Cemetery Lake (7 page)

Read Cemetery Lake Online

Authors: Paul Cleave

Tags: #Fiction, #Suspense, #Crime, #Mystery & Detective, #General

I turn my cellphone on and wait for it to ring, but it doesn’t.

Could mean people are getting killed elsewhere in the city and the reporters flocking there have forgotten about me. Could be the police know who put the bodies in the water and don’t feel they need to let me know. Could be Tracey hasn’t noticed the missing ring on the dead girl’s finger and I’m sailing through trouble-free waters. Could be none of that. Might simply be a poor signal.

Or that taking it for a swim has finally caught up with the inner components.

I go through the motions of changing gears and avoiding

other cars before realising I’m not heading home, or even to my office, but back to the cemetery where my day suddenly became

interesting. Where there is death there is life — at least at the moment. Police cars are scattered across the landscape but mostly localised by the lake. They are no longer guarding the entrance.

I ignore them and head to the opposite side of the cemetery where the dead are still at peace.

I make the walk through the dark without need of a torch. It’s a walk I could make with my eyes closed. The grass is wet and

soon the bottoms of my pants and shoes are wet.

It’s been two months since I last stood over my daughter’s

grave. After her funeral, I never wanted to come back. Seeing the smooth headstone with the brass plate carved with her name and the dates hurt too much. But it hurt even more staying away. The doctors tell me they don’t think Bridget knows that Emily is dead or even that Emily ever existed. I hope they’re right — though I’m not sure what kind of person that makes me. Emily didn’t have

the good luck to become catatonic but the bad luck to be killed: she had twice as many bones in her body broken as my wife; she hit the pavement just as hard, just as awkwardly, and just like that she was gone. No luck there at all, unless you count bad luck.

The tears don’t come as much these days. The pain is part of

who I am now. Getting rid of it would be like losing a limb.

The flowers in the grave have wilted and died. The coffin

beneath the earth is child sized, and the mere fact there is a market for child-sized coffins in this world proves it’s a fucked up one — and for the briefest moment I think about the condition the coffin is in, whether it’s as dented and damaged as the one pulled out of the ground earlier today, or whether its smallness helped it withstand the weight of the earth above it. Then I wonder if she is even in there.

I don’t bother to tell Emily about my day because she can’t

hear me. Emily is dead, and none of the romanticised ideas I have at Death Haven reach out here.

I walk towards the lake and come to a stop near the police tape. It seems that every year the people who manufacture this stuff have to add another mile to the roll to keep up with the Christchurch crime rate. A good year for them means a bad year for the rest of us. The scene looks like an archaeological dig. There are more cranes and trucks than before. Strings of lights around the edges of me tents are glowing brightly as if a pageant is going on in the middle of it all — except that here the performers are Women and men in different coloured overalls marching back and forth, cataloguing death along with the different types of samples that come with it. There is a mound of dirt from another coffin that has been dug up. I thank God that Emily is buried far away from this scene; and then I curse Him for making me bury her in the first place. Then I think of the irony of that statement since I know there can’t possibly be a God — or, if there is, that He abandoned this city a long time ago.

I’m about to duck under the tape when an officer who wasn’t

here earlier in the day approaches me and tells me I can walk no further.

“I just want to know how things are going,’ I say.

The officer gives me his practised stone-cold glare, and tells me to read tomorrow’s paper. I feel like hitting him.

“Has anybody spoken to the caretaker yet?’

‘Listen, mate, none of this is any of your business.’

“I came to visit my daughter,’ I say, about to play the sympathy card. ‘Her grave is here.’

His eyes narrow, and he looks like he is about to tell me that having a dead daughter doesn’t give me a free invitation to go wherever the hell I please, but slowly he seems to become aware it’s the type of comment I’d make him regret saying.

‘I’m sorry, mate, but you’ve picked a bad time to come.’

‘Yeah, well, she picked a bad time to die.’

