The Doctor Digs a Grave

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Authors: Robin Hathaway

BOOK: The Doctor Digs a Grave
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Table of Contents
Title Page
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CHAPTER 1
- SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 4:45 P.M.
CHAPTER 2
- SATURDAY, 5:00 P.M.
CHAPTER 3
- SATURDAY EVENING, 6:30 P.M.
CHAPTER 4
- SATURDAY EVENING, 7:30 P.M.
CHAPTER 5
- SAME EVENING, 8:00 P.M.
CHAPTER 6
- SAME EVENING, 9:30 P.M.
CHAPTER 7
- SUNDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 30
CHAPTER 8
- MONDAY, OCTOBER 31
CHAPTER 9
- STILL MONDAY MORNING
CHAPTER 10
- MONDAY AFTERNOON
CHAPTER 11
- MONDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 12
- LATER MONDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 13
- TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 6:00 A.M.
CHAPTER 14
- LATER TUESDAY MORNING
CHAPTER 15
- TUESDAY, AROUND NOON
CHAPTER 16
- TUESDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 17
- LATER TUESDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 18
- WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2
CHAPTER 19
- LATER WEDNESDAY NIGHT
CHAPTER 20
- STILL LATER WEDNESDAY NIGHT
CHAPTER 21
- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, DAWN
CHAPTER 22
- LATER THURSDAY MORNING
CHAPTER 23
- STILL LATER THURSDAY MORNING
CHAPTER 24
- THURSDAY AFTERNOON
CHAPTER 25
- FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4
CHAPTER 26
- FRIDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 27
- SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5 (GUY FAWKES DAY)
CHAPTER 28
- SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 10:00 A.M.
CHAPTER 29
- LATER SUNDAY MORNING
CHAPTER 30
- MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7
CHAPTER 31
- MONDAY AFTERNOON
CHAPTER 32
- MONDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 33
- TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8
CHAPTER 34
- TUESDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 35
- WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 9
CHAPTER 36
- WEDNESDAY, AROUND NOON
CHAPTER 37
- WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
CHAPTER 38
- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 6:00 P.M.
CHAPTER 39
- LATER THURSDAY EVENING
CHAPTER 40
- STILL LATER THURSDAY
CHAPTER 41
- SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 13
CHAPTER 42
- A SATURDAY IN LATE NOVEMBER
THE INDIAN BURYING-GROUND
Copyright Page
To my husband, also a cardiologist,
who remembers things past
As much as I would like to, it would be impossible for me to thank all the people who have helped me with this book.
I must be content with expressing my heartfelt thanks to my husband, Robert Alan Keisman, M.D., cardiologist, for his exhaustive contribution to the medical content of this book. My deepest gratitude to Dr. Herbert C. Kraft, professor of anthropology and director of the Archeological Research Center and Museum at Seton Hall University, for his careful reading of my manuscript and his willingness to share with me his vast knowledge of the Lenni-Lenape Indians. And to Fred Kafes, medical librarian at Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center, Camden, New Jersey, my thanks for providing essential medical material.
To all the rest—family and friends, mystery writers and mystery readers, editors and agents—please know that I am profoundly grateful for all your help, and I wish I could thank each of you individually.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 4:45 P.M.
T
he driver edged the van carefully through the alley (there was no more than a two-inch leeway on either side) and entered a gloomy space about the size of a suburban backyard. Although still daylight, the enclosure was dim because it was surrounded by the rear ends of tall buildings—a bank, an apartment house, a parking garage, and a hotel.
Making a neat U-turn, the driver backed the van across the entrance to the alley, blocking a view of the enclosure from anyone passing by on the street. He jumped to the ground, moved around to the back of the van, and opened the twin doors. He drew a spade from inside and, choosing a spot a few yards from the van, began to dig. Now and then he stopped to wipe the sweat from his forehead with his sleeve. It was warm for October, and the dirt was packed down hard. It took almost an hour to dig a hole two feet by four feet and about five feet deep.
Satisfied, he tossed the spade into the back of the van and wiped his hands on his jeans. The rectangle of sky framed above the four buildings was still light. Too light to finish the job. The smell of hamburger reached him from a nearby McDonald's.
