James Bell - Deadlock

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Deadlock: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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In this legal thriller for the evangelical Christian market, former trial lawyer- turned-novelist Bell imagines what would happen if a prochoice, atheistic Supreme Court Justice suddenly became a born-again believer. A near brush with death and the sudden loss of her mother leaves 52-year-old liberal Justice Millicent "Millie" Hollander pondering eternity and considering faith. When she becomes chief justice, Millie discovers that the belief she has embraced excites a firestorm of confusion and anger from her former supporters. A case involving a separation of religion and state opens up a huge rift in the Court, and the media soon turns the whole affair into a three-ring circus. Alarmed about Millie's potentially conservative positions, the president and stereotypically hard-drinking, womanizing Sen. Sam Levering plot her impeachment and possibly her death. A weak subplot concerns a teen's abortion and subsequent lawsuit against the clinic where it was performed, which rather unconvincingly intersects with Millie's story toward the close of the novel. Portions of the plot aren't completely fresh Angela Elwell Hunt's recent The Justice ably tackled the same general topic for the same audience. But Bell's take on the idea of a Supreme Court justice making a religious about-face offers some unique spins, including a curveball plot development that will blindside most readers. Laudably, most characters are multidimensional, and even the senator's evil troubleshooter, Anne Deveraux, becomes worthy of pity. Evangelical prolife fiction aficionados should appreciate this addition to the CBA thriller genre.

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“Use the religious folks to get yourself elected,” he counseled his son. “But don’t fall into it yourself. The American religion is finishing first.”

Tad, he thought, soaked up every word.

But then that preacher got hold of his son, and Tad got “saved.” How Levering despised that word. As much as he despised the preacher, a man named Doty.

When Tad announced that he was a Christian, Levering almost went nuts. There had been huge arguments. Levering called Tad names he had never used before, even for political opponents. Tad took off.

That was eight years ago. Levering did manage to locate his son once through a private investigator. But Tad’s only response was to send his father a Bible with a note pleading for him to “turn to Christ.”

Levering sauntered to the bathroom and splashed cold water on his face, trying to put the past out of his mind. He heard his cell phone bleeping on the bed and went to answer it.

“Who’s your Huckleberry?” Anne Deveraux asked.

“Why do you keep saying that?” Levering asked.

“Heard it in a movie once. Now tell me who your Huckleberry is.”

“You, Anne.”

“Why?”

“Because you’re the best.”

“And do you know why?”

“Is this a personal call? Because I’ve got a ton – ”

“I’ll tell you why. Because I see things before they happen. I anticipate trouble.”

“Yes, you do, Anne.” It was true. She was the best in the business at not only getting out of a crisis, but steering clear of those that did not yet exist.

“Well,” Anne asked, “when can I see you?”

Levering went through his mental checklist. “I have several short meetings today.”

“Work me in.”

“When?”

“Now.”

“Why?”

“Let’s just say I see something coming.”

“What’s it about?”

“Madame Justice Millicent Mannings Hollander.”

Levering met Anne near Independence Avenue. The day was overcast but hot, making him sweat almost immediately. He felt like he was in detox.

She was waiting for him on a bench that offered a view of the Supreme Court building. She was eating a Power Bar and sipping a Starbucks.

“Breakfast?” Levering said, sitting next to her.

“And lunch and dinner,” she said. “This will take me to eleven o’clock tonight.”

The senator shook his head. “Aren’t you afraid of burnout, Anne?”

“No. Spontaneous combustion. If I’m not moving forward, I’m afraid I’ll explode.”

“What about your personal life?”

She looked at him. At least he assumed she was looking at him through her dark glasses. “Why the sudden interest in my personal life?”

Levering shrugged. “I was just thinking. You haven’t got a family. Maybe you should think about it.”

“Don’t go family values on me, Senator. I could not handle that paradigm shift.”

“Hey, you’re free to live your life.”

“Thanks for the vote of confidence. But it’s your life we should be talking about.”

“Go.”

