Here's a snip,
The gym on the roof of the jail is like something out of a movie, that was the thought going through my head when I stepped out, my first breath of fresh air in a month. Chain fence, 30 feet or so high, and chain fence to top it all off, too. No climbing over this mother. A bunch of Mexicans had tried it back in '89, before it had a ceiling, someone I easily forget tells me. They jumped down a construction chute, right to Main Ave., and got busted a few hours later, same day. Whatever.
There is a basketball court and a volleyball court, and a guard station where you first have to sign your name in a ledger; a long line forms. Everyone has to be signed in before you get the basketball. And there is only one for the 50 or 60 people up there that day. It's okay though, not everyone plays, most just want to sit at the periphery, get some fresh air, and talk to their people. Everyone has people in jail, a lot of people know each other from the streets, or know someone that knows someone, and so on. A lot of local folk, the type of people that a month or two at county is no big deal for. A part of life, to be expected in their trade, whatever the fuck they traffic in or abuse to excess; sometimes just a diehard aversion to lawful existence. Too many movies.
I'm the only white guy there even attempting to ball. My bunky, my cell mate, South, he gave me his old sneakers. But they lacked laces, so I had to rip apart a bed sheet and twist them up into makeshift laces. Caveman, a crafty old crack head who makes pens out of dorito's wrappers and his own razorblades out of AAA battery covers, helps me. He's cool with me. I'm one of the few inmates that doesn't fuck with him or laugh at him while he does his thing in the dayroom, not that he cares either way. I am good with everyone, respecting everyone, and in turn I am welcome at any table and any section of the day room. I have people watching the World Cup, albeit with sarcastic jeers and prodding, and they show enough respect not to bully me out of the tv and flip the channel. Everyone's human after all, and the people you meet in jail are some of the weakest and most down trodden you will ever come across. They try to cover up by spinning grand yarns, this exploit and that, but I know better. They're lost souls who don't know anything else, who just want to be normal, but they don't know how.
So the kicks are tight with bed sheet laces and a hole in the heel of the left foot. I'm up there, the game begins. ...
and I tell you about the game tomorrow.