SH03 - Take Out

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by Felicity Young




  Table of Contents

  Table of Contents PRAISE FOR FELICITY YOUNG

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  LIST OF SHORTENED FORMS USED IN THIS NOVEL

  PROLOGUE

  MONDAY: CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  WEDNESDAY: CHAPTER SIX

  THURSDAY: CHAPTER SEVEN

  FRIDAY: CHAPTER EIGHT

  SUNDAY: CHAPTER NINE

  MONDAY: CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  TUESDAY: CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  WEDNESDAY: CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  THURSDAY: CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  FRIDAY: CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  SATURDAY: CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  SUNDAY: CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

  CHAPTER THIRTY

  A FEW MONTHS LATER: CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

  EPILOGUE

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  OTHER STEVIE HOOPER TITLES

  AN EASEFUL DEATH

  HARUM SCARUM

  PRAISE FOR FELICITY YOUNG

  An Easeful Death is a delightful pot pourri of police corruption, injustice, tangled emotions, treachery and misunderstanding—Mary Martin website

  An Easeful Death is bound to keep you up at night—Scoop Magazine

  [An Easeful Death] is tight and well-written—Adelaide Advertiser

  An Easeful Death is an exciting whodunnit page-turner from a talented West Australian writer, and a welcome addition to Australian crime fiction—Western Suburbs Weekly

  Felicity Young is an intriguing new addition to the upper echelons of Australian thriller writing... Harum Scarum is a well-crafted page turner that explores themes that concern every parent—Sun-Herald

  Harum Scarum is an enjoyable read with considerable credibility—Aussiereviews.com

  Harum Scarum is a gripping, chilling thriller. A page turner—www.eurocrime.co.uk

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Felicity Young was born in Hanover, Germany, in 1960 and went to boarding school in the United Kingdom while her parents were posted around the world with the British Army. When her father retired from the army in 1976 the family settled in Perth. Felicity married at nineteen while she was still doing her nursing training and on completion of training had three children in quick succession. Not surprisingly, an arts degree at The University of Western Australia took ten years to complete. In 1990, Felicity and her family moved from the city and established a Suffolk sheep stud on a small farm in Gidgegannup where she studied music, reared orphan kangaroos and started writing.

  Having a brother-in-law who is a retired police superintendent, it was almost inevitable she would turn to crime writing. Felicity Young’s first novel, A Certain Malice, was published in Britain by Crème de la Crime in 2005. An Easeful Death (2007) and Harum Scarum (2008) were published by Fremantle Press. Take Out is her third Stevie Hooper crime novel.

  To Ben, Tom and Pip

  And to Mick, as always, with love

  LIST OF SHORTENED FORMS USED IN THIS NOVEL

  AFP Australian Federal Police

  APB all points bulletin

  CCC Corruption and Crime Commission

  COD cause of death

  DCP Department for Child Protection

  EEG electroencephalogram

  ET tube endotracheal tube

  GBH grievous bodily harm

  ICU intensive care unit

  ID card identity card

  MCIS Major Crash Investigation Squad

  OIC officer in charge

  PDQ paint data query

  RAN Royal Australian Navy

  SCS Serious Crime Squad

  SOCO scene of crimes officer

  UNIFEM United Nations Development Fund for Women

  UWA The University of Western Australia

  WACA Western Australian Cricket Association

  WAPOL Western Australian Police

  Table A

  PROLOGUE

  Mai and the other planters follow the farmer and his ‘mechanical buffalo’ as it chug chugs along, ploughing the ground into soupy mud. They separate the tied bundles of rice seedlings and then plant them individually into the furrows. It is back-breaking work, but neighbour helps neighbour. Soon a carpet of dazzling green will cover the paddies. The rice shoots will grow, the weather will dry the seeds and after the harvest there will be much celebrating in the village.

