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Brad Culley Mysteries - Janeen Ann O'Connell

 

A Contemporary Mystery Book Series Set In Australia

Brad Culley Mysteries by Janeen Ann O'Connell

Series Excerpt

Ebony Makepeace lay prone on the ambulance stretcher, eyes closed, breathing shallow. A paramedic used scissors to cut open her shirt and her jeans. It annoyed her; the jeans were from an op shop and the only pair she had found that fitted comfortably. Should I be worrying about my clothes? she wondered. How badly am I hurt? As the question was about to form itself into words, a paramedic clamped an oxygen mask onto her face, stifling her attempt to communicate.

‘It’s going to be all right,’ the paramedic soothed while attaching a blood pressure pad to her arm and an oxygen reader to her finger.

‘I don’t believe you,’ Ebony whispered into the oxygen mask. ‘You are frowning and look worried.’ Then darkness swallowed her consciousness.

***

‘Welcome back.’ The woman’s voice startled Ebony, and she turned her head quickly to the side to see who was speaking.

‘It’s okay. You are safe. You’re in Recovery. You’ve had surgery, and the bullet has been removed. No damage to internal organs. Very lucky girl. We’ll take you to your room shortly. The police are waiting to speak to you.’ The woman smiled at Ebony, then turned her attention to someone else.

While the bed was being wheeled out of Recovery and to a room, Ebony tried to focus on what had happened to her. Thoughts and images swirled around in her mind like clothes in a washing machine. She couldn’t pick one item to concentrate on. They all cluttered her head, scrambling for attention. With the bed in place in the room, the equipment designed to monitor her condition plugged in and set up, and the pain meds flowing through the IV, Ebony was left to her imaginings.

It was difficult to keep her eyes open, and when through half-closed lids she saw two people walk in, police detectives by their cocky stance and boring clothes, Ebony feigned sleep. There was nothing to say to the police that they would believe. The ramblings of the man who shot her made little sense; how could she relay them to anyone else?

‘Is she sleeping or drugged?’ the male detective asked his colleague.

‘Let’s see,’ the woman offered. ‘Miss Makepeace, Miss Makepeace. We would like to talk to you.’

Panic seeped into Ebony’s being. She wasn’t a good liar, and the truth was unbelievable. The effort to lie still, to not yell at the police to leave her alone, exhausted her. Ebony gave in to the pain-killing drugs that drip, dripped from the blue square machine next to her into the canula in her hand, and hoped the detectives would take the hint.

***

‘Would you like a sandwich, Ebony? Do you feel well enough to eat something?’

There were four people in her life who spoke her name, and this woman was not one of them. Ebony’s eyes focussed on the nurse who was checking, adjusting, and fussing over the automated drug machine next to Ebony’s bed.

‘Yes, please.’

She thanked the nurse, who placed a sandwich cut into four triangles on the tray alongside her, and raised the back of the bed so she was sitting up enough to eat.

‘You’re welcome, dear. The bell is right next to your hand. Press it if you need anything.’

With her right hand, Ebony reached out for the plate with the sandwich on it. She wasn’t hungry, but had agreed to eat, thinking she might need her strength. The ham, cheese, and tomato sandwich stayed uneaten on the plate. Ebony had been a vegetarian all her adult life and was not about to eat a sandwich with ham in it for any reason.

Putting her head back on the pillow, she tried to work through the events that had led to this moment.

***

The café, usually quiet on a Tuesday morning, had brimmed with chatter coming from groups of people ensconced on the benches, arms around each other or spread on the tables. It annoyed her. Why couldn’t they find another café? She came to this one because it was quiet from Monday to Thursday. Even the music had changed. The speakers in the corners, hanging precariously from the ceiling on little hooks, whispered gentle melodies on other days— great music to have in the background while she wrote. Today’s music was straight from a mainstream, cookie cutter radio station.

Standing for a moment, Ebony grappled with the thought of leaving and finding another place.

‘Good morning. Let me show you to a table.’ The waitress with the ivory skin, coal black hair, and deep green eyes led Ebony to a small table in the far corner of the café. ‘There are only two chairs,’ she said as she handed Ebony the menu. ‘Put your coat on the back of that one so you’ll be left alone.’

‘Why is it so busy today?’

‘University students passing through on the way to a conference of some sort.’ The waitress pulled a pen and notepad out of her apron pocket. ‘The boss is pleased. Even if we are not.’

‘I’m not pleased,’ added Ebony. ‘I come here because it’s quiet.’

‘Ignore them and concentrate on your writing. They’ll leave soon enough.’

Ebony thanked the girl, who must’ve been in her early twenties, and ordered a cheese toasty and flat white.

She’d finished her toasty and the last dregs of the flat white pooled in the bottom of the coffee cup, when the man ignored her coat and sat on the chair opposite. The fake tan on his face and hands was a shade too dark for his complexion, and the light brown beard speckled with grey covering his cheeks and chin needed a trim. Is it real?

He wore casual clothes that looked tailor made, and his expensive brand name sports shoes had the “just out of the box” look. She glared at him when he spoke, hissed in his face that he had no right to bother her and to go away. He didn’t go away. What was he talking about that she had pissed off someone important? Why did he have to shoot her?

***

Ebony had a restless night. The events of Tuesday morning, the pain in her side from the surgery, and the fear of “why me” played with her psyche, daring sleep to envelop her. With her eyes closed, going over the events in the café again, trying to recall every little detail, she did not hear the detectives come in.

‘Miss Makepeace,’ a female voice shrilled. ‘We must speak with you.’

Ebony was used to working out problems in her head, but most of the ones she grappled with were fictitious, part of her story writing process. Should she acknowledge them and answer their questions vaguely? Or should she ignore them and pretend to sleep?

