Read Forest Ghost Online

Authors: Graham Masterton

Forest Ghost (2 page)

‘What’s the problem, Sal?’ Jack asked Sally. ‘You want a beer, or are you on duty? How about a soda?’

‘No, I don’t want a drink, thanks,’ said Sally. ‘Something terrible’s happened.’ She paused, and took a deep breath, and then she said, ‘Two days ago the local scout troop sent off a party on a camping trip to Michigan. They were supposed to be going for a week.’

‘Yes, sure, I knew about that. One of the kids – Malcolm – he’s really good friends with Sparky. My God – they haven’t had an accident, have they?’

Jack suddenly realized that Sally had tears in her eyes. ‘They’re all dead, Jack. All of them. Sixteen scouts between the ages of eleven and eighteen and seven adult leaders.’

‘Dead?
What?
All
of them? How?’

‘I’ve just been talking to one of the deputies from the Muskegon County Sheriff’s Department. They still can’t work out exactly what happened, or if anybody else was involved, but one thing is absolutely beyond question. They all killed themselves, every one of them. It was a mass suicide.’

‘I can’t believe it. What did they do? Take poison or something?’

Sally shook her head. ‘Some of them cut their own throats, apparently, and some of them slashed their wrists. One of the leaders cut his own stomach open – you know, like hara-kiri.’

‘Jesus. When did this happen? I haven’t seen anything on the news. Not that I ever watch it. Too goddamned busy running
this
madhouse.’

‘One of the reservation forestry workers found them around eleven this morning, when he was out walking his dog. But the CPD didn’t want to release any details to the media until the parents had all been informed.’

‘All of them dead? So Malcolm must have killed himself, too? Malcolm Cusack?’

‘I’m afraid so,’ said Sally. ‘They sent us a complete list of names, so that we could tell the scout troop and the next of kin.’

‘Malcolm was only twelve years old, for Christ’s sake. Skinny little kid; wouldn’t have stepped on an ant. I don’t know how the hell I’m going to break it to Sparky. He’s going to be devastated.’

Jack suddenly felt light-headed. He pulled out a chair and sat down at the nearest table. Sally pulled out another chair and sat beside him. She laid her hand on his wrist and said, ‘Malcolm is the reason I’m here.’

Jack frowned, not understanding what she meant.

‘We’re flying all of the victims’ families to Muskegon first thing tomorrow morning to identify the bodies and visit the location where they died. We thought that it would help to bring them closure. There’s also a possibility that one or two of them might be able to give us some clue as to why they killed themselves. Maybe they all got themselves involved in some kind of online suicide cult.’

‘So where do I fit in?’

‘Corinne Cusack is a single mother, as you probably know.’

‘That’s right. Her husband died about a year ago, didn’t he?’

Sally nodded. ‘Jeff Cusack. Very sudden. Very sad. But they had only just moved here to Edgewater before he passed away, so Corinne doesn’t have any family close by. She hasn’t really had the chance to make many friends yet, either. Well – grieving widows are not exactly the best company. The thing is, Jack, I asked her if there was anybody she would like to go with her to Muskegon – you know, to give her moral support. Of course I’m going there myself, but I won’t have time to give her any one-to-one care. She nominated you, and Sparky.’

‘Corinne Cusack wants me to fly with her to Michigan?’

‘You and Sparky, both. According to her, Sparky was the only friend that Malcolm had. He used to get bullied at school and Sparky was the only one who ever stood up for him.’

Jack said, ‘I would have to take him anyway, if I went. You know that.’

‘Of course,’ said Sally. She waited for a moment, and then she said, ‘So? Do you think you could do it? The CPD will be picking up all of your expenses. You know – flight, and any accommodation if you have to stay overnight. I doubt if it will come to that, though.’

‘I don’t know, Sally. I’m just trying to think what effect it could have on Sparky.’

‘It might be just what he needs, to visit the place where his friend died. It might help him to come to terms with it.’

‘Oh, sure. And on the other hand, it might give him screaming nightmares. It took him nearly six months to get over seeing that dog being run over.’

Sally waited a moment longer and then she stood up. ‘OK, Jack. I can give you some time to think about it. But you would be doing me such a tremendous favor, believe me. Call me later this afternoon, if you can.’

