<h2><SPAN name="chap53"></SPAN>Chapter LIII</h2>
<p>The Eastern District Penitentiary of Pennsylvania, standing at Fairmount Avenue
and Twenty-first Street in Philadelphia, where Cowperwood was now to serve his
sentence of four years and three months, was a large, gray-stone structure,
solemn and momentous in its mien, not at all unlike the palace of Sforzas at
Milan, although not so distinguished. It stretched its gray length for several
blocks along four different streets, and looked as lonely and forbidding as a
prison should. The wall which inclosed its great area extending over ten acres
and gave it so much of its solemn dignity was thirty-five feet high and some
seven feet thick. The prison proper, which was not visible from the outside,
consisted of seven arms or corridors, ranged octopus-like around a central room
or court, and occupying in their sprawling length about two-thirds of the yard
inclosed within the walls, so that there was but little space for the charm of
lawn or sward. The corridors, forty-two feet wide from outer wall to outer
wall, were one hundred and eighty feet in length, and in four instances two
stories high, and extended in their long reach in every direction. There were
no windows in the corridors, only narrow slits of skylights, three and one-half
feet long by perhaps eight inches wide, let in the roof; and the ground-floor
cells were accompanied in some instances by a small yard ten by
sixteen—the same size as the cells proper—which was surrounded by a
high brick wall in every instance. The cells and floors and roofs were made of
stone, and the corridors, which were only ten feet wide between the cells, and
in the case of the single-story portion only fifteen feet high, were paved with
stone. If you stood in the central room, or rotunda, and looked down the long
stretches which departed from you in every direction, you had a sense of
narrowness and confinement not compatible with their length. The iron doors,
with their outer accompaniment of solid wooden ones, the latter used at times
to shut the prisoner from all sight and sound, were grim and unpleasing to
behold. The halls were light enough, being whitewashed frequently and set with
the narrow skylights, which were closed with frosted glass in winter; but they
were, as are all such matter-of-fact arrangements for incarceration,
bare—wearisome to look upon. Life enough there was in all conscience,
seeing that there were four hundred prisoners here at that time, and that
nearly every cell was occupied; but it was a life of which no one individual
was essentially aware as a spectacle. He was of it; but he was not. Some of the
prisoners, after long service, were used as “trusties” or
“runners,” as they were locally called; but not many. There was a
bakery, a machine-shop, a carpenter-shop, a store-room, a flour-mill, and a
series of gardens, or truck patches; but the manipulation of these did not
require the services of a large number.</p>
<p>The prison proper dated from 1822, and it had grown, wing by wing, until its
present considerable size had been reached. Its population consisted of
individuals of all degrees of intelligence and crime, from murderers to minor
practitioners of larceny. It had what was known as the “Pennsylvania
System” of regulation for its inmates, which was nothing more nor less
than solitary confinement for all concerned—a life of absolute silence
and separate labor in separate cells.</p>
<p>Barring his comparatively recent experience in the county jail, which after all
was far from typical, Cowperwood had never been in a prison in his life. Once,
when a boy, in one of his perambulations through several of the surrounding
towns, he had passed a village “lock-up,” as the town prisons were
then called—a small, square, gray building with long iron-barred windows,
and he had seen, at one of these rather depressing apertures on the second
floor, a none too prepossessing drunkard or town ne’er-do-well who looked
down on him with bleary eyes, unkempt hair, and a sodden, waxy, pallid face,
and called—for it was summer and the jail window was open:</p>
<p>“Hey, sonny, get me a plug of tobacco, will you?”</p>
<p>Cowperwood, who had looked up, shocked and disturbed by the man’s
disheveled appearance, had called back, quite without stopping to think:</p>
<p>“Naw, I can’t.”</p>
<p>“Look out you don’t get locked up yourself sometime, you little
runt,” the man had replied, savagely, only half recovered from his
debauch of the day before.</p>
<p>He had not thought of this particular scene in years, but now suddenly it came
back to him. Here he was on his way to be locked up in this dull, somber
prison, and it was snowing, and he was being cut out of human affairs as much
as it was possible for him to be cut out.</p>
<p>No friends were permitted to accompany him beyond the outer gate—not even
Steger for the time being, though he might visit him later in the day. This was
an inviolable rule. Zanders being known to the gate-keeper, and bearing his
commitment paper, was admitted at once. The others turned solemnly away. They
bade a gloomy if affectionate farewell to Cowperwood, who, on his part,
attempted to give it all an air of inconsequence—as, in part and even
here, it had for him.</p>
<p>“Well, good-by for the present,” he said, shaking hands.
