Read Cross Country Murder Song Online

Authors: Philip Wilding

Cross Country Murder Song (10 page)

BOOK: Cross Country Murder Song
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Mona took the bunch of keys from where they lay, bunched like a dormant spider on the table near the window. She read the note three times and it still made no sense. At first she thought that maybe he'd been keeping rabbits down there, but then why wouldn't he have just housed them near the back in a hutch and given them some light? More than this, she thought he might suddenly appear in the hallway laughing that maniacal laugh of his and grab her by the shoulder and explain the joke in his usual breathless way. She noticed that the garage was open though and one of the cars, the black one, was gone. She took the keys, approached the heavy door to the cellar and jiggled the heavy padlock until the bolt turned in her hand.
The size of the cellar surprised her, the thick darkness barely illuminated by the light coming in behind her. She reached out and found the rail and gripped it tightly in order to quell the sickly fear that she felt moving around in her stomach. Then she heard the low moan coming from somewhere beneath her feet and quickly stepped back into the hall, the sound of her heart filling her head, the cool light of the hallway suddenly a sanctuary as she felt the sun on her shoulders. She peered once again into the darkness and imagined a hand reaching out to her and pulling her in. She stood swaying for a moment and stepped forward with the keys clenched in her fist ready to strike out at the figures she imagined waiting for her. She took the first step slowly, felt around for the light switch and held her breath as the oblongs and squares of light buzzed into life overhead. No one came screaming at her, but she still couldn't bring her heart down to a manageable rate. It thudded rapidly as she slowly took the stairs. She'd spotted the boxes draped with chains to her right as soon as the light had come on, but couldn't bring herself to look directly at them. She kept them in her peripheral vision as she descended into the basement, convinced that one of the lids was about to spring open and reveal a spectre from her childhood dreams. There was another low moan and it took everything for her not to vault the stairs and leave the house running. The skin on her neck was suddenly raw and cold and she realised her hands were shaking. She forced herself to read the note again and take whatever solace she could find in the word friends that was written there. She traced her finger over it and called out.
It's okay, I'm here to help, I'll get you out. The boxes were indifferent and still and for a moment she was terrified that the moaning hadn't come from the boxes at all, but from somewhere else in the cellar, that someone lay waiting underneath the stairs she was standing on, furtive and predatory and the note had been their way of enticing her down here in order to trap her. She didn't want to end up in a box, craning to see the light through the thin hole punched in its lid. She felt trapped then and imagined never being able to stretch out her arms or work her legs, but to be tethered to the spot, held in place, eventually lowered into the ground, her cries ignored as the earth took her away. She shook the thoughts from her head and tried to focus on the boxes before her. The smell was damp and deep, almost fungal. There were thin, glittering pipes of burnt yellow leading from the boxes to a tall glass bottle near the bottom of the stairs. Another bottle with a feeding tube at its end stood on a low table nearby. There were six boxes in all, set in a circle around an upturned crate. Three were open and empty, their lids hanging back listlessly on their hinges; one was closed though chains hung freely from its side and two were locked shut, bound tightly, the steel links making snug circles around the wood. She approached the first box and flipped back the lid and then stepped quickly back. The lid clattered open and the noise made her recoil, her hand moving to protect her face. It was empty, but it smelled fresh and rank as if something had slithered away just before she'd got there. She checked the shadows beneath the stairs expecting to see eyes peering back at her, but it was quiet and still except for the low hum of the lights overhead. She wrestled with the padlock on the first box until the lock clicked free and she pushed the chains away until gravity took hold and they uncurled themselves from the box in speeding, rattling lengths, settling on the floor in a heavy coil. Recognising there was someone inside, she opened the lid more slowly, but took an instinctive step back as two bluebottles rose in buzzing circles. The girl was pale and small; her feet didn't even reach the bottom of the box. She was still and quite dead, her hands drawn up into two tiny fists as if she'd tried to resist the oncoming night by sheer force of will. Mona tried to see where the bluebottles had risen from and then one appeared crawling slowly from the pocket on the short jacket she was wearing. She reached forward and lifted the flap to find a slowly seething ball of them attached to what must have once been an apple. She snapped her hand back and shook it violently until the bluebottle that had attached itself to her hand flew free. She was shaking as she approached the last box. The moaning had stopped and she was scared that she'd find another dead body. Each time she closed her eyes she saw the young woman's clenched fists beating at the lid of the coffin, her screams the only sound in the encroaching darkness. She worked the padlock and pulled the chains free with a gasp and then gently eased the lid back. The man lying there was as still as the girl, and she felt the disappointment rising in her chest and began to chastise herself for hesitating, frozen to the spot on the stairs. Then he let out a low moan again and she moved quickly forward and grabbed his hand, his fingers clutching feebly around hers. He opened his eyes slowly and then closed them again as the light struck him full in the face. Sensing his anguish, she stood over him and cast her shadow across him to shield his eyes.
