Graverobbers Wanted (No Experience Necessary) (3 page)

BOOK: Graverobbers Wanted (No Experience Necessary)
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   I hesitated. "It's kind of a no, but it's the sort of no where I acknowledge that you haven't discussed payment yet. I seem to have left my exhumation price list at home."

 

   
"Twenty thousand dollars."

 

   Roger and I glanced at each other. That was incredible money for what basically amounted to an evening of illegal manual labor. It would certainly buy Helen a new video camera and pay off the car damages...

 

   No, no, what was I thinking? This
wasgraverobbing
!
This was ghoulish behavior! This was sick, sick, sick! This could put me in jail, in an asylum, or on a sleazy daytime talk show. The best thing—
no,theonly
thing—to do was tell Jennifer we were flattered she'd thought of us to fulfill her disinterment needs, but that we had to pass.

 

   
"Twenty thousand
cash?"
I
asked.

 

   
"Of course."

 

   "Answer this important question: Do you want your husband dug up for some sort of unholy
ritual
?Because
I don't do unholy rituals."

 

   Jennifer smiled. "Don't worry, there's no witchcraft involved."

 

   "And I don't do college-style pranks, either. If you want him dug up to leave in the passenger seat of your mother-in-law's car, find somebody else."

 

   "I don't know, that might be kind of funny," said
Roger."
If
I had a mother-in-law."

 

   "Shut up, Roger."

 

   "It's nothing like that," said Jennifer. "The body will never leave the coffin."

 

   "Why,
then
?If
you don't mind my saying so, you don't look all that upset for somebody whose husband just passed away."

 

   "You're very perceptive."

 

   "Well, I have to warn you that after what happened to me last week I'm a little burned out on the whole pissed-off spouse thing," I said. "So tell me why you want this done."

 

   Jennifer gave a casual shrug. "He had a key with him when he was buried. I want the
key.Simple
as that."

 

   I guess that was quite a bit less weird than other possible reasons for wanting her husband dug up, though the idea still wasn't especially thrilling. "Where is it, in his pocket?"

 

   "
Maybe.It
could be anywhere. It could be in his mouth, for all I know."

 

   "
Inhismouth
?You
want us to reach inside a corpse's mouth? And maybe even touch a dead tongue? Have you taken hygiene into consideration?"

 

   "Are you turning down the job?"

 

   "I still haven't said that." I looked at Roger to
seeifhe
had said that. He hadn't. He was just sitting there looking confused. "How long do you think it takes a dead tongue to dry out?" I asked.

 

   "I have no idea. Now do you want the job or not?"

 

   "I have a couple thousand more questions first. Such as, I'm not an expert in the field, but aren't caskets meant to be permanently sealed? Wouldn't I need to bring along a jackhammer or something?"

 

   "Cheap pine
box.Shallow
grave.Well
-hidden area. A park, actually."

 

   I stared at her for a long moment. "Not to be rude, but I find that a little disconcerting."

 

   "I didn't murder my husband."

 

   "I never would have dreamed otherwise. How did he die?"

 

   "
Suicide.And
I'd rather not discuss it."

 

   "Fair
enough.May
I ask why he's lying in a cheap pine box in a shallow grave in a well-hidden area of a park rather than a state-approved casket in a designated graveyard burial site?"

 

   "I'd rather not discuss that, either."

 

   "Okay, how about an easier question. Why did you pick us?"

 

   Jennifer smiled. "I've done my research." She glanced at her wristwatch and sighed. "Listen, I know men hate having to make a commitment, but I'm going to need one right now. Do you want the job?"

 

   
Twenty thousand
dollars.Well
, ten thousand for
me.Plus
the chance to add something new to my resume.
But in terms of eliciting Helen's fury, it had the potential of making the videotaping debacle look like passing out toys to doe-eyed orphans at Christmas.

 

   And yeah, I really needed the money, but spending time in jail
forgraverobbing
would really look bad on a job application.

 

   Ah, screw it. What's life without risk?

 

   "What do you think?" I asked Roger. "It would pay for
that
trip
toLas
Vegas you've been dreaming about."

 

   "
Ummm
...all right." Roger was never big on the concept of independent thought.

 

   "Okay, Jennifer, you've got yourself a pair
ofgraverobbers
."

 

 

 

        HELEN WAS working
nightshift,
and the kids spent every Wednesday night during the summer with Helen's parents. I love my in-laws and they tolerate me, but sending the kids over there on a weekly basis was most certainly not my idea. Have you ever tried to discipline children who've been allowed to stay up as late as they want and do whatever they want and whose blood sugar invariably tests six times over the legal definition of "wired?" It doesn't work.

 

   However, not having my wife or kids around meant that I wouldn't have to be home until 6 A.M. Roger and I got in Jennifer's sleek silver sedan and went for a forty-five minute drive, during which she kept the radio volume loud and was unresponsive to our questions.

 

   We ended up
inFleetPark
,
which is a decent little place located up north, in an area generally known as "way the hell out in the boondocks." Jennifer stopped her car in front of the closed gate and shut off the engine.

 

   "So, are you boys ready?"

 

   She was trying to maintain the casual attitude she'd had in the Blizzard Room, but it was starting to falter. Probably had a little to do with the whole digging up her dead husband thing.

