Johnny Gruesome (18 page)

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Authors: Gregory Lamberson

BOOK: Johnny Gruesome
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“Willard here could probably carry that box on his back,” Gary said. “Couldn’t you, Willard?”

Willard grinned, a dangerous look in his eyes, and Eric halfexpected drool to pour out of his mouth.

“That won’t be necessary,” Matt said behind them. “I’m your sixth man.”

Carol and Mr. Milton had joined Charlie and Lawrence. Father Webb stood in the road, a weary look on his face.

“Cool,” Gary said.

The coolest,
Eric thought.

Gripping a metal handle, Willard pulled the casket out on a Formica tray with chrome rollers. The pallbearers filed alongside the casket, three on each side. Grabbing the long metal bars on the casket’s sides, they raised it off its tray, backed up, and maneuvered it toward Lawrence. Eric imagined how difficult carrying it would have been without Matt’s assistance.

Lawrence led the mourners along the road and a winding path layered with fresh snow. The path angled uphill, and midway up the incline Eric slipped and went down on one knee. The casket tipped toward him.

Thump.

Eric’s eyes widened as Johnny’s body rolled against the side of the coffin. For a perilous moment, he feared the casket would crush him. Heart pounding, he stood, his face turning red as the other pallbearers and the people in the procession gaped at him.

“We’re good,” Matt said.

They continued uphill. The ground leveled off, then dipped again, and they came to a tent erected over a dozen metal folding chairs. The tent overlooked a fresh grave hidden by a lowering device. As the pallbearers circled the device, Eric saw it consisted of four telescopic legs, one on each corner of the grave, with four metal bars connecting them and a green drape hanging from the bars. A matching grass-colored mat stood out against the snow. As they lined up the casket with the edge bars, Eric peeked into the grave. Six feet below, a concrete vault liner awaited its occupant.

Once they’d lowered the casket onto the device, they joined the other mourners beneath the tent. Eric and Gary sat in the front row with Karen, on Charlie’s right side. Carol, Matt, and Mr. Milton sat on the other side, and Tony and Ron sat behind them. Willard stepped on a pedal, and the coffin descended into the earth. Father Webb stood near the tent’s open flap and opened his Bible. Eric ignored the priest’s lulling voice, his eyes locked on the black casket. Tears trickled down his cheeks, and mucus clogged his nostrils. He wondered how Johnny would have felt about the priest presiding over his burial.

FUCK YOU, FATHER WEBB!

Stretching now.

Snap.

Crackle
.

Pop.

Chapter 15

M
any Red Hill residents assumed Ross and Tommy Condon were brothers, not cousins, partly because they looked so similar—short, wavy black hair, reed thin physiques—and partly because one seldom made a public appearance without the other. To make things even more confusing, Ross’s mother had died of cancer and Tommy’s father had suffered a fatal heart attack, so people also mistook their surviving parents as husband and wife, and the families lived in houses on side-by-side lots on the outskirts of town. Ross’s father, Alec, had been the Green Forest Cemetery’s groundskeeper for twenty years, and had employed the young men as gravediggers since their final months of high school three years earlier.

Desperate to avoid following in his father’s footsteps, Ross attended night classes at Red Hill Community College, but Tommy lacked such ambition. He lived at home with his mother and only needed enough cash for beer and to maintain his Mustang. Grave digging suited him just fine. He especially enjoyed his occupation during the summer, when he sneaked afternoon naps behind a crypt at the cemetery’s northern tip, far from the building where Alec did most of his work.

The cousins watched the funeral procession drive through the gates. Although they’d been sipping beers for nearly two hours, they maintained respectful, somber expressions as the vehicles passed. After the vehicles pulled over to the side of the road and discharged their occupants, Ross and Tommy watched Willard Lawson pull the casket from the hearse. Then they disappeared into the large garage that housed the cemetery equipment and retrieved two tall cold ones from beneath a workbench. This time of year, they didn’t even bother to fill the chest with ice. They popped the tabs, touched cans, and passed the time getting numb. Outside the garage, an easterly wind drove the falling snow sideways.

“Shit,” Ross said. “We should just let the snow bury him.”

“Create a hell of a problem come spring,” Tommy said, grinning.

After finishing their beers, they pulled on their gloves and stepped out into the storm. Leaning into the howling wind, they circled the small hill leading to the fresh grave, careful not to disturb the mourners. The snow had driven all but the funeral director and four of the bereaved away: an overweight, middle-aged man; two teenage boys; and a pretty girl. The man and one of the boys stood silent at the grave’s edge. The other boy stood a few feet behind them with the girl, hands stuffed in his pockets. The flowers had blown over, and the canvas tent billowed in the wind. The first boy rested a hand on the man’s shoulder, and after a moment all four of them turned and walked away, their faces scrunched up and tilted toward the ground.

Ross and Tommy waited a few more minutes, giving the mourners time to get over the hill, then made their way to the grave and disassembled the tent. They folded the canvas and laid it in the snow beside the poles, then closed the chairs and piled them on top so the canvas would not blow away. They returned to the garage and climbed into the cab of the Grave Master II, the small, grassgreen dump truck containing the earth that had been removed from the grave earlier. Ross and Tommy had not opened the grave; that chore had fallen to Ricky Mallard, who owned a power shovel with a hydraulic claw-arm. Mallard and his sons opened all of the graves, and Ross and Tommy closed them.

