Chapter Sixteen

Chapter 173,267 wordsCompleted

The chapter opens with a bleak historical essay about post‑Civil‑War debt labor, dark cells, and sweatboxes, linking those practices to Nickel’s lingering cruelty. Superintendent Spencer orders a second White House beating for Elwood; the flogging is less brutal than the first, but Spencer hands the infamous strap “Black Beauty” to the newly hired house supervisor Hennepin, who briefly beats Elwood before Spencer stops him. Elwood is then taken to the dark cell on the third floor of the “White House.” The cell, recently repainted for an inspection, holds the initials and graffiti of former inmates, now resembling occult symbols. Inside, Elwood receives a single bucket for a toilet, one meager meal a day, and a sliver of gray light through a mesh opening. The narrative recounts three earlier occupants: Rich Baxter (sent for fighting back, later died in the Korean War), Claude Sheppard (sent for stealing peaches, later overdosed in Chicago), and Jack Coker (Elwood’s immediate predecessor, caught in a homosexual liaison with Terry Bonnie, died one month before Elwood’s arrival). After three weeks, Spencer, unsettled, visits Elwood; the atmosphere is tense as the statehouse quiets and the old power dynamics persist. Turner, a houseman, slips into the cell, shushes Elwood, and helps him out, handing him his original first‑day clothes and glasses. Together they slip past the sleeping house father Blakeley, navigate the freshly repaired dormitory floors, and escape into the night. Turner explains that a plot to “take him out back” was overheard from a Cleveland boy named Lester; the plan is imminent, so they must flee immediately. The two hop on bicycles, racing through dark streets, evading barking dogs and occasional passing cars. They head toward Tallahassee, a destination Turner believes offers a chance to find transport. Mid‑flight, a Nickel Community Service van appears, driven by Harper and Hennepin, both brandishing shotguns. The boys dodge the van, leap a fence, and run through tall grass as Harper fires a missed shot. Turner and Elwood keep moving, bruised and bleeding, but manage to outpace their pursuers, ending the chase as they disappear into the countryside.