really into lust privacy.”
There was an awkward silence as they drove along.
Michelle was racking her brains for some other line of questioning and gratefully pounced on it. “But you were gone from the Service long before her husband ran for the Oval Office.”
“He was also a U.S. senator before that.”
“But what’s the connection with the Service? Or did it not have anything to do with that?”
“It did. And it didn’t.”
“Great, thanks for clearing that up.”
He remained silent.
“Sean, come on!” She slapped the steering wheel in frustration.
“This can go no further, Michelle.”
“Yeah, I’m a real blabbermouth.”
“I’ve never told anyone this. No one.”
She glanced over at him and noted the grim expression. “Okay.”
He settled back in his seat. “Years ago I was working presidential advance team duty in Georgia. I went out to have a late bite to eat with another agent. He left to get back on shift but I was off for the night. I took a stroll, scoping out the place, with an eye to doing some recon for trouble spots along the motorcade route. I’d been walking around for about an hour. It was maybe 11:30. That’s when I saw him.”
“Saw who?”
“Dan Cox.”
“The president?”
“He wasn’t president back then. He’d just been elected to the Senate. If you recall, he served a full term and then a couple years of his next before running for president.”
“Okay, you saw him, so what?”
“He was in a parked car in an alley, dead drunk, with some chick going down on him.”
“You’re shitting me.”
“You think I’d make that up?”
“So what happened?”
“I recognized him. He’d actually been at a briefing we did for the local officials in anticipation of the president coming to town.”
“So what was he doing getting ‘serviced’ in an alley by a woman who wasn’t his wife?”
“Well, I didn’t know it wasn’t his wife at the time, but it was still dicey. He was in the same political party as the president and I didn’t want this to make waves before the man came down. So I knocked on the car window and flashed my shield. The chick jumped off him so fast I thought she was going to go right through the car roof. Cox was so wasted he had no idea what was happening.”
“So what’d you do?”
“I told the lady to get out of the car.”
“Was she a hooker?”
“Don’t think so. She was young but not dressed the way you’dthink a hooker would be. I remember she almost fell out of the car trying to pull her panties on. I asked her for some ID.”
“Why?”
“Just in case this came back to bite me in the ass later, I wanted to be able to find the lady.”
“So she just gave you her driver’s license?”
“She obviously didn’t want to, but I told her she had no choice. I bluffed her and told her if she didn’t I was going to have to call in the police. She let me see her license and I wrote her name and address down. She lived in the city.”
“What happened after that?”
“I was going to call her a cab but she just took off. I started to go after her, but then Cox began making noises. I hustled back to the car, zipped up his pants, pushed him into the passenger seat, got out his license to get his address, and drove him home.”
“And that’s where you met Jane Cox?”
“That’s right.”
“Boy, some introduction. Did you tell her everything?”
Sean started to say something, but then paused.
“Discretion the better part of valor?”
“Something like that,” he said. “I just told her I’d found him in the car ‘under the weather.’ Although you could smell the perfume on him and there was lipstick on his shirt. I carried him into the house and upstairs to the bedroom. It was pretty awkward all around. Luckily their kids were asleep. I’d shown her my ID when I first got there. She was incredibly thankful, said she’d never forget what I’d done for her. And him. Then… then she sort of broke down
James Leck, Yasemine Uçar, Marie Bartholomew, Danielle Mulhall
Michael Gilbert
Martin Edwards
Delisa Lynn
Traci Andrighetti, Elizabeth Ashby
Amy Cross
Kevin J. Anderson, Rebecca Moesta
James Axler
Wayne Thomas Batson
Edie Harris