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The Mouse on the Mile 8 page

judges. All he had left to hope for was the governor, who as a rule didn't issue clemency to folks who had

baked half a dozen of his constituents.

"Even if he don't get a stay, that mouse'd be shitting in that box until October, maybe even

Thanksgiving," Toot argued, but Brutal could see he was weakening. "Who gonna buy a cigar box some

mouse been using for a toilet?"

"Oh jeez-Louise," Brutal said. "That's the numbest thing I've ever heard you say, Toot. I mean, that takes

the cake. First, Delacroix will keep the box clean enough to eat a church dinner out of - the way he loves

that mouse, he'd lick it clean if that's what it took."

"Easy on dat stuff," Toot said, wrinkling his nose.

"Second," Brutal went on, "mouse-shit is no big deal, anyway. It's just hard little pellets, looks like

birdshot. Shake it right out. Nothing to it!"

Old Toot knew better than to carry his protest any further; he'd been on the yard long enough to

understand when he could afford to face into the breeze and when he'd do better to bend in the hurricane.

This wasn't exactly a hurricane, but we bluesuits liked the mouse, and we liked the idea of Delacroix

having the mouse, and that meant it was at least a gale. So Delacroix got his box, and Percy was as good

as his word - two days later the bottom was lined with soft pads of cotton batting from the dispensary.

Percy handed them over himself, and I could see the fear in Delacroix's eyes as he reached out through

the bars to take them. He was afraid Percy would grab his hand and break his fingers. I was a little afraid

of it too, but no such thing happened. That was the closest I ever came to liking Percy, but even then it

was hard to mistake the look of cool amusement in his eyes. Delacroix had a pet; Percy had one too.

Delacroix would keep his, petting it and loving it as long as he could; Percy would wait patiently (as

patiently as a man like him could anyway), and then burn his alive.

"Mousie Hilton, open for business." Harry said. "The only question is, will the little bugger use it?"

That question was answered as soon as Delacroix caught Mr. Jingles up in one hand and lowered him

gently into the box. The mouse snuggled into the white cotton as if it were Aunt Bea's comforter, and that

was his home from then until ... well, I'll get to the end of Mr. Jingles's story in good time.

Old Toot-Toots worries that the cigar box would, fill up with mouse-shit proved to be entirely

groundless. I never saw a single turd in there, and Delacroix said he never did, either, anywhere in his

cell, for that matter. Much later, around the time Brutal showed me the hole in the beam and we found

the colored splinters, I moved a chair out of the restraint room's east corner and found a little pile of

mouse turds back there. He had always gone back to the same place to do his business, seemingly, and as

far from us as he could get. Here's another thing: I never saw him peeing, and usually mice can hardly



turn the faucet off for two minutes at a time, especially while they're eating. I told you, the damned thing

was one of God's mysteries.

A week or so after Mr. Jingles had settled into the cigar box, Delacroix called me and Brutal down to his

cell to see something. He did that so much it was annoying - if Mr. Jingles so much as rolled over on his

back with his paws in the air, it was the cutest thing on God's earth, as far as that half-pint Cajun was

concerned - but this time what he was up to really was sort of amusing.

Delacroix had been pretty much forgotten by the world following his conviction, but he had one relation

- an old maiden aunt, I believe - who wrote him once a week. She had also sent him an enormous bag of

peppermint candies, the sort which are marketed under the name Canada Mints these days. They looked

like big pink pills. Delacroix was not allowed to have the whole bag at once, naturally - it was a

five-pounder, and he would have gobbled them until he had to go to the infirmary with stomach-gripes.

Like almost every murderer we ever had on the Mile, he had absolutely no understanding of moderation.

We'd give them out to him half a dozen at a time, and only then if he remembered to ask.

