Narrative Web
S3E17
· Stirred

Leo Briefs Bartlet on Burning Nuclear Trucks and Stolen Rig Amid Pager Banter

Leo enters the Oval Office fresh from his AA meeting, facing Bartlet's playful ribbing about his sobriety 'luxury' and missing pager, which Bartlet cheekily retrieves from his pocket. Leo delivers a tense update on the Idaho crash: joint ops established, no radiation release yet, but both nuclear trucks burn uncontrollably beyond design limits. Revelation of a stolen second truck, its driver Garry Vernon Clarke dead in an apparent accident, escalates the crisis's peril. Bartlet probes the secretive meeting next door; Leo stonewalls. This beat humanizes their bond through banter while thrusting Bartlet deeper into national security peril, contrasting personal recovery with public catastrophe and teasing VP intrigue.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

6

Leo enters the Oval Office after being briefed on the Idaho crisis, expressing regret for not being present earlier.

concern to relief ['Oval Office']

Bartlet teases Leo about his missing pager, highlighting the tension between Leo's AA meetings and his professional duties.

jest to discomfort ['Oval Office']

Leo updates Bartlet on the hazardous situation in Idaho, revealing the trucks are still burning and the fire commander is pulling out his men.

concern to alarm ['Oval Office']

Bartlet jokes about being ahead of Leo in information, but Leo counters with new, critical information about the stolen truck involved in the crash.

jest to surprise ['Oval Office']

Leo reveals the identity of the deceased driver and suggests the crash was accidental, though the situation remains dangerously unpredictable.

surprise to resignation ['Oval Office']

Bartlet questions the nature of the incident as uniquely dangerous for nuclear waste transport, and Leo acknowledges the severity.

concern to acknowledgment ['Oval Office']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

Playfully teasing shifting to surprised concern then frustrated resolve at escalating intel

Greets Leo playfully, yanks pager from back pocket with theatrical mockery dubbing it a 'telephonic device,' probes crisis details intently, reacts with surprise to stolen truck revelation, sighs and questions accident context before pressing on next-door meeting.

Goals in this moment
  • Extract crisis updates from Leo immediately
  • Uncover details on secretive Roosevelt Room activity
Active beliefs
  • Leo's AA commitment creates vulnerability in crises
  • All intel, including thefts and deaths, demands scrutiny
Character traits
wry authoritative curious paternal
Follow Abigail Bartlet's journey

Mildly exasperated by banter yet professionally urgent and composed under crisis pressure

Enters Oval Office promptly after briefing, endures pager tease with retorts on missing the crisis start, delivers precise updates on joint ops, rad assessments, burning trucks, stolen rig and driver death, stonewalls Roosevelt Room query with curt dismissal.

Goals in this moment
  • Brief President fully on Idaho nuclear developments
  • Deflect inquiry into sensitive VP discussions
Active beliefs
  • Personal sobriety meetings are secondary to national emergencies
  • President must be shielded from political distractions amid crisis
Character traits
stoic dutiful sardonic protective
Follow Leo McGarry's journey

Deceased, inert in referenced accident

Named explicitly by Leo as the deceased driver of the stolen nuclear truck, his fatal accident in Idaho's remote crash humanizing the theft's toll amid the ongoing inferno.

Character traits
elusive reckless tragic
Follow Garry Vernon …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Leo's Pager

Bartlet invades Leo's back pocket to extract the pager with flamboyant flair, mocking it as a 'telephonic device' to rib AA-induced disconnection; Leo requests it back, prompting a casual over-the-shoulder toss that punctuates banter, symbolizing tension between recovery and readiness.

Before: Forgotten in Leo's back pocket, fabric-warmed and silent
After: Tossed back into Leo's possession, reactivated for duty
Before: Forgotten in Leo's back pocket, fabric-warmed and silent
After: Tossed back into Leo's possession, reactivated for duty

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

4
Elk Horn

Leo reports joint operations command establishing here, epicenter of Elk Horn's chaotic evacuations 20 miles from the crash, injecting immediacy into Oval briefing as sirens and refugee swarms underscore the human stakes of the burning trucks.

