The Church of Dead Girls

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by Stephen Dobyns


  Allen Malloy stared down at the hands as the other men joined him.

  “What is it?” said Sheila Murphy. “What is it?” She pushed forward so she could see.

  “Dr. Malloy,” said someone coming through the men. It was Captain Percy.

  The doctor turned, wiping the snow from his face. He seemed surprised to see other people. He handed Percy the rifle.

  Forty-four

  This is how they looked: three dead girls propped up in three straight chairs. The fourteen-year-old sat in the middle. She was taller than the others by half a head. The two thirteen-year-olds sat on either side of her. Across the chest of each girl was an X of rope leading over her shoulders, down around her waist, and fastened in the back. All three girls were barefoot and their ankles were tied to the legs of their chairs.

  Donald Malloy had sealed off the attic, removing the door and molding and fitting a piece of sheetrock over the opening. Then he had wallpapered the wall so no one could tell from the second-floor hall that a door had been there. The wallpaper was light blue with small bouquets of dark-blue flowers. Around the bouquets were chains of yellow buttercups making a diagonal pattern like chicken wire.

  It was Dr. Malloy who found the trapdoor in the closet when he had come earlier in the evening, and he was the first one into the attic. Then he kicked out the sheetrock so the police could climb the stairs, kicked it hard in his anger so the pieces flew into the hall. After that he had gone looking for Donald.

  Chuck Hawley took the photographs of the attic for the police department. He says he doesn’t have to see the pictures again to know what they show. He says he sees it all the time anyway: three dead girls propped up in three straight chairs.

  In Lincoln Park a monument was put up to the girls. It was dedicated in the spring. A square piece of obsidian, ten feet high and three feet thick, with the girls’ names and dates printed on each of the four sides. When it was dedicated, half the town went and I went as well. Bernie Kowalski made a speech. Father Murphy of Saint Mary’s Church spoke, too, quite a long speech that people had trouble following. Nothing the two of them said made anything better. They spoke of the horror we had gone through but they didn’t make anything better. The parents of the dead girls were given the chance to speak, though they chose not to. Ralph Shiller said he was glad it was all over, but he didn’t want to speak in front of a crowd. Paul Leimbach was there, walking with a cane. Mike Shiller was there with some of his friends from the post office, the same group who had smashed up Leimbach’s house. You would think that they might have acted guilty, but they didn’t. To my mind they still looked angry, as if their anger was something that was now part of them and couldn’t go away. Karla’s father was some fellow in California who had never even seen his daughter. Even so, he came all that distance. My colleague Lou Hendricks said he was the luckiest of the parents, but many thought that was too cynical.

  Aaron McNeal wasn’t there. He had left town by that time. Franklin came with Sadie and Paula, with Franklin standing in the middle, surreptitiously holding the hand of each. He looked very handsome in a dark tweed suit. Paula wore a dark dress and her black hair shone. It was April but quite warm, and there were daffodils. Ryan Tavich was there with Franklin but he, too, would be leaving shortly. Eventually he settled someplace out West.

  For some people there were too many memories, too many things they wanted to forget. It made it difficult to stay in Aurelius. Dr. Malloy and his family would move back to Rochester. The fact that Allen had shot his brother was, for our town, too big a piece of information: to shoot your own brother in the back with a rifle. And Franklin had told people how Donald had accused Allen, as if Dr. Malloy, and not Donald, had killed the girls. For some people the whole thing was still a mystery. They looked at Dr. Malloy with mistrust. How could he be a doctor under those conditions? Even Paul Leimbach was talked about. And the fact that Mike Shiller had wrecked Leimbach’s house—some people defended it. They said that Mike had done the right thing at the time. There were many arguments about this, even harsh words. The suspicion didn’t just go away. It just slipped back to wherever it hid. I had the feeling it would stay with us always, as if we would never be able to look at one another again except through its filter, a colored lens of suspicion. That is why Bernie Kowalski’s words about putting it all behind us were such a lie. And that big black stone, as if it were pushing down upon the suspicion, keeping it underground—but it didn’t work like that.

  Consider Ryan’s leaving town. I think of Ryan as trying to cut a thread, trying to forget Janice, trying to forget the dead girls. He had been shot in the shoulder. Now when he moves that shoulder, he’ll always remember us. He can’t put Aurelius behind him. It’s inside him wherever he goes. And Aaron too. His mother’s grave is here and his sister is here. Whenever he sits and glances from a window and lets his mind wander, won’t he soon be thinking of Aurelius? Even if he hates it? All these people who are trying to make their lives go forward, won’t these memories tug at them? And Franklin, when he wakes in the night, won’t he hear Donald’s reedy voice in the dark telling him once again about filth? I am sure it has happened. I am sure he turns to Paula in the night and holds on.

