I remember it all, even now, in the quiet twilight of my own long life, the green linoleum stretching like a river to Old Sparky. Cold Mountain Penitentiary, E Block, 1932. That's where I was, Paul Edgecombe, supervisor of the death row, and I thought I'd seen it all. Then came John Coffey. He was a giant of a man, dark-skinned, with a child's simple demeanor, weeping constantly, and accused of a crime so heinous it turned the stomach: the rape and murder of two nine-year-old sisters, the Detterick twins. When they found him, he was holding their lifeless bodies, crying, "I couldn't help it. I tried to take it back."
Before Coffey, there was Eduard Delacroix, a Cajun with a rat-like face, convicted of rape and murder, and setting a fire that killed others. He was a nervous, meek sort, and then a miracle happened: a small mouse, brown and quick, appeared on the Mile. We called him Steamboat Willy at first, but Delacroix, who possessed a surprising gentleness, tamed him and renamed him Mr. Jingles. That little mouse, with his peppermint candies and his spools, became a beacon of improbable joy in that grim place, a testament to life in the shadow of death. But not everyone appreciated such small wonders. Percy Wetmore, a junior guard whose position was secured by political connections, was a cruel, petty man, forever tormenting the inmates and trying to stomp out Mr. Jingles, a constant, ugly presence on our block.
My own body, meanwhile, was failing. A urinary infection gnawed at me, a burning torment that no medicine could touch. One day, alone with Coffey in his cell, a strange urgency in his eyes compelled me to allow him near. He reached out, his massive hand covering me, and a jolt, like electricity, shot through me. When he pulled away, the infection was gone, expelled from his mouth as a cloud of shimmering, buzzing insects. John Coffey possessed a gift, a divine power to heal, to take sickness and pain into himself. This revelation, coming from a man condemned as a monster, shook the foundations of my beliefs. How could God grant such grace to a child killer? My conviction in his innocence began to solidify, even as another truly monstrous inmate, William "Wild Bill" Wharton, arrived, bringing with him a new wave of chaos and violence to the Green Mile.
The day came for Delacroix to walk the last mile. Percy, in his malice, had sought a transfer to a mental institution and, as a condition, insisted on supervising Delacroix's execution. We agreed, desperate to be rid of him, but we underestimated the depth of his spite. Percy deliberately failed to wet the sponge used in the electric chair. The execution became a slow, agonizing immolation, Delacroix screaming, burning alive, the stench of roasted flesh filling the execution chamber. It was a hellish spectacle, a "bad death" that seared itself into our souls, a horrific injustice that left us all reeling and filled with a desperate need for atonement.
That need for atonement, coupled with the growing certainty of Coffey's innocence, led us to a desperate gamble. Warden Hal Moores's beloved wife, Melinda, lay dying of a brain tumor, her suffering unbearable. We hatched a plan, a reckless "night journey" to spirit Coffey out of Cold Mountain under the cover of darkness. We drugged Wild Bill and locked Percy away. The drive to the warden's house was fraught with tension, a silent prayer clinging to every curve of the road. There, in Melinda's bedroom, Coffey laid his hands upon her, and again, the dark, buzzing insects flowed from him, taking her sickness with them. She awoke, healed, whole. In that miraculous moment, Coffey also showed me flashes of the truth, images of Wild Bill Wharton, the true killer of the Detterick twins, revealing the profound injustice of Coffey's conviction.
Despite knowing the truth, the wheels of justice, once set in motion, could not be stopped. John Coffey, the innocent healer, was scheduled to die. He told me he was tired, tired of feeling the world's pain, the constant stream of hatred and cruelty. He welcomed the end, though he feared the dark. On that final walk down the Green Mile, the air thick with unspoken sorrow, we, his guards, cried openly. He was executed, a gentle giant snuffed out by a system that failed him. His touch, however, had left its mark. Mr. Jingles, the little mouse, and I, Paul Edgecombe, were both granted an unnaturally long life, untouched by sickness or serious injury. It was a blessing, and a curse, a perpetual reminder of the miracle we witnessed and the profound wrong we allowed to happen. I am now well over a hundred years old, and Mr. Jingles, too, has defied all natural limits, a silent, furry witness to a lifetime of regret and the enduring weight of that final, unjust walk.