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  • Episode 2.2 -- “In The Shadow Of Two Gunmen part 2”
    The West Wing Scripts/Season 2 2008. 11. 6. 16:58
    THE WEST WING
    “IN THE SHADOW OF TWO GUNMEN PART 2”
    WRITTEN BY: AARON SORKIN
    DIRECTED BY: THOMAS SCHLAMME
    
    
    TEASER
    
    FADE IN: EXT. OUTSIDE A DINER - NIGHT
    
    	TUESDAY, 3:28 AM
    
    Somewhere in the middle of not much obviously, the camera pans down from the hanging sign 
    of the diner: “The Dixie Pig Bar-B-Q.” We hear a news reporter on T.V. inside.
    
    T.V. REPORTER [VO]
    ...that there will be a press conference at the White House at 7:30  Eastern, that's 
    about four hours from now. Deputy Chief of Staff Joshua Lyman is currently undergoing 
    extensive surgery...
    
    CUT TO: INT. THE DIXIE PIG BAR-B-Q - CONTINUOUS
    The signal skinhead -- sans grey baseball cap, but still without hair, is smoking a 
    cigarette, watching the news.
    
    T.V. REPORTER [VO]
    ...to repair a collapsed lung, and remove a bullet that remains lodged in his thoracic 
    region. Now, for an update on his condition, let's go live to Lynn Blakely, who's 
    standing by at George Washington Hospital. She's got the latest for us.
    
    The camera pans from the T.V. screen down skinhead's head as he turns to watch a blonde 
    woman walk in. The camera moves to his hand as he takes the cigarette out of his mouth 
    and crushes it in his eggs. We see a swastika, etched on his hand.
    
    T.V. REPORTER [VO]
    Wait, we're not going to Lynn just yet. Now, I'm being told that authorities are 
    reporting another gunshot victim, a woman who...
     
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE THE DINER - CONTINUOUS 
    Skinhead is now walking outside, lighting another cigarette. And then all hell breaks 
    loose -- suddenly, a helicopter light comes on above him, pointing straight at him, 
    while just being surrounded by four police cars.
    
    POLICEMAN 1
    Let me see those hands! 
    
    POLICEMAN 2
    Hold it right there! 
    
    POLICEMAN 3
    Get down. Get down on the ground!
    
    The camera pulls away, as the bewildered skinhead -- who still has his unlit cigarette 
    in his mouth -- looks around in shock at the gun toting, screaming policemen, just as 
    Secret Service Agents pull up and join in. He puts his hands up and gets down on the 
    ground, surrounded by agents with really big guns.
     
    SMASH CUT TO: MAIN TITLES.
    END TEASER
    * * *
    
    ACT ONE
    
    FADE IN: INT. THE WHITE HOUSE BRIEFING ROOM - DAY
    C.J. is holding the 7:30 Press Conference.
    
    C.J.
    We're confirming now that a suspect is in custody, and is being questioned by federal 
    law enforcement. At this time, we cannot, we are not releasing any information whatsoever 
    about the suspect.
    
    STEVE
    Can you tell us anything, his name, where he's from, his ethnicity, if you guys suspect 
    a motive?
    
    C.J.
    Yes, Steve, I can tell you those things, because when I said that we weren't releasing 
    any information whatsoever, I meant except than his name, his address, his ethnicity, 
    and what we think his motives are.
    
    The reporters clamor for C.J.
    
    C.J.
    I am releasing the name of Stephanie Abbott, A-B-B-O-T-T, from Silver Spring, Maryland, 
    who was in the crowd, and sustained an injury to the left femur, which is the thighbone. 
    
    She begins flinching from the flashbulb lights.
    
    C.J.
    The President remains in stable condition in the recovery room, and is expected to return 
    home Wednesday. Josh Lyman is in his sixth hour of surgery...
    
    CUT TO: INT. G.W. WAITING ROOM - DAY
    C.J. is on the T.V. outside the waiting room. The camera pans into room itself, where 
    Toby, Donna, Abbey, Charlie and Sam sit with a few secret service agents, including 
    Gina, who's pacing.
    
    C.J. [VO]
    ...to repair a collapsed lung and a ruptured pulmonary artery. We very likely will not 
    have an update on his condition until the procedure is complete, which they expect will 
    be in the next 6 or 8 hours. We'll keep you updated in the next hour. Thank you very much.
    
    SAM
    [to Abbey] Ma'am, does the President know they've arrested a suspect?
    
    ABBEY
    Yes, I told him. He's pretty groggy after the anesthesia.
    
    An aide bursts in the room.
    
    AIDE
    Sam, Toby, you've got a phone call in the other room.
    
    Sam and Toby get up and leave the room.
    
    ABBEY 
    [to Donna] Donna? Do you want to throw some water on your face?
    
    DONNA
    You know, I should ask. Is there anything I'm supposed to be doing right now?
    
    ABBEY
    No.
    
    DONNA
    I mean, anything that Josh's office is supposed to be doing? Should I be making sure it's 
    farmed out?
    
    ABBEY
    No, I'm sure it's being covered.
     
    CUT TO: INT. COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    C.J. walks inside and into Toby's office.
    
    C.J. 
    [to Bonnie] You got them on the phone?
    
    BONNIE
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    [into speakerphone] Guys?
    
    SAM [VO]
    Yeah, we're here.
    
    C.J.
    Sam, I need you to come back to the White House and speak to Nancy McNally about a letter 
    the President was supposed to sign. She'll know what you're talking about.
    
    CUT TO: INT. G.W. HOSPITAL ROOM - CONTINUOUS
    Sam and Toby are in a hospital room, listening.
    
    SAM
    Yeah, all right.
    
    C.J.
    And Toby?
    
    TOBY
    Yeah?
    
    C.J.
    They're still asking about the tent.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    I'd be more comfortable with the "no comment" coming from the Secret Service, though... 
    
    SAM 
    [to Toby] What's this?
    
    TOBY
    They want to know why the President exited the building in the open air.
    
    SAM 
    [to C.J.] I'll talk to someone at Treasury.
    
    TOBY
    I'll do it.
    
    SAM
    No.
    
    C.J.
    Well, someone.
    
    SAM
    Toby, we were all in that meeting together.
    
    TOBY
    Go back to the office.
    
    SAM
    Okay. Okay. 
    
    Sam exits the room and walks down the hall.
    
    MAN’S VOICE [VO]
    Can the ships pass inspection? 
     
    CUT TO: INT. GAGE WHITNEY CONFERENCE ROOM - THREE YEARS EARLIER
    
    	GAGE WHITNEY PACE
    	MIDTOWN MANHATTAN
    	THREE YEARS EARLIER
    
    The camera pans down a long conference table, resting finally on an over the shoulder 
    shot of Sam.
    
    FEMALE LAWYER [VO]
    The ships will be registered in Libya and Panama, so they won't be subject to the OPA, 
    which wouldn't allow an American company to keep a tanker like this in service very long.
    
    ASSOCIATE
    I think 2017.
    
    FEMALE LAWYER
    I think 2015, and we'll check that, but you get the idea.
    
    MR. GAGE
    I think all that's left, then is to dot the tees.
    
