Fish: A Memoir of a Boy in Man's Prison (33 page)

Read Fish: A Memoir of a Boy in Man's Prison Online

Authors: T. J. Parsell

Tags: #Male Rape, #Social Science, #Penology, #Parsell; T. J, #Prisoners, #Prisons - United States, #Prisoners - United States, #General, #United States, #Personal Memoirs, #Prison Violence, #Male Rape - United States, #Prison Violence - United States, #Biography & Autobiography, #Prison Psychology, #Prison Psychology - United States, #Biography

BOOK: Fish: A Memoir of a Boy in Man's Prison
4.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
The deputy leaned on the edge of the open door and tapped his key on the surface. He faced the other way, as if to avoid eye contact or the smell of my body.
"Where'd the sergeant go?" he asked the other deputy.
I stepped inside and couldn't hear the response as he slammed the door and locked it.
As it turned out, this was not an attorney visit after all. It was the Probation Officer who sat at a small table attached to the wall. He was there to complete the Pre-Sentence Investigation Report.
"Give a yell when you're ready," the deputy said to him through a small opening in the door. His footsteps faded up the hall, followed by the sound of a crashing gate.
The probation officer was a large man, with clammy white hands, who appeared unusually chipper. He held mine for an awkward moment as we shook. "Your hands are soft," he said.
I sat down, and he grabbed my right hand again, facing it palm-side up.
Inside the cramped space, there were two stools on each side of the table. The man was so large, his body spilled over the stool.
"No calluses at all," he said. "That's amazing." He rubbed my fingers with both thumbs. "Do you do any manual labor?"
"No." I took my hand back and placed it under the table.
There was a kindness in his voice that I wasn't expecting.
"Hey! What's this?" he said, looking at me as I started to shake.
I was still trying to process what had just happened with Nate and Loud Mouth. As if I were trying to deny it-but couldn't. I wanted to run, but my feet wouldn't move, so all I could do was sit there and tremble.
"Are you OK?"
I nodded.
"Are you sure?"
I shrugged. At least the first time it happened, I was drunk and drugged with Thorazine, so I didn't have to feel everything.
He sat silently, and I couldn't speak.
"Kind of rough in here, huh?"
I nodded, beginning to cry.
He handed me his handkerchief.
I couldn't believe I was crying in front of him, but I couldn't help it.
"Do you want to talk about it?"
I shook my head.
"Well, you don't have to," he said.
He pulled out a pack of cigarettes from his shirt pocket and offered me one.
"Thanks," I managed to say, but my voice was choked.
The side of my face hurt from when Nate smacked me, and the blood in my mouth tasted like metal. He lit my cigarette and put the pack away. I had left mine in nay cell, which I was sure were already stolen. "You're not having one?" I asked.
"I don't smoke." He smiled, gently. "I keep them handy, because I know what a commodity they are in here." He reached in his pocket and placed the pack on the table. "Keep 'em. I have more in the car."
All I could do was nod.
He let me finish my cigarette before he spoke again.
For a moment, I started to blame myself again-like what had happened was my fault, but this time it was different.
There was no way to avoid being attacked. It was like what had happened that morning, when Nate asked the guy with the food tray if he would buck for his food. He was damned if he did, and fucked if he didn't. At least I wasn't beaten up, but it felt like they had taken more than sex from me. It was as if Nate and Loud Mouth reached in and stole something more. I couldn't explain it. And no matter what, I couldn't say anything about it. Not then, and probably not ever. Not if I wanted to stay alive.
"You're up for sentencing on Tuesday," he said, "and I have to get this report to the judge." He tapped the blue file on the table with his pen.
I nodded. I was grateful that he'd given me time to pull myself together.
"So what did you rob?"
"A Photo Mat."
"A Photo Mat? Why did you do that?"
"For fun." I shrugged.
He chuckled. "Was it worth it?"
"No."
I still couldn't look at him, and I wondered if he could smell what was soiling the inside of my pants. I couldn't tell if the smell was real or imagined, but I was sure I would never forget it. And the pain down there was unbearable. I shifted in my seat.
"Well, if I ever got caught for some of the things I did when I was your age," he said. "I would be in here, too."
Judging by how large he was, I doubted he'd have the same problems. I wondered if the rest of him was as wet and clammy as his hands, but I appreciated how nice he was being. "When will I be sentenced?" I asked.
"Next Tuesday."
"That's right. You said that, didn't you?"
"I see you're serving time for larceny. You stole something from a hotel?"
"I use to work there," I said. "Some friends and I would sneak there at night to find an empty room to sleep in."
"Why didn't you go home?"
"Because if we woke our parents up-they'd beat us for coming home late."
"So what happened when you didn't come home?"
"They wouldn't notice, mostly."
"Have you been here in the county jail the whole time?"
"Riverside," I said.
"Riverside. Isn't that maximum security?"
"I had to go there until I got sentenced for the Photo Mat."
"Why did they send you to Riverside?"
"Because Armed Robbery carries up to life, and until I was sentenced, they had to treat me like I had been given life."
"Did you plea bargain?"
"My lawyer said I'd get two and half years. It's supposed to run concurrent with the time for the hotel."
"We'll that's not too bad. You'll be home in no time."
"No time soon," I said.
"How was Riverside?"
I shrugged.
"Anyone give you a hard time?"
Again, I shrugged. In spite of how nice he was being, there was no way I could say anything. If I snitched, my life would be worthless. Then I thought about the look on Nate's face when I told him that I would.
"Do you think I could be moved to another cellblock?" I asked.
"Why? Is someone bothering you?"
I didn't respond.
"Did you ask the deputies?"
I shook my head.
