain deference. 'I'm George Callister,' he said. 'I think I'm supposed to say 'congratulations' to the President, but 'best wishes' to you.'
'That sounds about right,' Kerry observed. 'Or maybe just 'good luck.' '
Lara smiled at Callister. 'Thank you,' she said and then, in turn, introduced Inez, Mary, and a somewhat subdued Joan Bowden.
Callister greeted them, then allowed that he was needed elsewhere, and that they should enjoy their afternoon. 'We intend to,' Inez told him. 'This is quite an experience.'
'For me, as well,' Callister answered dryly.
With that, he said goodbye to Lara's family. Kerry walked him to his car, two Secret Service agents trailing at a distance.
'You have a nice family,' Callister remarked. 'Though I hope they forget they ever saw me here.'
From his tone, Kerry inferred that 'family' carried great weight with George Callister. 'Do you have children?' he asked.
'Two. A boy, seventeen, and a girl, thirteen. And neither one much trouble.' Stopping near his car, Callister added, 'If it comes out that I was here, think you can get them police protection?'
Though this was offered with a smile, its undertone was not as jocular. 'From some maniac with a gun?' Kerry answered. 'It's quite a world we live in, isn't it.'
Callister considered this, and then extended his hand. 'I'll see what I can do, Mr. President.'
NINETEEN
Shortly after five on the next afternoon, Kit Pace asked to see the President.
It was a crowded day—a new tax bill; a meeting with civil rights leaders—and a long one: at nine that evening, the President and Lara would sit for a live interview on ABC. Though Kerry waved her to a chair, Kit elected to stand. 'The other shoe's dropped,' she said bluntly. 'Carole Tisone from the
'She's got the whole story—everything on Joan and Bowden, your various conversations with the D.A. . . .'
'Will she run it?' Kerry interrupted.
'Yes.' Kit's face and voice betrayed her frustration. 'I took her through it all, off the record—protecting Joan's privacy, giving her marriage a chance, letting Bowden work out his problems in peace. When none of that worked, I argued that you and Lara shouldn't be harried for looking out for her sister like any decent family would, especially on the eve of your wedding . . .'
'Oh,' Kerry said, '
'Apparently so—they're running this tomorrow, regardless of what we say. We've got only a few hours to respond. You and Lara will have to decide how and where.'
'That's up to Joan, not us. But just for the hell of it, what do you suggest we do?'
'Get it over with, Mr. President.' Pausing, Kit sat down. 'I know how you feel. But if you say nothing, the story will keep going until we're forced to comment. Just as bad, the story is what the
Chin propped on his hand, Kerry allowed himself a moment of depression, contemplating how unfair this was to Joan, and how it might affect her. 'We'll talk to her,' he said with quiet anger. 'But first, get me the publisher of the
• • •
Less than four hours later, Kerry and Lara sat with Taylor Yarborough of ABC in the Library, surrounded by cameras and sound equipment.
It was ten minutes before the interview. Taylor, Lara's friend and former colleague, chatted easily with Kerry and Lara about her children, mutual friends, the oddity of getting married in quite so public a fashion.
'I had my assistant run a search,' Taylor told Lara with a smile. 'He came up with several thousand articles, twice that many mentions on evening news shows, six television specials, and the covers of all four bridal magazines. There were more items on your mother, niece and sisters than on the conflict between Israel and Palestine, Mahmoud Al Anwar, and nuclear proliferation—combined.'
Briefly, Lara gave Kerry a look tinged with worry, then turned back to Taylor. 'About my family,' she said quietly, 'we have a favor to ask.'
* * *
Drinking vodka and orange juice, John Bowden stared at the screen. He had not eaten, could no longer sleep. The continuous hits of alcohol seemed to surge through his veins, causing the picture to focus, then blur, as though suspended between reality and dream.
The telephone rang. Bowden did not answer. Nor did his machine: after seven messages from Carole Tisone —whoever she was and whatever she wanted—he had switched it off. The 'urgent' message from his lawyer could wait; the only 'urgent' matter was getting back his family. He stared at the screen, torn between numbness and rage, a sense of loss so deep he could feel it in the pit of his stomach, so profound that only death could relieve his pain.
On the screen, the son of a bitch Kilcannon smiled at Joan's ice queen of a sister, the television prima donna. Her sorority sister—the overpaid bottle blonde—kept up the cheerful patter. 'How,' she asked the ice queen, 'has your family enjoyed getting to know the President?'
Lara took Kilcannon's hand. 'They adore him,' she said lightly. 'But then, who wouldn't?'
Kilcannon smiled. 'Should we start with the U.S. Senate?'
Bowden took another swallow of vodka.
The chirping from the screen enraged him now. He stood, staggering, and went to the refrigerator for more vodka. Returning, he stopped to snatch
On the screen, no one was smiling.
'The
Lara touched his hand. 'Joan's dealing with the challenges in her marriage,' she told the blonde, 'in large part thanks to Kerry. But not everyone has a former domestic violence prosecutor in the family to guide them through the legal system. All we can hope for now is that other victims of domestic violence, as well as their abusers, find the help they need . . .'
Bowden stopped, staring at Kerry Kilcannon. The glass trembled in his hand.