Hold on, she said, hold on, and gently closed the lid again. Then she ran, still talking to him or to herself, she didn't know. I'll get help, I'll get help, hold on, she said as she took the stairs two at a time.
Detective Moon made his way back down the stairs to the basement as the paramedics carried someone on a stretcher, still alive though barely, up to the ground floor.
Detective, said a patrolman he knew but couldn't name. He nodded. The only survivor? he asked, indicating the man on the stretcher as he disappeared through the open door.
Yep, said the patrolman. The girl in the other box was already dead and it looks as though someone had been in the third one until recently. It still smells pretty lively.
He looked in at the boxes, there were holes in the bottom of each with catheters running through them, the lids had scratch marks on the inside. They smelt of decay and fear and blood and piss. The house, or its inhabitants at least, were well known to the police throughout the state, but everything had gone quiet here since the father of the family had died.
The kid wasn't involved in any of his dad's business, as far as we knew, he said and the patrolman nodded, though he didn't know if that were true or not.
What's missing? he asked.
A body, said the patrolman, looking in at the empty box. The other three don't look as though they've been used for a while and a car's gone from one of the garages. The rest of the guys are checking upstairs now.
The note wasn't giving anything away, the detective said. Did the guy in the box say anything? As he asked, the paramedics returned and lifted the body bag onto the stretcher and carried it away. It offered little resistance.
Who's in there? the detective asked them.
Some girl, said the first paramedic, looks young, looks like a runaway, there were tracks on her arm, but it's hard to tell. There's not much left of her.
Not much left of her, the detective repeated. What, like remains?
Not like that, like she went down to nothing, said the paramedic, like she gave in. And he nodded and found himself writing this down as the paramedic said it.
He went back up the stairs where Mona told him that it was the black Lexus that had gone from the garage; it had always been his favourite car.
Does he own a gun? the detective asked. Lots of guns, she replied and then told him how he would spend his days down at the peripheries of the property setting up targets on his makeshift range. Some days, she said, all you heard from morning until night was the sound of gunfire.
He sighed. Can you show me where? He followed her down through the expansive garden to the high hedges and trees that bordered the carefully kept lawn. There was a small, weathered cross stuck in the ground across from the path they were on. It listed badly.
Pet? he asked her.
The dog in the photograph, she said, and pushed past the bushes and on into the trees. In the clearing there were the remains of a beehive with a flat piece of wood balanced on the top acting as a makeshift table. The clearing had been pared back to give the makeshift shooting gallery some range. There were various targets, some charging silhouettes, others conventional numbered circles, pockmarked with bullet holes. When he saw the figure propped up against the trunk of a fallen tree he drew his gun and motioned for the housekeeper to step back. He moved slowly forward, but knew before he was within ten feet that it was from the third box. He moved to check the pulse at his neck and then he saw the black holes grouped closely on his chest. Pieces of a paper target were still stuck to him, held in place with congealed blood.
What is it? asked the housekeeper, but she kept her distance.
Target practice, I guess, said the detective. And then he shepherded the housekeeper from the clearing, through the sun-filled trees and back to the house where he knew he'd be able to find some help.
