Authors: Olivia Goldsmith
With keen, discriminating sight, Black's not so black, â nor white so
very
white.George Canning,
New Morality
After the night in Observation, Jennifer was ready for assignment to a cell. Though it was the relatively benign Officer Camry, rather than the brutal Byrd, who came to take her away, the relentless gloom of the institution put Jennifer into a state bordering on catatonia. If Observation had been hell for her, it was clear that the rest of the place was purgatory. It was all so grim that it was appalling to imagine that women actually lived in this hopeless drabness day after day.
âI need to make a phone call,' she managed to say to Officer Camry. Her head was pounding and she desperately needed some Tylenol â and maybe a Valium â but calling Tom was the most important thing to do right now. âI have to make a call,' she said again. âIs there a phone near here?'
Camry stepped back and looked at her intently. âIf there
was, you couldn't use it,' he told her. âI'm scheduled to give you your house assignment. You can only make calls on your own time.'
Jennifer clenched her jaw and the headache intensified. She wasn't prepared for any of this. She admitted that now. How could Donald and Tom abandon her to this experience? She couldn't imagine the elegant Mr Michaels in a jumpsuit, or Ivy League Tom in the filthy hole. But that didn't matter. She squared her shoulders behind Camry's rounded ones and followed as she was instructed. She would not cry nor would she fuss. This whole ordeal was a punishment; not for the nonsense with the SEC, but for the terrible error in judgment that she had made.
âRight this way,' Camry said, leading her down a long narrow corridor. Then he stopped abruptly and opened a door. âWhile we're here, this is the athletic facility,' he said.
Jennifer looked in to see a small room with a couple of flabby volleyballs and a few exercise mats that were so soiled that she had to avert her eyes. So this was the gym. She almost laughed. It was nothing at all like the Vertical Club where she and Tom worked out. Well, she'd be out of there before she needed to go to the gym. But what about the women who had to
use
the place? God almighty.
âYou can use the athletic facility in your free time, but not during lockdown or after eight p.m.,' Camry told her.
Jennifer sighed. As if. Once again she turned to Camry and said with great urgency, âAre you certain I can't use a phone? It is imperative that I get in touch with my lawyer.'
Camry lifted his eyebrows and looked up at the ceiling. He shook his head as if to say,
No, you crazy bitch, no!
Jennifer knew then that she had made a terrible error. For the first time in her life she had been so confident that
she knew everything that she needed to know that she had gone into a test completely unprepared. Prison wasn't like life on the Outside. In here, there was no multiple choice to guess at, and there was no essay that she could bluff her way through. This was all true or false â black and white. This was the test of her life, and she'd willingly come into it unprepared and ignorant.
Tom and Donald had told her that it would be easy. She didn't know why she had believed them â except that they'd never lied to her before. Christ, there was no way this could've been easy. She should've known that. Life had taught her that nothing came easy â it all took work, it all took discipline, and above everything else, it all took a willful determination not to fail. She knew that. She had always been prepared, always one step ahead of the rest.
Jennifer hung her head and looked at the orange jumpsuit that she was wearing. When she was a kid she used to lay out her school clothes before going to bed. She hated uniforms so much that she spent hours figuring out ways to make a plaid jumper and a navy blazer look like something out of
Vogue.
But she did it. She stood out from all the rest.
It was that kind of preparation and thinking ahead that were the big secrets to her success. She got into State on scholarship, and her grades there earned her a free ride into the MBA program at Wharton. When it was time to go out and get a job, Jennifer's research landed her an interview with the already legendary Donald J. Michaels. She walked into his office, clearly a girl from the working class, and she started to talk about his Gulbenkian porcelain. Donald lifted his eyebrows. He knew she was faking it, but he also knew she was
really good
at faking it. Preparation and a poker face were exactly what she needed to succeed in his
Wall Street firm. Donald Michaels not only hired Jennifer on the spot, he put her on his own team. They were known as the smartest and the most aggressive of all the Wall Street shark pool. They specialized in the highest-risk/ highest-reward IPOs and some
very
leveraged buyouts. They didn't miss a trick. They were invincible.
âWe go down from here,' Camry told her, and Jennifer preceded him down the stairs. She was glad she wasn't with Byrd as they made their way down the dark and damp stairwell.
The trek seemed to take forever, and through it all Jennifer mentally beat herself up. From the first moment she had gotten into the van, things had been out of her control. She tried to control the rising tide of panic that was threatening to overtake her. Why didn't the Warden know who she was? If Tom had called, whom did he talk to? And if she didn't find out, how would she be cushioned and protected from this nightmare? Who was the Warden's boss? Could she go over the stolid Warden Harding's head? She would just have to wait until this ridiculous process was over. Then she would call Tom. Or Don. Or both of them.