“I’ll be all right and I’ll get out soon. Wait and see. Tell
Lillian not to worry.”</p>
<p>He stepped inside, and the gate clanked solemnly behind him. Zanders led the
way through a dark, somber hall, wide and high-ceiled, to a farther gate, where
a second gateman, trifling with a large key, unlocked a barred door at his
bidding. Once inside the prison yard, Zanders turned to the left into a small
office, presenting his prisoner before a small, chest-high desk, where stood a
prison officer in uniform of blue. The latter, the receiving overseer of the
prison—a thin, practical, executive-looking person with narrow gray eyes
and light hair, took the paper which the sheriff’s deputy handed him and
read it. This was his authority for receiving Cowperwood. In his turn he handed
Zanders a slip, showing that he had so received the prisoner; and then Zanders
left, receiving gratefully the tip which Cowperwood pressed in his hand.</p>
<p>“Well, good-by, Mr. Cowperwood,” he said, with a peculiar twist of
his detective-like head. “I’m sorry. I hope you won’t find it
so bad here.”</p>
<p>He wanted to impress the receiving overseer with his familiarity with this
distinguished prisoner, and Cowperwood, true to his policy of make-believe,
shook hands with him cordially.</p>
<p>“I’m much obliged to you for your courtesy, Mr. Zanders,” he
said, then turned to his new master with the air of a man who is determined to
make a good impression. He was now in the hands of petty officials, he knew,
who could modify or increase his comfort at will. He wanted to impress this man
with his utter willingness to comply and obey—his sense of respect for
his authority—without in any way demeaning himself. He was depressed but
efficient, even here in the clutch of that eventual machine of the law, the
State penitentiary, which he had been struggling so hard to evade.</p>
<p>The receiving overseer, Roger Kendall, though thin and clerical, was a rather
capable man, as prison officials go—shrewd, not particularly well
educated, not over-intelligent naturally, not over-industrious, but
sufficiently energetic to hold his position. He knew something about
convicts—considerable—for he had been dealing with them for nearly
twenty-six years. His attitude toward them was cold, cynical, critical.</p>
<p>He did not permit any of them to come into personal contact with him, but he
saw to it that underlings in his presence carried out the requirements of the
law.</p>
<p>When Cowperwood entered, dressed in his very good clothing—a dark
gray-blue twill suit of pure wool, a light, well-made gray overcoat, a black
derby hat of the latest shape, his shoes new and of good leather, his tie of
the best silk, heavy and conservatively colored, his hair and mustache showing
the attention of an intelligent barber, and his hands well manicured—the
receiving overseer saw at once that he was in the presence of some one of
superior intelligence and force, such a man as the fortune of his trade rarely
brought into his net.</p>
<p>Cowperwood stood in the middle of the room without apparently looking at any
one or anything, though he saw all. “Convict number 3633,” Kendall
called to a clerk, handing him at the same time a yellow slip of paper on which
was written Cowperwood’s full name and his record number, counting from
the beginning of the penitentiary itself.</p>
<p>The underling, a convict, took it and entered it in a book, reserving the slip
at the same time for the penitentiary “runner” or
“trusty,” who would eventually take Cowperwood to the
“manners” gallery.</p>
<p>“You will have to take off your clothes and take a bath,” said
Kendall to Cowperwood, eyeing him curiously. “I don’t suppose you