  Mai thinks of the fun times to come and they are the only things that keep her going. She works alongside her mother and sisters. Her father leaves before the short lunch break. He tells them his back is sore. Mai’s mother says nothing, but Mai knows she will be blushing with shame under the scarf that covers most of her face. With the help of these neighbours their own family paddy was planted several days before.

  They break for lunch, flick the mud from their feet like cats and find a patch of ground a little less soggy than the rest to sit on. Mai’s three younger sisters eat sticky rice and play jacks with the other children on a scrap of timber. Mai rolls her shorts further up her legs and steps into the tepid water of the drainage ditch to hunt for frogs and small fish to add to their evening meal of steamed rice. The liquid movement of a snake glides across the skin of her calf. She stands rigid, like a water bird on one leg, and concentrates on the buffalo on the bank. The buffalo’s ears flick ineffectually at the surrounding halo of flies. Grass shoots are stretched and snapped by his lips and tongue, teeth crush and grind upon the pulp. The scent of his breath sweetens the metallic tang of mud from the surrounding fields. Damp air presses against Mai’s skin. In the dishwater sky, heavy clouds roil. Only when she is sure the snake has gone, does Mai move again and continue with her lunchtime hunting.

  When the day’s planting is finished, Mai and her mother and sisters get a lift in the farmer’s pick-up to their house in the village on the banks of the river Pai. The house is built on stilts to protect it from floods. A colourful assortment of open umbrellas hangs underneath the floor and sways in the weak breeze. Bicycles lie on top of one another under the shelter, chickens perch on rusty handlebars. All around the village, buffalos bellow at the approaching storm.

  A satellite dish on the tin roof makes the roof tilt to one side. Mai’s father says they are a privileged family. No one else in the village has a satellite dish and because of this he is a very big man.

  But there is no noise from the TV tonight. Mai climbs the steps to find her father with the usual can of Singha beer in his hand, sitting on a fruit crate watching an Elvis Presley movie with the sound turned down. A stranger in an embroidered silk dress sits on a crate next to him. She wears dainty red shoes and carries a bag that sparkles like diamonds under the single light globe. The woman must be very rich: the TV doesn’t get turned down for anyone.

  Her mother places her hands together and gives the woman a little bow. Her father hauls himself up from the crate. ‘See this woman, Mai?’ he says. ‘She used to live in a village like ours and came from a poor family too. She went to Bangkok and made lots of money.’

  Mai bows to the woman as her mother has done.

  ‘Would you like to come to Bangkok with me, Mai? Would you like to be rich like me?’ the woman asks in a high fluting voice.

  There is a long silence. Mai’s mother starts to cry. Mai doesn’t understand why. This is the most
exciting thing she has ever heard and she finds herself gulping air like a frog. She is twelve years old and cannot take her eyes off the woman’s diamond purse. She wants so badly to have a purse like that.

  ‘You go with this woman, Mai,’ her father says, ‘and you will never be hungry again. You will have all the jewels and fine clothes a young girl could ever want.’

  Mai glances across the room towards her three younger sisters. The food she has caught in the field today will never fill those hungry bellies. Her own belly begins to growl; perhaps it is the spirits giving her a sign. She lowers her eyes and nods her head to her father.

  He pulls her into his arms. His skin is slick and he smells of smoke and beer. ‘You are a good girl, Mai. You go with this woman. Help yourself and then you can help all of us.’

  Mai knows of girls in other villages who have been visited by beautiful strangers. Their families boast about it, saying how rich the girls have become. Mai realises she must have been very special in her previous life to be chosen as one of the lucky few in this one.

  Her mother hugs her. ‘You will come back to visit?’

  Mai looks to the beautiful stranger for an answer. The stranger nods her head and says ‘yes’ with a solemn promise.

  As Mai is led to the door by the stranger’s small manicured hand, she hears her father say, ‘DVD players are going cheap in the market. I can buy one now.’

  MONDAY: CHAPTER ONE

  The dead cycad might look like a rusty buzz-saw in a pot, Stevie thought, but it was hardly a portent for disaster.

