Categories
art Fashion Gay prison

Outcasts Always Mourn

Gerard Falconetti looking like Robby

Sunday morning, children all over the bed.  Asking questions.  They want to know everything.  Inquisitive little things.  The sun is bright and warm.  My hostess is making blueberry pancakes and coffee.

Lily, their youngest, had dreams about heaven and hell.  Hell had something to do with a supermarket.  She said, “There were people in hell who shouldn’t have been there.” Which was a very astute observation for a 9 year old girl.

She’s Jewish, Jews don’t believe in heaven or hell.

The Little Dog is confused.  He’s a one man dog.  He’s been with J and J these past few months so his loyalty, understandably, shifted.  We are re-orientating him.  He slept with me last night.  Hung out at the house yesterday.  He lay on his bed as we toiled in the garden.

Robby and I spent the day doing errands.  I have my phone!  The garden is tidy!  The house is returned to normal!  The art is back on the walls!  Lost things have been found! There is food in the fridge!  The dog is happy!

Saw Safe House at the Malibu cinema with Robby, bumped into AA folk.  The film was ok but had one huge and unforgivable plot flaw.

Before the film we wandered down Cross Creek.  Wondering at the night.  The cold, damp breeze on my face.

Robby is the only person I tell everything.  He has seen me vulnerable and survived.  Not like Jennie and the others.  No room!  No room!

Last night we watched September IssueAnna Wintour really is an extraordinary woman.  She is also incredibly generous.  You know, don’t you, that she lent us her NYC house when we made Dorian Gray.  Hamish, I wish we had seen more of him.  I remember meeting Grace with Patrick Kinmonth when they worked at Vogue in  London and again, rather obscurely at a house in North Wales  years later.  She stole the show.

God, Andre Leon Talley is such a twat.  The least interesting character in the film…just because he tries so hard to be fabulous.  Inauthentic.  I knew him when I lived in Paris, we met at Karl Lagerfeld‘s house when Karl lived on the Rue de la Universite in the early 80’s.  Gerard Falconetti and I stopped by unannounced.

Falconetti’s brilliant grandmother Maria played Jean d’Arc in The Passion when she was 19 years old.

For some reason I remember touching Andre’s face, his skin was cold and soft.  Like an old handbag.

Gerard was 11 years older than me, so incredibly handsome.  A wonderful lover.  In 1981 Gerard played Meryl Streep‘s boyfriend in The French Lieutenant’s Woman.

In 1984 Gerard found out that he had AIDS and threw himself off the Tour Montparnasse.

Gerard was a generous, extraordinary friend.  He played Montserrat Caballe singing Tosca when I was sick with flu, he lifted my spirits with delicate macaroons from Carette.   He showed me the Paris I would later show those who have never been. The secret places we all need to know when we discover a city for the first time.

I have, somewhere, a note Karl sent Gerard referencing his grandmother.

That was then this is now…

I have a million things to do.  A great deal of catching up and making good.

I promised to write about being arrested.  Well, I will…but after conversations yesterday with my journalist brethren I’ll let them do the reporting and I’ll take a rest.  There’s still so much to tell you.

As you may know this entire being arrested thang was to do with this very blog.   What can or cannot be said.

Meanwhile on another part of the internet…you simply have to check out what is being said about me by identifiable enemies: an ex-employee calling me a sadist,  a gross individual from Province Town who attempted to malign me last summer,  some cretin accusing me of killing my own dog…these people are wrought with life affecting, overwhelming resentment.  It is so extreme it makes me laugh.

Baying for blood.  Send him back to jail!  Throw away the key!  If only, in some way, they could find a way of getting me locked up for ever…the death sentence even?

I am chuckling to myself.

Chris Lewis of Sydney Australia thinks I want your sympathy.  If I looked like Chris Lewis I would want your sympathy.  Even when he was young he was ugly.  You know very well that I report as I see…as truthfully as I am able.  It is my unalienable right to do so.  I don’t want sympathy.  I need your support.  Those of you who have stood by me, my God!  I never expected such amazing gifts.

Marilyn Monroe, of all people, said that for every fan excited to see her there were 10 enemies waiting to bring her down.   Being hated is an occupational hazard for those of us who do not live in the shadows.  If you think what people write about me is outrageous…try being Rachal Maddow.

