The Final Twist Jeffery Deaver (ebook reader with android os TXT) đ
- Author: Jeffery Deaver
Book online «The Final Twist Jeffery Deaver (ebook reader with android os TXT) đ». Author Jeffery Deaver
âAsh didnât teach poli sci, I believe, but it was one of his passions. And with your father, thatâs passion with an uppercase âP.ââ
Shaw took the ruling from his backpack and handed it to the professor.
Before he read, Field turned it over in his hand, held it up to the light. âOriginal.â
âThatâs right. Nineteen oh-six.â
âTypewritten. Most official documents were, back then. People think typewritersâre a modern invention.â Field produced glasses and pulled it closer, pushing aside the teacup so thereâd be no accidents. He began to read, speaking absently. âDid you know the first electric typewriter was invented by Edison in the eighteen seventies? It became the ticker tape for the stock market andââ
He stopped speaking abruptly and his eyes grew wide as he stared at the words.
âProfessor Field?â Shaw asked.
The man didnât seem to hear. He leapt to his feet and pulled down an old leather-bound book from the shelf. He cracked it open and read, his face a knot of concentration. He closed this volume and found another. He flipped pages again and, still standing, traced a passage with his finger.
Then he uttered a gasp of shock and whispered, âHoly Jesus.â
48
Field ushered the brothers into the kitchen. âBigger table. We need a bigger table.â
The professor cleared the round piece of furniture of flowers and cookbooks. Then he set about gathering books from the library and stacking them here.
âCan we help?â Shaw asked.
Field didnât answer. He was lost in thoughtâand clearly dismayed.
Russell ran the back of his hand over the beard and he and his brother eyed the titles of the books the professor had plucked from shelves, all of which seemed to have to do with California history.
The last batch involved law books, California reporters and treatises. A U.S. Supreme Court Reporter too.
The professor didnât say a word. He kept skimming passages, marking some with a Post-it note and, in other instances, apparently synopsizing them on a yellow pad. Finally he sat back and muttered to himself. âItâs true. It canât be but it is . . .â
âProfessor?â Shaw was getting impatient. It was clear that Russell was too.
Staring at the tally certificate as if it were a land mine, Field said, âCaliforniaâs always had direct democracyâwhere citizens themselves approve or reject a certain law, including constitutional amendments. The governor and legislature approve a measure and then it goes to the people directly for a vote. If the majority approves, it changes the constitution. No further actionâs required.
âEnter Roland C. T. Briggs. Nineteen oh-six.â Field tapped a thin, leather-bound volume with the manâs name embossed in gold on the cover and spine. âHe commissioned this biography himself. It wasnât exactly a bestseller. The subject was, letâs say, unappealing. He should have had a co-author byline: written with his ego. Briggs was a real estate and railroad baron. Typical of the time: stole Native American land, worked his employees to death, drove competitors out of business illegally, monopolized industries. And I wonât even get into his personal peccadillos.â
Shaw thought immediately of Devereux.
âHis team of lawyers drafted Proposition Oh-Six. It was full of obscure changes to trade and taxation. Briggs and his operatives managed to coerce and cajoleâand bribeâthe state assembly and the governor into approving the referendum vote. And it went on the ballot.
âHis bludgeoning didnât stop there. He and his political machine pressured the people to vote for the referendum and it nearly made it. But it failed by a hairsbreadth. Everyone thought that was the end of the matter. Butâaccording to thisâno. It actually passed.â He nodded at the tally.
âI guess someone noticed irregularities in voting in the Twelfth Congressional District. Thatâs San Francisco. Maybe new ballots were discovered or there was evidence some were forged or duplicates. Anyway, a complaint must have been lodged and a state court judge reviewed the ballots and certified the new countâwhich was enough for the measure to pass and amend the constitution. Except that never happened.â
âWhy?â
âBecause of the earthquake. Look at the date on the certified vote tally. April seventeenth. The earthquake was at five in the morning the next day. A number of government buildings and records were destroyed, and dozens of officials were killed. The judge, this Selmer Clarke, was one of the fatalities. In the chaos and destruction after the earthquake, the recount was forgottenâand no one knew the proposition had in fact passed. Briggs probably wanted to put the matter on the ballot again but he died not long afterâof syphilis, it seemsâand the whole question of the amendment went away.â
Shaw asked, âWhatâs the âHoly Jesusâ factor?â
âProposition Oh-Six was dozens of pages long, but Briggs didnât care about ninety-nine percent of the measure. That was all smoke screenâso no one would focus on the only provision he cared about. Paragraph Fifteen.â
Field opened a book and thumbed through musty pages. âHere.â He pushed the volume toward the brothers.
Proposition 06
Paragraph 15. That section of the Constitution of the State of California which sets forth the requirements to hold office in the State shall be amended by the following:
To hold any public office in this State, all persons:
must have been a resident of California for the five years preceding their election or appointment,
must have attained the age of 21 years, and
must have been a citizen of these United States for 10 years, if a natural person.
Shaw and Russell read the passage then both looked toward the professor questioningly.
âLet me explain. Like all business tycoons of the day Briggs hated Marxism, and the growing communist movement, which said basically all the woes of the earth come from the elite owning the means of production and oppressing the working class. Lenin wouldnât start the revolution in Russia for another ten years but there was plenty of evidence that communism as a form of government was coming.
âBriggsâand more than a few of his âcomrades,â if I may use
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