Atmosphere Frantic with evacuation sirens shredding the night
Function operations center
Symbolism Vulnerable heartland thrust into radiological peril
Sirens wailing through streets Traffic-choked roads to Caldwell armory
Boise State FEMA Office

Leo cites coordination with state FEMA here, Boise's nerve center slamming phones in sync with federal response to the uncontrollable fire and stolen rig shadows, bridging local urgency to presidential command.

Atmosphere Charged with urgent huddles and blazing lines
Function coordination hub
Symbolism State-federal fusion against catastrophe
Access Restricted to crisis coordinators
Phones ringing off hooks Hazard maps haunting walls
Glen's Ferry Rest Stop

Leo reveals the second truck stolen from this remote Idaho rest stop two weeks prior, its gravel-crunching isolation now menacing as origin of the dead driver's rig fueling Oval dread.

Atmosphere Eerily desolate with wind-rattled chain-link
Function theft site
Symbolism Unwitting cradle of stolen apocalypse
Phantom tire tracks on gravel Silent fuel pumps under desert chill
Baltimore

Leo invokes its train tunnel fire hitting 1,500°F to explain trucks' design failure, paralleling Baltimore's meltdown to heighten peril of Idaho's beyond-specs blaze.

Atmosphere Infernal with buckling steel and acrid haze
Function comparative hazard reference
Symbolism Precedent for uncontainable nuclear fire
1,500°F surging flames Smoke veiling concrete veins

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

3
Office of the Governor of Idaho

Leo confirms Oval coordination with them on Idaho response, their feverish liaison anchoring state muscle to federal directives amid the crash site's inferno and stolen rig fallout.

Representation Via Leo's briefing on joint ops
Power Dynamics Collaborating under White House authority
Impact Exemplifies federal-state crisis fusion
Synchronize local fire crews with feds Contain blaze without rad breach State-level command bridging to national Urgent liaison compressing timelines
State FEMA

Leo notes their Boise role in overall crisis rhythm, locking arms with feds to quarterback lockdown against burning trucks and theft shadows.

Representation Through coordination cited in briefing
Power Dynamics Supporting federal lead with state resources
Impact Steels national spine via local execution
Channel state grit into unified response Manage evacuations from Elk Horn Boots-on-ground surge Bureaucratic bridging
RAD Team

Leo relays their hazard assessment—no cesium airborne, no gamma/neutron reads—arming Bartlet with data lifeline amid uncontrollable fires, tempering catastrophe edge.

Representation Via Leo's quoted technical readout
Power Dynamics Providing expert intel to presidential command
Impact Scientific precision as first-responder backbone
Scan and assess rad threats precisely Deliver hazard data to Oval Scientific scanners in hot zones Real-time assessments shaping response

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 2
Causal

"C.J.'s urgent news about the truck crash in Idaho directly causes Leo's update to Bartlet about the hazardous situation and the ongoing crisis management."

Bartlet Joyfully Files Charlie's Taxes, Shattered by Crisis Alert
S3E17 · Stirred
Causal

"C.J.'s urgent news about the truck crash in Idaho directly causes Leo's update to Bartlet about the hazardous situation and the ongoing crisis management."

C.J. Interrupts with Urgent Idaho Uranium Crash Alert
S3E17 · Stirred

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"BARTLET: If only technology could invent some way to get in touch with you in an emergency. Some sort of telephonic device with a personalized number we could call to let you know that we needed you. Perhaps it would look something like this, Mr. Moto!"
"LEO: Both trucks are still burning. The fire commander's pulling out his men and equipment as soon as possible."
"BARTLET: So you know about the other truck. LEO: It was stolen from a rest stop outside of Glen's Ferry two weeks ago."