The Glorious Prodigal (13 page)

Read The Glorious Prodigal Online

Authors: Gilbert Morris

BOOK: The Glorious Prodigal
4.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

A murmur ran through the courtroom after the sentencing, but Leah seemed locked in a trance. Though she heard the words and saw all the commotion all around her, it didn’t seem real. But then she saw Stuart, who turned and gave her one unfathomable look—and then he was taken away.

And it was at that moment Leah Winslow knew that she herself had been sentenced along with her husband, Stuart Winslow.

CHAPTER SEVEN

Number 6736

Stumbling off the police wagon that stopped in front of the rising, cold walls of the Tucker State Penitentiary, Stuart stepped down and took his place in a ragged line of miserable men. Two armed guards watched them with bored faces, one of them muttering impatiently, “Come along—step out there!”

Leg chains jingled as the eleven men hobbled forward, and Stuart lifted his eyes to the grim structure that was to be his home for the next twenty years. Ever since the trial he had been in a mental and emotional coma. He could barely remember the good-byes of his friends and loved ones before he was taken away. His mother had clung to him and whispered, “God won’t forget you, Stuart, so don’t you forget Him!”

But God seemed very far away, even nonexistent, as Stuart entered the gates that swung back to admit him. Behind him one of the men uttered a choking sob, but Stuart simply narrowed his eyes and looked around the yard, where men in stripes were gathered in small groups. They were smoking and joking, and if the clothing had been different, he could have pictured the same kind of men gathered outside a rodeo or a ball game. But despite the almost friendly sounds of voices and laughter, a chill ran up Stuart’s spine. He saw that some of the inmates had lined up and were calling out, “Fresh fish! How do you like your new home? Tucker Farm ain’t so bad. Be good boys now and you’ll be all right.” The shouting became more raucous and cruel, the remarks cruder, as the new inmates were forced to shuffle past. The guards
ignored the regular prisoners as they marched their new ones through another set of barred doors guarded by a man with a shotgun held firmly in his hands.

Concrete and steel loomed everywhere, and guards with shotguns stood all around, giving the place a cold, clammy air of gloom. These new dismal pictures soaked into Stuart’s numbed mind, and he kept his lips firmly clamped together, determined not to let any emotion show on his face.

“All right. Line up here!” The guards who had escorted them now formed them into a ragged line and ordered them to face front. They were standing shoulder to shoulder, miserable and frightened, when a steel door opened and a short, sturdy man briskly entered. He had iron gray hair with a slight curl and a pair of penetrating blue eyes that looked as hard as nails.

“My name is George Armstrong. I’m the warden.” Armstrong’s voice was not loud, but it carried well. He walked up and down looking the men over, then stepped back in front of them and took a deep breath. “I don’t have a long speech for you. You men have all broken the law, and you are here to serve your sentences. You’ll hear it said that I’m a hard man.” Warden Armstrong paused, and his eyes fastened onto those of the men standing closest to him. His glare had made many a man feel that he was being searched, tried in the balances, and found wanting. “Maybe I am. Maybe I have to be. I hope I’m a fair man, however, and there’s one verse of Scripture that I want to leave with you without preaching to you. ‘Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.’ That’s the rule here. You behave yourselves, and you’ll be all right. But don’t try my patience, or you’ll find yourself in a worse condition than you’d ever dream possible.” He turned and said, “All right, Mr. Munger.” Wheeling on his heels he left the room, and silence reigned.

The man the warden had addressed as Mr. Munger came forward. He was six feet tall and appeared to be as hard as the concrete prison walls. His eyes were hazel, his hair
a light brown, and there was an implacable air about him as he stalked back and forth, staring at the line of fledgling inmates. “Which one of you is Moore?”

“Here. I’m Moore.”

Munger’s head swiveled, and he went at once to the middle-aged man who had answered. The prisoner was a meek-looking fellow, undersized and with a fearful expression.

Without warning, Munger raised his stick and, with one swift, practiced motion, drove the blunt end of it into the pit of Moore’s stomach. Moore’s breath exploded as he doubled over and fell to the floor gasping for breath. Munger stood looking down at him with a cold, sadistic expression. “I’m Mr. Munger,
sir!
” he said. He reached down, jerked the man to his feet, and shoved him into line. “Moore, I’ve been looking over your records. I look over the records of all new cons.” He grinned suddenly, but there was no humor in it. “I see that you’ve got five years to serve for embezzlement. I can’t stand an embezzler, Moore! Don’t think you’re going to get any time off for good behavior. I’ll see to it that you don’t.”

