by Roger Hayden
"Who the FUCK do you think you are?" he seethed. His face constricted to a wrinkled mass of bulging veins. Samantha felt herself being pulled closer and closer as if in the throes of a shark.
"Do you know who I am? Do you have any clue what it is that I do? I'm a United States Senator!"
"Jeff--please. Let me go," she said, struggling. Bryant pulled harder.
"I take you in, protect you from harm, and this is the thanks I get?"
Samantha pulled away, causing Bryant to heave her completely face-first on the bed. He placed his knee on her back to keep her down.
"Now you wanna come to my room wearing your little red dress, playing a bunch of fucking games. Well, it's not going to work like that, sweetheart, not today!" Bryant said, digging into her back.
Samantha screamed into the bed comforter. Her calls for help came out muffled and unintelligible. She lifted her head sobbing. "Let me go, you bastard!" she shouted.
Bryant pushed her head back down onto the comforter, silencing her.
"Shhhhh. Let's not blow this out of proportion. It's time that you showed me a little appreciation," Bryant said, unfastening the belt on his bathrobe with one hand, while pushing her down with his free hand.
Samantha squirmed and twisted her way from under his knee. She managed to break free, only to be tossed on her back with Bryant over her. He smiled, and grunted as he pinned both her arms down with his legs, sitting atop her. There was no escape.
"Ah, now we're talking," Bryant said excitedly.
Samantha let out another scream and wrestled one arm away from under Bryant's knee. She brought it directly to his face and clawed fiercely down the side of his cheek. Her nails dug deep, causing Bryant to fall back in agony. Once free, Samantha rolled off the bed and hit the ground. Bryant writhed in pain from his wounds as she dragged herself on the ground towards his door.
"You bitch!" Bryant yelled, wiping the blood off his check. "You'll pay for this. You'll pay for everything!"
Struggling, Samantha crawled towards the small glass table near Bryant's bed. She pulled herself up just as he jumped off the bed directly behind her.
"Samantha, I'm sorry," he said in a drastically different tone. "Let's be friends again."
She wobbled to her legs and grabbed the bottle of champagne in her reach. Bryant ascended on her like an animal. She swiftly turned and swung the entire bottle of champagne into his face, splitting it in half. Champagne and glass spilled on the floor. Bryant collapsed onto the floor on his back, crashing over his nightstand. The room went silent. He didn't get up.
Samantha held what was left of the bottle in her hand, ready to strike again. She looked to the bedroom door, walked over and quietly shut it. It may have been too late. Someone had to have heard the commotion.
She studied Bryant. He was on his back and not moving. His eyes were closed. She had no idea when he might awake. There was a large gash on his head. Blood trickled down across his face. Had she killed him? She didn't know, but there was little time to ponder. She tossed the remains of the bottle onto his bed and hurried over to his computer desk to continue her search. She searched frantically for the access card. If she came up empty handed she would have to face Bryant again. It wasn't an option. Massive paperwork cluttered his desk, making the search for something as small as an access card seem impossible. She threw the papers aside clearing his desk in the process. The laptop beckoned her to examine the screen.
"Fuck," she said in frustration. Her plan was slipping away with every minute. Then suddenly a thought occurred to her that she hadn't considered before. Bryant could have the access card on him. She looked to the feeble lump on the ground who only moments ago tried to attack her. His chest rose slowly up-and-down. His labored breaths flowed harshly in and out of his mouth, sounding an unbearable gargling snore. She slowly approached him, looking for anything that looked like a badge. She knelt and patted the sides of his bathrobe finding nothing. He made no movements to indicate consciousness.
"A wallet," she thought. "I need to find his wallet."
She went back to the desk, opened the two small drawers directly underneath the desk surface, and rummaged through the pencils, pens, sticky notes, and clutter. There was no wallet, no badge, and nothing whatsoever of any use.
"Dammit!" she shouted in frustration.
