Share

The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey
The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey
Author: Crystal Lake Publishing

Cemetery Whispers

Author: Crystal Lake Publishing
last update Last Updated: 2024-10-29 19:42:56
1979

CEMETERY WHISPERS

Even before the calamity that shook the city to its deepest foundations, St. Charles, a place of some charm and innocence during the late seventies, held its traces of dark history and secrets. As St. Charles expanded, becoming more actual city than town, its shadows subsisted. With industry and developments accelerating the city’s way of life, many of the old tales, such as those surrounding Marion Cemetery, were forgotten by most.

“Be careful around Marion Cemetery,” a few of the city’s fading elderly used to say to their children. “Or the shadows might carry you away.”

Dominguez remembered. Having seen almost a full century, he was a man of many secrets. Though his frame was frail and his mind aged, he remembered much.

As the cemetery’s solitary gravedigger, Dominguez often strolled its outer perimeter during the dark hours. In his way, he walked the boundary of darkness and light.

His occasional whispering to the shadows punctured the silence, for two dark forms followed him closely.

Most other visitors to Marion Cemetery never saw the old whispering man with the deep-red ruby ring on his right hand. Some who came during the dark early hours heard his whispering, even if they did not see the man himself, and Lucy Newcomb was one such visitor.

On an autumn night of 1979, she approached a grave—a flat stone set in the dark-brown soil and surrounded by dried leaves that crunched with her approach. Dressed in a black coat with brass buttons, she came forward with a bouquet of sunflowers and daisies and laid them on the grave etched Newcomb.

The plain gray stone suited her aunt, simple in manner but kind at heart and gone for a year past.

Between the crunching leaves and the soft-blowing breeze, Lucy barely heard the whispering. She released the bouquet onto the stone and stood up straight. Anxious, she glanced around.

“Hello?” Lucy called, but the voice she thoughtshe had heard went silent.

She looked at her aunt’s grave again, then back to the darkness. Beyond a freshly-dug grave, she could discern nothing.

She made for the cemetery’s black iron gates. Once past the gates and to the road which ran beside them, she hurried to the black Mercedes-Benz at the curb. She drove away, making only one more stop before leaving St. Charles.

Half an hour later, she sat in one of the small bars that clustered Candle Square. She didn’t like the look of the place, but she wanted a drink. One drink turned into two. She couldn’t shake the thoughts of the cemetery from her mind.

“Excuse me,” she said to the gray-haired man behind the bar. He paused in the midst of wiping off a section of the bar with a white towel.

“Yes, miss?”

“What do you know about Marion Cemetery?” she asked him.

“What do you want to know? It’s an old cemetery, the oldest in St. Charles. Lots of history in that place.”

“Sure, there’s history,” said another man sitting two stools away from Lucy. “It’s a cemetery.” The man sipped his gin and tonic and added, “Those people in the ground, they’re history.”

The man had been sitting there for the past ten minutes, smoking his cigarette and drinking his drink beneath his brown mustache. A name tag pinned to the man’s blue-collared shirt read Mike. Lucy glanced at him but didn’t respond.

She looked back at the bartender. “I think I heard a voice there tonight. Someone whispering.”

The bartender gave a slight nod, thinking. “You ought to be careful,” he said. “You never know who might be wandering around in the cemetery at night.” He finished wiping down the bar and moved along to another waiting customer at the opposite end.

As Lucy lifted her second Singapore Sling to her lips, she realized to her further discomfort that Mike still stared at her.

“So what did they say?” Mike asked.

“It was almost like he was watching me, whoever he was,” Lucy said without looking up. “He was saying something like, ‘Look at her, look how she breathes. She’s young. She probably has a healthy young heart, doesn’t she?’”

“That’s weird.” Mike’s gaze dipped toward the scuffed brown surface of the bar. He cracked open a couple of peanuts and popped them into his mouth.

“It was creepy.” Lucy went back to her drink.