    SAM
    Actually. I have a thing. I have a thing I was going to mention, just a proposal to throw 
    out there. When I was a congressional aide, we had an expression, “no idea was too stupid 
    to say out loud,” so here it is, bear me out. [beat] Instead of buying these ships? Don't 
    buy these ships. Buy other ships. Better ships. That's my idea.
    
    MR. LOCH 
    [to Mr. Gage] What is he talking about?
    
    MR. GAGE
    That's a perfectly fair question. Sam, what the hell are you talking about?
    
    SAM
    And the good news is we have a no-penalty clause we can exercise if we pull out before 
    the First of December. 
    
    MR. CAMERON
    But Sam, we want these ships. This is as little as we've ever paid for a fleet.
    
    SAM
    Well, there's a reason why they don't cost a lot of money. They're 20-year old single 
    hulled VLCCs that nobody wants. When they hit things, they will break. And they will 
    hit things, because they don't have state of the art navigation systems. They don't 
    have G3 tank gauging, or EM-5000 engine monitoring, the recommended staletronic, or 
    electopneumotronic ballast.
    
    MR. GAGE 
    [chuckling] And yesterday, he didn't know the difference between a ship and a boat!
    
    MR. LOCH
    Sam, I thought you told us that you covered our liability.
    
    SAM
    I did. Strictly speaking, I did. But there's a broader liability to think about. People 
    drove past Exxon Stations after the Valdez.
    
    MR. CAMERON
    We've got PR firms for PR problems.
    
    SAM
    There's a Suez tanker ready to launch in the Koje Island shipyard in Korea. Chevron just 
    dropped the option, and it's sitting there in its cradle. Let's go get it.
     
    MR. GAGE
    Sam, can I talk you for a second?
    
    Sam follows Mr. Gage out, while still talking to the client.
    
    SAM
    308,000 deadweight tons, carries 2.2 million gallons, and you can have it today for 46 
    million.
    
    MR. LOCH
    46 million dollars?
    
    SAM
    That's a good price!
    
    They walk out to the HALLWAY.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Sam, what are you doing? 
    
    SAM
    I think I have an obligation. 
    
    MR. GAGE
    What are you doing?
    
    SAM
    Maybe they want to buy safer boats, but we never gave them the option.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Are you trying to get fired?
    
    SAM
    Maybe they're really going to thank us for this suggestion.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Knock it off, Sam!
    
    SAM
    Look...
    
    MR. GAGE
    Knock it off! 
    
    He storms back inside the conference room.
     
    CUT TO: EXT. MANHATTAN PAY PHONE - DAY
    Josh is outside in the rain, back on the pay phone.
    
    JOSH
    [into phone] Look, Operator, I'm looking for the number of a law firm in Manhattan. 
    Here's the thing, I can't quite remember the name of the firm... no, wait, wait, wait! 
    I just came back from New Hampshire, where I saw this guy and now I have to... look it's 
    a very famous firm that handles Shearson, you must know... okay, you know what, I'm just 
    going to - okay, bye. 
    
    He hangs up the phone, runs to the curb -- Remembers! -- then turns back and runs the 
    other way.
     
    CUT TO: INT. THE CONFERENCE ROOM - CONTINUOUS
    The conference room again.
    
    MR. CAMERON
    That's amortized over--?
    
    FEMALE LAWYER
    15 years.
    
    MR. CAMERON
    Pre-tax?
    
    FEMALE LAWYER
    Sam?
    
    SAM
    Hmm?
    
    FEMALE LAWYER
    15 million pre-tax amortization.
    
    SAM 
    [to clients, giving it one last shot] 11 million extra dollars.
    
    The female lawyer groans.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Sam!
    
    MR. LOCH
    We're back to this.
    
    SAM
    Money's going to be spent, Mr. Loch, you can spend it now, or you can spend it later, 
    but it's cheaper to spend it now.
    
    MR. LOCH
    Sam.
    
    SAM
    And it's also the right thing to do. Spend 11 million extra dollars.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Sam!
    
    SAM
    Spend it on a better boat.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Damn it!
    
    SAM
    The Amoco Cadiz, 68 million gallons of crude oil off of Brittany, France. The Braer, 
    a Liberian Tanker 26 million gallons off the Shetland Islands. I just pulled these off 
    the internet last night! The Exxon Valdez. The Aegaen Sea. The Argo Merchant. Look it up!
    
    MR. GAGE
    I'm sure they're... 
    
    SAM
    Spend an extra 11 million dollars!
    
    MR. GAGE
    Sam, that's enough!
    
    SAM
    You don't want to pay for it? Pass the expense on to us.
    
    FEMALE LAWYER
    Sam!
    
    Past her, we can see a very wet Josh walking up the conference room doors.
    
    SAM
    Half a penny at the tank. Here's five bucks. A thousand people are on me.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Sam!
     
    Josh knocks on the window, causing Sam to look over to him. Josh is pretty much just 
    standing there, looking really wet and vaguely... prophetic.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Sam.
    
    Sam can't take his eyes off of Josh.
    
    FEMALE LAWYER
    Sam, we're in the middle of a meeting.
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    MR. LOCH
    Sam, we're not indifferent to the concerns of the environmentalists... Excuse me, Sam?
    
    Josh points to his non-poker-playing face.
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    MR. LOCH
    It doesn't quite feel like I have your attention.
    
    SAM
    Yeah. 
    
    Josh is still pointing to his face, smiles and nods slowly, Sam laughs.
    
    SAM
    Yeah! Yeah. 
    
    He shuffles his papers, then pulling away from them.
    
    SAM
    I'm not going to need that.
    
    MR. GAGE
    Sam? Sam! Sam, please keep your seat! Sam, where are you going?
    
    Sam gets up from the table and walks to the door. Josh opens the door for him.
    
    SAM 
    [shouts back] New Hampshire!
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT ONE
    * * *
    
    ACT TWO
    
    FADE IN: INT. HALLWAY - DAY
    
    	TUESDAY, 3:55 AM
     
    C.J. is waiting in a corridor for Sam, who comes walking out a door.
    
    C.J.
    Sam!
    
    SAM
    Yeah?
    
    C.J.
    I wanted to see if...
    
    SAM
    How's your head?
    
    C.J.
    Oh, it's fine. I wanted to see if you talked to Nancy McNally.
    
    SAM
    Yeah, and she talked to the Counsel's office, and they're going to work on a few things 
    and see what we like, but I got to tell you we're not going to --
    
    C.J.
    Sam, you didn't happen to notice, when the shooting started, you didn't happen to notice 
    who pulled me to the ground, did you?
    
    SAM
    No.
    
    C.J.
    They pulled me down behind the police car, and my necklace came off... 
    
    SAM
    No.
    
    C.J.
    You talked to Nancy McNally?
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Okay. 
    
    Sam goes off in one direction. Carol catches C.J. as she is going in the other direction.
    
    CAROL
    Oh, C.J.!
    
    C.J.
    Yeah.
    
    CAROL
    You need to call back Debbie at the Today Show.
    
    C.J.
    Why?
    
    CAROL
    We said you might be willing to do the morning shows when they go on the air at 7.
    