  For me, at least, work is a better remedy. It’s something I can trust: a daily schedule, repeated actions that I imagine benefit the common good. I teach more. I have my hobbies. I spend more time with my students. At times it seems that I think of them as sexual creatures more often than I did in the past. Not that I would touch them. But I consider Donald talking to Franklin in the woods. If you could look to the bottom of a human being, what desires would you find? And what desires are concealed beneath my white shirt and bow tie, my civilized veneer?

  Donald Malloy had lived with his desires a long time. Who knew how he struggled? He must have seen them in his face every time he looked in a mirror. Later we learned that when he lived in Buffalo he had touched a girl in his pharmacy. He had taken the girl’s hand and rubbed it against his genitals. She told her parents and they confronted him. He begged them not to make it public. He promised the girl’s parents he would see a doctor. He said he would leave the area. He begged them not to ruin his career. Nobody knew about it, not even Donald’s brother. The girl’s parents kept quiet until the news of his death appeared in the papers. How many other girls had he touched? What awful sweetness did he discover in these experiences? And when he killed Janice McNeal, what sort of sweetness did he find there?

  How that sweetness must have sung to him and how insistent it must have grown as it led him to take more chances. Is it possible that voice exists in all of us but in most it is quiet? When I help a tenth grader with his biology assignment and I feel the heat of his body beside mine, the heat of his cheek, don’t I hear a sweetness calling to me? Of course, I do nothing. I move away or send the boy back to his desk, but sometimes I have fantasies. In my dreams I do things that I shouldn’t. But I am a good man. I have a respected position. I would never do anything wicked. But isn’t my fear one of the reasons I live alone? What do you do with your fear? And do you dream?

  I think of my neighbors. I see men looking at young girls on the street. Or I see how the young high school athletes are observed by both men and women. What desires do these people push down inside them? Is it good to pretend we don’t have such feelings?

  And the place where Donald worshipped cleanliness. Surely I am not the only one to think of him up in his attic—his church. Don’t others wonder what it felt like to give in to desires like his?

  The three girls were buried at the beginning of Thanksgiving week. Their families had decided to join together to hold a single observance at Saint Mary’s Church. Identical coffins stood at the front of the church, and of course the church was packed. TV and newspaper people came from all over. Franklin said it was a zoo. And a mob of people went to Homeland Cemetery as well. There were no speeches and the funeral was kept as simple as poss
ible. The mountain of flowers at the church was later taken to the hospital and to a home for the elderly. I’m sure many were stuffed in garbage bags and thrown away.

  Houari Chihani had his service too. There were many such tributes at the end. They existed for the living, of course, for what could the dead care about such things? Aaron and Harriet arranged for Chihani’s service in early December. They held it in the Unitarian Church, thinking, I expect, that that church would have been the least objectionable to Chihani. Indeed, the room was scarcely more than a social hall. All the members of Inquiries into the Right attended. The students paid for a plaque to be put up in the corridor in the history department at Aurelius College. It gave Chihani’s name and dates and the word Teacher. That was all. After a while, I am sure that people had no idea of its significance.

  Donald Malloy was buried in Homeland Cemetery. His stone was hardly a foot across and very low to the ground. It had his name—D. Malloy—and his dates. Some people didn’t want him buried in Homeland, as if the presence of his body might corrupt their own well-loved dead. I know there were questions raised in the city council meeting. But by then Donald had been buried and to dig up the body and put it elsewhere would have caused unwelcome publicity.

  Dr. Malloy, Ryan Tavich, and Captain Percy went to Donald’s funeral. They were the only ones. Of course, Dr. Malloy kept it as secret as possible. Ryan arranged it with Ralph Belmont, the funeral director, with whom he played basketball on Thursday evenings, or used to play. The vast majority of people didn’t know about the funeral until it was over. And Dr. Malloy had delayed it until December, until after the three girls had been buried, a rainy day with sleet in the afternoon. Nobody wanted the television trucks to reappear. We had had enough of being famous. Not that there wasn’t a little mystery about the funeral. A little puzzle. Malloy’s body had been kept at Belmont’s Funeral Home. Everybody knew it was there. The body had been prepared and Donald’s severed hand lay at his side. The closed coffin was in a cooler, though that probably isn’t the right name. But it had a big chrome door like a refrigerator that you might find in a large restaurant.

