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The Last Suppers

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by Mandy Mikulencak




  The Last Suppers

  Mandy Mikulencak

  JOHN SCOGNAMIGLIO BOOKS

  KENSINGTON BOOKS

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  FEATURED RECIPES

  Acknowledgments

  A READING GROUP GUIDE

  DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  JOHN SCOGNAMIGLIO BOOKS are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  119 West 40th Street

  New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2018 by Mandy Mikulencak

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

  The JS and John Scognamiglio Books logo is a trademark of Kensington Publishing Corp.

  ISBN: 978-1-4967-1003-1

  First Kensington Hardcover Edition: January 2018

  eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-1005-5

  eISBN-10: 1-4967-1005-5

  Kensington Electronic Edition: January 2018

  For Andy

  The Last Suppers portrays characters and events at the fictitious Greenmount Penitentiary in Louisiana in the 1950s. All names and characters—including death row inmates—are a product of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. The physical descriptions of the penitentiary are fictitious including the death row cell block called the Waiting Room. Some details of prison life were drawn from real-world accounts of the Louisiana penal system. This work should not be considered an accurate historical representation of any single U.S. prison in the 1950s.

  Greenmount Penitentiary

  Inmate Number 6451

  East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana

  Crime: Murder/Robbery

  Execution Date: September 7, 1951

  Leroy tells them he doesn’t feel right. That his chest’s going to explode. They laugh.

  “You gonna be dead in two hours anyway.” The two guards laugh some more. The larger one shoves him toward the table.

  Leroy just wants to sit in his cell with his Bible, but that cook from the prison kitchen has brought over pot roast for his last supper. Says she talked with his mama and got the recipe. It smells like Sundays before church, when Leroy and his brothers would line up for inspection to prove they’d washed behind their ears and didn’t have holes in their shirts.

  The roast would be in the oven, waiting on them after the preacher turned them loose. That smell got him through many a sermon.

  “I hope you like it,” the lady says, placing a metal tray in front of him.

  The thick slabs of roast and hunks of potato look so familiar his eyes water from the memories. He doesn’t want the guards or the lady to see, so he bows his head low and pretends to say grace.

  The smell is right, but the tray is all wrong. What day is it anyway? He wants one of those blue-rimmed plates his granny gave his parents for their wedding, the ones brought out only on Sunday with a warning not to dare drop one.

  “You gonna watch me eat?” he asks the lady.

  One of the guards hits the back of Leroy’s head with his fist. “Watch your manners, boy.”

  “He didn’t mean any offense.” She looks at Leroy. “I’m sorry to linger. I hope I did your mama’s recipe justice.”

  “Eat, boy!” Another fist connects with his ear.

  “Please don’t hit him,” she says, and turns to leave.

  Leroy hacks at the meat with the edge of his spoon and then stuffs a large chunk in his mouth. The heat’s gone out of it, but it’s tender like his mama’s. He chews and chews, but the meat seems to grow, filling his cheeks and cutting off his breath. Leroy’s chest pounds faster now, like when his brothers would hold him under the creek till he was certain he’d drown.

  Even though he can’t swallow, he stuffs in a piece of potato. Then another. Choking would be a mercy, he thinks. The electric chair sits in the next room. Why would they make him eat so close to where they plan to kill him?

  The cook is smaller than his little niece, but dressed like a grown-up. She waves as she exits the room. Like she’s gonna see him again one day, walking down the street. He nods his thanks for the food that’s choking him.

  In his mind, his granny is scolding him for having too much food in his mouth. He sees her, still in her Sunday hat and dress, white gloves clutched in one hand. His lips stay pressed together because chewing with your mouth open is impolite, she taught him.

  He slaps at the table with both hands, waiting, waiting for his lungs to give up. The guard hits him square in the back and the mass of food in his mouth is ejected onto the tray.

  “Worthless piece of shit,” the guard says. “Can’t even be thankful for a goddamn meal.”

  Tears cut shiny lines down his cheeks as the guard shoves his face into the now-cold food.

  Chapter 1

  Ginny crawled beneath Roscoe’s threadbare wool blanket, not caring that the fibers scratched at her bare skin. She’d come to lay with him, as she typically did after the weekday workers returned home or to their barracks and the weekend guards took their posts. The musky scent of Old Spice clung to his pillow. She pressed her face deep into the fabric, breathing in the memories of him that lingered there.

  Tonight, he was in the bath, which was also typical right before their visits. He’d once said that the stench of desperation and violence clung to him at the end of the day and he feared it’d rub off on her. Ginny had reminded him that she, too, worked at the prison. To which he shook his head and replied, “The kitchen don’t count, Ginny. The kitchen don’t goddamn count.”

  She let Roscoe believe the lie because he needed to think she was immune to the savagery in men’s thoughts and actions. But savages existed on both sides of the metal bars, a truth everyone at the prison understood.

