CHAPTER 1
Half an hour before dawn the unmelodic noise of raucous Kookaburras awoke Greta and she used a corner of a sheet to dab the light patches of perspiration between her breasts and under her chin before she dropped back to sleep in the cloying warmth of subtropical paradise.
Paradise?
The fading blonde ground out a hollow laugh before sleep retook her.
Later the tepid shower water removed the film of sweat from most of Greta's body but a new coating would return like invisible nail polish as the summer sun warming high humidity continued relentlessly. Although a thunderstorm was needed to bring relief Greta was aware she lived under conditions necessary to keep the rainforest happy and the colourful flowers and huge scavenging bird life abundant.
She ate her breakfast in the garden as crimson rosellas infiltrated the tree above her. In the distance she watched Brush Turkeys scrap over food. The canned peaches soaking the mix of untoasted rolled oats, nuts and dried fruit made by her friend Belinda Bell and marketed as BB's Wholesome Muesli was, according to Greta, a breakfast made for Kings and Queens. Consistently breakfast marked one of the highlights of her day.
Greta finished breakfast with a small glass of milk and imagined energy building through her fifty-two year old body. And that was her early morning ritual completed, the rising sun creeping across the lawn.
"Fucking lawn. Ha!" she snorted, thinking it was coming along nicely as a hay field. The ride-on mower was parked uselessly in the small barn; it's motor refused to start despite her efforts at cleaning the spark plug and replacing the battery. She needed her trailer to cart the stupid machine to Cairns for maintenance but someone had borrowed it but whom? She couldn't remember, probably having agreed to the loan after drinking a few gins. God, people who had more than a couple of drinks were so irresponsible. She sighed and said, "Guilty" and knew she only had to start calling her far-flung neighbours and within the hour her trailer would be returned when she called the lazy bastard who owned up to not returning the trailer when finishing with it. Or perhaps the usage would never finish? Well she'd phone people, perhaps tomorrow.
* * *
Greta was returning midmorning from the supermarket in Tully and ahead of her, two miles from her property, was a young and unhappy tourist from Victoria hoping to thumb a lift.
These two seemed destined to meet, a newly divorced guy in need of a beer and a swim in a pool before a good meal and an abandoned woman who's long-term partner has suddenly disappeared.
* * *
Greta drove the white Ute (pickup) fairly slowly, once again thinking of her loss and being seduced regularly by a younger man. There was talk Evan had been taken by a croc (crocodile) but although Greta never voiced it, she knew his disappearance had coincided with the unexpected decision of the McCloud's 24-year old daughter to return to Sydney. So after two months when the police no longer considered Evan Scott's missing person file was 'active' Greta burnt or buried everything of Evan's possessions. At the outset the two police constables investigating had been told several of his favourite personal affects, such as bush knife, camera, razor, photograph album of his family and his beside Bible were no longer in her house. They'd just smiled. Croc killing or roadside murder indeed; the cops knew Evan had done a runner!
Greta saw the guy walking towards town. As was the custom in the district she stopped and said, "Hi, another hot one?"
"Yeah."
"Where are you heading?"
"Next town I suppose."
"That's Tully at least a three-hour walk away."
"Oh crap."
"Are you out of food?"
Standing on the other side of the unsealed road he scuffed a boot, lifting dust.
"I see. Jump it and I'll feed you."
"I don't know you."
"Oh what an astonishing conclusion. You're obviously not from around here with that conservative attitude and speech so it's no bloody wonder you don't know me."
"Well you speak roughly with vulgarity."
"And your observations are acute. The question is, to eat to not to eat, to swim in my pool or to continue on your dusty way, tongue hanging out? You are very uncivil but I put that aside because my mother taught me to offer hospitality to anyone appearing in need of it, even bums."
"So I'm a bum?"
"Did I say that?"
The guy let a small grin slip. "You appear to be quite a character. A beer would go down well."
"Toss you backpack into the tray."
"My backpack contains valuables."
"God you are difficult. We are two minutes from my access track. Throw your stuff into the tray and hop in."
Greta stopped to get the mail and quickly checked, as she always did now, for the 'Darling I want to return home' letter from Evan and sniffed when not finding it.
"You must be popular getting all that mail."
"It's mostly bills and leaflets of people attempting to sell me something. Also it's five days since I've been out to check for mail. Any more questions?"
The guy grinned. "I'm Charlie James."
"Hi I won't kiss you because you're not local. I'm Greta Chapman."
Greta drove up the track that wound between trees and rocky outcrops without braking and Charlie said she drove well for a woman. Noticing her grip on the steering wheel tighten he said, "Excuse me, I meant to say you drive well." He noticed the whiteness around the knuckles on the wheel recede.
They came into the acre clearing where the old-style 'Queenslander' squatted.
"Ah, that architecture with character and functionality appropriate for climate. Very nice."
"God you swallowed a dictionary and come from Victoria."
He smiled. "So you think you detect a southern accent?"
"Accent and a conservative streak. No way does it suggest Sydney."
"Oh, look at your lawns. The city lawn mowing service hasn't been I see."
The mechanical engineer from Melbourne noticed the return of white knuckles and said, "I'll cut them for you after lunch."
"The mower's crapped out. But you can help me push the ride-on on to the tray of the Ute. Some bastard has borrowed my much lower trailer and is sitting on it."
"Why would someone borrow a trailer to sit on it?"
"God you're thick. The damn fool borrowed it for a job and didn't return it which is a colloquialism for sitting on it."
"Colloquialism appears to be a big word for you?"
Charlie looked concerned that he'd just said that and then was astonished by Greta's reply, "I'm glad you have a sharp tongue and can be sarcastic. It makes you more interesting that you appear."
"There's the pool β go over and get in. I'll bring out a couple of beers."
"I-I have no swimsuit. It's in my luggage shipped through to Cairns."
"I didn't know luggage went there on coastal shipping."
"By rail, I mean consigned."
"So you thought I wouldn't know what consigned meant?"
Charlie turned brick red.