We present the first simultaneous radio, X-ray, ultraviolet, and optical spectroscopic observations of the M8.5 dwarf TVLM 513–46546, with a duration of 9 hr. These observations are part of a program to study the origin of magnetic activity in ultracool dwarfs, and its impact on chromospheric and coronal emission. Here we detect steady quiescent radio emission superposed with multiple short-duration, highly polarized flares; there is no evidence for periodic bursts previously reported for this object, indicating their transient nature. We also detect soft X-ray emission, with -->LX/Lbol ≈ 10−5.1, the faintest to date for any object later than M5, and a possible X-ray flare. TVLM 513–46546 continues the trend of severe violation of the radio/X-ray correlation in ultracool dwarfs, by nearly 4 orders of magnitude. From the optical spectroscopy we find that the Balmer line luminosity exceeds the X-ray luminosity by a factor of a few, ruling out chromospheric heating by coronal X-ray emission. More importantly, we detect sinusoidal Hα and Hβ equivalent width light curves with a period of 2 hr, matching the rotation period of TVLM 513–46546. This behavior points to a corotating chromospheric hot spot or an extended magnetic structure, with a covering fraction of about 50%. This feature may be transitory based on the apparent decline in light-curve peak during the four observed maxima. From the radio data we infer a large-scale and steady magnetic field of ~102 G. A large-scale field is also required by the sinusoidal Balmer line emission. The radio flares, on the other hand, are produced in a component of the field with a strength of ~3 kG and a likely multipolar configuration. The overall lack of correlation between the various activity indicators suggests that the short-duration radio flares do not have a strong influence on the chromosphere and corona, and that the chromospheric emission is not the result of coronal heating.