Authors: D. B. C. Pierre
âThink of it as a chapel.'
âThe pastor's down here?'
âPastor
Lasalle's
down here.' He stops at the last door, and unlocks it with a set of keys.
âYou lock the pastor in there?' I ask.
âI lock
you
in there.'
The guard flicks a switch outside the door, and a pale green light glows into the shadows of the cell. It's empty except for two metal bunk frames that fold out of the wall on each side.
âSiddown. Lasalle be along just now.'
He steps back into the corridor, throwing an eye into the gloom of the stairwell. After a minute you hear clinking and shuffling, and an ole black man appears in a beat-up mechanic's cap, and
regular gray shirt and pants. He wears a bemused kind of smile. You sense it's been around awhile.
âKnock when you want out,' the guard tells him, locking the door.
The ole black man unfolds the opposite bunk, and squeaks down onto the bare springs, as if I wasn't here. Then he pulls his cap down low, folds his hands in his lap, and shuts his eyes, real comfortable.
âSo â you're a preacher?' I ask.
He doesn't answer. After a minute you hear a gentle wheezing from his nostrils, and see his tongue laze around his mouth. Then his face nods onto his chest. He's asleep. I study him for about six decades, until I get bored of the shadows and the damp, then I slide off the bunk, and step away to knock for the guard.
Lasalle stirs behind me. âCrusty young outcast,' he says, âall brave and lonely, older than his years . . .'
My feet weld to the floor.
âLopin away to hop another bus outta town.' I turn to see a yellow eye pop open and shine at me. âOnly one bus leaves these parts, son â and you know where it's goin.'
âExcuse me?' I stare at his ole slumped form, watch his lip hang dopey from his jaw.
âKnow why you down here with me?' he asks.
âThey didn't say.' I sit back down on the opposite bunk, and slouch to see under the shadow of his cap. His eyes glisten through the dark.
âOnly one reason, boy. Becausen you ain't ready to
die
.'
âI guess not,' I say.
âBecausen you spent all these years tryin to figure things out, and in figurin them out you got tangled up worse'n before.'
âHow do you
know
?'
âBecausen I'm human.' Lasalle creaks to the edge of his bunk. He takes a big pair of glasses from his shirt pocket, and puts them on. Huge moon eyes swim through the glass. âHow you feel about us humans?'
âHeck, I don't know anymore. Everybody's just yelling their heads off about their rights, and stuff, and saying, “Nice to see you,” when they'd rather see you in the river with your neck cut. I know that much.'
âBoy, ain't it the truth,' says Lasalle with a chuckle.
âAin't it just? Folks lie without even thinking about it, like every day of their lives, “Sir, I woke up with a fever,” then they spend the whole
rest
of their lives telling
you
not to lie . . .'
Lasalle shakes his head. âAmen. Sounds to me like you plain don't want to associate with those people no more, you rather not even be around.'
âYou're right there, Pastor.'
âWell,' he says, eyeing up the cell. âYou got your wish.'
That kind of hits me sideways. I sit up.
âWhat else did you wish for, son? I bet you wished you could shut your mama up once or twice before, I bet you dreamed of quittin home.'
âI guess I did . . .'
âPresto,' he says, opening out his hands. âYou lookin more and more lucky.'
âBut, wait â that ain't the right logic . . .'
His eyes bore through me, a hardness comes to his voice. âAhhh, so you a
logical
boy. You all strung out on everybody else's lies, and everybody else's habits that you hate, becausen you
logical
. I bet you can't even tell me a thing you
love
.'
âUh . . .'
âThat cos you such a big man, all crusty and independent? Or wait, lemme guess â it's probably cozza you ole lady â I bet she the type of lady makes you feel guilty about the leastest thing, the type who probably gives the same dumb ole cards on you birthday, with puppy-dogs, and steam trains on 'em . . .'
âThat's her.'
Lasalle nods, and blows a little air through his lips. âBoy that woman must be one stupid cunt. Must be the dumbest fuckin
snatch-rag that ever roamed this earth, probably is so butt-spastic . . .'
