Reuben Tate with his throat slit, hanging upside
down by a rope knotted hard around his
ankles from one of the iron gates in Hillside Cemetery.
His eyes were open, strafing the stones of the old
graveyard with undimmed malice. A crow swooped
down, attracted by the glint of his upturned boot
cleats, and flapped off with a cheated caw. The puddle
below the body, dully glistening in the pale sunshine,
resembled fresh tar.
"Reuben," Ellie said softly, her face disbelieving.
I said nothing. We'd started our walk as we always
did, down Key Street to the bay which was just then
brightening to silver. On Water Street, cars and pickups
crowded around the Waco Diner, town men having
their eggs and coffee before heading out to work.
At the freight dock the Star Hoisin loomed massively,
cargo bays open. Guys in coveralls and rubber
boots went down the metal gangways to the finger
piers and onto the fishing boats, the grumble of diesel
engines mingling with the slopping of small waves
against the breakwater and the cries of seagulls. A bell
buoy clanked as tinges of deep pink rose behind the
Canadian islands, dark blue blotches against the lightening
sky.
As we walked, I'd been giving Ellie a few stock
tips. It was advice I had lagged away from following
for myself since I'd been in Eastport, but someone
might as well get the good of it. Ellie had been half
listening as she always did, or so I'd thought.
Now in the cemetery all thoughts of money flew
from my mind; instead I was busy trying to hold on to
my breakfast, breathing the way they'd told me to do
while Sam was being born. It hadn't worked very well
then, either.
Ellie reached out and touched a finger to Reuben's
leather jacket, as if to confirm what she was seeing.
The whoop-whoop of a squad car sounded somewhere
down on the waterfront.
"Be careful," Ellie murmured as if reminding herself,
"what you wish for."
I sat down hard, leaning against one of the old
gravestones with my head between my knees. The face
was bad, shrouded in red, and his hair was no longer
the pale whitish color of sun-bleached straw, but it was
the hands that really got to me. Stiffened into caked,
curved claws, they had obviously been at his throat.
"Nobody," I managed, "wishes for that."
Ellie turned slowly, expressionless. "No. Not anymore."
Then the sirens started again. I got up and called
Monday and snapped her onto her lead. The squad
cars were coming fast. Somebody must have seen the
body before we found it and gone to find Bob Arnold,
Eastport's police chief, to let him know.
The thought troubled me; there wasn't much traffic
on the cemetery road at this hour of the morning.
Moments later, Arnold's squad car appeared, speeding
between the maples and the larch trees that made
a bright avenue of the road in autumn. But behind
him were a couple of state squads, and that wasn't
right, either. All three cars pulled to the curb, cherry
beacons whirling.
Bob Arnold emerged from his squad and stalked
over to us furiously. "Jesus H. Christ," he grated.
"One's not enough?"
"One what?" I asked puzzledly, and then I knew:
the siren, and the state cops already in town. Another
body.
"He was alive when he went up there," I said, gesturing
at Reuben. "Somebody tied him and lifted him,
hung him upside down."
I was babbling. "And then ..."
"I get the picture, Jacobia." Arnold pronounced it
the Maine way: pictchah.
By now it was full morning and a pickup truck was
pulling in behind the squad cars. George Valentine got
out and walked over to Ellie, while Arnold and the
state guys conferred by the gate.
"The guy Victor sewed up last night," George said.
"In the bar? They found him down on the seawall a
couple hours ago, cold as a flounder."
A town truck with a bunch of orange traffic cones
in its bed parked behind George's vehicle, and some
fellows from the highway department began using the
cones to block off the road where it entered Hillside
Cemetery.
"Couldn't figure what happened," George went
on. "Bruises on him. And something blue sticking out
of his mouth."
"Blood all over his shirt," Arnold added, approaching.
"But that was from the events of earlier, in
the bar."
He looked at me. "No mystery there. We've got a
complete and fully detailed report of that. Fully," he
emphasized, "detailed."
Uh-oh. Suddenly one those details came back to
me: blue. But of course what I was thinking wasn't
possible.
Behind Arnold, the state men began marking off a
perimeter, using yellow tape weighed down with small
stones to form a circle about twenty feet in diameter.
"Tell me it wasn't," I said to George, who had
been at the restaurant with us. Who had seen ...
