digging reveals three bodies buried under the first, one next to the other, exactly aligned. Indeed, they look for all the world like infants in a cradle. Sleeping soundly side by side, carefully swaddled against the night air. Charles sits back on his heels. âSo what do we think? Are we assuming itâs a woman?â
The other man considers. âMost likely, in my experience.â
âAnd the same one each time?â
âHard to tell for sure. Could be two of them. The body on the topâs a lot more recent, but the other three are like peas in a pod. Probably all went in together.â
Charles is silent a moment, then shakes his head. âI disagree. The earth hereâs been turned over more than just once or twice. And surely even in this light you can see the difference in the bones.â
Not just the bones, in fact, but the flesh. One babyâs face is smoothed almost doll-like â unnerving the first time, but Charles has seen many times what grave wax can do. The other two underneath are withering one after the other into parched cages of separating bones, their mummified flesh dried in tight leathery tendons, the closed lids stretched paper-thin.
Charles glances up. âWhoever this woman was, she seems to have been trying to give them a decent burial â or the nearest she could manage. This last one looks like it even had a handkerchief or something put over its face â as if she couldnât bear to look at it. And yet she kept coming back â kept reopening the same grave.â
He stares at the open pit, struggling for a word to help make sense of it, and comes up only with âtendernessâ. It jars horribly with the evidence of his own senses â not just the sight of decomposing flesh, but the reek of decay eating into his skin and clothes â but the idea has caught his mind, and it will not go away.
The other man is dismissive; heâs clearly had enough of this wild goose chase. âCome on, itâs no big mystery. Sheâd have needed time, even for a shallow grave, and this is the only part of the cemetery where youâre not much overlooked. Itâs just common sense. Nothing more sinister than that.â
Charles nods; the man has a point â he should have thought of that himself. âAll the same, think about what that actually meant. Imagine digging over the same piece of earth time and time again, knowing full well what you were going to find. What kind of woman could do that? It goes against every idea we have of the sanctity of motherhood.â
The man laughs. âSanctity of motherhood, my arse. I thought they told me youâd been in the police? Most of the women round here have already got too many mouths to feed. Baby farms cost money; a pillow over the face is free gratis, and you know as well as I do that unless theyâre either very careless, or very unlucky, thereâs virtually no chance of getting caught. Iâve lost count of the number of dead babies Iâve seen fished out of the Thames, or found rotting in the street, but I can number the women weâve prosecuted for infanticide on the fingers ofone hand. The courts have better things to do with their time. As have we.â
He turns and waves at Wheeler, beckoning him over.
âCome on,â he calls. âThereâs nothing for us here. Just another routine child-killing.â
Charles sticks the trowel into the ground and stands up, his eyes glinting. âSo if dumping them in the river is so easy, why go to all the trouble of bringing them here? Not to mention the risk. Itâs because this place is consecrated ground â thatâs the only explanation that makes any sense. And that alone means this is a very long way from being just another routine child-killing. â
Thereâs a snort, and Charles looks round to see Wheeler staring down into the gaping grave, a half-eaten apple in his hand.
âJesus,â