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Fatal Undertaking
Fatal Undertaking
Fatal Undertaking
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Fatal Undertaking

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"A tantalizing mystery full of humor and eccentric characters." —Booklist

Funeral director and part-time sheriff Barry Clayton finds Archie Donovan's request absurd until he learns the casket will be the centerpiece of the Jaycees' haunted house, with all proceeds going to the children's hospital.

But when the president of the Jaycees is found murdered in the casket on Halloween, the national press descends to cover the bizarre crime. The case presents no motive and no suspects. Then someone fires a shot at Donovan, and Barry wonders whether the victim in the casket was even the intended target.

Barry's police work and personal life collide as his ex-wife Rachel comes to town hoping to use the case to launch a TV network career. Soon her prying creates a backlash that leaves another body in its wake. Barry must follow a trail of clues to an unexpected destination: a mountainside of Christmas trees. Somewhere behind them lurks a killer. Unmasking him may be a fatal undertaking.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherSourcebooks
Release dateAug 31, 2010
ISBN9781615952588
Fatal Undertaking
Author

Mark de Castrique

Mark de Castrique grew up in the mountains of western North Carolina where many of his novels are set. He's a veteran of the television and film production industry, has served as an adjunct professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte teaching The American Mystery, and he's a frequent speaker and workshop leader. He and his wife, Linda, live in Charlotte, North Carolina. www.markdecastrique.com

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Rating: 3.6250000166666667 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    De Castrique writes of a small town nestled in the North Carolina mountains where the main character works as a funeral director and part time policeman. The combination provides a glimpse at both sides of a murder: the victim and the perpetrator. Rachel, Barry's ex-wife makes an appearance; as well as an old flame of uncle Wayne. The story centers on Christmas tree rustling and the plight of migrant workers. The story is short and could have better character development, as well as setting enhancement, but still a fun read.

Book preview

Fatal Undertaking - Mark de Castrique

Us

Chapter One

You want to borrow a casket?

Archie Donovan leaned forward, his eyes bright and his brain disengaged from any concern that I’d find his request ridiculous. Only the last two weekends in October. Then you’ll get it back as good as new.

But it won’t be new. I got up from my armchair, anxious to move both the conversation and Archie out the door of the funeral home. People don’t buy used caskets.

Archie seemed unperturbed. He pushed his proposition like he pushed his insurance policies, oblivious to any objections. You have my personal guarantee, Barry. And who’s to know? Is it violating some lifetime warranty on the casket? His brow furrowed as he thought about his question. Can you have a lifetime warranty when the owner’s already dead?

For you, I’ll double the lifetime warranty and I’ll even put you in the casket myself.

Archie looked up at me, his eyes wide with surprise. No need to get mad. I thought you’d want to help. Susan said we could count on you.

Susan? The name of my girlfriend got my attention.

The Jaycees are raising money for the children’s wing of the hospital. Don’t you care about sick kids?

Of course I care about sick kids. Ask another stupid question like that and I will get mad. I returned to the chair across from him. Susan hadn’t mentioned anything about the Jaycees’ fundraiser. I wished she’d warned me before Archie’s unannounced visit. He had a knack for punching all my wrong buttons. We’d known each other since grade school, and he was always figuring out an angle, whether it was a scheme for my lunch money or a can’t fail investment in a cemetery.

Susan came up with this idea? I asked.

Archie beamed. I did. What better than a casket in a haunted house?

Maybe he had a point, but when you’d grown up in a funeral home, you were sensitive to jokes about the business. I never forgave Archie for calling me Buryin’ Barry in the third grade, a name that stuck through high school.

The Gainesboro Jaycees were creating a haunted house for Halloween to raise money for charity. Apparently this year the funds were going to the hospital where my girlfriend Susan Miller worked as a surgeon. I could see I was fighting a losing battle.

If you’d join the Jaycees, Barry, you’d know what’s going on in town.

I know enough, more than I want to sometimes.

The secrets of the dead?

Of the living. Remember I’m also a deputy. I got up again. And I’m on duty in an hour.

Archie stood and offered his hand. So, we’ve got a deal?

I’ll check with Fletcher and Uncle Wayne, but, yes, we can probably help.

He pumped my arm. Great.

What are you going to do with the casket?

Someone will be lying in it, and then when people come up close, he’ll sit up real fast and scare the be-jesus out of them. You want to volunteer?

No. And keep where you got the casket a secret.

Archie laughed. Where else would we get it? Wal-Mart? He jabbed me on the shoulder. You kill me, Barry. You really do.

There certainly were times when I wanted to.

***

A full month later I stood at the edge of a cow pasture and watched a line of cars turn off Stag Hollow Road where the blue flashers of my patrol car marked the entrance to the Gainesboro Jaycees’ House of Horror. Orange-vested volunteers waved flashlights to direct vehicles over the bumpy ground and into makeshift parking spaces.

