seen.â
My crew was sitting at our usual table in the cafeteria eating lunch. Dinner is always at one of our houses but lunch is quick and gotta be in from food service. When you first see us, you might think weâre kind of an unlikely group. Iâm a proud and beautiful black woman, but all the rest of the women in my crew are white. Unlike men in prison, where black and white rarely mix, women inmates tend to group up based on whether or not they like each other, and what they can do to help each other out. My women make up the most organized, efficient and tight-knit crew in the joint. Weâre a family.
Like I said, Iâm the boss. As the Wardenâs secretary, I hold a position of power (and opportunity) at Jennings that few, if any, can challenge. Cher McInnery works Intake, and that means that all sorts of nice things flow like a river over the desk in that room where the new inmates strip and leave all their possessions behind. Some of that river of riches, maybe just a small stream, gets diverted in Cherâs direction â and some of that gets passed on to my crew.
Right now Cher had an advantage over the others in the crew. She was the only other of us who had actually seen Jennifer Spencer. Even though I insisted that she was âno big fuckinâ dealâ to me, we had all heard and read plenty about Number 71036 in the news â the fall of âthe Wall Street Princessâ â and we were all anxious to talk about her.
You see, inside a prison nothing ever changes. Thatâs probably the worst damn thing about living Inside. Everyoneâs in the same uniform, Christmas looks just like the Fourth of July, the windows are too high to see out of, and the exercise yard doesnât have a blade of grass that hasnât been examined by four hundred pairs of eyes. Therejust isnât much to look at except the walls and each other, and women, we like to look at things. I read once in one of the Wardenâs magazines that the experts call it âsensory deprivationâ. I call it goddamn hard.
âWhat was she wearing?â Theresa LaBianco wanted to know. Sheâs into âHow was her hair styled? Does she know how to put on makeup?â Theresa used to be at the very top of one of those big makeup sales pyramids. Had a couple of hundred housewives sellinâ mascara. I could just imagine what the kites â secreted notes â would say about this new candy.
Theresa worked in the canteen and could always manage to buy us the freshest produce or the best chicken when we got to shop. It wasnât until her husband was caught cooking the books that she found herself on the Inside at Jennings. But Theresa never lost her love for life or blusher. And the bitch could dish. She especially loved to hear Cher talk about all of the new inmates. âItâs kinda like window shopping,â she would say.
âWell,â Cher began, because she knew what was expected of her, âher shoes were the softest damn leather I ever felt.â Cher shook her head. âShoes like that must go for four hundred bucks if they go for a dime.â
âWell, you know what they say about shoes, donât you?â Theresa asked. âThey say, you canât know someoneâs sorrows until youâve walked a mile in her shoes. Thatâs what they say about shoes.â Theresa had a damn saying for everything. She lived by sayings. She said that was how she had motivated her sales force, but they drove me nuts.
âWell, I donât think 71036 has ever had too many problems walking in those shoes,â Cher sneered. âAnd I plan to walk more than a mile in âem,â she told us and laughed.
âDid you take âem, Cher?â Suki asked, all wide-eyed. Suki Conrad was our crewâs innocent â our baby. She worked in the laundry and in Sukiâs case it wasnât so much what she could do for the rest of us, but what