need one, but it’s the rule.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” replied Cowperwood, pleased that his personality was
counting for something even here. “Whatever the rules are, I want to
obey.”</p>
<p>When he started to take off his coat, however, Kendall put up his hand
delayingly and tapped a bell. There now issued from an adjoining room an
assistant, a prison servitor, a weird-looking specimen of the genus
“trusty.” He was a small, dark, lopsided individual, one leg being
slightly shorter, and therefore one shoulder lower, than the other. He was
hollow-chested, squint-eyed, and rather shambling, but spry enough withal. He
was dressed in a thin, poorly made, baggy suit of striped jeans, the prison
stripes of the place, showing a soft roll-collar shirt underneath, and wearing
a large, wide-striped cap, peculiarly offensive in its size and shape to
Cowperwood. He could not help thinking how uncanny the man’s squint eyes
looked under its straight outstanding visor. The trusty had a silly,
sycophantic manner of raising one hand in salute. He was a professional
“second-story man,” “up” for ten years, but by dint of
good behavior he had attained to the honor of working about this office without
the degrading hood customary for prisoners to wear over the cap. For this he
was properly grateful. He now considered his superior with nervous dog-like
eyes, and looked at Cowperwood with a certain cunning appreciation of his lot
and a show of initial mistrust.</p>
<p>One prisoner is as good as another to the average convict; as a matter of fact,
it is their only consolation in their degradation that all who come here are no
better than they. The world may have misused them; but they misuse their
confreres in their thoughts. The “holier than thou” attitude,
intentional or otherwise, is quite the last and most deadly offense within
prison walls. This particular “trusty” could no more understand
Cowperwood than could a fly the motions of a fly-wheel; but with the cocky
superiority of the underling of the world he did not hesitate to think that he
could. A crook was a crook to him—Cowperwood no less than the shabbiest
pickpocket. His one feeling was that he would like to demean him, to pull him
down to his own level.</p>
<p>“You will have to take everything you have out of your pockets,”
Kendall now informed Cowperwood. Ordinarily he would have said, “Search
the prisoner.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood stepped forward and laid out a purse with twenty-five dollars in it,
a pen-knife, a lead-pencil, a small note-book, and a little ivory elephant
which Aileen had given him once, “for luck,” and which he treasured
solely because she gave it to him. Kendall looked at the latter curiously.
“Now you can go on,” he said to the “trusty,” referring
to the undressing and bathing process which was to follow.</p>
<p>“This way,” said the latter, addressing Cowperwood, and preceding
him into an adjoining room, where three closets held three old-fashioned,
iron-bodied, wooden-top bath-tubs, with their attendant shelves for rough crash
towels, yellow soap, and the like, and hooks for clothes.</p>
<p>“Get in there,” said the trusty, whose name was Thomas Kuby,
pointing to one of the tubs.</p>
<p>Cowperwood realized that this was the beginning of petty official supervision;
but he deemed it wise to appear friendly even here.</p>
<p>“I see,” he said. “I will.”</p>
<p>“That’s right,” replied the attendant, somewhat placated.
“What did you bring?”</p>
<p>Cowperwood looked at him quizzically. He did not understand. The prison
attendant realized that this man did not know the lingo of the place.
“What did you bring?” he repeated. “How many years did you
get?”</p>
<p>“Oh!” exclaimed Cowperwood, comprehendingly. “I understand.
