The Outsider
by Anthony Franze
on Tour March 21 - April 21, 2017
Synopsis:
A young law clerk finds himself caught in the crosshairs of a serial killer in this breathtaking thriller set in the high-pressure world of the Supreme Court, from renowned lawyer Anthony Franze.
Things arenât going well for Grayson Hernandez. He just graduated from a fourth-tier law school, heâs drowning in student debt, and the only job he can find is as a messenger. The position stings the most because itâs at the Supreme Court, where Gray is forced to watch the best and the brightestâthe elite group of lawyers who serve as the justicesâ law clerksâfrom the outside.
When Gray intervenes in a violent mugging, he lands in the good graces of the victim: the Chief Justice of the United States. Gray soon finds himself the newestâand unlikeliestâlaw clerk at the Supreme Court. Itâs another world: highbrow debates over justice and the law in the inner sanctum of the nationâs highest court; upscale dinners with his new friends; attention from Lauren Hart, the brilliant and beautiful co-clerk he canât stop thinking about.
But just as Gray begins to adapt to his new life, the FBI approaches him with unsettling news. The Feds think thereâs a killer connected to the Supreme Court. And they want Gray to be their eyes and ears inside One First Street. Little does Gray know that the FBI will soon set its sights on him.
Racing against the clock in a world cloaked in secrecy, Gray must uncover the truth before the murderer strikes again in this thrilling high-stakes story of power and revenge by Washington, D.C. lawyer-turned-author Anthony Franze.
Stellar Reviews:
âTHE OUTSIDER is as authentic and suspenseful as any John Grisham novelâand I like Grisham a lot.â âJAMES PATTERSON, #1 New York Times bestselling authorâCrafty and clever! Franzeâs insider knowledge of the Supreme Court sets this twisty legal thriller apart. The sympathetic plight of the outsider hero, Grayson Hernandez, will keep you glued to the pages; the explosive plot will leave you breathless.â âLISA GARDNER, #1 New York Times bestselling author
Book Details:
Genre: Legal Thriller
Published by: St. Martin's Press | Minotaur Books
Publication Date: March 21, 2017
Number of Pages: 320
ISBN: 1250071666 (ISBN13: 9781250071668)
Purchase Links: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Goodreads
Read an excerpt:
PROLOGUE
When her computer pinged, Amanda Hill ignored it. This late at night, she shouldnât have, but she did.All her energy was focused on tomorrowâs closing argument. Her office was dark, save the sharp cone of light from the desk lamp. Sheâd waited for everyone to leave so she could run through her final words to the jury. So she could practice as sheâd done a thousand times, pacing her office in front of imaginary jurors, explaining away the evidence against the latest criminal mastermind sheâd been appointed to represent. This one had left prints and DNA, and vivid images of the robbery had been captured by surveillance cameras.
She glanced out her window into the night. Normal people were home tucking in their children, watching a little TV before hitting the sack. Her little girl deserved better. She should call to check in, but she needed to get the closing done. Amandaâs mother was watching Isabelle, and her mom would call if she needed anything.
There was another ping. Then another. Irritated, Amanda reached for the mouse and clicked to her email. The subject line grabbed her attention:
URGENT MESSAGE ABOUT YOUR MOTHER AND ISABELLE!
Amanda opened the email. Strange, there was no name in the sender field. And the message had only a link. Was this one of those phishing scams?She almost deleted it, but the subject line caught her eye again. Her seven year old's name.
Her cursor hovered over the linkâ then she clicked. A video appeared on the screen. The footage was shaky, filmed on a smartphone. The scene was dark, but for a flashlight beam hitting a dirty floor. Then a whisper: âYou have thirty minutes to get here or they die.â
A chill slithered down Amandaâs back. This was a joke, right? A sick joke? She moved the mouse to shut down the video, but the flashlight ray crawled up a grimy wall and stopped on two figures. Amandaâs heart jumped into her throat. It was her mother and Isabelle. Bound, gagged, weeping.
âDupont Underground,â the voice hissed. âThirty minutes. If you call the police, weâll know. And theyâll die.â
The camera zoomed in on Isabelleâs tear-streaked face. Amandaâs computer began buzzing and flashing, consumed by a tornado virus.