Somebody called from the jail yesterday, he is as well as can be expected.  How quickly one forgets. Yet…you know me.  The lure of the uniform…the smell of ruminating men…ransacked sexual fantasies.

Do you know what a Nonce is?  It’s a slang word for a child molester.  I taught the men in my dorm at Men’s County Jail this very English word.  By the time I left they were calling each other Nonce, it was quite inappropriate…but very funny.

By the way, I didn’t get any Christmas cards whilst I was at the jail, I thought you didn’t care!  I now know that many of you sent cards and letters of support.  Apparently, they were all returned as having inappropriate content.  What were you sending me?

One’s body is weakened by three months of inactivity.  Working in the garden was exhausting yesterday.

Thank God for Robby.

As I lay here, at what ever time during that constant night…the ghosts of Wilde and Cocteau, Rimbaud and Verlaine come to me.  The fragrant, aromatic smoke he blows to me through the tiny hove carved between cells.  The great poet cries, “Hard labour!”  And all…for love.

A famous passage from the Ballad of Reading Gaol:

Yet each man kills the thing he loves
By each let this be heard.
Some do it with a bitter look,
Some with a flattering word.
The coward does it with a kiss,
The brave man with a sword!

The line is a nod to Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice, when Bassanio asks, “Do all men kill the things they do not love?”

A passage from the poem was chosen as the epitaph on Wilde’s tomb.

And alien tears will fill for him,
Pity’s long-broken urn,
For his mourners will be outcast men,
And outcasts always mourn.

Categories
prison

Cookies For Juice

The day passed without argument or contradiction.

I still don’t have a phone or lap top as the police are holding both as evidence.  It is amazing, however, that I can do without.

Before I tell you more about the last three months I think I should warn you that leaving an anonymous comment on this site is almost impossible to do, as a certain Chris Lewis from Sydney Australia found to his chagrin yesterday.

Chris hoped to leave a nasty message and get away with it.  Well, Chris, not only must you have a valid email address to create a WordPress account but every comment left on this blog has your email and your IP address attached to it.

The IP address will lead, in most cases, directly to you.

Chris Lewis is a good friend of the man I allegedly extorted and contacting me on his behalf by email was a foolish and potentially case destroying decision.  I passed his email and details onto the relevant authorities.

Again, let me warn any of you who think you can get away with leaving anonymous notes on WordPress…you can’t.

Jason just made hot coffee and brought it to my room.  The children are slowly getting dressed, ready for school, they file into see me before they head off and kiss me goodbye.  Max is smoking in the attic.  I will never again take these moments for granted.

Hot coffee, what a treat.  No hot coffee in jail.  No hot food in jail.  I lived on jelly and peanut butter sandwiches, cookies and fruit.  My shit turned the colour of peanut butter and about the same consistency.

Do you want to know more?  I want to tell you. I think you should know.

We are woken, woken by the booming deputy on the loudspeaker.  The fluorescent lights ignited, flickering across the dorm.  She/he bellows, “Chow, get ready for chow!”  Unless it is a Monday or Wednesday morning in which case she/he booms “Clothing exchange!”, meaning of course that we had the opportunity to exchange our uniform, sheets and towels.

We stand in a sad crocodile, scarcely awake, holding up for inspection what we need to exchange to the ruddy-faced, alcoholic looking deputy.  Impatient, rude and ugly…a Max Beckmann caricature, he amused me with his slick backed hair, the broken veins in his cheeks.  His miserable job scoffed at by the younger deputies who held him in obvious contempt.  A career in jail changing underpants.

His teeth stand away from his lips as he barks at me.  Barking at me like a rabid dog.  “Is that a whole sheet?”

I stand in line.  My private thoughts do not show on my poker face.

I do as I am told.  Like a good jew waiting to be gassed.

Then, after he takes his laundry circus else where we lay on our beds waiting for chow, waiting for the trustees to arrive with cereal, milk, eggs and fruit.

We guard the door, peering through the window into the hall.  Moments before the police arrive we are warned to, “Put on your blues and get on your racks.”  Then, one word, “Walking!”  they holler.  As the door opens one of us screams, “They’re in the house!”  We lay silently on our bunks.