    C.J.
    No, that's not a good --
    
    CAROL
    They just wanted --
    
    C.J.
    No, I'm not doing any interviews just yet, I'm not doing it.
    
    CAROL
    I'll take care of it.
    
    C.J.
    Which one of our people?
    
    CAROL
    It was a mistake. I'll take care of it.
     
    C.J. keeps going, and runs into Danny.
    
    DANNY
    C.J.?
    
    C.J.
    Yeah.
    
    DANNY
    I really don't want to be this guy.
    
    C.J.
    Somebody around here thought I should do the morning shows.
    
    DANNY
    I still don't have an answer. 
    
    C.J.
    Who was in charge?
    
    DANNY
    For the three and a half hours that the President was under anesthesia.
    
    They end up back at C.J.'S OFFICE.
    
    C.J.
    Danny, it's a little complicated. There's something called the National Security Act of 
    1947. There's the 25th. Nancy McNally, the White House Counsel, Bill Hutchinson, they're 
    all working on it right now.
    
    DANNY
    Yeah, but they're going to tell me who's supposed to be in charge. I want to know who was 
    in charge.
    
    C.J.
    And we are working on that information. [on Danny's look] We're working on it.
    
    Danny leaves the office. C.J. sits down, scratching her neck when the phone rings on her 
    desk. C.J. reaches for it.
    
    QUICK CUT TO: INT. C.J.’S BEDROOM - THREE YEARS EARLIER
    C.J. reaches for the phone from her bed.
    
    C.J.
    Hello? [sits up groggily] Yeah? [picks up watch on bedstand] Isobel, it's 6:30 in the 
    morning! Yeah. 
    
    She hangs up the phone and climbs out of bed.
     
    CUT TO: EXT. BEAUTIFUL LOS ANGELES SKYLINE - DAY
    
    	TRITON-DAY PUBLIC RELATIONS
    	BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA
    
    We hear an aide knocking on someone’s door.
    
    AIDE [VO]
    Excuse me. C.J.'s here.
    
    CUT TO: INT. PUBLIC RELATIONS OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    ROGER BECKER, in sunglasses and an unbelievably garish Hawaiian shirt, is pacing agitated 
    in the corner behind the door. ISOBEL is at her desk.
    
    ISOBEL
    Thank you.
    
    C.J. walks in and closes the door behind her.
    
    C.J.
    Good morning, Isobel. Hi, Roger. 
    
    ROGER BECKER
    I asked her to be here 45 minutes ago.
    
    C.J.
    I'm sorry.
    
    ROGER
    I said, I asked her to be here 45 minutes ago.
    
    ISOBEL
    Roger... 
    
    C.J.
    It was 6:30 in the morning, Roger, I wasn't quite ready for work, but I am now. How can 
    I help you? [sits]
    
    ROGER
    Are you aware that the Golden Globe Nominations were announced this morning?
    
    C.J. looks at Isobel for confirmation. Isobel shrugs.
    
    C.J.
    I wasn't. Am I up for something? 
    
    ISOBEL
    C.J., Atlantis only got two nominations.
    
    ROGER
    For the entire studio! Best Comedy Score, and Supporting Actor for the kid. That's what 
    $20,000 a month bought us!
    
    C.J.
    Roger, I think we put together a very aggressive campaign.
    
    ROGER
    Two nominations!
    
    C.J.
    That's two nominations more than a lot of people got.
    
    ROGER
    Are you aware that the new Premiere Magazine list is coming out Monday?
    
    C.J.
    The Hundred Most Powerful People in Hollywood.
    
    ROGER
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Yes, I am, and I can tell you that you're on it, and uh, congratulations, and it must, 
    you know, feel good being that powerful.
    
    ROGER
    I went from third to ninth. I dropped to ninth! Do you know how that looks? Do you know 
    how many people were ahead of me?
    
    C.J.
    Eight?
    
    ROGER
    Lady, you're... 
    
    C.J.
    The movies were bad, Roger, all of them. Even the little kid was bad, but he was a little 
    kid, he had a couple of scenes, big eyeglasses, lisp, he's going to the Golden Globes. 
    You know why the New Coke marketing campaign failed? Because nobody liked New Coke. 
    The movies were bad. If the movies were unknown, I could help you, but they weren't. 
    They were just bad!
    
    ISOBEL
    Roger, would you excuse us for just a second, please?
     
    Isobel and C.J. step out into the HALLWAY.
    
    C.J.
    Sorry I talked to him like that, but did he really think he had "The Maltese Falcon" 
    out there?
    
    ISOBEL
    The thing is, C.J., he's big business for me.
    
    C.J.
    I'll apologize to him, Isobel. I'll find someone to make him Man of the Year. I'll ask 
    around in Vegas.
    
    ISOBEL
    He wants you fired. He thinks you're a smart mouth.
    
    C.J.
    He's going to pull his business unless you fire me?
    
    ISOBEL
    This was never what you wanted to be doing, C.J. You've always felt it was beneath you.
    
    C.J.
    It is beneath me!
    
    ISOBEL
    C.J.
    
    C.J.
    So take me off Film and Television, I don't know anything about it, anyway! We have 
    plenty of accounts...
    
    ISOBEL
    I need to keep his business. I'm sorry.
    
    C.J.
    You're firing me?
    
    ISOBEL
    I'm sorry.
    
    C.J.
    Out here in the hallway!?
    
    ISOBEL
    C.J.
    
    C.J. 
    [to the room at large] I need someone to call me a cab!
    
    ISOBEL
    I'm sorry?
    
    C.J.
    I couldn't get my contacts in this morning, and I broke my glasses getting out of the 
    car. I can't drive myself home. I need someone to call me a cab.
    
    ISOBEL 
    [to suit standing in lobby] Could you call a taxi for C.J., please? 
    [to C.J.] I have to go back in.
     
    Isobel turns around and opens the door to her office, just as she does so, C.J. yells 
    after her, with Roger plainly hearing--
    
    C.J.
    It was a bad movie, Isobel.
    
    ASSISTANT [VO]
    Yes, I need a taxi to Beverly Hills, please.
     
    CUT TO: EXT. A STREET IN HOLLYWOOD HILLS - DAY
    A taxi pulls up to C.J.'s house. C.J. gets out with a box of office stuff, pays the 
    cabbie, noticing a strange car in her driveway. She walks to the back of the house and 
    pushes open the gate.
    
    CUT TO: EXT. C.J.’S BACKYARD - CONTINUOUS
    C.J. goes inside her backyard, where there's a nice pool with Mexican tile. Toby is 
    sitting on the opposite side of the pool.
    
    C.J.
    Hello?
     
    TOBY
    Hey, C.J.
    
    C.J.
    Who is that?
    
    TOBY
    It's me.
     
    C.J. walks closer, following the edge of the pool. Toby waves his arms wildly.
    
    C.J.
    Toby?
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    What the hell are you --
    
    C.J. slips, missteps, and falls right into the pool. She surfaces, sputtering.
    
    TOBY
    C.J., you fell into the pool, there.
    
    C.J.
    I can't see!
    
    TOBY
    Yeah, well, maybe, kind of, uh, try to feel your way to dry land?
    