Song 5: Box (Reprise)
His office ceiling was low, but the room stretched on forever. There were thousands of lightbulbs of differing shapes and sizes that covered most of the available space above his head. Some were burnt out and black, others hypnotically bright, one or two flickered indifferently, buzzing into darkness and then blooming back into silent life. The light didn't reach much past the bulbs themselves, penetrating no more than two or three feet down from the ceiling and barely dispersing the creeping gloom. The room was filled with binders and boxes full of files and filing cards. Some bulged with paper, precariously stacked, but somehow they remained intact. There was no obvious attempt at order. Red, black and green folders dominated in the main, but the odd boxy oblong of navy blue or steely grey stuck out (literally in some instances) here and there. In the distance, when a heavy door banged open and shut, the discordant tapping of hundreds of typewriters could be heard clicking away, tiny metal keys striking red and black ribbons, the inky cloth deadening the impact. Like an army marching in its socks, he thought. Endless tiny silver bells resonating shrilly and abruptly, then the sudden zipping sound as rollers were pushed from right to left and a new sentence began to run from one margin to the other, a still faintly vibrating bell waiting to come pealing into life again. He preferred it when the door was closed; the sound hurt his head otherwise. He looked up as someone came in to load another pile of black filing boxes on to the edge of his desk. He gave the courier a baleful look, but they'd already turned their back and squared their shoulders and were soon lost among the teetering columns of paperwork. He heard the door opening and the trilling metallic chorus rose up again in a rush until it was muffled by the heavy wooden door slamming shut. Then it was suddenly quiet. He stood up and walked to the window, but the window was always dark, the view always obscured. He peered at the glass, but the only thing he saw was himself looking back. His brow, he noticed, was furrowed. He rubbed hard at the jutting shelf of flesh between his eyes. He looked tired, dissatisfied. Another bell rang somewhere, not a typewriter bell, something with more clarity. He turned to see an envelope set squarely on his desk and crossed the room to open it. The index card inside was covered in tight red script and in one corner there was a small box that someone had neatly ticked. He held it up and regarded it over the top of his glasses, then he walked to the first pile of black folders and carefully pulled the top box down from the unsteady pile. Inside the box there were hundreds of index cards tightly bound together in neat batches. He pulled the elastic bands apart and playfully catapulted one in a looping arc into the corner of the office. It bounced off a red folder and disappeared into a shadowy corner. He matched the card from the folder with the one in his hand, found a paperclip in his top pocket and joined them together, making sure their corners were precisely matched. He placed them in the folder and then returned the box to its jaggedly concave pile. He grunted a little as he pushed it back into place and then he returned to his desk and waited. He'd filed him away, which meant that he'd be here soon.
He woke in darkness and lay there letting his eyes adjust. It was quiet, just the low hum of an air conditioning unit and the occasional flickering in the shadows that made him think someone was coming, but he was alone. The box he was in was shut tight with a slit in the hinged door set almost directly above his face that let the air in. He had kicked and thrashed around in the tight blackness when he'd first awoken, but he'd simply bloodied his knuckles and cracked his knees, the impact making him exhale loudly. That had been how long ago, hours or days? He didn't know. The space was too confined for him to even raise his watch to his face; he was immobile, held, stilled. A figure finally approached the box after moving slowly about in the darkness above and flicked a switch that filled the basement with shocking white light. It was as if the walls had been broken down and daylight allowed to come flooding through the room. He blinked rapidly, tears flushing across both cheeks, and found himself gulping hard as if his head had been thrust underwater, then allowed briefly back to break the surface before it came rushing once more into his mouth. His coughing racked his chest and the voice shushed him. Lying there in the dark he could hear keys jangling against a hip, he heard a bottle of wine being slid from a shelf, the chink of glass as it was manoeuvred free, he waited for someone to speak, but the footsteps faded, disappearing up a set a wooden stairs. There was a pause and the darkness suddenly shrouded him again as a door locking shut was the only hook he could find to attach his fear to. At first he worried about things rushing up at him, tearing the box apart, lunging hungrily. Then some days he'd pray for something to break the box and make him free, if only momentarily.
BOOK: Cross Country Murder Song
2.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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