“Close your eyes, face down!”  they feed all 90 of us in less than one minute..throwing our breakfast at our rack (bunk).  Beeman stands overseeing the feed, I look at him cautiously, he’s wearing a tie, he has cut his hair.  He’s shorter than his colleagues.  I lay on my bunk wondering if he got laid last night.  Who he fucked, his uniform in a heap on some boys bedroom floor.

After the breakfast is delivered the door is slammed shut and the dorm returns to normal life.

Then the bartering begins.  Inmates roam the dorm like 18th Century market traders calling out “Cookies for juice!”  or  “Cereal for eggs!”  The men with HIV get special diets, rich in protein.   Their food is quickly snapped up by those who know.   Then, it’s time for school.  “Line it up!”

On the wide corridors beyond the dorm we follow prescribed paths.  Keeping an eye on the deputies.  “Tuck your shirt in!”  They bawl.  When they learned that I was English the Mexican officers would talk animatedly about Premiere League Football.  You know, don’t you, that I know jack about football?

Breakfast at 6am, lunch at 10am, dinner at 4pm.   Snacking on overpriced vending machine food in between.  A ramen noodle costing 20 cents on the streets costs an inmate $1.30.  The store, run by a Kansas City based company called Keefe gouges those who can least afford it.

Hunger determines everything in jail.  Men are hungry.  Very hungry.

It’s easy to be a Jail House millionaire, it costs about $135 a week.  For that a huge bag of store arrives and those who do not have target those who do.  The younger, attractive boys lay down with the elderly.

I buy fish from the commissary, packets of sardines in hot chile sauce.  I buy fish because it is unlikely to be stolen.  To buy is to be judged.  A large bag of store is complimented, a small bag attracts derision.  I am quizzed by those I least expect about how much money I spent on any particular Monday. When the surly commissary man hands over my purchase I scurry back to my bunk.

Yet, to buy too much somehow ties one to the jail, makes one vulnerable.  Attracts the wrong sort of friends.  If the deputies decide to target the dorm and tear it up, they steal your store, confiscate your vending cards.

When I first arrived I bought the soup, the ramen noodles.  I hated the bloody ramen noodles.  They were only good for trading.

One can buy just about anything with a packet of ramen noodle in Men’s County Jail.  I saw a beautiful boy with clown tattoos on his face sell his ass to an HIV+ older man for a packet of noodles.   Boys like him are called commissary babies.  They didn’t wear condoms, fucking raw costs more, even though condoms are distributed in the dorm once a week.

On Monday nights, the night Keefe deliver the store, the men gorge themselves on Chocolate and soda.  Those who have nothing wander the dorm like Bombay beggars asking for shots of coffee, food, selling razors from the ‘indigent kits’ that are delivered to the poor on credit from the state of California.

After second count at around 9pm the lights are dimmed, never switched off entirely.   We stand in the half-light, men stand in small groups preparing their night-time spread as the tranny’s dance.  Noodles are softened in luke warm water, packets of chicken and chips are crushed and reconstituted.   Pickles are diced, spam chopped, cheese grated on home-made graters.

We sit eating the spread, enjoying the freedom.  “Quiet time!”  they call after midnight.  “Quiet time!”  Waiting for 3am count and bed time.  I pass out long before.

We sleep during the day, when we can, between classes and AA and church and hospital visits, phone calls to loved ones, attorney room passes and the ubiquitous pill call.

Pill call, four times a day the sweet Irish lady arrives with her cart…the men with HIV stand and wait, scoffing down their expensive HIV drugs.  It costs a great deal of money to keep a gay man in the jail.  $500 a day without transportation and medication.   Double with both.

It cost the Californian tax payer $45,000 to keep me in jail.

During my time in Dorm 5200 I read the entire works of Dickens (Steve Harris and I promised we would do that when we retired) and Voltaire, (I LOVE VOLTAIRE).  I read Dominick Dunne‘s fascinating collection of essays Fatal Charms and The Mansions of Limbo…heartened that he started writing seriously at 53 years old but became quickly bored by his snobbery and petty resentments.  I read what ever I could.  I read bad novels and good novels.  I read Lauren Bacall’s whining auto biography.  I hadn’t read so much in years.  I became a voracious reader, bereft when I finished anything, especially if I had nothing lined up to read next.

