Read Dead Men Don't Order Flake Online
Authors: Sue Williams
My phone rang.
I picked it up. âRusty Bore Takeaway.'
âS'that Cass Tuplin?' A male voice, a little slurred.
âSpeaking. How can I help?'
âYou're Cass Tuplin, the detective?'
âErr.' I'm not actually a private detective, not officially. But that's not how most of Rusty Bore sees it. Ever since Edna's snowdropping case I'm this big-time private eye, apparently. Edna's problem didn't exactly require the services of a mastermind: a swift search through her spare room chest of drawers did the trick. Still, you have to appreciate the loyalty.
Of course, my status as a celebrated yet non-licensed investigator doesn't entirely suit Dean. Dean's my eldest. Senior Constable Dean Tuplin. Was an acting sergeant for
an encouraging moment there, but it didn't quite work out.
âMy name's Gary Kellett,' the man said.
Not a Rusty Bore resident, but his name seemed somehow familiar; possibly not a good thing. âEdna Rawlins gave me your number.'
Ah. One of Edna's hopeless cases. This'd be about a lost pet, iffy ferret dealer or non-existent knicker nicker.
âWhat is it you're wanting, Gary?'
âCan we discuss it in pershon? I'm in Muddy Soak.' Definitely slurred. He'd had a drink, maybe. Or a stroke.
Muddy Soak's a two-hour drive away. Bit far for the hopeless-case-comfort-chat. âHow about we meet in Hustle?' I said.
âYepâ¦I could do nine o'clock tomorrow.'
âRight. Slick Café, 9am.'
I got on the blower to Edna who answered after one ring.
âWhy do I recognise the name Gary Kellett, Edna?' I shouted. Edna's hearing's not the best.
âBank manager in Muddy Soak,' she shouted back. âWell, ex-manager, to be precise. Liberated from his employment about a month ago.'
Gary's gentle, slurred voice wasn't what I'd have expected of a bank manager. Not the kind of voice for announcing mass staff redundancies or telling farmers how much he regrets foreclosing on them. Maybe the bank got rid of him due to a substandard capacity for brutality.
âNice fella,' she said. âAnd seen more than his fair share of tragedy. On his own, like you. And he's not gay, not even bi. At least that's what he said when I asked him. They don't always like to tell you, of course, not straight off.'
âEdnaâ¦'
âAnyway, he's got a lovely smile. And all his hairâgood going for a fella who's past fifty. I know, I know, he's a bit older than you. But you can't have everything, not at your age.'
I tried not to bristle. I'm not quite a geriatric: I'm forty-six. In my prime. A bit of a solitary type of prime, unfortunately, since Piero died three years ago.
Mum, just be thankful you're alive. Plenty of people your age already dead.
Dean likes to tell me that, with that depressing downward slant to his mouth.
You can count on Dean to boost the spirits with one of his little pep talks. Anyway, he doesn't need to worry about losing me, assuming that's what he means. I'm still here, fit and well, enduring the full range of life's pleasures: paying my bills, frying fish, investigating Edna's drawers. It's possible it would be a more cheery experience to have someone to share it with. Someone a little likeâ¦Leo.
No, I knew better than to go there again.
âWhat exactly are you up to, Edna?' I shouted. I hoped this wasn't an attempt to set me up with the bloke.
âNo need to shout. I'm not bloody deaf,' she snapped. âAnd I'm not
up to
anything. Gary Kellett needs help. And so would you, if you thought your daughter had been murdered.'
âMurdered?'
âI wish people wouldn't repeat everything I say, like they think I'm an imbecile. Yes, he says Natalie was murdered.'
I sat still a moment. Natalie Kellett. That's why I knew the name: Natalie Kellett died in that car crash on Jensen Corner. It's a renowned black spot; my own mother died there when I was a kid. Named after the
first person that crashed and died there: Alistair Jensen, back in 1950-something, decades before my mum. Nice for the bloke to be remembered for something, I suppose. It doesn't seem to matter how many accidents happen there, apparently there's no money to fix that bit of road.
âBut that was just a car accident, wasn't it? Why's he say she was murdered?'
âWell, I don't know. I'm not one to poke around in people's business. That's your job, Cass.'
