This is still a bad idea. But putting myself in Emilia’s debt had also been a bad idea. Letting Vivvie fish this phone out of her father’s trash had probably been a very bad idea. Not going straight to my sister with Vivvie’s accusations almost certainly was.
I brought my thumb to the phone’s keypad, scrolled down, and hit call before I could change my mind. This time, the phone rang. Once. Twice. Three times. I didn’t put it on speaker. My hand tightened around it with the fourth ring. I could feel my heart beating in my stomach.
No one is going to answer. Whoever Major Bharani was talking to on this phone, they’re long gone. That was what I told myself, right up to the point when someone picked up.
“I told you, you’ll get your money when I get my nomination.” The voice was male, deep and velvety with an American accent I couldn’t quite pinpoint. Whoever he was, he wasn’t happy. “Don’t call this number again.”
The line went dead.
“Any answer?” Emilia asked, unable to keep the curiosity from her tone.
I cradled the phone in my hand for a moment, then flipped it closed. “No.”
Asher met my eyes over his sister’s head. He wasn’t buying that answer. I didn’t expect him to.
You’ll get your money when I get my nomination. The words were burned into my brain. I’d wanted Vivvie to be wrong. I’d wanted this to be a mistake.
Clearly, however, it wasn’t.
CHAPTER 26
“The process for appointing a judge to the Supreme Court is an involved one. It starts with the president and his staff vetting candidates for the nomination. Who can they get past the Senate? Who best serves the party’s needs?” As Dr. Clark lectured, I thought of the president telling Ivy to dig for skeletons in someone’s closet.
I tried not to think of the voice on the other end of the phone line.
You’ll get your money when I get my nomination.
“Eventually, the president selects a nominee, typically one who shares his broader ideological viewpoint. Once appointed, the only way a justice can be removed from the bench is impeachment—and no justice has been so impeached since 1804. As a result, Supreme Court appointments have the potential to dramatically change our legal and political landscape for decades.”
As the class wore on, we got a brief overview of some of the biggest cases the Supreme Court had ever taken on. Voting rights. Segregation. Women’s health.
“The president’s nominee eventually goes before the Senate Judiciary Committee,” Dr. Clark continued. “During the hearings that follow, the nominee is questioned on everything from their record to their personal life. The committee then issues an assessment. A negative evaluation might send the president’s team scrambling for a new nominee. Eventually, to get a confirmation, the would-be justice will have to be confirmed by a majority vote of the Senate.”
Dr. Clark leaned back against her desk. “It probably won’t come as a surprise to most of you to hear that long before the nomination goes to the floor, lobbyists and special interest parties will already be attempting to sway votes, one way or another.”
Lobbyists. Special interest. She was speaking a language that was foreign to me, but for many of my classmates, it was their native tongue. I understood only that there were a lot of reasons for different groups to want—or not want—a person on the Supreme Court.
I tried not to think about the fact that there were probably just as many reasons to want a Supreme Court justice dead.
There were two numbers on the phone’s call log. I couldn’t stop the gears in my mind from turning. One of the numbers had belonged to the man I’d talked to. And the other?
That one was a giant question mark.
“For the next two weeks, you and your partner will be playing the role of the president.” Dr. Clark began handing out an outline of our assignment. “You’ll be researching candidates, putting forth your own nominee. Think of it like March Madness, but instead of putting together a bracket, you have your eye on the prize, and instead of winning a championship, the appointee instantly becomes one of the most powerful individuals in our country.”
I took the sheet someone passed me and stared down at it. There were dozens of names on this list: possible nominees to research.
“Mr. Marquette.” Dr. Clark lowered her voice as she came to Henry. “If you would prefer an alternative assignment . . .”
“No,” Henry said, his posture almost supernaturally straight, his face giving nothing away. “This will be fine.”
“You know something,” Vivvie said the second we settled in the back corner of the room to “brainstorm” for our project. “I know you know something. You have that look on your face.”
I tried to think of a way to catch Vivvie up to speed without hurting her. That way didn’t exist.
“There were two numbers on the phone.” I stuck to the facts, as bare-bones as I could make them. “We called both of them.”
“We?” Vivvie leaned toward me, her eyes wide and panicked. “Who’s we?”