Beyond the Grave
Ghost Detective, Volume 1
R.W. Wallace
Published by Varden Publishing, 2021.
In the Ghost Detective Universe:
Novels
(Best to be read in order)
Beyond the Grave
Unveiling the Past
Beneath the Surface
Short Stories
(All stand-alone)
Just Desserts
Lost Friends
Family Bonds
Common Ground
Till Death
Family History
Heritage
Eternal Bond
New Beginnings
Severed Ties
Foreword
Welcome to my Ghost Detective books. I’ve been living with these characters in my head for a while, and a certain number of stories have come out of it. So many, in fact, that there are two parallel timelines.
A quick word to explain.
I started writing short stories about Robert and Clothilde. Had so much fun with them. And wondered what had happened to them when they died. They stayed so secretive! Then came the story Common Ground, and I got a definite link to Clothilde. And a way to get them out of the cemetery!
“Cool!” I thought, and started writing the next short story. Which wasn’t a short at all, but rather the beginning of a series of novels, the first of which you’re holding right now.
But I didn’t want to stop writing the shorts. So I’ve done both. In one timeline (this one), the ghosts get out of the cemetery and go looking for their own murderers, and in the other (the shorts), they’re still stuck in the cemetery and helping other ghosts find peace.
All of that to say you definitely do not need to read the short stories before starting the novels (though Common Ground will give some extra background), and the shorts can be read in any order. The novels, however, are best read in order.
Enjoy!
R.W. Wallace
One
Ghosts are nothing but people who died with unfinished business. Once the business is dealt with, they move on to the afterlife.
Sounds easy enough, right?
Wrong.
Ghosts are also bound to the cemetery they are buried in, unable to escape their confines. Which means that unless the person associated with the unfinished business shows up in the cemetery, the business stays unfinished.
Even when the person does show up in the cemetery, there’s no guarantee we can accomplish our mission. Our interactions with the world of the living are severely limited—although not non-existent—and we often have to get creative.
For the most part, we manage.
My friend Clothilde and I have haunted this cemetery for over thirty years and we’ve helped countless ghosts move on to the afterlife. Murders have been solved, spouses have been forgiven, family secrets have been unearthed. It’s become our mission in death to help others move on.
And yet, the two of us remain.
Our graves are close to the squeaking back gate of the small cemetery, with the gray stone wall outlining our field of action at our backs, the small stone church with its bronze spire and large wooden doors at the far end of the cemetery straight ahead, and gray tombstones and mausoleums covering the rest of the area. Some graves are simple and understated like Clothilde’s, some are more like palaces with columns and spires and crying angels, while yet others used to be grand but have long since fallen into disrepair and barely show the name of the person who was buried there decades or centuries ago.
There’s a certain ebb and flow to the life in a cemetery.
Some days, especially in winter, we won’t get a single visitor. The church doors stay closed, the back gate remains silent, and the small parking lot stays empty. When the gray clouds of a southern French winter lay so low we can barely see the top of the church spire, the sounds become muffled, making us wonder if the world of the living is still out there, and water clings to the dark granite of the tombs and runs down the faces of the sculpted angels, letting them shed real tears.
When the sun bears down on us the hardest in summer, the elderly visitors wisely stay away. There’s some shade under the plane trees lining the main path or under the large cedar tree, but mostly, the graves absorb the sunlight and send it back to our visitors ten-fold, making a visit to our cemetery a stifling experience. If there’s any wind, it’s blocked by the wall or the larger mausoleums. Only the most desperate will show up on a day like that.
Other than the obvious crowd for the Day of the Dead in November, we get the most visitors in spring. The temperature is in the agreeable twenties, the sun makes a first appearance after months of hiding behind clouds, and nature is waking up and reminding people that they are alive.
This quite often translates into thinking about the dead, and wanting to bring some life to the graves of their loved ones. So, in addition to all the flowers growing naturally in our cemetery, graves receive roses and daffodils, lilies and tulips. Our cemetery becomes the canvas for the most colorful of flower arrangements.
No flowers have ever graced my grave, or that of Clothilde, because in thirty years, we haven’t had a single visitor.
In my case, this makes sense. After all, the only thing marking my grave is a slight bump in the ground next to Clothilde’s tombstone, which shows how much—or rather how little—anybody cared about my demise.
I can’t say I blame them. The reason I’m still here as a ghost thirty years after my death, after all, is because I have sins to atone for before I can move on to the afterlife. I was a lousy police officer, a lousy brother, and a terrible son.
I wouldn’t want to honor my memory, either.
I made my peace with the status quo a long time ago, in large part because I’ve found a way to work toward a possible redemption. If I solve enough crimes, help enough ghosts, perhaps I can make up for the crimes I didn’t solve while I was alive, the people I didn’t help.
