It was nearly six before Cassie Rollins arrived at Fasano's office. Winter darkness had fallen, and the black rectangle of Fasano's window framed a distant, spotlit view of the Mall. Somehow Cassie knew that it was cold outside.
"Well?" Fasano inquired.
The monosyllable carried the reminder of her betrayal on gun immunity, an intimation that she must earn her way back into her leader's good graces or face banishment to some senatorial Siberia—or worse, the humiliation of a primary loss, the end to her career in politics.
"How are you going to play this?" was Cassie's blunt response. "We can't keep quiet forever."
Fasano shook his head. "My staff's preparing a statement. You can read it if you like."
"Give me the Cliff Notes."
"The A-words—adultery and abortion—never cross my lips. This problem is a lack of candor, and its real victim is the American people, including the next generation, who are losing trust in those who seek to lead them. As for me, I don't want to dwell on the President's personal life. I'm simply 'as disappointed as I expect the rest of the country is.' "
It was shrewd, Cassie thought. "No freelancing," Fasano continued, "from Paul or anyone. I'll expect all of you to 'echo the sentiments expressed by the Majority Leader' and then soberly proceed to override Kilcannon's veto, and send his gun bill to defeat. That should about do it for his Presidency."
Balling a fist, Cassie rested it beneath her chin. "Where do you suppose this story came from?"
Fasano shrugged. "The important thing is that nobody think that we played any part in it. That's why we all need to be as sober as an undertaker."
"That won't be hard for me," Cassie answered quietly. "I feel sorry for the Kilcannons—both of them. From what I can see, every conservative so-called journalist is swarming to Fox News to complain about Lara's ethics. But in my experience with her as a reporter she always played it completely straight. No one's ever claimed that she cut Kerry any breaks."
Fasano gave her a wintry smile. "Or Kilcannon's former wife."
"Believe me, Frank, I'm not going to be out defending their affair. But if a lifetime of marital fidelity were the test of fitness to serve in the Senate, there'd be only you and me left to turn out the lights. And that's only because I've never been married."
Fasano's smile compressed. "I don't love this, either. But we didn't make Kilcannon do it, and this is business. Where do
"Where I stood before. I don't like gun immunity, but on balance I favor the final bill. So you've got my vote to override." Cassie gazed at him intently. "As for what's happening to the President, I don't like the feel of it. Not just because of the blackmail and whose interests it serves—a thought which, by the way, does
"And never will, I suspect. Nor will I."
Eyes narrowing, Cassie studied her nails. "There's something else," she said. "Lara exercised a right I happen to believe in, and now the President's being pilloried for it. My reading was that most of his statements in favor of choice were shot through with ambivalence." She looked up at Fasano. "Now I think I know why. If I had to guess, I'd say that Lara did it on her own, and that Kilcannon's refusing to say so."
"What?" Fasano said with incredulity. "You're suggesting that he wanted her to have a child and ruin his career? But that
"You and I," Cassie responded, "have always disagreed about the nature of Kerry Kilcannon. I contend he has a soul—unlike many of our colleagues, I might add. That's why he and Chad always got along." Having delivered this veiled barb, Cassie changed subjects. "His motives aside, the President was clever about one thing. He got the story over with quickly—the press won't be trying to prove what he's already admitted. By tomorrow they'll be fixated on the identity of the blackmailer. Dollars to doughnuts it's someone who's a 'friend' of ours." She smiled briefly. "And Slezak's, Kilcannon seemed to imply. That would narrow the field a bit."
At once, Cassie saw this thrust strike home: Fasano's face became a mask, and his eyes froze on her face. He
It was a reminder that the subject was radioactive, and that a careless word, conveyed to the wrong person, could cost her a great deal. "I've said what I had to say," she answered.
Fasano's voice and manner changed abruptly. "Eleven days ago you crossed me on a leadership vote. The next one is on Kilcannon's gun bill. For you, I'd call it sudden death."