Read My Island Homicide Online
Authors: Catherine Titasey
Chapter 32
I hadn't even made it to my office on Monday when Jenny rushed up to me.
âShay's in bed. I've just been with her. You've got to come.'
âAnother sick day?'
âYou'll see.'
I followed her, amazed by her now shapely figure. She had taken to wearing police-issue skirts, joking she had a waist for the first time since she was twelve. We reached the single officers' accommodation, a lowset dwelling of three rooms with ensuites, share kitchen and lounge, where Shay and Salome lived. Piles of plates and dishes were at all angles on the sink. Washing covered the laundry floor and the heavy, muffled whir of a dryer reached a crescendo and faded as we walked through the hot, moist exhaust. Jenny stopped at the last door and knocked.
âGo away,' a voice said, cracking.
âYou won't believe this,' whispered Jenny and she turned the knob.
Thick drapes darkened the room. After my eyes adjusted, I made out a figure under the covers. The plastic blonde of Shay's hair shone in the light from the corridor.
âI told you to leave me alone.'
âSweetheart, I am going to help you.' Jenny sat on the edge of the bed. Against the wall was an assortment of fluffy toys: teddy bears, a bird, a donkey. âThea's here. Show her what he did.' It was moments before Shay turned her head and presented a puffed eye. âAnd your arms.' In the dull light, deep purple welts marred the pale flesh of her upper arms.
I wasn't game to open my mouth. I didn't need to be told. Isaac had exploded, perhaps when Shay questioned him about another infidelity. Or Isaac falsely assumed she was cheating on him because she had a conversation with another man.
âWe're gonna help you,' I said.
âI wanna go home. I hate this island. I hate it.' She curled up. âI just want to go home.'
Jenny placed her hand on Shay's back. âThea will help with the transfer, but you have to tell us what happened.'
Sure enough, it was the latter scenario. Shay and Isaac had been at the Railway last night celebrating the footy win. Shay had gone to the bar to buy drinks for herself and Isaac; he was already
bombs
. She was waiting to be served next to one of the male teachers from the high school. They started chatting. Isaac marched over and told her it was time to go. She followed him, not wanting to make him angry. He dragged her across to the beach and laid into her in the darkness.
âHow many times has he done this to you?' asked Jenny.
âOnly a few.'
âLike the time you told us you had drunk too much after you found out he cheated on you?'
âI bet everyone is talking about me. I hate this island. And I hate the fucking men. All they do is drink and beat up their women. Arseholes.'
âSweetie, that's what alcohol does to men everywhere,' said Jenny. âAnd it's not okay.'
âI just want to go home, to the Sunnie Coast.'
âYou need to charge him with assault, Shay,' I said. âThe only way for men to understand they can't do this to women is if the women stand up to them. That means charging him.'
âNo, I just want to leave.'
âI could organise a compassionate transfer,' I said.
âAnd pressing charges will help,' said Jenny.
âWhatever.'
In the end, Jenny took photos of her injuries, Shay signed a complaint alleging Isaac assaulted her, and went to arrange her transfer to the Sunshine Coast.
âMen don't have to beat up on their women to be arseholes,' said Jenny, tossing Shay's signed statement onto my desk.
âWhat do you mean?' I asked. âAre you saying Fred?'
âFred wouldn't lay a hand on me or cheat. But he's a bastard. He wants me to buy all the material for his father's tombstone unveiling. We're talking bolts and bolts of material. I told him to get a second job.' She got to the door and turned. âAnd now he thinks I am too skinny. Can you believe that? But you know, I'm the fool because I keep hoping he'll change. Really, I should just tell him to move out.' She went to leave and turned back again. âYou're lucky to have Jonah.'
Jenny phoned Isaac at work and asked him to come down to the station, which he did. He made full admissions and refused to call the legal service. Isaac knew the legal deal since he had a healthy criminal history of alcohol-fuelled violence against men and women. I attended to the paperwork for Shay's urgent transfer and sent out an email to staff. Salome booked her flight. Shay would leave tomorrow morning.
By then it was 11am and I went to make a coffee. Some officers were huddled in the kitchen.
