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TRIAL: A Post Apocalyptic/Dystopian Thriller

Page 28

by Murray Mcdonald


  “Jesus,” said Stevens, stepping over her legs and crossing himself.

  Tueur gestured towards a bedroom. A man in fatigues lay face down, a quarter of his head decorating the wall. Two assault rifles and a shotgun were scattered by his side.

  “The attacker,” Tueur said.

  He turned his attention to the door at the end of the hallway towards the far wall. A line in the wallpaper denoted a doorway but no handles or hinges could be seen. “That’s the safe room doorway. The director can see everything from the room. Go tell him we’re here to get him out.”

  “You’re Secret Service, you should go in.”

  “Look at me. Would you come out to a guy covered in blood? He needs to see the local police are here or he’ll worry I’ve been coerced by the attacker. When he sees you, he’ll know it’s clear.”

  Stevens walked in and identified himself at the doorway, informing the director that backup had arrived, they needed to get him out, and that the attacker was dead.

  Stevens gave his identification number and after another minute, the safe room door cracked open. Stevens led the FBI director out of the house. Tueur was already at the front door keeping watch when they reached the top of the stairs.

  “Get the car up here!” Tueur shouted to the two officers covering the front, then held up his hand, telling Stevens to wait.

  The officers raced back to their cruiser and drove it around the abandoned Town Cars, pulling up to the door.

  Tueur waved Stevens and the director onwards before stepping out into the driveway and opening the rear door.

  Sirens invaded the stillness of the night, growing closer. The full force of the police and FBI would soon be in place to uncover what had happened in the sleepy suburb of Virginia, scant miles from Washington D.C. Stevens exited first, stepping back to allow the director access to the back of the cruiser. He looked up at Tueur to thank him.

  Tueur smiled reassuringly, a smile that said he always got his man. He raised his pistol and without a second thought shot the FBI director exactly where he had recently shot the man’s wife. Stevens followed merely a fraction of a second later. He hadn’t even had time to register the deceit that had taken his life.

  The two officers in the cruiser struggled to turn and return fire in their confined space. Two more bullets, and Tueur’s job was complete as the blue lights of the cavalry were about to invade the street.

  Tueur, or at least the name on his tag, holstered his pistol and jogged around the back of the house. A powerful KTM 500 dirt bike was waiting for him and would have him miles away in minutes.

  Chapter 2

  Commanding, powerful, imposing, intelligent, heroic… Those were just a few of the adjectives that preceded the introduction of Clay Caldwell, the president of the United States. His presence on TV caught your attention. His face and voice pulled you into his words, enchanting you with his smiling eyes and wicked grin. Approval ratings had reached a point where the Democrats were seriously considering saving their campaign funds and sitting out his reelection battle. His thoughts and feelings preceded the groundswell, and before anyone had a chance to show outrage, he was already voicing it. The troops were on the ground before anyone could even think the country should be doing something, and were safely back home safe before anyone thought they had outstayed their purpose.

  All in all, he was the president every American had dreamt of. A veteran with an exemplary record and a Medal of Honor earned in the heat of battle. A husband who loved and cared for his wife deeply; a father who understood that the health and education of children were fundamental principles of parenting; an economist who understood that shareholder wealth was a right and that greed was wrong; a bureaucrat who believed in a government big enough to do what its people needed but not everything they wanted.

  He inspired Americans to be better, to achieve more, and to expect less if they didn’t try. He was a president to whom the people wished the two-term limit didn’t apply.

  Joe looked around while everyone else was transfixed by the TV screen. He appeared to be the only person in the queue not mesmerized by the president. He shuffled forward as the line moved, drowning out the president’s words with the thoughts of how he would be described: bum, loser, drunk, waster. Just a few of the choice words thrown at him over the years. The closest to presidential he would ever get was courtesy of his dearly departed mother, who had deliberately picked a middle name beginning with F, Joe Francis Kelly. Unlike John Fitzgerald Kennedy, he was simply referred to as Joe. Nobody, it seemed, would dishonor the memory of JFK with Joe.

  Joe reached the front of the line and held up the metal tray. Two dollops of food were deposited by the volunteer, one containing an unidentifiable mix of meat and vegetables, the second mashed potato. They were back to the usual slop, he noted, looking at it with some disdain.

  “No roast beef?”

  “Do you see any cameras here today?”

  Joe looked back at the slop, shrugged, and moved on. Beggars couldn’t be choosers.

  “Joe?” someone called behind him, but he ignored it.

  “Joe?”

  Although it was directed at him, he kept shuffling towards a table, unfazed. Nobody knew his name. He hadn’t told anyone his name in years, and certainly no one in Corpus Christi, nor the whole of Texas for that matter.

  Joe sat and took a mouthful. It may be slop but it was tasty.

  A hand tapped his shoulder. “Joe?” It was the elderly woman who sat watching over them each day from the office.

  “Nope,” he said dismissively, swooping in for a second forkful.

  “I have a call for you, it’s urgent.”

  “I’m not Joe,” he lied, depositing the contents of his fork in his mouth, ending any chance of a conversation.

