Chapter Twelve

Chapter 134,175 wordsCompleted

Chapter Twelve opens with a didactic overview of the four recognized exits from Nickel reform school: completing a sentence and earning a merit‑based discharge, a court‑ordered release prompted by a relative or lawyer, death from disease, neglect or violence, and a physical escape that usually ends with recapture. The narrative then shifts to a historical vignette about Clayton Smith, a 1952 escapee. Clayton’s early life is described—his father’s death, work in the Manchester orange groves, his mother’s death from pneumonia, and state‑appointed guardianship that scattered his siblings. His family’s distinctive look is noted, as are his siblings’ movements. At Nickel, Clayton survives poorly in fights but finds brief solace peeling potatoes in the kitchen. House father Freddie Rich, a serial overseer of abusive institutions, identifies Clayton as a candidate for exploitation and later subjects him to a brutal “Lovers’ Lane” punishment. Clayton plans his flight with the help of his sister Bell, who lives in a girls’ home near Gainesville. He reaches the edge of a swamp, hesitates, then proceeds eastward, eventually hitching a ride with a white man in a Packard who introduces himself as Mr. Simmons, a retired mayor of Eleanor and board member of Nickel. The two converse about school, race, and education; Clayton lies and gives his name as “Harry.” Mr. Simmons drives him toward Jacksonville, allowing Clayton to dream of opening a restaurant after working in orange groves and at Chet’s Drive‑In. After several days of wandering, Clayton reaches a dead‑end house, steals work clothes, and continues his trek, though the narrative leaves his ultimate fate ambiguous. The story returns to Elwood’s present at Nickel. During Visiting Day, Harriet arrives from Eleanor, weak with a chest cold, bringing newspaper clippings about civil‑rights speeches and the space race. She embraces Elwood briefly before he retreats to tend to the other boys. The dormitory life has settled: deliveries to Eleanor are routine, the White House building remains empty, and Earl’s illness has ended. Elwood, Turner, Desmond, and Jaimie play Monopoly with homemade rules. Elwood experiences nightly insomnia, haunted by the thought that compliance has not saved him. Burt, a fellow Cleveland dormmate, arrives with his mother and infant sister, joining the picnic table. Harriet informs Elwood that their lawyer, Mr. Andrews, vanished after taking $200 and abandoning his case, leaving the family financially strained. Elwood reflects on the bleak prospects for his future and his grandmother’s dwindling support. In a moment of resolve, he devises a “fifth way” out of Nickel: not merely to escape or wait for mercy, but to eradicate the institution itself.