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âTell me what to doâŠâ he whined.
âGood!â she said. The slinky temptress vanished into the guise of the no-nonsense administrative aide. He felt his eyes go wide in shock.
âWeâve got a lot to get done,â she said matter-of-factly. âI happen to have a stack of papers for you to signâŠyou need to grant permanent rights to the U.N. forcesâŠand youâll have to come up with a convincing speech to give to Congress about why they need to take a leave of absenceâŠbut donât worry about the details for all that. Iâll be here to help you! Oh, and then, thereâs the KoreansâŠâ
He groaned in frustration.
âBut,â she said, fingers to her lip. The administrative aide was gone, replaced once more with his seductress. She smiled, one finger caressing the corner of her full, ruby red, pouting lower lip. âAll that boring stuff can waitâŠâ
El Segundo, California
Los Angeles Air Force Base
âMr. President, if you couldâpleaseâlay back down and relax,â pleaded Dr. Honeycutt. The Chief of Emergency Medicine wrung his handsâit was clear he was not used to people disobeying his orders.
The pounding on the other side of the thick door intensified. Brief muffled shouts drifted into the communications room. The SEALs knelt on either side of the entrance, weapons ready, but with their eyes full of questions as they looked to their leader, standing near the President.
Brenda had a lot of questions, as well. How the hell are we going to get out of this? Did they really mean we were all traitors? Iâm just a doctorâŠI didnât shoot anyoneâŠ
âMiss,â said the President gently, drawing her attention back down to the gurney where the leader of the free world lay dying. He put an emaciated hand on Brendaâs and squeezed. She had to force herself to look at his face. The skin around his ears was a distinct blue color. His eyes were sunken into grayish folds of skin that on closer inspection, were just dark blue. Memories of the Blue Flu made her stagger backwards in fear.
NoâŠno, it canât be backâŠ
âTake this thing out of my arm so I can put my coat on. Please,â the President gasped. âIâll be damned if the last image people have of me isâŠthis.â
âSir,â she said, feeling her throat constrict with emotion. Here he was, a septuagenarian, on deathâs doorstep from the weaponized flu, and he was worried about making sure he was wearing a proper coat to address the nationâa nation that had already given him up for dead. She tried hard to hold back the tears. She knew from The Pandemic that once an infected patient started showing signs of cyanosis, death was only a few short hours awayâif they lasted that long
âPlease, sirâŠthis tube is helping to keep you alive untilââ
Something heavy hit the door, causing everyone in the room to suddenly stop and look around with alarm. The thud echoed again through the door. Whatever they were doing, base security was determined as hell to smash the door down. She shot a glance at Cooper, the SEAL leader. He frowned. The expression didnât make him any less handsome. Brenda averted her eyes before he noticed her stare.
âMissâŠâ The hand squeezed hers again. She looked down, thankful for the distraction. The Presidentâs grip was no stronger than a two-month-old babyâs. âI know I donât have much time.â He wheezed and coughed, a gurgling, wet sound. âI can see it in the look on your face, dear. Please let me do this my way.â
One of the nursesâBrenda thought her name was Pamâsneezed. Everyone froze again. Brenda shot Dr. Honeycutt a look. He nodded and moved to put an arm around the poor woman. She had her hands to her face, covering her mouth and a frantic look in her eyes.
Does she have it? Brenda watched as Dr. Honeycutt got the nurse to sit on a dusty chair while he pulled out his stethoscope and checked her breathing. Quickly, with the practiced skill of a country doctor, he ran his hand over her forehead. He turned to look at Brenda and frowned with a quick shake of his head.
Shit. Sheâs got a fever. Her hand moved to the surgical mask over her face. Donât think these are doing any goodâŠweâre probably all infected already.
âSir, weâre all set,â said the Air Force technician across the small room. âWhen we send out the signal, everyone on the continent who has an antenna hooked up to a TV will see you. It may not get to every house in the country, but youâll get to a lot of people. Iâm going to be bouncing this off three different birds. I bet everyone in Washington will see you, at the very least.â
âIâm sure they will, son,â said the President with a grandfatherly smile. He turned back to Brenda. âHelp me sit up.â
She didnât hear the Presidentâs soft request. Brenda was pouring over possibilities, percentages, and risks in her head. How long before others in this little group starting showing symptoms? She looked around at the SEALs. How many of them are infected but not presenting yet? They had all been around the President, nearly as much as the medical staffâŠ
âRight here, sir,â said Cooper as he gently slipped an arm around the elderly man and raised him up off the gurney. Brenda jumped into motion and propped a few pillows behind the President. The Air Force sergeant put a small desktop podium across the Presidentâs lap.
âIt doesnât have the Presidential Seal, sirâŠbut weâll zoom in so it wonât matter.â
âVery good. Thank you, Sergeant Lopez.â
âSir.â The airman hesitated. âI just want you to knowâŠitâs an honor to meet you, Mr. President.â
The old man smiled thinly.
Another man wearing a blue jumpsuit raised his hand and said, âSir, two minutes until we get the signal back.â One of the panels behind him chirped and went red. He smacked it with the palm of his hand, bringing the light back to green. âAhâŠthatâs if it holds together.â
Brenda looked at the impressive array of equipment in the shadows on the far side of the room. To her, it looked like Mission Control at NASA, not a communications center. She marveled at the progress of technology. Forty years ago, that equipment was considered state of the art. Now, she could easily do the same thing with a cellphoneâif the entire world hadnât gone completely to hell.
âOkay, Mr. President,â said Lopez with a hand on the Presidentâs shoulder. âWhen I give you the hi-sign, start talking. Youâll have aboutâŠâ He looked over his shoulder at the other airmen, manning the control stations. One looked up and held up a hand, all fingers splayed out.
âYouâll have about five minutes of clear airtime to broadcast,â continued Lopez. âAfter that, the satellites will be out of range and the feed will drop.â
âHow did you figure all of that out so fast?â asked Dr. Honeycutt.
The airman with his hand up stepped off-camera and said over his shoulder, âWe got word from NORAD yesterday on how to backdoor some old communication and weather satellites from the â60s. It allowed us to reestablish contact with Washington andâŠwell, this isnât going to be 3D-HD or anything, but people will know the Presidentâs still with us, thatâs for sure. It wasnât easy to get these old pieces ofâŠâ An embarrassed look came over the young manâs face. He glanced at Brenda and looked away.
âUhâŠthese old computers, to workâŠtheyâre really ancient, now. ButâŠthe process is basically the same as with new equipment. Think of it like a webcam. On steroids. Just got to massage these old ones a little more.â
âOne minute!â someone called out from the bank of control panels. âI got us hooked into the base feed. Everyone here will see you now as well, sir.â
âOkay, everybody, back out of the light,â said Lopez. âWe need quiet!â He frowned in Dr. Honeycuttâs direction. The Chief of Medicine placed a comforting hand on the shoulder of the sobbing nurse next to him in order to keep her quiet.
âOur microphone isnât exactly Hollywood quality.â He checked his watch. âOkayâŠyouâre sure about this, sir?â he asked.
The pounding on the door continued unabated.
âYes,â said President Denton, his pale, sweaty skin making him look like a living skeleton.
âIâve always wanted to do this,â said Lopez with a grin. âAnd fiveâŠfourâŠthreeâŠtwoâŠâ the sergeant held up one finger then closed his fist and pointed at the President.
âGood evening, my fellow Americans,â said the President
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