    C.J.
    Shut up! 
    
    Toby puts his hands on his hips. C.J. looks down at herself and then up at him.
    
    C.J.
    Avert your eyes!
    
    TOBY
    What?
    
    C.J.
    I'm climbing out of the pool, my clothes will be clingy, avert your eyes!
    
    TOBY 
    [chuckling] C.J., I really didn't come here --
    
    C.J.
    Avert your eyes!
    
    TOBY 
    [cowed] Okay. 
    
    He turns around. C.J. straggles out the pool, tries to cover herself with her wet 
    clothes, but it's really no use.
    
    C.J.
    Oh, turn around. 
    
    He does, and C.J. walks up the stairs past him, and reaches into the house for a towel.
    
    TOBY
    I tried calling you at your office. They said you were fired. Were you stealing things?
    
    C.J.
    Roger Becker dropped from third most powerful person in Hollywood to ninth most powerful 
    person in Hollywood.
    
    TOBY
    Does he still make the playoffs, or is the cutoff line...
    
    C.J.
    They take it seriously.
    
    TOBY
    C.J., Jed Bartlet is very impressed with you. 
    
    C.J. looks up at him, startled.
    
    TOBY
    He likes the work that you did with that girl's group with the stupid name.
    
    C.J.
    Emily's List?
    
    TOBY
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    That girl's group with the stupid name?
    
    TOBY
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    Emily's List -- "early money is like yeast".
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    "It helps raise the dough".
    
    TOBY
    I get it.
    
    C.J.
    They raise money for women candidates. “Early money is like yeast, it helps raise the 
    dough.” For the candidates.
    
    TOBY
    I really do get it.
    
    C.J.
    Bartlet's impressed with me?
    
    TOBY
    Very impressed. And one of the big keys to his game plan is bringing you on as Press 
    Secretary.
    
    C.J.
    He's never heard of me, has he? 
    
    TOBY
    No.
    
    C.J.
    Toby... 
    
    TOBY
    I'm here on instructions from Leo McGarry.
    
    C.J.
    McGarry wants me.
    
    TOBY
    Yes. Come join the campaign. 
    
    C.J.
    How much does it pay?
    
    TOBY
    How much were you making before? 
    
    C.J.
    $550,000 a year.
    
    TOBY
    This pays $600 a week.
    
    C.J.
    So this would be less.
    
    TOBY
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    Toby. Does he know I've only ever worked statewide? Does he know I've never worked on a 
    national campaign before?
    
    TOBY
    Yes. It's Graduation Day.
    
    C.J.
    You really think I can do this? 
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Is Jed Bartlet a good man?
    
    TOBY
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Toby.
    
    TOBY
    Yes.
    
    C.J.
    Then, let's go into the house so I can change my clothes and we can talk about it. 
    
    C.J. starts walking, still wringing out her hair.
    
    TOBY
    C.J.?
    
    C.J.
    Yeah?
    
    TOBY
    House is over there.
    
    C.J. 
    Okay.
     
    C.J. turns around, and Toby watches her go.
    
    CUT TO: INT. G.W. HOSPITAL ROOM - PRESENT
    In Bartlet's hospital room, Ron Butterfield briefs Bartlet, Abbey and Zoey.
    
    RON
    One of them was using 9 millimeter Baretta, the other had a 357 Desert Eagle.
    
    ABBEY
    Ron's saying that these were the absolutely wrong weapons to use for a shooting of this 
    kind. And that's why the injury count was as low as it was.
    
    BARTLET
    We don't know what the injury count is, yet.
    
    ABBEY
    Yeah, but his point is --
    
    The door opens. It's Charlie.
    
    CHARLIE
    Excuse me, sir, I was told you wanted to see me?
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah. Charlie, the guy the Secret Service has in custody is named Carl Leroy. He gives 
    a statement in which he says that he and the two shooters were members of an organization 
    called West Virginia White Pride.
    
    CHARLIE 
    They tried to kill the President 'cause Zoey and I are together?
    
    ABBEY
    No.
    
    CHARLIE
    Then why did --?
    
    RON
    Charlie. The President wasn't the target. According to the statement, the President 
    wasn't the target.
    
    Charlie tries hard to accept the fact.
    
    CHARLIE
    Oh. Okay. Okay, well. Okay. Thank you, Mr. President. 
    
    He exits.
    
    ZOEY
    Dad, I'm going to --
    
    BARTLET
    Go.
     
    Ron exits behind Zoey, closing the door.
    
    BARTLET 
    [to Abbey] We don't know what the injury count is, yet.
     
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT TWO
    * * *
    
    ACT THREE
    
    FADE IN: EXT. OVERVIEW OF THE WHITE HOUSE - DAY
    
    	TUESDAY, 6:15AM
     
    CUT TO: INT. LEO’S OFFICE - DAY
    Margaret and Leo are inside. Leo is sitting in a chair looking over papers, while 
    Margaret stands over him.
    
    MARGARET
    He was supposed to sign a letter?
    
    LEO
    The President is going under general anesthesia, he usually signs a letter handing over 
    executive powers to the Vice President.
    
    MARGARET
    And the President didn't sign the letter.
    
    LEO
    Nope. We blew that play.
    
    MARGARET
    Is there going to be trouble?
    
    LEO
    We'll see. To be honest with you, I don't really care right now.
    
    MARGARET
    Can I -- can I just say something for the future?
    
    LEO
    Yeah.
    
    MARGARET
    I can sign the President's name. I have his signature down pretty good.
    
    Leo looks up at her for the first time.
    
    LEO
    You can sign the President's name?
    
    MARGARET
    Yeah.
    
    LEO
    On a document removing him from power and handing it to someone else.
    
    MARGARET
    Yeah! [on Leo's look of disbelief] Or... do you think the White House Counsel would say 
    that was a bad idea.
    
    LEO
    I think the White House Counsel would say it was a coup d'etat!
    
    MARGARET
    Well. I'd probably end up doing some time for that.
    
    LEO
    I would think. 
    
    Margaret tries to beat a hasty retreat, as C.J. enters.
    
    LEO
    And what the hell were you doing practicing the President's signature?
    
    MARGARET
    It was just for fun. 
    
    LEO
    We've got separation of powers, checks and balances, and Margaret vetoing things and 
    sending them back to the Hill.
    
    C.J.
    Leo, who thought it was a good idea for me to do the morning shows?
    
    LEO
    I did.
    
    C.J.
    Why?
    
    LEO
    The President's not ready for cameras. If it's the Vice President, we're going to look 
    like we don't have a President, and I'd like the White House to start climbing out from 
    behind the bushes.
    
    C.J.
    I think it's a bad idea.
    
    LEO
    Why?
    
    C.J.
    I just... First of all, I think it's inappropriate while Josh, you know, until --
    
    LEO
    What's wrong?
    
    C.J.
    Nothing.
    
    LEO
    C.J.
    
    C.J.
    Nothing. I'd rather not do it, but obviously.
    
    LEO
    Have Sam do it.
    
    C.J. 
    [relieved] Okay. Listen, the letter.
    