2
I woke, sweaty, my heart hammering. That dream again: I'm trapped. Somewhere small and dark. The smell of vomit and old sweat. I can't breathe. I scrabble with my fingernails, trying to claw my way out, but the walls close in on me.
I lay in bed a moment, aiming to get my breathing back to normal. I should probably see someone about that dreamâget myself analysed. At least it'd give everyone something new to talk about.
Heard the latest? Cass is off her head
.
I got up; peered out my bedroom window. The sky was slashed with the lace ribbon of a jet trail. I live behind the shop: it's just me. It's been more noticeably just me since Brad moved out to study eco-bio-whatsit at uni. Brad's my youngest. It's dispiriting the way you bring up your offspring to be independent and then they go and actually be it, miles away. The last time
Brad came home for a weekend was aeons ago.
After a quick breakfast, I phoned Claire and lined her up to mind the shop, then headed out to my car.
My sky-blue Toyota Corolla, might, like myself, be past its heyday, but it too is still a goer. I drove through town, past the closed hardware shop, its dusty windows covered in graffiti. Past the old town hall, our own leaning tower of Pisa, propped up along one side with steel girders.
It was in the town hall, in its better days, that I first met Piero. A Saturday-night disco, way back. Him in his green Miller shirt, me in a silky white dress and long pearls from the op shop. It could be said I was slightly on the rebound that night. Leo and I had just split up, after Ernie had given me a little briefing on Leo's extracurricular activities.
I was seventeen, blue eye-shadowed and red-lipsticked and more than ready to get Leo out of my system.
Piero was tall, dark, handsomeâand there, importantly. A rebound-one-night-stand that turned into a more permanent arrangement, thanks to his overactive fertility.
I passed the silos and took the turn onto the highway, heading south.
The weathered yellow sign to our town flashed by:
Rusty BoreâOriginal Home of the Mallee Farm Days
. It's our only claim to fame. Pretty sad given that we lost the Farm Days to Hustle back in '91. Ernie reckons we should replace it with a sign that says,
Rusty BoreâNot Dead Yet
.
Acres of wheat stubble drifted by, punctuated by telephone poles. Twenty minutes later I reached the sixty sign outside Hustle, glimpsed my speedo and slowed down. Glanced nervously in my rear-view mirror: you never know where Dean is at any given moment.
Dean's been pretty stressed since his transfer to Muddy Soak. Melissa hates living there and frankly you don't want Melissa unhappy. Maybe that's the reason Dean's thrown himself into the job with so much enthusiasm. Jaywalking fines, for instance. Muddy Soak's only got one set of traffic lights, and Dean likes to hang around there with a little clipboard. He's even fined one of his relatives, as in me. There are times when I wonder who it is in this family Dean thinks he takes after. Not his mother, that's for sure.
I headed past the red-brick post office, the Commonwealth Bank, the newsagent. Hustle has an unwashed look, seemingly indifferent to the several decades that have drifted by since the 1970s. I passed the TV shop, its broken front window ârepaired' with orange cellophane.
I parked and headed into the Slick Café. Marched over the black and white tiles; past the orange booths and the rest of the 1950s fit-out. Laminex-topped tables, jukebox, aluminium milkshake cups, you name it. They stopped short of the smallpox and polio.
Only one customer: a man, sitting at a booth up the back, hunched over a phone. Dark messy hair; unshaven. Wearing a stained grey trench coat. A bit like Columbo, only even scruffier. There was a green overnight bag by his feet.
âGary Kellett?'
He looked up; nodded.
I slid into the booth seat opposite him.
The waitress, Jacinta, swung her freckles and pony tail over to our table. I ordered a strong cup of tea, milk, no sugar.
âI'll have a beer, thanks. Desert lager.' Gary pushed his phone into his pocket.
âErr, we don't serve alcohol at breakfast.'
âI'll be ordering lunch shortly.'
âSorry, kitchen won't be ready for lunch for a couple of hours. Do you a tea?'
He scowled; clenched a hand into a white-knuckled fist on the table.
Jacinta shot back behind the counter and got on with making the tea.
Gary pulled a silver flask out of a trench coat pocket, took a sip, slipped it back.
âSo, ah, what can I do for you, Gary?'
âIt's about Natalie. Her birthday yesterday. She would have been twenty.' He looked down at the table.
âI'm sorry.'
The tea arrived: Gary's in a blue teapot, matching blue cup; mine in pink.