Now I need to write.

Now I am home and before I forget the precise flavour of the jail I need to write it all down.

I still wake at dawn although my face is no longer scarred by doing so.  I still have one foot in the jail. Thinking about those men.  My friends.

Tomorrow I will describe the arrest, the vain judiciary and the whippet DA.   All of who seem, in retrospect, like characters from a restoration comedy.

Categories
Malibu prison

Jail House Rock

Malibu.  It is even more beautiful here than I remember.  Especially after the heavy rain. Verdant.

It is the second day since I left the Men’s County Jail.

Yesterday the maid washed my clothes and folded them on my bed.  Robby arrived and smiled a crooked, anxious smile.  It was wonderful seeing him.

Friends joined us for dinner.  14-year-old Max and came home from school wanted to know everything.  The girls hugged me for ages, especially Hannah who at 12 years old really understands what is fair and what is not.

I spoke for some time with my friends in Whitstable.   Dee called from Antibes.  She told me that she did what she could which was, as you know, more than I could have dreamt of.  I sat on the phone with him and explained how it felt…he was sweet, understanding, baffled.  I wanted to kiss him.  I didn’t tell him.  He knew.

Sadly, I received the first pass from a really good Producer for my new film It Gets Better.  Everyone else has responded very heartily to the material. Never mind.  I might not have mentioned before I was arrested I was sending out my new script.

Began talking to the right people about the play/spectacle I want to devise using my jail experience as a spring board from which we can leap into something unimagined.   My fancy choreographer friend just returned from Venice.  We’re meeting soon.

Today, I chatted with everyone who ever meant anything to me.

When I have a moment, I sit quietly and collect my thoughts, re-reading the diary I kept religiously whilst in Jail.

I don’t want to forget.  It was too extraordinary.

Shall I tell you some more?  Shall I tell you how I was moved from Dorm 5300 after the mad boy broke the TV with a chair to Dorm 5200, the so-called ‘Honor Dormitory‘.  The school dorm.

Every day we woke at 6am, scarfed our breakfast, filed out (shoulders pressed against the wall) past the grumpy deputies, attending class for most of the day.  I learned to type.  No more one finger typing for me.  Typing classes taught by the kind and wise Mrs E.

I lapped up the Anger Management taught by C and M.  Apparently anger like mine is shame based.  On Monday and Thursday an ex gang member inmate called Jesse taught us life and leadership skills.  On Wednesday a gay inmate called Jeremy taught Gay Equality but…not very well.

He was far too self obsessed to be a competent teacher.  However, the gays never had anyone take their story seriously so they loved his class.

He taught us the origin of the pink triangle..which I am sure you all know originated in the concentration camps of Nazi Germany.

On August 3, 2011 Rudolf Brazda died at the age of 98, he was the last known homosexual deportation survivor.

My fellow travelers didn’t know about the pink triangle, they didn’t even know about the concentration camps.  They didn’t know much.

They knew I was English but they didn’t really know what that meant.  I told one of them that I was British, “Wow!”  He said, “You speak English really well for a British.”  They’d ask me about England then follow-up with a case specific question like: “Do people use meth in England?” or “Do people like transgender in England?” or “Do English people have tattoos?”

I found a huge atlas and showed them where I lived.  I showed them Whitstable, my fingers tracing over the English countryside toward Dorset.  My friend Ivan asked, glancing his hand over the entire country, “Is this all London?

“No.” I replied.  Incredulity scarcely concealing my contempt.

Left on my own with the atlas I traced the route we had taken from New York to Paris, Paris to Marseille, Marseille to Antibes.  We traveled vast distances in a very short time of knowing each other.  Foolhardy, impatient, surly.  What did we think we were doing?  I wonder if it was indeed a love affair?  I can’t remember.  Two desperate men clinging onto each other for dear life as their world crumbled around them.

I remember him as if he were a child.  Then I feel tremendous guilt.  As if I had kicked a defenseless dog.

I took the reigns from Jeremy the bad gay teacher.

I taught them what Neil Bartlett had taught me.  I taught them about Fanny and Stella the two trans boys arrested in Burlington Arcade in 1869.  I reminded them that had these boys not been arrested we might not have had any evidence that Fanny and Stella and men like them had ever existed.

