Nor Iron Bars a Cage.... by Randall Garrett (ebook reader with highlight function .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Randall Garrett
Read book online ยซNor Iron Bars a Cage.... by Randall Garrett (ebook reader with highlight function .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Randall Garrett
Adam finds that he is disappointed by Rookโs decree; he had rather liked the idea of staying in prison for a while. โWhatโs the job?โ
โOh.โ Rook focuses on Adam again. โI need someone to find my brother. His spending habits have become peculiar as of late, and I have been unable to contact him. Indeed, my only means of tracking him is by following his withdrawals, which have been growing steadily more substantial. Itโsโฆ unlike Magpie to spend my money. Iโve never known him to not have his own. And while I am well aware of my brotherโs eccentricities, this is unusual, even for him. Iโd like someone to track him down, and either have him contact me, or questioned; Iโd like to find out where my money is going.โ Rook knocks on the door, waiting to be released. โLast I knew, he was in Scotland.โ
โOkay,โ says Adam.
Rook peers at Adam across the top of his spectacles, looking as if heโs been struck by a thought. โWhen was the last time you spoke to Eve, Adam?โ
Her name is like a spark in Adamโs brain. A point of light, reignited.
โI donโt know,โ he says, truthfully.
โMmm,โ says Rook, briefly studying Adamโs face, searching for something there.
The door opens, but before he can leave, Adam asks, โDid she name you? Or did I?โ
โShe did,โ says Rook, and then he is gone.
* * *
Adam is denied bail and transferred to a holding facility pending trial. They donโt have an orange jumpsuit big enough for him, so heโs made to wear one two sizes too small. The other prisoners watch him pass in silence โ step back from the bars of their cells.
Heโs given his own cell. It has a low barred window, through which Adam can see a single leafless tree, standing darkly against the scrubby ground at the centre of the facility. Once a day, he is brought out to the yard to stretch his legs, but he spends most of that time beside the chain-link fence, peering beyond the enmeshed links and trying to get a better look at the tree. It needs some care, he thinks. Itโs not getting enough water, and the sun is blocked off from it eight hours a day.
The only time of day he is allowed around the other prisoners is at lunch. The sudden sensory rush after being in his cell is always overwhelming: the rattling and clattering, the conversation and movement; all the stink of a hundred bodies devouring cheap slop in various dull arrangements. When he lines up with his tray, he is given space to move. The prisoners here donโt meet his eye, but the servers are generous with their portions.
Usually, Adam finishes his tray, but on the third day the kitchen serves fishcakes and he loses his appetite. A recent riot means that cutlery is forfeit for the foreseeable future, so that the prisoners must eat with their hands, and Adam becomes preoccupied with the slivers of fish clinging to the fingers and lips of everyone around him. He feels as if he is on the verge of remembering something โ the reason why killing the writer felt so familiar. Lunch ends, and the sensation fades.
After the fourth day, two prisoners come and sit with him. The first is muscular, with so many crudely drawn black tattoos that he is running out of untouched skin; the second is slight and downcast, looking as if he has lived through a lifetime of sorrows. โHey, man,โ says the tattooed prisoner. โYou the guy that killed that writer. I know you. Seen you all over the news.โ
The sullen prisoner swirls his porridge around in its bowl with his finger. โIโm Earl. This is Throat.โ
โYeah, and you Sullivan. Adam Sullivan. Pleased to meet you, man.โ When Throat grins, he flashes a complete set of golden teeth. โFuck that writer, man. Way I see it, you did the world a favour. Heโs been puttinโ out shit for years. Wish youโd done it three films ago.โ He laughs. โYou all right, man. You all right. Way I see it, guys like us, we gotta stick together.โ
Adam peels his orange. โGuys like us?โ
โYeah, man.โ Throat gestures broadly around the room.
No matter where Adam goes, heโs always singled out for the colour of his skin. He places his half-peeled orange down for a moment and turns his wrists over, studying his scars. โYou were all once me,โ he mutters, but the words arenโt really meant for Throat and Earl. Theyโre just a reflection of a thought heโs had for a long time.
โListen, man,โ says Earl, after sucking the porridge from his finger. โSome guys have been saying your lawyers are Corvid & Corvid. That shit is expensive. More important, they donโt even got a phone number.โ
โMy manโs got connects.โ Throat slaps Adam on the shoulder. โAinโt that right?โ
Adam returns to his orange, pulling it apart and digging around in the segments, tugging the seeds free. He lines the seeds up on his tray as he eats, and then gathers them up, sifts through them on his palm like a fortune teller interpreting bones. The orange is old โ barely edible โ but some of the seeds might still grow, under the right conditions.
โYou got a number I could call?โ asks Earl, but Adam doesnโt answer. Two of the seeds seem viable. Adam places them carefully into a pocket.
Adam returns to his cell, lays back on
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