Amanda drove erratically from her downtown office to Dupont Circle. She kept one eye on the road, the other on her smartphone that guided her to the only address she could find for âDupont Underground,â the abandoned street trolley line that ran under Washington, D.C.
Her mind raced. Why was this happening? It didnât make sense. It couldnât be a kidnapping for ransom. She had no moneyâ she was a public defender, for Christâs sake. A disgruntled client? No, this was too well organized. Too sophisticated. Common criminals, Amanda knew from her years representing them, were uneducated bumblers, not the type to plan out anything in their lives, much less something like this.
She checked the phone. She had only fifteen minutes. The GPS said sheâd be there in five. She tried to calm herself, control her breathing. She should call the police. But the warning played in her head: Weâll know. And theyâll die.
She pulled over on New Hampshire Avenue. The GPS said this was the place, but she saw no entrance to any underground. It was a business district. Law firms and lobby shops locked up for the night. She looked around, panicked and confused. There was nothing but a patch of construction across the street. Work on a manhole or sewer line. Or trolley entrance. Amanda leapt from her car and ran to the construction area. A four-foot-tall rectangular plywood structure jutted up from the sidewalk. It had a door on top, like a storm cellar. The padlock latch had been pried open, the wood splintered. Amanda swung open the door and peered down into the gloom.
She shouldnât go down there. But she heard a noise. A muffled scream? Amanda pointed her phoneâs flashlight into the chasm. A metal ladder disappeared into the darkness. She steeled herself, then climbed into the opening, the only light the weak bulb on her phone. When she reached the bottom, she stood quietly, looking down the long tunnel, listening. She heard the noise again and began running toward it.
Thatâs when she heard the footsteps behind her. She ran faster, her breaths coming in rasps, the footfalls from behind keeping pace. She wanted to turn and fight. She was a god-damned fighter. âAmanda Hill, The Bitch of Fifth Street,â sheâd heard the defendants call her around the courthouse. But the image of Isabelle and her motherâs faces, their desperation, drew her on.
The footsteps grew closer. She needed to suppress the fear, to find her family.
The blow to the head came without warning and slammed her to the ground. There was the sound of a boot stomping on plastic and the flashlight on her phone went out. The figure grabbed a fistful of her hair and dragged her to a small room off the tunnel. She was gasping for air now.
A lantern clicked on. Amanda heard the scurrying of tiny feet. She saw the two masses in the shadows and felt violently ill: her mother and Isabelle. Soiled rags stuffed in their mouths, hands and feet bound. Next to them the silhouette of someone spray-painting on the wall.
Amanda sat up quickly, and a piercing pain shot through her skull. She averted her eyes, hoping it was all a nightmare. But a voice cut through the whimpering of her family.
âLook at them!â Amanda lifted her gaze. She forced a smile, feigned a look of optimism, then mouthed a message to her daughter: Itâs okay. Everythingâs going to be okay.
It was a lie, of course. A godforsaken lie.
CHAPTER 1
Grayson Hernandez walked up to the lectern in the well of the U.S. Supreme Court. He wasnât intimidated by the marble columns that encased the room or the elevated mahogany bench where The Nine had been known to skewer even the most experienced advocates. He calmly pulled the lever on the side of the lectern to adjust its height, a move heâd learned watching the assistant solicitor generals showing off. He stood up straight and didnât look down at any notes; the best lawyers didnât use notes. And he began his oral argument.âMr. Chief Justice and may it please the courtââ He was immediately interrupted, not uncommon since the justices on average asked more than one hundred questions in the half hour of oral argument allotted to each side. But the voice, which rang though the chamber, wasnât from a justice of the highest court in the land.
âIâve told you before, Gray, you canât be in here.â The beam of a flashlight cut across the empty courtroom. Gray held up a hand to shield his eyes. He smiled at the Supreme Court Police officer making his nightly rounds.
âSomeday, counselor,â the officer said. âBut for now you might wanna focus on getting the nightlies delivered.â The officer swung the ray of light to Grayâs messenger cart filled with the eveningâs mail.
