by Ben Bova
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To Rashida, of course
It is not because things are too difficult that we do not dare, it is because we do not dare that things are too difficult.
SENECA
Tomlinson Mansion
“Wow,” whispered Tami. “Talk about old money.”
Jake Ross glanced down at his wife. Tami had never seen the Tomlinson mansion before.
The black-liveried butler ushered Jake and his wife through the marble-columned entry and down the wide, thickly carpeted corridor that bisected the mansion’s ground floor. Photographic portraits and oil paintings of Tomlinson family members going back to Colonial times decorated the walls.
The portrait of Alexander Tomlinson—stiffly erect, stern, almost haughty—was draped in black.
With a whispered, “In here, sir,” the butler opened the double doors to what ordinarily was the formal dining room. The usual furniture had been moved out. The room now held Alexander Tomlinson’s open coffin on a black-draped bier, with a small circle of stiff-backed chairs for the somberly dressed mourners.
The old man had been well past eighty, but as he lay in his coffin he looked to Jake as if he just might open his eyes, sit up, and demand to know what all the fuss was about. Tall and lean as a saber, Alexander Tomlinson had been the head of the family almost all his adult life. It was his indomitable will that had driven his son Franklin into the United States Senate.
Senator B. Franklin Tomlinson got up from his chair in the little circle of family members and greeted Jake with an extended hand and a half-whispered, “Glad you could come, Jake. And you, Tami.”
Jake nodded while Tami said softly, “We’re so sorry for your loss.”
Tomlinson was several inches taller than Jake, slim like his father from a lifetime of tennis, handball, and sailing, his ruggedly handsome face deeply tanned. His golden blond hair was thick and wavy, with just a touch of gray that made him look distinguished. He had a smile that could light up a room, but now it was dimmed, diminished.
“Dad had a full life,” he said, almost sorrowfully, “but it’s not going to be the same without him.”
Thinking of the old man’s imperious ways, Jake sympathized, “How could it be?”
Jacob Ross had been the younger Tomlinson’s science advisor since Franklin’s first run for the Senate, almost six years earlier. Jake was just short of six feet tall, solidly built, with dark unruly hair and a face that he had always thought too long and horsey. Tami, standing between the two men, was like a delicate oriental doll. A Japanese-American from California, she was wearing a sleeveless knee-length black dress with a single strand of pearls.
Tomlinson’s wife, Amy, got up from her chair to join them. She nodded to Jake and smiled at Tami. Amy was pretty, in a pert, perky cheerleader’s way. Slim figure, sparkling eyes, lovely honey-blonde shoulder-length hair. Not even her dress of mourning black could make her look somber. She and Jake had engaged in a brief, torrid affair together, during Tomlinson’s first campaign for the Senate. The affair ended when Amy told Jake she was going to marry the future senator.
Senator Tomlinson leaned closer to Tami and asked her, in a hushed voice, “Tami, do you mind if I borrow your husband for a few minutes? We’ve got some business to discuss.”
“Of course,” said Tami.
Draping an arm across Jake’s shoulders, Tomlinson led him to a door on the far side of the room. Amy gestured Tami toward the semicircle of chairs and began introducing the other family members to her.
The senator opened the door and stepped into what looked to Jake like a pantry. Rows of shelves stacked with cans and jars, a few unopened cardboard cartons on the floor.
Closing the door gently, Tomlinson said, “I’m really glad you could make it here, Jake.”
“I’m glad you asked us,” said Jake.
None of the other Washington staffers had been invited to the funeral, Jake knew. But then, of course, Jake was the only person on the senator’s staff who came from Montana; the rest of the staff were all Beltway insiders. Jake was proud that the senator thought of him almost as family.
Leaning an elbow against the shelving, Tomlinson said, “It’s been a tough week.”
Jake confessed, “I never gave a thought to the idea that your father would die someday. I know he was pushing ninety, but—”
“But he was larger than life, wasn’t he?” Tomlinson said, with a sad smile.
“That he was.”
Jake thought of the father figure in his own life, Leverett Caldwell. It was Lev who guided Jake out of the narrow gang-ridden streets of his youth and into a scholarship at the university, Lev who talked Jake into joining Tomlinson’s staff for his first run at the Senate. When Tomlinson unexpectedly won his race, Jake went with him—and his bride, Amy—to Washington.
Almost wistfully, Tomlinson asked, “Do you know what his last words to me were?”
Jake shook his head.
“He was lying in the hospital bed, all sorts of tubes hooked up to him, so weak that I had to lean down and put my ear next to his mouth to hear him.”
Jake studied the expression on Tomlinson’s face. There was grief there, yes, but something more—something like pride, and determination.
“He said to me, ‘I’m only sorry that I didn’t live long enough to see you in the White House.’”
Jake tried to think of something to say.
Tomlinson went on, “He thought I could become president of the United States.”
“Of course he did.”
