Derailed
By James Siegel
Warner Books
Copyright © 2003
James Siegel
All right reserved.
ISBN: 0-446-61372-X
Chapter One
Attica
I spend five days a week teaching English at East Bennington High
and two nights a week teaching English at Attica State Prison. Which
is to say, I spend my time conjugating verbs for delinquents and
dangling participles for convicts. One class feeling like they're in
prison and the other class actually being in one.
On the Attica evenings, I eat an early dinner with my wife and two
children. I kiss my wife and teenage daughter goodbye and give my
four-year-old son a piggyback ride to the front door. I gently put
him down, kiss his soft brow, and promise to look in on him when I
get home.
I enter my eight-year-old Dodge Neon still surrounded in a halo of
emotional well-being. By the time I pass through the metal detector
at Attica Prison, it's gone.
Maybe it's the brass plaque prominently displayed on the wall of the
visitors room. "Dedicated to the Correction Officers who died in the
Attica riots," it says. There is no plaque for the prisoners who
died. I have only recently begun teaching there, and I can't quite
decide who's scarier-the Attica prisoners or the corrections
officers who guard them. Possibly the corrections officers. It's
clear they don't like me much. They consider me a luxury item, like
cable TV, something the prisoners did nothing to deserve. The
brainchild of some liberal in Albany, who's never had a shiv stuck
in his ribs or feces thrown in his face, who's never had to peel a
tattooed carcass off a blood-soaked floor swimming with AIDS.
They greet me with barely disguised contempt. It's the PHD, they
mumble. "Pathetic Homo Douchebag," one of them scrawled on the wall
of the visitors bathroom. I forgive them.
They are the outnumbered occupiers of an enslaved population
seething with hatred. To survive this hate, they must hate back.
They are not allowed to carry guns, so they arm themselves with
attitude.
As for the prisoners who attend my class, they are strangely docile.
Many of them the unfortunate victims of the draconian Rockefeller
drug laws that treat small purchases of cocaine like violent
felonies. They mostly look bewildered. Now and then, I give them
writing assignments. Write something, I say. Anything. Anything that
interests you. I used to have them read their work in class. Until
one convict, a sloe-eyed black named Benjamin Washington, read what
sounded like gibberish. It was gibberish, and the other convicts
laughed at him. Benjamin took offense at this and later knifed one
of them in the back over a breakfast of watery scrambled eggs and
burnt toast.
I decided on anonymity there and then. They write what interests
them and send it up to the desk unsigned. I read it out loud and
nobody knows who wrote what. The writer knows; that's good enough.
One day, though, I asked them to write something that would interest
me. The story of them. How they got here, for instance, to Mr.
Widdoes's English class in the rec room at Attica State Prison. If
they wanted to be writers, I told them, start with the writer.
It might be enlightening, I thought, maybe even cathartic. It might
be more interesting than the story "Tiny the Butterfly," a recent
effort from ... well, I don't know, do I? Tiny brought color and
beauty to a weed-strewn lot in the projects until he was,
unfortunately, crushed like a bug by the local crank dealer. Tiny,
it was explained at the bottom of the page, was cymbollic. I gave
out the assignment on Thursday; by next Tuesday the papers were
scattered across my desk. I read them aloud in no particular order.
The first story about an innocent man being framed for armed
robbery. The second story about an innocent man being framed for
possession of illegal narcotics. The third story about an innocent
man being framed ...
So maybe it wasn't that enlightening. But then.
Another story. Hardly a story at all (although it had a title); a
kind of introduction to a story. An invitation to one, really. About
another innocent man. Who walked on the train one day to go to work.
When something happened.
Derailed
The morning Charles met Lucinda, it took him several moments after
he first opened his eyes to remember why he liked keeping them
closed.
Then his daughter, Anna, called him from the hallway and he thought:
Oh yeah. She needed lunch money, a note for the gym teacher, and
help with a book report that was due yesterday. Not in that order.
In a dazzling feat of juggling, he managed all three between
showering, shaving, and getting dressed. He had to. His wife,
Deanna, had already left for her job at P.S. 183, leaving him solely
in charge.
When he made it downstairs he noticed Anna's blood meter and a used
syringe on the kitchen counter. Anna had made him late.