âHey,
hey
â you sure you're a
pastor
?'
âBoy, she one selfish fuckin piss-flap . . .'
â
Wait
,
goddammit!
'
There's a noise at the door, the peephole darkens. âKeep it down,' says the guard.
I realize I'm on my feet, with my fists clenched tight. When I look back to Lasalle, he's smiling. âNo love, huh, kid?'
I sit down on the bunk. Velcro maggots crawl up my spine.
âLemme tell you something for free â you'll have a honey of a life if you love the people who love you first. Ever see your ma choose a birthday card for you?'
âNo.'
He laughs. âThat's becausen there ain't the hours in a boy's agenda to watch her stand and read every little word in those cards, turn every feeling over in her soul. You probably too busy hiding the thing in you closet to read the words inside, about rays of sunshine the day you came into the world. Huh, Vernon Gregory?'
Heat comes to my eyes.
âYou messed up, son. Face it.'
âBut I didn't mean for anything to happen . . .'
âStuff needed to happen, kid. Different stuff from this. You just ain't faced your God.' Lasalle goes to his pants pocket and pulls out a rag for me to wipe my eyes. I use my sleeve instead. He reaches over and wraps a wrinkly hand around mine. âSon,' he says, âole Lasalle gonna tell you how it all work. Lasalle gonna give you the secret of this human life, and you gonna wonder why you never saw it before . . .'
As he says it, I hear movement in the corridor outside. Footsteps. Then Lally's voice.
âT
he key to this first public vote'
, says Lally, âis not to give too many choices. We need to pick a shortlist of prisoners, advertise them well, then open the voting lines and see who performs.'
It sounds like he's with at least three other men. The guard knocks urgently on our door, but doesn't open it, like he just wants us to shut up.
âWe have a hundred and fourteen ready to go,' says another man. âYou mean put up three dozen or so, for the first vote?'
âTch, no way. I mean put up two or three, at most. Flesh-out their characters for the audience, show interviews, reconstructions of their crimes, tears from the victims' families. Then give the candidates web-cam access for the last week, live to air â a head-to-head battle for sympathy.'
âI see,' says the guy. âKinda
Big Brother
, huh?'
âPrecisely, just how we sold it to the sponsors.'
âBut how do we select the first two?' asks a third man.
âIt doesn't really matter, provided the crimes are strong enough. I heard a concept the other day that kind of interested me, though, I think it was on a game show or something â “
The last shall go first
,” it said. Has a ring to it, don't you think?'
âNice,' says the fourth man. âTop-of-mind recall.'
âPrecisely.'
Their footsteps slow as they approach the cell, you hear the guard clink to attention.
âAny reason for you to be down here, Officer?' asks Lally.
The guard shuffles on the spot, then a shadow passes over the peephole. âOpen this door,' says Lally. The key turns, and he looks inside. âWhat have we here?' He turns to the guard.
âAren't the men supposed to be segregated?'
âOh sure, sure,' says the guard, fidgeting with his keys. âIt's just like, therapy, you know? A little counseling makes the living easier up on the Row.'
Lally frowns. âThis boy is a mass-murderer â surely it's a little late for counseling. Anyway, these cells are out of bounds, we're installing sound post-production down here.'
âHow's your mama?' I ask Lally. The words skim from my lip like spit. âMotherfucker.'
âJesus, kid!' chokes the guard.
Lally stifles an impulse to lash me, his business cronies keep him chilled. I stare slow deaths at him. âThere ain't prayers enough in heaven to stop me paying your fucken ass back,' I hear myself whisper. Even Lasalle recoils.
Lally just smirks. âBreak them up.'
âYes, sir,' says the guard. He straightens, and waves an angry hand at Lasalle and me. I try to catch Lasalle's eyes, but he just shuffles away.
âLasalle â what's the secret?' I hiss after him.
âLater, kid, later.'
Lally smiles at me as I leave the room. âStill trying to figure things out, eh, Little man?' He gives an asthma laugh, then his voice folds into echoes as he leads his men away. âSo, February fourteenth we launch the first vote.'
