The Green Mile(83)



Dean came back and gave me a little nod.

'Percy,' I said, 'I want you to go on in the storeroom and mop down the floor. Stairs to the tunnel, too. Then you can write your report on last night.'

'That should be creative,' Brutal remarked, hooking his thumbs into his belt and looking up at the ceiling.

'You guys are funnier'n a f**k in church,' Percy said, but beyond that he didn't protest. Didn't even point out the obvious, which was that the floor in there had already been washed at least twice that day. My guess is that he was glad for the chance to be away from us.

I went over the previous shift report, saw nothing that concerned me, and then took a walk down to Wharton's cell. He was sitting there on his bunk with his knees drawn up and his arms clasped around his shins, looking at me with a bright, hostile smile.

'Well, if it ain't the big boss,' he said. 'Big as life and twice as ugly. You look happier'n a pig kneedeep in shit, Boss Edgecombe. Wife give your pecker a pull before you left home, did she?'

'How you doing, Kid?' I asked evenly, and at that he brightened for real. He let go of his legs, stood up, and stretched. His smile broadened, and some of the hostility went out of it.

'Well, damn!' he said. 'You got my name right for once! What's the matter with you, Boss Edgecombe? You sick or sumpin?'

No, not sick. I'd been sick, but John Coffey had taken care of that. His hands no longer knew the trick of tying a shoe, if they ever had, but they knew other tricks. Yes indeed they did.

'My friend,' I told him, 'if you want to be a Billy the Kid instead of a Wild Bill, it's all the same to me.'

He puffed visibly, like one of those loathsome fish that live in South American rivers and can sting you almost to death with the spines along their backs and sides. I dealt with a lot of dangerous men during my time on the Mile, but few if any so repellent as William Wharton, who considered himself a great outlaw, but whose jailhouse behavior rarely rose above pissing or spitting through the bars of his cell. So far we hadn't given him the awed respect he felt was his by right, but on that particular night I wanted him tractable. If that meant lathering on the softsoap, I would gladly lather it on.

'I got a lot in common with the Kid, and you just better believe it,' Wharton said. 'I didn't get here for stealing candy out of a dimestore.' As proud as a man who's been conscripted into the Heroes' Brigade of the French Foreign Legion instead of one whose ass has been slammed into a cell seventy long steps from the electric chair. 'Where's my supper?'

'Come on, Kid, report says you had it at five-fifty. Meatloaf with gravy, mashed, peas. You don't con me that easy.'

He laughed expansively and sat down on his bunk again. 'Put on the radio, then.' He said radio in the way people did back then when they were joking, so it rhymed with the fifties slang word 'Daddy-O.' It's funny how much a person can remember about times when his nerves were tuned so tight they almost sang.

'Maybe later, big boy,' I said. I stepped away from his cell and looked down the corridor. Brutal had strolled down to the far end, where he checked to make sure the restraint-room door was on the single lock instead of the double. I knew it was, because I'd already checked it myself. Later on, we'd want to be able to open that door as quick as we could. There would be no time spent emptying out the attic-type rick-rack that had accumulated in there over the years; we'd taken it out, sorted it, and stored it in other places not long after Wharton joined our happy band. It had seemed to us the room with the soft walls was apt to get a lot of use, at least until "Billy the Kid" strolled the Mile.

John Coffey, who would usually have been lying down at this time, long, thick legs dangling and face to the wall, was sitting on the end of his bunk with his hands clasped, watching Brutal with an alertness - a thereness - that wasn't typical of him. He wasn't leaking around the eyes, either.

Brutal tried the door to the restraint room, then came on back up the Mile. Hie glanced at Coffey as he passed Coffey's cell, and Coffey said a curious thing: 'Sure. I'd like a ride.' As if responding to something Brutal had said.

Brutal's eyes met mine. He knows, I could almost hear him saying. Somehow he knows.

I shrugged and spread my hands, as if to say Of course he knows.

5

Old Toot-Toot made his last trip of the night down to E Block with his cart at about quarter to nine. We bought enough of his crap to make him smile with avarice.

'Say, you boys seen that mouse?' he asked.

We shook our heads.

'Maybe Pretty Boy has,' Toot said, and gestured with his head in the direction of the storage room, where Percy was either washing the floor, writing his report, or picking his ass.

'What do you care? It's none of your affair, either way,' Brutal said. 'Roll wheels, Toot. You're stinkin the place up.'

Toot smiled his peculiarly unpleasant smile, toothless and sunken, and made a business of sniffing the air. 'That ain't me you smell,' he said. 'That be Del, sayin so-long.'

Cackling, he rolled his cart out the door and into the exercise yard. And he went on rolling it for another ten years, long after I was gone - hell, long after Cold Mountain was gone - selling Moon Pies and pops to the guards and prisoners who could afford them. Sometimes even now I hear him in my dreams, yelling that he's fryin, he's fryin, he's a done tom turkey.

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