I reminded them that being arrested assures future generations that we were here.  That we are part of an honorable gay history.  I told them about Private Flower who was arrested in a public lavatory in 1850 for lewd conduct.  If you want to know more about our gay history read this.  It is invaluable.

“At Marlborough Street Court, when the assistant gaoler Scott called out “Ernest Cole,” a person looking like a well-dressed woman stepped into the dock and gravely faced Mr. Denman, the presiding magistrate. No one would have imagined that the prisoner, who was attired in a black fur-trimmed winter mantle, large black feathered hat and veil, and carried a muff and neat hang-bag was a man. It was alleged that the prisoner was a suspected person loitering in Oxford-street presumably for the purpose of committing a felony. Detective Gittens, D Division, deposed that, while in company with Detective Dyer, he saw the prisoner in Oxford-street on Monday evening. The prisoner was behaving like a disorderly female. He went up to the prisoner, and told him that he believed him to be a man. The prisoner endeavoured to escape by jumping on to an omnibus.”

The Times, January 2, 1901

Not everyone approved of the classes or the notion of an honor dorm.  Some of the deputies loathed the idea that we were being cossetted so.  The officers, the deputies.  Rookie cops, their young fearful faces.  On their own, on the way to the attorney room they would engage in conversation.  Their faces momentarily discarding that look of disdain.

My favorite was the fascinatingly sexy Deputy Beeman.  Short black hair, piercing blue eyes, a body to die for but most delightful of all…his sexy swagger, his perfect ass…his figure hugging uniform holding him snugly, perfectly…fueling ghastly fantasies…late at night I would imagine him forcing me to do unspeakable things.

As I have said…for people like me…it was hard not to eroticize his demands.

The school dorm is the idea of forward thinking Deputy Baca, the controversial head of the jail.  Baca believes that inmate education is the way forward.  He has thrown his weight behind the Share Tolerance scheme run by the kindly and considerate Deputy Vargas.  Share Tolerance is aimed mostly at breaking the cycle of recidivism and gang related violence in the General Population but we (the gays) took the class too.

We were taken to a warm carpeted room (the jail is freezing cold) decorated to stimulate and comfort.  We were asked to kick off our shoes, sit where we wanted then invited to watch a mawkish video about intolerance introduced by the awkward Deputy Baca.

The story may have been familiar to me but I learned fast that for most the ideas posited in the video were entirely original.  We watched gays and homophobes working together at the Museum of Tolerance, mothers sobbing at the deaths of their young sons to gang related violence.  Tentatively introducing these men to a new way of thinking.

It was a crudely made video and occasionally naive but the enthusiastic Vargas has a real heart and believes passionately in what he is doing.

There is an odd right-wing Christian bent in the jail.  I was told that John McCain was a hero to many of the men who worked there.  McCain and Jesus Christ.  I heard both McCain and Jesus quoted during the Share Tolerance class.

If Vargas and Baca wants to beat recidivism in the gay dorm they are going to have to work quite a bit harder.

For a start…relationships form in the gay dorm.  Fearfully loyal and tenaciously protected.  Gay boys, queens and tranny-lovers.  Remember, many of these people have nobody, they have burned all their bridges.  Most of them just have the streets, a card board box, mooching off customers at Sizzler.

I have so much in comparison.  I never forget how lucky I am.

I witnessed many instances when a star crossed lover would get deliberately arrested days after release simply to return to his still incarcerated husband.

Every day it seemed like an old friend would wash up in the dorm, looking beaten by the journey but happy to have arrived.  All the tranny hookers knew each other.  Clutching their mat and a few miserable papers.  A cheer erupting as they entered the dorm.  A swarm of cackling men carrying the new arrival, their old friend to her bunk and listen avidly to the ‘T’ (the gossip).

At around the time of the second trans murder on Santa Monica Blvd., (“She was shot in the weave!”) the trannie hookers sat together sharing their memories of her in hushed tones.  Murder or the threat of murder is an occupational hazard for these girls.  “He held a gun to my face and told me to blow him, then he took off without paying me.”  They agreed that back on the street, looking for clients, they would alter their routes, stay in the light, never stray far from the others.