Moore’s face turned a sickly pale color, and he expelled and inhaled air as if he were drowning. Trembling like a man in a stiff breeze, he opened his mouth as if to say something, but all that came out was a faint whisper. “Yes, sir, Mr. Munger.”

Munger nodded, then turned his head. “Winslow! Where are you?”

“Here, sir!”

Stuart stood straight, his eyes locked onto those of Munger. Winslow had never seen such eyes before. They were glassy like a cat’s—with nothing beneath them, a total lack of emotion.

“Well, Mr. Murphy, we have a killer here with us. He got caught with another man’s lady and shot the poor fellow when he tried to protect what was rightfully his. Is that right, Winslow?”

Stuart knew there was no use in denying what a jury had convicted him of, so he nodded. “Yes, sir.”

“We’ll just call you Lover Boy, then. Will that be all right, Lover Boy?” Munger waited for Stuart to answer, and when no response was forthcoming, he reversed his stick and drove it into Stuart’s stomach.

Stuart had seen the blow coming and tensed his muscles. He did not move; nor did his eyes flicker.

“Oh, a tough one! Lover Boy’s a tough one, Mr. Murphy,” Munger said to one of his subordinates standing nearby. Then with one quick motion, the chief guard swung his stick and caught Stuart in the head.

The unexpected blow drove Winslow to the ground, and the world seemed to be made of flashing lights. From far away Stuart could hear a voice saying, “Why didn’t you toughen your head muscles against that, like you did your stomach muscles? Come on, get to your feet, Lover Boy.”

Stuart came slowly to his feet, the room reeling. He squeezed his eyes and shook his head, and Munger’s face came slowly into focus inches from his own.

“Oh, we’re going to have lots of fun, Lover Boy! I’ve had plenty of guys here before who thought they were tough, but they were jelly when I got finished with them. I never saw a woman chaser who wasn’t yellow.” Turning to the middle-aged guard who was watching all this without expression, he said, “Mr. Murphy, as soon as the men get their clothes, put Lover Boy on the new unit. Have him push a barrow. That ought to take some of the starch out of him.” He turned again and stared into Stuart’s face. “I hate a womanizer,” he said between clenched teeth. “But you won’t be doing any of that again for twenty years, Winslow. That’s all over for you. You’ll be pushing a wheelbarrow until you’re an old man!”

****

Stuart had the number 6736 displayed prominently on the back and front of his black-and-gray striped uniform. When the other new prisoners were taken to their cells, the guard named Murphy took him at once to the construction site.

“A new unit’s being built, Winslow,” the guard said as they approached a big mixer churning the wet concrete. A line of inmates stood with their filled wheelbarrows, waiting to push them up a steep incline. “This is a new unit. It’s going to be three stories high. You ought to have some gloves, but you’re on the bad side of Mr. Munger, and he won’t permit it.” Murphy studied Winslow’s face and shook his head. “Don’t give him any trouble. If you bow down and don’t get his back up, he’ll forget about you soon enough and move on to someone else. But if you’re stubborn about it, life will be even more miserable for you here than it oughta be.”

Stuart had arrived at the construction site slightly after one. For the next five hours he pushed the wheelbarrow up and down the incline. At first it was bearable enough, for he was stronger than most men, but his hands were in screaming agony by the time the construction superintendent said, “All right. That’s it for today.”

As Stuart picked up the handles of the wheelbarrow, he felt a sticky moistness. Looking down at the grips, he saw that they were stained scarlet with blood. His hands were torn to pieces, blistered, and then the blisters destroyed. Twice during the long day, Felix Munger had come by to watch with sadistic pleasure in his eyes as Stuart pushed the wheelbarrow up the incline. Each time Stuart had let nothing show on his face, making Munger laugh.

“You’re a tough one, all right, Lover Boy. We’re going to have a lot of fun, you and me.”

Stuart stood there for a moment trying to flex his hands. He turned to fall in line with the inmates who were heading across the yard back toward the main gate, but a double shadow loomed in front of him. He looked up to see Munger and Murphy blocking his path.

“Well, did you have a pleasant day, Lover Boy?”

Determined to do nothing deliberately to anger the chief of guards, Stuart said tightly, “Yes, sir.”