Gray waved at the officer, and returned to his cart. The wheel squeaked as he rolled it out of the courtroom and into the marble hallway.
In Chief Justice Douglasâs chambers, two law clerks were sitting in the reception area, fifteen feet apart, tossing a football between them. They seemed punchy, wired after a long day at the office, talking about one of the courtâs cases.
âA high school has no right to punish a kid for things he says off school grounds. The court needs to finally say so,â one of the clerks said. He was a stocky blond guy. Gray thought his name was Mike. Mike spiraled the ball to the other clerk who looked kind of like a young JFK.
âYouâre high if you think the chief is going to side with the student,â JFK said, catching the ball with a loud snap. âYou upload a violent rap song on YouTube saying your math teacher is sexually harassing students, youâre gonna get suspended.â
âEven if itâs true?â Mike said. The Supreme Court had thirty-six law clerks, four per justice. It was an internship like no other, promising young lawyers not only a ticket to any legal job in the country, but also the chance to leave their fingerprints on the most important legal questions of the day. The current clerks were all in their late twenties, the same age as Gray, but thatâs where the similarities ended. Like the two throwing the ball, almost all were white, from affluent backgrounds. Gray didnât think there were any Mexican Americans in the clerk pool, and certainly none who grew up in gritty Hamilton Heights, D.C. Theyâd all gone to Harvard or Yale or institutions that, unlike Grayâs law school, had ivy instead of graffiti on their walls. And they certainly werenât delivering mail.
Gray nodded hello as he lifted the stacks of certiorari petitions out of his cart and dropped them in the metal in-boxes for the chief âs clerks.
Mike looked at Gray. âNo, not more petitions, Iâm begging you.â Gray smiled, but didnât engage. His boss in the marshalâs office had a rule when it came to the justices and their law clerks: Speak only when necessary.
The ball whizzed across the reception area again. âIs it printed yet?â JFK asked. âI wanna get out of here.â He looked over to the printer, which was humming and spitting out paper. Gray worked tw night shifts a week, and there usually were no less than a dozen clerks still in the office. Theirs was a one-year gig, but they worked as if the justices wanted to squeeze five years out of them.
âIt wonât take long,â Mike said. âItâs a short memo, and I just want someone whoâs a disagreeable ass to point out any soft spots before I turn it into the chief.â
âYouâre wasting your time. Heâs never gonna side with the student, heââ
âThis case is no different than Tinker v. Des Moines Schools,â Mike countered. âThe court said disruptive speech at school could be punished, but not speech made off school grounds. Off-campus speech, including posting something on YouTube, should be covered by the First Amendment just like everything else. Itâs none of the schoolâs business.â
JFK gave a dismissive grunt. âA rap expert from Greenwich, Connecticut, I love it.â
Mike threw the ball hard at his co-clerk. âHey,â JFK said, shaking off the sting after reeling in the throw. âIâm just saying, the Tinker case was decided in the late sixties. You canât apply it in the digital world. Youâre in an ivory tower if you think the chief will blindly follow Tinker.â
Gray pretended not to listen, but he lingered, enjoying the intellectual banter.
The ball flew by again. âIvory tower?â Mike said. âFine, letâs ask an everyman.â He pointed the football at Gray. âHey, Greg, can we ask you something?â
Mike had once asked Gray his name, a regular man of the people.
âItâs Gray.â
âSorry. Gray. We have a question: Do you think if a high school student is off campus and posts something offensive on social media a school can punish him for it?â
JFK chimed in: âItâs not just posting something offensive. Itâs a profanity-laden rap that accuses a teacher of sexually harassing students and threatens to âput a capâ in the guy.â
Gray pondered the question as he retrieved mail from the outboxes. âI agree with what Murderous Malcolm said about the case.â The clerks shot each other a look. That morning the New York Times ran a story about the case, in which a famous rapper was interviewed and defended the studentâs right to free speech. Every morning the Supreme Courtâs library sent around an email aggregating news stories relating to the court. Gray was probably the only person at One First Street who read them all.