He doesn’t know what to say, so he says nothing, figuring

this is best, and I figure he’s right. I stay at the line of police tape, trying to make eye contact with anybody who will tell me anything, but there’s too much going on for that to happen. The officer keeps looking at me like I’m a shoplifter. I feel his eyes on my back the entire way as I walk to my car. He’s probably

wondering if I’m for real.

The cemetery grounds are like a golf course, separated into

many sections divided up by hedges and trees and bushes. The

main road through it branches off to these different areas, and one of the bigger branches leads to the Catholic church, which sits left of the cemetery, back some forty metres from the road.

A belt of trees forms a horseshoe barrier around its sides and back, so that if you’re at the lake or even in other parts of the cemetery you might not even know it was there. This is the church that

once held a ceremony for my dead little girl, but more recently gave me somewhere to serve the priest with an exhumation order for Henry Martins.

I park as close as I can to the huge oak doors that could pass entry to a fairytale giant and I walk up the stone steps. The wooden door on the right swings open easily and noiselessly. Inside the church the temperature seems to drop another degree with every step I take. Most of the lighting is coming from candles, with a few overhead lights dimly illuminating the chapel. There are dozens of pews, all of them empty except for one at the very front where a man is staring ahead, lost in thought, seemingly unaware or uncaring of my presence.

I walk down the aisle, letting my fingertips tap the pew backs along the way. Left and right are tapestries of Jesus and stained glass windows of Jesus and paintings of Jesus. Somewhere around here there’s probably a gift shop with coffee cups with a smiling Jesus. At the head of the church behind the altar is a large wooden crucifix with a large wooden Jesus carved onto it. Jesus doesn’t seem to care that he’s hanging on a slight angle, or that he’s being promoted so heavily.

Before I reach the end of the aisle one of the boards beneath

me creaks, and the priest turns suddenly. He steps out from the pew and smiles at me, but after a few seconds the smile falters, and I realise how hard it must be for him to maintain his composure under the strain not just of this day but of every day. Priests don’t see the same violence that cops do, but they sure as hell hear about it — and worse. They’re the ones trying to pick up the pieces of a broken family looking to blame more than just the man or the disease that took away their loved ones.

Father Stewart Julian, a man in his mid to late fifties who has been here for as long as I can remember, offers me his hand. He has a notepad in his other hand that he hasn’t written a thing on, and a newspaper folded on the pew where he was sitting. His soft face, grey hair and black eyebrows give him a kind look, but at the moment he looks tired. Still, I figure in his day, if Father Julian hadn’t become a priest, he would’ve had women all over him.

Awful day, Theo,’ he says, shaking his head, proving just how

awful the day really is. ‘Just awful.’ His voice is low and easy to listen to. ‘It’s been long and it’s already late. You wouldn’t believe how many hours I’ve had to spend talking to police. Or to families of those who have loved ones buried here. They keep calling, Theo, scared that their mothers and fathers and sons and daughters are being desecrated. The calls finally stopped an hour ago, and since then I’ve been looking for a distraction.’ He waves the notepad a little. ‘Have you seen this?’ he asks, and picks up the newspaper.

‘Seen what?’ I ask, pretty sure that the distraction was a

hundred miles away, because that’s where Father Julian seemed to be looking before he heard me.

‘This,’ he says, and he points to the article.

‘I’ve seen it.’ It’s a newspaper article about the advertising campaign for McClintoch Spring Water. Promotional billboards

have been erected across the country and advertising spots taken out in newspapers. The ads say, ‘What would Jesus drink?’ and

show Jesus turning wine into water with McClintoch Spring

Water labels on the bottles.

‘I just don’t understand,’ he said, shaking his head.

‘Times are changing,’ I say, hoping my answer will apply here.

‘Father, I was hoping you could help me out.’

‘Helping you out, Theo, has led to a very long day’

‘You’d rather have left things as they were?’

‘Well, no, of course not. But I think I need more notice before I help you out so I can plan some holiday time.’

We sit facing each other, mimicking each other’s position with our elbows resting on the top of the pew. The pews are solid

wood, worn a little around the edges, but they’ve held up over the years in the way that only expertly crafted furniture from sixty or seventy years ago can. Wooden Jesus is looking down at us,

wooden nails in his wooden hands. He’s holding up well too.