Jack looked at her. In many ways, she reminded him of Agnieszka. A little shorter, a little bigger-breasted. But she had a similar blonde crop and similar high cheekbones, although her mouth was wider and her lipstick was always redder. He wondered if – in another life – they might have been more than just friends. She was a police detective, however, the most hard-boiled woman he had ever met, and he ran a restaurant and liked to paint watercolors in what little spare time he ever had. Their attitude to life was so different that he couldn’t imagine any relationship between them could have lasted.

He checked the antique Polish clock on the opposite wall, with its wearily swinging pendulum. It was twenty minutes of five now, and he had to collect Sparky from school. He didn’t know how he was going to break it to him that Malcolm was dead. He went through to his small office at the back of the restaurant to collect his car keys. In the same drawer there were three Oh Henry chocolate bars which were Sparky’s favorite. It was a ritual that Jack gave him one every day when he came out of school. What was he going to do today? Say, ‘Here’s your candy bar and by the way Malcolm’s killed himself’?

He looked into the kitchen to see how Mikhail was getting along. Mikhail was stripping the leaves from a head of white cabbage, and looked up at Jack as if he would like to be doing something similar to
his
head, instead.

‘I know,’ he said. ‘Slovak recipe. Tomato. Paprika.
Phaugh!

Jack walked out to the narrow yard in back of the restaurant where his black ’98 Camaro was squeezed in between the trashcans and the wall. The space was so tight that he could barely open his door wide enough to climb in. He was halfway in and halfway out when a voice called out, ‘Jack! Jack! Wait up a second! Jack!’

It was Bindy from the bookstore next door. She was small and excitable, with rimless spectacles and wildly curly brown hair and she always reminded Jack of a hyperactive Disney animal. She was wearing a baggy mustard-colored dress and at least five strings of amber beads.

‘Hi, Bindy. Sorry – I’m kind of in a hurry here. I have to pick Sparky up from school.’

‘Oh, OK. I just wanted to tell you that we have Tamara Thorne coming to the store on Wednesday.’

Jack was still uncomfortably jammed in the half-open door of his car. ‘Tamara Thorne? Is that somebody I should know?’

‘Tamara
Thorne
, Jack! The medium! She wrote
How to Talk to the Loved Ones You’ve Lost
.’

‘Oh, yes. You gave me a copy, didn’t you?’

‘That’s right. You can bring it along and she’ll sign it for you. But the main thing is, she’s going to be holding a séance. She’s going to try to get in touch with people who have passed beyond.’

‘Bindy, I’m really pushed for time here. I’ll come in and talk to you about it later, OK?’

‘OK, Jack. Just thought that you’d like to know. Maybe you’d like to try and contact Aggie.’

Jack didn’t say anything, but gave Bindy a fixed grin and forced himself down into the driver’s seat. Bindy gave him a little wave and went hurrying back to her bookstore. Jack adjusted his rear-view mirror and looked at himself. The last thing he wanted to think about right now was getting in touch with the dead.

Von Steuben High School, 5039 North Kimball Avenue, Chicago

J
ack parked outside the school’s front entrance. It was unusual for Sparky to be late: he was usually standing on the sidewalk, patiently waiting.

Nearly five minutes went by, during which time Jack kept a sharp lookout for parking attendants. Chicago’s parking attendants were notorious for slapping tickets on anything on wheels, even if a meter still had time left to run, or it was two minutes after nine p.m. Eventually, Sparky came down the steps of the red-brick building on his own, carrying in his arms a celestial globe, or what looked like a celestial globe. He was frowning, for some reason. He was blond-haired, like his mother had been, and he always looked pale, even when Jack had taken him on vacation to Florida and he had spent all day in the sun. He was wearing a maroon T-shirt and flappy brown cargo pants, and his shoelaces were undone.

He opened the door, folded the passenger seat forward, and carefully stowed his celestial globe in the back.

‘What’s that?’ Jack asked him, as he climbed into the car and closed the door.

‘It’s an astrological globe,’ said Sparky, pronouncing his words very clearly, as if he were talking to somebody of limited intelligence. ‘Mrs Hausmann said I could borrow it for the weekend, so long as I drew her star chart for her.’

‘That’s what it does, then?’ asked Jack, as he pulled away from the curb and headed back up North Kimball Avenue. ‘Tells fortunes?’

‘It helps an astrologer to work out which astrological houses are going to be affected by which planets, and when.’

‘Oh. I see. That’s cool.’

‘Yes. Mrs Hausmann said I could borrow it because she’s never come across anybody who can accurately tell fortunes like I can.’

