peer down we see him lying in a pocket of heavy shadow, his arms folded under him, his head resting near one of several large decorative stones which border the oleanders. Our plan will work after all, we think. It will appear as though he was leaning out of the window, lost his balance, fell and struck his head on one of those stones. A tragic accident.
We turn from the window, leaving it open, and glance around the office. There is nothing out of place, no signs of violence. Satisfied, we cross to the door, open it, slip into the anteroom; and a moment later our steps echo hollowly in the empty corridor as we hurry away from the scene of our execution.
The scene of our act of mercy.
Seventeen
It was 10:25 when the telephone rang in the Oval Study.
The sudden sound made Augustine jerk his head up from Fred Fearnot and the Rioters, the Hal Standish railroad dime novel he was paging through. He looked at the Seth Thomas wall clock, noted the time. Pretty late for someone to be calling, he thought, unless it’s important business. He let the phone ring three more times while he rubbed at his tired eyes, took a sip of water from the tumbler on his desk blotter. Then he reached out and caught up the receiver.
“Yes?”
“Mr. President? This is Christopher Justice, sir. I have to see you right away. It’s urgent.”
“Urgent? At this time of night?”
“Yes sir, very urgent.”
“Where are you?”
“Downstairs in the press secretary’s office.”
“All right-come up then.”
“Thank you, sir.”
Augustine replaced the receiver. Justice’s voice had sounded grim, shaken, as if he were the harbinger of tragic news; and it would have to be something tragic, Augustine thought, to rattle someone of Christopher’s nature. A foreboding touched him, but it was ephemeral, directionless. He could not imagine what might have happened.
He picked up the dime novel again, carried it around his desk and across the room, and put it away in one of the glass-fronted cabinets. Restlessly he began to roam the study. Two minutes passed; three. He had stopped in front of the shelves of railroad lanterns and was running his fingers over the flared reflectors on one of them when the knock, soft but hurried, sounded on the door.
When he opened the door, the sense of foreboding deepened. Justice’s face was tightly set; his eyes, shadowed because of the dim light in both the hallway and the study, had a somber, uneasy appearance.
Augustine gestured him inside, shut the door. “My God, Christopher,” he said, “what is it, what’s happened?”
Justice said heavily, “It’s Mr. Briggs, sir.”
“Briggs?”
“Yes sir. He… I’m afraid he’s dead.”
“What!”
“It’s true, Mr. President. I was walking on the south lawn, getting some air because it was so hot in my room, and I noticed that the window in the press secretary’s office was open and the lights were on. But there was nobody inside, so I went over to have a look. I found him lying in the bushes under the window.”
“But how — how did it happen?”
“I’m not sure, sir. It looks as though he was leaning out for some reason and lost his balance and fell. He must have hit his head on one of the rocks.”
A hollowness had formed under Augustine’s breastbone, but he seemed to have no other reaction beyond a kind of shocked confusion. Sometimes you came up against something so stunning that you lacked the emotional language to deal with it immediately. He shook his head, walked over to the nearest piece of furniture-a leather couch-and sat on the arm and stared down at the carpet.
Across the study, the door to the presidential bedroom opened and Claire entered. “I thought I heard voices,” she said. “Is something-” Then she stopped speaking and ridges appeared on the smooth surface of her forehead.
Augustine said, “Claire, something terrible has happened.”
A shadow passed across her face. She caught the fabric of her blouse at the throat-she was still fully dressed, or she would not have entered as she had-and then came over to where he was sitting. “What is it?”
“It’s Austin Briggs. He’s dead.”
Her mouth opened and her face went white. “Oh my God,” she said.
“Christopher just found him, outside his office window.”
“Where?”
“It seems to have been a freak accident, Mrs. Augustine,” Justice said. He went on to tell her what he had told Augustine.
Claire said, “Are you certain he’s dead?”
“Yes ma’am. I checked his pulse.”
“Have you told anyone else?”
“No. I thought the President should be the first to know.” She closed her eyes, put her hands to her temples as though trying to clear her thoughts. Watching her, Augustine thought dully that the news seemed to have hit her even harder than it had him; he had never seen her quite so shaken.
Justice said, “Do you want me to notify the security chief, Mr. President?”
Before Augustine could answer, Claire lowered her hands and turned abruptly. “No,” she said. “Not yet. Don’t call anyone yet.”
“But Mrs. Augustine…”
“Don’t argue with me, please. We need time to think.”
Justice looked at Augustine, who nodded mutely. “Yes ma’am,” he said then. “Whatever you say.”
Claire bit her lip, and her eyes, dark and glistening, rested on Augustine for a long moment. Then she pivoted and hurried out of the study.
When the bedroom door closed behind her Augustine roused himself, went slowly to his desk and poured water into the tumbler there; drank it to ease the dryness in his throat. Some of the numbness began to leave him then, and in his mind he heard the echo of Claire’s voice saying We need time to think. Time to think about what? Briggs was dead, he had died in a tragic accident. In one sense it was unfortunate; and yet, looking at it another way, coldly and practically, it solved the problem of his political threat.
Time to think about what?
But it was already beginning to break in on Augustine, the same realization that must have struck Claire immediately: it was not the fact of Briggs’s death that demanded careful reflection, but the probable repercussions of it. He had died here at the White House, and under circumstances which were as bizarre as they were tragic. There had probably never been an accidental death on the White House grounds, no deaths of any kind here that he was aware of since President Harrison had succumbed to pneumonia in 1841. The story would make national headlines, would have the country buzzing for weeks. Members of the press and his political enemies would use it as a weapon to further attack the viability of the Augustine administration; some of the more vicious, muckraking types might even hint at Christ knew what type of scandal.
Augustine passed a hand roughly over his face. Time to think, time to think-but what was there to be done? Briggs was already dead. Still, the real problem was not the death itself, it was where and how he had died. If the accident had happened somewhere else, in his own house in Cleveland Park, for instance, the repercussions might not be so Somewhere else, he thought.
Justice had not told anyone about finding Briggs; suppose it were possible to move the body, to take it away from the White House, to put it in another place where an accidental fall might have happened, a place such as