up.
“Well,” said James, “I suppose that’s the principal difficulty of running a cemetery with volunteers. You can’t exactly tell people they can’t go on holiday because you’ll be left short of guides.”
“No,” said Jessica. “But I do wish they would all make the cemetery a priority-”
“They do, you know,” said Robert. “They drive in from all over, week after week.”
“Yes, I know. I’m just exhausted, that’s all. It was a terribly long day.”
Robert stretched his legs. “On the upside, if I did four tours every day I might get a little fitter.”
“You do look as though you’ve been left indoors a bit too long.” Jessica scrutinised him. “You ought to get more vitamin D. You always seem tired.”
“Maybe I should buy a laptop. I could sit in the Meadow amid the graves and write in the sunshine.
Jessica smiled. “How very Romantic. That would make a lovely advertisement for laptops.”
“How is the thesis coming along?” asked James.
“Reasonably well. I’ve been slightly distracted lately.”
“Don’t you have a deadline? I thought your thesis committee was getting restive,” James said.
“The problem is, the more I research, the more there is that ought to go into it. Sometimes I think my dissertation is going to be the size of Highgate Cemetery itself, grave by grave, year by year, every blade of grass, every fern-”
“But Robert, there’s no need for that!” Jessica startled him, she sounded so urgent. “We need you to write what happened, and why it is significant-you don’t have to completely re-create the place on paper. You’re a historian-history has to pick and choose.”
“I know. I will. But it’s hard to stop gathering material.”
Jessica pressed her lips together and looked away. James said, “Can we help in any way? How long is your manuscript?”
Robert hesitated before he replied. “One thousand, four hundred and thirty-two pages.”
James said, “That’s marvellous, then it’s merely a matter of winnowing it down.”
“No,” said Robert. “Because I’m only up to the First World War.”
“Oh,” said James. Robert looked at Jessica. She was gazing out at her garden, trying to restrain herself.
“The cemetery has many histories,” Robert told them, “not just one. There’s the social and religious and public-health aspects. There are the biographies of the people buried there-the rise and fall of the London Cemetery Company. There’s the vandalism and then the coming together of the Friends and all the work that has been done since then. All these things have to fit together. Then there are the supernatural things that people claim-”
“Surely you aren’t putting all that rubbish in!” Jessica sat up and turned to him.
“Not as fact. But it is a part of the modern historical record-”
“A very distasteful part.”
“A small part. But all that craziness was the catalyst for forming the Friends. And I don’t want to censor events just because we don’t approve of them.”
Jessica sighed. “But ‘history is written by the victors.’ And in the Battle for Highgate Cemetery the Friends are most certainly the victors. So we ought to have some say in our history.”
Robert had misplaced the reference; he thought that she was quoting Michel Foucault. He struggled for a moment with the cognitive dissonance of that, until James kindly said, “Winston Churchill.”
“Oh, right,” said Robert.
The Bateses exchanged glances but didn’t say anything. Robert realised that he wasn’t sure what he wanted to say.
“The digitisation project,” he said finally. “And cleaning the graves so the inscriptions can be read. And George in his workshop, carving the names onto new gravestones…”
“Yes?” said James.
“Why do we do it?” asked Robert.
“For the families,” said Jessica. “The dead don’t know the difference.”
“And for the historians,” James added with a smile.
“But what if the dead did know?” Robert asked. “What if they’re all there, or somewhere…?”
“Well…” Jessica sat looking at him.
Robert looked at his lap. James said, “Is everything all right with the twins? Stop us if we’re prying, but we did rather think you had turned the corner…” Robert looked up to find both Bateses peering at him with worried frowns.
“The twins are coming undone. If I understand correctly, Valen-tina wants to leave Julia, and Julia wants Valentina to break things off with me. But that’s not actually the problem.”
He was aware of a resistance to telling them; he didn’t want them to think badly of him and he knew he would not be believed.
“I’ve come to believe that there is some sort of existence after death,” Robert said. “I think it’s possible for people to hang around…or to get stuck, somehow…” He took a breath. “I’ve been talking to Elspeth. She’s in her flat and can’t leave.”
“Oh, Robert.” Jessica sounded terribly sad. He knew it was sadness for him, sadness that he was losing his mind, not sadness at Elspeth’s plight.
Robert said, “The twins talk to her too.”
“Hmm,” said James. “Would she talk to us, do you think? How do you communicate with her?”
“Automatic writing, and Ouija board when we get tired. She’s very cold, so it’s hard to do the writing for very long.”
“Can you see her?”
“Valentina can see her. Julia and I can’t, I don’t know why.”
Jessica said, “It doesn’t seem to be having a very salutary effect on you.” She looked as if she wanted to say a great deal more.
“No. It doesn’t.”
“Perhaps we should send you on holiday,” she said. “A change of scenery might help. And some vitamins. Perhaps the cemetery isn’t quite what you need just now.”
“More whisky?” asked James.
“Yes, please.” Later Robert wondered if they’d all had more whisky than they should have. He held out his glass. James added a little water and a generous pour from the bottle. “But Elspeth isn’t in the cemetery. I’ve never encountered anything in the cemetery except foxes and tourists and the occasional work party.”
“That’s good,” said James. “I’d hate to think of everyone stuck out there in all weathers. Though it seems to me that the afterlife might be a bit dull if it consists of lounging about the house for all eternity with nothing to do.”
“Apparently it started out that way. But lately she’s been quite-active. Yesterday I watched Valentina playing backgammon with Elspeth. Elspeth won.”
Jessica shook her head. “Granting that what you tell us is true, and understand, please, that I find it
Robert shrugged.
“It seems to put you in a difficult position,” James said. “This situation never works out very well for the man.” Robert thought,
“ ‘Pomegranate Seed,’” supplied Jessica.
“Thank you, yes. The lovers and husbands all end badly.”
“I asked her to kill me, so I could be with her. She refused.”
“I should hope so!” said Jessica, aghast.
“This won’t do,” said James. “Let us help you. We’ll
“Who will run the cemetery?” asked Robert, smiling.
“Who
“Let’s go somewhere warm and sunny,” said James. The evening was becoming overcast. He felt tired, and the thought of travelling farther than Highgate High Street made his back ache. He held out his glass, and Jessica refilled it.