Grave Conversation
I want to say a sincere thank you to Shackman636 for his assistance with proof reading. He has taken the time to improve my story with his work and I thank him for that generosity. Any mistakes are mine and I own them, view them as character tics that make me unique and special.
This story was written as a second part to an earlier story, at the same time as the earlier story. The intent was to release it a week after the first part. The first part unfortunately breached the site submission guidelines and was withdrawn before this part was submitted. I won't be rewriting the first part as I am happy it told the story I wanted to.
I revisited this story and with some work it stands alone. As ever, all comments are read, considered, and appreciated. I find it interesting what is written and quite surprising some of the insights I have got from the comments. I hope you enjoy this submission. There is no violence and no sex, so I hope that this time it will be allowed to stand.
Grave Conversation
He didn't need to glance down at the number, he had it memorised. He walked from row to row, head down, searching. It had been a while since he'd last been here. The evening air wasn't cold, it had been a lovely day. It hadn't rained, which makes it a lovely day in England and the temperature had been unseasonably warm. It was Spring and as he walked through the cemetery, he could see crocuses and daffodils. Clover was beginning to show its head. The colours were starting to return after the bleak greys and browns of Winter.
He glanced up and around, there were a couple of people in the boneyard. He wasn't the only one there, he didn't see anything to trouble him and he returned to his search. It took a few minutes but he found her grave. She had been buried next to his father, reunited in death. She'd have liked that. He hadn't known his father's number, just where it was. He smiled to himself as he walked closer. His father had died when he was in his early teens, the family had it tough and he'd missed that male presence in his life. His mother hadn't messed around, she'd grieved and she'd gotten on with life. They bred them slightly different in those days.
They had a good marriage and his early years had been everything he could have wanted. They didn't have much money. No-one in their neighbourhood had money. If you had money you lived in a different neighbourhood. Although now that had all changed. He'd walked around his old stomping grounds earlier. He wasn't worried about being identified, he looked sufficiently different that it would take someone who really knew him to make him. Anyone who knew him that well, wouldn't rat him out. Times and values change but snitching in this part of town; be a brave soul to do that. Especially calling down trouble on a local boy. Especially him.
There was no stone yet, not for his mother. She was too recently passed, too recently buried for a stone to be sited. He wondered who was dealing with that. He was planning to drop in on a couple of old friends and he'd chew that over with them. Make sure there was a suitable memorial for her. She deserved it. She wasn't anyone special. She was just one of the nameless, faceless tide of humanity that came into the world and exited the world without seemingly wrecking any substantial change upon it. She deserved something nice, something that people could see in fifty years' time. Something that would shout out to the world that her life mattered, that the fluke of life wasn't wasted upon her.
He could see that her grave was looked after. She'd been respected in the neighbourhood. People knew she'd had some tough breaks, losing her husband. Later, the death of a grandson; the furore around the end of his marriage. She'd had it harder than most and not complained, not looked for sympathy or special treatment. Just kept going on, kept a kind word for the people she interacted with.
He lay his flowers down carefully amidst the other blooms that were there. None of them looked particularly old, someone was keeping an eye on her grave. He squatted down on his heels. He wanted to say something to her. Find the words, the right words that would let her know that she mattered to him. That the distance between them hadn't diminished his love for her. That he was sorry that things had worked out how they had. He snorted; what words could do that? She was dead. She didn't care, she couldn't care. There were no words that could reach her. The words that he was reaching for were for him, not for her.
He grinned at his neediness and stood up. A faint groan as he stood. He was in good shape but part of becoming middle aged is groaning when you sit or stand. Feeling your body protest at the movement.
'I was wondering how long it would take you. Part of me was surprised you didn't come to the funeral.'
He turned quickly at the sound of her voice.
'Don't worry, I'm alone. There's no-one with me.'