At long last, she and Camry entered the cellblock, and Jennifer was taken to her cell. She thought she'd seen the worst of Jennings, but no â they had saved the worst for last.
âThis is your house assignment,' Camry told her.
House? This wasn't a house; it wasn't even a dormitory â and it most certainly was not a country club. It was a prison cell, plain and simple. The concrete walls were painted a color that a decorator might claim to be
Dusty Rose,
but to Jennifer's eyes it was a hideous
Battleship Pink.
The beds â four of them â were bunked and bolted against the side
walls with only about ten square feet of floor space in between. There was no furniture except a tiny desk that was suspended from the wall, and, beneath it, a single chair. Jennifer wondered if she would have three cellmates, and if the four of them were supposed to share that chair.
The only other place to sit was on a toilet that was quite unlike anything Jennifer had ever seen before in her life. At first glance, the stainless steel creation reminded her of a metal miniature of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. On closer inspection she saw the faucets and realized with horror that it was a monument to prison efficiency. It served as both wash basin and commode, with the seat only inches from the lower bunks. She remembered a snippet of a song parody her mother used to sing:
And my bunk is where the skunk is.
Did someone actually sleep with her head virtually in the
head
? She set her shoulders and tried not to show her dismay. After all, she only had to sit there until Tom came and took her away. She wouldn't be spending the night.
âHome sweet home,' Camry said as he rolled open the door in the fourth wall, which consisted completely of bars. The section slid open, and for a moment it doubled the bars on the left side of the cell. The shadow play they made passing reminded Jennifer of the sun through the windows of New York's elevated trains. But there was no sunshine here. The cells were on a windowless hall, and although each one did have a window, it was so high in the wall that even from the top bunk you couldn't peer through the chicken wire. Camry took Jennifer's elbow and firmly guided her into her new home.
âIt's only for a few hours,' she told herself. Maybe now she could finally call Tom. She looked for a moment at Officer Camry, but decided not to ask.
âGet comfortable,' Camry instructed. âI'll go get your cellmate so you two can get acquainted.'
âRight,' Jennifer said.
âPardon?' Camry responded.
âI wish,' Jennifer said with a cynical sigh.
Only one of the four bunks was made up, and over it, taped to the walls, were six pictures. One was of a baby â obviously a snapshot â but the other five were clipped from magazines. There was an angel, a toddler on the beach building a sand castle, a fire engine, the Nike logo complete with
Just Do It
, and finally a picture of Jesus, looking a lot like Donny Osmond. Jennifer stood there for a moment, trying to imagine what kind of brain had arranged those particular images in that particular way.
She walked over to the desk. It was bare except for three books: the Bible, a copy of
The Pokey Little Puppy
, and a paperback Baby-Sitters Club book. Jennifer had read the Baby-Sitters Club when she was in fourth grade. Had they put her in a cell with a child or a simpleton?
On the lower bunk on the opposite wall, Jennifer found a rolled up mattress and a set of sheets. Hers, she wondered? She thought about making the bed, but was enraged at the thought of actually making herself âcomfortable' as dopey old Roger had suggested. This was no place to be comfortable. She would never sleep here, and she would most certainly never use the toilet. Anyone â even someone like Byrd â could look right through the bars and see everything that went on.
Jennifer sat on the solitary chair and wondered what time it was. Would Tom still be at home, on his way to the office, or was he already there? She knew his cell phone number by heart, but she wasn't sure if a cell phone could
accept a collect call. She stood up suddenly in a rage. Goddamnit! She wasn't a convict. She had her own damn cell phone â and they had taken it. She had a Verizon credit card with no limits. Why couldn't she use it? What harm would there be in that? It had rounded corners, too. She couldn't kill anyone â or herself â with a fucking cell phone. The rage took its toll, and Jennifer wilted onto the made-up bunk. Tom had better get her out of here before the end of the day. This was worse than anything she'd imagined.
âYou're sitting on my bed,' Jennifer heard a timid voice say. She jumped up to see Officer Camry standing in the door of the cell with a very small and very pretty young blonde woman.
âI'm sorry,' Jennifer said sincerely.
âIt's okay,' the girl said timidly. She looked as if she was terrified of Jennifer, and she seemed to be almost clinging to the smiling Officer Camry.