Four and three months.”</p>
<p>He decided to humor the man. It would probably be better so.</p>
<p>“What for?” inquired Kuby, familiarly.</p>
<p>Cowperwood’s blood chilled slightly. “Larceny,” he said.</p>
<p>“Yuh got off easy,” commented Kuby. “I’m up for ten. A
rube judge did that to me.”</p>
<p>Kuby had never heard of Cowperwood’s crime. He would not have understood
its subtleties if he had. Cowperwood did not want to talk to this man; he did
not know how. He wished he would go away; but that was not likely. He wanted to
be put in his cell and let alone.</p>
<p>“That’s too bad,” he answered; and the convict realized
clearly that this man was really not one of them, or he would not have said
anything like that. Kuby went to the two hydrants opening into the bath-tub and
turned them on. Cowperwood had been undressing the while, and now stood naked,
but not ashamed, in front of this eighth-rate intelligence.</p>
<p>“Don’t forget to wash your head, too,” said Kuby, and went
away.</p>
<p>Cowperwood stood there while the water ran, meditating on his fate. It was
strange how life had dealt with him of late—so severely. Unlike most men
in his position, he was not suffering from a consciousness of evil. He did not
think he was evil. As he saw it, he was merely unfortunate. To think that he
should be actually in this great, silent penitentiary, a convict, waiting here
beside this cheap iron bathtub, not very sweet or hygienic to contemplate, with
this crackbrained criminal to watch over him!</p>
<p>He stepped into the tub and washed himself briskly with the biting yellow soap,
drying himself on one of the rough, only partially bleached towels. He looked
for his underwear, but there was none. At this point the attendant looked in
again. “Out here,” he said, inconsiderately.</p>
<p>Cowperwood followed, naked. He was led through the receiving overseer’s
office into a room, where were scales, implements of measurement, a
record-book, etc. The attendant who stood guard at the door now came over, and
the clerk who sat in a corner automatically took down a record-blank. Kendall
surveyed Cowperwood’s decidedly graceful figure, already inclining to a
slight thickening around the waist, and approved of it as superior to that of
most who came here. His skin, as he particularly noted, was especially white.</p>
<p>“Step on the scale,” said the attendant, brusquely.</p>
<p>Cowperwood did so, The former adjusted the weights and scanned the record
carefully.</p>
<p>“Weight, one hundred and seventy-five,” he called. “Now step
over here.”</p>
<p>He indicated a spot in the side wall where was fastened in a thin
slat—which ran from the floor to about seven and one half feet above,
perpendicularly—a small movable wooden indicator, which, when a man was
standing under it, could be pressed down on his head. At the side of the slat
were the total inches of height, laid off in halves, quarters, eighths, and so
on, and to the right a length measurement for the arm. Cowperwood understood
what was wanted and stepped under the indicator, standing quite straight.</p>
<p>“Feet level, back to the wall,” urged the attendant. “So.
Height, five feet nine and ten-sixteenths,” he called. The clerk in the
corner noted it. He now produced a tape-measure and began measuring
Cowperwood’s arms, legs, chest, waist, hips, etc. He called out the color
of his eyes, his hair, his mustache, and, looking into his mouth, exclaimed,
“Teeth, all sound.”</p>
<p>After Cowperwood had once more given his address, age, profession, whether he
knew any trade, etc.—which he did not—he was allowed to return to
the bathroom, and put on the clothing which the prison provided for
him—first the rough, prickly underwear, then the cheap soft roll-collar,
white-cotton shirt, then the thick bluish-gray cotton socks of a quality such
as he had never worn in his life, and over these a pair of indescribable
rough-leather clogs, which felt to his feet as though they were made of wood or
iron—oily and heavy. He then drew on the shapeless, baggy trousers with
their telltale stripes, and over his arms and chest the loose-cut shapeless
coat and waistcoat. He felt and knew of course that he looked very strange,
wretched. And as he stepped out into the overseer’s room again he
experienced a peculiar sense of depression, a gone feeling which before this
had not assailed him and which now he did his best to conceal. This, then, was
what society did to the criminal, he thought to himself. It took him and tore
away from his body and his life the habiliments of his proper state and left
him these. He felt sad and grim, and, try as he would—he could not help
showing it for a moment. It was always his business and his intention to