He looked at her, it was the first time he'd seen her in the flesh since just before he'd walked into the villa and begun his vengeance. She looked good. She was a fine-looking woman, always had been. But it looked like her beauty had grown, perhaps where he hadn't seen her for so long. Perhaps she was growing into her looks. Slender, despite the two children she'd birthed. The years had been kind to her. He could see the lines on her face were etched deeper, the skin looked softer. The tightness of youth now fading. But she stood tall and still had the poise, a beauty that stabbed him in his chest when he looked at her.
'Talk to me, Terry.'
He took a deep breath. He could feel his heart hammering in his chest. His throat felt suddenly very dry, his mouth like he'd swallowed ashes.
'You look beautiful Dawn. I'd forgotten just how beautiful.'
It was hard getting the words out. He could feel tears pricking the corner of his eyes as he looked at her.
'Pity my beauty is just skin deep, hey?'
He shrugged.
'You look good from where I'm standing'
'You always did like the way I looked.'
'I did. Standing here. Now, nothing's changed. I still look at you and...' The words caught in his throat. He stopped talking, looking down at the ground, trying to regain his composure. Embarrassed at his weakness.
She walked closer to him.
'I'm sorry, Terry. I knew you loved me. I always knew you loved me.'
She took a hand that was hanging by his side.
'There's a bench over here. Let's sit over there and talk.'
He said nothing as she led him over to the wooden bench and he sat down on it.
'Lovely tree this.' She said. 'A Yew tree. Been around a few years and got some character. Very common in graveyards. You know why, Terry?'
He shook his head. 'They're an old tree. One of the longest living. Your oaks; big, mighty trees. Larger and more majestic than the humble yew last nine hundred years. Three hundred years to grow, three hundred to mature and three hundred to die. That's what they say about oaks. But your yews, they grow slowly. Don't tend to grow as big or dominate the landscape in the same way, but they just keep going. Thousands of years in some cases. They outlast the competition. They take what life throws at them and they endure.'
'Your mum bought me here, she liked to sit here when she came to visit your dad. I got in the habit of coming with her, this last couple or three years. She told me about how they used to plant yews in sacred spaces and because those spaces were protected, the yews could live their full lives without fear of being cut down to make ships or houses or weapons.'
He turned to her with a frown on his face.
'You didn't know? I'm sorry.' She paused, thinking. 'I moved in with her after what happened. We'd always gotten on well. She'd always treat me like a daughter, not a daughter in law. After what happened, I wanted to make things right. I couldn't change what I'd done, but I knew my actions had caused her a lot of pain.'
She looked down at her legs.
'She missed you, Terry. I know you called her when you could. She lived for those calls. One of the things that made her happy. When she heard your voice, I could see her light up. She'd be sad after the call, but she loved hearing your voice. She worried about you all the time. Where you were, what you were doing. Whether you'd get caught.'
'Well, you've got me now. Kind of ironic isn't it. Great fugitive captured visiting his mother's grave. Kind of a cliche.' He could hear the bitterness in his tone.
'I'm not going to call anyone. As far as I'm concerned, you can get up and walk away anytime you like.'
'You didn't ring the bill?'
She shook her head. He saw her trying to say something and look around with frustration as the words didn't come out. He sat, watching her, giving her the space.
'I'm sorry, Terry, so fucking sorry. I... my stupidity, my selfishness, my lack of thought hurt so many people. So, so many people.'
'You weren't the only one who fucked up, Dawn. No-one comes out of this whole fucking mess looking good. You, me, Ruthie, Darius, Marcel, none of us was the good guy. Each of us could have done something different. Each of us had the power to stop it and... I don't know. It's not just on you.'
She was crying. He could see the tears falling and dropping onto her legs. Leaving a wet spot on her slacks. A steady rain of tears. Her shoulders were shaking, not a lot, but he could see the motion. He reached out a hand and put it around her shoulder, scooting over so that they were sat close. She folded herself into him and cried. He put his other arm around her and sat holding her. He could smell the shampoo she'd used to wash her hair. Faint, but the scent still lingered. He could see grey in the roots of her blonde hair.
It took her a few minutes to calm herself down. She tugged a small handkerchief out of her coat sleeve and dabbed her eyes before tucking it back.
'Thank you.'