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Authors: Graham Masterton

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BOOK: Trauma
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“Help you?” Dan asked him.

“Dean Willits, friend of the family. I've come for Mrs. Goodman. And Consuela here needs to pick up some clothes.”

“Ah, yes. Mrs. Goodman is right through there, in the kitchen. I'll have an officer accompany Consuela.”

Dean Willits looked around the living room. “Holy shit,” he said, when he saw the shotgun blast in the plaster and the fountain of blood up the wall. “I didn't have any idea.”

“Let's just get Mrs. Goodman out of here, shall we?” Dan prompted him.

“Yeah, sure. Sorry. Aaron was such a great friend of mine, that's all. A terrific father, you know? A really outstanding father. Wouldn't touch a hair on those kids' heads.”

“Yes, well,” said Dan.

Outside, in the glare of the midday sunshine, Dan said, “I'll leave it with you, then?”

“You bet,” said Bonnie.

“Something bothering you?”

“No, not really. I was wondering the same thing
that Mrs. Goodman was wondering. A terrific father who loved his children so much. What the hell possessed him to
kill
them?”

Dan shook his head. “Cases like these, you never find out.”

Bonnie ducked under the police tape and walked back to her car. Dan followed her and opened the door for her. It groaned on its hinges like an irritated pig.

“How about I buy you dinner tomorrow night?”

“I'm not your type. Besides, what would I tell Duke?”

“You don't have to tell him anything. This is the age of sexual equality.”

“Bullshit. If this is the age of equality, what am I doing running two jobs while my husband is sitting at home watching TV?”

“You ought to stop for a moment, Bonnie. You ought to stop and smell the flowers.”

“Sorry, Dan. I'm too busy cleaning up the smell of dead bodies.”

“Cynic.”

“Lecher.”

Lunch Menu

She met her friend Susan Spang at the Green Rainbow on the corner of Sunset and Alta Loma. It took her more than fifteen minutes to decide what she ought to eat, while Susan impatiently played with her fork. At last she chose:

Warm red cabbage salad with chorizo, green olives and goat cheese (674 calories)

Beef and tiny corn stir-fry with pepper confetti (523 calories)

Grilled figs (311 calories)

Evian water (0 calories)

The Meaning of Human Tragedy

She had known Susan since high school. In those days they had been the closest of friends, sisters almost, and they had both fantasized that they would be movie stars. They had even cut stars out of baking foil, written their names on them and stuck them to the sidewalk on Hollywood Boulevard. Bonnie would be called “Sabrina Golightly,” and Susan would be called “Tunis Velvet.” Now they met only three or four times a year, and they hardly had anything to say to each other, but Bonnie was reluctant to end their friendship altogether. It would be like finally admitting that her teenage dreams would never come true and that she would never own a million-dollar diamond ring or a pink house in Bel Air. Apart from that, Susan was the only friend she had who didn't
talk about shopping or children or what to do with leftover chicken.

Susan was tall and intense, with glossy black hair that reached all the way down to her waist and a pale, starved-looking face with enormous black eyes. Today she was wearing a short purple dress embroidered with silver stars and a big, floppy felt hat that looked as if a medieval dwarf were perched on her head.

She was sitting at a table in the corner with her long legs crossed underneath it.

“You look ex-
hausted
,” was the first thing she said.

“Thanks. I am.”

“Can you not scrape your chair? I have one of my headaches.”

“Sorry. You should have canceled.”

“I didn't want to cancel. I wanted to see you. I'm so tired of people who aren't real.”

“Well, I'm glad I'm
real
.”

“You are. That's the point. You're completely real. You always have been. I don't know how you've managed to stay so real.”

“I don't know either.”

A Chinese-American waiter in a long green apron came up to their table and recited the day's specials.


Sangchi ssam
, what's that?” Susan interrupted.

“It's a dish inspired by Korean cuisine. Highly seasoned ground beef and tofu in a parcel of radicchio, topped with mint and chili sauce.”