Gray continued. âI think the First Amendment allows a kid who saw a wrong happening to write a poem about it over a beat.â Gray wheeled the cart toward the door. âAnd if the chief justice disagrees, you might mention all the violence in those operas he loves so much.â
âThatâs what Iâm talking about,â Mike said, spiking the ball, then doing a ridiculous touchdown dance. He strutted over to Gray and gave him a high five.
For a moment, it felt like Gray was a clerk himself, an equal weighing in on the most important school-speech case in decades.
âHey, Gray,â JFK said. Gray turned, ready to continue his defense of the First Amendment.
âIâve got some books that need to be delivered to the library.â
When Gray arrived at the gym two hours later, his dad already had his hands wrapped and was hitting the heavy bag. There was a large sweat stain on his shirt. âYouâre late,â he called out.
âI told you, I have the night shift on Sundays,â Gray said. His dad didnât respond, just pounded the bag. He wasnât going to get any sympathy from Manny Hernandez about the night shift. This was his fatherâs one night off from the pizza shop. Since his dadâs cancer went into remission, theyâd been meeting every Sunday night at the old boxing club in Adams Morgan. Gray would have preferred that they spent these times together somewhere other than a smelly gym, but it made his father happy to see him back in the gloves. It was these moments that Gray was reminded that he probably wasnât the man his father had dreamed heâd become. With his books and big dreams, Gray was his motherâs boy. Gray punched the bag, the hits vibrating through him, his thoughts venturing to his earlier encounter with the law clerks. He threw his weight into his right.
Letâs ask an everyman.
Then his left.
Iâve got some books that need to be delivered to the library.
Gray continued to pummel the bag, his heart pounding, sweat dripping from his brow.
âSomethinâ wrong?â His father came and stood behind the bag, holding it in place as Gray kept going at it. âTalk to me.â
âItâs nothing,â Gray finally said, catching his breath, wiping his forehead with his arm. âJust work stuff.â
âI thought it was going well. Youâve loved that building since you were a little kid. And now youâre working there, helping the justices.â
âI donât think delivering the mail is exactly helping the justices, Dad.â
âItâs a foot in the door. Once they get to know you, see how smart you are . . .â
Things didnât work that way, but Gray wasnât in the mood to argue.
âItâll happen, son,â his father added. âYou just gotta pay your dues, Grayson.â
âI know, Dad, I know.â
CHAPTER 2
At seven the next morning, Gray sat at his cubicle, tired and his muscles aching from the workout the night before. He started his day, as always, slugging down a large coffee while reading SCOTUSblog, a website that covered the court. It was the first day of the new term, and the pundits predicted it would be an exciting year with several landmark cases.Gray turned when he felt a hand on his shoulder. Shelby, one of the marshalâs aides. A mistake heâd made after a night of drinking with the other aides. She made a point of saying sheâd never been with âa guy like him,â which he assumed meant a poor kid from a sketchy side of D.C. She worked part-time while finishing her senior year at Georgetown.
âMartin wants to see you,â she said. Gray looked across the expansive cube farm. He could see Martin Melnick, their supervisor, through the glass walls of his small interior office in the back. He was eating something wrapped in foil. A breakfast burrito, maybe. Shelbyâs expression summed up her assessment of Martin: Ick. Martin was in his late thirties, ancient by aide-pool standards. Overweight with bad teeth, he was the antithesis of the bright young things who worked at the high court, the butt of many jokes. He was never particularly nice to Gray; the opposite, actually. But Martin was good at his job and didnât deserve the ridicule, so Gray kind of rooted for him in all of his slobbiness. Before Gray made his way over to Martin, Shelby said, âWhoâs that?â She pointed to a photo pinned to Grayâs cubicle. It was of a boxer in the ring, bruised and battered, arms in the air, standing over his opponent who was out cold.
âMy dad, back in the day. He was a fighter in Mexico.â Gray had pinned it up his first day on the job. His own Facebook motivational meme.
Shelby squeezed Grayâs bicep. âI see where you getââ
âIâve gotta get over to Martin,â Gray said, politely extracting himself.
Martinâs office didnât help his image. Stacks of papers everywhere. Post-it notes all over the place. He glanced up at Gray and handed him an envelope.