Standing up straighter, almost squaring his shoulders as if facing an approaching enemy, Tomlinson said, “Well, I’m going to make his dream come true. I’m going to run for president next year.”
American Airlines Flight 222
“He wants to be president,” Jake told Tami.
“That’s no surprise.”
Tamiko Umetzu Ross had been a news reporter before she met Jake. She ran afoul of one of the most powerful senators on the Hill though, and now she worked for EcoSanity, a public relations firm that represented mostly environmental issues and the organizations that pushed them. “We’re poor but pure,” Tami often joked. Ruefully.
Jake muttered, “He hasn’t even finished his second term in the Senate and he wants to run for president.”
Tami and Jake were sitting side by side in the minuscule first-class section of the Boeing jetliner, heading back to Reagan National Airport in Washington, DC.
Alexander Tomlinson’s funeral had been small, tasteful, with only a small knot of dark-clad family members in attendance at the Unitarian Universalist Congregational Church that Senator Tomlinson’s grandfather had built, almost directly across the tree-lin
ed avenue from the Tomlinson mansion.
“Why shouldn’t he run for president?” Tami asked. “He’d make a good candidate: handsome, rich—with his looks and your brains he could win.”
She was grinning at her husband, but Jake was not amused.
“Yeah, he’s good looking, all right,” Jake admitted, “but he’s almost totally unknown outside of Montana. And being so damned rich might work against him. Another playboy with delusions of grandeur.”
“Don’t sell him short. He’s more than that,” Tami said.
“You know that, and I know that, but the general public doesn’t know him. He doesn’t have a base of voters. The party insiders will see him as an upstart.”
“Like Obama?”
Jake almost smiled. “He was a Democrat. The Republican party doesn’t take to upstarts so easily.”
“Like Reagan?”
“Reagan worked his way up. It wasn’t all glamour. He paid his dues before running for president.”
“Tomlinson got the energy plan through,” Tami said. Then she added, “Your energy plan.”
“Yeah, that seems to be working out okay. Even the Democrats voted for it, in the end.”
“And it’s creating jobs, bringing down people’s electricity bills, isn’t it? That’s something he can take credit for. Thanks to you.”
Jake shook his head. “I just don’t think the time is right for him to throw his hat in the ring. There are plenty of other people in line ahead of him.”
“But there’s one other factor you’re not giving enough credit to,” Tami said.
“Another factor?”
“He wants to run. And he wants to win.”
“Does he?” Jake wondered. “Or is his father still pulling his strings, from the graveyard?”
* * *
Jake and Tami lived on the top floor of a six-story-high condominium building on Connecticut Avenue, not far from Dupont Circle and the apartment Tami had shared with three other women when Jake had first met her. The two-bedroom condo was much more expensive than similar quarters in the suburbs outside DC, but Jake cherished its location, within a few minutes’ drive of the Hart Senate Office Building, where Senator Tomlinson’s office was.
Their flight from Helena arrived at Reagan National on time, and within little more than a half hour they were home.
Jake threw his worn old travel bag on the bed, and while Tami started to unpack her roll-on, he checked the phone’s answering machine.
One call. From the executive assistant of Kevin O’Donnell, the senator’s chief of staff: “A staff meeting is scheduled for tomorrow morning, Dr. Ross,” came the woman’s high, girlish voice. “Ten sharp.”
Why didn’t she call my cell phone? Jake wondered. Then he saw the time of the call on the answering machine’s tiny screen. We were in the air; no cell service. Kevin set up this staff meeting while we were flying in from Helena. Wonder what it’s all about.
Staff Meeting
Senator Tomlinson’s suite of offices was on the second floor of the Hart building. Jake walked through the building’s lobby, past the people waiting for elevators, and hustled up the marble stairs.
DC Formica, Jake called the marble that was so ubiquitous in Washington’s government buildings. My tax dollars at work.
It was only a few minutes past nine when Jake pushed through the door of the suite’s entry, but the lively young receptionist behind the desk there immediately told him, “There’s a staff meeting at ten, Dr. Ross.”
“Thanks, I know,” said Jake as he breezed by, heading for his own office.
Just past the entry hall Jake saw Earl Reynolds filling a steaming mug at the coffee machine. Head of the senator’s media relations team, Reynolds looked like a former college football player who was bloating into middle-aged softness. Yet his fleshy face was still handsome and his dark hair seemed to be natural.
Reynolds raised his free hand to stop Jake. “Big powwow at ten o’clock,” he said, almost solemnly.
“Ugh,” said Jake, as he reached for a coffee mug.
“How was the funeral?” Reynolds asked.
“Quiet. Tasteful.”
“I wonder what our boy’s going to do without his old man prodding him?”
“I think we’re going to find out at ten o’clock.”
Reynolds looked surprised, then impressed that Jake apparently knew something he didn’t.
* * *
“Run for president?” Lee Di Nofrio blurted.