He pulled out his flask and emptied it into his cup, then took a swig.
âI still catch myself expecting to see her, hear her voice.' He put down the cup. âAnyway, you come highly recommended.'
âEdna?'
âYeah. Look, all I want is justice for Natalie. Surely that's not too much to ask?' He didn't wait for an answer. âShe was murdered three months ago. Twenty-eighth of January, to be precise.' He stared down at his cup a moment, then looked back up at me.
âI've got nowhere with the police. Bloody nowhere. If I could just findâ¦something tangible. Something to make them reopen the investigation.'
âGary,' my voice was gentle, âwhy do you think Natalie was murdered?'
There was a crashing sound behind me. I whirled around. Jacinta stood there, a hand at her mouth, smithereens of broken glass around her feet. âI'll just get the broom.' She scuttled off.
âNatalie's car crash wasn't an accident. She was a careful driver. Natalie was always a good girl,' he said.
For God's sake. Why is it always so bloody vital that a girl be good? You never hear anyone say, âOh, she's a bit wild, but girls will be girls, you know,' with a careless little spread-out of the hands and a light, accepting laugh.
Swishing noises from behind me as Jacinta swept up the glass.
I cleared my throat. âNo one can be careful all the time.'
âOf course, I know that. But she was worried, really worried, about something.'
If being worried indicated you were about to be murdered, the citizens of Rusty Bore would have the homicide squad run off their feet.
âAnd she'd stopped talking to me. For weeks, this had gone on. Normally she told me everything.'
He really thought his nineteen-year-old daughter told him everything?
âI'm sure it was somethingâor someoneâat work. Natalie was a journalist at the
Muddy Soak Cultivator
.'
The weekly paper in Muddy Soak. Heavily into heritage, thus the weird title. Makes it sound less like a newspaper and more like a tractor brochure. Owned by the Fitzgerald family and has been for generations.
The thought of the Fitzgeralds never helps me relax.
Breathe, just breathe, I told myself. This won't have anything to do with Glenda.
âShane Millson, the editor, he was up to something. I don't know what, but he was bloody unhelpful when I phoned that night.'
âWhat night?'
âThe night of Natalie's crash. I phoned Millson to find out where she wasâit was late, really late, and Natalie hadn't come home. I knew she had a deadline, but it wouldn't normally keep her as late as that.
âMillson had no idea where Natalie was and didn't care, he told me. I asked him what the hell he meant by that. He just said, “She walked out on the job today.”
â“What do you mean?” I said. It made no sense. Natalie loved that job. Bastard told me he had a deadline and hung up.' Gary took another gulp from his hipflask-charged cup. âI waited a bit longer, hoping she was on her way home. After another hour, I tried calling her friends, but no one knew where she was. Finally, I phoned the police. Reassuring platitudes.'
My phone buzzed. Dean. Well, he'd have to wait a tick. I put it away.
âAnd then I saw a post-it note on the kitchen floor. It must have fallen off the fridge.'
âWhat did it say?'
âThat she'd been called away suddenly for work. She didn't say what about or where.'
âBut hadn't she just walked out on the job?'
âYeah, it didn't make sense.'
âAnd you told Dean, err, the police all this?'
âOf course. I called as soon as I found her note. Got the reassurance routine again. Then, a couple of hours
later, he came to my door, took off his hat and said her car had been found by the roadâ¦' He looked down at the table, blinking.
Jacinta floated by and asked if I'd like another cuppa. I shook my head and she bustled off.
Another buzz from my phone. âSorry, Gary, hang on.'
A text from Dean.
Why aren't you answering? Call me
.
Yes, when I get a bloody minute, Dean. I have a life, you know. I put the phone away.
âMillson said afterwards he had no idea why Natalie had written that note. He hadn't sent her anywhere to do a story. Especially given that she'd chucked in the job.' His voice rose. âBut Natalie would never lie to me. And why the hell would she walk out like that, anyway? That job was everything to her. She worked so hard to get it.'
âMillson say why Natalie resigned?'
âPersonality clash, he said. Well, I know she didn't find him easy to work with. He's a stickler for the old ways. Insisted she learn shorthand, which she wasn't too impressed with. But she'd never
leave
. Not like that. And before you ask, no, she didn't take drugs. And no, she wasn't mentally ill.'