âPoor Rita,' said Lency.
âI been warning her 'bout the fucker for years,' said Salome.
âWhat a bastard,' said Jenny.
This could mean only one thing: sorry business.
âIs everything all right?'
âNoah Jabiri has taken up with Edie Jensen,' said Lency. âHe's the head of housing. Married with four teenage kids.'
âSelf-appointed big shot, know-it-all,' said Jenny.
I remembered the name. Jabiri. Noah Jabiri. Robby mentioned him. He was one of the first Islanders to study through the TSEEC tuition program.
âThere was a rumour he was having an affair with Edie Jensen, a young Islander girl who came up to work for Queensland Health.' Jack shook his head. â
Em nathakind gathawara, yu sabe
?
She was sleeping around with married men.'
Gathawara
must have meant âslut'. So Edie Jensen the
gathawara
ended up nabbing Noah Jabiri and he moved into her Queensland Health-provided unit, abandoning his wife, Rita, and their children.
âHe reckons Edie's family
maydh
him to be unfaithful,' said Lency. âSo he had to cheat on his wife.'
âIn white culture, it's called a male mid-life crisis,' I said. âThe men usually say things like, “Well, the sex isn't hot like it used to be” or “My wife is always doing things with the kids, she doesn't think about me.” Using
maydh
to justify cheating is quite clever, don't you think?'
âThe first bloke I went out with, boy from Yam Island, he tried that one on me,' said Salome. âSaid his family been
maydh
him to boom that barmaid from the Railway, to get him away from me. Reckon I'm too bossy.'
âWhat did you do?' I asked.
âI
maydh
him with this one.' She held up a fist. âThen I told him to piss off. Met one of Bertie the builder's boys after that.'
âAnd another one,' said Lency. âAnd another one.'
We all laughed except Jack. âNoah's situation, it's not proper
maydh
,' he said. âIt's selfish.'
âJack, I thought you were a big believer of
maydh
,' I said. âRemember Tonny Gava? You said he
maydh
his beautiful girlfriend.'
âYes, but sometimes people claim to have been
maydh
when they haven't and are making excuses. Other times
maydh
is true, like Tonny. Noah's just making excuses.'
âRita will be okay,' said Lency. âShe was fed up with him anyway.'
Blaming sorcery was obviously part of the furniture. I had to accept that. But I didn't have to believe it myself. I made my coffee and settled at my desk. Soon after a short, stocky woman marched in to my office. Lency was behind her, pleading with her to wait in the foyer. My attention shifted to the man behind Lency. He wore a bright floral-print long-sleeved shirt and held an old-fashioned bowler hat with feathers arranged in an intricate pattern on the leather band.
âLala, you need to wait outside,' said Lency, her eyes darting between me and the woman.
Then I recognised the beady black eyes. It was Dave's wife, Leilani. Lala must've been a nickname. âThanks, Lency, I'll handle it.'
âI've come from Cairns for my mother's funeral,' said Leilani. âMy husband is upset he couldn't come. Thanks to you.'
âPlease leave.' Dizziness hit me like I'd stood up too fast, only I was still sitting. âIt's not appropriate that we communicate directly. If you have something to say, say it to your husband's lawyer.'
âYou've made a big mistake, sister.'
âPlease leave now.'
The man was relaxed, looking around the room like he was planning ways to rearrange the furniture. He put the hat down on my desk.
âDave might be in trouble at school, but he's not a killer. You should be very careful,' said Leilani.
I wanted to call out for Jack but I couldn't think clearly. âLeave now before I interpret your words as a threat and have you charged.'
âThe real killer is still out there. You don't understand.'
I stood still, feeling faint. âI appreciate your loyalty to your husband but this matter is out of my hands.'
Leilani reached across the desk and grabbed my right arm, her nails digging into my flesh. I fought a free-falling sensation.
âYou bloody half-caste people. You come up here and think you know everything.
Ossi kole man
, still making decisions for us.' She let go of my arm and walked to the door. âIf you don't drop the charges against my innocent husband, you'll be in big trouble.' She turned and stormed out.
