“Mr. President… do you still want me to keep quiet about the attempts on your life?”
He stood straight and rigid in front of me. Not the usual relaxed slouch, not at all. “As far as I know,” he answered stiffly, “there have been no attempts on my life.”
I couldn’t believe I’d heard him right. “No attempts…?”
“Two imposters have been found, both dead of unknown causes. A helicopter accident has killed the chief of my personal security force and my personal physician. No one has fired a shot at me; no one has made any attempt whatsoever on me.”
“And the investigation on those two… imposters? Who’s taking that over, with McMurtrie dead?”
“Robert Wyatt is handling that. We’ll be using selected personnel from the Secret Service and the FBI.”
“And you want me to keep it all under wraps?”
“I
“And when will that be?”
“Maybe never. If we find out who’s responsible for those duplicates, and the story’s sensitive enough, you might never get to tell the press about it.”
About the only thing I could say was, “I see.”
“Now I need to know, Meric,” he went on, deathly cold now, “if I can count on your cooperation and your help. There’s no reason for you to play detective in this. We have enough experts for that. We’ll find out who’s behind these killings. What I need from you is silence. Or your resignation. Which will it be?”
It was like getting punched between the eyes. I bet I staggered backwards a step or two. “My resignation? You’re asking for…”
“I’m asking you to decide. I don’t want you to resign. But I’ve got to have absolute loyalty and cooperation. There’s no third possibility.”
“I see,” I said again.
“You can think it over for a day or so. Sleep on it. Let me know Monday.”
“No need to,” I heard myself say. “I’ll stick. I’ll get the job done.”
“You’re sure?”
For the first time in my life, I was knowingly lying about something important. But I had the feeling that if I resigned, a fatal accident might hit me, too. And moreover, if Halliday was starting to purge his staff of everyone except blindly loyal followers, something ugly was going on.
“I’m sure,” I said. “As long as you have Wyatt keep me informed on the progress of the investigation. I still have to know what I should avoid stepping on in front of the press.”
He nodded once, curtly. “Good. I’ll go in and phone Robert right now. I’ll tell him that you’re still on the team, and he should cooperate with you.”
“Fine. Thank you.”
“Meet me in the dining room,” he said.
My drink arrived as the President left the balcony. Laura excused herself to dress for dinner. I sipped sherry and knew what it felt like to be a politician. I had said one thing and meant something else altogether.
But by the time we’d gathered together in the President’s Dining Room, with its wallpaper depicting wildly inaccurate scenes from the American Revolution, The Man was his old cheerful, relaxed self again. He even joked about how grim-faced I looked.
It wasn’t until the dinner was over and I was sitting in the dark rear seat of a White House limousine on my way back to my apartment that I realized the entire truth of it.
TEN
I never did go out to the country. I stayed holed up in my apartment, thinking, worrying, wondering what to do. I couldn’t sleep Saturday night after that dinner with The Man and Laura. I paced my three rooms all Sunday morning, then started cleaning the place, desperate for something to occupy my time and fidgety hands. I wondered briefly if any of the neighbors would complain about the vacuum running so early in the day, or cause a fuss with the cleaning service and its union. But everyone else in the building must have either been out at church or sleeping soundly; the phone didn’t buzz once.
By midafternoon I was trying to force myself to watch a baseball game on television. Even in three dimensions it bored the hell out of me. I couldn’t concentrate on it. My mind kept circling back to the same thoughts, the same fears, the same conclusions.
Part of what? What in hell is the President trying to do with men made to look exactly like him? Why was McMurtrie murdered? Was there a power struggle going on? A coup?
Have they—whoever they are—already slipped their man into the White House? No. That much I was certain of. They could make somebody look exactly like the President, but not behave so minutely similar to him. Despite that little show of real rage on the back porch Saturday evening, The Man was still James J. Halliday, not a duplicate. Of that I was certain.
My apartment was spotless and even the laundry was done by the time the answer hit me. I was standing in the middle of the living room, looking for something else to do, trying to keep myself occupied. The sun was low in the west, sending red-gold streams of light through my windows. The TV set was blathering mindlessly: some game show. And the answer hit me.
The man who had raised his son to be President, but got a President whom he didn’t agree with. The man who grew more paranoid and megalomaniacal each day. The closer he came to death, the more wild-eyed he got about “setting the country straight.” And if his son couldn’t do the job the way the General wanted it done, then the General would make a new son and put
It sounded crazy. But it fit. That’s why the President wouldn’t come out with all guns firing against his shadowy opponent. That’s Why McMurtrie was killed just after talking to the General. And Dr. Klienerman—he had probably recognized the symptoms right off.
The dramatic thing to have done would have been to phone the White House immediately and pledge my support to The Man wholeheartedly. Instead, I simply took a frozen dinner out of the refrigerator and popped it into the microwave cooker. There were three things wrong with my terrific piece of deduction.
First, if the President had wanted my help in fighting his father he would have asked for it.
Second, it’s always stupid to get involved in a family scrap. In this case, it could be fatally stupid. The President wasn’t a killer, I was certain. But there were those around him whose entire careers were based on killing.
And Wyatt—His Holiness: where did he stand? Which side was he on? Both? Neither? Wyatt could order a killing; I knew it in my bones. Under the proper circumstances he could commit murder himself.
Third, and most important, was the nagging doubt in my mind about the whole idea. If it was the General, why wouldn’t the President simply drop a battalion of troops into Aspen and cart the old man off to a well-guarded rest home? Why all the pussyfooting? Why let the plot go on, and let good men like McMurtrie die? There was