Mr. Jingles was sitting beside Delacroix on the bunk when we got down there, holding one of those pink

candies in his paws and munching contentedly away at it. Delacroix was simply overcome with delight -

he was like a classical pianist watching his five-year-old son play his first halting exercises. But don't get

me wrong; it was funny, a real hoot. The candy was half the size of Mr. Jingles, and his whitefurred belly

was already distended from it.

"Take it away from him, Eddie," Brutal said, half-laughing and half-horrified. "Christ almighty Jesus,

he'll eat till he busts. I can smell that peppermint from here. How many have you let him have?"

"This his second," Delacroix said, looking a little nervously at Mr. Jingles's belly. "You really think he ...

you know ... bus' his guts?"

"Might," Brutal said.

That was enough authority for Delacroix. He reached for the half-eaten pink mint. I expected the mouse

to nip him, but Mr. Jingles gave over that mint - what remained of it, anyway - as meek as could be. I

looked at Brutal, and Brutal gave his head a little shake as if to say no, he didn't understand it, either.

Then Mr. Jingles plopped down into his box and lay there on his side in an exhausted way that made all

three of us laugh. After that, we got used to seeing the mouse sitting beside Delacroix, holding a mint and

munching away on it just as neatly as an old lady at an afternoon tea-party, both of them surrounded by

what I later smelled in that hole in the beam - the half-bitter, half-sweet smell of peppermint candy.

There's one more thing to tell you about Mr. Jingles before moving on to the arrival of William Wharton,

which was when the cyclone really touched down on E Block. A week or so after the incident of the

peppermint candies - around the time when we'd pretty much decided Delacroix wasn't going to feed his

pet to death, in other words - the Frenchman called me down to his cell. I was on my own for the time

being, Brutal over at the commissary for something, and according to the regs, I was not supposed to

approach a prisoner in such circumstances. But since I probably could have shot-putted Delacroix twenty

yards one-handed on a good day, I decided to break the rule and see what he wanted.

"Watch this, Boss Edgecombe," he said. "You gonna see what Mr. Jingles can do!" He reached behind

the cigar box and brought up a small wooden spool.

"Where'd you get that?" I asked him, although I supposed I knew. There was really only one person he

could have gotten it from.

"Old Toot-Toot," he said. 'Watch this."

I was already watching, and could see Mr. Jingles in his box, standing up with his small front paws

propped on the edge, his black eyes fixed on the spool Delacroix was holding between the thumb and

first finger of his right hand. I felt a funny little chill go up my back. I had never seen a mere mouse

attend to something with such sharpness - with such intelligence. I don't really believe that Mr. Jingles

was a supernatural visitation, and if I have given you that idea, I'm sorry, but I have never doubted that

he was a genius of his kind.

Delacroix bent over and rolled the threadless spool across the floor of his cell. It went easily, like a pair

of wheels connected by an axle. The mouse was out of his box in a flash and across the floor after it, like

a dog chasing after a stick. I exclaimed with surprise, and Delacroix grinned.

The spool hit the wall and rebounded. Mr. Jingles went around it and pushed it back to the bunk,

switching from one end of the spool to the other whenever it looked like it was going to veer offcourse.

He pushed the spool until it hit Delacroix's foot. Then he looked up at him for a moment, as if to make

sure Delacroix had no more immediate tasks for him (a few arithmetic problems to solve, perhaps, or

some Latin to parse). Apparently satisfied on this score, Mr. Jingles went back to the cigar box and

settled down in it again.

"You taught him that," I said.

"Yessir, Boss Edgecombe," Delacroix said, his smile only slightly dissembling. "He fetch it every time.

Smart as hell, ain't he?"

"And the spool?" I asked. "How did you know to fetch that for him, Eddie?"

"He whisper in my ear that he want it," Delacroix said serenely. "Same as he whisper his name."

Delacroix showed all the other guys his mouse's trick ... all except Percy. To Delacroix, it didn't matter

that Percy had suggested the cigar box and procured the cotton with which to line it. Delacroix was like

some dogs: kick them once and they never trust you again, no matter how nice you are to them.

