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Authors: Elizabeth L. Silver

Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Mystery

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BOOK: The Execution of Noa P. Singleton
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“Maybe,” I paused. “Maybe you wish that I was …”

But I stopped myself there. Marlene didn’t need to hear me say it. I had already taken two of her lives. The third needle, the third jab … well, that was for me.

“Nothing,” I finally said.

Marlene nodded her head up and down a few times, and watched the silver bars above her.

Instead of replying, she put the phone receiver down on the table and gathered the remaining photographs in her hand. When they were all together, she stood them up, again tapped them against the table (sending loud shots through the phone to my ear), allowing them to fall in alignment, and then dropped them into her coat pocket.

“I think that we have all we need for your petition, Noa,” she said. “I’ll be in touch over the next few days.”

There was no point in discussing anything more. Like I said, I was the one who pulled the trigger. I was the one who ended Sarah’s life. I was the one who ended Persephone’s. And, after all, isn’t that why I was on trial?

“How can I get my letters to Oliver?” I finally asked, knowing they might never reach him. When I started writing, I also didn’t expect them to have a reader in the first place.

“You can send them to me, and I’ll forward them on to him,” she said.

Thoughts sometimes do reach their intended audience, regardless of their mired trajectory. It was the one speck of hope I held on to.

With that, she hung up the phone as if placing a golden ring on a finger, careful not to clash the metal with plastic, placed her leather briefcase in one hand, and walked away. That was the last I ever heard from Mothers Against Death and Marlene Dixon.

Chapter 32

I’
M SUPPOSED TO GIVE MY ORDER FOR MY FINAL MEAL
. M
Y
final
meal.
My
final meal. My final
meal
. No matter how I look at it, pronounce it, emphasize my favorite syllable in it, it sounds almost biblical. Doesn’t it?

I’m pondering chicken parmesan, a thick New York strip steak (medium well), or a three-course meal from Le Bec Fin. Yes, if the system worked the way it should—truly granting us a proper last meal—then I would have someone get it for me from Center City Philadelphia. After all, isn’t that why we overspend at expensive restaurants? We want to feel good about ourselves, despite the fact that the food we are eating costs no more to make than a tightly sealed plastic carton of drumsticks from your local grocery store. We celebrate events at fancy restaurants; we introduce friends, future spouses, in-laws. We propose in them, we divorce in them. We tell the world that we are pregnant in them. What we don’t do in them is request our final meals. I mean, wouldn’t we all go back to those special-occasion restaurants if we knew it would be our final meal on the outside? Of course we would. We’d waste no time at KFC or McDonald’s; we’d go straight for Stephen Starr and Gordon Ramsay and tea at the Plaza.

It’s settled, then. Philadelphia was the city where I met Marlene and Sarah. Philadelphia boasts the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall and a crime rate worth knowing to anyone in here. Philadelphia
is proud to host Le Bec Fin, and so, no matter what it costs, they will get some exposure from my request. Just as I would have wanted to tell my mother there that I was graduating from college or getting married or having a baby, I’ll at least celebrate this way and tell her good-bye with class.

I think I’ll start off with Escargots “Persillade.” I’ve never had escargots. To be honest, I think I’m choosing it because I want to watch everyone mispronounce it. The sheriff says,
ass-car-got
, just like a redneck from Arkansas. My new neighbor has never heard of it and prefers to avoid the subject altogether. She’s looking forward to having s’mores and a burger. (She used to love campouts. Sadly, that was also where she killed her husband and his lover, but I digress.) Next, I’ll move on to Beef Bordelaise, with Crispy Purple Sweet Potato, Mustard Greens, and Wasabi. It might take a while to pronounce, but I will savor each moment. Of course, I’ll finish the meal with a Trio of Sorbet. If only they would let us drink wine with our last meal.

