* * *
They lay beside each other, sleepless in the dark. For an hour or more, neither had spoken.
'When I was little,' Lara finally said, 'my father owned a gun. Even then it scared me—like he did. Just passing a gun shop gave me the creeps.
'Then you were shot, and I nearly lost you.' Her voice softened. 'I made a pact with God—that if you lived I'd never leave you, no matter what sacrifices I'd have to make. And when you survived I believed that He had given you back to me, and now would never take you.'
In the pause that followed, Kerry touched her hand. 'He gave me you,' she finished. 'And then He took them in exchange . . .'
Heartsick, Kerry listened to the sound of muffled crying.
* * *
They walked the beach on a cool midmorning, hands in the pockets of their windbreakers. Out to sea, a Coast Guard cutter sliced along the perimeter mapped out by Peter Lake, beyond which two cabin cruisers carried photographers with telephoto lenses.
'Next week,' Lara said, 'there'll be a magazine cover of this moment, to remind me I'm First Lady. That's what I am now—a symbol. The only job I have.'
'True. But there's much a First Lady can do.'
Abruptly stopping, Lara turned to him. 'Please, if I decide to do something about guns, support me.'
In his worry and ambivalence, Kerry found no words. 'Before this happened,' she told him, 'it might have been race and poverty—somewhere I could use my skills to make people
* * *
They ate more chowder by candlelight. 'It's better the second day,' Lara said.
Smiling faintly, Kerry watched her glass of wine kick in. At length he ventured, 'There are some realities we should talk about.'
'Such as?'
Aimlessly, Kerry stirred his chowder. 'When it comes to First Ladies, Americans have problems with gender and lines of authority. They don't want the President's wife formulating policy, or running a task force. Marriage isn't enough—to push an agenda or propose new laws, you have to get elected to something.'
'What about dead relatives,' Lara answered coldly. 'Is that too feeble a credential?'
'No. Not if your goal is to make people feel the tragedy of gun violence, the pain of lives lost for no good reason . . .'
'Because I'm a
'There's more to worry about,' Kerry warned. 'If you get out front on this, people will say it's all about you— that if you'd become a paraplegic we'd be going full bore for stem cell research . . .'
'They say that about
'I'm not going to tour the country with home movies of my mother, Marie and Joanie. They're dead, dammit— there's nothing I can do for them. But there are thousands of living people out there who've lost someone they love to guns.
'I know this can't be Lara Costello's traveling memorial service.' Her tone was low and determined. 'If I go out and do this, it will be with other men and women who are looking for a way to keep some other husband, wife or parent from suffering as they did. I can be that way.'
* * *
At midnight, Kerry and Lara stood together, jeans rolled up, chill water nipping their feet and ankles. 'There are risks to what you're proposing,' Kerry said.
'Such as?'
'Getting shot, for one. We still get letters telling me how much better Jamie looked without the top of his head . . .'
'I'd have protection . . .'
'So did he. So did I.'
Lara turned to him. 'They killed my family, Kerry. When they killed Jamie, you didn't hide. You ran for Jamie's seat . . .'
'Dammit, Lara, to the kind of crazies who equate an AK-47 with their penis, you're a minority career woman with a high-toned education and a background in the liberal press, and now you want to take away their guns.'
Lara shook her head, resistant. 'I can't help it if people are crazy. Or that some frightened males see any assertive woman as emasculating.'
Kerry watched a clump of seaweed swirl at his feet. 'All right,' he said wearily. 'There's the abortion.'
' 'The abortion,' ' Lara repeated in mordant tones. 'If that's to stop me, why didn't it stop you from wanting to get married?'
'Because I love you. I thought you knew that.'
Silent, Lara gazed at him. Clasping her shoulders, Kerry spoke softly. 'This is different. Like it or not, you're now a figure of sympathy for millions. It's a power you've never had before. Use that power, and the SSA will search for ways to destroy you.
'That would be enough for them. But it might not be enough for some fanatic with a gun. Guns and abortion is a combustible mixture— it's gotten too many people killed already. I don't want the next one to be you.'
Lara studied him. 'Is that
'What else do you think it's about?' he answered with real heat. 'My visceral distaste for feminism? Or just politics?'
Lara's mouth formed a stubborn line. 'If it isn't politics, don't try to intimidate me. My life, my choice.' Her voice became more level. 'You nearly died, then got out of bed and kept on running for President. All I could do was pray. Don't ask me to turn my back on this so you don't have to worry.'
* * *
Later, Kerry held her. But that was all. They had not made love since the murders. To Kerry, Lara's grief had left her hollow.
'I don't want a child,' she murmured. 'At least not now.'
'Why?'
'What's the usual line—'I can't bring a life into a world as cruel as this'?'
Kerry stifled his dismay. 'Is that really how you feel?'
Lara exhaled. 'I don't know. In the last day or so, I've wondered if a child would help heal us—a new life, a new person to love after so much death . . .'
'I've thought that, too . . .'
'But it's not a reason. People should have children more for the
child's sake than their own. Things are so unsettled now, even with us.' Pausing, Lara spoke more quietly. 'We need time to heal, Kerry. And I have something else to do.'
Kerry fell silent.
'I worry about safety, too,' Lara confessed. 'All the people who'll hate me, and what could happen.' In the darkness, she rested the crown of her head against his face. 'I know what you want. But it's not the time to have a