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©2006 The Angst Guy
(theangstguy@yahoo.com)
Daria and associated
characters are ©2006 MTV Networks
Feedback (good, bad, indifferent, just want to bother me,
whatever) is appreciated. Please write to: theangstguy@yahoo.com
Synopsis: Thirty years from now, three old friends reunite to
remember the past, just moments before the future arrives to overtake them.
Author's Notes: This story began as a PPMB “Iron Chef” challenge by
MMan in March 2004, called “Hail to the Chief, la la la la
la.” What if a future President of the United States
was someone from the Dariaverse? The idea then merged in my head with another
challenge issued some weeks earlier by Kara Wild, on injecting realism into Daria stories (“something that is
neither kinky nor over the top”). Brother Grimace then offered further
restrictions on the challenge:
·
Someone offers
someone a totally inappropriate food item in an effort to apologize for
something.
·
The time-frame of
the fic is thirty minutes or less.
·
The conversation
focuses around a well-known, yet inaccurate belief concerning romance.
·
There are three
persons involved with the conversation, and one of them is naive or uneducated
about the subject of the conversation.
·
The story should
involve a card game.
Some of the restrictions were
fudged slightly (the time frame is just over an hour), but they were used
anyway. Only the first two sections of this three-part story appeared in March
2004, and the story remained incomplete until now. Sorry for the delay. The
tale was originally entitled “When It Changed,” but I have since used that
title elsewhere.
Acknowledgements: Thanks to MMan, Kara Wild, and Brother Grimace as
this tale’s grandparents, and to Thea Zara, for catching a mistake.
*
PART
ONE
TIME:
08/09/2037, 21:27:56 EDT
PLACE:
LANDON RESIDENCE, LAWNDALE COURT, SILVER SPRING, MD
SPEAKERS:
AUTHORIZATION
3731P43S57-0809ERFQ-L1 AUDIOFILE
ONLY
RECOVERED/DECLASSIFIED/RELEASED
1/13/2096
[START]
LANDON:
Daria! Jane!
J.
LANE: Madam Speaker!
LANDON:
Oh, stop that! Come here, give me a hug! Look at you, Jane! My God, you haven’t
changed a bit!
J.
LANE: Look at you, dear! Get that suit!
LANDON:
Daria, good to see you.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Hi, Jodie. You look great. I bet that outfit cost more than our
apartment does.
LANDON:
It probably does, if you’re living in Mississippi.
J.
LANE: We’re not, but maybe we should. Manhattan’s getting a little crowded.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: So, Jodie, is it true that being the Speaker of the House means
you don’t have to speak?
LANDON:
God, I should be so lucky. I should have my doctor grow me a new throat.
J.
LANE: Can he do something with my butt, too?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Please.
J.
LANE: Hey, what did my butt ever do to you?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: If you wouldn’t drink that carbonated apple juice before you go
to sleep, it wouldn’t do anything to me.
LANDON:
Listen, speaking of that, I wanted to ask how’s
married life treating you.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: We’re divorced. That was just a stunt we did for the “Good
Mornings” show in twenty-twenty.
LANDON:
Right, I remember that. But you two got married again a while back, right? Or
was that supposed to be a secret? Hmmm, you’re not saying anything.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I always forget you have connections.
LANDON:
Hey, this is Washington. We know more than you think we do, and less, too.
J.
LANE: Jodie . . . it’s not really what it sounds like.
LANDON:
I know, I know. It’s the tax thing. So, how is it?
J.
LANE: Oh, it’s awful. She snores like a rocket taking off every five seconds.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You sleep like a log, Jane, so what would you know about it?
J.
LANE: The neighbors are suing us for auditory damage.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You mean the ones who weren’t killed off by the poison gas?
LANDON:
My, neither of you has changed a bit! Oh, wait. Mister Crandall, bring that
tray here, please. Thank you. Here, try these. These are excellent. They’re my
apology for interrupting your marital bliss.
J.