I can hear Delacroix now, yelling, Hey, you guys! Come and see what Mr. Jingles can do! And them

going down in a bluesuit cluster - Brutal, Harry, Dean, even Bill Dodge. All of them had been properly

amazed, too, the same as I had been.

Three or four days after Mr. Jingles started doing the trick with the spool, Harry Terwilliger rummaged

through the arts and crafts stuff we kept in the restraint room, found the Crayolas, and brought them to

Delacroix with a smile that was almost embarrassed. "I thought you might like to make that spool

different colors," he said. "Then your little pal'd be like a circus mouse, or something."

"A circus mouse!" Delacroix said, looking completely, rapturously happy. I suppose he was completely

happy, maybe for the first time in his whole miserable life. "That just what he is, too! A circus mouse!

When I get outta here, he gonna make me rich, like inna circus! You see if he don't."

Percy Wetmore would no doubt have pointed out to Delacroix that when he left Cold Mountain, he'd be

riding in an ambulance that didn't need to run its light or siren, but Harry knew better. He just told

Delacroix to make the spool as colorful as he could as quick as he could, because he'd have to take the

crayons back after dinner.

Del made it colorful, all right. When he was done, one end of the spool was yellow, the other end was

green, and the drum in the middle was firehouse red. We got used to hearing Delacroix trumpet,

"Maintenant, m'sieurs et mesdames! Le cirque presentement le mous' amusant et amazeant!" That wasn't

exactly it, but it gives you an idea of that stewpot French of his. Then he'd make this sound way down in

his throat - I think it was supposed to represent a drumroll - and fling the spool. Mr. Jingles would be

after it in a flash, either nosing it back or rolling it with his paws. That second way really was something

you would have paid to see in a circus, I think. Delacroix and his mouse and his mouse's brightly colored

spool were our chief amusements at the time that John Coffey came into our care and custody, and that

was the way things remained for awhile. Then my urinary infection, which had lain still for awhile, came

back, and William Wharton arrived, and all hell broke loose.

10.

The dates have mostly slipped out of my head. I suppose I could have my granddaughter, Danielle, look

some of them out of the old newspaper files, but what would be the point? The most important of them,

like the day we came down to Delacroix's cell and found the mouse sitting on his shoulder, or the day

William Wharton came on the block and almost killed Dean Stanton, would not be in the papers,

anyway. Maybe it's better to go on just as I have been; in the end, I guess the dates don't matter much, if

you can remember the things you saw and keep them in the right order.

I know that things got squeezed together a little. When Delacroix's DOE papers finally came to me from

Curtis Anderson's office, I was amazed to see that our Cajun pal's date with Old Sparky had been

advanced from when we had expected, a thing that was almost unheard of, even in those days when you

didn't have to move half of heaven and all the earth to execute a man. It was a matter of two days, I think,

from the twenty-seventh of October to the twenty-fifth. Don't hold me to it exactly, but I know that's

close; I remember thinking that Toot was going to get his Corona box back even sooner than he had

expected.

Wharton, meanwhile, got to us later than expected. For one thing, his trial ran longer than Anderson's

usually reliable sources had thought it would (when it came to Wild Billy, nothing was reliable, we

would soon discover, including our time-tested and supposedly foolproof methods of prisoner control).

Then, after he had been found guilty - that much, at least, went according to the script - he was taken to

Indianola General Hospital for tests. He had had a number of supposed seizures during the trial, twice

serious enough to send him crashing to the floor, where he lay shaking and flopping and drumming his

feet on the boards. Wharton's court-appointed lawyer claimed he suffered from "epilepsy spells" and had

committed his crimes while of unsound mind; the prosecution claimed the fits were the sham acting of a

coward desperate to save his own life. After observing the so-called "epilepsy spells" at first hand, the

jury decided the fits were an act. The judge concurred but ordered a series of pre-sentencing tests after

the verdict came down. God knows why; perhaps he was only curious.

