Kalliope 2014.pdf May. 2014 | Page 104

there for him. He had never met her in person, but I can understand the feeling of wanting something, anything. Lethal injection was the order… I wonder how he received the news? When I imagine it I feel it must have been something like an icy hand that grips the heart, an arctic tremor that envelops your whole body. He probably wanted to cry, couldn’t breathe, reached out and found nothing. I looked at the white Rosary in my hands; did he feel that way as he was weaving this together? I thought of his arms moving, now in vivid color, the images on them morphing as he slipped beads onto clear string. All that color being wrapping up with taut white cord, Jerry suspended in a white room with a sea of colorful Rosaries shifting below him. Sister told us that she would have loved to be with him. He was such a wonderful person, she said. But that day, the day he was to die, she had a very important meeting to attend in D.C. It was a prior engagement that she could not miss. When she told us that, my blood froze in my veins; I looked again at the Rosary in my hands. Did he weave it together after he had heard the news I had just heard? Tears running down his face, fear gripping at his heart, despair and strength, weakness and hope all wrestling around inside his chest? I wanted to throw that thing away from me and run as fast as I could, I wanted to clench that thing as close to my heart as I could get it. All the while I sat there holding it in my hands not too close, not too far, thinking about what it means to be born into this world in which people suffer and die alone. How many times do you suppose Jerry solemnly accepted that reality? ‘I’m probably going to die alone.’ How many times do you suppose Jerry threw that reality away and allowed himself to hope? To hope that in this world people could step above that, he didn’t have to be punished in such a way. Of course in the end, he died alone. The pretty words of a black and white nun were only that: false prayers and empty words, red beads that trickled down her neck. Such a woman cannot transcend into the colorful cell of a convict. Miracles cannot occur in environments of falsehood. In such a place, things cannot become more than they are. There is no foundation. Words can only be words, nuns can only be nuns, and prisoners can only be prisoners. Alone, alone, alone. After class I asked Mr. Crossen, “How could she do that? Leave him alone for some stupid meeting?” He had a heavy look in his eyes, but 102