âMiss Spencer, this is Suki,' Roger said as he gently guided the young girl into the cell. âYou and her will be bunking together.'
Jennifer saw the girl looking at her still damp jumpsuit.
âWere you the one who stuffed the toilet in Observation last night?' Suki asked her. Then she went over to her bunk and looked at the wet spot Jennifer had left when she sat there.
âYou can use
this
bedding,' Jennifer said, pointing to the roll on the bunk meant for her. âI won't be using it.'
âWhy not?' Suki asked her.
âI'm not staying,' Jennifer replied.
âWhere are you going?'
Jennifer thought she was going to scream. âCan I just
make a phone call?' she asked, looking past this Suki and talking to Roger.
âNot until after work,' Suki told her.
âBut I have to make the call
now.
'
âMiss Spencer â Jennifer â will be working with you in the laundry,' Camry told the young girl. âWill you see that she gets there this afternoon?' he asked with a smile.
âYou bet Rog â uh, sir,' Suki said, blushing.
Roger stood there as awkward as a teenager on a front porch after a first date. Was he going to kiss this girl? Jennifer wondered. But Camry finally turned and walked away. Suki watched him go until he turned for a moment and waved good-bye.
Jennifer didn't know what that was all about, and she didn't need to know. A deafening bell clanged loudly and echoed off the concrete.
âTime to go back to work,' Suki chirped brightly. âCome on, I'll show you the way.'
Jennifer followed without question. Maybe she could find a phone in the laundromat.
Here I am and here I stay.
Patrice de Mac Mahon
I did alotta work in the office that no inmate should be trusted with, but that was because of Miss Ringling. She was one of those state employees who felt the main function of her job was cashing her paycheck. Most work that required any intelligence was given directly to me by the Warden. The rest of it was given to me by Miss Ringling. But now I was finally shuttin' down the PC and gettin' ready to go to dinner, when Warden Harding strolled outta her office in that casual-like way that says she's got something to tell me.
âMovita?' she asked.
âMmmm,' I kinda murmured back. You can't really diss the Warden, but by now her and me know each other good enough for me to voice a certain kind of awareness.
âI've assigned Spencer to Conrad. Do you think Suki
will mind having her as a cellmate?' the Warden asked me.
Since when did The Woman worry about what I thought? âWhy do I care what Suki minds?' I answered back. It sounded kinda snotty so I softened it a bit with, âShe'll do fine. NBD. Spencer's no suicide, if that's what you're thinking.'
âI just thought that you might have a better sense of who would be the best to match the new inmate with. You
are
the â uh â main person for the crew. I just don't want to add a problem to an already sensitive situation.'
âHey, my policy is just like that old president's,' I told her. â“Don't ask, don't tell.” That works for me, too.' I knew what she was angling for. The Warden wanted me to take that little white witch to my lovin' black bosom. That's one of the deadly things about prison; you show weakness just once and everyone is ready to prey on ya'. Just âcause I unreasonably, uncharacteristically, and maybe unfortunately âadopted' Suki Conrad into my crew doesn't mean I'm gonna do it for every sorrowful new piece of meat that comes to Jennings. It bugged me that The Woman even asked me.
I don't know if the
others
wanted to take Suki in, but I insisted. And when I insist, they don't have much choice. It wasn't like anybody really hated her, and face it, girls, Movita rules. Anyway, the very first day I saw Suki Conrad draggin' her pitiful little butt through Intake, I just took to her. Maybe it was that baby-fine blonde hair or the lost look in her eyes. I got me a pink-skinned baby doll with yellow hair and blue eyes for Christmas once. Didn't I love that dolly! Whatever. Sometimes, though, someone like that just tugs at your heart or some shit like that. I guess I just plain felt sorry for the little thing, and that's the
truth. Just âcause I'm in prison don't mean I got no human feelings. And I felt like we needed a baby in our crew.
Women need family. Don't matter if it's blood or not. In the crew we're like mother and daughters sometimes, and sometimes we're like sisters, and sometimes we're like other family members, too. That don't mean we don't fight and argue and stuff. But when you're in a crew you just try to keep all that to a minimum.
âPlease let me know if there's any trouble with the match-up, okay?' the Warden asked me. She was lookin' me right in the eye and I knew she wanted more than a trouble report. She knew how to get at me. âThat's it for today, Movita. You better go to dinner.' She paused for a second. âWhat do you and your girls have planned tonight?'
