Power in the Blood jj-2 Read online

Page 7


  “Did you have Johnson stuck?”

  “The pig had him stuck because he was tired of getting stuck in the butt.”

  He jumped up suddenly from his crouched position at the slot and began dancing around the cell, crashing into the sink, bed, and walls as he did. All the while he was singing the old hymn, “There’s Power in the Blood.” There is power, power, wonder-working power in the blood of the lamb.

  “Jacobson,” I yelled at him, “Jacobson, come here, now.”

  Power, power, wonder-working power in the blood of the lamb.

  Evidently the officer at the other cell heard me yelling because he rushed over and looked through the narrow glass window of the cell door. He yelled for the other officer, who was still seated at the end of the hall, to come quickly and began to fumble for his keys.

  “CHAPLAIN, CHAPLAIN.”

  “Step back, Father, please,” he said, his voice an octave higher from the excitement. His strawberry blond hair was very fine and it moved a great deal whenever he did. His face, previously pink, was now a deep red.

  I complied. He pulled the handcuffs from the back of his belt and opened them. As soon as the rotund black officer joined him, Strawberry unlocked the door and stepped in, Rotund following closely behind him. As Rotund entered the cell, I could have sworn I saw him smile.

  Would you be free from the burden of sin? There’s power in the blood, power in the blood.

  Strawberry told Jacobson to assume the position, to which he responded with many colorful obscenities, some of which I had never heard before. The next thing I knew, Jacobson was on the floor. It happened so quickly that it took my mind a few seconds to replay it, at a slower pace, so that I could comprehend what had happened. The tall white officer in front told Jacobson to turn around and spread them, and it looked as if he was actually about to when the short black officer stepped up and punched him hard at the base of the neck.

  By the time my mind had finished the first scenario, the second one was already over. Jacobson was cuffed, face down on the rough concrete floor. They got him to his feet and spun him around. There was a mild abrasion on his forehead. He looked as calm as anyone I had ever seen. In fact, he appeared to be in a trance. He seemed to move in slow motion, but his movements lacked both direction and sturdiness.

  “Let’s get him to medical,” Rotund said. “See about these cuts.” Then he added to Jacobson, “Next time I’m using the gas.”

  “You better ask your captain first,” Jacobson whispered.

  “Nobody touch this blood,” Rotund said as if he hadn’t heard Jacobson. “It’s bad blood in more ways that one.”

  “Let me call the OIC first,” Strawberry said, beginning to walk back toward his desk. “Chaplain, can I talk with you for minute?”

  “Sure,” I said looking back at Jacobson, who stared blankly at the wall in front of him.

  As we walked down to the officer’s desk at the end of the corridor, I learned that Strawberry’s name was Rogers. When we passed by Starn’s cell, I stopped and looked in.

  “Chaplain,” Starn asked, “do you believe that a demon can possess a man?”

  “We already talked about this, Starn,” I said.

  “I’m scared,” he said in the small voice of a scared child.

  “Nothing spiritual good or bad can happen to you that you don’t allow or even invite,” I said. “You keep reading your Bible and praying. I’ll check in on you later, okay?”

  “Okay,” he said in an upbeat voice again, easily soothed like a child.

  Rogers propped his feet up on the desk without the problems Rotund had had. “What happened to make him go off like that?” he asked. I was seated across the desk from him.

  “I really couldn’t say. He was okay, and then all of a sudden he exploded. Does he do that often?”

  “He does pretty much whatever he wants to around here,” he said, and I could tell he wanted me to ask him for more.

  “What do you mean?” I asked.

  “I don’t know. It’s just that certain inmates are looked out for by certain officers, and if the officer happens to be a captain, well, then they do pretty much what they want to. At least on that captain’s shift anyway. And, if the captain is popular or powerful enough, the inmate does pretty much whatever he wants anytime.”

  “Who gives that kind of preferential treatment to an inmate as unstable as he is?”