Trannies are violent and fearless.

Months earlier a straight friend of mine, high on crack had his car stolen by a tranny hooker.  When he shared his sad story at the Wednesday morning SAA meeting the other men were outraged.  It seemed outrageous.  I was outraged…now it would make me laugh.  He deserved it.

Trannies are resourceful and creative.

At night, after lights out, someone would find a stick and a towel and beat the bathroom window like a drum.  The black trannies would parade between the bunks wearing amazing clothes they had fashioned from the four official items of clothing we were given.  They tore up everything they had and re-purposed it.  It was like being on Project Runway.  You wouldn’t believe just how many ways you can wear, remake, recycle one pair of short, Chartreuse boxers or a white tee.  The tee would be shredded and dyed pale blue with the wrapping from a toilet roll.

Sabrina cut up her plastic mat cover and made a warrior princess costume with shorts and bra.

Then the Portugese tailor arrived who made himself a needle.  He made a needle.  You heard me.  He made it out of a found paper clip.  He sat cross legged on his bunk and started sewing.  Suddenly the girls were all wearing beautifully hand stitched gowns cut out of blankets and trimmed with their pale blue uniforms.

Girls sure love to be girls, even if they are boys with their cocks tucked between their legs.

 Their mini skirts, their halter necks, their contraband bras proudly showing off their implants, their hormone induced, lactating titties.

At night after second count, in the half-light, singing tribal songs, parading, shimmying, twirling, cat walk, house of Ferragmo…the singer introducing each performer by his/her drag name…when the singer called out Shablam! the dancers would hit the floor and writhe around until it was over.

At night after second count we would eat together, ‘cook’ a ‘spread’.

I’ll tell you all about that tomorrow.

Categories
Auto Biography Immigration Malibu prison

Jails, Institutions, Death

Duncan RoyBefore I tell you.  Before I make it public.  Before I describe the beauty and the beast…before I feed the children, before I take the dog for a walk I want to say thank you.

Firstly, from the bottom of my heart, I want to thank Robby who never missed a visiting day, who sat behind the bullet proof glass and smiled hopefully and never gave up.  He tirelessly searched through many, many boxes for essential documents.  He put money on  my ‘books’ so I could eat decent food.  He called friends, wrote emails, paid bills, drove between far-flung offices in different parts of Los Angeles in his windowless Miata delivering those essential documents to essential lawyers.

He answered my calls on a Friday night when most beautiful 21-year-old boys should be out chasing equally beautiful people, places and things.

He never gave up.  He never let go.  He told me he loved me when I felt unloved.  He proved, once and for all, that God exists.

I want to thank Dee and Nicola for their extraordinary generosity by paying my lawyers bills.  I want to thank Jason, Jennifer, Anna, Dan, Zelcho and Joan for picking up the phone, for listening, for laughing and caring.

I want to thank Mel for paying the mortgage.

The people on the outside, those good and honorable people complimented those I shared the majority of time inside the Men’s County Jail.  The men who convinced me that everything would work out.  The men who taught me how to play Cribbage, Spades and Feral (my brain REFUSED to learn Pinocle)  and made me join in when all I really want to do was sleep away the day.  Every day.

I want to thank my convicted friends Ivan and Steve, two men my age who sat with me daily (like the council of elders) laughing gently at the antics of the young.

1.

So it began…

The day I was arrested in early November 2011 heralded the beginning of the end of possibly the worst two years of my life.

The end of the mid-life crisis that had well exceeded its sell by date.  It was the end of the madness that had determined far too many bad choices.

A series of catastrophic decisions made after the The Big Dog was torn up in front of me: a relationship with a man who could not possibly give me what I needed and from whom I should have run as fast as I was able…as soon as he revealed the truth about himself. An appearance on a TV show that merely underpinned the rancid thoughts I had brewing about my self.

Finally the reason, that reason…the reason I cannot explain at this particular moment because the lawyers have told me to keep my big mouth shut and on this occasion I have agreed.

This morning at 3am, after a 6 hour wait,  I pulled on the musty clothes I had stowed in a clear plastic bag nearly three months before, from a different year.

For the first time in 3 months my  arms were covered.  My legs felt warm.  My feet enclosed in fur-lined Marc Jacobs boots rather than flopping around in Chinese, black cotton pumps.