âWe got a rush delivery for E.R.D.âs chambers.â E.R.D. were the initials for Edgar R. Douglas, the chief justice. In his month on the job, Gray had learned that the Supreme Court was obsessed with abbreviations and acronyms.
âOral arguments start at ten, so get this to his clerk ASAP. His nameâs on the envelope.â
Gray fast-walked up to the main floor, shuttling through the impressive Great Hall that was lined with marble columns and busts of past chief justices. He nodded at the officer manning the bronze latticework door and made his way to the chief justiceâs chambers. The chief âs secretary, a tough old bird named Olga Romanov, flicked him a glance.
âI have a delivery for Keir Landon.â âThe clerks are getting breakfast,â she said in her clipped Eastern European accent.
âDo you know where?â
âBreakfast. Where do you think?â Gray forced a smile, then headed back downstairs to the courtâs cafeteria. He marched past the assembly line of trays and the public seating area and into the private room reserved for the law clerks. A group of four were sitting at the long table.
Gray cleared his throat when they didnât look up. When that didnât work: âExcuse me. I have a delivery for Keir Landon.â
The guy from last night who looked like JFK popped his head up. He walked over to Gray and plucked the envelope from his hand.
âWhatâs up, Greg?â Mike said from the group. Before Gray could correct him again on the name, Grayâs phone pinged. A text from Martin, another rush delivery.
Gray hurried out, tapping a text to Martin as he paced quickly through the cafeteria. He didnât look up until he bumped into someone. A tiny woman in her seventies. It was only when the elderly womanâs food tray hit the floor that Gray recognized her: Justice Rose Fitzgerald Yorke. She looked different without the black robe. Always weird seeing the teacher out of school. Yorke was one of the most beloved members of the court. Gray had read that when Yorke graduated from Harvard in the fifties, the only woman and number one in her class, none of the white-shoe law firms would hire a woman as a lawyer. A few had offered to make her a secretary. Maybe that explained why she ate in the public cafeteria rather than the justicesâ private dining room, or why she organized the office birthday celebrations for every single employee at the court. She knew what it was like to be an outsider. She brought what some would derisively call empathy to her jurisprudence.
Justice Yorke bent over to pick up her spilled plate and silverware.
âJustice Yorke, Iâm so sorry. Please, let me clean this up.â Gray lightly put a hand on the elderly justiceâs arm.
âItâs no problem, young man, I can clean up after myself.â
âNo, really, itâs my fault. Please.â
The manager of the cafeteria was standing there now looking annoyed. He gestured for Justice Yorke to come with him to get a new plate. The manager shot Gray a hard look as he spirited the justice away.
So there he was on the first Monday in Octoberâ the opening day of the termâon hands and knees wiping up the floor, the clerks passing by on their way back to chambers.
You just gotta pay your dues, Grayson.
CHAPTER 3
At the end of his shift, Gray headed down to the courtâs garage to get his bike. In the elevator down, he contemplated his dinner options. He wasnât sure if he could take another night of ramen or SpaghettiOs. Maybe heâd go to the pizza shop. Or to his parentsâ apartment. Mom could always be counted on for a good meal, and he could bring some laundry. The elevator doors spread open to a field of gray concrete. The bike rack was empty but for his beat-up Schwinn. As he unlocked the chain, he heard a commotion. In the back, behind one of the support beams.Gray stepped toward the sound. Next to an SUV parked in a reserved spot he saw two men, one had fallen on the ground, the other standing over him. The guy must have slipped. Was he hurt? There was something about how he didnât try to get up and the stance of the other man that didnât seem quite right.
âEverything okay?â Gray said. The man who was standing whirled his head around. Thatâs when Gray noticed the ski mask.
Before Gray could process the situation, the assailant had kicked the man on the ground and charged Gray.
Grayâs father had taught him that when someone is coming at you, in the boxing ring or on the street, time slows. Natureâs way to give you a chance to evade the predator. And that was how Gray dodged the blade that lashed in a wide arc, grazing his abdomen. A panic washed over Gray. And when the attacker came at him again, it wasnât one of Dadâs bob-and-weaves that saved him, but a crude kickâ more Jason Statham than Cassius Clayâ that connected to Ski Maskâs chest. The guy slammed into a car, but he didnât go down. He roared forward at Gray again. Gray did a bull-fighterâs move and pushed the attacker past him, but felt a bite in his side. Ski Mask then jammed something into the small of Grayâs back. He felt a jolt of electricity burning into himâ a shockwave up his spineâ causing him to spasm and gasp for air. Gray went black for a moment, and then was flat on the cold concrete.