LANE: Thanks! Oh! Ooo, goob!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: What are they?
LANDON:
Shhh! I’m telling everyone it’s real crab, but it’s
fake. It’s crab-flavored superfish.
Take one.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I’m really allergic to some of those new flavors they’re putting
out. Get hives and everything. Maybe just a cracker.
LANDON:
A cracker, then. Are you two staying married this time, or should I shut up?
J.
LANE: We, um, we’ve talked about it.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: We are. Just say it, Jane, get it over with. Who the hell cares?
Where’s the bathroom?
LANDON:
Oh. It’s down that hall, second door to the right. Are you okay? Daria? Oh, crap, I bet I put my foot in that one.
J.
LANE: It’s okay. She’s a little touchy about . . . things. Everything.
LANDON:
When did you two get remarried?
J.
LANE: Uh . . . oh, what the hell. Twelve years ago.
LANDON:
Twelve years ago? Jane, you aren’t gay! Neither of you is gay!
J.
LANE: Shhh! Don’t spoil it for the rumormongers!
LANDON:
Are you serious? Twelve years?
J.
LANE: She showed up at my place right after her last divorce. She was a wreck.
Don’t talk to her about it. It was pretty bad.
LANDON:
Which divorce was that? First or second?
J.
LANE: Third.
LANDON:
Oh, my Lord, I am so sorry to hear that.
J.
LANE: Yeah. Some twenty-ish actor she met in L.A. He
sent the papers right to her e-phone, four months after they traded rings. Didn’t
get much of her savings, but it wiped her out emotionally. She really . . . cared
about him, but he used her inside and out.
LANDON:
Oh, that was cold. I’m so sorry, I didn’t know.
J.
LANE: Well, you’d be the only one in North America who didn’t, then. He was
seeing someone else, a lot of someone elses,
actually, about two or three a day. She never knew until he dumped it in one of
his autobiographies. He said a lot of unkind things about her. The book sucked,
but unfortunately, some important people read it. I can’t believe you didn’t.
If you did and you’re being nice about it, then thanks for pretending otherwise.
She won’t or can’t go to the West Coast ever again. She hadn’t left New York in
a decade, till last night when we came in.
LANDON:
Oh, Lord. I’m really sorry now that I brought it up.
J.
LANE: Don’t be. She knows you didn’t mean anything bad by it.
LANDON:
Are you sure she’s okay?
J.
LANE: Uh, I don’t know. She took it really hard. A few months after she moved
in, we just filed the papers, same as before.
LANDON:
Why are you keeping it a secret?
J.
LANE: Wasn’t much of a secret, if you knew about it.
LANDON:
I hate to remind you that it came from that little identity-surfing program you
gave me, so that I could keep track of you two.
J.
LANE: Oh. Damn, I forgot all about that. You’re right. I didn’t know it got
into . . . oh, of course it gets into government
files. Forget it. Sorry. Anyway, we just . . . we just don’t talk about it much
to anyone. It gives people the wrong idea, and they already have too many wrong
ideas about us. Best to leave it alone, move on.
LANDON:
You should be proud of being the role models you are. The two of you started a
trend when you got married, you know? Straight, same-sex, best-friend couples
getting married for tax purposes?
J.
LANE: Not much of a trend, far as I’ve seen. The network cut us off from its
data files when our show was cancelled.
LANDON:
Well, it caught on. I saw the demographics the other day. About one hundred
fifty-six thousand couples like that so far. Friends marrying friends is on the
rise among, um, experienced, world-wise women, especially.
J.
LANE: Good save. Better than “old” or “mature.”
LANDON:
Yeah. I still don’t feel mature. Thank God.
J.
LANE: It’s the stuff they put in the drinking water. Keeps us looking
twenty-nine when we passed that milepost decades ago.
LANDON:
I thought it was in the granola bread.
J.
LANE: If it is, I should be using your brand. You look wonderful.
LANDON:
Thank you, but you look better.
