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Authors: Chester Himes

BOOK: Cast the First Stone
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“You know what to do, you know what to do,” Captain Warren said. “Didn’t nobody tell you to rob those folks but you did that. You’ll do this, too.”

I went to look for a mop. Finally I found one in a pail of water. Another porter came up and said that was his. Then B&O hollered at me from across the dormitory.

“Get that barrel over there and go get some shavings,” he ordered.

I found the barrel in a corner. I rolled it out on the floor. “Where do I get the shavings?” I asked.

“At the planing mill. Where the hell you think?”

I didn’t know where the planing mill was. But I didn’t ask. I picked up the barrel and started outside. Captain Warren saw me when I came around by the coal pile. “Get a wheelbarrow, get a wheelbarrow,” he said. I looked around for a wheelbarrow.

“They’re down in the shed,” a convict volunteered. I went down to the coal shed and got a wheelbarrow and put the barrel in it and started off. I didn’t know where I was going. I went around the powerhouse and came out into an expanse of open yard that looked like a ball diamond. I kept on going.

Down at the end of the wooden laundry building a guard stopped me. “Where you going, boy?”

“To the planing mill to get some shavings.”

“You’re new, aren’t you?”

“Yes, sir.”

He showed me how to get to the planing mill. I went down some slush-covered alleys between brick buildings. I could hear the steady looms of the woolen mill, and a hundred other sounds of activity I couldn’t identify. Finally, after what seemed like a long distance, I came to a tin shed where convicts were cutting and planing lumber.

I went up to the guard and told him I’d come to get some shavings. He pointed to a pile. After filling the barrel I came back the other way, down to the crossroad and over by the sunken gardens next to the dining room, and back of the dining room by the long glass-enclosed greenhouse, back to the dormitory.

It was some prison. There were convicts just walking about everywhere you could see and the waiters hung out the dining-room doors and stared when I passed. They looked me over and asked if I wasn’t a new man and if I didn’t want them to get me a better job so I could move into their company. I didn’t answer any of them. I was fed up with it because I knew what it was all about.

When I got back with the shavings I put them in the corner and sat out at the table and played gin rummy with another porter until the company came in, about eleven o’clock, to wash up for dinner. After dinner they had an hour to smoke and rest and then went back to the coal pile until four-thirty. Then they came in and washed up again and went to supper. We had soupy beans, tea and bread for supper. By that time it was dark outside. When we returned to the dormitory we were through for the day. Until nine o’clock we could do whatever we pleased, as long as it wasn’t against the rules or the guard didn’t catch us. We could gamble, read, wrestle, dance, sing, write, study, talk, walk, cry or shout. We could yell as loud as we pleased. Couldn’t anybody hear us, anyway, and if anybody did there wasn’t anybody to give a damn. The only thing we weren’t allowed to do was whistle. I never knew why we weren’t allowed to whistle. But if we were caught just whistling softly we’d be sent to the hole.

Right after supper they called out mail. I got a letter from my mother and a note from my father with a hundred-dollar money order inside. The colored runner, Deacon Smith, brought the money order for me to sign. Later I learned that Deacon was the secretary of the Sunday School and assistant to the Protestant chaplain. When the chaplain was away he took charge of the Sunday services.

I wasn’t allowed to keep the money but it would be put to my credit in the front office. Deacon had no sooner left than everybody in the dormitory knew I had a hundred bucks to my credit. All of a sudden I had more friends than I knew what to do with. They wanted to walk around with me or give me some Bull Durham. Mostly they wanted to tell me what I could order the next day, which was ordering day.

With all that money I’d seen outside around gambling clubs during the past year, a hundred bucks didn’t seem like a lot of money to me. But those convicts in that dormitory were broke and they figured they had a sucker.

Everybody began calling me Jim. All of a sudden they knew all about me; all about my sentence, and my going to the state university and graduating, and being a doctor, one of them said, and another had it a lawyer, and one asked, “Weren’t you a fighter pilot?” They had a lot of things to sell me and a lot of things to give me. All I wanted was to gamble. I could have gotten credit in any of the poker games. But I didn’t know it.

