For Hillary Clinton's supporters, election night played out like a horror movie.
They'd gathered to celebrate. All the polls, all the predictions said this would be the year America elected its first female president.
As of midnight, those polls were looking more wrong by the minute.
"I seriously find it incomprehensible," said Monica Foote, sitting shellshocked at a gathering of Wellesley College alumnae in Edina. "He's a moron and a con man."
For the women of Wellesley, Clinton will always be the clear-eyed girl in the cap and gown who brought an entire campus to its feet when she derided leaders who "viewed politics as the art of the possible."
"The challenge now is to practice politics as the art of making what appears to be impossible possible," young Hillary Rodham told the crowd at her 1969 commencement speech.
But on election night, they watched the possibility of America's first female president slip away, state by state.
Her fellow alumnae, who had gathered for what was supposed to be a Minnesota victory celebration, watched in horror as state after state was called for Donald Trump.