  The rhythmic sloshing of water between the tub and Roscoe’s body would have lulled Ginny to sleep if it weren’t for the tiny spasms in her lower back and legs shouting for attention. It had been another thirteen-hour day with only a short break for stale coffee around 2 p.m. If she didn’t get out of bed, Roscoe might not be able to rouse her.

  She stood before his dresser and eased open the top drawer. It wasn’t the first time she investigated its contents, but there were no secrets between them. The act of snooping reminded her of the times she had snuck into her parents’ bedroom and investigated their personal belongings. During those foolhardy moments, she held her breath until she almost became dizzy with excitement. Back then, the price of being found out had been her mother’s hellfire temper and the bite of a metal belt buckle against her bare legs. No such reproach would come from Roscoe.

  He’d added nothing new since the last time she looked. The mainstays were still there: a bottle of whiskey, a small white prayer book that had been his mother’s, a change of underwear, and a half-empty carton of cigarettes left over from when he’d quit smoking. The last thing a person should do is lock up his demons in a place he could access at any time, but that was
Roscoe. He had impulse control.

  As soon as he stepped out of the bath, she closed the drawer quietly and slipped back into bed. He entered the room, naked except for a small St. Christopher’s medal he wore around his neck. Other lawmen swore by their St. Michael’s medals. Roscoe never said why he chose St. Christopher, but wearing the patron saint of travelers next to his heart made sense to her. A person’s road in this lifetime was perilous enough. A bit of luck might just extend the journey by a few years.

  The metal springs shuddered when he sat down on the edge of the bed. His skin, bright red from hot water and scrubbing, radiated warmth. She leaned closer and breathed in the scent of Ivory soap. The smells of the kitchen clung to her own skin and hair—onions, greens, hot grease, perspiration, and industrial dish soap. It crossed her mind to bathe before she met him in his room, but sheer fatigue kept her from worrying about it too much.

  “Tough day?” he asked.

  She kissed the small of his back before he nudged her to the other side of the bed.

  “No so bad. You?”

  “Nothing out of the ordinary,” he said.

  Neither expected a truthful or detailed answer. They always kept their talking to the bare minimum until after—when the lights were out and truth came more easily, like a confessional before the priest opened the curtain for absolution. Still, Roscoe shared only a fraction of what troubled his mind. His darkness played out in nightmares he seemed mostly ashamed of and almost never talked about. The nights they both wrestled with nightmares, they took turns waking the other up with their thrashing and muffled cries.

  Ginny rolled on top of Roscoe and let his skin warm her from chest to toes. Aligning their bodies made her feel like they were one entity and that their cells could be merged by the heat and sweat between them. Her mind sometimes went off in odd directions, wondering, for example, if they’d start breathing in unison if they stayed still enough. Or whether a couple could stay completely entwined a whole night without needing to pull away.

  His stubbly chin was always a pleasant sensation against her smooth one. She moved back and forth, feeling its roughness. He turned slightly so their lips touched, but only for a moment.

  “Enough of that now,” he said, rolling her onto her back.

  The bedsprings sang for a few minutes while she watched two moths dance in the lamp shade on the nightstand.

  * * *

  Roscoe go9781496710031t out of bed and pulled on the boxers he’d draped over the chair back. His arms and long legs were taut and sinewy, but his belly spilled over the elastic waistband, a juxtaposition Ginny didn’t find unattractive. At age fifty, he was more than twenty years her senior and exhibited more vigor than she ever had. She found this strange considering how closely he was tied to the death of others.

  He walked to the small dresser and removed a bottle from the top drawer. “Drop of hooch?”

  “Sure. A finger is all, though.” She sat up, tucking the blanket beneath her armpits.

  He handed her a juice glass half-full of whiskey, then poured his own more substantial portion. He set the bottle on the nightstand before he lay back against the wrought-iron headboard. His quarters in the administrative building contained only this sorry bed, a mismatched nightstand and dresser, and a small wooden table with two ladder-back chairs. His clothes hung from nails pounded in the window trim. He rarely stayed in the warden’s residence, a three-bedroom, freshly painted, white clapboard house at the far end of the compound. It had a formal dining room and a fully stocked kitchen Ginny envied. He said it was too far from the main prison buildings, that he needed to be closer to “the men.” She didn’t know if Roscoe meant his guards or the inmates, or both.

  It was clear from his face that something troubled him. She traced his forehead with her finger, stopping to smooth the deep lines etched between his brows.

  “You sure nothing’s wrong?” she asked.

  “Just the normal stuff.” He took a generous sip of his whiskey.

  “Nothing you want to talk about?”

  “Nope.” He downed the rest of his drink and cradled the empty glass.