J.
LANE: God, listen to us. Can you believe we’re saying this?
LANDON:
Here she comes. Daria, you look wonderful!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Oh, knock it off. Shouldn’t you be schmoozing with the other
guests instead of high-school outcasts?
LANDON:
Actually, I’d rather be right here, doing what I’m doing, if you don’t mind. I
haven’t seen either of you in ages.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Well . . . it’s been a while, I guess.
LANDON:
What have you two been doing?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Since the network cancelled our show and threw us out? Not much.
Sold a few books, got a bit part in a movie. I sleep a lot now. Read, listen to
music, complain about things, the usual.
J.
LANE: Life’s nicer without a TV around. Quieter, anyway.
LANDON:
What was the story with the cancellation? I heard a lot of different things, and
I don’t know what to believe.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You tell it.
J.
LANE: Well, you can—
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Just tell it.
J.
LANE: Oh, fine. The network said it was going to go to D.A.s,
you know, make everyone online digital—
LANDON:
Now, I heard that, but was that so they wouldn’t have to pay salaries?
J.
LANE: No, because it costs more to make digital actors than to use regular
people. The thing is, digitals don’t get sick or die. Cuts off all the health
insurance issues, too, and overtime, all that, but the sick-and-die part was
the key. Plus, they can adjust the digitals in little ways whenever they want
to flow with public trends and expectations. Change the eyes to blue over time
if that’s the trend, make the boobs bigger or smaller,
change ethnicity, sex, height, weight, whatever. Plus—
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Is there anything to drink here?
LANDON:
Anything hard? Over there. No, wait. You stay right
there. Mister Richards? Yes, could you bring—right. Bring those over here,
please. He’ll bring it.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You like that?
LANDON:
What?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Telling people what to do, and they do
it.
LANDON:
Yes, but they get paid plenty to do it. Thank you, Mister Richards. Whoa, girl!
Daria, don’t—
J.
LANE: Daria, not so much. You’ll choke.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I’m not driving, what do you care? Can I get another one?
LANDON:
Daria, why don’t you and Jane come with me? I’d like for you to meet some
people, or at least see them at a distance so we can gossip about them.
J.
LANE: I’m game.
D. MORGENDORFFER:
Gossip. Let’s see . . . we don’t have sex. Not with each other, anyway. You
probably know that, too.
LANDON:
Um . . .
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I don’t have it with anyone. Not anymore. Thank God.
LANDON:
Dear, why don’t—
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I mean, we’re just married for the tax
break.
J.
LANE: Daria. Cracker. Eat.
LANDON:
Now, over there, that’s the man who wants to be the next king of Hawaii,
assuming secession comes to the floor of the House and Senate and gets
approved.
J.
LANE: Any chance in hell of that happening?
LANDON:
More of a chance than I’d thought, unfortunately. Guam and Saipan are thinking
about it, too. China put them up to it.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: He looks pretty good. God’s gift to evolution.
LANDON:
His four wives think so, too, from what I hear. He’s got eighteen children.
J.
LANE: Only eighteen? Slacker.
LANDON:
A self-made slacker billionaire, yes.
J.
LANE: Oh, yawn. There are so many of those. So common.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: He’d have to be a billionaire to afford all those pro-passes.
LANDON:
Hmmm. A millionaire, anyway. Procreation passes aren’t
that expensive.
J.
LANE: I wouldn’t mind giving him a trial run.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: That looks like a giant pizza over there.
LANDON:
It is. Archaic, isn’t it?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Be right back.
J.
LANE: Bring back a piece for me! Daria!
LANDON:
So, you two sleep in the same bed, too?
J.
LANE: It isn’t what you think it is, Jodie, really.
LANDON:
I know. I was going to say, she must really need close comfort or . . . I think
I’m overstepping my bounds here. Sorry.
J.
LANE: It’s okay, you’re right. It’s been a cold world.