For Clothilde, the fact that she hasn’t had a single visitor makes a lot less sense.
She arrived as a ghost in this cemetery in the late eighties, a few short weeks before my own death, and has hung around here ever since, being my friend but sharing little to nothing about her past. She was twenty years old when she died and will forever be the rebellious teenager. She’s moody, mistrustful, and has a terrifically dry sense of humor. She loves perching on tombstones, with her hands under her jeans-clad thighs, and her Converse-covered feet swinging through the stone, completely ignoring the rules of the physical realm.
Her gravestone only has her name and her date of death. No date of birth. No last name.
And yet, every five years or so, a gardener comes to clean the tombstone, removing moss and weeds and repainting the gold of the engraved letters if needed.
I tried asking Clothilde if she knew who paid for this service, but she never answered.
I don’t think she knows, either.
Although I guess it would make sense that it was her uncle, who apparently was the one to pay for and arrange her funeral. Not that the man has ever set foot in our cemetery.
Her mother certainly didn’t have anything to do with her daughter’s final resting place. She came through here as a ghost a few months ago, and was surprised to discover her daughter was in the same cemetery.
Today, a rainy April morning, Clothilde has her very first visitor.
Two
The man must be at least seventy years old, possibly eighty. He arrives in an old and battered Renault R19 that sounds like it’s on its last breath. Ignoring the downpour
, he shuffles to the trunk of the car, gives it a whack to get it open, and pulls out a threadbare leather jacket. A black umbrella follows, then a bouquet of red roses.
“Haven’t seen him before,” I comment to Clothilde as we linger around the gate. “Wonder who the flowers are for.”
Clothilde doesn’t answer. She chews her lip as she studies the man, a frown marring her forehead.
Moody today, then.
Fits well enough with the atmosphere of our cemetery on a day like this. The clouds obscure the church spire and the contours of the neighboring houses look like a sulky artist’s lazy take on a ghost town through the rain and fog. Only Madame Guillamot’s living room window lights up like a beacon down the street.
To the north, the copse of trees separating us from the elementary school is a black hole promising an endless walk into dark eternity for anyone attempting escape. The children should be arriving at school in about an hour and their joyous screams will break the spell like a bubble bursting when poked with a toddler’s finger, but it’s difficult to imagine at the moment.
I’ve lived as a ghost in this village cemetery for thirty years and it’s only logical that it ends up having an effect on me eventually. When you only see dead people and the living coming to mourn their lost loved ones, it makes it difficult to maintain any kind of sense of humor, except a rather dark one. I seem to remember that I loved a good laugh and the occasional clownery when I was alive but I remember the images more than I remember the accompanying feeling.
One feeling I haven’t lost track of is the guilt. I might not have deserved to die when I did but I was no saint. I was on the verge of coming to this realization before I was killed, even got so far as to thinking I might need to make amends.
But I never got the time.
And making amends when you’re a ghost stuck in a cemetery isn’t exactly easy. If I can’t meet or communicate with the people I wronged, it’s kind of difficult to help them.
So I help the people who cross my path instead. More specifically: the ghosts who cross my path.
The only ones I haven’t been able to help move on are Clothilde and yours truly. Clothilde because she’s never wanted to tell me much about why she’s still here and me because I honestly don’t know what I need.
Also, I’d really like to make sure Clothilde is all right and not leave her here all alone. Being the only permanent ghosts for thirty years forges a certain bond.
And right now, Clothilde is one hundred percent focused on the old man approaching the cemetery.
He takes his time, his feet hardly lifting off the ground with each step, but his determination is clear.
He passes through the gate, takes a quick look around, and turns down the path running along the wall.
“There aren’t any new graves that way,” I comment. “Odd that we haven’t seen him before, don’t you think?”
Clothilde doesn’t answer, of course. But her gaze is particularly intense as she walks right in front of the man, studying his face.
“Have you seen him before?” I ask.
The man shuffles forward. Clothilde stays just ahead.
Guess the communications will be one-sided.
Only when the old man picks the path toward the back gate does the idea take root in my mind.
“Is he coming to visit you, Clothilde?”
When she still doesn’t answer, I step closer to the man to study his features, searching for any resemblance to my friend. But despite having been a police officer while I was alive, I’m unable to find similarities between the sagging cheeks, large nose, and high forehead of the old man, and the fresh face, sharp nose, and voluminous wavy hair of my friend.
The old man comes to a stop—in front of Clothilde’s tombstone.
“Who is he, Clothilde?”
Slowly, and clearly with a lot of pain in the joints, the man kneels on the ground and gingerly places the roses on the fresh and wet grass.
“I’m sorry I haven’t come by before, ma chérie,” the old man says, petting the petals of the largest of the red roses. “I’d say I didn’t want anyone to find you, but that is only a silly excuse I’ve told myself for thirty years.” He gulps and closes his eyes.
