Senator Dormin woke at the crack of dawn, as he usually did, and as he always did, spent a good hour grooming. It was his favorite part of the day.
As he practiced his various senatorial looks in the mirror (righteous indignation, studious interest, warm acknowledgement, and, of course, his all-purpose smile), said aloud "I wonder what my wife is up to today."
This always broke him up. It had been at least a week since they'd so much as spoken on the phone. He allowed himself this one admission per day, alone in his bathroom, of their marriage of convenience.
After a quick breakfast of a bran muffin and orange juice, he hopped in the limo, excited to start work. He read through the talking points prepared by his chief of staff. Most days there was nothing new, but he was very diligent about this. It was his most important skill: matching the correct look to each sound bite. No matter how many times he'd rehearsed and performed his lines on an issue, he still would go over and over each and every point in his mind.
Today was a little special. The senator had been newly assigned a big role by the White House. He was to help put up a smoke screen for one of the President's senior advisors, who was getting deeper and deeper into trouble with the press, and with the opposition in Congress. This would be a triple-play: studious interest as he listened to questions; righteous indignation as he explained to the press why this was all just partisan nonsense; and, naturally, a big smile as he wrapped up.
The chauffeur glanced in the mirror at the senator's facial contortions. "He's good. He's really good," he thought to himself.
A quick glance at his schedule revealed that the day started with a large portion of drudgery: making nice with big contributors. Senator Dormin had initially loved this part of his job, perhaps even more than press conferences. But as his self-confidence grew, as he became acclimated to Washington, he had diminishing patience. His own constituents were the worst. They always wanted to talk about one local issue or another. The senator could not care less about what was going on back home, unless it gave him an opportunity to get good press.
Today was no different -- behind that smile he was thinking "Just write the check, already!"
It was grueling. After two hours of glad-handing the yokels, he finally was rid of them for the day. "Hold my calls!" he barked to the receptionist, and closed his office door. Retreating to his office bathroom, he finally got in some more quality mirror time.
Back at his desk, he read his new spin assignment from the White House three more times. This looked like a fun one. He didn't know if the President's man was guilty, but it didn't matter. He wouldn't have to go anywhere near the facts of the case.
His phone beeped, and he glanced at his watch. "Time to meet the press!" said the voice of a junior staffer over the intercom.
"OK, I'll be out in a minute."
Back into the bathroom for another quick look in the mirror, and Senator Dormin was ready to go. Walking out the door with his staffer, he said aloud to nobody in particular "I love public service!"