The three most common last requests are: steak, breakfast food, and nothing. Nothing at all. Honestly, I can’t for the life of me imagine what sort of final protest this pathetic statement stands for. You’re about to die; you might as well enjoy your favorite food for the last few minutes. It’s not like suddenly saying no to something is going to change your fate. No warden is going to see you as humility incarnate for refusing to ingest an absurd amount of calories. Nevertheless, many people refuse. Maybe they have no appetite, maybe they can’t remember what they used to enjoy. But, good lord, it can’t be for lack of hunger. Go force them to find you exactly what you want. One person actually requested sixteen Pepsis with his final meal. Sixteen.

Over the past few weeks, I’ve learned that one inmate requested steak with A.1. sauce, jalapeño poppers with cream sauce, onion rings, and a salad with cherry tomatoes, ham chunks, shredded cheese, bacon bits, and blue cheese and ranch dressing. Lemon iced tea and coffee to drink and ice cream for dessert. Another wanted four fried pork chops, collard greens with boiled okra and “boiling meat,” fried corn, fried fatback, fried green tomatoes, cornbread, lemonade, one
pint of strawberry ice cream, and three glazed donuts. Others in coalescence: four buns with lots of butter, lots of salt, and two slices of banana bread. Nine tacos, nine enchiladas, french fries, a salad with ranch dressing, beef fajitas, a bowl of picante sauce, a bowl of shredded cheese, six jalapeño peppers, a strawberry cake with strawberry frosting, and, there it is, the sixteen Pepsis.

This is my favorite, though. One man, who had no final request, asked that a vegetarian pizza be purchased and donated to a homeless person for his last meal. The prison officials refused.

I have to be honest, though, I have prepared poorly for this moment. The final meal, the final words, the final thoughts. It’s all too formulaic. Too contrived. As if it really is a gift to plan for your final moments. I can’t imagine Patsmith enjoyed it. She probably ate breakfast food before she died. Knowing her date was anything but a gift, and, in that, the government met its goal. The gift handed to me by Marlene Dixon, however, was wasted. She supplied me with a vehicle to properly prepare for X-day, and I can’t even figure out what I’m going to eat. I thought the gift was from her all this time, but perhaps I haven’t planned for these final words and this final meal and these final moments because the gift was never from her.

It doesn’t really matter in the grand scheme of things, though. I don’t want to be one of those brainless clods who refuses, I don’t want to order fried chicken or fried okra or fried fries, and you’ve got to be kidding me if I’m giving up my chance to finally dine at Le Bec Fin so that someone else can enjoy my service. They can fly it in at whatever cost. They spend enough money here. What’s a little more? It will be like I’m inviting the entire public into my special dinner out for the most important of all occasions. My mother will know the news I have to share. Hell, anyone who reads the
New York Times
will, too. The only difference for me is that I just won’t walk out of the restaurant. That’s all.

January

Dearest Sarah
,

This is my final letter to you. I’ve bought a nearby plot to yours and am burying these letters, bound together, next to you, with you, so that you may read them. If you can read them. I don’t know what else to say
.

Please listen to me and try not to be too upset. I’m also burying Noa’s papers with them. Before you get angry or proud (quite honestly, I don’t think I even know what you’d feel), please listen to what I have to say
.

About a week after Noa died on her execution date as scheduled, I received a letter in the mail. It stood out on the floor from the postal sea of bills and advertisements that were thrust through the mail slot like forgotten debris. It was a handwritten envelope. I didn’t wait to close the door when I walked in on it. I didn’t even bother gathering the remainder of the mail. I simply picked it up and ran my fingers across the return address from Muncy, Pennsylvania, Prisoner number 10271978
.

Standing by the door, I slipped my pinky finger under the opening at the corner, tearing the envelope from one end to the other. A diamond tennis bracelet slipped out of it and onto the floor. I dropped to the ground to pick it up, and in my hands, the sallow golden prongs clutching each miniature diamond stabbed at my fingers, which quickly climbed back into the envelope to find some sort of explanation. A reason for her to send her remaining possession to me. A relic of her former life returned just prior to execution. For reparations? For forgiveness? Spite?