  “He’s not unstable. He’s a damn thespian.”

  “You’re saying that was a show for my benefit?” I asked.

  “I’m saying that everything he does is for show. It has an angle. He is always on the make. Did you say anything about Johnson to him?”

  “As a matter of fact, I did. Why?”

  “Well, his death really seemed to shake him up. Like maybe he wasn’t acting. I don’t know, but I think he’s scared for real about that.”

  “Do you think he had anything to do with it?”

  “He had everything to do with Johnson. They were both down here constantly. So either he had something to do with it or it scared him shitless, excuse my language, because he had nothing to do with it.”

  “Like it may have been a message to him?” I asked.

  “Yeah, something like that,” he said as if that caused a light to come on in his head. “Yeah, that could be it.”

  Rotund yelled from down the hall, “Come on. What’s taking so long?”

  “Just a minute,” Rogers yelled back.

  I glanced at my watch. It was almost time for my meeting with Tom Daniels and Edward Stone.

  “I’d better be going now. I’ve got a meeting up front. What will happen with Jacobson?”

  “He’ll be taken to medical, checked out, and probably taken to the isolation cell and sedated and watched for twenty-four hours. That is, unless Captain Skipper cuts him out.”

  “Then what will happen to him?” I asked.

  “He’ll be sent back down here, I guess,” he said with a shrug that said, I just work here.

  “What’s the difference in being confined in one cell as opposed to another?”

  “Not much during the day, but I’ve heard at night all sorts of weird stuff happens in here.”

  “Thanks for the info,” I said.

  “Anytime, Father,” he said respectfully.

  Before leaving, I glanced down the hallway at Jacobson. If he had moved even an inch, I couldn’t tell it. He appeared to be catatonic. I walked out of confinement with these words whirling around in my head: There is power, power, wonder-working power in the blood of the lamb. There is power, power, wonder-working power in the precious blood of the lamb.

  Chapter 9

  They looked like men sitting around a barber shop on Saturday morning or senior citizens on a park bench or mall-wanderers: they had time to kill. Inmates don’t have much, but what they have they possess a lot of-time. They sat around the chapel library under the watchful eye of the officer temporarily assigned to watch them until my new assistant, a Jewish chaplain, was hired next month. Mr. Smith and three other inmates were reading Decision magazine, the monthly magazine that the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association faithfully sent us free of charge. Mr. Smith and one of the other inmates were wearing headphones-listening to gospel music no doubt. On my way to meet with Mr. Stone and Tom Daniels, I decided to stop by the chapel to check in and pick up something to take notes on, sure our meeting would prove to be noteworthy.

  When Mr. Smith saw me, he jumped up and walked out into the hallway where I was unlocking my office door. “They’s two who want to see you, Brother Chaplain,” he said.

  “Okay,” I said, “but it will have to be when I get back. I’ve got a meeting with the superintendent in about ten minutes.”

  “Yesuh. I tell them to wait. It so hot out there, they won’t mind waitin’ in here where it nice ’n cool. ’Sides they got nothin’ else to do.”

  “Thank you,” I said and walked into my office. As I closed the door, the phone began
to ring.

  “Chaplain Jordan,” I said into the receiver.

  “Is this the chaplain?” a distressed female voice asked.

  “Yes, it is,” I said. “How can I help you?”

  “This is Veronica Simpson. My husband Charles Simpson is an inmate there.”

  “Uh huh,” I said encouragingly.

  “I need to talk to him,” she said, her voice breaking slightly. “I haven’t heard from him in four months, and I need to talk to him right now. I’m not playing with you, and I’m not crazy, but I’ve got a gun to my head, and I’m going to kill myself and his two-year-old son if I can’t talk to him right now.”

  My heart started racing. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. Whatever it took, I was not going to let another person die. So help me God, I was not. I had no way of knowing whether or not she would do it, but that really wasn’t the point.

  “Okay,” I said, “now listen to me. I will let you talk to your husband, so just put the gun down and relax.”