The man reached across and placed his hand on my now sore arm. âI'm so sorry about my friend.' His touch was tender, his voice was calming. âYou must understand this: she is very upset your people have made a terrible mistake. You should have another look at the case against her husband.'
âThank you, but you should leave now.' My voice sounded far away, disconnected from me.
â
Yawo
.'
He picked up his hat and left as Lency rushed in. âAre you all right? Lala's a proper strong head. I couldn't stop her. I tried to call Jack but he's not answering.'
âI'm fine.' My arm was aching badly. âWho's the man?'
âThere he goes,' she said, pointing through the window. He and Leilani were walking to a car parked across the road. âStrange. I've never seen him before.'
Lency left after I assured her I was fine for the tenth time. I lifted the sleeve of my shirt. The four red welts would fade in a day or two. I considered having Leilani charged with assaulting a police officer, but her behaviour seemed petty. Assaults on officers are not uncommon. I'd received my share of thick lips, bruises and bites. And being spat on. Leilani's assault was not serious and I would rather avoid the paperwork.
I looked down and found my desk was covered in feathers, handfuls of feathers. They must have fallen from the band of the man's hat. I scooped them up and put them into the bin.
Jack barged in. âWhat was that about?'
Jenny followed him and insisted on checking out my welts. âCharge her with assault.'
âHonestly, it's not worth it.'
âThea,' said Jenny, âwhat did you tell Shay?'
I hate it when people use my logic against me. âShay had just been beaten up by her boyfriend, Jenny. Leilani's upset because her husband's been charged with murder and her mother's just died. Surely we can cut her some slack.'
Jack and Jenny hounded me until I promised them I would write a statement. Then I promised myself I wouldn't.
âI almost forgot,' said Jack. âRobby called the station last night to make a complaint about a trespasser. He went onto his verandah to have a beer near midnight and saw a figure run out of his yard and up the track to Millman Hill. Robby raced downstairs but wasn't quick enough. The door to the storeroom was open, the shelves had been ransacked, but he didn't think anything was missing. He couldn't understand why the dog didn't bark.'
âDid you make a record for future reference?'
âYeah.'
âThanks, Jack.'
I managed to forget about Leilani's tantrum until Jonah and I were in the shower that night.
âWhat are those marks on your arm?'
âMosquito bites.' I put my arms around his neck to distract him. The last thing I needed was another person hassling me to charge Leilani with assault.
Chapter 33
At the end of the week Jonah and I headed to Friday Island as usual. When I woke up on Saturday morning, my whole body was aching. Jonah suggested we take a trip to a waterfall on Prince of Wales Island.
âThe tides are good and it takes half an hour, tops, to walk from the beach.'
âI dunno,' I said. âI feel like crap. I can hardly move.'
âAll right. You stay and rest. I'll go for a quick fish. I wanna try that spot close to here. There should be
matha
fingermark.'
I was on edge all day and even though I was exhausted, I couldn't sleep. It was like ants were crawling under my skin. Come to think of it, I'd been feeling lethargic for a couple of days so I'd probably picked up a virus. I stayed in the cottage while Jonah went fishing or took the dogs walking. There wasn't much to do, but lie down, try and read, get up, sit on the verandah. But I couldn't focus on anything. With nothing to keep my mind busy, I started to have irrational thoughts about my relationship with Jonah: Would it last? Why doesn't he talk about Kuriz? Am I as lucky as Jenny said? On a rational level, I was settled and figured we would be together for a while, so it must have been the virus making me feel
nathakind
, out of sorts.
On Sunday night, I was sitting at the table, staring into space while Jonah was at the sink. The firm grip of his hands on my shoulders made me jump. His hands moved in a slow, strong rhythm, and a sense of calm filled the void that had consumed me for days.
âYou're feeling
nathakind
. What's going down, no, what's going on?' His voice was soft and reassuring.
My eyes stung with tears. I wanted to talk about our relationship. I had to, but didn't know what to say or how to start. We had been together for four months yet hadn't spoken once about where our relationship was going.
âJust exhausted, I suppose, probably a virus.'
âHow do you feel?'
âWell, I feel sick, but I just . . . we've never talked about us being together. I mean, obviously, we are together, but I don't know where it's going orâ'
âIt's going great. I'm happy. Are you happy?'