I switched off the monitor and neatened up some stacks of papers on my desk. âWell, it's Theresa's turn to cook,' I said, âso it's gonna be a surprise.' Sometimes I get the oddest feeling that the Warden is kinda â well â
envious
of us in the crew. It's like she'd rather come and eat with us instead of goin' to her own house. I don't know much about her life Outside, âcept that she's divorced and that she works all the time. I doubt she's got much of a life.
When I got back to my house, Theresa was already chopping the carrots that Suki was washin'. âYou want the salad dressing sweet or you want it tart?' Theresa asked.
âI don't care as long as you're making it,' Cher told her. She was loungin' her sassy ass on the bunk, readin' a magazine, and just waitin' to eat.
If prison is the place where society thinks they can make us cons eat shit, they do a damn good job of it. Even though the Warden keeps fightin' with Ben Norton down in Food
Services, the food at Jennings never gets any better. No one â and I mean no one â wants to eat the shit old Ben serves up in the cafeteria. It's nothin' but starch, grease, and real bad meat. People eat it, but only if they have to.
You can eat for free in the cafeteria. So if you're destitute, or spend whatever you got on contraband, or if you can't make even one friend, then you're stuck in the cafeteria eatin' one of Ben's blue plate specials.
But if you got some sense, a little social grace, or any initiative at all, you can buy things from the prison canteen and cook âem up yourself. You just need to save a little money and get pots and pans and all. There's no real kitchens in our houses, but Harding lets us have a hot plate or an electric skillet. Of course, the canteen doesn't have much variety â maybe only seven or eight kinds of things. You can usually get a chicken, or sometimes beef. They always got a little lettuce or some vegetable. There's potatoes and sometimes rice. And now and then some fruit like apples or bananas or even oranges. Theresa works down in the dispensary, so she always knows what's comin' in. She stashes the best for the crew, and with the money Cher gets from sellin' some of the stuff she steals from Intake we can buy a whole lot of good stuff. Problem is, we don't got refrigeration, and that's why we need plenty of ice. Frances was the lucky one to get to deliver it. Ice is like gold in prison. Without it, lots of our good stuff goes to waste. If we buy a chicken on our own, by the time we eat half of it the other half is no damn good and we're so sick of chicken that we're cluckin'. We don't wanna see no bird
ever
again.
âHand me that pot of water, Suki,' Theresa said as I sat down to listen to the day's bulletins. I wanted to know if anyone had any more news on Spencer. I thought Suki
might speak up, but Cher was the first one to sound off, as usual.
âI hear she's already sashaying round here like she owns the place.' Cher smirked. âByrd told old Cranston down in Intake that he's gonna toss Spencer into solitary if she demands to use the phone one more damn time.'
âWell, you know what they say about asking and receiving, don't you?' Theresa said as she opened the Tupperware and measured out some pasta into the boiling water.
âYeah, well this ain't Sunday school,' Cher shot back. âAnd it ain't the movies either. You don't automatically get one call when you get here.'
âIt's tough on you white girls when you don't get your way, ain't it?' I said, givin' Cher a look. She was copping some pretty amazing attitude.
âThat's not very nice,' Suki said with hurt feelings.
âMovita wasn't referrin' to you, sweetie,' Cher reassured her. She got up and gave Suki a pat on the shoulder.
That was for my benefit. Back when I first took Suki in, Cher made quite a fuss. âShe can't cook, she can't steal, she can't do nothin' but cry,' Cher bitched. âShe's dumb as dirt. That's why she drove the car for her boyfriend.'
I guess Suki actually believed her boyfriend when he said he was goin' into that 7-Eleven for cigarettes. He came out with the contents of the cash register, and little Suki thought she was guilty of nothin' more than keepin' the heater running.
Theresa, on the other hand, was more understanding. âBut she lost her baby,' she said to Cher. âShe's never going to stop crying about that. You know what they say about mothers when someone takes away their babies, don't you?'
Well, nobody answered Theresa's question. It got real
quiet for a moment. You see, I don't like talkin' about children. I never talk about my little girls. Their granny is raisin' them, and that's all I can bear to say about it.
âJust what in heaven's name are you makin' there, Theresa?' I asked to break the tension. âYou trying to kill us all before Cher gets a chance to get outta here?'
âGet out of my way, Movita,' Theresa warned. âYou know what they say about too many cooks, don't you?'
I just laughed and backed off. Havin' a conversation with Theresa was like talkin' to a refrigerator door loaded with sayings. I respected that girl. The goin' never got so tough that Theresa didn't get up and go. âPeople say I'm an optimist,' she'd say, lookin' all serious and stuff. âBut I don't think that's necessarily true. And do you wanna know why? I'm gonna tell you why. Because â you know what they say about pessimism and optimism, don't you?'