He was hungry. Hopping into the rear of the van, he lifted a corner of an oil-stained tarpaulin. The tarpaulin covered a mound slightly smaller than the hole he had just dug. A quick glance underneath, and he let it fall.
Slamming the back doors, the driver made his way around to the front. The sound of the motor starting up reverberated in the small space. He backed the van carefully over the hole he had just dug and parked. He walked once around the van, checking to make sure the doors were locked, before turning down the alley on foot. It wouldn't hurt to leave for a few minutes, long enough for him to grab a bite. By the time he got back, it would be dark and he could finish the job.
SATURDAY, 5:00 P.M.
D
r. Andrew Fenimore stepped out the back door of the hospital for a breath of fresh air. Even with the level of pollution in Philadelphia, the air outside was fresher than the air in the doctors' lounge. It was balmy for October. Indian summer. He shed his suit coat and headed for the doctors' parking lot. As he neared his car, he spotted the boy. Either a tall twelve or a short sixteen, wearing a dark baseball cap—visor in back—he was jogging between the cars, head down. When he crossed an aisle between two rows of cars, Fenimore saw that he was carrying a sack. Not carelessly, swinging it at every bumper and fender as you might expect, but cautiously, protectively, as if it contained the crown jewels. (The loot from a nearby jewelry store, more likely. Why, Fenimore? Because his skin is dark? He's probably taking some groceries home to his mother.) The boy halted beside a lone sycamore at the edge of the parking lot. When the land had been cleared for the lot, the tree had been spared and the ring of earth around it had escaped the macadam. Bending, the boy began to scratch in the dirt with some tool that Fenimore couldn't see. The parking lot attendant rapped sharply on
the inside of his glass booth. With a sullen look, the boy darted into the street.
Fenimore opened the rear door of his car and tossed his suit coat into the backseat. He snapped the door shut and sauntered out of the lot. With no particular destination in mind, he headed east on Walnut Street toward the river. He had an hour to spare before the Cardiology Department meeting at six. An odd time for a meeting. But the chairman had just returned from a sojourn on the Riviera where he had been chalking up continuing education points (of one sort or another) at the Nice-Hilton. Fenimore couldn't care less. His calendar was rarely full, but he imagined that some of the more socially active doctors (not to mention their wives) were unhappy about it.
The street was empty except for an occasional panhandler or a stray tourist heading back to the hotel after a look at the Liberty Bell or the Betsy Ross House. A standard Saturday in the city.
As he waited for the light to change at Seventh Street, he caught sight of the boy again. Poised at the entrance to the park, he glanced around and Fenimore got a good look at him. His face, the color of strong tea, framed eyes of a much deeper brown. Hispanic, probably. His expression was belligerent and anxious at the same time. Fenimore concentrated on a row of tattered posters announcing the arrival of a famous rock star—six months ago.
From the corner of his eye, Fenimore watched the boy turn into Washington Square. He was no longer jogging; his feet dragged. Homeless people lounged on the benches on either side. Fenimore paused to look at the Eternal Flame, a memorial erected to the unknown rebel soldiers who were buried there after the American Revolution. When he looked up, the boy was gone. To his surprise, he was annoyed. The boy had piqued his curiosity more than he realized. What the devil was in that
sack, anyway? As Fenimore moseyed along the bench-lined path, the boy's head popped up from behind an azalea bush a few yards away. It disappeared and reappeared several times. Each time it appeared, a shower of dirt flew across the path. From a different direction, a tall man in a neat gray uniform strode purposefully toward the bush. Fenimore sat down on the nearest bench to watch.
The park guard collared the boy, seized his digging tool—a rusty toy shovel—and reached for the sack. The boy lunged for the sack.
Fenimore intervened. “What's the trouble, Officer?”
The guard turned on Fenimore. “Look at that!” He nodded at a hole about the size of a soup bowl next to the azalea bush. “These vandals cause thousands of dollars worth of damage a year.” He gave the boy a shake. “He oughta be locked up.” The boy cringed. “But we aren't allowed to do that nowadays.”
“Officer, you must have more important criminals to take care of. Why don't you leave this one to me?”