"Well, I doubt they'll listen to me any more than they would to you. Why don't you ask them?"
I couldn't answer him. I remembered reading about a prison riot in New Mexico, where the inmates broke into the protective custody wing using blowtorches they'd taken from the machine shop. Once inside, they turned the blowtorches on the faces of all the snitches. I'd also heard that if you asked to be moved, you had to tell the deputies who it was that was bothering you, and it was doubtful that the deputies would protect me.
"What made you do it?" He asked.
"What?"
"The robbery of the Photo Mat. You knew you were being placed on probation for the hotel thing, so why risk going to jail?"
"I didn't think I would get caught," I said.
"But still, why risk prison?"
"I didn't think they would send me to prison."
I thought of telling him that I robbed the Photo Mat before the hotel and that I got caught for it later, but it didn't matter now. "DeHoCo maybe," I said, referring to the Detroit House of Detention, "but I never thought I'd go to prison."
"Yeah, its kind of hard to believe with you being so young and good looking."
I moved to the other stool. It was cramped inside the cell, and I thought I felt his knee lean against mine.
"Do you see a lot of action in here?"
"Huh?"
He looked embarrassed. "I mean fights, bloodshed. You know, violence."
I shrugged. It seemed strange coming from him.
"A little," I said. I pulled another cigarette from the pack.
He struck a match and cupped it with his hands. I leaned forward and lit it.
He New out the flame and held the match between us as we watched the blue and gray smoke rise slowly from the tip. "You have blues eyes," he said. "It almost matches."
His kneecap touched the inside of my thigh again, but this time it stayed there.
I jumped up and looked at him. "Are you finished?"
His eyes darted between the small opening in the door and me.
"Sit down," he said. "I have a few more questions."
"That's all right. I'll stand."
"Sit down, cowboy." He glared. "I'm the one in charge here."
I sat back down, and he finished the interviewed.
He didn't bother me again, but his whole demeanor had changed. He picked up the cigarettes from the table and placed them back inside his pocket.
When the deputy came to take me back to my cell, I asked him if I could be moved. "Why?" he asked.
I didn't answer at first.
He unhooked his keys and opened the sliding gate at the end of the hall.
"Because some guys are pressing me," I said. I stepped past him and waited as he closed the gate.
"Who?" He asked.
I said nothing.
"You have to tell me who, if you want to be moved."
He continued up the hall.
I struggled to catch up with him. I thought about telling him what had just happened with the probation officer, but I doubted he would believe me.
"I can't," I said. "They'll kill me if I say something."
He shook his head, but then stopped suddenly to look at me. "How old are you?"
"Seventeen."
His face softened, but then he let out a sigh.
I stood in front of him, shaking.
"Let me get the sergeant," he said, sounding exasperated.
I thought about Coach Kelly and how he yelled when I missed too many baskets, or passed the ball by accident to the opposing team. He'd blow his whistle and shake his head. "Hug the bench," he'd say to me, as he looked down at his clipboard and waited for everyone to notice. "What a dork," one of the kids on the sideline would say.
When the deputy opened the holding cell door and told me to have a seat on the floor, I thought about gym class and how the guys used to call him Coach Nelly, because of the way he came into the locker room to see who was undressed with their dick hanging out-jotting it down on that fucking clipboard of his-those of us who had showered from those who had not. But looking back on it, I would have given anything to be there again, to have the chance to shower with boys my own age in high school where the worse that could happened was someone called you a fag.
The deputy turned the key in the lock and then tapped it against the bars. He asked if I had anything in my cell that I needed.
"No," I said.
I was too afraid to go back for my cigarettes, where Nate and Loud Mouth were waiting for me.
"Are you sure?"
"My smokes," I said. "But I don't want to go back there."
"I'll get 'em," he said. But when he returned, I wasn't surprised to hear him say they weren't there.
As he walked away, I watched his keys dangling from the side of his belt. The simplicity of those small metal objects-just beyond my reach-that fit inside the locks and turned the cylinders to freedom and safety and to the outside world. If he'd just tossed me his keys-I'd never be back here again.
When I was kid, my brother Rick tried to teach inc how to pick a lock. He said I had to feel and listen for the sound of the tumblers triggering inside. "It's like having sex," he said. "You stick your little pin inside the slot and jiggle it around until you feel the cylinder release." But his analogy was lost on me.
I just wanted to get to a shower. I wanted to wash away what had happened earlier. The smell of shit lingered in the air, but I still couldn't tell if it was real or remembered. Perhaps the preoccupation was just another attempt to escape what had happened. My head pounded with a band of pressure and I felt nauseous.
From inside the holding cell, I felt the rumbling vibration and clatterclack-clack of the approaching meal cart. "That's him there," one of the inmates said to another, pushing the cart past. He nodded toward me, but the deputy wouldn't allow them to stop.
"I hope they put her up on my block," the inmate said.
I was hoping no one would find out about me and thus increase the chance of it happening again, but the inmates who delivered the meals were also the guys who carried the information. All food came from the same kitchen. So the food carts, as they rumbled past, were the lines of communication to every corner of the jail.

Other books

Alien in My Pocket by Nate Ball
Fragments by Dan Wells
Slow Turns The World by Andy Sparrow
The Drake House by Kelly Moran
Rising Darkness by Nancy Mehl
Cages by Peg Kehret
A Village Affair by Joanna Trollope
Cooking Up Trouble by Joanne Pence
The Dark Inside by Rupert Wallis