  ‘Have you been inside?’ she asked Skye, who had joined her on the front porch. Stevie’s fingers grazed one of the plant’s leaves. ‘Ouch!’ She pulled away, beads of blood welling along the small cut.

  ‘Tetanus up to date?’ Skye asked.

  Stevie pulled her stinging finger from her mouth. ‘Yes, Nurse Williams.’

  ‘If I’d had the guts to go inside,’ Skye went on, ‘I wouldn’t have bothered calling you, would I?’ She gave a characteristic eye roll that made Stevie smile despite her irritation. ‘Mrs Hardegan’s positive no one’s been home for days. I mean come off it, look at all this.’ She waved her hand at the overflowing letterbox and the rolled newspapers cast about the lawn.

  ‘And the grass needs a mow,’ said Stevie, ‘I can see all that, but why didn’t you just wait for the local cops?’

  ‘I told you,’ said Skye. ‘They never showed. ‘C’mon, you owe me. Let’s get this over with. I’ve still got another three home visits to make and she’s watching.’ Skye tilted her head towards the squat pre-war bungalow next door. Stevie caught a shadow of movement from a window, the snap of venetian blinds. With a resigned sigh she gave the lion-head doorbell three sharp jabs.

  Skye fumbled in the pocket of her uniform for the key Mrs Hardegan had given her and reached for the doorknob. ‘I rang before and got no answer, had a look around the garden, the back shed, looked through the windows—there isn’t anyone about.’

  To their surprise the door opened under her touch.

  They found themselves in a cool front entrance with a high ceiling. A stained-glass skylight shone down on them and a black and white tiled floor chequered its way down the passageway to the left and right. There were plenty of larger mansions in the area, but this Federation-style reproduction was the biggest in the block. Stevie regarded the spacious lounge room ahead. Two modular sofas gripped the walls, the type found in airport lounges or hotel lobbies, not really designed for lounging. Not even a coffee table filled the void between them. The room was bare: there were no paintings, no TV, books or magazines. Stevie had seen display homes that looked more homey.

  ‘Police! Is anyone here?’ she called out, her voice echoing down the passageways.

  No response.

  ‘Nice place,’ Skye mumbled.

  ‘What exactly did the old lady say?’ Stevie asked as they headed down the right hand passage, footsteps scuffing on the gritty tiles.

  ‘Mrs Hardegan said she hasn’t seen the couple for several days, and they always tell her if they’re going away. She likes to keep an eye on things. It gives her something to do.’

  ‘Good neighbour,’ said Stevie, glancing into an open-plan dining room that contained a dusty antique table and no chairs. A picture window, designed to capture rolling farmland or sweeping cityscape, revealed a cramped backyard.

  ‘She said she’d got her son to call the local cops—several times—and they promised they’d look into it, but they haven’t. I tried them too, also with no luck. I reckon the old dear might’ve cried wolf one too many times.’

  ‘So you called me instead.’

  ‘Mrs Hardegan’s recovering from a serious stroke and I don’t want her having another. She’s been getting more and more anxious over this and I can’t see the harm in putting her mind to rest. Besides,’ Skye added with an ironic smile, ‘we were planning on catching up anyway.’

  ‘This isn’t exactly what I had in mind.’ Stevie pulled at her paint-spattered overalls. ‘I was doing the eaves of my house.’

  Skye shrugged. ‘Give a girl a spanner.’

  Stevie thumped on the closed door of what she assumed to be the master bedroom, expecting and receiving no reply. ‘Has Mrs Hardegan told you anything about the couple?’

  ‘Delia and Jon Pavel, early thirties, filthy rich.’

  Stevie opened the door and saw an unmade bed, scattered shoes, dirty carpet. The windows were shut and the room smelt sour.

  ‘Filthy seems to be the operative word,’ she said as she approached the bed. She poked for a moment among the tangle of forget-me-not blue sheets and floral pillows, noting the absence of doona or blankets.