“Then what?”

“Nothing. I left after that.”

Mike lit another cigarette. “It kind of sounds like a bunch of bullshit to me.”

“How would you know?” Lucy exclaimed. “You weren’t even there.”

Mike didn’t reply this time, already having lost interest. He finished his drink and went back to smoking.

Lucy gathered her things, paid her tab, and walked out. She left St. Charles soon afterward to move on with her life elsewhere. Likewise, the city went on without her.

Related chapters

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Loss

    LOSSIIn the spring of ’79, the efforts of Damon Sharpe’s research reached a pinnacle. He had in part been victorious, he believed, in his battle to unearth a truth obscured by time. He had only to look on it with his own eyes to verify the success as more than personal, though it remained a victory few recognized as authentic.The only things that made Damon different to his wife, Anne, were that she loved him and that he was who he was—and he had loved her, even if no one else seemed to remember her. Damon’s wife, they probably called her, the ones who knew he had a wife. The invisible woman. Spring became summer, which faded into early autumn. The leaves turned and fell.Anne lay among the sheets of the bed with her head against a flat white pillow. As the wall clock ticked away, she stared at the empty space on the other side of the bed.At the age of 38, her husband had died of a heart attack and Anne was alone with a house full of things, unfilled wishes, dreams, and remn

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Intruder

    INTRUDERIWhen the manstepped in and saw her there, he froze. Their eyes locked.He was bald, with a flat nose and narrow eyes. The beginnings of a gray-speckled black beard lined his jaw. His frame filled out a navy-blue tee-shirt and black jacket.Anne broke away and ran. The intruder dashed after her. She reached the bedroom door and his hand twisted into the back of her shirt to jerk her backward. The clothing ripped. Thick gloved fingers seized her arm.Anne spun and struck. Her knuckles struck his tender windpipe and he released her, shocked and gasping. He clutched his throat. Anne bolted into the bedroom.She ran to the bag on the bed and grabbed for its strap but fumbled. The bald man charged through the bedroom doorway, running across the room toward her.She turned and popped a vicious kick at him. Her heel glanced from his shin, and his weight slammed her to the edge of the bed. In her struggling, she slipped down to the carpet below. Her head struck the edge

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Taking Flight

    TAKING FLIGHTIThe St. Charles RegionalAirport was only semi-crowded today. Anne rushed across its expanse to the nearest pay phone she could find and dialed Ruben’s number again. This time, he answered.“This is Ruben Ramirez.”“Ruben, this is Anne.”“Anne. How are you?”“I’m at the airport. Can you meet me here?”“At the airport?”“Can you meet me here or not?”Ruben paused. Anne’s voice had remained neutral, but her delivery was concise. She didn’t care to squander the minutes away, not now. If anyone would understand, she thought, Ruben would.“All right,” Ruben said. “Tell me exactly where you will be and I’ll meet you there.”“There is a café here,” she said. “A small one in the airport. I think it must be new. I’ll be waiting for you there. Is your passport current?”“Excuse me?”“If it is, bring it.”“What is this about, Anne?”Finding a beginning wasn’t easy. With everything coursing through Anne’s mind, she ran the risk of spewing it out in an incomprehe

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Lima

    LIMAIRuben managed toconvince the random flyer next to Anne to trade seats with him. Soon, the plane hummed along the runway stretch, lurched upward, and lifted them into the skies.Anne wasn’t speaking much. Ruben had a glass of water and ignored the package of peanuts brought. Halfway through the flight, Anne’s near-silence abated.“Ruben,” she said to him, “Keller showed up at my husband’s funeral.”Ruben nodded. He kept his eyes on the back of the seat in front of him.“I know,” he said. “I was there.”“Of course,” Anne said with a sigh. “I’m sorry.”Ruben had seen what had happened with Keller. Everyone had. Anne wished he hadn’t, although she wasn’t ashamed of it.“It’s all right,” Ruben said quietly. “I realize we never spoke there. I was trying to give you some space. I could tell that was what you wanted. I tried to speak to you on your way out, but I don’t think you even heard me. You were already out the door and it was raining hard.”“Thank you for being t