  During the first week of December when it came time for Donald’s funeral, Ralph Belmont opened the coffin and saw that the hand was gone. At first he thought he might have made a mistake and he looked through the coffin, but the hand wasn’t there. Then he realized somebody had stolen it. He told Ryan—after all, they were friends—but he didn’t tell Dr. Malloy and hoped that he wouldn’t wish to see his brother’s body. But Allen had no desire to see his brother’s face again. And he probably only went to the funeral out of a sense of duty. But that’s not true. He wanted to see Donald put in the ground and covered with six feet of dirt, in a corner of Homeland far from the three girls. He wanted to see his brother covered up and forgotten.

  Ryan tried to find out what had happened to the hand but he was circumspect. He was afraid to have it generally known that the hand had been stolen. He knew there would be some people who would say that the hand had not been stolen. They would say it had escaped, crept away, using its fingers as little feet. People believe all sorts of foolish things. So Ryan asked a few questions, and when he still couldn’t learn the whereabouts of the hand, he decided to keep silent. Oddly enough, Madame Respighi, before leaving Aurelius, claimed that Donald had been buried without his hand, though no one believed her. She claimed to see Donald’s hand floating in a jar next to other jars. People laughed at her. But she had faith in her visions, or whatever they were. She ignored her critics, shrugged her shoulders, and took the bus to Utica or maybe Syracuse.

  Certainly it was no trouble for someone to steal the hand. The back of the funeral home wasn’t locked, nor was the cooler. Ralph Belmont was always with Franklin and Ryan on Thursday evenings, although they didn’t play basketball again until Ryan’s shoulder got better. The lid of Donald’s coffin hadn’t been screwed in place. Belmont’s wife was far on the other side of the house, and what would a person steal from a funeral home anyway?

  Donald’s face in death was as expressionless as a fat knee. His fine hair was stuck in place. He didn’t appear to be sleeping. He didn’t appear to be waiting. His body was simply a husk, a shell. All the bad thoughts were gone. His church of dead girls had been erased from his brain. I had only to lift the coffin lid, take the hand, put it into a plastic bag, then lower the lid again. Of course, I had a flashlight.

  My collection of biological specimens is now above my desk: my pickled punks. The frogs, the rat, the snake, the eyeballs of cows, the fetal pig, the human fetus with its eyes closed. I don’t show them to my classes anymore. They keep me company in a gloomy way. I wonder what the cow eyeballs ever saw and what the history of the human fetus might have been. Donald Malloy’s left hand is now among them, turning slightly darker in its jar of formaldehyde. It’s in the center, in the place of honor between the fetal pig and the human fetus. For me it’s a reminder of what is always there, of the longings that lie within people, the longings we hide within ourselves. I look up at Donald’s hand swimming in its liquid. I think of it as my private teacher. My own academy. It instructs me. By now the right hand and Donald’s body have rotted away, but the left hand is safe. Though the wrist is ragged, the veins and arteries, the tendons and muscles are all visible, and the bone, of course. Sometimes I’m sorry I can’t show it to my classes; it makes everything so clear. I try to think what those fingers felt and I scare myself: the necks of the three girls, their tenderness.

  Donald Malloy was very particular about his hands. I recall their pinkness when he waited on me at his pharmacy, the neatly pared cuticles, the buffed nails. At times he even wore clear nail polish. Now the fingers point downward, the wrist points up toward the top of the jar. Not many hairs on the back; a few dozen short red ones. The fingers are curled, the knuckles are thick and swollen in the liquid. The thumb extends outward as if planning its own departure. The wrist bone shines. And the nails, how carefully they had been trimmed.

  About the Author

  Stephen Dobyns is the author of more than thirty novels and poetry collections, including The Church of Dead Girls, Cold Dog Soup, Cemetery Nights, and The Burn Palace. Among his many honors are a Melville Cane Award, Pushcart Prizes, a 1983 National Poetry Series prize, and three National Endowment for the Arts fellowships. His novels have been translated into twenty languages, and his poetry has appeared in the Best American Poetry anthology. Dobyns teaches creative writing at Warren Wilson College and has taught at the University of Iowa, Sarah Lawrence College, and Syracuse University.

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