She opted for the answer behind box number one—knowing they would keep coming back until she spoke to them. Ebony opened her eyes slowly, as if she were waking from a long sleep.

‘Who are you?’

‘Hello Miss Makepeace. I am Detective Sanderson, and this is Detective Tomy,’ the officer said, waving to the woman standing at the end of the bed. ‘Her name is pronounced toe me for future refence.’ He smirked at the woman. ‘We want to chat about the shooting.’

‘All right,’ Ebony said. She did not need to sound feeble or vulnerable. Her voice was raspy and her throat sore. The breathing tube from the anaesthetic, she acknowledged to herself.

With the forced smile of someone who had been told to be more affable, Detective Sanderson began. ‘Who shot you?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘Had you seen him before?’

‘No. How do you know it was a him?’ Ebony added for dramatic effect.

‘The closed-circuit camera footage,’ Detective Tomy said.

Ebony nodded. She remembered the shooter telling her about the camera.

‘Why would anyone want to shoot you?’ Detective Tomy had a pen poised over an open notebook.

‘I don’t know. I don’t know who it was. I don’t know why he shot me. I was writing, minding my own business like I do every time I go to the café.’ Ebony raised her raspy voice, deliberately adding anxiety to its timbre. As if on cue, a nurse came into the room and suggested the detectives come back another day.

Detective Tomy frowned at Ebony and let a drip of malice seep from the side of her mouth. Ebony shivered.

‘Have a rest, Ebony,’ the nurse said. ‘I’ll come back soon and help you into the shower. You’ll feel better.’

***

Dinner was a plate of sausages, mashed potatoes, pumpkin, and peas, smothered with what Ebony assumed was gravy. She wasn’t hungry until the smell reached her nostrils. ‘But I am still not hungry enough to eat sausages,’ she mumbled while moving them to one side of the plate with the fork. She ate most of the vegetables, pushed the tray away, and put her head back on the pillow. Ebony started planning her escape.

He snuck in like the detectives had. She hadn’t heard him and didn’t know he was there until he cleared his throat.

Startled, Ebony pulled the covers over herself and demanded to know who he was.

‘It must be a good disguise if you don’t recognise me,’ Café Man said. ‘Or are you still woozy from the drugs?’

‘Both,’ Ebony snarled through gritted teeth. Her heart raced with the panic that he’d come to finish her off, and she fumbled around for the button to call the nurse.

‘I’ve moved that out of your reach. Time to kick up the plan to the next stage,’ he said as he took a syringe out of his pocket and moved towards the IV line that led to the canula in Ebony’s hand.

‘Stop!’ she tried to yell as the world disappeared around her.

Café Man melted into the hallway as the monitors attached to Ebony squealed with the alarm that she was dead.

After fruitless attempts to revive her, Ebony was covered with a sheet and moved to the hospital morgue.

Café Man, disguised as a morgue attendant, helped with the moving of Ebony’s body into the refrigerated locker allocated to her. Paperwork signed, Café Man waited anxiously for the room to empty. Ebony would have to be revived in the next few minutes.

Sliding her out of the locker, Café Man took Ebony’s arm out from under the sheet and pressed a syringe into her skin.

She took longer to arouse than he was led to believe, and panic—panic that he had not felt since his father called him after he had “killed” his brother—coursed through his heart.

As Ebony’s eyes focussed, her body shook and her teeth chattered.

‘Why am I so cold?’ she asked whoever was there.

‘Shock,’ said a voice she knew.

Ebony sat up. It took a few moments for her to realise where she was. ‘What have you done?’ The terror Ebony felt in her gut made its way out into the world.

‘Saved your life by killing you. I’ve filled in the paperwork.’

‘What? What are you talking about? I don’t understand. Why am I here? How will this all pan out when they realise there is no body?’

Ebony still shivered.

Am I cold, terrified, or both?

‘There will be a body. I will fill in the gaps later. Get dressed. I took the liberty of getting some clothes from your apartment.’

While she was trying to process the events that led to her being on a slab in the morgue, the comment that infuriated her the most, was the one about him being in her apartment.

‘How did you get into my apartment? Who do you think you are?’

‘I’ve told you. I am your saviour. Now get dressed.’

Café Man turned around to give Ebony some privacy. ‘Let me know if you need any help,’ he said to the door.

‘Not likely.’

Hands shaking, Ebony managed to put on her undies by leaning against the table her body had been on. She struggled with the tracksuit pants but was grateful Café Man hadn’t brought jeans. She couldn’t put on her socks, so she slipped her feet into her runners without them. She asked Café Man to do up the laces.

‘I thought you said not likely,’ he mocked while tying them.

He handed her a bag and told her to look inside. There was a brunette wig, sunglasses, and liquid foundation in a tube.

‘What’s with the makeup?’

‘Your skin is naturally pale, and you look even paler now. That will put some colour in your face. I’ll wait while you put it on. The bathroom is over in the corner.’

‘You are going to a lot of trouble,’ Ebony said while Café Man opened the morgue door and led her into the hallway. ‘Why?’

‘Am I? I shot you. I was told to kill you. I chose not to.’

Ebony moved slowly down the hallway to the elevator, wondering how she was going to get out of the hospital without raising suspicion. Even with the disguise, she knew she looked like a patient. But what troubled her most about her situation was not her condition. It was that she sub-consciously, or otherwise, had followed the lead of the man who had shot her.

As if he’d read her thoughts, Café Man said, ‘We’ll get out on level three. You will sit on a seat near the elevator, and I will get a wheelchair.’

Relief swept over Ebony like waves lapping the shore.

 

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