Ashli Babbitt was a prolific retweeter, and the last thing this Trump true believer retweeted before she was shot dead during the storming of the US Capitol Building on Wednesday was a call for Vice President Mike Pence to be charged with treason.
Pence, the ultimate survivor of the Trump administration, and previously The Donald's most ardent loyalist, lost the support of Babbitt, and thousands of others like her, when he refused to overturn the Electoral College votes certifying Joe Biden's election victory.
In a flash, the mob turned. Pence became part of the problem.
The incident reveals something of the volatility in American politics right now, as the dynamics of power shift chaotically, almost by the hour. Who holds the power right now, and to whom is it flowing? Is it still with Trump, forced at last to concede defeat, possibly toxic now because he went too far, but still capable of unleashing hell with a simple message to his foot soldiers? Or is it flowing towards Biden, the incoming president, perceived by some to be a weak candidate but bolstered by historic victories in both the White House and Senate? What of the Republican Party players, jockeying for position with an eye on 2024? And what of Trump's base, who proved they would not be silenced by taking the house of America's democracy in such a dramatic fashion?