“Clothilde,” I say, my voice sharp. “Who is he?”
Her face is perfectly still, like that of a doll, no emotions showing. Except in the eyes. You have to know her well to be able to read her emotions, but I’ve lived with her and her lack of verbal cues for three decades, so I most definitely qualify.
She’s scared. Angry. And sad, I think.
“Who is he, Clothilde?”
She wets her lips, something I haven’t seen her do since she stopped paying attention to the rules of the physical realm and the needs of her long-lost living body.
“My uncle,” she whispers.
I remember the short time while her mother had been with us as a ghost. “The one your mother asked to handle the funeral arrangements?”
Clothilde nods.
I study the old man on his knees before us. His eyes are watery and his breath short.
“Why is he here now?” I wonder out loud. “Do you think he’s dying and wanted to make one last visit?”
“First visit.” Clothilde’s expression still hasn’t changed.
She isn’t going to be much help here and I’m not about to pass up an opportunity to better understand the circumstances of Clothilde’s death. I want to help her find closure, so she can move on.
I kneel down next to the old man and put a hand on his shoulder. He won’t be able to feel me physically, but we can often get through to people’s subconscious and it works better if we touch them.
“Why are you here, old man?” I ask him. “You might feel better if you talk to her.”
Clothilde’s eyes flash to mine, anger burning.
“Don’t you start,” I tell her, keeping my voice stern. “I know you don’t like to share your past, but you can’t hang around here as a ghost forever. You deserve to move on just like everybody else.” I nod toward her uncle. “He could help.”
She grinds her teeth—another habit I haven’t seen in a good twenty-five years—but keeps her mouth shut.
“What’s his name?” I ask.
“Lucien,” she reluctantly replies.
I focus all my attention on the old man. “Tell me, Lucien, why did you come here today?”
Lucien heaves a great breath. Lets it out slowly. His umbrella hangs limply over his shoulder, covering most of him as he kneels in the wet grass, but his left shoulder will get soaked rapidly.
“A lady came to see me yesterday,” he says, his eyes on Clothilde’s name on the tombstone. “A police officer named Evian. Said they were looking into cold cases and she had questions about your death.”
I dare to spare a quick glance at Clothilde, but her face has completely shut down, eyes included.
Evian is the police officer we met a few weeks ago. She’d been sent down here from Paris to look into the deaths of several young women where the police work had been particularly sloppy. Two of them were ghosts in our cemetery.
Being the police officer who’d declared Clothilde’s death as suicide and not murder, I know for a fact that her death qualified.
Could she be looking into older cases, too, like I’d hoped?
“She’d tried contacting your parents first, naturally,” Lucien continues. “But your mother passed only a couple of months ago, and your father has been in a nursing home for several years already, his mind lost to Alzheimer’s. So she found me.”
He lowers his chin to his chest. “At first, I didn’t want to tell her where you were buried. There was such chaos when you died. Your parents were afraid people would disturb your grave, make a spectacle. And some rather unsavory chaps came by two days after you died, while your body was
still at the morgue, and wanted to look at the body. Just because.
“Your mother was beside herself with grief and worry, and was afraid she’d end up caving if they insisted, so she asked me to arrange the funeral, take care of everything.” He runs a wrinkled hand down his face, his fatigue evident.
“I planned for the entire family to be invited, to do it properly. Then, when I called your mother to tell her which cemetery I’d chosen, I ended up not telling her because the scandal of your apparent suicide and the links to the City Council had just broken.”
Lucien takes a deep breath and straightens his spine. “I think that’s when we lost your mother, all of us. She lost her baby, her reputation, her husband’s career…all in one go. So I was the only one to attend your funeral. I decided not to put your last name on the tombstone, to protect you. And I never came to visit, for fear that someone might follow me.”
A tear escapes and trails down along his large nose, into the furrow running from nose to mouth, and disappears between his lips. “I apologize for that last part, ma chérie. It was pure cowardice on my part.”
He falls silent and we all sit there for several minutes, while the rain falls down on Lucien’s umbrella and the back of his coat and trousers.
I don’t know what to say. Not sure if I should say anything.
In the end, Clothilde is the one to break the silence with a whispered question. “What is Evian going to do?”
Lucien seems to wake up from a stupor and blinks as he takes in the cemetery around us and his soaked-through left shoulder and trousers. “I wanted to see where you’d been all this time. Before all hell breaks loose again.” He takes a deep breath.
“They’re coming to exhume you tomorrow morning.”
Three
We’ve seen each other every day for thirty years. And every night, since ghosts don’t sleep.
At times we’ve had company, other ghosts passing through as they wrap up their unfinished business, but none who stayed for more than a few months.
Beyond the Grave Page 1