When Mal came out and asked me to come back to his bunk I went because I didn’t have anything else to do. He looked very neat. He had washed and cleaned up after supper, so he must have had some private water because the washtrough was cut off. As he walked ahead of me I noticed that he was taller than I. He must have been about five feet, ten-and-a-half, or eleven. His hips were as wide as his shoulders. That looks odd in a man, especially if the man isn’t stout.

He was very pleasant and very friendly. He kept smiling all the time he talked as if he was pleased with something. When he smiled the hardness which his face had in repose was gone and he looked quite boyish.

I liked his bunk. There was an openness about it. Although it was over by the wall there was a light over it that gave it a certain cheerfulness. He didn’t have it curtained off as Jeep had his bunk, and there was none of that gloom and secrecy and suggestiveness like the bunks down in the corner where Jeep and Mike were: I liked it because it was open. I didn’t have any secrets.

Mal sat down beside me, crossing his legs and leaning his head back against the bunk frame so as to face me. I was sitting with my back to the aisle and my feet on his box, with my arms propped on the bunk.

“Do you draw disability compensation?” he asked. He was just fishing, he knew I hadn’t been in the army.

“Naw, state compensation from the industrial commission,” I said.

“You mean for an injury?”

“Yeah, I broke my back about three years ago—before I went to college.”

“Broke your back! Damn!” he exclaimed. “How do you get about?”

“Oh, it’s all healed up now. Just about, that is.”

“Damn! Nobody’d ever know it.”

“Nobody’d ever know you were in death row, either. Not just by looking at you.”

“Naw, guess you’re right. How’d you do it?”

“I was working in a steel mill in Gary. I’d just finished high school. I was riding an overhead crane and fell on a stack of plates.”

“Jesus Christ! Wonder it didn’t kill you.”

“It damn near did. I broke my arm, my jaw, and three vertebrae. I was in the hospital four months.” I showed him the scar where the bone had come through my arm.

“Jesus Christ!” he said. “Does it ever hurt?”

“Not often. Mostly when I get cold. Of course I make out like it does to keep drawing compensation.”

“How much do you get?”

“Twenty-seven bucks a week. That’s for total disability. I can get it for five hundred weeks if I keep stiffing.” After a pause I said, “I haven’t told anybody but you. I don’t know what they might do when they find out I’m in prison. They might cut it off.”

“If you’d told the deputy warden you could of got an easy job,” he said. “You could of got in the cripple company.”

“I don’t mind it here,” I said. “I don’t want to take any chances.”

All of a sudden he leaned over and tousled my hair. “I believe you’re a slicker, Jim.”

I drew back. “What the hell!”

He laughed. “You wouldn’t get mad if a girl did that.”

I had to laugh, too. “I wonder what a girl looks like,” I said.

“Hell, you’ve only been in here ten days,” he said. “Don’t tell me you’ve forgotten so soon.”

“It already seems like a million years,” I said.

He smiled at me with his eyes half closed. He had two gold teeth in front in the very same places where I had mine.

“We look enough alike to be twins,” he said, “only you have dimples and your hair is a little darker than mine and your skin is smoother. Jesus, you’ve got pretty skin.”

“Hell,” I said, blushing.

“Mine was smooth, too, but this water and soap in here roughens it.” He picked up my cap where I’d laid it on the bunk. “You’d better get a cap like mine. The dye comes out of these things and makes you bald.”

“Yeah?”

He showed me his cap. It had a long visor and was lined with black coat-lining material and it was soft.

“What makes it keep its shape?” I asked.

“It’s got horsehair inside of the lining.”

“Do they let you have them?”

“No, they take ‘em if they notice ‘em. Some of the guards do. The others don’t care.”

“I better get me one. How much do they cost?”

“A dollar and fifty cents. But I’ll get you one.”

“I’ll give you the money.”

“Oh, that’s all right. It won’t cost me anything.”

“You’ve got some extra pants, too, haven’t you?”

“Yes. They let you have them if you’re in some companies, but in some companies they take them.”

“Do they give them to you?”

“Oh no, you get them for yourself. They just let you keep them if you’re in a company like this, where the work’s dirty. We have them made up in the tailor shop.”

The runner came around with the papers. “You want to subscribe to the paper?” Mal asked.

“How do you do it?”

“Come on, I’ll show you.”

