The Voter Index
Chapter 1 — Election Night By the time Pennsylvania began to turn, Elias Ward had been sitting in the same chair for nearly six hours, long enough for the muscles at the base of his neck to harden and for the room around him to lose the ordinary comfort of a room. The apartment still held the shapes of his life—the half-stocked kitchen, the narrow hallway, the shelves of books he had bought during a more hopeful decade, the framed photograph of his sister’s family turned slightly toward the wall after their last argument—but election night had reduced all of it to background. The only real light came from the three monitors on his desk and the television mounted over the cold fireplace, where a panel of exhausted commentators talked over one another beneath a banner that had changed three times in twenty minutes. Rain moved down the windows in wavering lines, bending the lights of lower Manhattan until the city looked less like a place than a system under stress. Elias had watched elec...