The glass door behind which I had been escorted and left, changed out of my baby blue smock and elasticated pants.  On that door the deputy had written in clumsy, black letters K6G.

I was on my own.  On my own for the first time in 3 months.  I could take a shit on my own.  I didn’t.

I pulled on the black knitted Ralph Lauren cardigan.  It smelt as it looked.

Opposite me, a similar room crammed mostly with Mexican immigrants.  Pulling on their terrible street wear.  Their grinning, greasy, fat faces pressed up against the glass.  They knew what I was, they had seen me in the distinctive costume, they knew what K6G meant. I stared back at them.  I wasn’t afraid.

I had not expected to be released.  The narrative I had long accepted included: 4 more months in Men’s County Jail, a further 6 months at a Santa Ana Immigration center and a lengthy deportation.  I had long given up on ever seeing my home, my dog, my view…ever again.

This was the judgement of my expensive but woefully inadequate immigration attorney.  Imminent catastrophe.  God, as it turns out, had other plans.

Frustrated by their miserable prognosis I set about firing them and contacted the Esperanza Immigrant Rights Project.  A Catholic organization run by two super smart, compassionate women and paid for by the Mexican Government.

I had my first meeting with them two weeks ago.  They made representation last Friday.  Today I was released from the immigration hold that had polaxed me these past three months.

Of course there were people who were very happy that I had been arrested.  Thrown into jail.  I was told that some were gleeful when I was arrested.  “He’s going down!”  they screamed.

I have no idea when this will end.  No release in sight.  No plea deal.  No, no, no.

Perhaps I will never see the Ocean from my mountain ever again?  The abrupt loss of life, like a suicide, coming here is like committing suicide.  I cannot imagine, dare not imagine returning to that glittering life.

The dream of some future is dashed.

2.

I was arrested on the PCH.  I can’t tell you why.  You’ll have to find out for yourself.  All in good time…more will be revealed.

All I can tell you is this:  I was arrested and charged, when I attempted to bail out I was told that due to an ‘immigration hold’ I was to be kept in custody.  Sent to jail.  I made frantic phone calls, I cried until my face was wet.

At that very moment the line would be drawn between those friends who were able to help and those who turned their back.

After being processed like a bad meat pie out of The Hidden Hills Police Station they drove us to the jail.  They took the scenic route.  They drove along the PCH, past Tom’s house, David’s mansion, The Malibu Inn where I had watched Pink perform a few nights after I met her.

They drove the same route I had driven many, many times since I had moved to Malibu in 2007.  I was in the back of the police bus looking at the hazy dawn, the rising sun over the ocean. The greasy waves flopping lazily over the sand.

They picked up other newly arrested men from an assortment of locations all over Los Angeles.

Those first few days away from home were unpleasant but, thankfully, I remained teachable.  I knew that the harder I struggled the deeper the hook.  I sat behind my eyes, doing as I was told.  Finally, after hours in the bus, we were processed into the jail.  A theatrical experience designed to frighted and malign.

“Look at the floor.” they screamed.  I looked briefly into the blue eyes of the startlingly handsome officer.  He growled, “Don’t look at me.” It was hard not to eroticize his demand.

Flipping from aggressor to victim.

We were given sandwiches and told to sit on metal benches.  Nothing you can do will hurt me.  You cannot hurt me.  

We were interviewed.  “Are you gay or suicidal?”  He asked.  I knew that I hadn’t lied about my gayness, not now or ever.  The moment I told him I was gay I was torn from the line, the general population.  My name called out.  “Roy 066!”  A huge black deputy cut off my wrist band, looking spitefully at me.  “Gay?” he spat.  I nodded.  He attached another band to my wrist.

A yellow wrist band, it said: K 6 G.

My life in jail would now be as different as my life on the streets.

Another few days of being ‘processed’.  Peered at, prodded, questioned.  Many men opted for the gay dorm, straight men, but few achieved their aim.

The straight men want to fuck the convincing trans boys.  The straight men didn’t want the ‘politics’.  The ‘politics’ in the California jail and prison system means living in the racially divided dorm.  If you are black you speak only with the blacks, if you are white or latino you do the same.  If you are caught fraternizing with a black, latino or white (or those who have chosen with whom they will run) you’ll get beaten, stabbed or worse.

