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Chapter no 1 – PRESENT DAY

The Inmate

As the prison doors slam shut behind me, I question every decision Iโ€™ve ever made in my life.

This is not where I want to be right now. Atย all. Who wants to be in a maximum-security penitentiary? Iโ€™m going to wager nobody wants that. If you are within these walls, you may have made some poor life choices along the way.

I sure have. โ€œName?โ€

A woman in a blue correctional officerโ€™s uniform is looking up at me from behind the glass partition just inside the entrance to the prison. Her eyes are dull and glassy, and she looks like she doesnโ€™t want to be here any more than I do.

โ€œBrooke Sullivan.โ€ I clear my throat. โ€œIโ€™m supposed to meet with Dorothy Kuntz?โ€

The woman looks down at a clipboard of papers in front of her. She scans the list, not acknowledging that she heard me or that she knows anything about why Iโ€™m here. I glance behind me into the small waiting area, which is empty except for a wrinkled old man sitting in one of the plastic chairs, reading a newspaper like heโ€™s sitting on the bus. Like there isnโ€™t a barbed wire fence surrounding us, dotted with hulking guard towers.

After what feels like several minutes, a buzzing sound echoes through the roomโ€”loud enough that I jump and take a step back. A door to my right with the red vertical bars slowly slides open, revealing a long, dimly lit hallway.

I stare down the hallway, my feet frozen to the floor. โ€œShouldโ€ฆ should I go in?โ€

The woman looks up at me with her dull eyes. โ€œYesโ€”go. You pass through the security check down the hall.โ€

She nods in the direction of the dark hallway, and a chill goes through me as I walk tentatively through the barred door, which slides closed again and locks with a resounding thud. Iโ€™ve never been here before. My job interview was over the phone, and the warden was so desperate to hire me, he didnโ€™t even feel compelled to meet me firstโ€”my resume and letters of recommendation were enough. I signed a one-year contract and faxed it over last week.

And now Iโ€™m here. For the next year of my life.

This is a mistake. I never should have come here.

I look behind me, at the red metal bars that have already slammed shut behind me. Itโ€™s not too late. Even though I signed a contract, Iโ€™m sure I could get out of it. I could still turn around and leave this place. Unlike the residents of this prison, I donโ€™t have to be here.

I didnโ€™t want this job. I wanted any other job but this one. But I applied to every single job within a sixty-minute commute of the town of Raker in upstate New York, and this prison was the only place that called me back for an interview. It was my last choice, and I felt lucky to get it.

So I keep walking.

Thereโ€™s a man at the security check-in all the way down the hall, guarding a second barred door. Heโ€™s in his forties with a short, military- style haircut and wearing the same crisp blue uniform as the dead-eyed woman at the front desk. I looked down at the ID badge clipped to his breast pocket: Correctional Officer Steven Benton.

โ€œHi!โ€ I say, in a voice that I realize is a little too chirpy, but I canโ€™t help myself. โ€œMy name is Brooke Sullivan, and itโ€™s my first day working here.โ€

Bentonโ€™s expression doesnโ€™t shift as his dark eyes rake over me. I squirm as I rethink all the fashion choices I made this morning. Working in a menโ€™s maximum-security prison, I figured it was better not to dress in a way that might be construed as suggestive. So Iโ€™m wearing a pair of boot- cut black dress pants, paired with a black button-up long-sleeved shirt. Itโ€™s almost eighty degrees out, one of the last hot days of the summer, and Iโ€™m regretting all the black, but it seemed like the way to call the least attention to myself. My dark hair is pinned back in a simple ponytail. The only makeup I have on is some concealer to hide the dark circles under my eyes, and a scrap of lipstick thatโ€™s almost the same color as my lips.

โ€œNext time,โ€ he says, โ€œno high heels.โ€

โ€œOh!โ€ I look down at my black pumps. Nobody gave me any guidance whatsoever on the dress code, much less theย shoeย code. โ€œWell, theyโ€™re not very high. And theyโ€™reย chunkyโ€”not sharp or anything. I really donโ€™t thinkโ€ฆโ€

My protests die on my lips as Benton stares at me. No high heels. Got

it.