    LEO
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    The three and a half hours? I don't know how much longer I can dance around Danny, and 
    it's going to be Danny times a hundred by lunchtime.
    
    Toby enters.
    
    LEO
    Have him come see me.
    
    C.J.
    Yeah?
    
    LEO
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Okay.
     
    CUT TO: INT. HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS
    Leo and Toby walk-and-talk down the corridors.
    
    LEO
    She doesn't want to do the morning shows.
    
    TOBY
    She says she's been getting a couple of questions about why the President exited in 
    the open air. You remember the Secret Service usually constructs a tent or a canopy. 
    I'm going to talk to Ron Butterfield.
    
    LEO
    He's going to say the Secret Service doesn't comment on procedure.
    
    TOBY
    I know. But maybe I can talk him out of it. I should try, anyway.
    
    LEO
    You don't have to, Toby.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah, I should, though.
    
    Toby watches Leo exit through the front door.
    
    CUT TO: INT. BARTLET’S CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS - THREE YEARS EARLIER
    It’s a very busy day at the headquarters. As the camera pans over volunteers, we see 
    Toby drinking coffee. It stops on Bartlet himself, leaning on a table on which a taped 
    news program is also running.
    
    	BARTLET CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS
    	MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE
     
    REPORTER [VO]
    ...won the non-binding straw poll, pulling in 48% of the vote, Senator William Willey 
    of Washington State drew a poorer than expected 22% of the vote, but the story this 
    morning is the 19% of the vote picked up by former New Hampshire Governor Jed Bartlet, 
    who leapfrogged several democratic candidates to finish a surprising third. And we're 
    going to go now to Governor Bartlet, who's standing by live... okay, I'm told we don't 
    have the Governor at this moment, so we while we try --
     
    C.J. clicks off the tape. Behind her, all facing Bartlet, are several campaign staffers, 
    including Sam, Toby, Leo and Josh.
    
    C.J.
    Okay, who can tell me what we did wrong there?
    
    BARTLET
    I blew it. What's next?
    
    C.J.
    We didn't have the candidate. That's right. Anyone who answered "we didn't have the 
    candidate" -
    
    BARTLET
    What's... next?
    
    JOSH
    Toby wants to say something. 
    
    BARTLET
    Which one is Toby?
    
    TOBY
    I am.
    
    BARTLET 
    [to Josh] And which one are you?
    
    JOSH
    I'm Josh.
    
    LEO 
    [to Toby] What was it you wanted to say?
    
    TOBY
    Let's get out of New Hampshire. 
    
    LEO
    Why?
    
    TOBY
    Nothing to win here.
    
    SAM
    He's right.
    
    BARTLET
    The New Hampshire primary isn't held in New Hampshire anymore?
    
    TOBY
    You can't win the New Hampshire primary.
    
    BARTLET
    I am going to win the New Hampshire primary.
    
    TOBY
    Which is why you can't win it. 
    
    JOSH
    You're incredibly popular in this state.
    
    SAM
    You're a democrat who was elected with 69 percent of the vote. That's unheard of.
    
    TOBY
    There's no way that you can exceed expectations, all you can hope for is an 
    "as expected", and there's always the possibility that you could embarrass yourself.
    
    BARTLET
    I appreciate that, thanks. 
    
    JOSH
    Toby meant in the polls.
    
    BARTLET
    I know what he meant.
    
    TOBY
    So, Hoynes will be in a fight with Wiley for a strong second place finish in 
    New Hampshire, meantime we're going to be in South Carolina, and we're going 
    to be the only ones there.
    
    BARTLET
    We're not going to beat Hoynes in South Carolina.
    
    TOBY
    We don't have to beat Hoynes in South Carolina.
    
    C.J.
    We just have to beat Wiley.
    
    BARTLET 
    [to Leo] Wiley's going to drop out after South Carolina?
    
    LEO
    If he doesn't finish higher than third.
    
    BARTLET
    Are we going to get his endorsement?
    
    LEO
    We're going to get his money, that's for sure.
    
    BARTLET
    It's for sure?
    
    LEO
    Josh thinks it is.
    
    BARTLET
    Which one is Josh?
    
    JOSH 
    [as Leo points at him] I am. 
    
    BARTLET
    Okay.
    
    TOBY
    So, we finish second in South Carolina, we pick up some steam, some endorsements, 
    mostly some money, going into South Dakota, Vermont, Maine --
    
    SAM
    Where we come away with a split, maybe better, and now the prohibitive nominee for the 
    democratic candidate has lost 3 out of seven contests...
    
    C.J.
    And half the actual primaries - 
    
    SAM
    Leading into Super Tuesday.
    
    JOSH
    Hoynes will take the South. We’ll take the North and the Pacific Northwest.
    
    TOBY
    This race will be decided a week later in Illinois.
    
    C.J. 
    Illinois will be High Noon.
    
    LEO
    Sam, if we win in Illinois, will we have a shot at California and New York?
    
    SAM
    If we win in Illinois, we're going to run the table.
    
    BARTLET
    Well, that's it, then. And we saved people the trouble of voting. What's next?
    
    JOSH
    Our point is that it's --
    
    BARTLET
    I understand the point. We're going to South Carolina to set up Illinois. When I ask, 
    "What's next?", it means that I'm ready to move on to other things. So, what's next?
    
    LEO
    We're done.
    
    BARTLET
    Fantastic.
    
    Bartlet gets up and walks away. Josh walks over to Leo.
     
    JOSH
    Well, I feel bathed in the warm embrace of the candidate.
    
    LEO
    He's very easy to like, once you get to know him.
    
    JOSH
    How many people get that far? 
    
    LEO
    Not that many.
    
    JOSH
    Okay.
     
    CUT TO: INT. BARTLET HEADQUARTERS, JOSH’S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Donna is sitting on Josh's desk at the campaign office, consulting his calendar as she 
    talks on the phone.
    
    DONNA 
    [into phone] Josh Lyman. Uh, no, he's not available right now. This afternoon? Uh, he's 
    got a media session, and then a five o'clock with finance. 
    
    Josh walks into his office, grabs a piece of paper, turns right around to leave and then 
    does a double take.
    
    DONNA [CONT.]
    I can get your name and number and give Josh the message when he gets back. Thank you 
    very much. 
    
    She hangs up the phone.
     
    JOSH
    Hi.
    
    DONNA
    Hi.
    
    JOSH
    Who are you?
    
    DONNA
    I'm Donna Moss, who are you? 
    
    JOSH
    I'm Josh Lyman.
    
    DONNA
    Ah.
    
    JOSH
    Yes.
    
    DONNA
    I'm your new assistant.
    
    JOSH
    Did I have an old assistant? 
    
    DONNA
    Maybe not.
    
    JOSH
    Who are you?
    
    DONNA
    I'm Donna Moss, I came here to volunteer and the woman assigned me to you.
    
    JOSH
    Which woman?
    
    DONNA
    Becky.
    
    JOSH
    You mean Margaret?
    
    DONNA
    Yes.
    
    JOSH
    Who are you?
    
    DONNA
    I'm Donna Moss, I'll be working as your assistant.
    
    JOSH
    I'm going to talk to Margaret. 
    
