Authors: Paul Cleave
Tags: #Fiction, #Suspense, #Crime, #Mystery & Detective, #General
Cemetery lake
by
PAUL CLEAVE
What began as a routine exhumation of a suspected murder victim quickly turns complicated for private investigator Theodore Tate…Theo Tate is barely coping with life since his world was turned upside down two years ago. As he stands in the cold and rainy cemetery, overseeing the exhumation, the lake opposite the graveyard begins to release its grip on the murky past. When doubts are raised about the true identity of the body found in the coffin, the case takes an even more sinister turn. Tate knows he should walk away and let his former colleagues in the police deal with it, but against his better judgement he takes matters into his own hands. With time running out and a violent killer on the loose, will Tate manage to stay one step ahead of the police? Or will the secrets he has buried so deeply be unearthed?
Also by Paul Cleave
The Cleaner
The Killing Hour
S
Published by Arrow Books 2009
13579 10 8642
Copyright S Paul Cleave, 2008
Paul Cleave has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the author of this work.
This book is a work of fiction. Names and characters are the product of the author’s imagination and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
First published in New Zealand in 2008 by
Black Swan, an imprint of Random House New Zealand
First published in Great Britain in 2009 by
Arrow Books
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is available from the British Library
ISBN 9780099536253
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To Joe — who got the ball rolling
Blue fingernails.
They’re what have me out here, standing in the cold wind,
shivering. The blue fingernails aren’t mine but attached to
somebody else — some dead guy I’ve never met before. The
Christchurch sun that was burning my skin earlier this afternoon has gone. It’s the sort of inconsistent weather I’m used to. An hour ago I was sweating. An hour ago I wanted to take the day
off and head down to the beach. Now I’m glad I didn’t. My own
fingernails are probably turning blue, but I don’t dare look.
I’m here because of a dead guy. Not the one in the ground
in front of me, but one still down at the morgue. He’s acting
as casual as a guy can whose body has been snipped open and
stitched back together like a rag doll. Casual for a guy who died from arsenic poisoning.
I tighten my coat but it doesn’t help against the cold wind.
I should have worn more clothes. Should have looked at the
bright sun an hour ago and figured where the day was heading.
The cemetery lawn is long in some places, especially around
the trees where the lawnmower doesn’t hit, and it ripples out
from me in all directions as though I’m the epicentre of a storm.
In other places where foot traffic is heavy it’s short and brown where the sun has burned all the moisture away. The nearby
trees are thick oaks that creak loudly and drop acorns around the gravestones. They hit the cement markers, sounding like bones of the dead tapping out an SOS. The air is cold and clammy like a morgue.
I see the first drops of rain on the windscreen of the digger
before I feel them on my face. I turn my eyes to the horizon where gravestones covered in mould roll into the distance towards the city, death tallying up and heading into town. The wind picks up, the leaves of the oaks rustle as the branches let go of more acorns, and I flinch as one hits me in the neck. I reach up and grab it from my collar.
The digger engine revs loudly as the driver, an overweight
guy whose frame bulges at the door, moves into place. He looks about as excited to be here as I am. He is pushing and pulling at an assortment of levers, his face rigid with concentration. The engine hiccups as he positions the digger next to the gravesite, then shudders and strains as the scoop bites into the hardened earth. It changes position, coming up and under, and filling with dirt. The cabin rotates and the dirt is piled onto a nearby tarpaulin.
The cemetery caretaker is watching closely. He’s a young guy
struggling to light a cigarette against the strengthening wind, his hands shaking almost as much as his shoulders. The digger drops two more piles of dirt before the caretaker tucks the cigarettes back into his pocket, giving up. He gives me a look I can’t quite identify, probably because he only manages to make eye contact for a split second before looking away. I’m hoping he doesn’t
come over to complain about evicting somebody from their final resting place, but he doesn’t — just goes back to staring at the hollowed ground.
The vibrations of the digger force their way through my feet
and into my body, making my legs tingle. The tree behind me can feel them too, because it fires more acorns into my neck. I step out of the shade and into the drizzle, nearly twisting my ankle on a few of the ropey roots from the oak that have pushed through the ground. There is a small lake only about fifteen metres away, about the size of an Olympic swimming pool. It’s completely enclosed by the cemetery grounds, fed by an underground stream. It makes this cemetery a popular spot for death, but not for recreation.
Some of the gravesites are close to it, and I wonder if the coffins are affected by moisture. I hope we’re not about to dig up a box full of water.
The driver pauses to wipe his hand across his forehead, as if
operating all of those levers is hot work in these cold conditions.
His glove leaves a greasy mark on his skin. He looks out at the oak trees and areas of lush lawn, the still lake, and he’s probably planning on being buried out here one day. Everybody thinks that when they see this spot. Nice place to be buried. Nice and scenic.