We don’t really have anyone else but each other. Her mother died in
twenty-twenty-one, and I don’t know anything about my folks. They could be
alive, dead, I wouldn’t know. Wind’s gone, you know, from that flu, and you
know about Trent, and Summer was in Tampa when that
went up. Penny’s in Tierra Del Fuego, haven’t heard
from her in ages. Don’t know where anyone else is. Quinn, she’s doing fine in
Paris, with Jamie and the kids. Daria says Quinn’s trying to buy part of the
Louvre. How about your side?
LANDON:
My parents passed a while ago. Mom got to see me make Speaker, at least.
Rachel’s got her casino in Vegas still, she’s doing well. You heard about Evan,
right?
J.
LANE: No. What?
LANDON:
He was killed in Indonesia about twelve . . . no, thirteen years ago. He was
with the Marines.
J.
LANE: Oh, Jodie.
LANDON:
No, no, it’s all right. It’s all right. He did what he wanted to do. He was
such a . . . he was—
J.
LANE: Jodie.
LANDON:
No, I’m fine. I’m—
J.
LANE: Here.
LANDON:
Thank you. I’m sorry. I’m not usually—
J.
LANE: It’s okay.
LANDON:
I’ll buy you another handkerchief.
J.
LANE: I have hundreds. Keep it. Daria’s coming.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Here. I bet this isn’t real pepperoni, but it’s pretty damn
close.
J.
LANE: Probably not real cheese, either, but who cares?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Exactly. You have a cold, Jodie?
LANDON:
A little one. Excuse blowing my nose. Sorry.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Want some pizza?
LANDON:
How you two could eat this stuff all these years is beyond me. Oh, why not. That small one.
J.
LANE: Whoa, now that’s a gown. Who’s that?
LANDON:
Ambassador from Wales. You’ll need a translator if you want to talk to her.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: No, thanks. Safer to gossip at a distance, per
our earlier agreement.
LANDON:
Jane, do you drink?
J.
LANE: A little. Just a little.
LANDON:
Mister Rovello! Yes, one for each of my friends. This
is the best vintage in Washington and vicinity, and thus the best in the world.
Shall we toast?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: To . . . taxation without representation?
J.
LANE: To pizza?
LANDON:
To friends.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Cheers.
J.
LANE: Cheers.
LANDON:
Cheers.
J.
LANE: So, could your doctor do something with my butt? It’s starting to sag a
little.
[END
PART ONE]
* * *
PART
TWO
TIME:
08/09/2037, 22:39:10 EDT
PLACE:
LANDON RESIDENCE, LAWNDALE COURT, SILVER SPRING, MD
[START]
LANDON:
I’m back. Sorry I was away so long.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Boy, you missed a good one. Some drunk told us he was a minister
and tried to pick us up.
LANDON:
What? You’re kidding!
J.
LANE: Nope. He was a little hard to understand through his accent, but I think
he said he’d give either one of us a ton of money to do something unnatural
with food coloring and honey.
LANDON:
No way!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I didn’t know ministers had that kind of money. They must’ve
taken up a hell of a collection this morning during services.
J.
LANE: He was good looking, at least, about our age. Drunk, but dignified. Kinda sweet, if you could get over the minister part.
LANDON:
I can’t believe you’re serious.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I wonder what church he’s in.
J.
LANE: Yeah. I might join.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Too bad blue’s not my color. I could have used the extra cash.
LANDON:
Blue? I don’t know. You’d look interesting with blue skin.
J.
LANE: Hey, that’s what I told her, but does she listen to me? Nooo. . . .
LANDON:
So, is this guy still around, or did he leave?
J.
LANE: You’re interested? He’s over there. There by the punch bowl—brown suit,
goatee, wineglass, delusions of grandeur.
LANDON:
Oh! Raoul! He’s Brazil’s minister of finance. I know
him.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: What?
J.
LANE: Raoul?
LANDON:
He’s here to work out a trade dispute. He’s a great guy. He tried to pick you
up?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: That guy is the minister of finance for Brazil? Really?