Bonnie thought: Give me a double cheese-and-bacon burger any day. But this time it had been Susan's choice of restaurant.

Susan swallowed an ibuprofen tablet and half a
glass of Evian water. “I can't drink Perrier anymore. It reminds me too much of Clive.”

“How is Clive?”

“Oh, he's still with that synthetic-chested teenager. You should see him. No, you shouldn't see him. He's dyed his hair blond. He looks like an alien. Well, he always did.”

“Duke's okay,” Bonnie volunteered.

“And Ray? I'll bet he's eight feet tall by now. Does he still want to be a WWF wrestler?”

Bonnie smiled and shook her head. She suddenly felt that time was passing her by.

“And how's
business
?” asked Susan, pulling a ghoulish face.

“It's okay, yes, ticking over good. We have a natural death to clean up tomorrow and two suicides Friday. The natural should be something. The guy died in the hot tub, and they didn't find him for seven-and-a-half weeks. It was only when his body fat blocked up the drain.”

“My God, Bonnie, I don't know how you do it. I really don't. I think I'd—I don't know what I'd do. Barf. Faint. Barf and faint, both.”

“Somebody has to do it. The police won't do it and the coroner's department won't do it and the county won't do it. It's a public service, that's all.”

“I can't even think about it. The
smell
. A coyote died in our crawl space once.”

Bonnie shrugged. “Blob of Vicks on your upper lip—that's all you need.”

Susan shivered.

While they were eating, Bonnie's cell phone rang. It was Dean Willits, calling for Bernice Goodman. He was driving along the Ventura Freeway, so his voice kept breaking up. “I've talked to Mrs. Goodman's insurance agent, and he says fine, go ahead and clean up. Guy called Frears, says he knows you.”

“That's great, Mr. Willits. I should be able to get there tomorrow afternoon.”

“Frears has the keys, okay?”

Bonnie went back to her stir-fry. She put a forkful of beef and baby corn into her mouth and started to chew, but it was tepid and greasy and underdone and she suddenly thought of the children's beds with the bloody, blown-apart comforters, and she couldn't swallow it. At last she retched and spat it out into her napkin.

“What's the matter?” Susan asked her. “Bonnie—you've gone so
white
.”

“It was something I saw this morning, that's all. You don't want to hear about it while you're eating.”

“For goodness' sake, tell me. What are friends for?”

Bonnie described the Goodman house. Susan sat and listened and nodded.

“So that's it,” said Bonnie. “I don't know why it's affected me more than any other trauma scene I've been to. Maybe I felt the same way as Mrs. Goodman … like the children were still there, you know? Or at least their souls were.”

“You really felt their souls?”

“I don't know.… I felt something. Like there was somebody there, but there wasn't. It was scary. Very depressing.”

“You felt their souls. That's wonderful! Do you know what that is?”

“Sorry? I don't understand you.”

“That's Gilgul, the transmigration of souls. To be able to
feel
it, that shows that you're very receptive. You really ought to come see my kabbalah instructor. His name's Eitan Yardani, and he's so enlightening. Like your whole life will be so
fulfilled
.”

“Susan, what are you talking about?”

“The kabbalah, of course. Everybody's into it. Madonna, Elizabeth Taylor. It shows you how to find all the answers to your inner self. It's like there's one God, En Sof, so far away from human thought that some kabbalists call it Ayin, the Nothingness.”

“But the kabbalah—that's Jewish, isn't it? I'm a Catholic.”

“So what? Is Madonna Jewish? Am I? So long as you find the infinite truth, what does it matter what religion you are? The kabbalah teaches us that everything in life has a special meaning, even if it's hidden. Those children died for a reason, Bonnie; and you could look through the texts and find out what it is.”

“I don't think I
want
to find out what it is.”

“You felt them, Bonnie! You felt their presence! That's totally kabbalistic. You may not want to find out—but what if they want to tell you?”