Victor, tossing back that final martini. And afterwards
...
George nodded, looking unhappy. "Pried open the
guy's mouth, see what was in there, that's when we
found it."
One of the state officers went back to his car and
got on the radio, while the other began marking off a
second perimeter a few yards out from the first. At the
center of it all, Reuben hung there like some ghastly
flag.
"And to judge by how far down his windpipe it
was," Arnold went on, "I doubt that fellow just happened
to mistake it for a cheeseburger. I don't care," he
finished, "how rip-roaring drunk he'd got, couple
three hours earlier."
My mind's eye showed Victor readying himself for
impromptu surgery, in the course of which there might
be blood. So that Victor, always a poster boy for the
compulsively fastidious ...
"Mistook what?" Ellie demanded.
Monday stopped nosing around and sat down beside
me, wanting to go home. Me, too.
"Victor's tie," George said. "What the guy strangled
on."
He must have taken it off. Tucked it into his shirtfront,
first, but that hadn't been enough for him; it
might get dirty. So he'd taken it off.
"Part in his mouth, and the rest," Arnold supplied,
"damned near down into his lung. Have to wait for the
medical examiner, of course. And the way his dance
card's filling up already today, it could take a while.
But I'd agree the guy suffocated on it."
Somebody touched my shoulder and I jumped:
Sam.
"Mom? I think you better come. Dad's at the
house, and he's pretty upset." Sam kept his eyes
averted from Reuben.
"Oh, brother. He knows about the tie?" I asked
Arnold.
"Yeah. Teddy Armstrong remembered who he'd
seen wearing it. I talked to your ex-husband about it a
little while ago. Told him I'd see him at your house,
and I was on my way over there. But then," he gestured
in disgust at Reuben, "I got diverted."
I got up. To Victor, everything was always about
him. But this was going to put the frosting on it.
"Did Reuben have relatives?" Bob Arnold asked,
squinting at the body. Thinking, I supposed, about a
funeral.
Ellie shook her head. "His parents were from
away. Both gone now. Buried away, too, I've forgotten
quite where. They both had," she added, "that same
white-blond hair. And those white eyelashes--to look
at them, you'd think they must be brother and sister.
But," she came back to the practical present, "he didn't
have any brothers or sisters, himself."
Trust her to know; Ellie's memory contained a veritable
orchard of Eastport family trees. "Come on,
kiddo," I told Sam. "Let's go settle your father down. I
guess he must have left that tie in the bar last night.
He'd forget his head, you know, you feed him enough
martinis."
"Uh-huh," Sam agreed, not sounding convinced,
but I just laid it to general upset. When Victor gets
going, he can generate emotional shock waves that
would shatter the Rock of Gibraltar.
Ellie came too, looking grimly gratified now that
the first surprise of our discovery had worn off. She is
ordinarily the mildest of souls but her gentleness conceals
some icy attitudes, partly I think because her ancestors
were cold-water pirates, men who cut their
eyeteeth on barbecues of long pig and rum until a hurricane
blew them out of the Caribbean, eventually to
downeast Maine, back in the 1700s.
Since then her family had flourished in Eastport
and the surrounding towns, as tenacious as barnacles
and when necessary as coldly pragmatic. I got the impression
she felt some rough justice had been served
there in the cemetery.
George stayed behind with Arnold, calling on Arnold's
radio for sawhorses to hold more perimeter tape
and for a second body bag from the small stock of
them kept over at the medical clinic.
Which made two more body bags than our little
town tended to use in a year. When we have bodies in
Eastport they are generally the result of elderly people
--and by that I mean very elderly; in Maine, if you
should pass before the age of one hundred, your obituary
will call it unexpected--signing off more or less on
schedule.
So I still felt reasonably sure that the sudden run
on body bags was a statistical anomaly, not the beginning
of a trend.
Wrong.
Before Wade went out on the water that
morning, he'd brought all forty-eight of my
old wooden storm windows up out of the
cellar and lined them against the picnic table
in the side yard. I'd bet him I could remove the upstairs
window sashes and weatherstrip them before snow fell,
and he'd said that if I did he would repair and hang the
storm windows for me.
But when Victor is in trouble, he thinks he is a
swallow and my house is Capistrano, so I wasn't going
to get to the weatherstripping anytime soon.
"Sam," I said as we approached the back porch.