known that for two hours,” Masterson interrupted. “What happened with the Woodruff petition?”
“It’s still alive.”
Masterson swore. “Millard couldn’t kill it?”
“He tried but Moss stepped in and convinced the other judges to defer a vote.”
“What’s the count?”
“Justices David and Martinez want cert granted. Moss won’t take a position, but Price thinks she’s leaning toward voting to grant.”
“Thank God for Chalmers’ wife. He would have been the fourth vote if Moss is in favor.”
Masterson went quiet. The caller waited.
“I want Moss’s chambers bugged,” Masterson said. “We have to know which way she’s leaning.”
“I’m on it.”
Masterson broke the connection and returned his attention to the world outside his office. In the streets below, people scurried back and forth with no idea of who was really running the world. From this height, they looked like ants, and Masterson viewed them with the same dispassion he viewed any other insect. Of the billions of people in the world, only a few counted, and he was one of them. But that could change if Sarah Woodruff’s case didn’t die in conference. As it stood now, Woodruff was just another criminal case from a Podunk state known for tree huggers, pretty mountains, and running shoes. Masterson could not risk the scrutiny it would receive if the Supreme Court took it up. Woodruff had to stay buried, and Dennis Masterson was willing to do anything to keep it six feet under.
Chapter Eight
The Supreme Court cafeteria is open to the public, but the clerks eat in a glassed-in section with a door that is always closed so they can discuss Court business freely without worrying about being overheard. Advance notice of, for instance, the way a business case is going to be decided can have all sorts of consequences, and the clerks were impressed from their first day with the need for secrecy. Brad never discussed his cases with anyone but his justice and his fellow clerks, and Ginny knew better than to ask about them.
Brad was grabbing an early lunch alone in the clerks’ area of the cafeteria when a tall, fit-looking man with a military haircut carried his tray to the seat across from him.
“Mind if I join you?”
“No, sit,” Brad answered. The man looked to be in his mid- to late thirties, which was old for a clerk, and Brad wondered if this was a visitor who had wandered into the clerks’ eating area by mistake.
“Are you Brad Miller?” the man said as he set down his tray. Brad braced himself for questions about the Farrington case. “Your fiancée is Ginny Striker, right?”
“Do you know Ginny?” Brad asked, relieved that he wasn’t going to have to fend off another nosy inquiry.
“I’m Kyle Peterson and I’m a senior associate at Rankin Lusk.”
Peterson saw the panicky expression on Brad’s face and laughed. “Don’t worry. I’m temporarily clerking for Justice Price until he hires someone to replace Frank Sheppard.”
Brad sobered immediately. “That was awful,” he said. Brad had met Frank his first week at the court. All of the clerks were shocked when he was badly injured in a hit-and-run accident.
“I never met him, but I heard he’s a very nice guy,” Peterson said.
“He is. So how did you get to take his place?”
“I worked with Justice Price when I started at Rankin Lusk, and we stayed in touch after he went on the Court. He’s comfortable with me, and he trusts my work. The firm thought it wouldn’t hurt for me to work up here, so . . .” Peterson shrugged.
“Do you work with Ginny?” Brad asked.
“We worked on a project together. When Justice Price asked me to fill in, I mentioned it to her and she told me you were clerking. I knew your name and what you look like from the papers and TV.”
“That is my curse.”
Peterson laughed. “So, how do you like clerking?”
“I really enjoy it. Justice Moss is great to work for, and the work is so interesting and