On my way back, I had a number in my mind. I could see it as clearly as if it had appeared in the smudged window, written in dull, oily numerals, as if Kitty-Kat had said it out loud, and I repeated it over and over, making sure not to forget it before I could write it down.
I got that broke dick pen and wrote down the number on my mattress, in a little space on the end that my sheet didn’t cover. 349-1568. I mumbled it to myself even afterward, hoping I would never forget it again.
Little D said, You gonna start with that psycho shit now that he’s gone?
What?
You notice anything different?
I looked around the cell.
Peanut’s gone, I said. What happened?
I told you he had something, didn’t I?
It hadn’t been rabies, or anything like that. Peanut really had been pregnant. She was a woman impersonating a man. She was wanted, as a woman, for a long list of nationwide financial crimes involving an Internet charity kidney transplant scam. The nurse told Little D that the pregnancy was probably an echo-something, something where the egg gets caught in the Philippine tube.
Can you fucking believe that? said Little D.
I bet those deputies feel like idiots.
They’re used to it by now.
It was all too much. Too much at once, I thought. I had to tell someone. I picked up the receiver and put it to my ear, still warm from the visiting room. Press 0 for a collect call, the operator said. I pressed 0, then the number I had visualized. I waited.
I was going to tell him about Marvin Newhouse, how I knew it was him. I would tell him about Peanut, and I’d tell him that this time I had saved the number on the end of my mattress, and tomorrow when I called, he wouldn’t ask Who is it? He’d say, Hey, I know you.
I know you, he’ll say, and we’ll talk about Vicodin and roofing. We’ll talk about shit knees and madmen, first communions and the end of the world. I have a lot to say. But first he has to answer.
Answer, I whispered into the phone. Answer.
SUNSHINE
George had come back from the visiting room where his girlfriend, Sunshine, just told him she had cancer. He couldn’t touch her or hold her, of course, through the phone, through the glass. He said he almost tried to smash through the thick, shatterproof pane, but he figured he’d be tackled long before he ever got to comfort her. He looked around at us with the anger still in his eyes, as if expecting praise for his restraint from trying something that would have been impossible to begin with.
Just down the hall was a cell of suicidal women who wrote dirty notes on little bars of soap, then slid them down to our cell, like illicit Olympic curlers. No matter the gender, all the suicide cases were lumped in this one small section of the jail. We never laid eyes on the women, only heard them and read their notes. The men in general population probably would have loved to be so close to women, but it was frustrating and meaningless, and I would’ve traded them ten times over for a better TV to replace ours, which was slowly dying up on the wall. Half the time there was only a black screen and the voices inside, or an occasional haunting thump from the speaker.
No one died on the suicide watch wing when I was there. A man did commit suicide over in the jail, but he wasn’t on A North, he was in segregation. My wife came to visit on the same day jail officials gave his personal belongings to his grieving sister in the waiting room. My wife didn’t go into detail about it; she was shaken and I didn’t press. But in my mind I’ve played that scene over and over again. I imagine a sibling, someone I love and grew up with, who goes to jail—which is bad enough—but then the personal demons set in and I never see them alive again. I clutch a paper bag of their things that doesn’t seem to weigh enough.
On A North, no one died. None of us, at least. But George’s girlfriend had cancer and we all felt horrible about it. When you’re separated from the people you know and love, every emotion is multiplied. Your mind becomes a very clear prism, into which every feeling enters, then becomes seven or eight different shades. We were all responsible for being there, of course—none of us were innocent. But that only makes you feel worse when you’re the one in jail.
We were sad about Sunshine, and we were worried about George, who was a surly kid who would fight anyone at the drop of a hat. Finding out about the cancer didn’t help his already touchy mood. I had been making chess pieces from wet toilet paper, and was just about finished with the bishops, which strongly resembled the pawns. George sat on his bunk and said, Her hair was falling out. And then he started to cry. I mean he really cried. Sobbing.
How long has she had cancer? one of us asked.
She just—sob—found out—sob—today.
And of course, being the resident know-it-all, I explained to George that something was strange about Sunshine’s cancer story. No one’s hair falls out the same day they’re diagnosed with cancer.
That’s the chemo, I said. And if they just found it, she couldn’t have started chemo yet.
George always had a problem with violence—it was the first thing he said when he became the fifth man in our cell. He said his father used to set up fights between him and his drinking buddies’ kids. They would place bets, like the kids were roosters or dogs. I expected to be punched after I’d basically called Sunshine a liar. But I wasn’t punched. I just kept adding my wet wads of toilet paper to build up the bishops.
George stopped sobbing. He lay back on his bunk and listened to the black TV as if he could see what was happening there.
I always assumed it was Sunshine who was the liar—that she’d been diagnosed months earlier but had to work up the nerve to tell him face-to-face. But years after I was on A North with George, it occurred to me that it was probably him who had made the whole story up. For sympathy, or something like it.
He lay there watching the black screen and seemed to really enjoy the soap opera that was going on. It was like a radio play, or eavesdropping, as if the action were taking place just on the other side of our cinder-block wall. There was a hostage situation—some nut with a Southern accent demanding a couple million in ransom. We could hear that the hostage was a regular character, so we knew no permanent damage would be done. She might think she was going to die, but there was no way she would. In fact, the situation might do the spoiled twerp some good. It might deepen her shallow soul. Then there was a loud thump from the speaker and a wisp of smoke rose from the back of the TV. And that was it. The television died a slightly smoky death.
We never learned how the hostage situation turned out, if it affected the soap opera’s character or not. I imagine it gave her nightmares, as proximity to death is wont to do, and like me she wakes up in a paper bag, waiting on someone to pick them up.
DAYTIME DRAMA
Arthur wore a cape in the county jail. He fashioned it from the dark gray wool blanket given to each inmate, and the knot from the tied corners rested on his Adam’s apple. November was a cold one in the jail and the cape kept him warm, plus the dark, brooding superhero effect was not lost on Arthur. He looked at himself in the dull, scratched metal mirror above the stainless-steel toilet, flashed a toothless grin, then turned around with a swoop and sat at the steel picnic table bolted to the floor of our cell.