When he got to the station, his train had already left-he could hear
a faint rumble as it retreated into the distance. By the time the
next train pulled in, the platform had been repopulated by an
entirely new cast of commuters. He knew most of the 8:43 crowd by
sight, but this was the 9:05, so he was in alien territory.
He found a seat all by himself and immediately dived into the sports
pages.
It was November. Baseball had slipped away with another championship
for the home team. Basketball was just revving up, football already
promising a year of abject misery. This is the way he remained for
the next twenty minutes or so: head down, eyes forward, brain
dead-awash in meaningless stats he could reel off like his Social
Security number, numbers he could recite in his sleep, and sometimes
did, if only to keep himself from reciting other numbers. Which
numbers were those?
Well, the numbers on Anna's blood meter, for example. Numbers that
were increasingly and alarmingly sky high. Anna had suffered with
juvenile diabetes for over eight years. Anna wasn't doing well.
So all things being equal, he preferred a number like 3.25.
Roger-the-Rocket-Clemens's league-leading ERA this past season. Or
twenty-two-there was a good round number. Latrell Sprewell's current
points per game, accumulated, dreadlocks flying, for the New York
Knicks.
Numbers he could look at without once feeling sick. The train
lurched, stopped.
They were somewhere between stations-dun-colored ranch houses on
either side of the track. It suddenly occurred to him that even
though he'd ridden this train more times than he cared to remember,
he couldn't describe a single neighborhood it passed through.
Somewhere along the way to middle age, he'd stopped looking out
windows. He burrowed back into the newspaper.
It was at that exact moment, somewhere between Steve Serby's column
on the state of the instant replay rule and Michael Strahan's
lamentation on his diminishing sack total, that it happened.
Later he would wonder what exactly had made him look up again at
that precise moment in time. He would ask himself over and over what
would have happened if he hadn't. He would torture himself with all
the permutations, the what ifs and what thens and what nows. But he
did look up.
The 9:05 from Babylon to Penn Station kept going. Merrick to
Freeport to Baldwin to Rockville Centre. Lynbrook to Jamaica to
Forest Hills to Penn. But Charles clearly and spectacularly
derailed.
Attica
Two nights later after dinner, my four-year-old climbed onto my lap
and demanded I do treasure hunt on his back. "We're going on a
treasure hunt," I whispered as I traced little steps up and down his
spine. "X marks the spot ..." as he squirmed and giggled. He
smelled of shampoo and candy and Play-Doh, the scent that was
clearly and uniquely him. "To get to the treasure, you take big
steps and little steps," I murmured, and when I finished he asked me
where this treasure was exactly, and I answered him on cue. This,
after all, was our routine.
"Right here," I said. And hugged him. My wife smiled at us from the
other side of the table. When I kissed them all good-bye, I lingered
before stepping out into the driveway. As if I were attempting to
soak up enough good vibes to last me through the night, straight
through the redbrick archway of Attica and into the fetid rec room.
Like a magic aura that might protect me from harm. "Be careful," my
wife said from the front door.
When I went through the metal detector, it went off like an air raid
siren.
I'd forgotten to take my house keys out of my pocket. "Hey, Yobwoc,"
the CO said while patting me down. "Keys are like ... metal."
Yobwoc was Cowboy backward and stood for Young Obnoxious Bastard We
Often Con. PHD was just one of my monikers here. "Sorry," I said,
"forgot."
As soon as I entered the classroom, I could see there was another
piece of the story waiting for me at my desk. Eleven pages, neatly
printed. Yes, I thought.
The story is just getting started. Other
sections soon followed like clockwork. From that first day on, there
would be another piece of the story waiting for me every time I
entered the classroom. Sometimes just a page or two-sometimes what
would constitute several chapters. Placed flat on my desk and all,
like the first one, unsigned. The story unfolding piecemeal, like a
daytime serial you just can't pull your eyes away from. After all,
it would end up containing all the staples of soap opera-sex, lies,
and tragedy.
I didn't read these installments to my class. I understood they were
solely for me now. Me and, of course, the writer. Speaking of which.
There were twenty-nine students in my class. Eighteen blacks, six
Hispanics, five pale-as-ghosts Caucasians. I was reasonably sure
that none of them had ever ridden the 9:05 to Pennsylvania Station.
So where was he?
(Continues...)
Excerpted from Derailed
by James Siegel
Copyright © 2003 by James Siegel.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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