She covered her mouth on the verge of tears. Time was running out. Where would Senator Bryant put his wallet? He had to have one somewhere. She looked to his nightstand. Directly under a small lamp, was a folder leather-brown wallet. She stumbled over his incapacitated body and snatched it up in one fell swoop. She moved back to the computer desk and opened the wallet carefully. It was packed with hundreds of dollars' worth of cash. She thumbed through his driver's license, credit cards, club memberships, and photos of the same three children.
In a slit within the wallet she pulled out a small blank plastic card. Her heart jumped in anticipation as she was almost positive it was the access card in question. She folded the wallet, set it on the table, then picked it up again and opened it. The money was tempting, but would it do her any good? There was little time to hesitate further, she swiped all the cash from it and threw his wallet back on the table. Now it was time to escape.
The laptop screen lit up again, distracting Samantha. Senator Bryant had received a message. A small box appeared in the corner of his screen.
What is your status? Need to know the location of the bomb.
A cursor blinked repeatedly, awaiting a response. Samantha's fingers hovered over the keyboard. The message continued.
Transport team is off the grid and mobilizing. Need to intercept bomb before its deployed.
Samantha couldn't resist. She typed a quick response on the keyboard.
Who has the bomb? What are they planning to do?
The chat box immediately disappeared, leaving Samantha staring at a blank screen. There were several minimized windows on the laptop toolbar. She opened them, and scanned their contents. They displayed correspondence between Senator Bryant and several other contacts. From what she could gather, the nuclear attacks were a planned endeavor, involving Senator Bryant and his group of contacts. She flipped through document after document. They had armed middle-eastern terrorist networks with nuclear capabilities to use against their home countries, but apparently had lost control and oversight of the groups, and were scrambling to try to prevent an attack on the west coast. But there was much more she hadn't even begun to delve into.
Senator Bryant groaned from the floor. Samantha jerked her head around in a panic. He was waking. She pulled the power cord of the laptop from the wall and rolled it up. Everything she had read was either speculative nonsense or held the key to explain the masterminds behind the attack. She shut the laptop, grabbed his access card, and slipped out his door before he awoke.
The hallway outside was empty and quiet. Samantha felt great relief, but still shook with fear. She decided to abandon her small bag of belongings and go straight for the exit. It was time to escape. She took off her sandals and bundled them in her hands with Bryant's laptop and power cable. Her footsteps remained cautious down the cold steel floor towards the secret meeting room. Several thoughts shifted throughout her head, as her body was gripped in emotion. Her heart beat rapidly, as if it was going to burst out of her chest. She felt faint again, and tried to control her erratic breathing. The last thing she needed to do was to pass out on the meeting room floor. If the card didn't work she was stuck. If the card failed to activate the door, she may never escape. If the card didn't do what she thought it would do, she would have to face Bryant.
She walked down the narrow hall to the sealed door. Its thick metal surface looked back in defiance, seemingly mocking her. There was no time to spare. Samantha held the card up to the security scanner. The pinhole-sized light turned green, followed by a slight beeping sound. She heard a mechanism unlock within the door as it cracked open. She was ecstatic, near euphoric in response, though she
wasn't sure what lay ahead. Perhaps it was another room with guards. Samantha looked back and then slipped into the darkness beyond the door, sealing it shut behind her.
Several of Bryant's associates found him later in the evening, gurgling on the floor.
"Jeff, Jeff, wake up!" a concerned man wearing a silk robe with the initials, JT, embroidered on the chest pocket said. He lightly patted Bryant's face as a shrill woman stood over holding a small French Terrier in her arms.
"For heaven's sakes, Thad, can't you see that the Senator is badly injured," she quipped.
The man looked up at his wife, and nodded his head. "We have to get the others."
"What on earth happened here?" she asked while scanning the room. There was broken glass everywhere, puddles of champagne, and of course, Bryant's beaten, unconscious body.
"It looks as if he had a break-in," Thad answered.