LANDON:
Yes. I met him two years ago during hearings.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Not a religious minister, but a minister of finance. And I
thought he was drunk.
LANDON:
Well, he probably is. I can’t believe he would hit on you, though.
J.
LANE: Why? What’s wrong with us, other than our mental problems and criminal
records?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: He must have recognized us.
J.
LANE: He could be a fan. I think we still have some.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Maybe we should, you know, apologize for telling him to jam—
J.
LANE: Does he have a lot of money? Being a minister of finance?
LANDON:
He’s pretty well off, personally, but the money he manages isn’t his. It’s Brazil’s.
J.
LANE: But it could be ours, right?
LANDON:
Yours? No, of course not!
J.
LANE: I bet it could. Private property, public property—it’s interchangeable.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You think I’d look good in blue?
J.
LANE: She said interesting, Daria, but you can go with that.
LANDON:
I must have been drunk when I invited you guys.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: We don’t have any honey back at the hotel.
J.
LANE: We can get some on the way out, if he’ll wait. It’ll wash out with soap.
LANDON:
Oh, shut up.
J.
LANE: We’re trying to improve international relations! C’mon, help us out.
LANDON:
You two are pure trouble. I knew I should’ve had the FBI keep watching you.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: So, who called?
LANDON:
What?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: When you had to leave earlier. Who called?
LANDON:
Oh. I guess I can say, long as no one overhears. I got
a call from one of my contacts with Walter Reed.
J.
LANE: What’s Walter do?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Jane, that’s the main hospital here.
J.
LANE: I knew that! I was just trying to throw off anyone who was listening in.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Was this about Ivers?
LANDON:
Yeah. The prognosis isn’t good.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Oh.
J.
LANE: What does that mean? Is Ivers still the veep?
LANDON:
Eh, yes and no. As she’s in a vegetative coma right now, I’d say no at this
point. They couldn’t get her to the hospital in time yesterday to stop the
bleeding and fix the damage. Everyone knew another stroke would be iffy.
J.
LANE: That’s awful. She wasn’t even in office a year.
LANDON:
She was okay. I hated her choice in shoes, but she was okay.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Any chance she’ll recover?
LANDON:
Probably not with any intact memories. The President arranged to have a name
sent to Congress for confirmation before he left for Montreal this evening.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: So, he doesn’t think she’ll make it, either.
J.
LANE: Whose name did he send?
LANDON:
Richardson.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Richardson? The guy who wears that red suit, President pro tempore of the Senate? Isn’t he sort
of a nutcase?
LANDON:
He has some unusual views not shared by the majority of Americans, if that’s
what you mean.
J.
LANE: I think some of those views got him elected.
LANDON:
Look at his home district. That explains a lot. I didn’t say that, by the way.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Didn’t say what?
J.
LANE: I can’t see him as a Vice President. I can’t even see him as a
dogcatcher.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I could see him as a dog, if you gave it rabies.
LANDON:
He supposedly shares some opinions with Sanchez on domestic and foreign issues,
though if you asked me which ones, I couldn’t tell you.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Didn’t Richardson say we should annex Canada?
LANDON:
He said that quote was taken out of context.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: What context? He said the drought’s killing us, and we should
attack Canada and take its farms.
LANDON:
No, he said we should consider a more aggressive foreign policy to increase our
arable farmland.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Which means, what?
LANDON:
It means we should talk about something less explosive, like religion.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Jodie, come off it. You know what he meant.
LANDON:
I know what he meant. I know exactly what he meant.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: So?
LANDON:
I’m working on it, okay? This isn’t the place to do it, and you’re not the
people I should talk to about it, but I’m working on it. I’d just like to
forget about it for one night and have a little fun.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Sorry.
J.
LANE: Yeah, sorry about that.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You know how we get when we smell politics in the water.