conceal his real feelings, but now it was not quite possible. He felt degraded,
impossible, in these clothes, and he knew that he looked it. Nevertheless, he
did his best to pull himself together and look unconcerned, willing, obedient,
considerate of those above him. After all, he said to himself, it was all a
play of sorts, a dream even, if one chose to view it so, a miasma even, from
which, in the course of time and with a little luck one might emerge safely
enough. He hoped so. It could not last. He was only acting a strange,
unfamiliar part on the stage, this stage of life that he knew so well.</p>
<p>Kendall did not waste any time looking at him, however. He merely said to his
assistant, “See if you can find a cap for him,” and the latter,
going to a closet containing numbered shelves, took down a cap—a
high-crowned, straight-visored, shabby, striped affair which Cowperwood was
asked to try on. It fitted well enough, slipping down close over his ears, and
he thought that now his indignities must be about complete. What could be
added? There could be no more of these disconcerting accoutrements. But he was
mistaken. “Now, Kuby, you take him to Mr. Chapin,” said Kendall.</p>
<p>Kuby understood. He went back into the wash-room and produced what Cowperwood
had heard of but never before seen—a blue-and-white-striped cotton bag
about half the length of an ordinary pillow-case and half again as wide, which
Kuby now unfolded and shook out as he came toward him. It was a custom. The use
of this hood, dating from the earliest days of the prison, was intended to
prevent a sense of location and direction and thereby obviate any attempt to
escape. Thereafter during all his stay he was not supposed to walk with or talk
to or see another prisoner—not even to converse with his superiors,
unless addressed. It was a grim theory, and yet one definitely enforced here,
although as he was to learn later even this could be modified here.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to put this on,” Kuby said, and opened it in
such a way that it could be put over Cowperwood’s head.</p>
<p>Cowperwood understood. He had heard of it in some way, in times past. He was a
little shocked—looked at it first with a touch of real surprise, but a
moment after lifted his hands and helped pull it down.</p>
<p>“Never mind,” cautioned the guard, “put your hands down.
I’ll get it over.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood dropped his arms. When it was fully on, it came to about his chest,
giving him little means of seeing anything. He felt very strange, very
humiliated, very downcast. This simple thing of a blue-and-white striped bag
over his head almost cost him his sense of self-possession. Why could not they
have spared him this last indignity, he thought?</p>
<p>“This way,” said his attendant, and he was led out to where he
could not say.</p>
<p>“If you hold it out in front you can see to walk,” said his guide;
and Cowperwood pulled it out, thus being able to discern his feet and a portion
of the floor below. He was thus conducted—seeing nothing in his
transit—down a short walk, then through a long corridor, then through a
room of uniformed guards, and finally up a narrow flight of iron steps, leading
to the overseer’s office on the second floor of one of the two-tier
blocks. There, he heard the voice of Kuby saying: “Mr. Chapin,
here’s another prisoner for you from Mr. Kendall.”</p>
<p>“I’ll be there in a minute,” came a peculiarly pleasant voice
from the distance. Presently a big, heavy hand closed about his arm, and he was
conducted still further.</p>
<p>“You hain’t got far to go now,” the voice said, “and
then I’ll take that bag off,” and Cowperwood felt for some reason a
sense of sympathy, perhaps—as though he would choke. The further steps
were not many.</p>
<p>A cell door was reached and unlocked by the inserting of a great iron key. It
was swung open, and the same big hand guided him through. A moment later the
bag was pulled easily from his head, and he saw that he was in a narrow,
whitewashed cell, rather dim, windowless, but lighted from the top by a small
skylight of frosted glass three and one half feet long by four inches wide. For
a night light there was a tin-bodied lamp swinging from a hook near the middle
of one of the side walls. A rough iron cot, furnished with a straw mattress and
two pairs of dark blue, probably unwashed blankets, stood in one corner. There
was a hydrant and small sink in another. A small shelf occupied the wall
opposite the bed. A plain wooden chair with a homely round back stood at the
foot of the bed, and a fairly serviceable broom was standing in one corner.