Archie Donovan and his committee had rented the Bradley farmhouse, a piece of real estate that had been on the market for six months without a single offer. The old widow Bradley passed away in early spring and none of her children wanted to move into the home place, a weathered structure that saw its last renovation when Eisenhower sat in the Oval Office.

Sheriff Tommy Lee Wadkins had assigned me Halloween night duties. He knew I had no children to take trick-or-treating and I’d be here anyway since Susan manned the ticket table at the foot of the front porch steps.

The site was about three miles from Gainesboro, not so far that town folk wouldn’t drive out, but removed enough that only a sliver of the waxing moon and the brittle stars lit the clear night sky.

I could see my frosty breath in the beams of the oncoming headlights. On this Friday night, the temperature threatened to dip into the twenties, and I zipped up my uniform jacket to ward off the cold. The sudden chill hadn’t deterred the crowd. I had to give Archie credit. He and his Jaycees would be making a significant contribution to the children’s wing of the hospital. The haunted house had been a tremendous success and tonight’s Halloween crowd promised to break attendance records.

My assignment was to make sure cars, SUVs, and pickup trucks got safely in and out of the pasture. Once in the field, the event’s attendees became the responsibility of the Jaycees. The only other government service on hand was a county ambulance with two EMTs. Their green and white vehicle idled between the house and parking area. Archie said its presence added an ominous touch, the possibility that someone might die of fright. To me, the corny sound effects and weird lights emanating from the house weren’t nearly as scary as navigating through the cow pies hidden in the brown fall grass.

A white Lexus pulled out of line, ignored the exaggerated gestures of the first parking volunteer, and bounced to a halt behind my patrol car. The strobing blue lights of the flasher bar made the emerging driver look like a twitching marionette, jerked to life by invisible strings. I recognized Carl Atkinson, president of the Jaycees and son of Ralph Atkinson, a wealthy businessman who owned the John Deere dealership and acres of apple orchards and Christmas trees, Laurel County’s primary agricultural products.

Carl had been four years ahead of me in school so we hadn’t been close growing up. He had to be nearing the Jaycee age limit of forty. Word on the street said Carl wasn’t as sharp as his daddy and he preferred hard liquor over hard work. Everyone knew the old man kept his only son on a short leash of high expectations and low cash flow. Ralph Atkinson orchestrated opportunities for Carl, like the Jaycees’ presidency, but he demanded results. Carl could be obnoxious and overbearing, but I felt sorry for the guy trapped in the image of his father’s creation.

Barry, can I leave my car here a few minutes? I won’t be staying long and it’ll be easier to get out. He clicked his keyless remote, locking the doors before I could answer. Archie called that they need more small bills for change. Looks like half the county’s here.

How much do you hope to raise? I asked.

We ought to clear five or six thousand dollars. He surveyed the rapidly filling pasture. Archie thinks we’ll take in over a thousand dollars tonight. That’s good because who’s going to come to a haunted house the night after Halloween?

Teenagers, I said.

Carl laughed. Yeah. Any excuse for them to get in a car. I’ll be back soon. He walked toward the farmhouse, chuckling to himself.

Traffic became more congested as those who’d been through the House of Horror tried to leave. I used orange cones from the trunk to create in-and-out lanes and gave the volunteers a quick course on how to route the exiting vehicles. Then I started flares burning one hundred feet out in each direction to warn motorists on Stag Hollow to slow down. Not everyone was going to the haunted house and I especially didn’t want them running over me as I stood in the middle of the road.

Since the Jaycees hoped to attract families, the event was scheduled from seven to ten. At nine forty-five, I moved the cones to block the entrance lane and asked one of the volunteers to tell any late arrivals to return tomorrow. The EMTs gave a wave as they left, and I lit the final set of flares that would burn until everyone had gone.

As I walked back to the patrol car, a voice called, Hey, big guy, want a cup of hot coffee?

Susan Miller stepped close and held out a Styrofoam cup. Her knit pink stocking cap matched her cheeks, and her mahogany-colored hair fell in soft waves that spread over the collar of her tan jacket.

Thank you.

Is that all I get? She flashed a smile that warmed me in a way the coffee never would.

I’m on duty. Then I kissed her lips. Breathalyzer test. Inconclusive. I kissed her again. Sober enough, I guess.

The night is young.

Then I’ll check later. Want to grab a bite to eat?

Maybe. If I get away soon enough. I promised Archie I’d double-check his money count against the ticket sales.

I glanced at the Lexus parked behind me. Carl Atkinson said you ran out of change. He must have been too busy to leave.

Susan shrugged. I haven’t seen Carl for a couple hours. Since he got Archie out of the casket.