The boy and the officer both eyed Fenimore with suspicion. Fenimore saw himself through their eyes: a small, conservatively dressed man hanging around the park picking up teenage boys. Hastily, he drew out his wallet and handed the officer his card, hoping to establish credibility with the boy as well as the guard.
“A doctor, huh. I don't see what you can do for him, unless you're a shrink.” He gave the boy a disgusted look but let go of his T-shirt. “All right. But fill in that hole.” He tossed the shovel at him. “And don't let me catch you around here again.” He left them to attend to more urgent business—harassing a homeless man on a bench nearby.
The boy kicked the dirt back into the hole and grabbed his sack, preparing for a quick exit.
“Hold on.” Fenimore stopped him. “What have you got in there?”
The boy swung the sack behind him.
“Don't worry, I'm not going to take it. I'd like to help you.”
Something—either Fenimore's words or his tone—got through to the boy. “My cat,” he cried. “A car got him this morning. I want to bury him. But you can't bury anything in this fucking town. Everything's cement or brick or tar, and the parks are full of fuzz.” He turned away.
Fenimore waited until the sniffing stopped. “I know a place,” he said.
The boy wiped his nose down the length of his sleeve and looked at him.
“Come on.” Fenimore headed out of the park. The boy followed—a car's length behind.
On Saturday there were few shoppers on Walnut Street and no commuters to get in their way. The boy walked behind Fenimore, Indian file. Fenimore turned only once to make sure he was still there. Between Broad and Thirteenth, he stopped at the entrance to a narrow alley flanked by two buildings, a cart track long ago. On the wall of the facing building, the words “Watts Street” were carved deeply into the stone, a reminder of more permanent times. He turned in. The boy followed. The alley ended in a small open space—a swath of hard-packed dirt walled in on three sides by tall buildings. The only occupants of the area were a couple of pigeons and a gray van. The pigeons took off with a rush of wings and Fenimore noted the license tag on the van: SAL123. He wouldn't be apt to forget that. His cat's name was Sal and her litters never exceeded three.
“This was an old burial ground set aside over three hundred years ago by William Penn for Indian … er … Native Americans,” Fenimore explained, “and the deed still prevents anyone from building here or paving over the ground. People shouldn't be allowed to park here. The Lenape Indians have unmarked graves, but there should be a historic marker or sign.” He made
a mental note to bring this to the attention of the Historical Society soon. But for his present purpose, it was better to have the place unmarked, anonymous. A historic secret. “Only a few people know about this place,” Fenimore told the boy. “Just the Lenapes and a few history buffs like me.”
The boy looked down. The ground was smooth and black and hard. But not macadam. Real dirt, packed down by feet and tires. He tested the surface with the toy shovel. It grated. He looked up.
“We'll need something better than that.” Fenimore glanced at his watch: 5:45. Nearly time for that damn meeting. “Tell you what. Meet me back here at eight. I'll bring my spade.”
The boy's eyes shifted, still suspicious.
“On second thought, come to my office.” Fenimore pressed his card into his hand.
The boy glanced at it.
“One-five-five-five Spruce.”
He nodded and started off.
“Hey.” Fenimore stopped him. “I don't know your name.”
The boy hesitated. “Horatio.” Then he quickly added, “My mom calls me Ray. My friends call me Rat.”
Horatio. Fenimore savored it. He didn't know what he'd expected, but not the name of one of his boyhood heroes—Horatio Nelson, the great admiral of the British fleet. “How did you come by a tag like that?”
He shrugged. “I'm the sixth kid. My mom ran out of saints. She picked that one off the TV and stuck me with it. Some old movie she was watching. She likes the sad ones.”
That Hamilton Woman
, Fenimore thought. Vivien Leigh played Lady Hamilton and Laurence Olivier was Nelson. It was sad, all right. “Mind if I call you by your full name?”
He looked as if he minded.
“He's kind of a hero of mine,” Fenimore explained. “He beat
the French with a sleight of hand. Split his own fleet in two. Won the battle but lost his life. Lost an arm and an eye before that.”
The boy danced from one foot to the other, eyeing the exit.
“See you at eight.” Fenimore watched him retreat down the alley, holding the sack carefully at his side.

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