Gray watched as Ski Mask turned his attention to the other man who was on his feet now. It was only then that Gray got a good look at the victim: Chief Justice Douglas. The chief had scurried behind a car and was frantically thumbing a key fob, his panic button. The elevator dinged and Gray heard the slap of dress shoes on concrete, the courtâs police.
Still on the ground, Gray shifted his eyes toward the man in the ski mask, but he was gone. Grayâs vision blurred. He heard yelling. Then things went dark.
CHAPTER 4
Gray awoke to the scent of disinfectant and the presence of a crowd in the small hospital room. He mustâve been given painkillers because it was like watching a sitcom, one of those Latino family comedies written by white guys from Harvard. There was Mom, hovering over him, wiping his brow, pushing the giant plastic jug of hospital water at him. Dad, looking tired and too thin, wearing a flour-stained apron, staring at the old box television mounted from the ceiling. And big sis, Miranda, wrangling Grayâs seven-year-old nephew, Emilio.When they noticed his eyes open, they called for a doctor, and soon an intern was checking Grayâs pupils with a penlight.
Gray never got into drugs, but as he sat back in the relaxed haze, he was starting to understand the fascination. And for the next hour, or maybe it was longer, his family kept talking to himâ asking about the garage attackâ and he gave woozy responses. God knows what he said.
Sometime later, Grayâs attention turned to a familiar voice at the doorway.
âAlways gotta be the hero.â One of his oldest friends, Samantha. When they were in elementary school, Gray had intervened to save Sam from a schoolyard bully, only to have the kid then pummel Gray until Sam put an end to it by giving the kid the worst wedgie Gray had ever seen. Sam still gave him shit for it.
As Sam hugged everyone hello, Grayâs father shadowboxed and said, âHe used the moves I taught him.â
Gray didnât have the heart to tell him that most of the credit went to Jason Statham.
Sam came to his bedside and punched him in the arm.
âWhat was that for?â
âFor being so stupid. Youâre lucky to be alive.â
âThatâs what I said to him,â Mom said. The room grew loud again with his family talking over one another. Gray watched as his nephew reenacted Grayâs confrontation with the mugger. He was feeling the pull of sleep, more drugs theyâd put in the IV, and closed his eyes. He was just about to drift off when the room went suddenly quiet, a rarity at any Hernandez gathering.
His eyes popped open at another voice. âI owe you a thank you.â
There was a tall man standing at his bedside. He wore a sports jacket, shirt open at the collar. It took Gray a moment to realize it wasnât the drugs, it was really him. Chief Justice Douglas. âIt was nothing,â was all Gray managed in response. âNo, if you hadnât arrived when you did, then . . .â the chief's voice trailed off.
Gray introduced the chief justice to his family. He noticed the chief hold Samâs gaze a beat longer than comfortable when they shook hands. Sam had that effect on men, and Gray supposed Supreme Court justices were not immune to her beauty. To Gray, she was still the flat-chested tomboy he used to play dodgeball and video games with.
After the introductions, the chief pulled up a chair next to Grayâs bed. It was awkward to talk because the room was compact and his family wasnât too subtle about the gawking.
âSomeone at the court told me youâre a lawyer?â the chief said.
âTop of his class,â Grayâs mother said.
âMom, please.â Gray felt his face flush.
The chief justice smiled. âThe doctors said youâll be out of commission for a few days.â
âThatâs what they said, but I donât think itâll be more than a day. Iâm already feelingââ He stopped when he saw the hard look his mother was giving him.
âItâs always wise to listen to your mother,â the chief said with a dry chuckle.
His mom nodded, giving a satisfied smile.
âBut do me a favor, would you?â the chief continued.