Bonnie couldn't think what to say. If Susan hadn't been her lifelong friend, she would have dropped her fork and walked out. She was used to Susan's spiritual flirtations. Last month she wouldn't stop enthusing about the Dalai Lama, and in the spring it was Sufi. But as far as Bonnie was concerned, Benjamin, Rachel and Naomi had been murdered less than twenty-four hours ago, and their deaths couldn't be explained by the kabbalah, or the Tarot, or anything else but the plain factual
truth, no matter how hideous that truth might be. Their father had gone crazy and shot them. That was all.

“Do you know what you ought to do, Susan?” she interrupted. “You ought to come along with me one day, when we're clearing up a trauma scene. You wouldn't believe that human beings contain so much blood.”

“I told you, I'd throw up.”

“Maybe you would. But you'd look infinity right in the eye, and I think you'd forget your kabbalah.”

“You're trying to make fun of me.”

“I'm not,” said Bonnie, pushing her plate away. “I'm sorry. I shouldn't have told you any of this. It wasn't fair.”

Susan fiercely prodded her raw tuna salad. “You've changed. Do you know that? You never used to be so cynical.”

“I'm sorry. I've said I'm sorry.”

“I was only trying to help you, Bonnie. I was only trying to show you that life has its affirmative side, too. I mean, you're so negative these days.”

“What?” said Bonnie.

“I can't—I don't know. It's like you're somebody else.”

“I don't understand you. What do you mean I'm like somebody else?”

“You were always laughing. You were always like—I don't know. Sunshine.”

Bonnie found herself worriedly scratching at her forearm. “I still laugh.” Although she thought,
When? When was the last time I really laughed?

“I don't want to hurt you, Bonnie. But it's
depressing
.”

“You think I'm depressing?”

Susan pressed the palms of both hands flat on the
table and stared Bonnie directly in the eye. Her breath came in small, compressed sniffs. “I'll tell you something, Bonnie. I'm positive for life. It's taken me years to find life. And when I say life, I'm talking about creation, and fulfillment, and transformation.”

“Yes? I know that. Who isn't? What do you want me to say?”

Susan opened her mouth and closed it again without saying anything. She was so upset that she was hyperventilating. “It's just that—you're all about death. You walked into the restaurant, and I could feel it. You carry death around with you like a—like you're
wearing
it. Like a black veil, Bonnie. And I can't take it. I'm sorry, but I have to tell you how I feel. It frightens me and it brings me down.”

“So? You don't want to see me anymore? Is that what you're saying?”

Susan was in a mess of tears. She gave an airy wave of her hand, and then she pressed her knuckles against her mouth.

“Listen, Susan, if you don't want to see me anymore, then you only have to say so. If I'm death incarnate—you know—I don't want to cast a shadow over your spiritual affirmation or anything. God forbid. Or En Sof forbid. Or whatever.”

The waiter came up. “Is everything all right?” he asked, staring uneasily at their scarcely touched food.

Susan took a tiny tissue out of her diminutive pocketbook and wiped her nose. She wouldn't even look at Bonnie. “I'll take care of this,” she said, offering her platinum card.

“I'm death, am I?” said Bonnie, as they waited for the check. “You really think I'm death?”

“I'm sorry, Bonnie. I have a headache. You were right. I should have canceled.”

She stood up, but Bonnie took hold of her sleeve. “Are we going to see each other again?”

Susan whispered, “Sure,” but Bonnie knew that she was lying. She stayed at the table and watched her go. The last time she saw her was when she was crossing Sunset, flicking her hair back with her hand. A last frozen Polaroid. And to think of all the days and all the nights; all the parties and all the bus trips; all the laughter and all the teenage despair. They had kissed each other once, on the pier at Venice Beach, at sunset, with the gulls screaming, because they loved each other. Love, ageless and evergreen, seldom seen by two.

BOOK: Trauma
7.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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