    DONNA 
    [blocking his way] Actually, Josh --
    
    JOSH
    Yeah?
    
    DONNA
    When I said I was assigned to you?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah?
    
    DONNA
    I may have been overstating it a little.
    
    JOSH
    Who are you?
     
    Josh and Donna walk and talk through the headquarters.
    
    DONNA
    I'm Donna Moss, I drove up here from Madison, Wisconsin?
    
    JOSH
    When did your boyfriend break up with you?
    
    DONNA
    What makes you think that my boyfriend broke up with me?
    
    JOSH
    Well, you're too old for your parents to have kicked you out of the house.
    
    DONNA
    I'm here because I want to work for Bartlet. I'm a college graduate, with a degree in 
    Political Science and Government.
    
    JOSH
    Where did you graduate?
    
    DONNA
    Hmm?
    
    JOSH
    Where did you graduate?
    
    DONNA
    Okay, when I said I graduated, I may have been overstating a little?
    
    JOSH
    Look --
    
    DONNA
    I was a couple of credits short.
    
    JOSH
    From where?
    
    DONNA
    University of Wisconsin.
    
    JOSH
    You majored in Political Science and Government?
    
    DONNA
    And, uh, Sociology and Psychology.
    
    JOSH
    Uh-huh.
    
    DONNA
    And biology for a while, with a minor in French?
    
    JOSH
    Okay.
    
    DONNA
    And, uh, drama?
    
    JOSH
    You had five majors and two minors in four years?
    
    DONNA
    Two years.
    
    JOSH
    Okay, listen...
    
    DONNA
    I had to drop out. I had to drop out.
    
    JOSH
    Your boyfriend was older than you?
    
    DONNA
    I think that question is of a personal nature?
    
    JOSH
    Donna, you were just at my desk, reading my calendar, answering my phone, and hoping 
    that I wouldn't notice that I never hired you. Your boyfriend was older?
    
    DONNA
    Yes.
    
    JOSH
    Law student?
    
    DONNA
    Medical student.
    
    JOSH
    And the idea was that you'd drop out and pay the bills till he was done with his 
    residency.
    
    DONNA
    Yes.
    
    They end up back in JOSH’S OFFICE.
    
    JOSH
    And why did Dr. Freeloader break up with you.
    
    DONNA
    What makes you think he broke up with me?
    
    JOSH
    Donna, this is a campaign for the Presidency, and there's nothing I take more seriously 
    than that. This can't be a place where people come to find their confidence and start 
    over. 
    
    DONNA
    Why not?
    
    JOSH
    I'm sorry?
    
    DONNA
    Why can't it be those things? 
    
    JOSH
    Because --
    
    DONNA
    What, is it going to interfere with my typing?
    
    JOSH
    Donna, we're picking up today and going to South Carolina. If you want to stay in the 
    Manchester office - 
    
    DONNA
    I want to come to Charleston. 
    
    JOSH
    I can't carry you, Donna! I got a lot of guys out there not making the trip.
    
    DONNA
    I'll pay my own way.
    
    JOSH
    With what?
    
    DONNA
    I'll sleep on the floor, I'll sell my car. Eventually, you're going to put me on salary.
    
    JOSH
    Donna.
    
    DONNA
    Look. I think I might be good at this. I think you might find me valuable.
     
    The phone rings. Josh and Donna stare at each other, his look measuring, her's 
    beseeching, through a couple of rings. Finally --
    
    JOSH
    Go ahead.
     
    Donna grabs the phone.
    
    DONNA
    [into phone] Bartlet for America, Josh Lyman's office. Uh, yes, I think I'm going to 
    have someone from the press office get back to you if it's related to -- yes. Uh, yes. 
    
    Josh takes his badge holder off his neck and hands it to Donna, who smiles.
    
    DONNA
    [into phone] Yes.
    
    FADE TO: INT. G.W. HOSPITAL - PRESENT
    A very concerned and teary-eyed Donna watches from outside Josh’s operating room, while 
    holding her White House badge.
    
    FADE OUT.
    END ACT THREE
    * * *
    
    ACT FOUR
    
    FADE IN: INT. THE WHITE HOUSE - DAY 
     
    	TUESDAY, 8:46 AM
     
    CUT TO: INT. SAM’S OFFICE - CONTINUOUS
    Sam is inside as C.J. knocks on the door.
    
    C.J.
    Hey, Spanky.
    
    SAM
    Oh, God, what did I do?
    
    C.J.
    Take a walk with me, would you? 
    
    C.J. and Sam walk and talk down the HALLWAY.
    
    C.J.
    They're taking him off bypass now. 
    
    SAM
    Yeah, I just heard. I'm going to head to the hospital.
    
    C.J.
    You did well on the morning shows. 
    
    SAM
    Thanks.
    
    C.J.
    I told Leo the reason I didn't want to do it was that it didn't feel right with Josh 
    still in surgery.
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    You know what the real reason was? 
    
    SAM
    The real reason?
    
    C.J.
    Yeah.
    
    SAM
    No.
    
    C.J.
    I think you do.
    
    SAM
    Listen, C.J....
    
    C.J.
    [to aide] Suzanne. [to Sam] The real reason I couldn't go on the morning shows and give 
    a first-hand account of what happened is that I couldn't remember what happened. 
    I remember walking out of the building, I remember somebody knocked me down, I know my 
    necklace came off, and I know a police car window exploded over my head. All night long, 
    I've been doing my press briefings using notes from other people's accounts. But it's 
    morning now, and after listening to you on the morning shows, I know what happened.
     
    SAM
    C.J....
    
    C.J.
    Sam. I think you have my necklace. 
    
    SAM
    I didn't want you to feel beholden to me. I didn't want it to be like an episode of 
    "I Dream of Jeannie" where now you have to save my life...
    
    C.J.
    Sam.
    
    SAM
    ...the time-space continuum, where you have to follow me around with coconut oil and 
    hot towels...
    
    C.J.
    Coconut oil?
    
    SAM
    I'm just saying.
    
    C.J.
    Sam, I don't feel beholden to you. 
    
    SAM
    Why not? I saved your life.
    
    C.J.
    Can I have my necklace back? 
    
    She smiles at him sweetly as he searches his pockets for the necklace and hands it to her.
    
    C.J.
    Thank you.
    
    SAM
    I'll be in my office.
    
    C.J.
    Sam?
    
    SAM
    Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Were you scared?
    
    SAM 
    [pauses and steadies himself] Yeah.
    
    C.J.
    Me too. Thanks.
     
    Sam walks back to his office. C.J. opens a door and steps into the loud and glare that 
    is the press room.
    
    C.J. [VO]
    I have an update, and I can give you a ballistics report, so let's get started.
    
    The reporters clamor for C.J.
     
    CUT TO: EXT. OUTSIDE G.W. HOSPITAL - DAY
    Ron Butterfield is doing a security check, as Toby walks up to him.
    
    TOBY
    Ron.
    
    RON
    Hey, Toby. I heard they're about to take him off bypass.
    
    TOBY
    Pretty soon, yeah. Listen, can I talk to you for a minute?
    
    RON
    Sure. [to cop] Sergeant, I want those people in the corner backed up another 200 feet.
    