  “He described you and said you were Joe, he desperately needs to speak to you.”

  Joe tried to chew although it was useless, the slop melted in his mouth and slipped down his throat with ease. Many of the down-and-outs had few or no teeth, and the food was prepared accordingly. He swooped down for another load, trying to ignore the woman.

  “He said to say ‘brothers forever,’” she said. Joe’s fork paused mid-flight. “He said it’s life or death,” she emphasized.

  Joe stood up and followed her to the office. His eyes caught sight of the president. His speech from the previous day to the UN was being replayed incessantly by the news channels; it was a slow news day.

  The woman showed him to her office and motioned towards the handset on her desk. Joe picked it up and held it at his waist, looking back to the woman. She took the hint and closed the door, offering Joe the privacy he needed for the call.

  “Hello?” said Joe awkwardly. It had been many years since he had used a phone.

  “Joe, thank God!” exclaimed the caller, the voice desperate, anxious. “You know who I am?”

  “Of course,” replied Joe, watching the TV screen through the glass window. The president was receiving rapturous applause from the audience at the UN.

  “I need your help,” said the caller. Joe’s eyes were like everyone else’s, transfixed to the TV screen as the president accepted the adulation. Powerful and commanding, thought Joe.

  “I don’t know who I can trust anymore,” continued the caller in a whisper.

  “Don’t be ridiculous,” replied Joe. “You obviously spotted me on TV after the news crew was here.”

  “You’re Joe Kelly and the Joe Kelly I know can help me.” The voice was pleading, pathetic.

  “We’ve not spoken in over twenty years, what can I, in my position, possibly do to help you?”

  “You can be the only person in the world I can trust,” said the caller. “I need you Joe, can you help me?” The voice was frightened, the caller on the verge of tears.

  “You know I will,” Joe replied. “Brothers forever.”

  “You don’t know what that means to me.” The voice was barely audible.

  A knocking at
the other end of the phone drowned out the caller’s next words.

  “I need to go. Come to my house and ask for Mrs. Klein and—”

  “Mr. President, are you okay?” The shout resonated through the handset.

  “I’m fine!” The voice was back to the one that matched the image on the TV outside the office. Joe listened as the president of the United States flushed a toilet and ended the call. His childhood friend needed him and it was a childhood promise that was going to have him hitchhiking to the nation’s capital to help the most powerful man in the world.

  Chapter 3

  President Clay Caldwell ended the call with Joe and placed the cell phone out of sight on the floor behind the toilet bowl before opening the restroom door. Mike Laing, his recently promoted Secret Service Lead Agent, awaited his exit.

  “Apologies, Mr. President,” Mike said.

  The president waved his hand dismissively, walking over to wash his hands.

  “It’s just that we didn’t have time to check these restrooms before you used them.”

  Exactly the reason I used them, Clay thought. His trip to the local high school couldn’t have come at a more opportune time. He had waited until they were leaving before announcing his need to use the restroom. “If they’re good enough for the students, they’re good enough for me!” he had said, dismissing suggestions he should return to the principal’s office to use the ones prepared for him.

  “We ready?” he asked, walking towards the exit doors.

  “POTUS coming out,” Mike announced into his mic.

  After a final handshake with the school’s principal, the president exited the building to a cacophony of press. The news had broken. The FBI director had been found dead that morning.

  “Is this administration cursed?” came a shout from the gathered press. “That’s the third death in a week of people close to you.”

  President Clay Caldwell faced the cameras.

  “FBI Director Schwartz and his wife were close friends of mine, and will be sorely missed. My heart goes out to their children, family, and friends at this sad time.”

  “Is this administration cursed?” came the shout again. The president caught the reporter’s eye and shook his head in disappointment before ducking into Cadillac One.

  Cursed. To the outside world, it certainly looked like it. His Chief of Staff, his lead Secret Service Agent, and the Director of the FBI were all dead within a week. The brutal slaying of the FBI director, his wife, and his detail had been the final straw. To everyone except President Caldwell, all unconnected. Clay, however, knew otherwise. They had been his three most trusted confidants, the three people he had told, and all dead within hours of his telling them. He knew who he could trust, that was clear. The problem was who they had told thereafter. He thanked God he hadn’t told his wife. Her death on his hands would have been too much. There was nobody in the White House he could turn to. He was commander of the most powerful armed forces ever assembled, yet he had no one he could trust to protect his nearest and dearest.

  The sight of Joe Kelly in the soup kitchen line had hit him hard the previous evening. The news feature of the plight of veterans struggling to integrate into society long after their service to their country was harrowing enough for a president to stomach, without seeing a man who had been your best friend many years earlier. He didn’t know why, but as he watched with his wife, he remained silent. Was it shame? Guilt? Whatever it was, it had meant Joe remained nameless. One word of recognition and his wife would have swooped down to Texas and made a cause of the man. He’d have been the poster boy for the forgotten veterans.