There was an iron stool or pot for excreta, giving, as he could see, into a
large drain-pipe which ran along the inside wall, and which was obviously
flushed by buckets of water being poured into it. Rats and other vermin
infested this, and it gave off an unpleasant odor which filled the cell. The
floor was of stone. Cowperwood’s clear-seeing eyes took it all in at a
glance. He noted the hard cell door, which was barred and cross-barred with
great round rods of steel, and fastened with a thick, highly polished lock. He
saw also that beyond this was a heavy wooden door, which could shut him in even
more completely than the iron one. There was no chance for any clear, purifying
sunlight here. Cleanliness depended entirely on whitewash, soap and water and
sweeping, which in turn depended on the prisoners themselves.</p>
<p>He also took in Chapin, the homely, good-natured, cell overseer whom he now saw
for the first time—a large, heavy, lumbering man, rather dusty and
misshapen-looking, whose uniform did not fit him well, and whose manner of
standing made him look as though he would much prefer to sit down. He was
obviously bulky, but not strong, and his kindly face was covered with a short
growth of grayish-brown whiskers. His hair was cut badly and stuck out in odd
strings or wisps from underneath his big cap. Nevertheless, Cowperwood was not
at all unfavorably impressed—quite the contrary—and he felt at once
that this man might be more considerate of him than the others had been. He
hoped so, anyhow. He did not know that he was in the presence of the overseer
of the “manners squad,” who would have him in charge for two weeks
only, instructing him in the rules of the prison, and that he was only one of
twenty-six, all told, who were in Chapin’s care.</p>
<p>That worthy, by way of easy introduction, now went over to the bed and seated
himself on it. He pointed to the hard wooden chair, which Cowperwood drew out
and sat on.</p>
<p>“Well, now you’re here, hain’t yuh?” he asked, and
answered himself quite genially, for he was an unlettered man, generously
disposed, of long experience with criminals, and inclined to deal kindly with
kindly temperament and a form of religious belief—Quakerism—had
inclined him to be merciful, and yet his official duties, as Cowperwood later
found out, seemed to have led him to the conclusion that most criminals were
innately bad. Like Kendall, he regarded them as weaklings and
ne’er-do-wells with evil streaks in them, and in the main he was not
mistaken. Yet he could not help being what he was, a fatherly, kindly old man,
having faith in those shibboleths of the weak and inexperienced
mentally—human justice and human decency.</p>
<p>“Yes, I’m here, Mr. Chapin,” Cowperwood replied, simply,
remembering his name from the attendant, and flattering the keeper by the use
of it.</p>
<p>To old Chapin the situation was more or less puzzling. This was the famous
Frank A. Cowperwood whom he had read about, the noted banker and
treasury-looter. He and his co-partner in crime, Stener, were destined to
serve, as he had read, comparatively long terms here. Five hundred thousand
dollars was a large sum of money in those days, much more than five million
would have been forty years later. He was awed by the thought of what had
become of it—how Cowperwood managed to do all the things the papers had
said he had done. He had a little formula of questions which he usually went
through with each new prisoner—asking him if he was sorry now for the
crime he had committed, if he meant to do better with a new chance, if his
father and mother were alive, etc.; and by the manner in which they answered
these questions—simply, regretfully, defiantly, or otherwise—he
judged whether they were being adequately punished or not. Yet he could not
talk to Cowperwood as he now saw or as he would to the average second-story
burglar, store-looter, pickpocket, and plain cheap thief and swindler. And yet
he scarcely knew how else to talk.</p>
<p>“Well, now,” he went on, “I don’t suppose you ever
thought you’d get to a place like this, did you, Mr. Cowperwood?”</p>
<p>“I never did,” replied Frank, simply. “I wouldn’t have
believed it a few months ago, Mr. Chapin. I don’t think I deserve to be
here now, though of course there is no use of my telling you that.”</p>
<p>He saw that old Chapin wanted to moralize a little, and he was only too glad to
fall in with his mood. He would soon be alone with no one to talk to perhaps,
and if a sympathetic understanding could be reached with this man now, so much
the better. Any port in a storm; any straw to a drowning man.</p>
<p>“Well, no doubt all of us makes mistakes,” continued Mr. Chapin,
superiorly, with an amusing faith in his own value as a moral guide and
reformer. “We can’t just always tell how the plans we think so fine
are coming out, can we? You’re here now, an’ I suppose you’re
sorry certain things didn’t come out just as you thought; but if you had
a chance I don’t suppose you’d try to do just as you did before,
now would yuh?”</p>
<p>“No, Mr. Chapin, I wouldn’t, exactly,” said Cowperwood, truly
enough, “though I believed I was right in everything I did. I don’t
think legal justice has really been done me.”</p>
<p>“Well, that’s the way,” continued Chapin, meditatively,
scratching his grizzled head and looking genially about. “Sometimes, as I
allers says to some of these here young fellers that comes in here, we
don’t know as much as we thinks we does. We forget that others are just
as smart as we are, and that there are allers people that are watchin’ us
all the time. These here courts and jails and detectives—they’re
here all the time, and they get us. I gad”—Chapin’s moral
version of “by God”—“they do, if we don’t
behave.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Cowperwood replied, “that’s true enough, Mr.
