Fabula
S2E2 · In the Shadow of Two Gunmen Part 2

Toby's Guilt-Fueled Resolve to Challenge Ron Butterfield

In a brisk hallway walk-and-talk, Leo reveals C.J.'s refusal to face morning show questions about the President's unprotected open-air exit—a vulnerability tied to Toby's own memo that may have doomed Josh. Defying Leo's warning that the Secret Service will stonewall on procedures, a guilt-ridden Toby insists on confronting Ron Butterfield anyway, transforming personal remorse into a principled demand for accountability amid White House chaos.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

5

Toby reveals his intention to confront Ron Butterfield about the Secret Service's open-air exit procedure, showing his guilt over the memo he wrote.

guilt to determination

Leo predicts Ron Butterfield's response, emphasizing the Secret Service's policy of not commenting on procedure, highlighting institutional resistance.

frustration to resignation

Toby insists on attempting to persuade Ron Butterfield despite the odds, demonstrating his moral responsibility and loyalty to the team.

determination to resolve

Leo reassures Toby that he doesn't have to confront Ron, but Toby firmly insists, solidifying his commitment to accountability.

support to resolve

Toby watches Leo exit, symbolizing the weight of their shared responsibility and the unspoken bond between them.

resolve to contemplation ['front door']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

5

Cautiously advisory, masking concern for Toby's emotional burden with steady pragmatism

Leo strides purposefully through the hallway in a classic walk-and-talk with Toby, delivering news of C.J.'s morning show refusal, warning about Secret Service stonewalling on procedures, and gently advising Toby he doesn't need to pursue the confrontation before exiting through the front door.

Goals in this moment
  • Dissuade Toby from a futile and risky confrontation
  • Preserve team cohesion amid mounting crises
Active beliefs
  • Secret Service protocols are non-negotiable and unyielding
  • Toby's guilt-driven pursuit won't yield results but could exacerbate fractures
Character traits
Pragmatic Protective Authoritative
Follow Leo Thomas …'s journey

Righteously determined, fueled by remorse transforming into unyielding accountability drive

Toby walks briskly alongside Leo, explaining C.J.'s questions on the open-air exit and his memo's role, defiantly announcing his plan to confront Ron Butterfield despite warnings, then pauses to watch Leo depart through the front door, resolve hardening.

Goals in this moment
  • Force Secret Service transparency on procedural lapses linked to Josh's shooting
  • Absolve personal guilt through public accountability push
Active beliefs
  • Transparency on security failures is essential for trust and prevention
  • His memo's influence demands personal intervention despite resistance
Character traits
Determined Guilt-ridden Principled
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

refuses to do the morning shows due to questions about the President's open-air exit

Character traits
assertive decisive witty terse poised wry charismatic tenacious strategic quick-thinking committed dutiful measured pragmatic resilient insightful protective authoritative playful
Follow C.J. Cregg's journey

referenced as having exited in the open air without the usual Secret Service tent or canopy

Character traits
decisive witty performative control of public optics loyal relational — centers staff and family poised emotionally forceful candid consequential centralizing (commands staff attention and schedules) commands institutional authority self-aware weary/resolute politically shrewd deliberative strategic paternal ruthless politically consequential politically pragmatic principled politically consequential (actions and associations create immediate risk) institutional (symbolic center of staff effort) committed collegial constitutional institutionally minded policy‑driven supportive vulnerable measured strategically vital burdened resolute protocol-driven regionally grounded authoritative/managerial jocular decisive when confronted with moral stakes witty/jocular under pressure intelligent vulnerable-to-proxy-actions protective (paternal focus on family safety) paternal/protective protective risk‑aware centralized authority figure ceremonial authoritative principled but electorally mindful calculating public-facing blunt politically strategic traditional decisive in crisis politically vulnerable (per party strategists and press) principled in public rhetoric
Follow Josiah Edward …'s journey

target of Toby's planned confrontation regarding Secret Service procedures on the President's exit

Character traits
guardedly tender professional dutiful pragmatic authoritative decisive resolute empathetic loyal precise defensive stoic methodical disciplined protective urgent under pressure
Follow Ron Butterfield …'s journey

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
White House Entrance

The West Wing Front Door frames Leo's decisive exit, swallowing his silhouette as Toby halts in watchful isolation, punctuating their debate with a physical severance that underscores Toby's solitary commitment to confronting Butterfield amid the hallway's fading echoes.

Atmosphere Abruptly isolating, heavy with unspoken reckonings and transitional weight
Function Departure point marking divergence in paths and resolve
Symbolism Threshold between internal chaos and external accountability demands
Access Secure entry/exit for cleared personnel only
Heavy panels sealing off internal tensions Pre-dawn shadows heightening dramatic finality

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Key Dialogue

"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. [...] Yeah, I should, though."