Then my fingers found the note
.

P
LEASE DELIVER TO
S
USAN AND
G
EORG
R
IGA OF
L
OS
A
NGELES
, C
ALIFORNIA
.

No greeting or salutation. No apology. No explanation. Just a basic demand for transference of chattel. A selfish task bequeathed to me by virtue of failure. Mine? Hers? Failure to complete a goal,
regardless the proprietor, I suppose, looking back. Noa chose to give no final words before she died, and now she expected to get those from me on her behalf? She expected someone else to do her work for her? Absolutely not. It was not my place to publicize her final orders. Nor was it my duty to hand deliver her junk to Susan and Georg Riga
.

A name. Two names
.

Familiar names
.

Names that sit among the stack of useless declarations in my office all with the embossed seal of a notary certifying that someone matching a driver’s license made a declaration on the day scribbled at the bottom of the page. Names I’d heard only once before, names that rested inside the chamber of Oliver’s research from month one of this failed excuse for retribution. Names that fare no better than my own
.

The bracelet slipped between my fingers and slithered onto my night table, where it remained until I decided what to do with it. I placed the note beneath it and lay awake with those names ringing beside my bed every morning for a week, until I allowed myself to return to work. And when I did, I walked into my office with the note in my hand and found Susan and Georg Riga stamped on the list of supporting affidavits, stacked under the graveyard of frames beside my desk. I knew they were there. I put them there the moment Oliver left
.

I opened his folder and found an old newspaper clipping from the
Los Angeles Times
back from the early ’90s, along with a stack of declarations and affidavits from members of Noa’s past who wrote in support of clemency. People asking for her life, not for forgiveness—just for existence
.

There was a note from Andrew Hoskins, who claims he regrets his testimony at her trial, who wrote that a first love is something that cannot be killed. He wrote that he believes she should live. That she was a bright person who made a mistake, who thinks that nothing in her past was so heinous and depraved to lead to this sort of
an end. Another letter from Officer Robert McManahan, who now sits in a student dormitory in West Philadelphia, monitoring entry passes from students who flow in and out of the building on their way to class. No matter what, he said, scribbled in barely legible penmanship, she is not a person whose body should be found in a prison cemetery. There was also a letter from her mother, blaming herself and apologizing, wrongfully so, that she didn’t visit enough. Apologizing for villainizing her daughter while she awaited execution. There was not much more to her letter than that. And a letter from Georg and Susan Riga of Los Angeles, begging the governor, with more ethos than a stranger knew how, to spare this girl’s life. They hadn’t seen her since she was a child, they wrote, but they never forgot the kindness she showed to their daughter, Persephone. And for that reason alone, they wrote, she should be spared. What use does removing her do, they asked? The victim wouldn’t return, regardless of who took her, or how. And then a perforation of official validation stamped the bottom of each page like a presidential signature
.

Persephone
.

Persephone.

Persephone
.

I don’t understand what’s happening
.

I don’t understand what is happening anymore
.

Sweetheart, I can’t read on
.

I don’t know what this means. I don’t know what they mean
.

The only thing I know is that each new day, each new day since X-day, a shiny clean thread rolls out from my belly, knitting a web to cover the city, and I can’t stop it. At my home, or in my car, I cannot walk another step, because I know that mixed in with my regular paperwork, lurching above the thread and that newspaper clipping, those declarations reside with the perforated affidavit declaring what I cannot bear to read again
.

And so I don’t. I wash my face and brush my teeth, clean the sheets, slip each leg into pantyhose, each foot into a heel, and dress
myself for work. Every day. Every single day I go to my office and look away from Oliver’s files and your photos and your father’s wedding portrait
.

Then, two weeks after she sent me the bracelet, I received a larger package in the mail, fraught with the same telltale signs of bureaucracy. This time, however, the package was sent to the office and was addressed to Oliver Stansted. When the mailroom brought it to me to inquire about his forwarding address, I told them I would simply pass it on. You wouldn’t believe the stares I got when it was handed to me. Instantly I knew what it was. I went home with the box still closed and a blunted scissor in my purse, no different from how I stood at the doorway, opening the first envelope
.