Restful. Like it makes a difference. Like you’re going to know if somebody comes along and chops down all the trees. Still, I guess if you have to be buried somewhere, this place beats out a lot of others I’ve seen.
A second flatbed truck sweeps its way between the gravestones.
It has been pimped out with a wraparound red stripe and fluffy dice in the window, but it hasn’t been cleaned in months and
the rust spots around the edges of the doors and bumper have
been ignored. It pulls up next to the gravesite. A bald guy in grey overalls climbs out from behind the steering wheel and tucks his hands into his pockets and watches the show. A younger guy climbs out the other side and starts playing with his cellphone.
There isn’t much more they can do while the pile of dirt grows higher and higher. I can see the raindrops plinking into the lake, tiny droplets jumping towards the heavens. I make my way over
to its edge. Anything is better than watching the digger doing its job. I can still feel the vibrations. Small pieces of dirt are rolling down the bank of the lake and splashing into the water.
Flax bushes and ferns and a few poplar trees are scattered around the lakeside. Tall reeds stick up near the banks, reaching for the sky. Broken branches and leaves have become waterlogged and
jammed against the bank.
I turn back to the digger when I hear the scoop scrape across
the coffin lid. It sounds like fingers running down a blackboard, and it makes me shiver more than the cold. The caretaker is shaking pretty hard now. He looks cold and pissed off. Until the moment the digger arrived, I thought he was going to chain himself to the gravestone to prevent the uprooting of one of his tenants. He had plenty to say about the moral implications of what we were doing. He acted as though we were digging up the coffin to put him inside.
The digger operator and the two guys from the flatbed pull on
face masks that cover their noses and mouths, then drop into the grave. The overweight guy from the digger moves with the ease
of somebody who has rehearsed this moment over and over. All
three disappear from view, as if they have found a hidden entrance into another world. They spend some time hunched down, apparently figuring out the mechanics to get the chain attached between the coffin and digger. When the chain is secure the driver climbs back into place and the others climb out of the grave. He wipes his forehead again. Raising the dead is sweaty work.
The engine lurches as it takes the weight of the coffin. The
flatbed truck starts up and backs a little closer. With the two machines violently shuddering, more dirt spills from the bank and slides into the water.
About five metres out into the lake, I see some bubbles rising to the surface, then a patch of mud. But there is something else there too. Something dark that looks like an oil patch.
There is a thud as the coffin is lowered onto the back of the
truck. The springs grind downwards from the weight. I can hear the three men talking quickly among themselves, having to nearly shout to be heard over the engines. The cemetery caretaker has disappeared.
The rain is getting heavier. The dark patch rising beneath the water breaks the surface. It looks like a giant black balloon. I’ve seen these giant black balloons before. You hope they’re one thing but they’re always another.
‘Hey, buddy, you might want to take a look at this,’ one of the men calls out.
But I’m too busy looking at something else.
‘Hey? You listening?’ The voice is closer now. ‘We’ve got
something here you need to look at.’
I glance up at the digger operator as he walks over to me. The caretaker is starting to walk over too. Both men look into the water and say nothing.
The black bubble isn’t really a bubble but the back of a jacket.
It hangs in the water, and connected to it is a soccer ball-sized object. It has hair. And before I can answer, another shape bubbles to the surface, and then another, as the lake releases its hold on the past.
The case never made the news because it was never a case. It was a slice of life that happens every day, no matter how hard you try to prevent it. It made the back pages where the obituaries are listed, along with the John Smiths of this world who are beloved parents and grandparents and who will be sorely missed. It was a simple story of man-gets-old-and-dies. Read all about it.
It happened two years ago. Some people wake up every
morning and read the obits while downing scrambled eggs and
orange juice, looking for a name that jumps out from their past.
It’s a crazy way to kill a few minutes. It’s like a morbid lottery, seeing whose number has come up, and I don’t know whether
these people find relief when they get to the end and don’t find anybody they know or relief when they do. They’re looking
for a reason; they’re looking for somebody, wanting to make a
connection and to feel their own mortality.
Henry Martins. I pulled those stories from the library
newspaper database this morning just like I did two years ago, and read what people had to say about him when he died, which
wasn’t much. Then again, it’s hard to sum up a person’s life in five lines of six-point text. It’s hard to say how much you’re going to miss them. There were eleven entries for Henry over three
days from family and friends. Nobody made my job easier by
throwing a ‘glad you’re dead’ in with their woeful sorrows, but each obituary read like the others: boring, emotionless. At least that’s the way they come across when you don’t know the guy.
Henry Martins’ daughter came into the station a week after
the old man was buried. She sat down in my office and told me
her dad was murdered. I told her he wasn’t. If he had been, the medical examiner would have stumbled across it. MEs are like
that. It was easy to see she already had both feet firmly on the road of suspicion, and I told her I’d look into it. I did some checking. Henry Martins was a bank manager who left behind