It's a blue-eyed wonder that Wharton didn't escape from the hospital (and the irony that Warden Moore's

wife, Melinda, was in the same hospital at the same time did not escape any of us), but he didn't. They

had him surrounded by guards, I suppose, and perhaps he still had hopes of being declared incompetent

by reason of epilepsy, if there is such a thing.

He wasn't. The doctors found nothing wrong with his brain - physiologically, at least - and Billy "the

Kid" Wharton was at last bound for Cold Mountain. That might have been around the sixteenth or the

eighteenth; it's my recollection that Wharton arrived about two weeks after John Coffey and a week or

ten days before Delacroix walked the Green Mile.

The day our new psychopath joined us was an eventful one for me. I woke up at four that morning with

my groin throbbing and my penis feeling hot and clogged and swollen. Even before I swung my feet out

of bed, I knew that my urinary infection wasn't getting better, as I had hoped. It had been a brief turn for

the better, that was all, and it was over.

I went out to the privy to do my business - this was at least three years before we put in our first

water-closet - and had gotten no further than the woodpile at the comer of the house when I realized I

couldn't hold it any longer. I lowered my pajama pants just as the urine started to flow, and that flow was

accompanied by the most excruciating. pain of my entire life. I passed a gall-stone in 1956, and I know

people say that is the worst, but that gall-stone was like a touch of acid indigestion compared to this

outrage.

My knees came unhinged and I fell heavily onto them, tearing out the seat of my pajama pants when I

spread my legs to keep from losing my balance and going face-first into a puddle of my own piss. I still

might have gone over if I hadn't grabbed one of the woodpile logs with my left hand. All that, though,

could have been going on in Australia, or even on another planet. All I was concerned with was the pain

that had set me on fire; my lower belly was burning, and my penis - an organ which had gone mostly

forgotten by me except when providing me the most intense physical pleasure a man can experience -

now felt as if it were melting; I expected to look down and see blood gushing from its tip, but it appeared

to be a perfectly ordinary stream of urine.

I hung onto the woodpile with one hand and put the other across my mouth, concentrating on keeping my

mouth shut. I did not want to frighten my wife awake with a scream. It seemed that I went on pissing

forever, but at last the stream dried up. By then the pain had sunk deep into my stomach and my testicles,

biting like rusty teeth. For a long while - it might have been as long as a minute - I was physically

incapable of getting up. At last the pain began to abate, and I struggled to my feet. I looked at my urine,

already soaking into the ground, and wondered if any sane God could make a world where such a little

bit of dampness could come at the cost of such horrendous pain.

I would call in sick, I thought, and go see Dr. Sadler after all. I didn't want the stink and the queasiness of

Dr. Sadler's sulfa tablets, but anything would be better than kneeling beside the woodpile, trying not to

scream while my prick was reporting that it had apparently been doused with coal-oil and set afire.

Then, as I was swallowing aspirin in our kitchen and listening to Jan snore lightly in the other room, I

remembered that today was the day William Wharton was scheduled on the block, and that Brutal

wouldn't be there - the roster had him over on the other side of the prison, helping to move the rest of the

library and some leftover infirmary equipment to the new building. One thing I didn't feel right about in

spite of my pain was leaving Wharton to Dean and Harry. They were good men, but Curtis Anderson's

report had suggested that William Wharton was exceptionally bad news. This man just doesn't care, he

had written, underlining for emphasis.

By then the pain had abated some, and I could think. The best idea, it seemed to me, was to leave for the

prison early. I could get there at six, which was the time Warden Moores usually came in. He could get

Brutus Howell reassigned to E Block long enough for Wharton's reception, and I'd make my

long-overdue trip to the doctor. Cold Mountain was actually on my way.