Chapin.”</p>
<p>“Well,” continued the old man after a time, after he had made a few
more solemn, owl-like, and yet well-intentioned remarks, “now
here’s your bed, and there’s your chair, and there’s your
wash-stand, and there’s your water-closet. Now keep ’em all clean
and use ’em right.” (You would have thought he was making
Cowperwood a present of a fortune.) “You’re the one’s got to
make up your bed every mornin’ and keep your floor swept and your toilet
flushed and your cell clean. There hain’t anybody here’ll do that
for yuh. You want to do all them things the first thing in the mornin’
when you get up, and afterward you’ll get sumpin’ to eat, about
six-thirty. You’re supposed to get up at five-thirty.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Mr. Chapin,” Cowperwood said, politely. “You can depend
on me to do all those things promptly.”</p>
<p>“There hain’t so much more,” added Chapin.
“You’re supposed to wash yourself all over once a week an’
I’ll give you a clean towel for that. Next you gotta wash this floor up
every Friday mornin’.” Cowperwood winced at that. “You kin
have hot water for that if you want it. I’ll have one of the runners
bring it to you. An’ as for your friends and relations”—he
got up and shook himself like a big Newfoundland dog. “You gotta wife,
hain’t you?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Cowperwood.</p>
<p>“Well, the rules here are that your wife or your friends kin come to see
you once in three months, and your lawyer—you gotta lawyer hain’t
yuh?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” replied Cowperwood, amused.</p>
<p>“Well, he kin come every week or so if he likes—every day, I
guess—there hain’t no rules about lawyers. But you kin only write
one letter once in three months yourself, an’ if you want anything like
tobaccer or the like o’ that, from the store-room, you gotta sign an
order for it, if you got any money with the warden, an’ then I can git it
for you.”</p>
<p>The old man was really above taking small tips in the shape of money. He was a
hold-over from a much more severe and honest regime, but subsequent presents or
constant flattery were not amiss in making him kindly and generous. Cowperwood
read him accurately.</p>
<p>“Very well, Mr. Chapin; I understand,” he said, getting up as the
old man did.</p>
<p>“Then when you have been here two weeks,” added Chapin, rather
ruminatively (he had forgot to state this to Cowperwood before), “the
warden ’ll come and git yuh and give yuh yer regular cell summers
down-stairs. Yuh kin make up yer mind by that time what y’u’d like
tuh do, what y’u’d like to work at. If you behave yourself proper,
more’n like they’ll give yuh a cell with a yard. Yuh never can
tell.”</p>
<p>He went out, locking the door with a solemn click; and Cowperwood stood there,
a little more depressed than he had been, because of this latest intelligence.