    COP
    Yes, sir.
    
    RON
    And if they move again, then handcuff them to a parking meter.
    
    TOBY
    How's your hand?
    
    RON
    It's fine.
    
    TOBY
    You should be home.
    
    RON
    What's on your mind?
    
    TOBY
    C.J.'s starting to get some questions about why the President's exit wasn't covered in 
    Rosslyn.
    
    RON
    The Secret Service doesn't comment on procedure.
    
    TOBY
    Yeah. Ron, a few weeks after the President was sworn in, you got a memo about his 
    protection.
    
    RON
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    It said he wanted to enter and exit in the open air, and he didn't like the feeling of 
    traveling around in an armored tank.
    
    RON
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    Specifically, it said he wouldn't use the tent or the canopy anymore.
    
    RON
    Yeah.
    
    TOBY
    I wrote that memo, and the President signed it at my urging.
    
    RON
    I know.
    
    TOBY
    Ron, I don't think it's right that the Secret Service get blamed for what happened last 
    night, I want the Treasury Department to hand over my memo to the Press. 
    
    RON
    No, we can't do that.
    
    TOBY
    There are going to be a lot of questions.
    
    RON
    There are always a lot of questions.
    
    TOBY
    Ron.
    
    RON
    Don't worry about it, Toby.
    
    TOBY
    It's not right. You're the guys - look at your hand.
    
    RON
    My hand is fine.
    
    TOBY
    Your hand is not fine.
    
    RON
    Toby.
    
    TOBY
    Let me go over there and tell them it was my fault.
    
    RON
    It wasn't your fault.
    
    TOBY
    Ron.
    
    RON
    It wasn't your fault. It wasn't Gina's fault, it wasn't Charlie's fault, it wasn't 
    anybody's fault, Toby. It was an act of madmen. You think a tent was going to stop them? 
    We got the President in the car. We got Zoey in the car. And at 150 yards, five stories 
    up, the shooters were down 9.2 seconds after the first shot was fired. I would never let 
    you not let me protect the President. You tell us you don't like something, we figure out 
    something else. It was an act of madmen. Anyway, the Secret Service doesn't comment on 
    procedure. 
    
    TOBY
    Okay. 
    
    Ron walks away.
    
    TOBY
    Good job last night.
    
    RON
    Thank you.
    
    Toby sits down on a bench and sighs heavily.
     
    CUT TO: INT. THE BRIEFING ROOM - DAY
    C.J. is on a TV screen in the back of the pressroom holding another briefing. The camera 
    pans up to Leo, who is watching her. He gives the nod to Margaret, who pulls Danny aside 
    and directs him over to Leo.
    
    C.J.
    The Secret Service Agents carry a weapon called a .357 sig-hauer. The agents on the roof 
    shot the two men with .726 caliber rifles that are referred to as JAR, which believe it 
    or not, stands for "Just Another Rifle". They are made specifically and exclusively for 
    the Secret Service.
     
    Danny approaches Leo in the back of the room.
    
    C.J. [OS]
    I wanted to mention... 
    
    DANNY
    Leo?
    
    LEO
    Shh.
    
    C.J.
    This is our 5th press briefing since midnight. Obviously, there's one story that going 
    dominating news around the world for the next few days, and it would be easy to think 
    that President Bartlet, Joshua Lyman, and Stephanie Abbott were the only victims of a gun 
    crime last night. They weren't. Mark Davis and Sheila Evans of Philadelphia were killed 
    by a gun last night. He was a Biology Teacher and she was a Nursing student. Tina Bishop 
    and Linda Larkin were killed with a gun last night. They were 12. There were 36 homicides 
    last night. 480 sexual assaults, 3,411 robberies, 3,685 aggravated assaults, all at 
    gunpoint. And if anyone thinks those crimes could have been prevented if the victims 
    themselves had been carrying guns, I'd only remind you that the President of the United 
    States himself was shot last night while surrounded by the best trained armed guards in 
    the history of the world. Back to the briefing.
    
    C.J. continues the briefing.
    
    DANNY
    She's good.
    
    LEO
    Yes, she is.
    
    DANNY
    Leo...
    
    LEO
    I'm going to the hospital. Why don't you ride with me?
    
    Leo exits the Press Room as Danny follows.
     
    CUT TO: INT. A HOTEL ROOM IN CHICAGO - FLASHBACK
    
    	SHERATON CENTRE HOTEL
    	CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
    
    The T.V. screen shows the results from the primary. The camera pans across room, finally 
    following Sam and Leo as they cross it.
      
    SAM
    We're starting to get some good exit polling, at Stark County and Rock Island.
    
    LEO
    How good?
    
    SAM
    We're running at 53 to 58 with the undecideds, from 72 hours ago, at the 12th, 
    14th and 15th.
    
    LEO
    That's the Money!
    
    SAM
    DeWitt County, Cumberland!
    
    JOSH
    Yeah!
    
    LEO
    Who are you talking to?
    
    JOSH
    I'm talking to nobody. There's no one at my house.
    
    LEO
    What's going on?
    
    JOSH
    Nothing. My dad had his chemo today. These exit polls are going to cheer him up.
    
    LEO
    Sam said that we got the 72 hour undecideds in the 14th and 15th.
    
    Abbey walks up to them.
    
    ABBEY
    Leo, is there any food in this room that isn't fried?
    
    LEO
    Well, if there is, let's get rid of it.
    
    ABBEY
    I'm not kidding.
    
    LEO
    Good exits from Stark County and Rock Island.
    
    ABBEY
    How good?
    
    LEO
    They're good.
     
    BARTLET [VO]
    Leo! 
    
    Bartlet enters the arm, very grumpy.
    
    BARTLET
    What the hell is this?
    
    JOSH
    That's Sam's draft of your victory remarks.
    
    BARTLET
    "I congratulate my opponent on a well-fought campaign in Illinois"?
    
    LEO
    You don't want to congratulate him?
    
    BARTLET
    Yes, I want to congratulate him, but I'd like to call him by his name! Are we back to 
    this old crap again?
    
    JOSH
    Governor, we just--
    
    BARTLET
    Leo, I want to go over this whole thing with you.
    
    LEO
    Excuse me. 
    
    He follows Bartlet out of the room.
    
    BARTLET [VO]
    It's the exact same crap all over again! It's amateur hour...!
     
    ABBEY
    [to Josh] You can say it, you know. It's not like I haven't heard it before.
    
    JOSH
    Your husband's a real son of a bitch, Mrs. Bartlet.
    
    ABBEY
    He doesn't like being handled. 
    
    JOSH
    Well, I think that if he looked around, he'd see that nobody's handling him.
    
    ABBEY
    He's not ready yet, Josh. He's terrified.
    
    JOSH
    Well, is he going to be ready? 
    
    ABBEY
    You bet your ass he will. In the meantime, you want to kick something, kick me.
     
    We switch our view to Sam, Toby and C.J. by the T.V. 
    
    SAM
    Toby.
    
    C.J.
    Here it comes!
    
    T.V. REPORTER
    With 17% of the precincts reporting, we are now ready to call the Illinois primary for 
    former New Hampshire Governor Jed Bartlet.
    
