Part 8 (1/2)

”Everything about Crowley is in-house. We're taking care of it our way, thoroughly and methodically and fully. And so far, Kali, no one has broken ranks.” Meaning no one but me. Meaning if anyone did break ranks, it would be me. Meaning no one outside knew enough about where Crowley had been found and what condition he'd been in to even know there were questions worth asking.

Wallace went on. The inst.i.tution would need to put Hadley through a disciplinary hearing sooner rather than later because of the attention. He left the rest unspoken, but I knew the way it worked. There were two ways disciplinary hearings got handled. The first was to hold a public hearing in the prison before a judge, with lawyers present. The second, for more minor offenses, was to hold a closed hearing with the Keeper as judge and no lawyers present. A good keeper made sure everything disciplinary stayed in-house. This often meant reducing the severity of the charges so that punishment could be more freely doled out. But if the inmate went Al Sharpton on you, all bets were off.

I could see the lines of separation being drawn. I tried to get a.n.a.lytical about it, put all my objections aside and dig for information.

”You said calls. You mean more than one caller?” I asked, remembering my late-night stalker.

Wallace's shrug was weary with indifference. ”One reporter. A fellow named Bart Stone. He's been persistent. He's reached out to me, the warden's office, and a bunch of COs.”

He left that detail hanging. Other COs. I knew what those calls would concern. What kind of CO was I? Was it actually easier for a woman to commit an abuse? Was I capable of handling the same pressures and strains as a man? Off the record, what in particular was wrong with me?

Then Wallace interrupted my interior rant with a tactical explosive device.

”Someone, apparently, has some kind of photographic evidence showing you standing over Hadley with your baton raised. I haven't seen it, so I don't know how serious a problem we have.”

”How could someone take a picture of that?”

Wallace shrugged. ”We had the incident camera rolling. Maybe it's video. Maybe someone snapped a cell phone shot. I have no idea. But pictures make everything hotter. A story with a picture can spread.”

The idea of photograpic evidence shunted everything else aside and left me utterly silent.

Then Wallace suggested that I look into getting myself a union-appointed lawyer and start seeing a therapist.

He must have caught the look on my face because he offered some unexpected advice: ”A good counselor can turn your life around, even your career.” A pause. ”I've seen therapy be of significant help to those who needed it. And I've seen those who should have gotten it fall into serious trouble very suddenly.”

I was overcome by the suspicion that everyone around me, perhaps especially the Keeper, secretly wanted me to fail. I'd found Crowley when they couldn't. You'd think, in a reasonable world, such conduct would merit a free pa.s.s on other minor transgressions, a wiping clean of the dirty slate. Not here, not with me.

”Kali,” Wallace added, using my first name with a touch of urgency, ”make sure you think clearly about all this. Don't let your emotions push you around.” Emotional wreck that I am. ”You don't want to talk to those reporters. You'd do yourself more harm than good.”

It felt like an accusation. But nothing could be further from my mind than talking to some reporter. I did not want to be at the center of any attention. That would only make my situation worse. My secret anxiety was that none of them saw me as one of the guys. Instead, in their eyes, I was an interloper, an affirmative-action occupant of someone else's job.

I drove home fast at one in the morning, my hands tight with anger, little sniffy sounds coming from me once or twice, watching the dashed white lines suck under my wheels. The offer of therapy was a setup. It would allow the administration to paint me as someone who didn't have the mental makeup to do the job. If Hadley's lawyers pressed for action, my employment would be the easy sacrifice and the inst.i.tution could resume its normal routine without pause. Wallace knew I couldn't see a counselor under those circ.u.mstances. The administration encouraged it with vigor and enthusiasm whenever there was a trace of PTSD, but it was different for a woman. The men could talk macho about their sessions and joke about bulls.h.i.+t psychological terms because it showed them trying to be more sensitive, but if a woman opened a counselor's door, all her normal emotional reactions got labeled as softness or instability. I'd be forever marked.

On the way home I stopped for gas and picked up the newspaper. In the kitchen, with my uniform still on, I worked up the stomach to flip through the pages. A piece about Crowley took up a portion of the front of the city section.

It was appropriately hard-toned for a prison piece, and all lies, hewing to the warden's message that Crowley had killed himself in detention, a not particularly unusual occurrence in an inst.i.tution for inmates. I looked for comments on the editorial page, anything to raise a question or call bulls.h.i.+t, but found nothing. I continued through the city section until the word INMATE in medium-size lettering below the fold drew me to an article about Shawn Hadley and me. It took a few moments with my head in my hands to summon the courage to read on. How bad was it? Short on details or information, a tone of pious neutrality in sentences that read a tad more literary than normal, the article covered the complaints of the lawyer and the legal actions being initiated against a number of corrections officers, in particular, Kali Williams and Raymond MacKay, as well as Warden Gavin Jensen and the Department of Corrections. I kept coming back to a particularly florid line about the canceled Christmas visits and the resulting disappointment of Hadley's three children and girlfriend. ”The eight-hour drive home that afternoon, in a beat-up Impala burning through gas, left the children exhausted and gave Cindy Harris the dreadful feeling she might never see Shawn Hadley again.”

The writer was listed as one Bart Justin Stone. Angered, I googled him and found a page full of links. He'd done a few short pieces on the state primaries, a before-and-after job on the marathon last year, in which he'd apparently partic.i.p.ated, and a series about a crystal meth lab in Kino Park. According to Stone, practically the whole town knew about the lab, yet it took the death of a teenage user to push the police into action.

I sat in stunned exhaustion, whatever good luck I had left draining from my limbs. I reached for the phone and listened to the messages. My union rep. My friend Gina. A hang-up. I checked the hang-up against the call record. The number looked familiar, and I remembered the crumpled note from Ruddik. A match.

