Brock Kniles -
Brock stood up. He was slower than he used to be, his left knee shot, his right hand missing half its pinky from a fight over a bag of chips. But he still had the mass of a man who’d spent two decades lifting cinder blocks in a cage. He reached under his mattress—not for the notebook, but for the plastic spork he’d sharpened against the concrete floor for three months.
Tucked beneath his mattress was a composition notebook. Not the usual kind—no pornography sketches, no gang hierarchies, no escape plans scrawled in urine and Kool-Aid. Brock’s notebook contained poems. Sonnets, mostly. Petrarchan, Shakespearean, the occasional villanelle. He’d discovered Shakespeare in the prison library during his fifth year, smuggled out The Sonnets inside a laundry bag. For a man whose every waking hour was a negotiation for violence, the rigid architecture of fourteen lines, iambic pentameter, and a volta became his religion. brock kniles
Chavo laughed. “You think you get a vote?” Brock stood up
“Kniles,” Harlow said, flicking a shank made from a melted toothbrush. “Hand over the notebook. And the letter.” He reached under his mattress—not for the notebook,