Before I create a vision for you of your mother tearing into the novel of confessions like a vulture, as I did with her letter, you should know that once I got home, I calmly placed it on the kitchen table beside the bracelet and note. It was already on its first lap of decomposition, clearly stuffed, overflowing with papers and items, and God knows what else. The rectangular box didn’t even sit properly on the flat surface. It seesawed from a bulge in the center, struggling to balance on one side. Imperfect postal systems and the single unit of mail allowed for inmates produced this inoperable tumor in the bowels of a silly little package
.

So instead of forwarding that package or opening it to read for myself, I stared at it. I watched it slant one way, for seconds, and then I tapped it with two fingers as it tipped to the other side. I wanted to know what was inside. God, I did. I can’t tell you the curiosity that shot through my heart. Maybe it contained a manifesto of the sadness she felt prior to dying, or perhaps a golden beanstalk climbing with the humility and penitence she found in her final years, months, days, hours even before being strapped to the gurney. But, you see, the problem is that apologies are really just little weeds that grow over monuments and headstones. They keep coming back,
but never stop ruining what lies beneath. If an apology is truly authentic, the pain is supposed to stop. Right?

As the package settled on its bulge in the center of my clean kitchen, my arms reached out to it. I placed a single finger into one of the metaphorical loops of box string, and I couldn’t pull
.

Sarah, I was scared. I didn’t want to be that person. Not again. I didn’t want to untie the brown box string. I didn’t want to gut the cardboard box revealing the memoirs of a person’s life I so desperately wanted to end. You weren’t going to return to me. I cannot be with you. I am not with you anymore. I am not in the dirt beside you, no matter how much I may belong. Instead, I remain above ground, dangling from the thread that sways from side to side, as it drops me just far enough from you that I struggle to stand. I struggle to read, to dress myself, to merely hold on to that ropy thread, that strand of diamonds that the police report in the twenty-year-old newspaper clip said was the only thing taken from the burglary that killed Persephone Riga
.

I don’t want to know anymore what Noa did or didn’t do in her life prior to meeting you, prior to taking you away from me, while finding time to pen these hundreds of pages in her cell. Perhaps she wrote it in the darkness or maybe even while sitting on the toilet. But I don’t want to know how terrible she felt for taking you away from me. I don’t want to answer to Susan and Georg Riga. I don’t want to open the wound that is finally beginning to heal. My blood no longer coagulates. I cannot take any more chances. And I won’t
.

So I’m going to bury her apology or her tears, her retributive last words, her virulent expletives, and all of her potential in the ground with these letters. With you. She put it there, not me. She had the gun, she filled it with bullets, she used it on you. It was never up to me to refuse to speak with the governor. It was never really my choice to abandon her clemency petition. It was never up to me, sweetheart. None of that would have changed your current residence. None of that would have changed what Noa did, even without me. And no matter what she said, what she wrote, I’m still
up here and I’m sitting at my kitchen and I’m staring at that box. And that bracelet
.

That bracelet with a request. A merciless favor for another. That letter addressed to me, but intended for someone else. I think that maybe she’s right. I should give them away. I want to give them away. I want to pass the letters and bracelet on to their intended beneficiaries, but I can’t. I can’t pick up the phone and call Persephone’s parents. I can’t look in on Noa’s words. So instead, I pick up the bracelet and let it drop around my wrist each morning after I wake, struggling to secure the latch with my open hand. Sometimes it closes on the first try and sometimes not. But every day—it is with me when I drive my car, when I go to work, when I climb the stairs to the county courthouse, when I wait in a crowded elevator, when I present at a meeting before forty businesspeople in platinum cufflinks and tailored suits all looking to me for advice—the bracelet is always fastened around my wrist
.

Forever yours and only yours
,
Mom

BOOK: The Execution of Noa P. Singleton
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