Twice on the twenty-mile ride to the Penitentiary that sudden need to urinate overcame me. Both times I

was able to pull over and take care of the problem without embarrassing myself (for one thing, traffic on

country roads at such an hour was all but nonexistent). Neither of these two voidings was as painful as

the one that had taken me off my feet on the way to the privy, but both times I had to clutch the

passenger-side doorhandle of my little Ford coupe to hold myself up, and I could feel sweat running

down my hot face. I was sick, all right, good and sick.

I made it, though, drove in through the south gate, parked in my usual place, and went right up to see the

warden. It was going on six o'clock by then. Miss Hannah's office was empty - she wouldn't be in until

the relatively civilized hour of seven - but the light was on in Moores's office; I could see it through the

pebbled glass. I gave a perfunctory knock and opened the door. Moores looked up, startled to see anyone

at that unusual hour, and I would have given a great deal not to have been the one to see him in that

condition, with his face naked and unguarded. His white hair, usually so neatly combed, was sticking up

in tufts and tangles; his hands were in it, yanking and pulling, when I walked in. His eyes were raw, the

skin beneath them puffy and swollen. His palsy was the worst I had ever seen it; he looked like a man

who had just come inside after a long walk on a terribly cold night.

"Hal, I'm sorry, I'll come back----!" I began.

"No," he said. "Please, Paul. Come in. Shut the door and come in. I need someone now, if I ever needed

anyone in my whole life. Shut the door and come in."

I did as he asked, forgetting my own pain for the first time since I'd awakened that morning.

"It's a brain tumor," Moores said. "They got X-ray pictures of it. They seemed real pleased with their

pictures, actually. One of them said they may be the best ones anyone's ever gotten, at least so far; said

they're going to publish them in some biggety medical journal up in New England. It's the size of a

lemon, they said, and way down deep inside, where they can't operate. They say she'll be dead by

Christmas. I haven't told her. I can't think how. I can't think how for the life of me."

Then he began to cry, big, gasping sobs that filled me with both pity and a kind of terror - when a man

who keeps himself as tightly guarded as Hal Moores finally does lose control, it's frightening to watch. I

stood there for a moment, then went to him and put my arm around his shoulders. He groped out for me

with both of his own arms, like a drowning man, and began to sob against my stomach, all restraint

washed away. Later, after he got himself under control, he apologized. He did it without quite meeting

my eyes, as a man does when he feels he has embarrassed himself dreadfully, maybe so deeply that he

can never quite live it down. A man can end up hating the fellow who has seen him in such a state. I

thought Warden Moores was better than that, but it never crossed my mind to do the business I had

originally come for, and when I left Moores's office, I walked over to E Block instead of back to my car.

The aspirin was working by then, and the pain in my midsection was down to a low throb. I would get

through the day somehow, I reckoned, get Wharton settled in, check back with Hal Moores that

afternoon, and get my sick-leave for tomorrow. The worst was pretty much over, I thought, with no

slightest idea that the worst of that day's mischief hadn't even begun.

11.

"We thought he was still doped from the tests," Dean said late that afternoon. His voice was low, rasping,

almost a bark, and there were blackish-purple bruises rising on his neck. I could see it was hurting him to

talk and thought of telling him to let it go, but sometimes it hurts more to be quiet. I judged that this was

one of those times, and kept my own mouth shut. "We all thought he was doped, didn't we?"

Harry Terwilliger nodded. Even Percy, sitting off by himself in his own sullen little party of one, nodded.

Brutal glanced at me, and for a moment I met his eyes. We were thinking pretty much that same thing,

that this was the way it happened. You were cruising along, everything going according to Hoyle, you

made one mistake, and bang, the sky fell down on you. They had thought he was doped, it was a

reasonable assumption to make, but no one had asked if he was doped. I thought I saw something else in

Brutal's eyes, as well: Harry and Dean would learn from their mistake. Especially Dean, who could easily

have gone home to his family dead. Percy wouldn't. Percy maybe couldn't. All Percy could do was sit in

the corner and sulk because he was in the shit again.