Even if you know people on the streets…your best friend even…your affiliations mean nothing, could be deadly.  You keep to your own.

Sadly, this racial divide is perfectly mirrored on the ghetto streets of Los Angeles.  If you weren’t a racist before you went to jail or prison you’ll be one when you leave.   Lessons learned, not easily unlearned.  Tattoos on face and neck.  Tattooed collars, graphic letters…numbers on sculls and forearms.  Boys become men when they hold a gun, shoot a stranger, murder their enemies…BK=Black Killer.

I didn’t experienced the ‘straight’ dorm so I can’t tell you what it feels like to make others invisible because of the colour of the skin.  I can tell you however, that the majority of the white men I met in the gay dorm were despicable, homeless freaks.  Consequently, I hung with my new black buddies.  Most of whom, incidentally, had been co-opted into gangs as young children.

When I arrived they were suspicious, when I left the dorm yesterday evening they surrounded me and held me and cried.

When it was time to settle down and open my bunk to another man it wasn’t a white man I chose.

In the observation tank I met my first latino ‘green lighter’.  He was hiding.  In organized crime, gang and prison slang to green-light a person is to authorize his assassination.  Jose. We talked for hours.  I found him very desirable.  He told me that someone had once paid him 3o bucks for a blow job.

After a harrowing day or so in the vilest of cells waiting to be officially classified as gay they take me to a small office and a distinguished senior officer interviews me.  The officer tries to determine how gay I really am.  “Which gay bars do you go to?”  He looks at me suspiciously when I tell him that I don’t drink.  I tell him that I make gay films.  “Porn?” he chuckles.  Finally, I am determined as a convincing homosexual.  My dark blue ‘straight’ uniform removed, exchanged for a pale blue ‘gay’ uniform…I am sent to the relative safety of the gay dorm.  Dorm 5300.

Nowhere where there are deputies is anyone gay…safe.  I have abandoned my cloak of invisibility. They can see exactly what I am. The deputy whispers threateningly, “You gays have a sick life style.”  He can’t say it loudly.  They can’t beat us, not like they used to…not since the controversial undercover FBI sting that lead to the end of ritual beatings and institutionalized homophobia.

The night I arrived I watched the flat screen TV Robert Downey Junior had bought the gay dorms after his stint at The County Jail.  The inmates watch Law and Order.  CSI.  Anything by Tyler Perry.  By the time I left 5300 I had watched everything Tyler Perry had ever made.  He makes really bad films.

Dorm 5300 was like an insane and exotic freak show.

There are four gay dormitories, each holding 90 men.

80% pre-op transsexual, 90% HIV+, 50% homeless, 90% meth related crime, 80% parole violators.

The gay white boys had Supreme White Power written on their alabaster bodies.  They had badly drawn pictures of Norse Gods.  Claiming their white supremacist, Odinist heritage whilst fucking chocolate coloured trannies.

The tranny hookers, the homeless white boys, the squabbling couples who indulged nightly in domestic violence.

I watched in awe as a young man, caught by his fierce tranny wife fucking another ‘girl’, throw a chair through the flat screen TV bought by Robert Downey Junior.

I knew that I had to keep my mouth shut.  I had to learn quickly.  I listened.  I learned.

Statistically, there is more violence in the gay population (inmate against inmate) than in the rest of the 6000 plus general population.

3.

When they finally slept I walked between the serried bunks.

If I stroll between the bunks at dawn I remember what it is like to be at home in England.  I can smell the sea, the shingle on the beach crunching under foot, wrapped up warm against the bitter easterly winds, just me and The Little Dog.  We don’t need anyone else.  Did I tell you how much he loves the snow? Leaping carelessly into the great drifts.

One day I will see you again England.  I will walk gratefully in the rain, on the London streets and country lanes.  If I am able (if I can get back to you) they will drop us at the edge of the valley and we will walk to the house, past the stream where we would play, the pasture, the forest of rhododendrons, along the drive flanked by ancient Douglas Fir.

The door will open and they will be pleased to see me, hug me, feed me.  They will let me sleep until I am recovered.

More tomorrow.