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Page 56
Page 56
If Brady took the money from the company, how obligated was he to work with their interests? She knew that lobbying companies held a lot of influence. They swayed politicians one way or another with tactics from expensive dinners to just being downright annoying.
Brady’s father finished his speech to the sound of applause and then dinner was served. Brady ordered drinks from a passing waiter, and a glass of red wine was placed in front of Liz shortly afterward.
“So, Brady,” the man to her right said. “How is life in Congress?”
“Exceptional. We’re fighting the good fight.”
“And that education bill you’ve been working on—do you think that will come to the floor?” another man asked.
Brady had been working pretty extensively on a bill in the education committee that did a number of things, including lowering student loan interest rates for college students and removing fees for underprivileged students to apply to college and take standardized tests. Liz knew that ideally Brady wanted to include something that scaled back some of the mandates on teachers that put all the emphasis on test taking and less on applied learning, but he wasn’t sure if he could get that through Congress.
“We’re working on it right now,” Brady said vaguely.
“Getting stalled in the Rules Committee?” the first guy asked.
“Just waiting to get it on the calendar. I don’t think we’ll have too much trouble once it’s there.” Brady’s confidence about his projects oozed from every pore. She knew that when he was alone he had his doubts, but everyone was entitled to them. Brady just couldn’t allow his to show in public.
“Well, I think education reform is essential,” the wife of the second speaker spoke up. She was in her early fifties and strikingly beautiful, with short brown hair and long earrings that dangled to her shoulders. “Have you seen some of the things on the news right now? They say we have the highest test scores and grade point averages for incoming classes, and yet retention rates are down. I think this starts in the primary schools, and once professors get ahold of these students it’s almost beyond their repair.”
Liz smiled brightly. It was almost as if she were hearing her own words being spoken back to her. Her feature piece had been on this very subject, and it was encouraging to hear that someone else had similar ideas. “I completely agree,” she said, speaking up. “How do you expect professors to teach students critical thinking when they’ve only been taught memorization and how to take the test? You can’t. We need to be treating these students as more than just machines. They should be learning and experiencing subject matter, not plodding away, only able to recall what they had learned for their last exam. My father is a professor, and he always attempted to explain to me how the subject matter had a practical application, which assisted in cognitive reasoning skills. Seems pretty straightforward to me.”
“This is exactly the kind of forward thinking we need,” the woman’s husband said, tapping the table enthusiastically.
Brady found her hand under the table and squeezed gently. She smiled back at him softly just as dinner arrived. Brady had prime rib. Liz had decided on a braised chicken. She saw that Chelsea had just ordered a salad and was barely picking at it. They resumed the conversation as people began to eat their meals.
“You know, I recently started following this columnist and I think you would love him,” the woman said, pulling her phone out of her purse.
“Oh, really?” Liz asked enthusiastically. She was always looking for new people to follow.
“Yes! He hasn’t written much, but his pieces really strike a chord in the current debate. I was lucky that I caught his first piece quoted in the Post.”
Liz’s heart leaped into her throat. No . . . that was just a coincidence. Tons of people were quoted in the Post.
“Here we are. Oh, well he doesn’t list his name now that I’m looking for it, but he goes by Dear Congress.”
All of the air whooshed out of Liz’s lungs at once. She felt Brady’s hold on her tighten. He knew about her secret identity and she was sure he was listening very closely now. Neither of them wanted to be found out just yet. It was taxing knowing that she couldn’t reveal herself as this mysterious person, but at the same time exhilarating that her words were making a difference, they were being heard, and she had a voice once again.
“Dear Congress,” Brady said with a chuckle. “Sounds like someone I should start paying closer attention to.”
“You really should. He might help you with that bill you’re working on.”
“I’ll brush up on him—or her—when I get home, Barbara.”
Liz bit her lip and tried to keep from giggling. She knew that she shouldn’t think it funny, but it still was to her. If she was penetrating the reading circles of elite politicians, then it could only mean good things.
The conversation turned to lighter subjects and soon dinner was cleared away. The keynote speaker was a prominent North Carolina activist named Harold Carmine, who gave a charming speech centered around the bipartisan nature of the occasion and advocating compromise in the current divided times.
Carmine finished up his speech, the lights dimmed, and music started playing through the speakers. This was the beginning of the real party, where everyone could mingle and dance. Last time Liz had made it as far as the dessert table for Oreo cheesecake when Brady had swept her into a dance. This time she was looking forward to that dance, even if she still wasn’t that great a dancer.
Brady placed his hand on the small of her back and leaned into her when they stood. “I have to meet with Chelsea for a bit. Will you go with Barbara? She likes you.”
Liz laughed and nodded. “All right. Save me a dance.”
He arched an eyebrow. “You want to dance with me?”
“I think I do every night,” she whispered.
“That is a very different kind of dancing.”
“And I’m much better at it.”
“I’ll have you prove that to me later,” he said, squeezing her arm and then following Chelsea over to a now-empty table.
Liz followed Barbara over to another group of women and listened to them chatter among themselves. It was clear that they had all known one another for some time. Liz was introduced to several of the women and then conversation resumed. After a few pleasantries, the women started talking about some event they had all attended. Since Liz obviously hadn’t been there she found herself tuning the conversation out and just smiling and nodding at the right points.