"He has a black leather briefcase containing a set of codes that he has to use. The briefcase goes everywhere with him."

"And then . . . ?"

"It's automatic. There's a program called the Single Integrated Operational Plan. Our bombers and missiles take off with about three thousand nuclear weapons, and head for a thousand targets in the Communist bloc." Mawhinney made a flattening motion with his hand. "Wipe them out," he said with relish.

George was not buying this attitude. "And they do the same to us."

Mawhinney looked annoyed. "Listen, if we get the first punch in, we can destroy most of their weapons before they get off the ground."

"But we're not likely to get the first punch in, because we're not barbarians, and we don't want to start a nuclear war that would kill millions."

"That's where you politicians go wrong. A first strike is the way to win."

"Even if we do what you want, we'll only destroy most of their weapons, you said."

"Obviously, we won't get a hundred percent."

"So, whatever happens, the USA gets nuked."

"War is not a picnic," Mawhinney said angrily.

"If we avoid war, we can carry on having picnics."

Larry looked at his watch. "ExComm at ten," he said.

They left the Situation Room and went upstairs to the Cabinet Room. The president's senior advisers were gathering, with their aides. President Kennedy entered a few minutes after ten. This was the first time George had seen him since Maria's abortion. He stared at the president with new eyes. This middle-aged man in the dark suit with the faint stripe had fucked a young woman, then let her go to the abortion doctor on her own. George felt a momentary flash of pure vitriolic rage. At that moment he could have killed Jack Kennedy.

All the same, the president did not look evil. He was bearing the strain of the cares of the world, literally, and George, against his will, felt a pang of sympathy, too.

As usual, CIA chief McCone opened the meeting with an intelligence summary. In his customary soporific drone he announced news frightening enough to keep everyone wide awake. Five medium-range missile sites in Cuba were now fully operational. Each had four missiles, so there were now twenty nuclear weapons pointed at the United States and ready to be fired.

At least one had to be targeted on this building, George thought grimly, and his stomach cramped in fear.

McCone proposed round-the-clock surveillance of the sites. Eight U.S. Navy jets were ready to take off from Key West to overfly the launchpads at low level. Another eight would travel the same circuit this afternoon. When it got dark they would go again, illuminating the sites with flares. In addition, high-altitude reconnaissance flights by U-2 spy planes would continue.

George wondered what good that would do. The overflights might detect prelaunch activity, but what could the U.S. do about that? Even if the American bombers took off immediately, they would not reach Cuba before the missiles were fired.

And there was another problem. As well as nuclear missiles aimed at the USA, the Red Army in Cuba had SAMs, surface-to-air missiles designed to bring down aircraft. All twenty-four SAM batteries were operational, McCone reported, and their radar equipment had been switched on. So American planes overflying Cuba would now be tracked and targeted.

An aide came into the room with a long sheet of paper torn off a teletype machine. He gave it to President Kennedy. "This is from the Associated Press in Moscow," said the president, and he read it aloud. "'Premier Khrushchev told President Kennedy yesterday he would withdraw offensive weapons from Cuba if the United States withdrew its rockets from Turkey.'"

Mac Bundy, the national security adviser, said: "He did not."

George was as puzzled as everyone else. Khrushchev's letter yesterday had demanded that the USA promise not to invade Cuba. It had said nothing about Turkey. Had the Associated Press made a mistake? Or was Khrushchev up to his usual tricks?

The president said: "He may be putting out another letter."

That turned out to be the truth. In the next few minutes, further reports made the situation clearer. Khrushchev was making a completely separate new proposal, and had broadcast it on Radio Moscow.

"He's got us in a pretty good spot here," said President Kennedy. "Most people would regard this as not an unreasonable proposal."

Mac Bundy did not like that idea. "What 'most people,' Mr. President?"

The president said: "I think you're going to find it difficult to explain why we want to take hostile military action in Cuba when he's saying: 'Get yours out of Turkey and we'll get ours out of Cuba.' I think you've got a very touchy point there."

Bundy argued for going back to Khrushchev's first offer. "Why pick that track when he's offered us the other track in the last twenty-four hours?"

Impatiently, the president said: "This is their new and latest position--and it's a public one." The press did not yet know about Khrushchev's letter, but this new proposal had been made through the media.