Ross turned the ignition, and the truck rumbled out of the garage. Snow assailed the windshield, and he activated the wipers. “I can’t wait until I get my degree.”

“Yeah, what then?” Tommy stared out his window with a fixed grimace. “Maybe you’ll be an engineer in Buffalo instead of a grave digger in Red Hill. Same shit.”

Ross peered through the windshield. “Uh-uh. Fuck that. I’m going straight to Florida.”

Tommy laughed. “You think that’s an improvement?”

“I’ll be away from this snow, won’t I?”

“Sure, but you’ll have hurricanes instead. Humidity. Alligators. Mutant insects.”

“At least I’ll be away from all these bodies.”

“You ever been to Florida? It’s Senior Citizen Central down there. They’re all dead, only they just don’t know it.”

“As long as I don’t have to bury them, I don’t care.” Ross stopped at the grave. “What the fuck?”

Tommy followed his cousin’s gaze. Fifty yards away, a solitary figure mounted the hill, dressed in a black suit that rippled in the wind. “Looks like one of those kids.”

Ross squinted. “He’s not even wearing a coat, the crazy son of a bitch.”

The man lumbered up the hill with clenched fists and a purposeful stride.

Tommy beamed. “Maybe he’s a dissatisfied customer looking for a refund.”

“Fuck you. I hate it when you say things like that.”

“‘They’re coming to get you, Barbara
.’” Tommy loved
Night of the Living Dead;
he owned it on VHS and DVD.

“Cut it out, you asshole.” The snowfall reached blizzardlike intensity and swallowed the figure whole, as if it had never been there. Ross twisted the steering wheel, backed the truck up, and stopped. “Get out.”

Tommy stared at the whiteout beyond the windshield. “Huh?”

“I can’t see five feet behind me. If you don’t want me to back us right into that grave, get out and give me directions.”

Sighing, Tommy opened the door and jumped out of the cab. He walked around the truck, then backed up to the lowering device. “Okay,” he shouted.

Ross backed the truck up until he heard Tommy pounding on its side. He switched off the ignition, got out, and slammed the door shut. He joined Tommy at the grave. The casket had been lowered, but only halfway, to prevent the mourners from seeing the damage that could occur. Snow already covered its lid. Together, they gathered up the green mat, removed the drape around the metal framework of the lowering device, and laid them next to the canvas and chairs. Ross released the brake handle, and the casket descended the rest of the way. A sudden crash reverberated and rose with the wind as the casket slammed against its concrete liner.

“Damn,” Ross said. They took turns aligning the edges of the master lowering device with the concrete grave liner.

“You owe me ten bucks,” Tommy said.

Crouching, they grabbed opposite ends of the concrete lid, and raised it off the ground. They slid it over the edge of the grave, leaning it against the frozen earth like a door. Ross stepped over the frame, set one hand on the ground, and hopped into the grave. He landed beside the casket, which leaned at an angle inside the liner. Tommy hopped in after him, and they struggled to right the casket so it could descend into the liner. Groaning and red faced, they managed to tilt the casket. The concrete left deep white welts on the casket’s side, a common occurrence.

Ross grabbed the handle at his end of the casket, and Tommy unbuckled one of the two support belts. Ross released the handle, falling back against the hard dirt wall, and the head of the casket slammed into the base of the liner, pinning the belt. Tommy unbuckled the other end of the belt, allowing it to hang over the edge of the liner. Ross inched his way around the grave. He did not attempt to hold the raised end of the casket in place; once Tommy released the second belt, the force of weight would rip his arms from their sockets. Instead, he aligned the raised end with the liner’s edge. Tommy released the strap, and the remainder of the casket smashed into place with a loud boom. The accumulated snow shook, some of it pouring over the casket’s edges.

Breathing heavy, Tommy grinned. “That wasn’t … so bad …”

Ross wiped perspiration from his forehead on the back of his glove. Above them, the wind howled. “That’s because this was a kid, not one of those bloated beer bellies we usually bury.”

Tommy knocked on the scarred casket. A hollow sound bounced back at him. He regarded Ross with mock fright. “Doesn’t sound like anyone’s home.” Pause. “You want to find out?”

Ross stared at the snow-covered lid. He did not wish to make any discoveries.

“Come on, let’s open it up. Maybe the kid’s got some jewelry or something else that we can sell.”

Ross shook his head. “He hasn’t got anything on him. This box is the low-budget model.”

Tommy grinned. “Okay, so let’s just see what he looks like.”

“Fuck you.”

“Scared?”

Ross glanced at the sky, darkening beyond the blizzard. “I’d like to get out of here before five o’clock. My father doesn’t believe in overtime, remember?”

Tommy snorted. “Okay, man. Whatever you say.”

They grabbed the concrete lid, turned it sideways, and dropped it into place over the liner, entombing the casket. A fissure appeared near the middle of the slab.

“Damn it,” Ross said.

“It’s not like anyone’s going to notice.”

“Let’s get on with it.” He stood on the edge of the liner, placed his hands on the edge of the grave, and jumped up. On the surface, snow pelted his face. He reached down and helped Tommy up, snowfall obscuring what remained of the sunlight. They disassembled the lowering device and laid the pieces off to one side.

Ross clambered into the cab of the truck and pulled the release lever. As the bed of the truck rose, returning dirt to the ground from which it had been taken, he glanced into his side mirror, praying to himself that the dark figure would not return over the hill.

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