Anne finished her Power Bar, tossing the wrapper into a trash can. Then she took a sip of coffee to wash it down. “Hollander,” she said. “Caution.”

“Why?”

“How much is Francis behind her for chief?”

“All the way. I made sure of that.”

“Tell him not to say anything yet.”

Levering used one of Anne’s favorite lines. “Detail me,” he said.

“The last thing you need is an unstable chief of the Supreme Court.”

“You talking because of the accident?”

“Of course.”

“But Millie Hollander has always been steady as a rock.”

“Accidents do things to people.”

“Yeah, but she’s been given a clean bill of health.”

“Physically, yes.”

Levering said, “Just tell me what you’re driving at.”

“They allowed her to go home yesterday. You may have seen the news.”

“I did.”

“Well, it may interest you to know that Madame Justice did not go straight to her home.”

Levering was duly impressed. “Are you telling me you tailed a justice of the highest court in the land?”

Anne fetched a cigarette from her purse. “Just doing my job. There’s a Barnes & Noble in a mall just over the Virginia line. Hollander’s car pulled up in front and the driver got out. He went into the bookstore and came out a few minutes later.”

“Big deal,” Levering said. “Maybe he wanted a magazine.”

Anne looked at him with mock disdain. “Would I be telling you this if I didn’t know what he came out with?”

“You know?”

“Of course I know.”

“Mind telling me how?”

“Let’s just say you can do a lot with a computer and a little money given to the right people.”

That was a political truth Levering had long been aware of. “So?”

“Ever hear of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross?”

“She a judge?”

“No, an author. She wrote about death.”

“Sounds like the life of the party.”

Anne ignored him. “Her most famous book is On Death and Dying. That’s one of the books the driver bought. The other was one called On Life After Death.”

Levering thought about this for a moment. “What do you make of it?”

“Red flag, Senator,” Anne said. “You’ve got a middle-aged woman who is almost killed by a car. She just happens to be a Supreme Court justice, but let that pass. She is suddenly very aware of her mortality. She wants to read books about death. On life after death. Now what would you say was going on?”

“Maybe she bought them for a friend?”

Anne blew an angry breath into the Washington, D.C., air. “Don’t avoid the obvious. She got shaken up. Not just physically, but mentally. When somebody starts thinking about death, things happen. Who knows what?”

Levering shook his head. “I can’t see it making a big difference.”

“Oh, you can’t. Well, do you believe in life after death?”

That one hit him like a question from O’Reilly. “No,” he said, wondering at that moment if he really believed it himself.

“Right. Now who does believe we pass into some heavenly reward? Or get reprocessed as something else? Answer: religious folks. What would happen if Justice Hollander got a sudden dose of religion?”

A bus rumbled by, belching exhaust. Levering watched it for a moment, sensing things getting cloudy. “I’m not worried,” he said.

“That makes one of us.”

“Besides, we have our little backup plan if we ever need it.”

Anne shook her head. “Only as a last resort.”

“So what do we do?”

“Whatever I say,” she said. “Agreed?”

Levering felt oddly secure. “Darlin’, you da man.”

CHAPTER FOUR

1

Walking gingerly up the ramp at LAX, Millie felt remarkably good. She did have a cane, one of those aluminum jobs that were standard hospital issue, but didn’t need to use it. Residual pain, for the moment, was muted. Dr. Cross would be pleased.

She hoped Mom was feeling well. Millie knew her accident, and the aftermath, had been hard on Ethel Hollander. The last time they had talked on the phone, her mother’s voice sounded a little slower than normal. As Millie hobbled through the gate, she was anxious to see her mother’s face.

What she saw, however, was a chaos of reporters. Only this time Dr. Cross was not there to intervene. She had been offered a secret service escort, but declined. She had never been one for governmental intrusion – into the lives of citizens or on behalf of justices. When she was off the bench she wanted to be an ordinary citizen herself. And she couldn’t imagine a secret service agent hovering around her in Santa Lucia. It would simply draw more attention.

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