“This way,” Nora says, pulling me by the hand.
She opens the door to our far right and leads us out of the kitchen, back into the Ground Floor Corridor.
“There!” someone shouts from the hallway.
Fifty flashbulbs explode in our eyes. Instinctively, Nora steps in front of me, shielding me from the-Wait… it’s not the press. Not with Instamatics. It’s just another tour group.
“Nora Hartson,” the guide announces to what looks like a group of diplomatic VIPs. “Our own First Daughter!”
The crowd breaks into spontaneous applause and the guide unsuccessfully reminds them that they’re no photos allowed. “Thank you,” Nora says, excusing herself from the still snapping group. She stands in front of me, trying to keep me hidden the entire time. I know what she’s thinking: If my photo’s going to be in all of tomorrow’s papers, the last thing she needs is a group shot. As the tour group moves on to its next destination, Nora seizes my wrist. “Let’s go,” she whispers, trying hard to stay in front of me. “Hurry.”
I duck my head low and follow her lead. We speed-walk up the hallway past my favorite uniformed officer. He doesn’t move; he doesn’t touch the walkie-talkie. As long as we avoid the stairs to the Residence, he apparently doesn’t care. That’s why she didn’t take us out the back of the kitchen.
Making a sharp left outside the Dip Room, Nora opens a door flanked by bronze busts of Churchill and Eisenhower, which leads into a long hallway with at least forty six-foot-high stacks of chairs. Storage for state dinners. As we make our way down the hall, the floor starts to slant downward. We pass a pyramid of crated produce and then the bowling alley on our left. Nora maintains her swift pace as she takes us deeper down into the labyrinth. I’m starting to feel far from daylight.
“Where are we going?”
“You’ll see.”
As the hallway levels off, it leads into another perpendicular corridor, but this one is far dingier. Low ceilings. Not as well lit. The walls are dank and smell like old pennies.
It doesn’t make any sense. We’re in the basement-Nora’s running out of room. And I’m running out of time. Still, she isn’t slowing down. She makes a hairpin right and keeps going.
My eye starts twitching. My heart feels like it’s going to burst out of my chest. “Stop!” I shout.
For the first time, she stops and listens.
“Tell me where we’re going, for God’s sake!”
“I told you, you’ll see.”
I don’t like the dark. “I want to know now,” I say suspiciously.
Once again, she stops. “Don’t worry, Michael,” she says in a soft voice. “I’ll take care of you.”
I haven’t heard that tone since the day with my dad. Still, now’s not the time. “Nora… ”
Without a word, she turns away, striding to the far end of the basement hallway. There’s a steel door with an electronic lock. If the rumors are right, I’m pretty sure it’s a bomb shelter. Nora punches in a PIN code and I hear the thunk of locks tumbling.
With a sharp tug, Nora pulls open the door. Instantly, my eyes go wide. It can’t be. But there it is in front of me. The greatest myth in the White House-a secret tunnel.
Nora looks me in the eye. “If it’s good enough for Marilyn Monroe, it’s good enough for you.”
CHAPTER 33
With my mouth hanging down by my ankles, I’m staring into a secret tunnel below the White House. “When did… Where…?”
She steps in close and takes me by the hand. “I’m here, Michael. It’s me.” Reading my bewildered expression, she adds, “They may get it wrong in the movies, but that doesn’t mean it’s bullshit.”
“Still, the-”
“C’mon, let’s go.” By the time I blink, she’s gone. Zero to sixty. Instantly.
The tunnel itself has cement walls and is better lit than I would have expected. It looks like a straight shoot under the East Wing. “Where does it let out?”
She doesn’t hear me. Either that or she’s not telling.
At the end of the tunnel is another steel door. Frantically, Nora taps in her code. There’s a noticeable shake in her hands. We stare at the electronic lock, waiting anxiously for the thunk of access. It doesn’t come.
“Try again,” I say.
“I’m trying!” Once again, she enters a code. Again, nothing.
“What’s the problem?” I ask. I’m clenching my fists so hard, my arms are aching.
“Let us out!” Nora shouts, lifting her head.
“Who-?” I follow her gaze to the corner of the ceiling. There’s a small surveillance camera pointed right at us.
“I know you’re watching!” she continues. “Let us out!”
“Nora,” I say, gripping her arm, “maybe we shouldn’t-”
She pushes me away. She’s looking at that camera the same way she looked at the Secret Service our first night out.
“I’m not playing around, asshole. He’s just my boyfriend. Call Harry-he cleared him in.”
Now she’s gambling. Harry may’ve cleared me in, but he certainly doesn’t know we’re running out.
“Can you believe this?” she says to me, forcing a flighty laugh and flipping her hair back. “I’m so embarrassed.” I get the idea. But it takes a superhuman effort to relax my hands and slow my breathing.
“No, don’t sweat it.” I casually rest one arm against the wall. “Same thing happened last time I was in the Gulag.”
It’s a great moment. It’s also fake. That’s probably how it’s always been.
Nora looks at me with a small, appreciative grin, then glances up at the camera. “So? Did you call him?”
Silence. I’m almost faint with the desire to turn and run. Then, out of nowhere-the pop of a churning lock. Nora pulls open the door and lets me out. The camera can’t spot us anymore.
“We’re in the basement of the Treasury Building,” she whispers.
I nod. Next door to the White House.
“You can walk up the parking ramp to East Exec, or take the stairs and leave through Treasury. Either one’ll lead outside.”
I go straight for the stairs. Nora follows. Turning around, I hold my arm up and stop her, keeping her at the threshold of the tunnel.
“What?” she asks.
“Where’re you going?”
She looks at me with the same look she gave my dad when he was hysterical. “I meant what I said. I’m not leaving you, Michael. Not after all this.”
For the first time since we started running, my eye stops twitching. “Nora, you don’t have to-”
“Yes. I do.”
I shake my head. “You don’t, Nora. And while I appreciate the offer, we both know what’ll happen. If you’re caught running around with the press’s main suspect… ”
“I don’t care,” she blurts. “For once, it’s worth it.”
Stepping in close, I try to force her back toward the door. She doesn’t budge. “Please, Nora, it’s no time to be stupid.”
“So now it’s stupid to want to help?”
“No, it’s stupid to shoot yourself in both feet. The moment the press puts us together, they’re going to leap for your throat. On every page one. Above every fold. ‘First Daughter Linked to Murder Suspect.’ It’ll make your Rolling Stone story look like the back page of People magazine.”
“But-”
“Please-for once-don’t argue. Right now, the best thing I can do is lay low. If you’re around… it’ll be impossible, Nora. At least this way, we’re both safe.”
“You really think you’re safe?”
I don’t answer.
“Please be careful, Michael.”
I smile and head for the stairs. Hearing her like that… it’s not easy to leave.
“So where’re you going?” she calls out.
I freeze. My eyes narrow. And slowly, I turn around. Behind her, the outside of the reinforced steel door is disguised to look like an ordinary exit. The whole thing’s an illusion. “I’ll tell you when I get there,” I reply. With nothing left to say, I turn away and start walking. Then jogging.