‘It’s been one heck of a day for me,’ he says. ‘For all of us.

Sometimes I wonder …’ He doesn’t finish his sentence, just lets it trail off, making me think he’s wondering lots of things, and I don’t blame him. We’re all wondering lots of things. Foremost he is probably wondering where God fits into all of this.

‘You’re starting to think retirement might be on the cards?’

His smile comes back for a few seconds — there are a few

creases around the edges of his eyes — but then he sighs. “Theo, no, not yet. If I’m looking older than normal, it’s the day. It’s been a long one.’

‘For all of us, Father. What can you tell me about the caretaker who helped me this afternoon?’

‘Bruce? Bruce Alderman? Why are you asking?’

‘I want to talk to him.’

‘Ah,’ he says, and slowly shakes his head. Suddenly he doesn’t look as tired as he does sad. ‘You think he’s responsible. Well, I can’t tell you anything more than I’ve already told the police.’

‘And what did you tell them?’

‘That Bruce is a good man, and this sort of depravity, well…

it’s simply beyond him.’

It’s been my experience that depravity isn’t beyond as many

people as we’d like to think, and I’m pretty sure Father Julian knows that.

I adjust my position on the pew. Well made doesn’t mean

comfortable. ‘Did you tell them where they could find Bruce?’

‘I didn’t know’

‘Guilt makes men run, Father.’

‘So does fear. Nobody would like to see what he saw.’ ‘But fear doesn’t make them steal a truck and go into hiding.’

“I wish I could simply ask for your trust in this, Theo. I can guarantee you, Bruce isn’t a bad kid. And he couldn’t have known those poor people were going to rise up from the lake.’

“He knew what we were digging up.’

‘Of course he did. You had an exhumation order.’

“Have you ever heard of a girl by the name of Rachel Tyler?’

He thinks about it for a few seconds. ‘She went missing two

years ago,’ he says.

Her body was found in Henry Martins’ coffin.’

 

The look of horror on his face settles in his features, and he doesn’t look comfortable with it. In fact he looks downright sick.

 

He reaches out and grabs the back of the pew, as if to stop himself from tipping off and falling into an abyss that is opening beneath him.

‘She was murdered,’ I add. ‘And whether your caretaker did it

or not, he certainly knows something. Please, Father, you have to help me.’

He lets go of the pew, rubs his palm across the side of his face, then lifts both hands into the air as if the gesture can ward me off.

“I … I wish I could help, but there’s nothing I can say’

‘Would you like me to bring you a photograph of Rachel?

Show you what was done to her?’

The church seems to get colder as his horror turns to disgust, almost anger, and my stomach starts to knot. ‘That sort of parlour trick is beyond you, Theo. If I could help you, I would, just as I helped you two years ago when you were lost.’

‘Rachel has nobody to speak for her. I need to do what I can.’

‘She has God.’

‘God let her down.’

‘You must have faith, Theo.’

‘Faith lets everybody down.’

‘People let themselves down.’

I want to argue, but there is no argument a priest hasn’t heard and isn’t ready for. Their answers may not make sense, but they are a doctrine, there to be repeated over and over, as if the very repetition makes their case. I could take a photograph out of my wallet and show him my wife and my daughter, but of course

Father Julian remembers them. I could ask him where God

was during their accident, but Father Julian would have some

dogmatic answer that God-loving and God-fearing people love

to use — most likely the generic ‘God works in mysterious ways’

one that I want to scream at every time I hear it.

‘You’re right,’ I concede, ‘but none of this goes towards helping me find your caretaker. He saw us digging up something that

made him run.’

‘I still find that hard to believe,’ Father Julian says, but I’m starting to convince myself that the look on his face suggests it isn’t that hard for him at all. ‘Unfortunately, Theo, as I keep saying, I don’t know where he is.’

‘Start by telling me where he lives.’

‘The police have already been there and, to be honest, I’m not comfortable giving you information. You’re not a cop any more.

This isn’t your investigation.’

‘No, this has become my investigation. Two years ago I had

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