âOf course.â
âWhen you get back to work, come by my chambers.â Before Gray could respond, the chief added, âYouâre not gonna be a messenger boy anymore.â
CHAPTER 5
âNothing? They found nothing?âSpecial Agent Emma Milstein asked. Her partner, Scott Cartwright, stood in front of Milsteinâs desk in the FBI field office, staring into an open file. Cartwright wore his usual navy suit, white shirt, plain tie clamped around his thick neck.
Cartwright shook his head. âA guy with a knife strolls into the Supreme Court, attacks a justice, and not one camera catches him, no one knows how he got in or out, nothing?â
âNada,â Cartwright said.
âWhat about the kid? Whatâs his name again?â Cartwright flipped a page in the file.
âHernandez. Grayson Hernandez. The Supreme Courtâs squad interviewed him. Been on the job there for about a month, well liked. Theyâre confident it was just wrong place, wrong time.â
âCriminal record?â
âNo, heâs a lawyer, actually.â
âA lawyer? I thought he was a messenger?â
âYeah, works in the marshalâs office. Times are tough in the law business, I guess,â Cartwright said.
âI guess so. Our guys agree with the Supreme Courtâs police? Weâre sure Hernandez is clean?â
Cartwright walked over and put the open file in front of Milstein. âWe donât think he was involved in the attack. He got into some trouble as a kidâ joyriding in a stolen car with some friends. But thatâs like jaywalking in Hamilton Heights.â
âHe grew up in Hamilton Heights? Donât they call that area âAfghanistanâ?â Milstein looked down at the file, studying the photo of Grayson Hernandez. He was a good-looking kid. Late-twenties. Striking blue eyes, unusual for a Hispanic. He had a scar that ran from the corner of his left eye to his ear. Jagged, no plastic surgery. âYeah, heâs a regular local boy makes good,â Cartwright said, heavy on the sarcasm.
âAny criminal associates?â
âHe was childhood friends with a real charmer, Arturo Alvarez, whoâs just out of prison and already at war with a rival sect. But it appears that Hernandez left the Heights and never looked back. The report says no contact with Alvarez in years.â
Milstein read through the rest of the file. âDoes the press know he was there when the chief was attacked? I donât need reporters sniffing around. If they find out thereâs a connection to Dupont Underground theyâllââ
âThey donât know anything,â Cartwright interrupted. âThe court released a statement about the mugging, but no details. Theyâre pretty tight-lipped up there.â
âWhatâs the Supreme Courtâs police chief saying?â
âAaron Dowell? Heâs saying we should mind our own fucking business. Theyâre in charge of protecting the chief.â
âYeah, theyâre doing a great job.â Cartwright said nothing. âWhen can we talk to the chief justice?â Milstein asked. âTheyâre still stonewalling. I donât think theyâre taking the connection to Dupont seriously.â
âYou told them we think itâs the same perp?â
âOf course I did. Iâm working on it, Em.â
âWork harder.â Milstein let out a loud, frustrated breath.
âYou want me to get you a snack or something?â Cartwright said. âWhen my kids get a little cranky, I bring them some Goldfish crackers and itââ
âAny luck on getting the wires?â Milstein said, ignoring him. Cartwright made a sound of disbelief. âNeal says youâre crazy if you think youâll get a bug anywhere near that building.â As usual, Neal Wyatt, the assistant director in charge of the field office, was being too cautious, playing politics.
âCowards.â
âYou need to tread lightly. This is the Supreme Court.â
âThe Franklin Theater fire was on July fifth. The Dupont Underground murders on August fifth. Now the attack on the chief October fifth. And we now know itâs the same perp. Whatâs it gonna take to get the Supreme Courtâs squad to take this seriously?â
Cartwright shook his head. âHopefully not another victim on November fifth.â
Author Bio:
ANTHONY FRANZE is a lawyer in the Appellate and Supreme Court practice of a prominent Washington, D.C. law firm, and a critically acclaimed thriller writer with novels set in the nationâs highest court. Franze has been a commentator on legal and Supreme Court issues for The New Republic, Bloomberg, National Law Journal, and other major media outlets. He is a board member and a Vice President of the International Thriller Writers organization.Franze lives in the Washington, D.C. area with his family.
I have this on my wish list since so many people are recommending it.
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