We went out into the aisle. “Hey, Mac! Mac!” he called. The short, owl-faced paper boy came over. He was about fifty years old and was doing life. He’d been in twenty-three years. “Jim here wants to subscribe to The News.”

“How long?”

“Oh, I don’t know. About a month. I want a Sunday paper and a morning paper, too.”

He wrote the names of the papers on a cashier’s slip, filled it out for $2.65, and gave it to me to sign.

I signed my name and number—James Monroe #109-130. “Do I get one now?”

“You got your receipt?” Mac asked.

“What receipt?”

“He means the cashier’s receipt for the money order you signed tonight,” Mal explained. He turned to Mac. “He hasn’t got his receipt yet but he’s got the money. He signed a money order for a hundred dollars. I’ll vouch for him.”

The paper boy looked at Mal. “You can ask the clerk then,” Mal said.

“To hell with it!” I said.

Mac jerked out a paper and shoved it at me. I took it and we went back to Mal’s bunk. We passed the poker game. It looked good and hot. That poker game sure looked good. But I wouldn’t stop to watch it.

“You have to give your history to get a lousy nickel paper,” I said.

“So many new men beat them.”

“Oh, is that it?” When we were seated again I said, “Man I sure would like to play some stud.”

Mal frowned. “I wouldn’t if I were you, Jimmy. The night captain comes in sometimes and if he catches them playing he’ll take them all to the hole.”

“Yeah?” I didn’t give a damn.

We read the paper and talked about the news. The sports were still talking about that Rose Bowl game and a little about State’s basketball team. There was an editorial about the governor-elect. I discovered that the convicts were very interested in the governors. They read all the news that was printed about all governors.

Some other convicts joined us and borrowed the paper when we had finished. They stood around and joined in the conversation. They talked about the warden and the in-coming governor and the out-going governor and the parole board. Everybody was a son of a bitch. The warden was a pig. The parole board were dirty fink bastards. The governors were all crooked. Everybody who had ever been a governor was crooked. They always had their “goddamn hands stuck out.”

They said I was lucky to get a porter’s job and asked me if it was true about my plane being shot down over Germany. I said sure it was true. They said I looked pretty young. I said I was twenty-five. They didn’t believe it. They asked me how much did I get? I said fifty thousand in cash and eighteen thousand in jewelry. They didn’t believe that, either. They wanted to know how I got caught after getting clear to Chicago. I said the dicks spotted me from the readers the Lake City police had sent out. They said that was tough. I said it sure in hell was.

The magazine man came around with a steel rack of magazines slung from his shoulder, and resting against his belly. I bought every kind he had except the comic books. He had more comic books than anything else, but I didn’t want any. We thumbed through the magazines and talked some more.

“Every time I see you write your number it sort of shocks me,” Mal said.

“Yeah?”

“A hell of a lot of men have come in since I have. A whole city.”

“What’s your number?”

“99830…Let’s see…” He got out a pencil and paper and did some computing. “Nine thousand and three hundred men have come in between you and me and I guess a hundred more have come in since you have. That’s a lot of people.”

“How long have you been in?”

“A little over five years.”

“You’re an old-timer,” I joked.

“Not yet,” he said. “You’re not an old-timer until you’ve eaten out of all the plates.”

“Yeah.”

“I wonder how many of those nine thousand men went out,” he said.

“How many?”

“Hell, I don’t know. Let’s don’t talk about it.”

He showed me how to fill out my tobacco order. He had an old form but the regular forms would be passed out the next day. We could order a dollar and seventy-five cents’ worth of stuff from the commissary. The order went in on a Friday and the stuff came back Saturday week, eight days later.

“Order me a toothbrush, will you, Jimmy?”

“Sure.”

“I’ll pay you for it.”

“Aw, hell.”

I made out a list of what I would order—two toothbrushes, a tube of tooth paste, six boxes of matches and five bags of Bull Durham.

“Get two nickel books of cigarette papers with the rest,” he said.

Then he told me about the “outside” order which came back on Thursday. I could order shoes, socks, underwear, and handkerchiefs. I wanted to order a sweater but he said I couldn’t have that. He said for me to order some socks and underwear and I said I’d get him some and he said, okay, he’d get me a cap and some pants. I wanted to order some gloves but he said I could buy them cheaper from some of the fellows who got broke in the games.

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