A Prison Doctor Found Her Mother’s Necklace on a Dying Inmate-felicia

The first time I gave my daughter away, she was too small to understand the word goodbye.

She was three months old, warm against my chest, wrapped in a thin blanket that had been washed until the cloth felt almost transparent.

The nursery room inside the prison did not look like any nursery I had imagined when I was younger.

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It had painted cinder-block walls, a barred window, one plastic chair, and a metal table where every form had to be signed in duplicate.

The air smelled like powdered formula, floor disinfectant, and the sour fear of women trying not to cry in front of officers.

I remember the social worker placing the papers down very gently, as if gentleness could make the words less final.

Consent to adoption.

Transfer of custody.

Department of Corrections release authorization.

My inmate number appeared on every page, printed above my name like the state owned both my crime and my grief.

My daughter slept through most of it.

That was the mercy and the cruelty of it.

She did not know her mother was pressing a thumbprint beside a signature that shook so badly the pen scratched the paper.

She did not know I had been awake all night with her cheek tucked against my collarbone, memorizing the weight of her head.

She did not know I had whispered her name so many times that the sound felt carved into my mouth.

Chloe.

I asked one thing before they took her.

I asked that her name not be erased.

The social worker glanced at the officer, then at the adopting couple waiting down the hall, and said she would note the request.

Not promise.

Note.

Prison teaches you the difference.

I had nothing to give Chloe that day except a broken silver heart.

It had been mine since I was seventeen, cheap enough to bend with pliers, precious only because it was mine before every number and uniform came after.

I broke it in half with my own hands on the edge of the metal table.

One half went into the blanket beside her.

The other went beneath my shirt, where no officer could make it stop being mine.

When they carried her out, she made one small sound in her sleep.

It was not a cry.

It was worse.

It sounded like she trusted the world.

For thirty years, I lived with that sound.

Every woman in prison learns to make a calendar out of things nobody else counts.

I counted commissary coffee packets.

I counted winter storms against the window.

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