There were seven of them that went up to Indianola to take charge of Wild Bill Wharton: Harry, Dean,

Percy, two other guards in the back (I have forgotten their names, although I'm sure I knew them once),

plus two up front. They took what we used to call the stagecoach - a Ford panel-truck which had been

steel-reinforced and equipped with supposedly bulletproof glass. It looked like a cross between a

milk-wagon and an armored car.

Harry Terwilliger was technically in charge of the expedition. He handed his paperwork over to the

county sheriff (not Homer Cribus but some other elected yokel like him, I imagine), who in turn handed

over Mr. William Wharton, hellraiser extraordinaire, as Delacroix might have put it. A Cold Mountain

prison uniform had been sent ahead, but the sheriff and his men hadn't bothered to put Wharton in it; they

left that to our boys. Wharton was dressed in a cotton hospital johnny and cheap felt slippers when they

first met him on the second floor of the General Hospital, a scrawny man with a narrow, pimply face and

a lot of long, tangly blond hair. His ass, also narrow and also covered with pimples, stuck out the back of

the johnny. That was the part of him Harry and the others saw first, because Wharton was standing at the

window and looking out at the parking lot when they came in. He didn't turn but just stood there, holding

the curtains back with one hand, silent as a doll while Harry bitched at the county sheriff about being too

lazy to get Wharton into his prison blues and the county sheriff lectured - as every county official I've

ever met seems bound to do - about what was his job and what was not.

When Harry got tired of that part (I doubt it took him long), he told Wharton to turn around. Wharton

did. He looked, Dean told us in his raspy bark of a half-choked voice, like any one of a thousand

backcountry stampeders who had wound their way through Cold Mountain during our years there. Boil

that look down and what you got was a dullard with a mean steak. Sometimes you also discovered a

yellow streak in them, once their backs were to the wall, but more often there was nothing there but fight

and mean and then more fight and more mean. There are people who see nobility in folks like Billy

Wharton, but I am not one of them. A rat will fight, too, if it is cornered. This man's face seemed to have

no more personality than his acne-studded backside, Dean told us. His jaw was slack, his eyes distant, his

shoulders slumped, his hands dangling. He looked shot up with morphine, all right, every bit as coo-coo

as any dopefiend any of them had ever seen.

At this, Percy gave another of his sullen nods.

"Put this on," Harry said, indicating the uniform on the foot of the bed - it had been taken out of the

brown paper it was wrapped in, but otherwise not touched-it was still folded just as it had been in the

prison laundry, with a pair of white cotton boxer shorts poking out of one shirtsleeve and a pair of white

socks poking out of the other.

Wharton seemed willing enough to comply, but wasn't able to get very far without help. He managed the

boxers, but when it came to the pants, he kept trying to put both legs into the same hole. Finally Dean

helped him, getting his feet to go where they belonged and then yanking the trousers up, doing the fly,

and snapping the waistband.. Wharton only stood there, not even trying to help once he saw that Dean

was doing it for him. He stared vacantly across the room, hands lax, and it didn't occur to any of them

that he was shamming. Not in hopes of escape (at least I don't believe that was it) but only in hopes of

making the maximum amount of trouble when the right time came.

The papers were signed. William Wharton, who had become county property when he was arrested, now

became the state's property. He was taken down the back stairs and through the kitchen, surrounded by

bluesuits. He walked with his head down and his long-fingered hands dangling. The first time his cap fell

off, Dean put it back on him. The second time, he just tucked it into his own back pocket.

He had another chance to make trouble in the back of the stagecoach, when they were shackling him, and

didn't. If he thought (even now I'm not sure if he did, or if he did, how much), he must have thought that

the space was too small and the numbers too great to cause a satisfactory hooraw. So on went the chains,

one set running between his ankles and another set too long, it turned out, between his wrists.

The drive to Cold Mountain took an hour. During that whole time, Wharton sat on the lefthand bench up

by the cab, head lowered, cuffed hands dangling between his knees. Every now and then he hummed a


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