wall. They took the elevator down, and, when they came out on the corridor on two, she caught sight of Darryl Hudkins’s shaved head. He was now standing guard outside the president’s door.
“You okay?” Susan asked, once they’d closed the distance. Darryl’s face was slack and his eyes wider than normal.
“I’m—I’m holding up.”
“Who is in there?” she asked, tilting her head toward the nearest door.
“Just Michaelis, the president, and a nurse,” said Darryl. “Dr. Griffin has gone off to deal with the lockdown.”
Susan nodded and went to push the door open, but Darryl held out his arm, blocking Professor Singh.
“Forgive me, sir,” Darryl said, rallying now, “but are you carrying a knife?”
“A kirpan, yes,” Singh replied.
Darryl shook his head. “You can’t take it into the president’s room.”
Susan was mortified—first, that the issue had come up, and, second, because it hadn’t even occurred to her; she’d been about to let an armed man approach the president.
Singh’s voice had regained its steadiness. “I didn’t catch your name.”
“Darryl Hudkins.”
“Darryl,” Singh said, “the kirpan is a defensive weapon.” He opened his lab coat and revealed the cloth belt he was wearing; the ceremonial knife was attached to it. “It is an instrument of
ahimsa
—of nonviolence; a tool to prevent violence from being done to a defenseless person when all other means have failed.” He looked directly at Hudkins. “You’ll forgive me, but given the current circumstances, I rather suspect I could do no worse than the Secret Service already has in protecting the president.”
Susan thought about the kirpan, leafing through Singh’s memories related to the artifact—and it came to her. He would never, ever use it to hurt anyone. “Let him pass,” she said to Darryl.
“If you say so, ma’am,” Darryl replied—but he moved a hand to his holster, just in case.
SETH Jerrison was resting with his eyes closed. He’d insisted that Jasmine—the First Lady—stay in Oregon today. She’d wanted to rush back, but the last time terrorists had attacked Washington, on 9/11, they’d targeted multiple buildings; the current attack might not be over.
Seth opened his eyes when he heard the door to the room swinging inward on its hinges. A white Secret Service agent named Roger Michaelis was in the room already, as was Sheila, a stern-looking Asian nurse. Coming in was the leader of his Secret Service detail, Susan Dawson, and accompanying her was someone Jerrison had never seen before.
“Mr. President,” Susan said, “this is Professor Ranjip Singh. He’s a memory researcher, and, well, he thinks he has an explanation—sort of—for what happened to you.”
“Good,” Seth said weakly. “Because it didn’t end when my near-death experience did. I keep remembering things that couldn’t possibly be my own memories.”
Singh stepped closer. “Forgive me, Mr. President, but if I may: what sort of things?”
“Just now, I was recalling a basketball game.”
“Watching one on TV?” asked Singh. “Or as a spectator in a stadium?”
“No, no.” It took Seth a second to rally the strength to go on. “Playing basketball. Me and three other men.” He paused; his body just wanted to sleep. “But it wasn’t
my
memory.”
“Then what brought it to mind?” asked Singh, sounding intrigued.
“I don’t know,” Seth replied, still struggling to get each word out. But then he lifted his eyebrows. “Oh, wait. I
do
know. I’d been thinking about previous times surgery had been performed on a president.”
“Yes?” said Singh.
“Last time was in 2010.” He gathered some strength, then: “Obama got an elbow in the face while playing basketball with friends. Needed twelve stitches on his upper lip.”
Singh frowned. “I don’t remember that.”
Nurse Sheila spoke up. “I do. It was done by the White House Medical Unit, under a local
Philip Athans
Justine Elyot
Rebekkah Ford
Amy Leigh Strickland
Robert McCammon
Alyssa Maxwell
Mark G Brewer
Kate Forsyth
Richard Lee Byers
Eden Winters