Archie was in the casket?

For awhile. He’s such a ham. He said he used his cell phone to call Carl from there.

A casket with a built-in cell phone. Now there’s a marketing opportunity. I took a sip of coffee and stamped my feet to get the blood circulating. I’m done here. Let’s go to the house. I want to talk to Archie about changing the way he parks people.

Susan took my arm as we walked. You working tomorrow?

Yeah, but not for the department. Uncle Wayne and I have the Nolan funeral. Reece will be here.

Even in the dark I could sense Susan rolling her eyes.

Great, she groaned.

Deputy Reece Hutchins lived in a state of perpetual officiousness. I wouldn’t have been surprised if he slept with his badge pinned on his pajamas and a memo pad on his nightstand.

Susan and I found Archie at the ticket table binding stacks of cash with rubber bands and jotting figures on a legal pad.

What a night. The last group just went in. He grinned through a coating of chalk dust on his face that must have been his corpse makeup. We have nearly two thousand dollars.

Does that count the money we used to make change? Susan asked.

Yes. So back out the five hundred that includes what Carl brought and we’re still close to fifteen hundred. Not too shabby for one night.

A group of five teenage boys came around the house from the exit. They were teasing one another. A tall, skinny kid in a Wake Forest University parka seemed to be taking the brunt of the ribbing.

You would have jumped just as much, he protested.

You boys have fun? Archie asked.

Oh, yeah, they said in unison.

Then a stocky boy elbowed the skinny kid. Especially Ricky. He nearly peed in his pants.

Did not. Ricky looked at the ground, clearly embarrassed.

Archie laughed. What was it? The skeleton in the closet? The blast of cold air up your leg?

The guy in the coffin, Ricky muttered.

Archie looked at me. Told you the casket would be a winner. He turned to the boys. I was in the coffin earlier. Someone screamed every time I sat up.

He didn’t sit up, Ricky said. Didn’t do nothing but play dead. They dared me to tickle him. I jumped when I touched the fake blood. He held up his left hand.

In the harsh glare of the outdoor work lights, I saw bright crimson smears covering his fingers.

If I got some on my new parka, my mom’s gonna kill me.

Archie gasped. I set my coffee on the table and ran up the steps to the house. I could hear Susan right behind me.

The front door went straight into the living room. A sign glowing in the black light proclaimed it The Dying Room. Ghoulish figures sat on the sofa watching a horror film and eating finger food that looked like real fingers. The last tour group was just moving from that tabloid into the hallway. I shoved past them, tripping motion detectors and laser beams that triggered recorded screams, light flashes, and shots of mist in my face.

The previous week I’d delivered the casket to the back bedroom. Dead Room as it was now labeled. No one was inside.

Susan entered behind me.

Close the door, I said. I found the light switch.

The metal casket stood against the far wall. Carl Atkinson’s profile rose above the satin ruffles of the lining. His open eyes stared straight up. I bent over him. The once white fabric of the cushion was soaked in blood. His chest arched up as if trying to escape the flood beneath him. I pressed my fingers against the carotid artery on his neck. Nothing.

Is he dead? Susan asked.

Yes. I grabbed Carl’s body by the shoulders and twisted his torso away from us.

The wooden handle of a Buck knife protruded from between his shoulder blades.

Chapter Two

What a god-damned nightmare. Sheriff Tommy Lee Wadkins stood in the doorway of the bedroom, his hands on his hips and his one eye fixed on Carl Atkinson’s body in the casket. Why don’t we just march the Gainesboro High School band through here?

Why not? I agreed. Susan estimates over two hundred people bought tickets. I’ve asked her and Archie to make a list of everyone they knew who was here.

So, what have we got? He walked the perimeter of the room, looking at the artificial cobwebs dangling from each corner.

I’d reached him at home only twenty minutes earlier. He hadn’t changed into his uniform, but clipped his Sheriff’s badge on his gun belt and arrived in jeans and a brown leather jacket.

Carl was stabbed with a Buck knife, I said. From the size of the handle, I’d say the blade’s close to four inches. Long enough to pierce the heart.

Tommy Lee halted beside me at the casket. What makes you say that?

There’s blood, but the pool underneath him looks more like gravity flow. Not a spew from an artery like the aorta or the bleed-out from a vein. He must have died almost instantly, because no one heard him cry out.

Tommy Lee nodded and then grabbed Carl’s body by the shoulders like I had. He turned it enough to see the knife. How the hell could this happen with no witnesses?

People went through the house in groups of six to ten. One group would get to the back rooms before the next came in. Archie said there might be three to five minutes between them, especially if a group lingered in the front rooms.

How’d they coordinate the timing?

A volunteer at the back door had a walkie-talkie to a volunteer on the front porch. When he saw people come into the back hall, he radioed for a new group to enter.

