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.The noises from the house were growing closer, louder.Christ, forget the dog.It sounded like a freakin' leopard in the house, or something.Maybe I should go back for the 12-gauge, Miller thought, and then the back door blasted off its hinges with a crash, propelled halfway across the scruffy yard.A walking nightmare followed it outside, half crouching, shoulders hunched.Patrolman Miller took it for a burly man until the moonlight fell across its face.By that time it had spotted Miller and was rushing toward him, snarling as it came, with outstretched talons.And there wasn't even time to scream.Chapter 6The federal penitentiary outside Atlanta, Georgia, was among the toughest in the nation.There was nothing to suggest the "easy ride" or "country club"approach to housing prisoners so often noted in the press and by potential office-holders in election years, when fear of crime translated to votes.Atlanta's federal pen received no white-collar swindlers, kinky televangelists or presidential campaign managers who got caught with their fingers in the public cookie jar.At one time, it housed Al Capone, before he was transferred to Alcatraz-the Rock-but Alcatraz was now a kind of morbid theme park, while Atlanta's federal prison endured.Atlanta's clientele included drug dealers, bank robbers, kidnappers, self-styled gangstas.A majority of those confined were black, but there was also room for redneck "soldiers" in a race war of their own imagining, a handful of Sicilian mafiosi, certain careless Teamsters, Cubans and Colombians, a spy or two.And Armand Fortier.The Cajun godfather was in a bad mood when his lawyer came to visit him on Saturday.It always pissed him off to see the shyster who was charging him three hundred bucks an hour while he sat in prison on a bullshit RICO charge that should have been thrown out at the preliminary hearing.Fortier had canned his trial attorney-literally, at a plant outside Metairie, where they turned decrepit horses into dog food.But the new guy hadn't shown results, either, in their pursuit of an appeal.He had a new-trial motion bogged down somewhere in the system, plus a handful of concocted "evidence" so thin you could have read the Sunday funnies through it, but the key was getting rid of those who had betrayed Armand the first time out.The traitors who had sold him down-no, up-the river to Atlanta in the first place.Scumbag ingrates.Fortier had put his best man on it-if you thought of Leon Grosvenor as a man-and he had thought that things were working out all right.Until today."What you mean, he missed them?" Fortier demanded, leaning forward with his broad, big-knuckled hands spread on the table that was bolted to the floor inside the room reserved for inmate visits with attorneys.Theoretically, the room was soundproof and the screws were barred from eavesdropping, but Armand Page 28ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.htmlkept his voice down all the same, despite a sudden urge to scream.The lawyer swallowed hard, as if he had a fish bone or a little piece of oyster shell lodged in his throat."Um, well, I mean there was a problem.The fellow seems to have, um, well, moved on.""What the hell you mean, moved on?" the Cajun snarled."Cost me two hundred grand to find out where they at, them dickwads, and you tellin' me it's wasted.""Well," the lawyer said, frowning, "three out of four-""Ain't good enough!" said Fortier."But if the man has disappeared-""Feds hid him one time, they can hide him twice.What you use for brains there, little man?"An angry flush suffused the lawyer's cheeks, but he didn't possess the courage to reply in kind.Instead, he tried to humor Fortier, play to his mood."We found him once before, we can-""We found him?" Fortier was staring at him with the rapt attention of an entomologist who has unearthed a new and unexpected insect species."I hear you said we found him? Make it sound like you been out there lookin', instead of sittin' on your ass and billing me for shit, half the time I don't know what."The lawyer found a thimbleful of nerve."If you're in any way dissatisfied-""I'm in a damn zoo with crazy blacks and a bunch a guys that think they Hitler.Now you want me to be satisfied?""I meant-""Screw what you meant," the Cajun said."I tell you something true, I guarantee.You don't mean shit, hear what I'm sayin'? You take my money, say you going to do certain things for me, I expect them things to be done.You come round here with sad old stories, asking for more money, I start thinking maybe you be screwin' me.""No, sir, I can assure you that-""Thing is, when I get screwed, I wanna know it's comin', see? That way I can enjoy it, like.Your way, it's just a big pain in the ass.""He can't go far," the lawyer said."You know that for a fact? He call you up and say, 'I don't be going far'?""Well, no, but-""What you do is listen now, and do just what I say.""Yes, sir.""Reach out for Leon and remind his hairy ass he still owes me a pelt.He let me down on this, it be wolf season where he at, I guarantee.Then next thing, you call up that boy what took two hundred grand to do a job that still ain't done.Feds got old Jean, I wanna know the zip code by this time tomorrow
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