  Following the assassination of the FBI director, Clay was thankful he hadn’t said a word. The phone number of the shelter had been displayed on a banner strung behind the server, requesting donations. He had memorized it with a view to making a significant anonymous donation, the least he could do. However, that had all changed. He needed help from someone on the outside, a place the president had long since departed. Someone so far on the outside that nobody would know they were there or even existed, and certainly posed no threat. Joe Kelly. You couldn’t get much further on the outside than him.

  The president couldn’t make any calls from the White House. They watched and listened to everything he did. Their messages and warnings to him made that abundantly clear. The school had been perfect, along with the timing. He had remembered the clock in Texas had read 12.30 during the news piece. 1.30 in D.C. Dropping by a group of students during lunch, he had managed to acquire one of the many cell phones that littered the tables at which he’d sat. A quick restroom break, and the call to Joe had been made.

  The president waved to the assembled crowd as they pulled away, back to the seat of power in the United States and where, as president, he was powerless. They had him in their control. All around him were pawns waiting to be executed should he say the wrong thing. That wasn’t their only hold. His daughter, one that, despite his position, he had managed to keep a secret, was in their control. He had been issued with a final warning. The FBI director had been his last attempt at reaching out. Next time, his daughter would die too. His daughter, his family, the republic, the constitution of the United States— all were at risk. Their only hope was a down and out drunk loser some fifteen hundred miles away on the Texas coast. Joe Kelly was a man he could trust, a man who had never let him down, and a man the president had played a part in destroying.

  Chapter 4

  Joe watched the president walk off the stage. He was perfectly presented, not a hair out of place, his suit tailored to perfection. Everything about him oozed class, in total contrast to Joe. The television screen went black and afforded Joe a reflection of himself. “Unkempt” would have been a kind description. He rubbed his beard and ran his fingers through his unruly gray hair. It had been some time since he had seen a razor or a barber. His clothes were equally as ragged.

  “Everything okay?” asked the woman.

  As a drunk, manipulation was something with which he had become well accustomed. “My mother, she’s dying. They need me to get to her as soon as I can.”

  “Oh, I’m so sorry, that’s terrible. Where is she?”

  “D.C.,” said Joe, a tear welling in his eye.

  The woman looked at him carefully. She had worked the center long enough to know when she was being played. “Have you any way of getting there?”

  Joe shook his head. “Hitchhike, I suppose.” He shrugged. “I’ll have lunch and get going on a full stomach,” he said, walking towards the door.

  The woman didn’t stop him. She waited for him to ask for help. He didn’t. He walked over to the door and took his seat on the steps outside with his dog, who waited obediently, as it did every day. He opened the can of dog food he had been given and tipped its contents onto a paper plate he had taken. The dog, like Joe, wolfed down the food.

  “Okay, I can’t give you money,” the woman said, “although I can give you a ticket. There’s a flight this afternoon that will get you to Washington this evening.”

  Joe shook his head. “That’s very kind but I’m sorry, I can’t.”

  “I’ll take you to the airport and give you the ticket,” she said, not sure he understood her offer.

  “I’m afraid I can’t fly,” said Joe.

  “I can look after your dog if that’s the problem.”

  “No, it’s not that. I have no ID, no documents, there’s no way they’ll let me on a plane,” Joe explained.

  “So you can’t hire a car then?”

  Joe shook his head. His blood alcohol level would be illegal for the best part of the year, even if he stopped drinking there and then, never mind his lack of a license.

  “Which leaves the bus,” he said.

  “Can you get a bus to Washington?” she asked with genuine surprise.

  “All the way from here,” confirmed Joe.

  “Let me grab my jacket and bag and I’ll take you to the station.”

  The na
meless woman, whom Joe had seen every day for the last two years, walked back into the church hall. She smiled and thanked the volunteers for their help. She hadn’t once come out of the office in all the time Joe had visited, spending her time on the computer and phone while lunch was served. He assumed she had felt she was too good to deal with the drunks and down and outs. Perhaps he had misjudged her.

  She returned a moment later with her purse and car keys.

  “This is kind of you…” he paused to allow her to give him her name.

  “Jane,” she replied. “Not at all, every mother should get to see their son one last time.”

  A wave of shame hit Joe. The lie had come too easily, a by-product of a life spent on the street. Jane pointed to her car and let Joe in the passenger seat, the dog happily jumped in the back.

  “We don’t see you out in the hall much,” Joe remarked.

  “It costs about two thousand dollars a month to run the lunches, and I spend every second I’ve got fundraising. If I don’t do it, you guys would go hungry. I’d love to be out helping and chatting but I can only afford so much a month myself.”

  “You pay for some of the lunches yourself?”

  “When there’s a shortfall somebody has to make it up.”

  “And my bus ticket?”

  “I’m happy to help.”

  “It’s not the church that’s paying?”

  She shook her head. “It’s not the church that gives the lunches either. I hire the hall for a couple of hours each day.”

  “You have to hire the hall and pay the church for its use?!” exclaimed Joe.

  “Yesterday when the cameras came, it was the first time the church got involved, insisting we use their crockery, and they provided the beef for the roast.”

 

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