now.
Curl stopped and took a silk handkerchief from his top pocket. He carefully wiped his brow. More than once heâd heard the President refer slightingly to aides who arrived âhot and sweatyâ. Curl nodded to the elderly warrant officer outside the sitting-room door. On the floor at his side rested a metal case. (When the staff photographers were around he kept it on his knees.) It held sealed packets signed by the Joint Chiefs. These were the codes that could order anuclear strike. And the Doomsday Books that, in comic-strip style, illustrated projections in megadeaths for each of the target towns. The Russians, drowning in a sea of economic disaster, were clutching at the straws of capitalist revival. The East European satellite nations were offering their desolate industrial landscapes to any bidder. But anyone with access to the intelligence pouring in to Room 208, from the Gulf, as well as from Africa and the Far East, knew that Americaâs enemies had not gone out of business. So âthe bagmanâ followed the President everywhere he went.
Curl knocked at the door softly but waited only a moment before entering. His chief was sitting in his favoured wing armchair, reading from a fat tome and sipping at his favourite evening drink: cognac and ginger.
Curl stood there a moment reflecting upon the baffling way in which this room seemed to change when the President was in it. It was bigger, lighter and more imposing when the chief was here. Heâd stood here alone sometimes and marvelled at the difference.
The President made a movement of his hand to acknowledge Curlâs presence. The public saw only the President a make-up team and TV producer created for public display. They would have been shocked to see this wizened little man in his spotted bow tie, baggy slacks, hand-knitted sweater and red velvet slippers. This was the way the President liked to dress when the White House staff photographers were not around, but it was verboten at all other times. The bow tie was âartyâ, the slippers âfaggyâ, the sweater âtoo homespunâ and US Presidents didnât drink fancy foreign booze. Most important, US Presidents looked young and fit. They didnât wear granny glasses and sit hunched over books: they rode and roped and piloted their own choppers. It wasnât always easy to reconcile this carefully conjured outdoor figure with the emphasis the Administration was now putting upon formal education and the need for scientists and scholars, but votes must always come first.
The President had aged greatly in two years of office, aged by a decade. He continued to read and didnât look up as Curl entered. âFix yourself a drink, John. The news is coming now.â
Curl didnât fix himself a drink. He wasnât fond of alcohol and liked to present a picture of abstemiousness when with the President. Curl stood behind the President looking at the TV but also noticing the small bald patch on the crown of the chiefâs head. Curl envied him that: his own baldness was reaching up from his temples to a little promontory of hair that would soon become an island and disappear altogether. From the front the President showed no hair loss at all.
Still thinking about this, Curl seated himself demurely on the sofa with his leather case beside him. He arranged a handful of small pink prompt cards in sequence, shuffling them like a professional gambler with a deck of marked cards. Upon each one a topic of discussion was typed in large orator type. âSpanish Guiana â guerrilla contactâ read the topmost card. Curl kept them in his hand, holding them out of sight like a conjuror.
The Pizza Hut ad ended. The President closed his book. This newscaster was a man they both knew, a man to whom they both owed a favour or two. The first item was edited coverage of the protest march in Los Angeles. The subsequent demonstration had continued through the