‘Well, it’s just a talent you have. I never believed in it myself until you started doing it.’

Jack turned right at the Shell gas station into West Foster Avenue.

‘Apart from that, how was your day?’ he asked Sparky. He knew exactly what Sparky was going to say next, and he was trying to put it off.

‘It was OK. We had Mr Kaminski for algebra and that was OK. I had a cheeseburger for lunch and that was OK. I took out the tomato.’

‘You and Mikhail ought to get together. He hates tomatoes, too. He says they’re Slovak.’

‘Actually they first came from South America. The first people to eat them were the Aztecs.’

‘Oh, right. The Aztecs, huh?’

‘Yes. They called them
xitomatl
.’ A pause, then, ‘Dad … where’s my Oh Henry bar?’

‘I’m sorry, Sparks. I guess I forgot to bring it.’

They were crossing the north channel of the Chicago River, and the afternoon sunlight momentarily flashed from the surface of the water on to Sparky’s face, bleaching his skin so that it looked even whiter, and making his hair shine in fine gold filaments.

‘You
never
forget to bring it. You always give it to me when we go past Jimmy John’s.’

‘I know. But I was in kind of a hurry today. I forgot it.’

Jack glanced across at Sparky and saw that Sparky was staring at him with those stonewashed blue eyes as if he didn’t believe him for a moment.

Sparky said, ‘It’s happened, hasn’t it?’

‘What? What are you talking about? I forgot your candy bar, that’s all. I’m sorry. You can have it as soon as we get home.’

‘It’s Malcolm, isn’t it?’

‘Malcolm? What about him?’

‘He’s dead. That’s why you didn’t bring me my Oh Henry bar.’

‘Sparky – how can you possibly know that? Malcolm is away on a scout camping trip in Michigan.’

‘I
told
him not to go,’ said Sparky, clenching his fist and beating on his knee for emphasis. ‘I told him and I told him and I told him and he still wouldn’t listen.’

Jack reached across and laid his hand on Sparky’s skinny arm.

‘He
is
dead, isn’t he?’ said Sparky.

‘Yes, he is. I don’t know how the heck you knew about it, but yes.’

Sparky’s eyes suddenly filled with tears, and he shook his head from side to side in grief and frustration. ‘I
told
him not to go. I could see it in his stars. All the signs pointed to it. I even drew his chart for him, and I showed it to him.’

‘I’m really sorry, Sparks. I don’t know what to say to you. You guys were so close.’

Sparky sniffed and wiped his eyes with the back of his hand. ‘He wanted to prove to everybody that he was tough. I told him it didn’t matter what everybody else thought about him. But he said if he went to Owasippe and showed everybody that he could swim and light fires and tie knots and all of that scout stuff, they wouldn’t call him a geek any more.’

‘But you did his star chart for him, and that showed you that he was going to die?’

Sparky nodded, his mouth puckered in misery.

Jack said, ‘I have to tell you that they
all
died, not just Malcolm. The whole troop, fifteen scouts and seven leaders. Sally came round and told me, but it’s probably going to be shown on the news, later.’

‘All of them? I didn’t see that in the stars. Not
all
of them. Only Malcolm. They weren’t murdered, were they? What happened to them? It wasn’t like
Friday the Thirteenth
, was it?’

Jack hesitated, and then he said, quietly, ‘They killed themselves, Sparks. They all committed suicide, including Malcolm. That’s what Sally said, anyhow.’

‘I saw Castor in his chart,’ said Sparky. ‘Castor is a fixed star and that usually means a head or a neck injury which could be serious enough to kill you. The Sun was in Aries, and it was squared by Mars and Saturn. That was almost the same chart that Henry the Second of France was given in the year 1554. Five years later, when he was jousting, a lance went right through the eyehole in his helmet and into his brain.’

Jack glanced at Sparky again. Although his voice sounded flat, tears were still rolling down his cheeks. Jack was used to this apparent contradiction. Sparky always spoke as fluently as somebody twice his age, and with very little emphasis in his voice, almost as if he were reading from a prepared script. But Jack knew how emotional he could be. The first time Sparky had witnessed Malcolm being bullied at school, he had come home trembling with rage and frustration.

Jack said, ‘Malcolm’s mom has asked if we could go with her to Muskegon tomorrow – you and me. She has to identify Malcolm formally and the police are going to take all of the next of kin to the spot where they died. When something like this happens, some people find it pretty hard to get to grips with it, and I guess they think that might help.’

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