The Racketeer

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Authors: John Grisham
keep in prison, especially when outsiders appear and start asking questions. In my opinion, and based on some experience, it was a clumsy way to dig into my background.
    “Well, they’re back,” he says. “They’ll be here at ten and they said it might take some time.”
    It is five minutes before 10:00 a.m. The same sharp pain hits my gut again, and I try to breathe deeply without appearing obvious. I shrug, as if it’s no big deal. “Who’s coming?” I ask.
    “Hell if I know.”
    Seconds later, his phone buzzes, and his secretary relays a message.

    We’re in the same room adjacent to the warden’s office. He, of course, is not present. Agents Hanski and Erardi are back, along with a fierce young man named Dunleavy, an assistant U.S. Attorney from the Southern District of Virginia, Roanoke office.
    I’m gathering steam, gaining credibility and curiosity. My little group of interrogators is looking more impressive.
    Though Dunleavy is the youngest of the three, he is a federal prosecutor, and the other two are simply federal cops. Therefore, Dunleavy has seniority at this moment and seems rather full of himself, not an unusual posture for a man in such a position. He can’t be more than five years out of law school, and I assume he’ll do most of the talking.
    “Obviously, Mr. Bannister,” he begins with an obnoxious condescending tone, “we wouldn’t be here if we didn’t have some interest in your little story.”
    Little story. What a prick.
    “Can I call you Malcolm?” he asks.
    “Let’s stick with Mr. Bannister and Mr. Dunleavy, for now anyway,” I respond. I’m an inmate, and I haven’t been called Mr. Bannister in years. I kind of like the sound of it.
    “You got it,” he snaps, then quickly reaches into a pocket. He pulls out a slender recording device and places it on the table,halfway between me on one side and the three of them on the other. “I’d like to record our conversation, if that’s okay.”
    And with that, my cause takes a giant leap forward. A week ago, Hanski and Erardi were reluctant to remove their pens and take a few notes. Now the government wants to capture every word. I shrug and say, “I don’t care.”
    He flips a switch and says, “Now, you say you know who killed Judge Fawcett, and you want to swap this information for a ticket out of here. And once out, you want our protection. That the basic structure of the arrangement?”
    “You got it,” I say, mimicking his own words.
    “Why should we believe you?”
    “Because I know the truth, and because you guys are nowhere near it.”
    “How do you know this?”
    “I just do. If you had a serious suspect, you wouldn’t be here talking to me.”
    “Are you in contact with the killer?”
    “I’m not answering that question.”
    “You gotta give us something, Mr. Bannister, something that will make us feel better about this little deal of yours.”
    “I wouldn’t characterize it as little.”
    “Then we’ll call it whatever you want. Why don’t you explain it. How do you see this big deal happening?”
    “Okay. It has to be a secret, highly confidential. We have a written agreement, approved by the U.S. Attorney’s offices in both the Northern District, where I was prosecuted and sentenced, and the Southern District, where this investigation is taking place. Judge Slater, who sentenced me, will have to sign off on the agreement. Once we’ve agreed, then I’ll give you the name of the killer. You grab him, investigate him, and when the grand jury indicts him for the murder, I will suddenly be transferred to another prison. Except I will not be serving any moretime. I leave here as though I’m being transferred, but instead I go into your witness protection program. My sentence will be commuted, my record expunged, my name changed, and I’ll probably want some plastic surgery to alter my appearance. I’ll get new papers, new looks, a nice federal job somewhere, and, to boot, I get the reward

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