Benton runs my purse through a metal detector, and then I walk

through a much larger one myself. I make a nervous joke about how it feels like Iโ€™m at the airport, but Iโ€™m getting the sense that this guy doesnโ€™t like jokes too much. Next time, no high heels, no jokes.

โ€œIโ€™m supposed to meet Dorothy Kuntz,โ€ I tell him. โ€œSheโ€™s a nurse here.โ€

Benton grunts. โ€œYou a nurse too?โ€

โ€œNurse practitioner,โ€ I correct him. โ€œIโ€™m going to be working at the clinic here.โ€

He raises an eyebrow at me. โ€œGood luck with that.โ€ Iโ€™m not sure what that means exactly.

Benton presses a button, and again, that ear-shattering buzzing sound goes off, just before the second set of barred doors slides open. He directs me down a hallway to the medical ward of the prison. Thereโ€™s a strange chemical smell in the hallway, and the fluorescent lights overhead keep flickering. With every step I take, Iโ€™m terrified that some prisoner will appear out of nowhere and bludgeon me to death with one of my high- heeled shoes.

When I turn left at the end of the hallway, a woman is waiting for me. She is roughly in her sixties, with close-cropped gray hair and a sturdy buildโ€”thereโ€™s something vaguely familiar about her, but I canโ€™t put my finger on what it is. Unlike the guards, sheโ€™s dressed in a pair of navy blue scrubs. Like everyone else Iโ€™ve met so far at this prison, she isnโ€™t smiling. I wonder if itโ€™s against the rules here. I should check my contract.ย Employees may be terminated for smiling.

โ€œBrooke Sullivan?โ€ she asks in a clipped voice thatโ€™s deeper than I would have expected.

โ€œThatโ€™s right. Youโ€™re Dorothy?โ€

Much like the guard at the front, she looks me up and down. And much like him, she looks utterly disappointed by what she sees. โ€œNo high

heels,โ€ she tells me. โ€œI know. Iโ€”โ€

โ€œIf you know, why did you wear them?โ€ โ€œI meanโ€ฆโ€ My face burns. โ€œI knowย now.โ€

She reluctantly accepts this answer and decides not to force me to spend my orientation barefoot. She waves a hand, and I obediently trot after her down the hallway. The whole outside of the medical ward has the same chemical smell as the rest of the prison and the same flickering fluorescent lights. Thereโ€™s a set of plastic chairs lined up against the wall, but theyโ€™re empty. She wrenches open the door of one of the rooms.

โ€œThis will be your exam room,โ€ she tells me.

I peer inside. The room is about half the size of the ones at the urgent care clinic where I used to work in Queens. But other than that, it looks the same. An examining table in the center of the room, a stool for me to sit on, and a small desk.

โ€œWill I have an office?โ€ I ask.

Dorothy shakes her head. โ€œThereโ€™s a desk in there. Donโ€™t you see it?โ€

So Iโ€™m supposed to document with the patients looking over my shoulder? โ€œWhat about a computer?โ€

โ€œMedical records are all on paper.โ€

I am stunned to hear that. Iโ€™ve never worked in a place with paper medical records. I didnโ€™t even know it was allowed anymore. But I suppose the rules are a little different in prison.

She points to a room next to the examining room. โ€œThatโ€™s the records room. Your ID badge will open it up. Weโ€™ll get you one of those before you leave.โ€

She holds her ID badge up to the scanner on the wall and thereโ€™s a loud click. She throws open the door to reveal a small dusty room filled with file cabinets. Tons and tons of file cabinets. This is going to be agony.

โ€œIs there a doctor here supervising?โ€ I ask.

She hesitates. โ€œDr. Wittenburg covers about half a dozen prisons. You wonโ€™t see him much, but heโ€™s available by phone.โ€

That makes me uneasy. At the urgent care, I was never alone. But I suppose the issues there were more acute than what Iโ€™ll see here. At least, thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m hoping.