15.

In the morning at the appointed time Josh arrived at Brother Mike's office. All his nervousness clung to his skin like static electricity. He sank into the couch and waited for Brother Mike to look up from his desk. It was utterly quiet in the room, just the tick of the clock, and the waxy smudge of morning light leached through a window that overlooked the yard.

It was only their third private meeting, but the first two had touched on nothing in particular except Josh's art and his family life and the books he liked to read. Brother Mike had promised they'd start digging in soon. That promise or threat revealed itself now in the lack of friendly banter. Brother Mike left his paperwork, sat in the chair before him, and began speaking-the gray grizzled beard, the sparks of eyebrow.

”Do you know what grace means, Joshua?”

The word roused him, made him focus. He sensed the s.h.i.+t storm coming and braced himself.

”I know the bare bones of what you did. I don't know why yet. Maybe you don't either. If we're successful, in time, you might achieve a reconciliation, a personal forgiveness. But it's easy to see how much pain you're in, how uncomfortable you are in your own skin. Do you understand what I'm saying?”

Josh didn't bother to nod or shrug. You did not admit guilt or innocence. Your opinion was irrelevant.

”From our earlier talks, and your files, and the time I've spent with you in the studio, and yes, the times I've talked about you with others, I've come to some views about you. Do you want to hear them?”

”Yes,” Josh croaked. As if he had any choice.

”You're profoundly out of touch with yourself and with G.o.d. It doesn't matter whether you believe in him, whether you pray fervently every night or only when you're frightened. You're weak. You're lazy. You're devastatingly narcissistic. You tell yourself lies to justify the things you do and the things you don't do, and you believe in those stories. That doesn't make you unusual. That's the human condition.”

No better and no worse than anyone else. It was a conclusion he wanted to argue in both directions at once.

”Now, let me put forward an alternative path,” Brother Mike continued. ”It's through G.o.d's grace that we feel his will and his healing hand. You don't know what I mean yet. You're thinking, I need to please this man by agreeing to whatever he says. You're thinking, what does this have to do with therapy or restorative justice, let alone art? You don't have any idea what kind of journey you'll be taking. No matter what I say, you'll still sign on and tell me what I want to hear. But I'm telling you, your fundamental challenge is that you are disconnected from yourself and from G.o.d. What does that matter? Nothing and everything. No one else cares or will ever care. It's been my frequent experience in this place that the lost lamb is quickly forgotten by everyone except G.o.d. And sometimes I have to remind even him.”

”Are we going to develop a program together?” Josh mumbled. He knew, or had learned like Pavlov's dog, that psychologists, counselors, and case officers liked structure. They liked to fill up a schedule, monitor progress, and write reports. They wanted you to sit, beg, and bark on cue. He wanted Brother Mike to stop being vague and set up those rules, give him a game to play.

But Brother Mike said, ”I'm not interested in your correctional plan. I have no influence on your career as an inmate, unless you ask me to testify at your parole hearing, and I couldn't guarantee you'd like what I say. I warned a man about that once, but he asked me anyway. And when the parole board requested my opinion of his character for the record, I suggested that he was unrepentant, manipulative, deluded, and unsafe to release, though immensely eager to please.

”Since the early days of this country, there have been men with good intentions who thought the secret to reform was changing a man's behavior. If you can't change character, they felt, then why not change how a felon acts in the world? I don't think that's the answer. It's a kind of programming for reducing incidents of violence, with dubious results. The soul needs more attention than that. You might as well wait until a man is old and toothless if you want to solve the problem of violence. Let nature run its course, and a man gets too weary to take such instant and disproportionate offense at all the perceived slights of the world. But that doesn't mean he's a better man.”

”But what if he's a better man before his time is up-isn't it unjust to forget about him for a couple decades or so?” Josh was roused to his own defense. He knew it was a trick. You weren't supposed to question the calculus of justice.

”I'm not concerned about whether your punishment is justified. Why should I be? You come from a good family. You were loved, not abused. They made sure you were healthy and educated. You are not noticeably deficient in your mental faculties. You probably went to church. In short, my philosophical friend, you had a lot going for you. More, I would bet, than any other inmate in this inst.i.tution and many of the staff. If anyone is a poster child for the importance of deterring future wrongdoing through harsh punishment, I'd say you fit the bill. And maybe that's why they sent you here. Tell me why you did it. I'll know if you lie.”

”You want to hear what happened?”

Brother Mike nodded.

Josh swallowed. He'd told the story before-done the jig of regret-but not for some time.

”We broke up in the summer before freshman year. I thought it was a mutual decision, but later on I started to wonder if she hadn't made plans to get me to agree to something I didn't fully understand.” He stopped and slowed down, told himself to speak carefully. ”Looking back, it seemed as though a lot of the reasoning behind the breakup had come from her. I felt duped. I was looking forward to being free. Then I realized I'd made a terrible mistake, and when I tried to correct that, to get back together, she didn't want to. It was like she'd never loved me. I couldn't understand how she could change so quickly in terms of her feelings. And then I found out she was already seeing someone else.”

He'd spent the whole first semester in a daze. He couldn't concentrate in cla.s.s. He felt fearful and panicked all the time. ”She turned it all off like a switch. Something I couldn't do.”

”How did you know she was seeing other people? Did you follow her?”

With every waking thought, and most of the sleeping ones. ”It was a small world. You just knew what was going on.”

”Did you have any contact with her, intimate contact where you could talk things through?”

”That was all I wanted,” he said, ”a chance to talk things through one more time. To understand why.”