âYou mean Valentine's Day?' asks another man.
âPrecisely.'
Guess what: you can receive junk-mail on Death Row. The week before the first vote I get a sweepstakes letter that says I definitely won a million dollars; at least that's what it says on the envelope. I think you have to buy encyclopedias to get it or something, or to maybe get it. I also find a
Bar-B-Chew Barn
token entitling me to a
Chik'n'Mix
for two, at any of their branches across the State. Yeah, they're across the State now. Tomorrow the world, I guess.
I'm working on my art project when I hear Jonesy making his way down the Row towards me. Banter from the other cells lets you know where he is. He's bringing the phone. I stiffen, and stash away my art stuff. As it happens though, the big news reaches me before Jonesy arrives with the phone. I hear it from a TV up the Row.
â. . . The body of the American will be flown home today. Forty refugees also died in the skirmish,' says the news. âAfter the break â the end of the road for serial killer Vernon Gregory Little; we'll have the latest on that failed appeal, and also â the duck and the hamster that just won't take no for an answer!'
Jones doesn't look at me, he just passes me the phone. âVernon, I'm sorry,' my attorney crackles through the receiver. âI don't have the words to tell you how I feel.'
I just stay quiet.
âThere's nothing more we can do.'
âWhat about the Supreme Court?' I ask.
âIn your case, I'm afraid the fast-track process puts that option out of our reach. I'm sorry . . .'
I put the phone down on my bunk, hearing every crease of the blanket like gravel in my ears.
Tonight they install cameras in my cell, and remove all the TVs and radios from the Row. We ain't allowed to see how the voting's going, that's why. I just sit quiet in the darkest corner and think about things, I don't even play with the clacking balls. Eight squillion valentines turned up for me, from sickos all over the world. Somebody in the mail room was kind enough to just send up the one from Ella Bouchard. I left her on my mail list, don't ask me why. I don't open it, though. The Row is extra-quiet tonight, out of respect, I guess. They're called the worst in the land, but my Row mates know something about respect.
I need another date with Lasalle. As the first public vote gets underway, I find myself thinking hard on some of that stuff he said. Not that it made a whole lot of sense, back when I had a chance to live. But it laid an egg in my mind that started growing.
Face my God. In between trading junk-mail, the other cons get talking about this week's public vote, laying bets who'll be first to go. That's what they do in between griping for their TVs and radios. They don't bet on anyone from this Row, but you know the feeling of being the last one in the dentist's waiting-room? That's me right now. The problem with the voting is that you don't get to hear if it's you until the last day. You have to stay prepared. Sometimes I get grand schemes to be wacky for my execution, wear socks on my ears or something, or say something bizarre for my last statement. Then I just bawl a little. These days I'm bawling way too much really, for a man, I know it.
By the last day of voting, I can't bear it anymore. In an hour the world will know who's going to die. I bitch to Jonesy about some more time with Lasalle, but he ain't interested. He argues with another guard over who gets to mind the governor's phone-line in the execution chamber, for the first executions. Occasionally he snaps down the Row at me.
â
Mr Laid-his-ma
ordered no more visits,' he says. âAnyway, in a while you mayn't have to worry about nothin no more.'
In the end I take up clacking the metal balls again, until the other cons join in griping. All it does is ruffle Jonesy's feathers. âWhich one a you fucks got a million bucks to pay for special favors?'
âGit outta here,' yell the cons.
I just sigh. The swirl of musty air rustles a paper on my bench. An idea rustles with it. âJonesy,' I say, gabbing the sweepstakes letter. âHere's your million.'
âYeah,
right
,' he says.
âI ain't fooling â look,' I hold up the envelope.
âYou think I was born yesterday?' snorts Jonesy. âI just about have to shovel that mail-order fuckin bullshit off my driveway every mornin.'
I try a hooshy laugh on him. âWe-ell,' I hoosh. âO-kay â but this is a legally binding promise for a million bucks â you know they can't say it unless it's true, and they say it right here in red and white.'
âHey, Little!' calls a con. âYou sayin you got the latest sweepstakes letter?'