  “I’m not crazy. I swear,” she added quickly, her voice seeming to gain strength. “If I can just talk to him, I will not kill myself.”

  “The thing is, he is not here right now,” I said talking very slowly. “It will take a few minutes, but I will have him called up right away. So, why don’t we talk until he gets here. Would that be okay?”

  “That would be okay,” she said softly. She was beginning to sound calmer.

  “I have to ask you to hold on just a minute while I call down to his dorm and have him sent up here, okay?”

  “Okay. I’m not going anywhere. I’m all right, Preacher. I just want to talk to my husband. I won’t do anything foolish,” she said as if we had switched rolls and now she was trying to reassure me.

  As quickly as I could, I pressed the hold button, then the second-line button, and punched in the number to the control room. Without going into much detail, I told the sergeant in the control room to find Simpson and get him to my office ASAP.

  I then punched line one again, praying that she was still there. She was. We talked for about five minutes, waiting for her husband to come to my office. Our conversation dealt primarily with all the pressures she faced being a single mom whose husband was incarcerated. I actually felt as if I did her some good, but chances were I’d never know.

  When Simpson finally did arrive, after what seemed like days, I quickly put him on the phone and went into the other office where I called the Tampa Police and reported her threat of suicide. While talking to her, I had discovered where she lived, and I told them. I then jotted down a few notes about what had transpired and called the OIC and filled him in. He advised me to fill out an incident report, which I did. I then walked back into my office and sat down at my desk.

  Noticing that Simpson was crying, I busied myself with opening the rest of my mail. My mail consisted of roughly fifteen requests from inmates for everything from Bibles and greeting cards to phone calls. There were also two letters from citizen volunteers who ministered at the prison saying what a blessing they themselves were, a memo from the chaplaincy administrator about upcoming religious holidays that were to be observed by the Jewish, Muslim, and Christian inmates, and a single piece of typing paper trifolded and taped together on the end with the word “Chaplain” typed on the outside.

  I unfolded the typing paper, tearing it slightly while removing the tape. It read simply: “I’ve seen you talking to her. I watch over her. If you don’t stay away from her, I will kill you like I did that punk. She’s an angel, and I’m her guardian angel. She’s mine. Stay away from her.”

  I reached into my desk and pulled out the request from Ike Johnson. I laid them both on the desk in front of me and began to compare them. Within seconds, I could tell they were typed on the same machine.

  I thought of Anna as I reread the note a final time-when I realized that Simpson was talking to me. “I’m sorry, what’d you say?”

  “Thank you, Chaplain. I thinks she going to be all right. I should have called her or written or something. It’s my fault, but this place is getting to me. I don’t know what to do.”

  “Why don’t you start coming to see me every week for a while, and you might want to think about seeing our psychologist as well.”

  “Okay,” he said. “I will.”

  “And, stay in touch with your wife. It’s tough in here, but it’s tough for her out there, too.”

  “I know. I will. Thank you.”

  “You’re welcome,” I said. I should have said more. I should have talked to him right then and there, but I couldn’t. All I could do was think about Anna. Was she in danger? I talked to her more than anyone. Johnson had been assigned to her. Was he killed because of her? It was probably because I had just been with her, but I thought of Sandra Strickland, too. I could think of no other female staff members I had talked to recently.

  Those questions would have to wait for now. I glanced at my watch and realized that I was already fifteen minutes late for my meeting with the inspector and the superintendent.

  Chapter 10

  The superintendent’s office was neat, orderly, and as conservative as he was, with one exception. In the center of his wall of fame, amidst the diplomas, merit certificates, and department commendations, was a hand-drawn picture of a family: husband, wife, and child. The artist used crayons and showed great potential-potential he never got to live up to because of his untimely death at eight years old. Mr. Stone and his wife never tried to have children again after that, or so I’m told; I had been waiting for an opportunity to present itself for discussing it with him. However, since Edward Stone was involved, I realized it might not come in this lifetime.

