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Grafton killed the mags and master switch and we got out. Two soldiers jumped from the vehicle with guns in hand. Optimist that I am, I left my M4 and bag of grenades in the plane.

“My name is Jake Grafton. I want to see the CNO or army chief of staff, if they are around.”

“Sir, you aren’t supposed to land here.”

“Right. Now get on the radio and find out if Admiral McKiernan has the time to see Jake Grafton.”

* * *

Fifteen minutes later we were in some kind of situation room still wearing our sidearms. At least they weren’t going to arrest us on the spot, I thought, which was a relief.

Grafton shook hands all around — the room was full of admirals and generals — enough brass to make a few dozen monkeys. He was even courteous enough to introduce me, although all I got from the heavies were nods, then they ignored me. They all knew him and were obviously happy to see him. The commandant whacked him on his back so hard I worried about his ribs, but Grafton didn’t wince.

“Was that you we saw flying around the White House a few minutes ago?” someone asked, and Grafton admitted it was.

“The FAA will mail you a flight violation.”

On a console were three large screens showing the mob surrounding the White House. It only took me a moment to figure out that these pictures were the datalink video from drones. A large map of downtown Washington covered one wall. It was held there with masking tape, so it hadn’t been there long.

I watched the video while Grafton chatted and the brass nodded at the screens and shook their heads. “He’s going down before long,” one general said.

Everyone seated themselves in chairs and Grafton got right to it. “Is it true that the military is no longer taking sides in this civil war?”

“That’s right,” Bud Weiss, the air force general, said. “We’re America’s armed forces, not Barry Soetoro’s.”

Jake Grafton nodded. “I had hoped that you would see it that way.”

Cart McKiernan explained, “Marty Wynette committed suicide in his office two days ago. This war against Texas and Soetoro’s enemies had gone far enough, so we decided the best course for the military was to remain neutral.”

Fifteen minutes later I thought I had the picture. The military was devoting its efforts to pushing Mexican forces out of California. A very unhappy Barry Soetoro was hunkered down at the White House fulminating and making big noises, but so far he had left the Pentagon, and the Marines surrounding it, alone — probably because he had nothing to bother them with.

“What does Jack Hays down in Austin say about all of this?”

“I talked to him earlier today on the radio,” the army general, Frank Rodriquez said. “He says if we leave Texas alone, Texas forces will leave our troops and military installations alone. I guess you could call it a truce.”

Grafton gratefully accepted a cup of coffee from an aide. He sipped it and told the brass, “There are a bunch of folks, about three thousand, but the number is growing by the hour, heading this way from Camp Dawson in West Virginia. They’ll probably be here tomorrow.”

“Who is in charge of this group?”

“I guess I am,” Grafton said with a smile. “We intend to enter the White House and arrest Soetoro, if we can get there before that mob beats us to it. His days are almost over.”

“Then what?” some general asked.

“We need to get the United States up and running again. Get the power turned on nationwide, get water flowing through the pipes, and restore public order.

They weren’t yet ready to talk about tomorrow. “What do you know about this White House recording that is all over the radio dial? We think three or four stations are broadcasting it.” General Weiss said that and he gestured at the video screens. “That is what has them stirred up. The big problem is that that mob is made up of people who hate Soetoro and people who think he is the risen Christ and is being viciously slandered. We have people down there reporting on what’s happening. That thing may turn into a battle royal between the two groups right there in Lafayette Park, a bloody riot.”

Grafton replied, “I authorized secret electronic monitoring of the White House about six months ago. We used an Israeli program to turn all their cell phones, computers, and surveillance equipment into listening devices. The signals were gathered by the White House Wi-Fi system, encrypted, and sent to us. My tech staff” (that was only Sarah Houston, by the way — she was going to smile when I related this remark to her) “waded through hundreds of hours of conversation, but edited our take down to the pithiest sixty hours. That is what the radio stations are broadcasting.”

Rodriquez whistled. “That stuff is dynamite.” He jumped right to the key point. “So you knew Soetoro was planning to declare martial law for weeks before he did it?”

Grafton merely nodded.

“How many weeks?”

“Two months,” Grafton said.

As they digested that revelation, General Runyon said, “You should have told us.”

Grafton made a face. “There is always the question of whether clandestine recordings are genuine, and that cannot be answered to a certainty by listening to them. Even if you concluded that I was as honest as Diogenes, what would you have done after you listened? The American people needed to see the reality of a dictator in the White House, not listen to him scheming. Now they have seen and believe and most are ready to listen. The die-hards, a minority, are convinced the recordings are a plot to slander the saint; nothing on God’s green earth will make them change their minds.”

The military brass sat and looked at each other. “He’s right, you know,” Cart McKiernan said. No one wanted to argue. All eyes went to Grafton.

Grafton took another sip of coffee. “You made the right decision when you pulled your troops to the sidelines. The American people need to solve this problem. And I think they’re about to.”

That was the moment when I knew my country had a future. Jake Grafton talked about the rebuilding mission ahead, and the Pentagon generals and admirals listened carefully to every word.

I slipped out of the office, closed the door behind me, and asked the aides in the reception area how to get to the men’s room. A major escorted me, and when I had lightened the load, I asked if there was food available. There was. The major and I had a delightful late breakfast of scrambled eggs, sausage, fried potatoes, and toast with real butter.

I was in an expansive mood. The major wanted to talk about the splash the Soetoro White House conversations were making. I wasn’t about to tell him that was a Sarah Houston/Jake Grafton production, so I just listened. When he had expressed his and his colleagues’ stupefied amazement, he segued to the subject of the rebels coming to town. I told him what I knew, which wasn’t much.

“Who is leading the rebels?”

“Admiral Grafton, the officer who flew me here. I think you lead a rebel army by moral suasion. That’s Jake Grafton. I used to work for him but I quit. Now I do what he asks or tells me to do because he’s Jake Grafton and I’m me.”

“What’s going to happen to Soetoro?”

“I haven’t the faintest idea,” I said. “If Grafton has an idea, he hasn’t shared it with me. I doubt if he does. He’s sorta playing the melody by ear. May I have another cup of coffee?”