Leo Brushes Off Margaret's Concern, Confides Divorce to Bartlet
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Leo swiftly dismisses Margaret's prying look about his personal life, returning focus to the crisis at hand.
Leo reveals to Bartlet that Margaret's concern stems from his divorce papers arriving, exposing his personal vulnerability amid the crisis.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Deep concern laced with awkward vulnerability and fear for Leo's well-being
Margaret stands by Leo's desk, awkwardly voicing concern about his divorce and alcoholism before announcing the President's call; she lingers with a pitying gaze until whispered away, exiting quickly after his glare and snap.
- • Express personal worry to support Leo emotionally
- • Relay the urgent presidential call without delay
- • Leo's personal struggles heighten his relapse risk amid crisis
- • Her role includes caring beyond administrative duties
focused and cautionary
calls Leo (VO), questions operational goals for tanker, seeks confirmation on F-18 pilots' actions and risks
- • obtain clear briefing on tanker crisis handling
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Cyprus-flagged tanker anchors the crisis dialogue as Leo briefs Bartlet on the core operational goal: seize it and escort to Bahrain, underscoring the high-stakes enforcement amid oil sanctions evasion that propels the scene's urgency.
Central Command's F-18s feature centrally in Leo's tactical outline to Bartlet—firing warning shots or targeting the propeller—while the President cautions on risks to the oil-laden tanker, heightening tension over potential catastrophe in the interdiction.
Leo's divorce papers, freshly arrived, catalyze Margaret's hovering concern and her awkward plea; Leo references them directly to Bartlet as the root of her pitying look and fear he'll drink, piercing his stoic veneer to expose personal turmoil amid professional crisis.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Bahrain emerges as the strategic endpoint in Leo's briefing to Bartlet—destination for escorting the seized tanker—evoking defended harbors and customs scrutiny that frame the operation's geopolitical stakes, blending enforcement triumph with transit peril.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Josh's clipped urgency about Bartlet's fatigue connects to Leo revealing his personal struggles with divorce papers, showing how personal and professional stresses are intertwined for the staff."
Key Dialogue
"MARGARET: Can I just say that all I meant before was that if I was married and got divorced and my divorce papers came and I was an alcoholic, I would want to be..."
"LEO: [whispering to Margaret] Would you stop looking at me like that?"
"LEO: My divorce papers came today. She thinks I'm going to drink"