Kevin O’Donnell nodded, his pinched face looking more irritated than usual.
The chief of the senator’s staff always gave Jake the impression that he trusted no one—which was pretty close to the truth. O’Donnell was a rake-thin bundle of nerves, with suspicious dark eyes peering out of his lean, bony face. He wore his thinning light brown hair in a ridiculous flop-over that emphasized his creeping baldness more than hid it. But he was a longtime Beltway insider, keenly aware of the ways of Washington’s intricacies.
“Is this for real?” Di Nofrio asked.
“Unless we can talk him out of it,” O’Donnell said.
“Isn’t it too soon for him to be aiming at the White House?” asked Kathy Ellerman, the senator’s aide for women’s issues. She was a plumpish blonde somewhere between thirty-five and fifty, wearing a conservative dark blue skirted suit.
“Not necessarily,” countered Judine Asmus. “We can position him as the party’s rising star.”
O’Donnell frowned sourly at her. Asmus was slim, tall, and leggy, a young black woman with chocolate brown skin and a Georgetown University degree in statistics. Nominally, she worked under Reynolds in the media relations team, but she was smart and ambitious enough to have earned the assignment of dealing with the national polling services.
Reynolds shook his head. “He’d be facing some damned strong opposition: Morgan and Sebastian here in the Senate, and Governor Hackman in Tennessee.”
Asmus smiled knowingly. “He’d get plenty of women’s votes.”
“He’d get even more if he weren’t married,” Ellerman muttered.
O’Donnell growled, “Cut the crap. What’s our man done that he can campaign on?”
Jake kept silent, but Di Nofrio called out, “He’s chairman of the energy subcommittee.”
O’Donnell shrugged. “So he inherited Santino’s position when the Little Saint retired. So what?”
“The energy plan is working,” Reynolds said. “Electricity prices are going down. So is our carbon footprint. And the U.S. of A. has become a major exporter of oil and natural gas.”
“And the coal lobby hates his guts,” O’Donnell grumbled.
“The environmentalists aren’t happy with him, either,” said Di Nofrio. “They want more cutbacks in greenhouse emissions.”
Di Nofrio was in charge of relations with the various environmental lobbies. He was a smallish man in his thirties, smolderingly handsome, with thick, tightly curled dark hair and a swarthy complexion.
“The environmentalists are never happy,” O’Donnell groused.
“So what are you going to do?” Reynolds asked. “Tell him to forget about it?”
O’Donnell hesitated. Then, “I’m going to give him my honest opinion, and tell him that the staff thinks he should wait another four years.”
“At least,” said Ellerman, in a stage whisper.
Jake finally spoke up. “Wait a minute. This is something pretty close to the senator’s heart. Shouldn’t we take a hard look at his chances, figure out a plan of campaign for him, instead of telling him we won’t support him on this?”
“Who says we won’t support him?” O’Donnell snapped. “We’re his staff. Of course we’ll support him if that’s what he really wants.”
“But you said—”
“I said I’ll make it clear that we think it’s a wrong move. We think he should wait until the next time around.”
“The next time around,” Di Nofrio pointed out, “there’ll be an incumbe
nt in the White House, campaigning for reelection. Not like this time around.”
“Yeah,” O’Donnell admitted, “there is that.”
“So?” Reynolds asked.
Clearly unhappy, O’Donnell answered, “I’ll have to tell him that we don’t think he should get into the race this time around, but if he insists that that’s what he wants to do, we’ll support him like the loyal staffers that we are.”
Reynolds sighed, “Heads he wins, tails we lose.”
Di Nofrio added, in mock Bronx slang, “Dems de conditions dat prevail.”
Senator Tomlinson’s Office
It was well past the nominal quitting time. As he walked across the suite from his own office to the senator’s, Jake saw that the outer workplaces were almost all deserted. Even the senator’s personal executive assistant had left.
Jake had a knotty problem that the senator had to decide on. Stem cell researchers were pushing for clinical trials for using stem cell therapies to repair damaged spinal cords. More conservative medical researchers—and many top echelon bureaucrats in the National Institutes of Health—claimed that it was too soon for human trials. And there were conservative citizens’ groups that were against stem cell work altogether. The issue was going to come before the Senate’s committees on health and science, and Tomlinson had to decide where he stood.
Striding past the executive assistant’s empty desk, Jake tapped on the senator’s door.
“Come on in,” came the senator’s voice.
Opening the door, Jake saw that Tomlinson was at his gleaming broad desk, in his shirtsleeves and fire-engine red suspenders, a cut crystal tumbler of whiskey in one hand. Sitting in front of the desk was Kevin O’Donnell, empty-handed, looking crankier than usual.
“Jake,” Tomlinson said, “Kevin tells me he thinks it’s foolish of me to run for the party’s nomination.”
“I didn’t say foolish,” O’Donnell said.
Tomlinson grinned. “It sounded to me as if you did.”