  Skye tugged at an earlobe peppered with empty holes. ‘Stevie, maybe we shouldn’t be doing this…’

  Stevie barely heard her. She was in full cop mode now and it was too late for second thoughts. She indicated an open satin box on the dressing table containing a magpie’s nest of jewellery: gold chains, silver, diamonds and pearls, ‘Look at all this—they obviously haven’t been robbed.’ Nodding to a plasma TV on the wall opposite the bed she said, ‘And that would’ve been easy enough to take.’ A knot formed in the pit of her stomach. Robbery was now the least of her concerns. ‘Wait outside if you like, Skye.’

  ‘No, no, you might need me, I’d better stay.’ A tremolo underscored Skye’s earlier confident tone. A uniformed constable would be a lot more useful than this skinny girl with the dark rings under her eyes, Stevie thought as she flicked her friend an unenthusiastic smile.

  They picked their way around piles of unwashed clothes in the doorway of the ensuite bathroom. Scattered beauty products oozed over the vanity, blobs of dried toothpaste dotted the green marble top. The taps of the claw-foot bath were edged with slime, the tub ringed greasy grey.

  Skye shuddered. ‘Looks like my sister’s bathroom,’ she said as she toed a towel with a white Doc Marten, releasing an invisible cloud of mould into the air.

  ‘What you might expect from a teenager, but not a wealthy couple in their thirties,’ Stevie said.

  A tap dripped a steady pulse into one of the double basins. The basin would have flooded over if the plug had been more securely rammed in the drain. Stevie reached for the faucet and stopped the flow. ‘Their toothbrushes are still there, his shaving stuff, her make-up. Maybe they had toilet bags packed and ready to go?’

  ‘Maybe. I only saw one car in the triple garage.’

  ‘What kind of car?’

  ‘A new Range Rover, very dirty, filled with burger wrappers and junk. Why bother going to the tip when you can carry it around with you?’

  They continued to look around the east wing of the house, taking in the few pieces of expensive but carelessly arranged furniture, the layers of dust and the rippled oriental runners in the passageway. It seemed to Stevie as if the trappings of wealth were of little consequence to these people; things in this household were taken for granted, neglected. They passed a
sweeping wooden staircase. ‘We’ll search downstairs first,’ she said.

  The family room and kitchen were cavernous. Stevie folded her arms and slowly pivoted on her heel. There wasn’t enough furniture to fill the room or muffle their footsteps. There were no curtains on the windows or ornaments on the jarrah fire surround other than a mute carriage clock, hands stopped at 10.15. Possessions tended to give off echoes to Stevie but the few objects in this room told her nothing. All was silent except for the faint humming of the fridge and the popping of blowflies against the windows.

  She ran a finger across a windowsill. The paintwork looked fresh under the dust. ‘Have the Pavels lived here long?’

  ‘Long enough for Mrs Hardegan to get to know them. The house is obviously fairly new, not bad for a reproduction.’ Skye pointed out a row of brass light switches and the tracked ceiling lights. ‘Expensive, too.’

  Stevie’s eyes were drawn to the adjacent kitchen area some metres away. The rancid smell of old food became sharper as she zeroed in on the kitchen table. Laid for two, it held the remains of an unfinished meal—TV dinners by the looks of the empty food packets on the granite bench top. Both plates contained thin slices of drying beef, crusty cauliflower and half nibbled cobs of corn. Flies skated on ponds of solidified gravy splashed across the tray of a baby’s highchair.

  The knot in Stevie’s stomach tightened. ‘ Mary Celeste, ’ she whispered.

  ‘What?’

  Stevie waved her hand. ‘Forget it.’ As she walked she kicked a scattering of shrivelled peas across the floor. A glass of pale liquid teetered on the table’s edge, too close for comfort. She lifted the glass to her nose and sniffed.

  ‘Stale wine,’ she said, sliding the glass into a less precarious position. ‘Looks like this food has been here for several days.’ She pointed to the table. ‘The meal’s only half finished, the chairs are skewiff, as if someone left in a hurry.’

 

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