LANDON:
Forget it. I think Sanchez picked Richardson to keep the radical fringe of his
party behind him. He probably knew Richardson wouldn’t get the vote. It was a
bone to keep the other nutcases from running off and breaking his power base. I
don’t care for Sanchez’s politics, but he’s pretty rational, most of the time. Clever, too. He’s a decent guy when he’s not stepping all
over the . . . oh, forget it. Now I’m doing it.
J.
LANE: You should have some breathing time, anyway, before Congress votes on
Richardson. Things like this drag out a lot.
LANDON:
Mmm.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: LBJ went over a year without a veep when Kennedy was shot, and that was right after the
Cuban Missile Crisis.
LANDON:
Mmm.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Mmm?
LANDON:
Nothing.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Nothing what? What did that mean when you said mmm?
J.
LANE: Talk, Landon. Don’t make us put nasty things in your underwear drawer.
LANDON:
We don’t live in the world of 1963. You know that.
J.
LANE: So, you’re saying—
D.
MORGENDORFFER: When is Congress supposed to vote on Richardson?
LANDON:
It’ll come to the House tomorrow morning, and then it—
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Tomorrow? You must be kidding.
J.
LANE: Tomorrow, like tomorrow Monday?
LANDON:
Yeah. I’m sure they’ll put in the nomination then. I could try to put off the
vote by not recognizing anyone who might bring it up, but even if I only picked
people from my own party, which would really piss off the other side plus the
minor parties, anyway, there are people from my party who’ll bring it up.
Avoiding it won’t help.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Can you do anything about the vote, then?
LANDON:
It’s iffy because my party has a majority in the House of only two, but with Paletti sick, I’m stuck with throwing a tiebreaker vote if
it splits along party lines and the minor parties pick other people, which I’m
not sure they’ll do. I’d hate to do it, because my getting involved will really
tick some people off, but it would be better than seeing Richardson in the
number-two slot.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Heh heh heh,
you said “number two.”
LANDON:
What?
J.
LANE: What?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Forget it. Old joke from some guys I knew.
LANDON:
I got it. Richardson as a “number two” is about right. I think we’ll pull it
off and dump him without too much trouble, but you never know. Sanchez might
even thank me for it, if he can get someone he really wants.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: This vote just seems really quick to me.
LANDON:
It is. The other side’s pushing it hard.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Why so soon? Oh, wait. I get it.
J.
LANE: What?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: She’s next in line.
J.
LANE: She . . . oh.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You are next in line, right? In succession?
They haven’t changed that lately, have they? I mean, you’re next in line, you
know, if the, um . . .
LANDON:
That’s the way it’s supposed to work, yes. It won’t happen, though, so—
J.
LANE: But with whatever’s happening with Ivers, if
she can’t do it, you’re next in line to be president. Of the
United States of America.
LANDON:
Well, yeah, but with any luck at all, I’ll keep my present job and be able to
sleep at night. A little.
J.
LANE: Are you still next in line even though you aren’t in the same party as
the president?
LANDON:
Yes. That’s why they’re rushing the vote. End of story.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Oh.
J.
LANE: Oh.
LANDON:
Oh, what? Come on, knock it off. Nothing’s going to happen. Don’t look at me
like that.
J.
LANE: Okay.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Sure.
LANDON:
Talk to me. I’m still Jodie from Lawndale. Come on. Let’s get some jumbo shrimp
before everyone else finishes them off.
J.
LANE: Uh, yeah. You sure you won’t be veep?
LANDON:
How to put it tactfully . . . Sanchez doesn’t have any love for
middle-of-the-road types messing up his agenda.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: That sucks ass.
J.
LANE: That’s life.
LANDON:
That’s Washington, you mean.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: What’s the prez in Ottawa for, anyway?
Taking a last look around before we invade?
LANDON:
Sweet Christmas, Daria!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Joke.
J.
LANE: No one heard. I think.
