The prison bus rattled along the highway under a gray sky, carrying three men toward the same destination and three different versions of regret. The engine groaned, the benches vibrated, and the air smelled like diesel and stale coffee. None of them spoke at first. Whatever life had been, it was now sealed behind steel doors. As part of intake, they’d been allowed one small mercy: each prisoner could bring one harmless personal item—something to help pass time in a place where time stretched endlessly.
Suddenly, that small allowance felt huge. The silence broke when the man near the aisle leaned forward. “So,” he said like this was a casual road trip, “what did you bring?” The older man beside him lifted a small box. Inside were paints and worn brushes. “Paints,” he said proudly. “If I’ve got to be here, I might as well make something out of it.” The first man grinned and pulled out a deck of cards. “Cards,” he said. “A hundred games.
And I’ll have time for every one.” They turned to the third man, who’d been smiling the whole ride. He held up his item: a pack of vitamin gummies. The others stared. “Seriously?” the card player asked. “What are you supposed to do with those?” The third man smiled wider. “According to the label,” he said, tapping the pack, “they support energy, mood, confidence, and a better life.” The bus filled with laughter. Prison life settled in fast. Days blurred into routines that never changed.
But humor became a kind of currency—dark, ridiculous, and strangely comforting. One night, someone shouted, “Number twelve!” and the whole block exploded in laughter. A moment later: “Number four!” More laughter. The new guy asked his cellmate why. “We’ve been here so long,” the older inmate said, “we numbered the jokes.” So the new guy stood and shouted, “Number twenty-nine!” The place erupted like never before. When it finally calmed down, he asked, “Why was that so funny?” His cellmate wiped tears from his eyes. “We’d never heard that one before.” And just like that, he learned prison humor.