urgent but in reality it isn’t. Both are face down, and both appear to be dressed, and not badly dressed either. They look as though they could be on their way to an event. A funeral or a wedding.
Except for the ropes. There are pieces of green rope attached to the bodies.
The digger driver keeps squinting at the two corpses, as if his eyes are tricking him. The truck driver is standing with his mouth wide open and his hands on his hips, while his assistant keeps glancing at his watch as if this whole thing might push him into overtime.
‘We need to haul them in,’ I say, even though both bodies are
nudging against the bank now.
I had planned on staying dry today. I had planned on seeing
one dead body. Now everything is up in the air.
‘Why? They’re not exactly going to go anywhere,’ the truck
driver says.
‘They might sink like the other one.’
‘What are we going to grab them with?’
‘Jesus, I don’t know. Something. A branch, maybe. Or your
hands.’
“I’m not using my hands,’ he says, and the other two nod
quickly in agreement.
‘Well, what about rope? You gotta have some of that, right?’
‘That one there,’ the truck driver says, looking at the corpse closest to us, ‘already has some rope.’
‘Looks rotten. You gotta have something newer in the truck,
right?’ I ask, and we all look over at the truck just as we hear it start.
The caretaker is sitting in the cab.
‘What the fuck?’ the driver asks. He starts to run over to it, but he isn’t quick enough. The caretaker gets it into gear and pulls away fast. The coffin isn’t secure; it slides across the edge and hits the ground but doesn’t break.
Tley, come back here, come back here!’ The guy keeps running
after the truck, but the distance quickly grows.
‘Where’s he going?’ the digger operator asks.
‘Anywhere but here is my guess.’ I pull my cellphone from my
pocket. ‘You got some rope in the digger?’
‘Yeah, hang on.’
I phone the police station and get transferred to a detective I used to know. I tell him the situation. He tells me to sober up.
Tells me of course there are going to be bodies out here in the cemetery. It takes a minute to persuade him the bodies are coming up from the depths of the lake. And another minute to convince him I’m not joking.
‘And bring some divers,’ I say, before hanging up.
The digger operator hands me the rope. The truck driver is
back; he’s swearing as his partner uses the cellphone to call their boss for someone to come and get them. I tie an arm-length
branch around the end of the rope and make my way down the
gently sloping bank, intending to throw the branch just past the nearest corpse to bring it closer, but it turns out the slippery grass beneath my feet has other ideas. One moment I’m on the bank.
The next I’m in the water.
My feet are submerged in mud, the water up to my knees.
Something grabs my ankle and I lever forwards, my arms slapping the surface next to the corpse before I start sinking. I pull my legs from the mud, but there is nothing to stand on. This lake is a goddamn death trap, and now I know why it’s full of corpses.
These people came to grieve for the dead and ended up joining
them. The water is ice cold, locking up my chest and stomach and
cramping my muscles. My eyes are open and the water is burning them. There is only darkness around me, compounded by the
silence, and I can sense hands of the dead reaching to pull me deeper, wanting me to join them, wanting fresh blood.
Then suddenly I’m racing back to the surface, my hand tight
around the rope that is pulling me up. I kick with my feet. Point my body upwards. And a second later I’m right next to a bloated woman in a long white dress. It looks like a wedding dress. I push away from her, and the three men help me onto the bank. I sit
down, gasping for air. Both my shoes are missing.
‘Goddamn, buddy, you okay?’
The question sounds like it is coming from the other side of
the lake, and I’m not sure which one of them asked it. Maybe all three of them in unison. I lean over my knees and start coughing.
I feel like I’m choking. I’m shivering, I’m angry, but mostly I feel embarrassed. But none of the men are laughing. They’re all leaning over me, looking concerned. With two floating corpses
nearby, it’s easy to understand why nothing here is a joke.
‘There’s something else you need to know,’ the digger operator says. “I was trying to tell you before.’ He slips that last part into the conversation as if each word is its own sentence, and his face screws up slightly. He makes it sound like that whatever he has to say is going to be worse than what just happened, and I can think of only one thing that could possibly be.
‘Yeah?’
‘Marks. On top of the coffin.’
‘How did I know you were going to say that?’
Now it’s his turn to shrug. ‘Thin lines. Like cuts. They look
like shovel cuts,’ he says.
‘You think this coffin has been dug up before?’
“I’m not just thinking it, I’m saying it. There are definitely marks on the coffin that nobody here caused. Shit, I wonder if she’s empty.’
She. Like a plane or a boat, because the coffin in a way is a
vessel taking you somewhere.
We walk over to it. There’s a large crack running from the
chapter three
There is a natural progression to things. An evolution. First there is a fantasy. The fantasy belongs to some sadistic loser, a guy who eats and breathes and dreams with the sole desire to kill. Then comes the reality. A victim falls into his web, she is used, and the fantasy often doesn’t live up to the reality. So there are more victims. The desire escalates. It starts with one a year, becomes two or three a year, then it’s happening every other month. Or every month. Their bodies show up. The police are involved.
They bring doctors and pathologists and technicians who can
analyse fibres and blood samples and fingerprints. They create a profile to help catch the killer. Following them is the media. The media spin the killer’s fantasy into gold. Death is a moneymaking industry. The undertakers, the coffin salesmen, the crystal-ball and palm readers, then eventually the digger operators and the private investigators: we’re the next step in the progression, standing in the rain and watching as one travesty of justice reveals another.
I have shrugged out of my wet jacket and wet shirt, dried
off using a towel an ambulance driver gave me and pulled on a
fresh windbreaker. My shoes are still missing and my pants and underwear are soaking, but I’m safe from pneumonia. Nobody
is paying me any attention as I sit on the floor of the ambulance with my legs hanging out, looking over the scene of, at this stage, an indeterminable crime.
The graveyard has been cordoned off. The two police cars have
become twelve. The two station wagons have become six. There
are road blocks covering the main entrance, as though they are preparing to fight back an upsurging of angry corpses. There are two tarpaulins lying across the ground; on each one rests a well dressed but decomposing or decomposed body. A canvas tent
has been erected over them, protecting them from the elements.
Somebody has strung some yellow ‘do not cross’ tape around the tent. It keeps the corpses from going anywhere. There are men
and women wearing nylon suits studying the bodies. Others are
standing near the lake. They look like divers preparing for some deep-sea mission, only there are no divers here. Not yet, anyway.
There are open suitcases containing tools and evidence beneath the tent. The rain is still falling and the long grass ripples with the wind. The digger has been taken away, and the coffin has been