under once they’re in the ground. Often it’s enough to do serious damage. Part of this is from falling off the truck, but most of it will be from the pressure of being in the ground.’
‘So, is there anything you need me to do?’ I ask.
‘Just sign this and you can go,’ she says.
‘You’re not going to open it while I’m here?’
‘It was only your job to be at the cemetery, Tate. It was never meant to extend beyond that.’
“but my job was to make sure Henry Martins made it
here, and those shovel marks on the coffin suggest otherwise.’
She sighs, and I realise she knew all along she would never be putting up much of an argument.
‘Put these on,’ she says, and hands me some gloves and a face
mask. ‘The smell isn’t going to be pretty. But you better not tell anybody you were here for this.’
We shift a little closer to the coffin, and suddenly I don’t want to see what’s inside. This is a topsy-turvy world where corpses bubble up from lakes and coffins are full of empty answers. I pull on the latex gloves and slip the mask over my nose and mouth. If Henry Martins is inside, his fingernails may or may not be blue.
If he isn’t inside and the coffin is empty, then Martins is one of the bodies on the bank of the lake, or deep within its belly.
Tracey sprays some lubricant into the hinges before shifting a small crowbar into place and pushing down.
The coffin lid sticks because of simple physics. They were
designed to take people into the ground, not to bring them back out, and the structure of this coffin has been altered with all that dirt pressing down on it for the last two years. I lean some weight onto the crowbar to help. It starts to groan, then creak; then it pops open. From inside, darkness escapes, along with it the smell of long-dead flesh that reaches through the pores on my mask and right up into my sinuses. I almost gag. Tracey lifts the lid the rest of the way open. I stand next to her and stare inside.
It isn’t at all what either of us is expecting.
chapter five
Christchurch is broken. What didn’t make sense five years ago
makes sense now, not because our perspectives have changed but simply because that’s the way it is. All of us are locked into a belief of how this city should be, but it’s slipping away from us, nobody able to keep a firm grasp as Christchurch slowly spirals into full panic mode. Pick up a newspaper and the headlines are all about the Christchurch Carver, a serial killer who has been terrorising the city for the last few years. The police hate him, the media love him. He’s a one-man moneymaking industry who is stretching
the resources of the police — and the best they can do, it seems, is run ad campaigns on TV in an attempt to enlist new recruits. But the numbers don’t add up. They can’t do, because the police can’t keep up with the Carver, let alone the rising crime pandemic.
There are few solutions — but at least there are some, and
that’s where people like me come into the picture. Some of the smaller jobs get contracted out — the smaller things where a
police presence isn’t required — and in the beginning people
complained. They no longer do.
So yesterday when one of the law firms on the next floor up
contacted me with the job, it seemed like easy money. Crime
fighting has come a long way since Batman and Robin: now
it’s all about the lawyers and, sometimes, even the law. And in this case nobody needed a cop to stand in the cold while a coffin got dug out of the ground. Cops were getting paid to get put
to better uses. They were out there trying to stem the flow of violence, to push back the tides and fight the good fight. So I got paid to be there — a professional making sure the chain of evidence remained intact.
But nobody is paying me to be here in the morgue with a dead
girl in another person’s coffin.
And the police resources are about to get stretched even
further.
I struggle to focus my thoughts. They cover a whole range
of possibilities, as well as emotions. I feel sorrow and pain for whoever this woman is, and can’t see any reason other than a bad one for her to be in this coffin. I’m thinking about hoaxes and jokes, and hoping like crazy this is one of them; and as much as I like to think there could have been an elaborate set-up, I know it is much more than that. This is real. I shouldn’t be looking at a woman, she shouldn’t be dead, shouldn’t be in a coffin that isn’t hers — yet here she is, all laid out in front of me.
Tracey crouches over the coffin. ‘This isn’t Henry Martins,’ she says, not to be funny, not to state the obvious, but matter of factly, in a way that doesn’t suggest the same disbelief I’m feeling, but that the cold part of her mind she must engage to do this job is now fully in control. Tracey’s emotions have been locked away.
‘She’s decomposed, but not badly. Decomp comes down to temperature, soil, depth of the coffin and how long she was exposed to the air before being put in here. No way to tell what age at this stage.’
I’m hardly listening to her. My heart is racing hard as I look down at the body. There are areas where chunks of flesh have shrunken and dried, and other areas where it’s completely disappeared. What she has looks like a shell, so that if I was to poke her with my finger she would turn to dust. The few patches of
skin remaining are almost transparent, doing nothing to hide the
stormcloud-coloured bones that for the most part are exposed.
Her face and eyes have gone, just dregs of dried-up skin and flesh and scalp hanging onto her skull. Her teeth look too large with nothing to hide them. Her hair is swept out fanlike beneath her body; it is long and dark brown and I imagine it was once well kept, that she liked to run her fingers through it, that it smelled of shampoos and conditioners, and it would brush against her
lover’s face as they held each other as one day became another.
Her fingers are only bone; one rests across her chest, the other by her side. Resting between her palm and her thigh is a small diamond ring that in the light of the morgue refuses to sparkle. I figure it came loose when her fingers rotted away, and got shaken free when she fell off the back of the stolen truck.
Her clothes don’t seem to line up right; her short dress is
twisted and the buttons on her blouse are out of line, as if she dressed in a hurry or somebody else dressed her after she was
dead. I dig my hand into my pocket and start playing with my
car keys, wrapping them into my handkerchief over and over as
my mind races.
Tracey looks up at me. ‘Jesus, are you okay? You look like
you’ve seen a ghost.’
I can feel sweat starting to slide down the side of my body. It has to be near freezing in here and I’m sweating.
‘There were other people in the water, Tracey,’ I say, and the words are hard to form. ‘Maybe that means other girls, and if
there are … Jesus, I fucked up.’
‘What are you talking about?’
‘Two years ago. I should have dug Henry Martins up two
years ago and we would have found this girl then. We would
have known we were looking for a killer. We might have got him before he killed others.’
Tracey looks at me but doesn’t know what to say. She can’t
tell me the world doesn’t work that way, because we both know
that it does. She doesn’t say anybody could have made that
same mistake. She doesn’t try to tell me it isn’t my fault. All that happens is that her shoulders sag a little and she looks
away, unable to maintain eye contact with me.
‘Shit,’ she whispers, still looking at the floor. ‘You need to leave now, Theo.’
‘Come on, Tracey, there’s got —’
‘I’m serious,’ she says, looking up. ‘You wanted to know if