Theresa never really wanted you to answer her questions, âcause she had all the answers herself.
âThey say the pessimist says the glass is half
empty,
but the optimist says it's half
full.
Well, you know what I say to that? I don't say that glass is half
anything,
I say you're using the wrong damn glass. It's obviously too big. That's what I say.' Then old Theresa always waited a little and let it all sink in before she'd wind up for her big finale. âAnd you know what that makes me?' she'd ask. âThat makes me a
pragmatist
! That is someone who has a practical, matter-of-fact way of solving problems. That's a pragmatist and that's what I am â a practical, matter-of-fact problem solver. If you got a problem with how much is in your glass, well then maybe you're just using the wrong glass. You understand what I'm saying here? It just doesn't matter if you think it's half empty or half full, what matters is what you
do
about it.
Get off your ass and get yourself a different glass is what I say. Always remember this:
Answer
is also a verb. You understand what I'm saying here? The door to success is labeled
PUSH!
You can't leave footprints in the sands of time if you're not wearin' work boots.'
I don't know why, but I could listen to Theresa talk for hours. I loved those speeches.
âGet up off your butt, Cher, and grab that plastic strainer for me,' Theresa told Cher, and Cher did it. âHold it over the bowl.'
Cher was laughing as Theresa strained her pasta and let the water go down the john. âYou think there's any symbolism here with your cookin' right next to the toilet?' Cher teased.
Theresa's specialty is her pasta. That's somethin' the canteen don't carry, but Theresa's sister sends her a lot of it. That's another thing about who you pick for crew. You want the girls who get lots of packages from the Outside. Theresa gets pasta and salamis and Italian shit like that. And you can't get better packages than Cher gets. Theft runs in her family, so they're always sendin' her stuff. Lots of it is contraband and gets taken out and sent back, but the boxes always have hand creams and shampoos and stuff like that. And now and then she'll get a big ol' canned ham with some spices. The chips and dips and stuff come in on a regular basis. Both girls are real good about sharin' with the crew.
Suki never gets a damned thing. She ain't got a family. Her little girl is in foster care. I don't care, though â we had to take her in. But if we have to take in this Spencer bitch, then that girl better be prepared to do her part.
Dinner was almost ready. Besides the pasta we were
having some lettuce and some bananas for dessert. âAll the ice is gone,' Theresa said, âand there won't be any more until tomorrow afternoon, so get prepared to eat. I don't want anything to go to waste.'
âSpeakin' of waste,' I said. âI hear Miss Spencer had herself quite a night in Observation.'
âDid Karl Byrd give her any trouble?' Theresa asked, all concerned.
âKarl can do better than get a piece of that sorry ass,' Cher snarled.
âThat's not very nice,' Suki piped up. âI think she seems kind of nice. She's my bunkmate. But she says she's not gonna be here very long.'
Cher was laughing. âOh, let me guess,' she said. âShe's just another
innocent
victim, put in the slammer by mistake.'
âThat's what she says,' Suki told us, all sincere. Suki doesn't get irony â you might say she has an irony deficiency. âJennifer says her boyfriend is coming to get her out.'
âYeah, just like my knight in shining armor is comin' for me,' Cher snorted.
Havin' Cher as a cellmate helps the time pass. When she first hit Jennings, I couldn't imagine how I'd ever survive being locked up with a wild white woman. But she can be so damned funny. And she's honest â for a thief. She never pretends to be nobody âceptin' who she is. For her, everything she sees is just ripe for the pickin'. She always has her eyes wide open and on the lookout for the next chance to take what she wants. And not just for herself, either. Soon as she got here she stole me a Sony Walkman and a feather pillow, and damn it â that hillbilly girl just stole my heart. I never understood how it happened, but I was glad that it
did. I love Cher. Now it isn't like we're lesbians. No one in my crew is a lesbian. I know lots of women couple up for a little sex and comfort while they're here, but nothin' like that goes on between me and Cher. But we do love each other. When I think of how I felt for Earl I almost laugh. My feelings for him were pretty shallow and pathetic when I compare âem with the love I feel for Cher. And even for Theresa and Suki.
About the only action I get from men is from that mother Byrd. He would jump a ladybug or a polliwog as long as they were unwilling. That's what gives âem the thrill. I keep âem way off me by never showin' any fear and askin' him if he's got a hard three inches ready for me. Once I made the redneck bastard blush. Made my day, I tell ya'.