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Strangers

    STRANGERSIThe van ridewasn’t pleasant. The driver seemed to plow through every single bump and dip in the road. Anne’s bones jarred with each bounce. She clenched her teeth and fired a glare at Ruben, but he already knew her agitation. He kept looking out the window in the opposite direction.While Anne and Ruben sat in the back of the van, Raul was in a seat in front of them. He made occasional quiet exchanges with the other two at the front.The vehicle’s driver was a large man with a shaved head who spoke almost entirely in grunts. The other man, who sat in the passenger’s seat, was a skinny man with a bunched wad of dark curly hair on top of his head. The driver kept his eyes on the road. The other man kept turning his head toward the back of the van and looking at Anne a bit too often.Anne was grateful when they rolled into Huancayo. She climbed out with Ruben and Raul. Raul went to business with assembling supplies for their journey. Ruben went with him. Anne also d

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Mountains

    MOUNTAINSIThey drew nearer. The mountains appeared larger, much larger, than they had from that distance of hours before. Soon, they seemed incredible and immense, dwarfing Anne, Ruben, and Raul to tiny specks of near-nothing. Was this a fool’s errand or a suicide climb?And it hadn’t even started yet.Ruben glanced over at Anne. “Are you sure about this, Anne?”She didn’t return his glance. “Am I sure?This is hardly the time for second thoughts.”Anne noticed the doubt in Raul’s expression when he glanced toward her, even as he tried to hide it beneath an overly-patient smile. He didn’t give Ruben that same smile, she noticed. She guessed Raul had never embarked on this sort of climbing venture with a woman. If this concerned the man, Anne decided, she shouldn’t bother herself to care. Between her husband’s death and the undertaking before her, she would do it anyway, all else be damned. No obstacle would stand in her path.They plodded and climbed across rocky terrain. They

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Fire in the Night

    FIRE IN THE NIGHTIRuben began to rise. Raul held up a finger in caution.“Wait here,” he said. “I will look.”While Raul walked toward the mouth of the cave to investigate the sounds, Ruben came to his feet. Anne decided it wise to do the same. Her legs wobbled when she rose. Ruben put out an arm to steady her.The crunching sounds had desisted. The heavy outside winds renewed their fury. Anne and Ruben watched Raul’s dark form step into the light of the cave’s opening.In the middle of the cave, the soup bubbled.The explosion sent Raul staggering backward. His body struck the cave floor. Blood streamed from the bullet hole in his forehead.Anne cried out and rushed toward him. Ruben grabbed her arm to pull her back. She yanked away from Ruben but quickly understood he was right; Raul was already dead. Nothing could be done, and whoever had done this was still out there. Hardly able to sort out what had happened, she forced her feet forward and rushed to the back of the ca

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Blood on the Snow

    BLOOD ON THE SNOWIRuben knew it was a desperate move, but alternatives were scarce. He had to do something.To Ruben, everything slowed to a crawl. He leaned down to put his hand into the snow and curled his fist tight. When he came up, he ran, footsteps firing across the snow, and Javier turned the rifle on him.Ruben hurled the ball of snow and ice. Fire sprang from the barrel of Javier’s rifle and the snowball exploded into his face. Ruben dove, but not quickly enough.The blast clipped him and red erupted through his vision. Warm wetness flooded the side of his face.Carried by his momentum, Ruben crashed into Javier’s legs. The rifle jerked. Javier slipped, flailing down the precarious slant and over the edge.Ruben sprawled facedown into the snow. It reddened with his blood.Keller stood in shock. He stood gaping at the white mountain ledge, at Ruben and the red snow around his head.Keller made a crooked path toward the ice cave’s opening. Outside it, he slumped again