LANDON:
I sure as hell hope not! Don’t kid around like that. He went up to show
solidarity with Burgess. Things are unsettled because of Quebec, so Sanchez
went north to shake hands and show the smiley face. That’s all.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Aren’t the Canadians going to be pissed about Richardson?
LANDON:
Burgess won’t like it, but he knows the score. Richardson will get tossed, at
least if I have any say over it, and maybe Sanchez will pick someone more to
their liking, like Lin or Hamrick. Lin’s parents were from Ottawa. I could live
with him.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: How are things in Canada now?
LANDON:
Not too good. The Quebecers are steamed about their Supreme Court ruling that
chopped up what they can take out of the confederation for their country. The
Inuit and Cree lands and all the hydroelectric dams thereon went to the federal
government. That will probably be made into another native-controlled province,
like Nunavit. The native lands in the south might do
the same. Plus, Montreal will pick up a huge debt burden, and some of its
leaders want to ignore it, which would really screw them on the world markets.
Some of the Maritime Provinces are mulling over joining the U.S. or forming
their own union, but they just say that to scare everyone else and get a little
attention. They’ll settle down. They’re not that crazy about us, really, but
they’re really mad at Quebec for pulling out.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Would you support any of the provinces like Quebec, if it went
independent or tried to join us?
LANDON:
You remember when you interviewed me for “Good Mornings” and asked me about
medical insurance legislation?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Uh, yeah?
LANDON:
You sound exactly like that now.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Oh. Sorry to turn into a reporter again. I was just curious.
LANDON:
I don’t want to get involved if I can help it. I personally don’t want to see
the United States break up, even if the potential next king of Hawaii is a
hunk. If I support a Canadian confederation breakup, I’ll fire a breakup here,
too. That Cascadia thing damn near drove me crazy.
J.
LANE: It happens no matter what we want. It happened to the Romans.
LANDON:
We’re not the Romans. I don’t care how many times the Euros call us that, we’re
not the Romans.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Half the states in the Union don’t want to recognize any of the
laws passed by the others. It’s like everything’s slowly falling apart.
LANDON:
That’s why I’m glad it’s Sanchez’s problem to be President and not mine. I have
enough trouble governing the House.
J.
LANE: If Hawaii left, we’d still have fifty states. We could use that old flag
again.
LANDON:
Yeah. Thank God for Puerto Rico.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: That was a nice flag.
J.
LANE: Symmetrical. Bold. Nice use of primary colors.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Familiar, yet strangely comforting.
LANDON:
I don’t want to see Hawaii go. They have a nice ballet troupe in Honolulu. I
like the way they mixed the native dancing in with it.
J.
LANE: Oh. You reminded me of something. Daria, hold my drink.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Make Jodie hold it. I brought something, too.
J.
LANE: Here.
LANDON:
Hey!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Hold my drink, too.
LANDON:
Do I look like the hired help?
J.
LANE: Fine, I’ll give you a dollar.
LANDON:
This had better be worth it.
J.
LANE: It is. Tah-dah!
LANDON:
Oh, my Lord! Where did you get that? Daria, hold these.
J.
LANE: I was going to use it in a collage, but someone’s article on page three
convinced me to save it, just in case. Here.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: The Lawndale Lowdown, our old high-school paper.
LANDON:
May 15th, 1998. My God.
J.
LANE: Page three. Go to page three.
LANDON:
Oh, no. Oh, no! You guys!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Great editorial.
J.
LANE: “‘Living Up to Your Potential,’ by Jodie Landon, Honor Society
President.”
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Did you really want to be a ballerina?
LANDON:
Oh, God.
J.
LANE: I like this part: “Fun is a luxury you cannot afford.”
D.
MORGENDORFFER: That was so absolutely Jodie.
LANDON:
I will so absolutely kill you if you even breathe a word of this to anyone.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: We made copies. If we turn up in a river somewhere, this gets
spammed out to every net channel there is.
LANDON:
Aaah! No!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Okay, we lied. This is the only copy left. We want to frame it
for you.