  When I arrived, Tom Daniels was already there. The two men grew silent when I walked into the room. Daniels looked as if a day’s work felt like a week’s. His shirt ballooned out just over his belt, the way you would expect it to if it had been worn all day without a retuck. His face was red. And large conspicuous drops of sweat trickled down the sides of his cheeks.

  Stone looked as if he had just finished getting dressed-morning-fresh and military-crisp. His shoes, which were just visible underneath the desk, gleamed as the sunlight from the window, the only window in his office, spilled onto them.

  “Good afternoon, Chaplain. You’re late,” the superintendent said as I was taking my seat beside Daniels, who neither looked at nor spoke to me.

  “Good afternoon, Mr. Stone. I’m sorry I’m late. How are you doing?” I replied.

  “Better now that something is being done about this situation we have on our hands,” he said, nodding his head toward Daniels.

  “Let’s have a full report,” Mr. Stone continued. “But first, shut the door.”

  He said this to no one in particular, but I quickly responded. Daniels never even flinched in that direction.

  “Inspector, what do we have so far?” Stone asked.

  “In some ways, a great deal of information,” he said sitting up and leaning forward slightly. “But in other ways, not very much at all. I am finding your people very uncooperative.”

  “Surely the chaplain has been helpful with this,” Stone said.

  Daniels began to speak, but I beat him to the draw. “Mr. Stone, as soon as you left us this morning, the inspector expressed his desire to work alone.” I could feel Daniels’s anger; it was palpable, but he never looked in my direction.

  “Inspector?” Stone asked, raising an eyebrow, which caused his glasses to rise slightly.

  “I’ve made it clear from the very beginning that I do not wish to work with him,” Daniels said, the sweat on his forehead increasing. “I am fully capable of conducting this investigation on my own. I certainly do not need someone who is not even an investigator helping me. He would only botch up the case.”

  “If, as you say, you are fully capable of conducting this investigation on your own, how is it that you are having difficulty doing any investigating?” Stone asked.

  “I’m
not having difficulty investigating. I am having difficulty with these mother-loving rednecks around here. I have gathered a lot of information about the inmate who was killed, though.”

  “But that is only one investigation or one part of a larger investigation,” Stone said.

  Daniels withdrew a wrinkled, soiled handkerchief from his back left pants pocket and wiped his forehead. It merely smeared the sweat around. It also left some lint on his eyebrow.

  “That’s true, but,”

  “But, you will work together, or I will call the secretary. Understood?”

  Daniels did not respond.

  “Understood?” Mr. Stone asked again.

  Daniels made a slight nod with his head.

  “Understood?” Mr. Stone looked at me.

  “Yes, sir,” I said. “I understood it the first time.”

  “Now, tell me what you have, Inspector,” Stone said.

  “I can tell you that Johnson was murdered,” Daniels said with a swell of pride that changed his posture.

  “Murdered? Being killed while trying to escape is justifiable homicide not murder,” Mr. Stone said.

  “Yes, but,” Daniels said with obvious pleasure at the prospect of enlightening us, “it is murder when the inmate was unconscious before he was ever placed in the bag.”

  “And he was?” Mr. Stone asked with great surprise.

  “That’s what the ME says.” Daniels looked at me to gloat. His face registered surprise at my obvious lack of it. He turned away abruptly. “Says he was full of enough chloral hydrate to be dead soon anyway.”

  “What is chloral hydrate?” Stone asked. It was obvious he was interested, but he was not excited. He didn’t get excited.

  “Sleeping pills,” Daniels said with a small snort as if everyone should know it.

  “Could he have taken them himself?” Stone asked. “Maybe to relax during his escape?”

  “No, I don’t think so. It would seem that someone drugged him. Someone who knew that putting him in the trash bag would get him stabbed to death.”

  “Did the ME say how the drug was administered?” I asked.

 

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