"My goodness, none of us our safe then," his wife replied.
Moments later, Thad and his wife, Leila, rounded up some of the others, and were able to assist Senator Bryant. They moved him to his bed, bandaged his wound, and waited for him to awake. Within the hour, his eyes fluttered open to see the faces staring at him from around his bed.
"Jeff, are you with us? What happened here?" a concerned man asked.
"Yes, please, try to remember. None of us feel safe anymore," Leila said.
"Who did this to you? We simply must know," another man chimed in.
"Samantha..." Bryant muttered. "Where's Samantha?"
"The girl you brought here? Did she do this to you?" Leila asked.
Bryant groaned as he felt the bandage over his head.
"Doesn't look like too much damage. You may have had suffered a slight concussion,” a man wearing a white doctor's coat pronounced. He was the official bunker physician.
Bryant looked over to his desk and noticed his missing laptop. He shot up from his bed, but fell back down in dizzying pain.
"Relax, Jeff, just relax. What's the matter?" the doctor asked.
"My laptop. Where the hell is my laptop?"
The group looked at each other in confounded wonder.
"We don't know, Jeff. You said that woman, Samantha did this? Is she a spy?" Leila asked, grilling him.
"Find her," Bryant said, clutching his head. "Find her now.
Chapter Eight
Finding Samantha
Well, Tommy, this is my first letter to you. I have to admit, I haven't felt much like writing anyone. Most of the time I just feel tired. I'm tired of moving around, tired of running, tired of not being home. You get the idea. I hope things are OK at New Haven and that you're feeling better. It's funny to think how much school I've missed. Weird really. Or to wonder about what happened to everyone at school. It's not like I knew that many people at Beech Creek. Most of my friends were from Philly. I think they're all dead now. It's terrible to even think or write, but what if it's true? What about your friends? Are they still alive?
Now that I think of it, there's so much more I need to ask you about. Maybe we can come back there once we find my mom. Seems like I've been talking about finding her for so long, I sound like a broken record. We made it to Denver finally, but haven't found her yet. The convention center is a madhouse. There's like a million people there. There's police and Army people everywhere controlling where people go and what they do, but of course, they can't help us find my mom.
Paul and I actually broke into my mom's hotel. We're like Sherlock and Watson. I'm obviously Sherlock and he's more of my sidekick. Poor Paul. He gets so mad all the time, I think he just needs some rest. Well, anyway, we broke into the hotel, found her room then we got chased by police and escaped into an alleyway and then some guy took us in. Pretty exciting, huh? And I'm not making any of this up. The radio guy told Paul that my mom is probably at the airport because she might be with a bunch of important government people. I don't know. I'm confused. But at least we know she's alive, and if she's alive that means we will find her and see her soon.
We went back to the parking lot to get our car back. There were these people there who told us we couldn't get the car back, but Paul told them that we were leaving Denver for good because it was too crowded there. I guess that was all it took, plus he gave them like all the cash we had left. It's like he had to pay them to let us go. So we took the car and now we're on the way to the airport. But we've been stopped so many times and Paul's had to explain what we're doing so many times, that I have nothing else to do but write you. We're almost to the airport now. I'll write again once we find my mom. I also wonder how I'm going to send this letter to you. Maybe I'll put it on a carrier pigeon or something. - Julie
The Denver airport was closed off to the public and not a car or person was in sight. Paul parked the Malibu on the first level of the parking garage thinking of their next step. They couldn't very well just walk into the airport. All doors had been shut and gates locked. The airport had been placed off limits.
"But why would they shut down the airport?" Julie asked. "Just doesn't make sense."
"I don't know, Julie, but they did. No one gets in, no one gets out."
Paul's voice trailed off. Julie turned to Paul, curious.
"What are you talking about?" she asked.
"Nothing. Just something that man, Arthur, told me."
"So they closed the airport. How are we going to find my mom?" Julie asked.