“Well, now, I see this killer’s learned some manners, Mr.
Murphy.” A slight triumph lit Munger’s glassy eyes, and he looked down at Stuart’s hands. “Oh, you got some blisters! Too bad.” He turned to the other guard. “Mr. Murphy, I think we ought to show a little kindness to Lover Boy. Take him to the infirmary and get those hands fixed up. Then to the mess hall and see that he gets a good supper. Now”—Munger grinned—“say, ‘Thank you, Mr. Munger.’ ”

Stuart considered complying with Munger’s order, but something rose in his throat. He looked full into the man’s eyes, then clamped his lips tightly together. Stuart knew full well that his own stubbornness would lead him to disaster, yet he remained silent, waiting for the consequences of refusing to play Munger’s game.

“Oh, you still haven’t learned anything, Lover Boy! Well then, take him to the hole, Mr. Murphy. Throw him in tonight with nothing but water. That’ll teach Winslow here a few manners.”

“Come along, Winslow,” Murphy said, leading Stuart away.

Neither man said anything as they entered the main gates and headed toward the dispensary. An inmate on infirmary duty was tilting back in a chair reading the
Police Gazette.
He got up and said, “What’s this, Murphy?”

“Guy’s got some bad hands. Do what you can, Charlie.”

“Sure. Here, sit down. What’s your name?”

“Stuart Winslow.”

The attendant looked at the hands and whistled, “Boy, you
did
tear your paws up, didn’t you? Let’s get somethin’ on ’em and some bandages.”

The inmate quickly washed off the blood, applied some yellow salve, and then carefully wrapped each palm. “Better do this every day and take it easy now, will ya? You’re cut to the bone.”

“No advice, Charlie. Just do your job,” Murphy said.

The inmate’s eyes came up quickly, and he studied the guard until something passed between them. He said no more but shook his head, then went back to his chair, picked up
the paper, and began reading it while Murphy led Stuart from the room.

“Come along, Winslow.”

Stuart was ravenously hungry. He had had nothing since breakfast, and that had been only a bowl of oatmeal, two pieces of toast, and a chunk of salt bacon. He followed Murphy through the labyrinth of corridors, passing through doors that were carefully guarded by men with shotguns and side arms. They went down two flights to an underground level where the dank air was cold and miserable.

Murphy passed by a guard and asked, “Which hole is empty?”

“All of ’em right now. Been an easy time, Jerry.”

“This is Winslow. Put him in number one overnight.”

“Just one night? He’s lucky. Come on, Winslow.”

For a fleeting moment Stuart caught a glimpse of compassion in Jerry Murphy’s eyes as he handed the prisoner over. The other guard pushed Winslow down a corridor lined with six solid-steel doors, each with a small steel flap to allow the guards to slip in food and water.

The guard opened the last door and pointed with his gun. “In there.”

Stuart stumbled inside, and for one moment, the dirty yellow bulb in the hallway cast dim light into the cell. It was nothing but a cubicle, seven feet square and no more than seven feet tall. The gritty concrete floor was empty, with no bed, nor even a pad to sleep on. He faced the door as it closed and all light was shut out. Total darkness enveloped him, and he stood, unable to move. He had never liked closed spaces, and now the pitch blackness seemed to enter into his very spirit. Weariness from the hard work all day wore on him, and the pain of his hands was almost unbearable. He sat down on the cold floor, hugged himself, and shut his eyes. He found it was no darker with them shut than with them open.

Time ceased to have meaning for him. He had no watch, of course. There was no sun, no moon or stars—nothing
but the cold, frigid darkness. He finally dozed but then woke with a jolt, terrified and not knowing where he was. Then it came back to him, and he rose swiftly. He was trembling, and his teeth were chattering. He walked in a tiny circle on the damp, cold concrete for what seemed like hours until he finally slumped down again and tried to sleep.

Sleep came only in brief snatches. He had no way of knowing how long he slept each time. His memory, however, was the one part of him that was functioning well. He could think of Leah and Raimey without difficulty. He thought of the trial and the judge’s face when he had sentenced him to twenty years. He thought of what a fool he had been, and he finally bowed his head and gritted his teeth, determined to block those thoughts out of his mind. The night seemed to last forever, but finally when the door clanged open, he woke with a start. Getting to his feet, he blinked his eyes in the dim light.

Other books

The Mountain and the Valley by Ernest Buckler
The Time in Between: A Novel by Maria Duenas, Daniel Hahn
The wrong end of time by John Brunner
When a Billion Chinese Jump by Jonathan Watts
A Ticket to Ride by Paula McLain