Only two weeks, and then he would be transferred from this kindly old
man’s care to another’s, whom he did not know and with whom he
might not fare so well.</p>
<p>“If ever you want me for anything—if ye’re sick or
sumpin’ like that,” Chapin now returned to say, after he had walked
a few paces away, “we have a signal here of our own. Just hang your towel
out through these here bars. I’ll see it, and I’ll stop and find
out what yuh want, when I’m passin’.”</p>
<p>Cowperwood, whose spirits had sunk, revived for the moment.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” he replied; “thank you, Mr. Chapin.”</p>
<p>The old man walked away, and Cowperwood heard his steps dying down the
cement-paved hall. He stood and listened, his ears being greeted occasionally
by a distant cough, a faint scraping of some one’s feet, the hum or whir
of a machine, or the iron scratch of a key in a lock. None of the noises was
loud. Rather they were all faint and far away. He went over and looked at the
bed, which was not very clean and without linen, and anything but wide or soft,
and felt it curiously. So here was where he was to sleep from now on—he
who so craved and appreciated luxury and refinement. If Aileen or some of his
rich friends should see him here. Worse, he was sickened by the thought of
possible vermin. How could he tell? How would he do? The one chair was
abominable. The skylight was weak. He tried to think of himself as becoming
accustomed to the situation, but he re-discovered the offal pot in one corner,
and that discouraged him. It was possible that rats might come up here—it
looked that way. No pictures, no books, no scene, no person, no space to
walk—just the four bare walls and silence, which he would be shut into at
night by the thick door. What a horrible fate!</p>
<p>He sat down and contemplated his situation. So here he was at last in the
Eastern Penitentiary, and doomed, according to the judgment of the politicians
(Butler among others), to remain here four long years and longer. Stener, it
suddenly occurred to him, was probably being put through the same process he
had just gone through. Poor old Stener! What a fool he had made of himself. But
because of his foolishness he deserved all he was now getting. But the
difference between himself and Stener was that they would let Stener out. It
was possible that already they were easing his punishment in some way that he,
Cowperwood, did not know. He put his hand to his chin, thinking—his
business, his house, his friends, his family, Aileen. He felt for his watch,
but remembered that they had taken that. There was no way of telling the time.
Neither had he any notebook, pen, or pencil with which to amuse or interest
himself. Besides he had had nothing to eat since morning. Still, that mattered
little. What did matter was that he was shut up here away from the world, quite
alone, quite lonely, without knowing what time it was, and that he could not
attend to any of the things he ought to be attending to—his business
affairs, his future. True, Steger would probably come to see him after a while.
That would help a little. But even so—think of his position, his
prospects up to the day of the fire and his state now. He sat looking at his
shoes; his suit. God! He got up and walked to and fro, to and fro, but his own
steps and movements sounded so loud. He walked to the cell door and looked out
through the thick bars, but there was nothing to see—nothing save a
portion of two cell doors opposite, something like his own. He came back and
sat in his single chair, meditating, but, getting weary of that finally,
stretched himself on the dirty prison bed to try it. It was not uncomfortable
entirely. He got up after a while, however, and sat, then walked, then sat.
What a narrow place to walk, he thought. This was horrible—something like
a living tomb. And to think he should be here now, day after day and day after
day, until—until what? Until the Governor pardoned him or his time was
up, or his fortune eaten away—or—</p>
<p>So he cogitated while the hours slipped by. It was nearly five o’clock
before Steger was able to return, and then only for a little while. He had been
arranging for Cowperwood’s appearance on the following Thursday, Friday,
and Monday in his several court proceedings. When he was gone, however, and the
night fell and Cowperwood had to trim his little, shabby oil-lamp and to drink
the strong tea and eat the rough, poor bread made of bran and white flour,
which was shoved to him through the small aperture in the door by the trencher
trusty, who was accompanied by the overseer to see that it was done properly,
he really felt very badly. And after that the center wooden door of his cell
was presently closed and locked by a trusty who slammed it rudely and said no
word. Nine o’clock would be sounded somewhere by a great bell, he
understood, when his smoky oil-lamp would have to be put out promptly and he
would have to undress and go to bed. There were punishments, no doubt, for
infractions of these rules—reduced rations, the strait-jacket, perhaps
stripes—he scarcely knew what. He felt disconsolate, grim, weary. He had
put up such a long, unsatisfactory fight. After washing his heavy stone cup and
tin plate at the hydrant, he took off the sickening uniform and shoes and even
the drawers of the scratching underwear, and stretched himself wearily on the
bed. The place was not any too warm, and he tried to make himself comfortable
between the blankets—but it was of little use. His soul was cold.</p>
<p>“This will never do,” he said to himself. “This will never
do. I’m not sure whether I can stand much of this or not.” Still he
turned his face to the wall, and after several hours sleep eventually came.</p>
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