Paul turned the engine off, and looked to Julie sympathetically.
"My hope is that we find her before she gets on a plane with this Senator Bryant guy."
"Why would she go with him?"
"Maybe because she's scared like you said. Honestly, Julie I don't know. You see, when things like this happen, elected officials are protected and taken to safe areas. Your mother may have seen an opportunity."
"Since when has anything like this happened?"
Julie stared at Paul, waiting for his response.
"Let's go," Paul said, opening the car door. "We're going to find her."
They walked cautiously to a nearby staircase as their footsteps echoed throughout the empty parking lot. Paul kept a cautious eye on everything around them. Oddly enough, no one seemed to be around. The airport had been effectively shutdown, which continually amazed Paul. Julie wasn't sure what to think. They trotted the stairs and made their way to the airport terminal. There was no activity of any kind. No families driving up to the curb and unloading their luggage. No good-bye embraces between young lovers. No tourists being dropped by hotel shuttles. Each automatic glass door into the terminal was shut tight. No lights were on. No baggage handlers. No ticket agents. No rental cars. There was nothing; nothing except flashing siren lights moving towards them from down the street.
"Hide!" Paul said.
They ran behind a stone waste receptacle near the curbside baggage check-in just as the police vehicle's headlights beamed up the inclined road.
"Stay down, and stay quiet," Paul whispered to Julie as they crouched.
"I know," she hissed back.
The car raced past them with its blue and white siren lights flashing frenetically with eerie silence. The engine roared as it approached the highest point of the hill, pushing the car forward into a blur. Soon the car's insatiable pursuit trailed off into echoes on an empty street. Everything went quiet again.
"I wonder what that was all about?" Julie asked.
"We just need to be careful, stay out of sight," Paul insisted while peeking out.
"Can't we ask them where my mom is? Maybe they know."
Paul thought it a foolish thought, but maybe Julie had a point.
"The problem is, I don't think we're allowed to be here," Paul said while scratching the side of his neck.
"Why don't we just tell them that you're a senator and ask them to take us to the guy my mom is with?" Julie asked.
Paul stood up and stretched as Julie followed. They walked along the terminal looking into the windows that offered nothing but em
pty ticket lines. Suddenly, Paul snapped his fingers.
"You may be on to something, Julie," he said.
"What's that?" she asked."
"We're looking for Senator Bryant. I'm a congressman, you're my daughter. We go right up to the gate and tell them that we're with the Senator's party."
"Dressed like this?" Julie said, pointing out their clothes.
"If they ask, we're dressed this way as to not bring attention to ourselves," Paul responded.
"What if they want to see like, your ID or something?" Julie asked.
"Then I'll be Congressman Paul Thompson if I have to," Paul answered.
They approached the end of the terminal, and saw nothing beyond the usual emptiness. Paul turned as they made the reverse trek to the other side of the building.
"There has to be an opening somewhere. Somewhere we can get into the airport," Paul said.
"We can always smash the windows," Julie said smiling.
Paul glanced at her with disapproval as they continued walking.
"That got us in quite a bit of trouble last time. Let's try to avoid doing anything that makes us look like vandals."
"I'm just saying we would have never got into my mom's hotel room if we didn't do it. Desperate times--"
"Call for desperate measures, I know. But we'll do that if nothing else works."
After finding nothing, they left the terminal and walked towards the only landmark they could see from afar: the air traffic control tower beyond a steep chain link fence. The airport runway was in view. Instead of fleeing the authorities they were now actively pursuing them. Paul felt hopeful, slightly aimless, but hopeful, nonetheless.
From beyond the sealed door, Samantha plodded along a long corridor, hoping that it would bring her above ground. She anticipated the fresh air hitting her face, the sounds of nature and everything she had been deprived of the past couple of weeks. She began to second-guess physically harming the Senator. She feared the consequences of assaulting him. Could they throw her in jail for what she did? Was she officially a criminal?