Fowler occupied a six-room suite on the eighth floor of the Foster Lafayette. It was a corner suite, and so half its windows gave him an unimpeded view of the White House on the other side of Pennsylvania Avenue. Though the suite's annual rental was not quite covered by his Senatorial salary, this was not a problem. The Senator had inherited from his father The San Francisco Courier-Herald, nine smaller newspapers, and six radio stations. And it was more or less accurately gossiped that his wife and her brother owned two square blocks of downtown San Francisco and several million acres of timberland in Washington and Oregon.
A tall, distinguished-looking man in his early forties was standing in the corridor. He was wearing a khaki uniform, shirt, trousers, and overseas cap. The U.S. Navy insignia and a silver eagle were pinned to the cap, and silver eagles were on his collar. The right armpit area of the shirt was dark with sweat. The left sleeve had been cut from the shirt at the shoulder to accommodate a heavy plaster cast which covered the arm from the shoulder to the wrist.
The two men looked at each other for a long time before Senator Fowler finally spoke.
"I am so glad to see you, you crazy sonofabitch, that I can't even be angry."
"May I come in, then?" the other man asked with gentle sarcasm.
"Are you all right, Fleming?" Fowler asked, concern coloring his voice.
"When I get out of these fucking clothes, and you get me something cold-and heavily alcoholic-I will be."
"You want to get in bed? Should I call a doctor?"
"I want a very large glass of orange juice, with ice, and a large hooker of gin," Captain Fleming Pickering, USNR, said, as he walked into the sitting room of the suite. "I have been thinking about that for hours."
"Can you have alcohol?"
"Hey, I have a broken arm. That's all."
"A compound fracture of the arm," Senator Fowler said.
"Plus, I have been told, a number of other unnatural openings in the body." with his good hand Pickering started to shove an overstuffed chair across the room.
"What are you doing? Let me do that!" Fowler said and walked quickly to him.
"Right in front of the air-conditioning duct, if you please," Pickering said.
"You'll catch cold," Fowler said.
Pickering ignored him. He took off his cap, tossed it onto a couch, then unbuttoned and removed his shirt and dropped it onto the floor. In a moment his khaki trousers followed.
Fowler looked at him with mingled resignation and alarm.
Pickering suddenly marched into one of the bedrooms and came back a moment later with a sheet he had obviously torn from the bed. He started to drape it over the upholstered chair.
Fowler, seeing what he wanted to do, snatched it from him and arranged it more neatly.
Pickering collapsed into the chair.
"Anything else I can get you, Flem? Are you in pain?"
"How about a footstool and a pillow?" Pickering asked.
"And of course the iced orange juice with gin." Fowler delivered the footstool and the pillow, which Pickering placed on the arm of the chair, and then he lowered his encasted arm onto it.
"You look like hell, You're as gray... as a battleship."
"I was feeling fine until they opened the door of the airplane and that goddamned humidity swept in like a tidal wave," he said. "I honest to God think the humidity is worse in Washington than it is in Borneo. Or Hanoi."
"You really want a drink?"
"It will make the gray go away, trust me." Fowler shook his head and then walked into the kitchen, returning with a bowl of ice and a silver pitcher of orange juice.
He went to a bar against the wall, put ice and orange juice in a large glass, and picked up a quart bottle of Gilbey's gin.
"I don't feel comfortable giving you this gin."
"Please don't make me walk over there and do it myself." Fowler shrugged and splashed gin into the glass. He stirred it with a glass stick and then walked to Pickering and handed it to him.
"I knew that sooner or later you would turn me into a criminal," Fowler said.
"Meaning what?" Pickering asked, and then took several deep swallows of the drink.
"Harboring and assisting a deserter is a felony."
"Don't be absurd. All I did was leave the hospital. My orders permit me to go when and where I please."
"I don't think that includes this. The hospital didn't plan to release you for at least another two weeks."
"Yeah, they told me."
"Does Patricia know about it?"
"We stopped for fuel at Saint Louis. I called her from there."
"And what did she say?"
"She was unkind," Pickering said.
"Are you going to tell me what this is all about?"
"Well, I was getting bored in the hospital."
"That's not it, Flem."
"I want out of the Navy. I told Frank that when I saw him in California. When nothing happened, I tried to call him. But I can't get the sonofabitch on the telephone." Frank Knox was Secretary of the Navy.
"Did he tell you he'd let you do that?"
"He said we would talk about it when I got out of the hospital. I am now out of the hospital."
"I don't think it's going to happen. You were commissioned for the duration plus six months. What makes you think the Navy will let you out?"
"The Navy does what Frank tells it to. That's why they call him `Mr. Secretary."
"What do you plan to do, enlist in The Marines?"
"Come on, Richmond."
"Well, what?"
"Go back to running the company. That way I could make a bona fide contribution to the war."
"Why do I think I'm not getting the truth?" Pickering started to get out of the chair.
"What are you doing?"
"I need another of these," Pickering said, holding up his glass.
Fowler was surprised, and concerned, to see that he had emptied it.
"I don't think so," Fowler said.
"Richmond, for Christ's sake. I'm a big boy."
"Oh, God. Stay where you are. I'll get it for you." Making the second drink just about exhausted the orange juice. Fowler was about to call down for a fresh pitcher when Pickering said, "I want to see Pick before he goes over there." That, Fowler decided, sounds like the truth He carried the glass to Pickering and handed it to him.
"Well?"
"Thank you."
"That's not what I mean. You wouldn't let Knox send Pick out to the hospital. For God's sake, he doesn't even know you're home. Or that you've been wounded."
"It would upset him."
"That's what sons are for, to be upset when their fathers are wounded."
"The odds are strongly against Pick coming through this war."
"Every father feels that way, Flem. The truth is that most people survive a war. I don't know what the percentage is, but I would bet that his odds are nine to one, maybe ninety-nine to one, to make it." "Most fathers haven't been where I have been, and seen what I have seen.
And most sons are not Marine fighter pilots.
Jesus, do you think I like facing this?"
"I just think you're overstating the situation," Fowler said, a little lamely.