 

   I have to admit, I was feeling a bit queasy myself. "I guess so."

 

   She reached down and pulled the trunk release lever, then handed me a folded piece of paper. "You'll find shovels, lanterns, working gloves, and beer in the back. These instructions will show you how to find where he was buried. It's about a mile away, and you'll have to cross through some thick
brush.Oh
, and there's also a snakebite kit in the cooler, just in case."

 

   "That's very thoughtful," Roger said. "Aren't you coming with us?"

 

   "If I didn't have a problem being near my husband's corpse, I wouldn't have hired you two." She handed Roger a cellular phone. "My beeper number is written on the instructions. Page me when you're done, and I'll be back to pick you up. Now go dig him up, get the key, rebury the grave just as you found it, and come back here. Then you'll get your money."

 

 

 

        WE CLIMBED over the gate with no problem and then we were on a dirt path most of the time, so the walk wasn't so bad, except for the fact that Roger made me carry the cooler. After we had to step off the path and walk through moist brush, the fear of disturbing one of the numerous varieties
ofFlorida
snakes made things a little less pleasant, but we hurried through without encountering anything more fearsome than an armadillo. Though to be honest, the armadillo scared the hell out of us.

 

   The grave was in a small clearing. Though the site wasn't marked with anything helpful like a sign reading "Dead Guy Below," the freshly turned dirt made it obvious that we were in the right place.

 

   I set down the cooler and sighed. "Well, Roger, this is our last chance to wimp out.
We'regraverobbing
for a woman who probably murdered her husband.
Think it's worth the money?"

 

   "I don't know. Let's not even think about it. Let's just dig."

 

 

 

        THE DIRT WASN'T difficult to
move
,and
the digging went fairly quickly. About half an hour later, at approximately the stroke of midnight, we'd unearthed an area about two feet deep. Roger leaned against a tree, finishing a beer as he took his fourth break for the evening. He put the empty can back in the cooler. We may violate burial sites, but damn it, we don't litter.

 

   "And so resumes the twenty-third annual Fleet
ParkGraverobbing
Competition," Roger announced, using the handle of his shovel like a microphone. "It looks like our champion, Andrew Mayhem, is currently leading in the dirt removal process, but can
hesustain
such an incredible pace?"

 

   "You're pretty cheerful for somebody digging up a coffin," I muttered. "Correction, you're pretty cheerful for somebody sitting on his lazy
buttwatchingme
dig up a coffin."

 

   "I'm not sitting, I'm standing."

 

   "Shut up. You've been spending too much time around my daughter. Get in here and help me dig so we can get this over with. You may not be aware of this little tidbit of information, but if we get caught we're screwed."

 

   I pushed down on the shovel, and heard
adullthud
sound. "And he strikes casket!" Roger broadcast. "The crowd goes wild!" He mimicked a crowd going wild as I crouched down and began to push dirt away with my hands.

 

   "Who the hell would drag a heavy coffin all the way out here?" I wondered aloud. "Why not just bury him in a garbage bag or something?"

 

   "That would be disrespectful," Roger pointed out.

 

   In a couple of minutes, I'd exposed half of the coffin lid. The only thing holding it closed was a padlock, which wasn't going to withstand a good smack with my shovel. I lifted the shovel to do just that, when Roger suddenly tensed.

 

   "Did you hear that?"

 

   "What?"

 

   "I think somebody's coming! Hide!"

 

   Roger hurriedly pressed himself against the tree, while I got down on my stomach and hid from sight in the grave. It occurred to me that if this was the police, and they found me lying facedown on a coffin at midnight, I'd probably be going away for a long, long time.

 

   We waited.

 

   
Silence.

 

   A couple of minutes passed.

 

   "Maybe I was wrong," said Roger, stepping away from the tree.

 

   I stood back up, brushing off my shirt, and gave him what I deemed to be a suitably dirty look. "Just for that, you're the one searching the corpse for the key. Put on the gloves."

 

   "Let me give that idea full consideration before I reject it," said Roger. He pretended to think for a moment. "Okay, now I've rejected it."

 

   "If we're dividing the money equally, we should divide the duties equally. And since I've done about seven-eighths of the digging, I think it's only fair that you should have to reach into a corpse mouth if it becomes necessary."

 

   Roger shook his head. "Weren't
youan
archaeology major for a couple weeks? You should have no problem handling dead things."

 

   "I'll flip you for it," I said, taking a quarter out of my pocket. "Call it in the air." I flipped the coin into the air.

 

   
"Heads."

 

   I caught it. "Tails," I lied.

 

   "You're lying."

 

   "No I'm not," I lied again.

 

   "Rock, Paper, Scissors," Roger suggested. "It's the only fair way."

 

   "Oh, yeah, real
fair.Like
I haven't seen you make your
selectionjuuuuuuuust
a bit late before."

 

   "How about we both search together?"

 

   "Sure. Why don't we call in some friends, make a group project out of it?"

 

   I picked up the shovel, lifted it above the padlock, and brought it down as hard as I could. There was a loud clang as the padlock broke.

 

   "Now," I said, "I'm going to open this coffin, and one of us is going to have to get the key. I'll make you a deal. I'll get the key if you mow my—"

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