Latest chapter

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Tragedy

    TRAGEDYIAt the frontdesk of the King’s Motel, Mike Williams read a newspaper, absorbing further second-hand details of the quake’s impact along with all of the latest sports updates. The maid came in to work as usual but shrank away from cleaning one of the rooms. The guest there had screamed at her like a lunatic, she claimed.Annoyed, Mike dropped the newspaper and stood up. Since the maid couldn’t be bothered to do her job today, it fell on his shoulders.He snatched the maid’s cart from her and wheeled it to the room. The door stood slightly open, he noticed. He knocked. No one answered.“Anybody in there?” he called. He allowed five seconds for a response before he pushed the red door wide open and walked in.The room was vacant. The comforter lay halfway off the bed. The sheets were wrinkled.The clock radio on the bedside nightstand blared the news. He almost switched it off, but decided not to bother. At least it gave him something to listen to while he took his

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Minute of Truth

    MINUTE OF TRUTHIThe ground steadied across St. Charles. Mike Williams still sat in the storage room behind the front counter of the King’s Motel, watching continued coverage of the earthquake’s effects.“Authorities have reported that the River Bridge has been closed due to the earthquake’s destruction,” the reporter said. “All around St. Charles, especially downtown, we continue to receive reports of damages. While many people around the city are working to pick up the pieces, a few have questioned the possibility of an aftershock. We’ll have more on this later. We will also be on the scene with officers at the River Bridge for a full report on the additional difficulties this catastrophe could mean for the residents of St. Charles in the days and months ahead. Please stay tuned to this channel for further updates as they develop.”Around the River Bridge, blue lights whirled. Police guarded the River Bridge and turned away traffic as it arrived. Below, on both sides of the rive

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Hour of Destruction

    HOUR OF DESTRUCTIONIAnne stumbled outof her motel room. The sickness lurched in her again with another sudden bout of dizziness. Coupled with the unsteady ground, it almost staggered her.The vibrations in the ground were no delusions. They were as real as the cold feeling that gripped her inside.Why the ground shook, she couldn’t begin to guess. Of the rest, Anne suspected, she was dying.That exhausting climb into the mountains, the loss suffered, and her experience in the pit had not been altogether in vain. The secret of that place was inside her, changing her. She had merely failed to realize it until now.Many of the motel’s other customers stood outside. The vibrations beneath their feet and the rattling of mirrors, windows, and anything that wasn’t bolted down had driven them out. Undistracted by the shouts and excited conversations all around, Anne stumbled away from the King’s Motel.Her feet reached the hard street. She followed the long, dark stretch but cou

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Downtown

    DOWNTOWNIOn an outeredge of St. Charles, just before the downtown area thinned toward the outskirts, the flickering neon sign of the King’s Motel burned against the night. For Anne, cheap rooms were the motel’s prime selling point. She had almost two hundred dollars in cash left.The mustached man behind the counter, whose name tag read Mike, pretended not to see her at first. She stood waiting for almost a minute before he raised his head to regard her for an expressionless moment.“Can I help you?” he asked.“I need a room,” she said.“How many nights?”“One. For now.”“Eight dollars.”Anne lowered the green pack onto the floor and crouched to open it. She sorted through it until she came up with seven crumpled dollar bills, which she tossed onto the counter along with a handful of change. Mike blew audibly through his nostrils. He took the money and slid a key onto the counter.“Room 26,” Mike said, and turned his attention elsewhere.Anne took the key and exited

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Ghost of the Past

    GHOST OF THE PASTIShe came alonefrom the mountains. Thin, frail, and ashen, she appeared the ghost of a woman.The people of the small countryside village watched her as they had before. They didn’t recognize her from the previous occasion. She spoke little, only dropping a few items in trade for provisions.They muttered among themselves. Those who passed her closely enough saw something in her eyes they could not comprehend, and it disturbed them. Was it madness? Evil? Who or what was this woman and where had she come from?They were happy to see her go. Her presence frightened the children.In other towns along her route, she stirred similar reactions. Some were openly guarded. Others kept their eyes averted and lips sealed. Many maintained their distance.In contrast, few noticed her on the crowded streets of Lima. It was the same within the airport unless she presented herself in a direct fashion, as she had to do when securing a flight back to her home country of t