But he couldn’t see in this room?

No. And he wasn’t doing a head count. Someone could have hung back, approached the casket alone, and stabbed Carl when he sat up.

That was the bit? Tommy Lee asked.

Yes. When Carl heard someone come close, he sat up quickly. Archie said it was like doing sit-ups all night.

Who found the body?

I told him about the teenagers.

Are they still here?

Yes. And all the volunteers. They’re waiting out front.

Good. Tommy Lee stepped away from the casket. Who else have you called?

Doc Clark. Ezra Clark had been coroner of Laurel County for nearly thirty years and would need to sign off before we moved the body. And I called to see if we could get the Buncombe County Mobile Crime Lab. Buncombe County, where Asheville was located, had more sophisticated technical resources. I also knew Tommy Lee would probably want Carl’s body sent to the medical examiner in Asheville for a thorough report.

And Reece? Tommy Lee asked.

He’s on his way.

I’m here. Reece burst into the room like the hall behind him was on fire. He’d changed into his uniform, although his collar was twisted and one of the buttons under his unzipped jacket was missing.

Deputy Reece Hutchins and I worked under an uneasy truce. My father’s Alzheimer’s had brought me back to the mountains of western North Carolina, and I’d sacrificed my police career and my marriage to keep Clayton and Clayton Funeral Directors in business. After Dad died last year, I sold a half interest to a new partner, Fletcher Shaw, and returned to my first love—law enforcement.

I’d only partially returned. Sheriff Tommy Lee Wadkins offered me a part-time deputy position in his department and he counted on me for investigative assistance, a role Reece coveted but for which he had no aptitude. Instead, Tommy Lee gave Reece administrative responsibilities that took advantage of his fastidious, bureaucratic mentality. I knew that Reece and I would never be Best Friends Forever, but I appreciated what he did and I believed I’d earned his grudging respect.

I called in Wakefield, Carson, and Shelton, Reece said. They’re probably ten minutes behind me. Reece looked from Tommy Lee to the casket. His face paled. Sweet Jesus, murdered in a coffin.

Yeah, Tommy Lee said. The media will love it. We need to move fast before the circus begins. Reece, get statements from all the volunteers. Have the other deputies assist you. Ask if they saw someone suspicious. Maybe someone went through the house alone. And find out which volunteers were manning the backdoor and when they were on duty.

Reece nodded vigorously. Got it. He started to leave.

What about Carl sitting up? I asked.

Reece spun around, his eyes wide. You want to prop him up?

We need to know when he stopped sitting up.

Reece just stared at me. I realized he didn’t know the gimmick.

That’s what he did to scare people, I said. We should be able to narrow down the time of the murder if we find the first group that came through and Carl didn’t move.

Good, Tommy Lee said. When Archie and Susan finish the list of attendees, we’ll ask each of them that question. Reece, you’re in charge of organizing those interviews.

Reece smiled. I’m all over it.

But Barry’s in charge of the crime scene and the overall investigation, Tommy Lee added.

Reece’s jaw tensed as the smile faded.

I said nothing. I hadn’t expected to be the officer in charge, but I wasn’t going to argue with Tommy Lee in front of Reece. One thing that might help, I said. Archie had been in the casket earlier. Carl didn’t get here till seven-thirty, but I don’t know when he took over the corpse duties.

Then I’ll ask Archie, Reece said. He looked at Carl’s body. He took over the duties all right.

After Reece left the room, I said, This is a big case. I don’t know if a part-timer’s the right man for the job.

The scar that curved from beneath Tommy Lee’s eye patch to the corner of his mouth twitched as he pursed his lips. For a few seconds he didn’t say anything. The sheriff was tough as nails. He lost his eye and half his face in Vietnam as he led his ambushed platoon to safety. He’d been a good friend to my father, and I considered him my best friend. But he was stubborn as a mountain goat, and if his mind locked on something, it would take a crowbar to pry it loose. I didn’t want to get in over my head and let him down.

You’re right, Tommy Lee said. What was I thinking? He looked me up and down, an assessment all the more intense coming from just one eye. Then he turned his back to me and walked away. Instead of leaving, he shut the door and locked it.

He turned around. The trace of a smile crossed his lips. What was I thinking? he repeated. That this is a big case. That insights and ideas don’t punch a time clock. That I’d rather have the best brain working half-time than an average brain working time-and-a-half. He sighed and stepped forward. I was thinking how I’ll have to go up to old man Atkinson and tell him his only son died in a coffin. But then assure him my best officer is on the case, a man the whole damn town knows solved the street dance shooting last year.

Tommy Lee stopped directly in front of me. I flashed back to the summer of the previous year when the shooting on Main Street had put Tommy Lee in the hospital and I’d investigated the case.

"And when you called tonight, I dreaded coming

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