Like the flag at Iwo Jima, though, the cigarette was still there. This could well be her last breath and she knew what to say.
âFrom . . . my . . . cold . . . dead . . . hands.â Other restaurant patrons had gathered round and began screamingâa couple of them even tried to help me, to little avail. Then with her trembling left arm Ann felt her way around the Bloominâ Onion to a bottle of Corona. She carefully lifted it up and smashed it over Colmesâs head, creating a jagged weapon. Before she could plunge it into her enemyâs face, the waitress came to her senses and jumped back.
âAre you fucking crazy?â she asked. It was a reasonable question.
Ann shook her head, amused. âDemocrats. Always weak on defense.â She took a sip of water, stood up, and hobbled out of the restaurant still puffing away.
Hannity was halfheartedly holding a wadded-up napkin against Colmesâs profusely bleeding head wound. âIâm sorry for bleeding on the tablecloth, Sean,â stammered Colmes. Hannity wasnât listening but looking off in Annâs direction. âSheâs going to go hook up with Drudge, I know it,â he muttered desperately before giving his ailing cohost one last look. âSorry, guy.â He instantly let the napkin drop and chased after Ann. âHey, Ann, wait up!â
It all seemed so surreal. I turned to Candy.
âPolitics,â she shrugged, then turned to the waitress. âCould you wrap up the rest of the onion?â
11
Federalist Smackdown
Â
âTake a deep breath. Youâre hysterical,â Helen said.
Iâd made my way back to her lair; Iâm not sure why. Something told me sheâd give me perspective. But first I needed to be talked down. I was hyperventilating.
âAnd Ann was so angry and Candy had a gun and the waitressâs flesh was burning and Colmes was just bleeding everywhere.â My voice started to crack. âOh, Helenââ
Helen pulled my head to her breast and dabbed it with a cold compress. âThere, there, Colmesâll be fine. The truth is, he likes getting roughed up. Thatâs his job.â Helen was so motherly and I didnât want to reject her, but pressed up against her like that, my nose immediately began itching. Was there a cat somewhere? I backed off as I let out a big sneeze.
âBless you, dear!â Helen exclaimed.
âPardon me. Anyway, Helen, I couldnât believe the disgusting display. I can appreciate people disagreeing but it was so uncivil, so deeply personal. Violently
personal.
Maybe Iâm sounding naive.â
âYouâre sounding naive. If Iâve learned anything about Washington culture, it is that itâs about extremes. On the one hand youâve got the cocktail party set who like to make nicey-nice. With them you canât tell the difference between a San Francisco Socialist and a Birmingham Bible Belter. Then youâve got the true believers, also known as the Screamers. The problem with them is they donât just believe they know the truth. They
know
they know the truth.â
âOkay, you can call me a drip, but why canât anyone just talk calmly, honestlyâand substantively? Iâm sure that the Founding Fathers would be appalledââ
âDarling, youâre sounding like a drip. You donât think the Founding Fathers could go on the attack? They were the ones who started all this partisan nonsense. Sure, there were a few who tried to keep discourse on a higher level. President Washington was pretty âdignifiedââwhich is a nice way of saying he was boring,â she added under her breath.
âBoring?â
âOh, please. The manâs biography was written by a guy named Parson Weems. Jefferson on the other hand? What a life. Kitty Kelley would have gone to town. But I digress. Washington didnât like conflict and more than anything he feared the
Andrea Kane
Nigel Cawthorne
Kate Ward
David Donachie
Anitra Lynn McLeod
Eve Langlais
Laura Iding
Lauren Dawes
Gretta Curran Browne
John Cowper Powys