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Into White

    INTO WHITEIRuben opened hiseyes. He thought he might have heard something. A heavy sleep weighed on him. He struggled feebly to hold it at bay.Who was there? Was it Anne?He drew a slow breath. He waited for Anne to come into view. She never did.Maybe he had only been hearing things, deceiving murmurs of the wind. He had a strange feeling then, a feeling that Anne hadn’t returned coupled with the feeling that he might never see her again.He hoped she was all right. He had no way of knowing.Ruben’s thoughts meandered, and he stared into white.IIThe passing of time was impossible for Anne to gauge in the darkness of the hole. She waited there at its bottom, alone with her thoughts in the surrounding blackness. She could hardly bear it. She had to get out of this place. Anne searched for some sense of direction through the dark pit, and almost lost her footing several times on the bones covering the ground.The flashlight flickered on and off. She shook it until th

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   The Pit of Bones

    THE PIT OF BONESKeller’s life drained across the cavern floor. His final wet choking sounds faded away. Anne had cut deep. It didn’t take long.She waited for the peace to wash through her now that this man, the one who had made it his life’s mission to ruin her husband’s life, who had tried to kill Ruben and her, died at last. The peace didn’t come, but silence did.She stood and looked over the blood-tipped bone in her hand. She tossed it aside. Looking up, she saw a point of light.The tunnel that she, and presumably Keller, had fallen through appeared to be a twisting one. It seemed unusual that she could have fallen straight downward without striking solid rock at some point, but here she was at the bottom of the deep pit, injured, but still standing.Shining the flashlight around, she spotted a supply pack against one wall and knew it had to be Keller’s. She walked over to it.At least he had brought his supplies. She had nothing.Would Ruben come for her? Surely he would

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   Into Darkness

    INTO DARKNESSIAnne flung herarms out to grab anything she could, but found nothing in the open darkness. She screamed. There was nothing else she could do. When she hit the ground, she would die a quick death at best, or else she would break both of her legs and suffer until she perished.She threw her arms out again and, to her surprise, caught something with one hand, but her descent was too rapid to be halted by this mere action. Her hands ripped free from the rough, rocky surface with a sharp sting.She grabbed out again in that general direction with both hands, and her hands slapped against a solid surface. A wall? An unexpected moment later, her fingers caught onto some indented portion of the surface, almost by accident, but she latched on and fought to better secure the handhold she had gained.Her body swung and her hands slipped away. A new wave of panic hurled through her mind. When her feet hit the ground, her mind was quick, firing a command to her body to ro

  • The Mourner's Cradle: A Widow’s Journey   The Mountain Mystery

    THE MOUNTAIN MYSTERYIAnne didn’t thinkshe would ever get used to the soreness. Her body wasn’t used to this. Regardless, she forced herself out of the makeshift shelter. Ruben didn’t stir. She put a hand on his shoulder and gave it an easy, but firm, shove.“Ruben, wake up,” she said. “We have to start climbing again.” The wind had worsened. She had to lean near his ear so he could hear her.“We have to keep moving, or we’ll freeze to death.”Ruben’s eyes opened. He blinked, gave her a single nod, and made a sluggish effort to climb out. Anne waited for minutes until he stood on uncertain feet in the snow.“Are you all right to climb?” she asked. He nodded again and walked toward the upward-slanting face. She started to ask if he was sure, but stopped herself. He could decide for himself, couldn’t he?Ruben, as if hearing the passing thought in her mind, turned to her. “I’ll be all right, Anne.”Anne looked up at the mountain. “I don’t think we have much higher to climb

DMCA.com Protection Status