My god, she was beautiful
, he thought.
She had become a narcotic to him over the past few months of their relationship. He could do anything with her, to her, any time he wanted. She knew what he wanted even when he wasn't sure. But this night he didn't know whether she was an angel from God or the Devil himself. Tonight that fear nagged him.
He lit a cigarette, inhaled deeply, felt the nicotine rush and settled back into his chair.
"You only smoke when you're stressed. Do you need to come back to bed?"
"No. I'm okay. I'm starting to like these Turkish cigarettes and for some reason it seems appropriate to smoke them when I'm with you."
"The pasha in his seraglio?"
"Yeah, something like that. Only my harem's a bit small - just you. I'll have to work on it."
There was silence between them. It felt awkward.
"May I come to you? Let me use my mouth for you?" she asked tentatively rather than seductively. There was concern in her voice.
"No. Stay in bed - not that you can get out of bed without my help," he said quietly and with affection. "I'll come to bed in a little while. Go back to sleep."
He took a blue folder out of his brief case and left the bedroom for the kitchen.
He made himself a sandwich, poured a
Coke
and then sat down at the breakfast bar, the blue folder at his elbow. He had just about decided that he had the Devil himself handcuffed to his bed upstairs and that it was time to end the relationship.
But how to end something like this was the problem. He knew things would be complicated when he took his new position but he hadn't planned on this.
It wasn't just a matter of telling the Devil, "No thanks, but thanks for all the fun times." The Devil may have to be killed and how do you kill the Devil? He remembered the classic movie,
The Usual Suspects
. The question was posed, "
How do you shoot the Devil in the back? What if you miss?
"
This was no ordinary affair. Ordinary was not a word to be used about anything that had happened in the last 10 months.
He was not an anonymous entrepreneur in some big city. He did not have his lover in some townhouse in a gated community. He was the President of the United States of America. He was sitting across the street from the White House in Blair House, a ravishingly beautiful woman handcuffed to his bed - both of them having enjoyed several hours of some very rough sex.
It was May. He'd been in office just under 5 months. He had started his run for the White House a year ago and against all odds he won by a landslide, an unprecedented landslide.
Peter Montrose was not a handsome man. He was not good at speaking in sound bites. He had no charisma. He wasn't a Reagan or a Clinton or a Miller or even his predecessor, Thomas Carstairs. He was a common citizen who looked common and spoke plainly.
~~~~~~~~~~
The President opened the blue folder. There were three pieces of paper in the folder and except for the picture with a name on its back on one of the pieces of paper he couldn't read a thing. The writing was in Hebrew. The picture was of the woman in his bed.
Her name was Cynthia Green, B.S., Political Science, University of Kansas; J.D., Harvard; M.S., International Political Science, The Sorbonne. 36 years old. Never married. She was a lawyer in a Jefferson City, Missouri law firm specializing in international law until she joined the campaign. Now she was Deputy White House Counsel and had been his mistress since before he took office.
A Secret Service agent that had recently come on the President's protective detail noticed her in the Oval Office one day and it set off an alarm bell. Ten days later the agent, through a personal contact with the Ukrainian GRU, received the intelligence file on Cynthia Green and quietly gave it to the President.
The President took the folder to a young rabbi he had become acquainted with in the District for translation; he wanted to avoid official channels. The translation boiled down to this: Cynthia Green was a deep cover agent and an assassin for the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence Service. And he was sleeping with her - or rather her with him for some unseen purpose.
Break off the relationship in a conventional manner and maybe the tabloid shows suddenly know everything about their relatively unconventional sexual relationship. (The President found it perversely ironic that after the Gay Rights Movement victories of 2013 the electorate could elect a Gay/Lesbian (Richard Miller and Ellen Becker) ticket with the Social Democrats but had reservations about candidates who were into more esoteric sexual practices.)
Kill her and maybe her masters retaliate. Keep things as they were and he may find himself dead some night, at the hand of a foreign power.
The President made a phone call.
~~~~~~~~~~
The President, then candidate, suffered a personal disaster in late September before the election. It was the disaster and how the public perceived his handling of it that likely contributed to his landslide victory.
The disaster was a natural gas explosion at his home in Kansas City that took his wife and three sons. But the explosion wasn't an accident. It was an assassination meant to drive Peter Montrose from the campaign. Better that he dropped from the campaign, it was reasoned by the conspirators, than run a dirty campaign against the "common man."
Three weeks before the election a CIA case officer named Mitchell Cahill came to Montrose and confessed he was the one who rigged the explosion. And then Cahill presented hours of audio, video and computer data proving that the conspirators were at the highest levels of government: President Thomas Carstairs, Vice President and presidential candidate Winston Miles, several White House staff members and four senior FBI and CIA officials.
Cahill was ready to fall on his sword. He had no idea he was being ordered to kill the candidate's family. Mitchell Cahill had done many things in the service of his country; killing a political opponent's family was not one of them.
Instead, to Cahill's stunned amazement, Montrose asked Cahill to disappear with his evidence. If Montrose won the election he would ask Cahill to come forward and Montrose would deal with the conspirators. If he lost the campaign, he lost. Montrose did not want to win or lose based on the exposed treachery of the other candidate, the Vice President.
The final weeks of the campaign were waged on the "high ground". The American people got to see the "common man" candidate looking "presidential." They liked what he was saying. They liked what he proposed. They liked the people he had gathered to his camp and who would be a part of the new administration.
On Election Day the common man candidate rode an unprecedented landslide to victory. And on a cold, dreary Saturday, six weeks after taking office, the President dealt directly with the major conspirators.
The conspirators did not refute, nor even attempt to offer a defense of the evidence that Cahill had given to the President.
In the Oval Office, with a Supreme Court Justice presiding, the former President and first lady, the former Vice President, and four former White House staff members, pleaded guilty to five counts each of first degree murder for the ordering and planning of the assassination of the President's family.
The President promptly signed a pardon agreement and ordered the record of the proceedings sealed and given the highest level of secrecy available for federal documents. It would be 2160 before historians knew what happened surrounding Peter Montrose's election and first 100 days in office.
The FBI Director met with an accident and was given a state funeral.
The other intelligence and justice officials who were identified as being political met with similar fates over the next three months.
The President took a few days off, never leaving the White House but holed up in the Residence. His Press Secretary told the media that the President had the East Asian Flu and had been ordered to bed. The President's personal physician, Navy Capt. Ronald Nelson, confirmed the diagnosis and treatment of fluids and bed rest.
The truth was that the President was sick in his soul over the deaths of his family and knowing who was responsible. But rather than parade the conspirators before the public he felt he needed to make the matter as if it never happened. And he had.