    Everyone cheers, cheers, cheers all around, and hugs as "Celebration" by Kool and the 
    Gang plays.
    
    JOSH 
    [pointing at Sam] Yes!
     
    Leo enters and gives Josh a big hug.
    
    LEO
    Hey, hey, hey! Way to go! Now, let's get to California.
    
    Leo runs away to party.
    
    JOSH
    Leo, we've got to replace this music, we've got to replace it with some Doobie Brothers!
     
    Donna walks up to Josh apprehensively as the others party round.
    
    DONNA
    Josh?
    
    JOSH
    And Donna, you've got to get happy, Donna, you just won the Illinois Primary, come dance 
    with me!
    
    DONNA
    No, Josh. No, Josh... your father died. 
    
    Josh stares at her, stunned. 
     
    FADE TO: INT. CHICAGO AIRPORT - NIGHT
    In a T.V. screen at the airplane gate, we see a reporter.
    
    REPORTER
    ...very happy Bartlet Supporters. We are told the candidate is in the suite, refining 
    his remarks, he's due to be down here at any moment. Just over an hour ago...
    
    The camera pulls down to the coolest blocking on television. Two men walk under the TV, 
    one right past an oblivious Josh. The first man says something into his sleeve, and stops 
    to stand about three feet away from Josh, near the counter. The second man, earpiece 
    visible, walks past Josh on the other side of his seat, and stops to stand near the 
    windows. Josh doesn't quite realize what's going on until a third man slides into view 
    in the front left of the screen. All of a sudden, Bartlet appears, walking out of the 
    right side of screen, directly behind Josh. 
    
    [Do yourself a favor -- if you've got it on tape, watch it a couple of more times. 
    It's the coolest thing ever.]
    
    BARTLET
    Josh?
    
    JOSH
    [jumping up] Governor!
    
    BARTLET
    Your father died, Josh. I can't believe it.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, uh, Governor, you -- you shouldn't be here.
    
    BARTLET
    What happened? 
    
    Bartlet sits down. Josh also awkwardly sits.
    
    JOSH 
    He, uh, went for his chemotherapy and he unexpectedly developed a pulmonary embolism, 
    it's a --
    
    BARTLET
    It's a blood clot.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah. It went to his heart and there was cardiac arrest.
    
    BARTLET
    Yeah... Yeah.
    
    JOSH
    Governor, you should really get back to the ballroom, so that you can get on a plane and 
    get to California. 
    
    BARTLET
    He was a lawyer?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, a litigator.
    
    BARTLET
    Did he like that you were in politics?
    
    JOSH
    I think he would have liked grandchildren more.
    
    BARTLET
    [chuckling] He would've.
    
    JOSH
    He liked that I was working for you. He liked that we were starting to do well. 
    He would've liked tonight. At least his friends and neighbors will be spared all the... 
    you know...  
    
    BARTLET
    He'd have been doing some bragging?
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, and your name wouldn't have come up, by the way. "My son won the Illinois primary 
    tonight". Three more hours, and he would have been able to say that. He'd have been proud.
    
    BARTLET
    He was already. Trust me, Josh, I'm a father. He was already.
    
    JOSH
    I appreciate that, Governor. You should really get back to the hotel.
    
    BARTLET
    Nah, I'm okay.
    
    JOSH
    Sir, not that I don't appreciate you coming down here, but there's a ballroom full of 
    people waiting for a victory speech.
    
    BARTLET
    They'll wait.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah, they will, but the people watching television won't.
    
    BARTLET
    I've been a real jackass to you, Josh.
    
    JOSH
    Well.
    
    BARTLET
    To everybody. Toby Ziegler, C.J. Cregg, Sam Seaborn.
    
    JOSH
    Yeah.
    
    BARTLET
    Don't think I don't know what you gave up to work on this campaign, and don't think that 
    I don't know your value. And I'll never make you think I don't again. You got to be a 
    little impressed that I got all those names right just now. 
    
    Josh chuckles.
     
    FLIGHT ATTENDANT [VO]
    Delta Airlines Flight 175 to Kennedy International now boarding...
    
    JOSH
    They're calling my flight. 
    
    He gets up, and so does Bartlet.
    
    BARTLET
    You want me to go with you? 
    
    JOSH 
    [stops] Go with me?
    
    BARTLET
    Maybe you want some company on the plane. 
    
    He starts to feel all his pockets for his wallet.
    
    BARTLET
    I could get a ticket and come with you.
    
    JOSH
    Governor! California. You have to go the ballroom and give a Victory speech in primetime 
    and go to California.
    
    BARTLET
    I guess you're right.
    
    JOSH 
    [laughing] You guess I'm right? Listen to me, Governor, if you don't lose this election, 
    it isn't going to be because you didn't try hard enough. But it was nice of you to ask. 
    Thank you, I appreciate.
    
    BARTLET
    They're calling your flight. 
     
    Josh turns to board the plane, taking one last look at Bartlet, who nods encouragingly to 
    him. Josh boards the plane. Leo walks up behind Bartlet.
    
    LEO
    Is he going to be all right?
    
    BARTLET
    He's going to be fine.
    
    LEO
    Good.
    
    Bartlet turns around to face Leo.
    
    BARTLET
    Leo?
    
    LEO
    Yeah?
    
    BARTLET
    I'm ready.
    
    Leo grins in understanding, and then joins Bartlet as they walk out of the terminal, 
    several people recognizing Bartlet and stopping to shake his hand, all the while we hear 
    Bartlet giving his speech.
    
    BARTLET [VO]
    Tonight, what began on the commons in Concord, Massachusetts, as an alliance of farmers 
    and workers, of cobbles man and tinsmiths, of statesmen and students, of mothers and 
    wives, of men and boys, lives two centuries later as America! My name is Josiah Bartlet, 
    and I accept your nomination for the Presidency of the United States!
     
    The speech ends, we hear cheers and applause, but we--
    
    FADE TO WHITE.
    
    DR. HOLBROOK [VO]
    Josh? Josh, wake up, it's okay. 
    
    FADE TO: INT. HOSPITAL ROOM - PRESENT
    The camera is closed in on Josh, lying on his hospital bed, with his eyes closed.
    
    DR. HOLBROOK [OS]
    I want you to wake up.
     
    Josh opens his eyes slowly and looks around, muttering something as the camera pulls back 
    from his face. He is surrounded by Leo, the doctors, and Bartlet, who leans in.
    
    BARTLET
    I couldn't hear you, Josh.
    
    Bartlet leans in closer, and then pulls back.
    
    LEO
    What did he say?
    
    BARTLET
    He said, "What's next?"
    
    Bartlet lays his hand on Josh's head as we --
    
    DISSOLVE TO: END TITLES.
    FADE TO BLACK.
    THE END
    * * * 
    
    The West Wing and all its characters are properties of Aaron Sorkin, John Wells 
    Production, Warner Brothers Television, and NBC. No copyright infringement is intended.
     
    Episode 2.2 -- “In The Shadow Of Two Gunmen part 2”
    Original Airdate: October 4, 1999, 10:00 P.M. EST
     
    Transcript By: Camper
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