  Ginny stared at her still-untouched drink. She didn’t like the taste of alcohol or how it made her feel, but it seemed more trouble to refuse a taste when Roscoe was drinking. She often thought she’d turn to booze for comfort if she had to witness one tenth of what Roscoe witnessed each day. Even though he refused to talk about it, she’d already heard through the prison grapevine that two men were killed in the fields earlier that day at the hands of Roscoe’s guards. Men of questionable nature were attracted to the jobs at Greenmount, and it gave her pause to think even Roscoe couldn’t keep their aggression in check.

  “There’s no more money for the prison larder this month,” he said, steering her away from any other questions about his mood.

  She never asked for a penny more than was allotted, but he seemed to need to apologize for this thing beyond his control.

  “I always make do.”

  “You could make a meal fit for a king out of spoiled milk, rotten eggs, and flour,” he continued. It was one of those compliments he overused, both with her and anyone else he talked to about her cooking.

  “Good thing we don’t have to find out,” she always replied.

  It was 1959 and she’d been the lead cook at Greenmount Penitentiary for eight years—the first woman to be allowed on staff. The last warden didn’t care if meals were punishment in and of themselves. Said only filth was good enough for filth. She felt her hiring had less to do with her culinary skills and more to do with the Department of Corrections wanting bad press to go away. Just months before Ginny was hired, several inmates cut their Achilles tendons to protest conditions at the prison, including the slop they were fed. Reforms that followed included more staff, better food, and slightly more sanitary living conditions. Roscoe was promoted to warden the same year and had been the one to hire her. She suspected it was a job he wished he hadn’t taken, but he never admitted it out loud.

  “Goddamned prison board won’t leave well enough alone.” His voice was tired and low, as if the flu was coming on. “The superintendent and a couple of members are driving up soon.”

  “It’s not near time for their quarterly visit,” she said. “What do they want?”

  “What do they ever want?”

  The superintendent’s chief complaint—besides Roscoe taking reform a little too seriously—was he failed to kiss anyone’s ass, which was mandatory in the Louisiana penal system.

  The visits made Roscoe itch with worry, which he never showed to his men. The cues were apparent to Ginny, though. He’d chew the skin of his thumb raw and say he was more tired than usual. Another person might be on edge, snapping and grousing, but he did the opposite, retreating into himself. Ginny sometimes felt ashamed for savoring these quiet moods. Still, she worried that the unplanned board visit signaled bad news.

  Roscoe reached into the drawer of the nightstand and removed his well-worn Bible. He’d dog-eared almost every page. She wondered how he remembered which pages held significance, unless all of them had at one time or another.

  Even though she doubted God’s existence, she liked a good story, and the Bible had quite a few of those. She and Roscoe disagreed on whether the work was an excellent piece of fiction or words coming straight from God’s mouth. He respected her beliefs—or lack thereof—but said he wouldn’t hide his own. She’d never ask such a thing of anyone, much less Roscoe. Her longing for answers didn’t mean he hadn’t already found his.

  “Don’t want to talk about work anymore. Want me to read aloud?” he asked.

  Ginny always said yes because she loved the power in his voice. He could’ve been a preacher, the sort who didn’t keep people in line with words of fear and shame, but whose voice made the congregation believe he could protect them from Old Scratch himself. That same voice probably commanded more respect from the staff and inmates than anything else about him.

  �
�New Testament or Old?” He put a cigarette in his mouth but didn’t light it. During those times he tried to quit, he’d say it helped to have the thing between his lips, even if he couldn’t take a draw.

  “You pick.” She closed her eyes and listened as he started from page one. “In the beginning . . .”

  She tried to imagine if they’d be sharing a bed if they didn’t work at the prison together, or if he hadn’t been her daddy’s best friend before he was murdered.

  Chapter 2

  Ginny followed Roscoe down the hallway of the admin building, although several steps behind because the jackass was on some kind of foot race. He wouldn’t turn around, so she spoke to his back. “What do you mean, he won’t talk to me? Why the hell not?”

  His pace quickened and she struggled to keep up. “Roscoe! Please answer me.”

  He whipped around on her so fast she almost ran into his chest. “It’s Warden Simms unless we’re alone. You know that, Ginny.”

  He towered above her, hands clenched. It wasn’t yet 6 a.m. and perspiration soaked through his T-shirt to his uniform. He smelled of chewing tobacco, not Ivory soap as he had the night before, but the scent was just as comforting.

  “No one’s around to hear,” she whispered. “This is important, Roscoe. I have to see him.”

  The anger drained from his face. He was back to being plain frustrated by the requests she made of him all these years.

  “The boy has only days before he meets his Maker and you want to ask him about his favorite foods. He said he doesn’t want anything.”

  “He doesn’t know what he wants.” She tested Roscoe’s patience almost subconsciously. When he failed to give her reason not to, it had only become easier over the years.

  “Ginny, let it alone.”

  Her fingers brushed against his for a second. He stuffed his hands in his pockets and stepped away.

 

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