Our next stop on the tour is the supply room. Itโ€™s about the same as the room at the urgent care clinic, but of course, smallerโ€”also with ID badge access. There are bandages, suture materials, and various bins and tubes and chemicals.

โ€œOnly I can dispense medications,โ€ Dorothy tells me. โ€œYou write the order and Iโ€™ll dispense the medication to the patient. If thereโ€™s something we donโ€™t have, we can put it on order.โ€

I rub my sweaty hands against my black dress pants. โ€œRight, okay.โ€

Dorothy gives me a long look. โ€œI know youโ€™re anxious working in a maximum-security prison, but you have to know that a lot of these men will be grateful for your care. As long as youโ€™re professional, you wonโ€™t have any problems.โ€

โ€œRightโ€ฆโ€

โ€œDoย notย share any personal information.โ€ Her lips set into a straight line. โ€œDoย notย tell them where you live. Donโ€™t tell themย anythingย about your life. Donโ€™t put up any photos. Do you have children?โ€

โ€œI have a son.โ€

Dorothy regards me in surprise. She expected me to say no. Most people are surprised when I tell them I have a child. Even though Iโ€™m twenty-eight, I look much younger. Although I feel a lot older.

I look like Iโ€™m in college, and I feel like Iโ€™m fifty. Story of my life.

โ€œWell,โ€ Dorothy says, โ€œdonโ€™t talk about your kid. Keep it professional. Always. I donโ€™t know what youโ€™re used to in your old job, but these men are not your friends. These are criminals who have committed extremely serious offenses, and a lot of them are here for life.โ€

โ€œI know.โ€ Boy, do I know.

โ€œAnd most of allโ€ฆโ€ Dorothyโ€™s icy blue eyes bore into me. โ€œYou need to remember that while most of these men will see you for legitimate reasons, some of them are here to get drugs. We have a small quantity of narcotics in the pharmacy, but those are reserved for rare occasions. Do not let these men trick you into prescribing narcotics for them to abuse or sell.โ€

โ€œOf courseโ€ฆโ€

โ€œAlso,โ€ she adds, โ€œnever accept any sort of payment in exchange for narcotics. If anyone makes an offer like that to you, you come straight to me.โ€

I suck in a breath. โ€œI wouldย neverย do that.โ€

Dorothy gives me a pointed look. โ€œYes, well, thatโ€™s what the last one said. Now sheโ€™s gonna end up in a place like this herself.โ€

For a moment, I am speechless. When the warden interviewed me, I had asked about the last person working here, and he said that she had left for โ€œpersonal reasons.โ€ He didnโ€™t happen to mention that she was arrested for selling narcotics to prisoners.

Itโ€™s sobering to think that the last person who had this job before me is now incarcerated. Iโ€™ve heard that once youโ€™re in the prison system, itโ€™s hard to get out of it. Maybe the same is true for people who work here.

Dorothy notices the look on my face and her expression softens just the tiniest bit. โ€œDonโ€™t worry,โ€ she says. โ€œItโ€™s not as scary as you think. Really, itโ€™s just like any other medical job. You see patients, you make them better, then you send them back to their lives.โ€

โ€œYesโ€ฆโ€ I rub the back of my neck. โ€œI was just wonderingโ€ฆ Am I going to be responsible for seeingย allย the prisoners in the penitentiary? Like, do I just cover a segment orโ€ฆ?โ€

Her lips curl. โ€œNo, youโ€™re it, girlie. Youโ€™re seeing everyone. Any problem with that?โ€

โ€œNo, not at all,โ€ I say. But thatโ€™s a lie.

The real reason I was reluctant to take this job isnโ€™t that Iโ€™m scared a prisoner will murder me with my own shoe. Itโ€™s because of one of the inmates in this prison. Someone I knew a long time ago, who I am not eager to see ever again.

But I canโ€™t tell that to Dorothy. I canโ€™t reveal to her that the man who was my very first boyfriend is an inmate at Raker Maximum Security Penitentiary, currently serving life without the possibility of parole.

โ€ŒAnd Iโ€™m the one who put him here.โ€Œ

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