LANDON:
I swear, tomorrow morning I swear I am going to talk to the FBI about you two.
J.
LANE: Tell them Daria cheats at Scrabble.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: That was too a word! I even showed it to you in the dictionary!
J.
LANE: No one’s used that word in five hundred years!
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Well, I did!
J.
LANE: Cheater, cheater, cheater!
LANDON:
Excuse me, but you said you had else something for me?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Oh. Here.
J.
LANE: Cheater.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Shut up.
LANDON:
Is this a diary?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Yup. Mine, from when I was a sophomore, my first year at
Lawndale. I wrote something about you, right here.
LANDON:
“Jodie Landon, superstudent. Could
possibly become this country’s first African-American and female president if
the stress of being perfect doesn’t kill her first.” Well, it almost did
kill me, and I’m not even the President. Not even perfect, either.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: You’re close enough.
LANDON:
Do I get to frame your diary, too?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: No. I could get life in prison for some of the things I wrote in
here.
LANDON:
Where? Let’s see what else you’ve got in here.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Give me that! Hey!
LANDON:
Oh, what’s this you wrote about Trent? You had a crush on him?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Damn it! Give me—
LANDON:
Here. You can dish it out, but you can’t take it. For shame.
J.
LANE: Five shame, even.
D. MORGENDORFFER:
You can both—damn, is that your phone or mine?
J.
LANE: It’s not—
LANDON:
Mine. Excuse me.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Sure.
J.
LANE: Cheater.
LANDON:
Speaker Landon. Is this Bill? Who is this?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Admit it, Lane. I kicked your ass with both boots.
J.
LANE: I’ll never play with you again.
LANDON:
What? Repeat that. What?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Double or nothing, next game.
J.
LANE: Okay. Shhh. Wait.
LANDON:
When did this happen? Is that Eastern or Central Time? Did you see it happen?
Then, who did? Is it on the net? Where’s the President? Who saw him last, damn
it? Why doesn’t anyone know? Was he in the building? Was he anywhere in the
building, as far as anyone knows? Can you get me a picture? Send it to my
residence, right now. My line’s secure, just send it. Call me when you’re
ready. And call me when someone figures out where the President is! I have to
know immediately!
J.
LANE: Jodie?
LANDON:
Wait! Mister Rovello! Mister Rovello,
come here! We have to end the party, right now. Get everyone out of here, but
if anyone from the Cabinet or the Joint Chiefs is present, bring them
downstairs to my office at once. I saw the Secretary of State at the bar, make sure he’s there at least. Anyone from Congress,
bring them, too. Everyone else, out, as fast and nicely as you can. Get
everyone going.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Do you want us to—
LANDON:
Wait. Are you two still active press?
J.
LANE: Uh, no, our passes were revoked when the network—
LANDON:
I know your security clearances are good. If you’re inactive, then you can
stay, but you can’t be calling out and reporting what’s going on. I can’t have
an unsecured transmission going out from here. Can you do that?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: What happened?
LANDON:
I don’t know. I’ll tell you when I find out. Can you sit on this?
J.
LANE: Who are we going to tell? They fired us, remember?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: We’re the outcasts. Again.
LANDON:
Right. Stay here. Don’t drink too much at the bar.
J.
LANE: There she goes. What do you think happened?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Nothing good.
J.
LANE: Your phone still pick up scrambled
transmissions?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I’m on it. Shhh.
J.
LANE: Send it to my aural implant.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Okay. Oh. Oh, no.
J.
LANE: Shhh.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Christ.
J.
LANE: Daria? Are you getting video?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Shhh.
J.
LANE: Let’s go to the bar. Pretend to drink something.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I won’t be pretending.
J.
LANE: Is this on all the networks?
D.
MORGENDORFFER: Fourteen of them have it. It’s on the main net now.
J.
LANE: Let me see your video. I left my phone at the hotel.
D.
MORGENDORFFER: I can’t tell what that is. Oh. It’s from Ottawa.