However, there was no sign of Sam Quarry. He was still in the mine, under tons of rock.

CHAPTER 84

DAN COX had been educated at some of the country’s best schools. He’d been successful at just about everything he’d attempted. As president he was as well versed in foreign policy matters as he was in domestic issues. There weren’t many holes in his intellectual armor. Yet with all that, the people who knew the First Couple well would have agreed, at least in private, that Jane Cox was probably smarter than her husband. Or at least more cunning.

As she was flying over rural Alabama in a chopper she demonstrated the validity of this opinion. Dan Cox’s plan would not work, she decided. This matter could not simply be spun, or blamed on terrorists. There were things they didn’t know, that they simply had to know, to make an informed judgment about what to do.

She stared out the window of the chopper and saw the large house down below. She had been looking out the window all this time, in fact. This was the first home they had passed. The chances were very good, she felt, that whoever owned this house also owned the building she had almost died in. She pointed to it.

“Who owns that property?”

A young agent glanced past her, out the window. “I don’t know, ma’am.”

That was the other thing that Jane had subtly orchestrated without seeming to. Larry Foster and Chuck Waters were flying with her husband. She had banished the veteran Aaron Betack to that chopper as well. She had done it simply with one penetrating look, and the man had fled to the safety of Marine One. She had done the same with Agent Waters. The security detail she had with her was relatively young. The two HRT members were just gun jockeys. She knew how to deal with them.

“I want to go to that house.”

“Ma’am?” said the confused agent.

“Tell the pilot to put down in front of that house.”

“But my orders—”

“I’ve just been through a terrible ordeal. I was almost killed. I don’t feel very well and I want to get off this chopper before I throw up. Do I make myself clear? Because if I don’t I will take it up with the president when I get back to Washington and I am sure he will make it very clear to your superiors.”

The HRT guys glanced at each other but didn’t say a word. They just stayed hidden behind their big guns. The other agents arrayed around the First Lady stared at the floor of the chopper, unwilling to make eye contact with the woman.

The agent next to Jane said, “Walt, take us down to that house.”

It landed a minute later and Jane stepped off the chopper and walked toward Atlee.

The young agent sprinted ahead of her. “Ma’am, can I ask where you’re going?”

“I’m going in that house, get some water, and lie down for a bit. Do you have a problem with that?”

“No, ma’am, of course not, but let me just get the place checked out first.”

She looked at him disdainfully. “Do you really think there are criminals or terrorists hiding inside that old house?”

“We’ve got protocols to follow, ma’am. Just let me check things out.”

Jane simply marched past him, forcing the team of agents and the HRT snipers to rush ahead of her and build an impromptu protection bubble around the woman.

The door opened and Ruth Ann stood there with a kitchen apron on. When she saw who had just pressed her doorbell, her mouth gaped.

“May I trouble you for some water and a place to lie down, Miss—” Jane said.

When Ruth Ann found her voice she said, “I’m Ruth Ann. You, you come on in, ma’am. You just come right on in. I get your water.”

After fetching a glass, Ruth Ann started to leave, but Jane beckoned her to remain in the small front room.

Ruth Ann sat down across from her looking about as nervous as a person could look without actually passing out.

Jane said to the detail leader, “Can you wait out in the hall? I believe that you’re making our friend here extremely nervous.”

“Ma’am,” the agent began.

“Thank you,” she said, turning away from him.