Part 13 (1/2)

The security guard was a large black man with a sweet grin. A man doesn't usually say that sort of thing about another man, but it was true. Jeffrey's grin was powdered sugar on strawberries, the perfect start to the day.

Our usual banter involved an exchange of quips about football. I try to sound optimistic about the Redskins, while Jeffrey's a Raiders fan. But football season was months away, so instead we exchanged pleasantries.

I placed my bag onto the table next to the metal detector. There was nothing of consequence in it. It had already been through airport security at San Diego. As I moved to the threshold of the metal detector, Jeffrey glanced down at his clipboard. He frowned, then looked up at me with an expression I'd never seen on his face before. I didn't like it. He blocked my pa.s.sage. ”Please step out of line, Mr. Austin,” he said.

I grinned, thinking it was a joke.

”I hope you're not going to call for one of your drug-sniffing dogs,” I quipped. ”You could be charged with cruelty to animals. I didn't take a shower this morning.”

Hands like vise-grips grabbed my arms from behind while two of Jeffrey's buddies flanked me. n.o.body was smiling. Jeffrey's hand rested on the b.u.t.t of his gun.

”Please step out of line, Mr. Austin,” he said again.

”Jeffrey, it's me!”

Everyone in the vicinity had stopped talking. They were all looking at me, backing away as though I might go off any moment.

Jeffrey s.n.a.t.c.hed my bag from the table as his buddies escorted me to the door. He dropped my bag at my feet and ripped the ident.i.ty badge from my lapel.

”Go ahead, Jeffrey, do your worst,” I cried. ”But I want you to know that no matter how much you torture me, I will never become a Raiders fan.”

”Mr. Austin, I must ask you to leave the premises.”

Not a trace of humor was in his eyes.

”Is something wrong with my badge?”

”Your credentials have been revoked.”

”Not possible,” I said. ”The badge worked fine three days ago when I had lunch in the cafeteria with half of the West Wing staff. I have clearance for the rest of the year while we promote the book. Call Chief of Staff Ingraham, I'm sure this can all be worked out.”

”Mr. Austin, please leave.”

”Jeffrey, cut me some slack here, will you? You know I'd never-”

He gripped his weapon, but didn't draw it. ”If you do not leave willingly, Mr. Austin, I am authorized to consider you a credible threat and use whatever force is necessary to neutralize you.”

”This is insane!” I shouted.

The grip on my arms tightened to the point of real pain. Any hint of resistance and I'd be kissing tile with a knee in my back.

”Fine,” I said. ”I'll leave. But it's a bureaucratic mix-up, that's all. And it's not like this is the first time a bureaucratic mix-up has ever been made at the White House, is it?”

That last part was to save face with the people standing in line. I didn't know any of them. They didn't know me. All the same, I had to say something.

Jeffrey's buddies shoved me out the door.

So it had come to this.

Bag in hand I stood at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue outside the White House fence with the tourists and their cameras. In the course of writing my book I'd been in nearly every room of the White House. I could give tours. Now, I couldn't even take a tour.

The idea had crossed my mind-the tour-and I would have tried it had I thought it had a chance of succeeding. But with security alerted to my presence, I wouldn't get ten steps inside the entrance.

I flipped open my cell phone, giving the airwaves one last chance. I dialed the chief of staff's office and got . . . I don't know who I got, but as soon as I identified myself, I got cut off. I tried Christina's cell phone. No luck.

”Can't be accused of not trying,” I said to no one in particular.

I took one last lingering gaze at the White House.

”If only I had wings,” I muttered.

A lack of wings didn't stop my bag from flying over the fence. I jumped to follow it and had one leg over the top when I felt something pulling me back.

A j.a.panese man with a camera around his neck had grabbed hold of my coat. His eyes frantic, he let loose with a torrent of words, none of which I understood. What I did understand was the expressions of horror on the faces of his wife and children.

”It's OK! It's OK!” I shouted at them. ”I work here.”

You had to admire the man. For all he knew I had a knife or a gun which I could easily have turned on him. Yet despite the potential danger, he did what he thought was right, and this probably wasn't even his country.

Our struggle caught the attention of other tourists. Some of them came running toward us to help the j.a.panese man. My grip was giving way.

”I have a bomb!” I shouted. ”A bomb! I have a bomb!” It was the only thing I could think of that would make them back off.

The j.a.panese man didn't understand me. The other tourists did. They reversed course, slowly backing away.

The man's daughter understood. She shouted something at her father in j.a.panese, repeating it over and over. If she wasn't saying bomb, she was saying something equally effective, because the man let go of me.

I scaled the fence and dropped onto the gra.s.s and offered a rea.s.suring wave to the j.a.panese man, his family, and a growing audience. ”Everything will be OK,” I said to them.

No sooner had I turned and picked up my bag than I heard them coming. Barking, actually.

Dogs. I hadn't counted on dogs.

I heard snarls fast approaching and in stereo. They came at me from the left and from the right, so I ran forward.

Didn't get far.

The next thing I knew my face was in the gra.s.s and my keister was a dog's chew toy.

”Can I have a pillow, or a chair with a cus.h.i.+on?”

My plan had worked, though with unforeseen, painful complications. I was talking to the Secret Service.

”It's him, all right.”

A copy of my book thumped onto the table, bio picture side up.

The three of us were squeezed into a room barely big enough for the table-which was metal, dinged, and bolted to the floor. There were three matching dinged chairs. Mine was broken. The seat tipped forward right. It took constant effort to keep from slipping off it.

The walls and ceiling and floors were painted sickening green, giving it all the hominess of a sensory deprivation tank. No air circulated in the room and both agents had a sheen of sweat. I was literally dripping after my little romp with the dogs on the gra.s.s.