âI'm very happy. In fact, the happiestâ'
âThen that's good.' He kissed the top of my head. âYou know, you keep trying to use that, what's it called, where you think and think and . . .?'
âLogic.'
âYeah. Things will work out. We'll be fine.'
Jonah's comments about us being happy and letting things be made sense. If we were both happy, there wasn't anything to talk about. Don't fix what ain't broke! Emotionally I felt a bit better, perhaps even reassured; I'd just have to wait out this virus. I wasn't unwell enough to call a sickie.
As we walked to the station on Monday, Jonah took my hand, sending a tingle over my entire body, warming me against the frigid wind.
âThe south-easterly has got stronger,' I said.
âThe
sager
come more stronger,' he said. â
Yu matha lego
Broken English
.
'
âI still feel silly talking in a language that's not my own.'
âNow you know how I feel and why I make so many mistakes.'
âI love the way you talk. Don't change it.'
When we reached the station, Jonah turned to me and kissed me.
âI love you,' he said and walked off. I couldn't move for a few moments, or close my open mouth. I floated into work.
Jack had taped a notice in the kitchen saying that Kelly's sister, a vet, was arriving on TI and would desex dogs and cats, by appointment, in a makeshift surgery at the nurses' group share accommodation. I emailed Kelly straightaway to make bookings for Sissy, Phoebe and her brothers.
I flexed off at four after Mum texted to say the flight had landed on Horn Island. I'd planned to walk to the wharf to pick her up from the ferry but was too exhausted. Jenny said I looked like crap and insisted on driving me.
Mum stood out from the other passengers, not for her dark skin or her
kurid
afro hair. Those features identified her as Islander, but there was something else. Whereas most Islander women wore colourful baggy island dresses or big loose T-shirts and thongs, Mum had style, sophistication. Her pink knitted singlet with pearls around the neckline complemented her chocolate slacks and leather sandals. She was painfully thin compared to her rotund Islander sisters.
We hugged and she looked me up and down.
âIs this all you brought?' I asked.
âAnd those two eskies,' she said, pointing, âand that suitcase. You look tired. Are you working too much?'
âI'm fine.' I introduced her to Jenny, who helped lug Mum's baggage to the car.
âJenny, would you mind driving down the main street?' asked Mum. âI want to see how different it is.'
Sure enough, the black and white dog was on the footpath and as soon as we approached, it raced beside us.
âThat dog is part-greyhound,' said Mum laughing. âIt reminds me of a school friend of your brothers. He had a few dogs and a pig and they followed him to school every morning. I loved watching him. He'd get to the gate and talk to the dogs and the pig, and they'd turn around to walk, and trot, home. You don't get that in the city.'
After we waved Jenny off outside the unit, Mum looked around. She gestured to my complex of units. âThese weren't here last time I came up in, what, the early-nineties,' she said. âDo you know those rain trees have been there for more than 50 years?' She didn't wait for an answer but looked in the direction of Jonah's house. âGreenhill. Have you caught up with any family?'
âFamily? I thought they all left. Although apparently I am related to Lency Edau and a woman named Izzy.'
âIzzy Josef? I heard her mother had a son who was born brain damaged. That was long after we left. Izzy was the same age as Thomas.'
âSo you know Izzy?'
âI knew her parents.' She was staring at Yenah's house. âOh, there's so much that's happened.' She snapped to reality. âAre you still seeing that man?'
But I wasn't really listening. I was signalling with my hand to the thin, pitiful man with thick scars on his cheeks, standing at the gate to my driveway. I walked towards him but he turned and scurried off.
âFranz?' I called out.
âWhat was that about?' asked Mum.
âNothing. Guess who lives in that last house?'
âWho?'
âYenah Azmy.'
She stared again at Yenah's house and whispered, âLily Bera.'
I mentioned Jonah's mother and she mentioned someone else? Maybe Lily was a third friend.
âHow is she?' Mum asked.
âLily? How would I know?'
âYenah, how's Yenah?'
âYenah? She's fine. Who's Lily?'
âLily is Yenah's English name. Bera is her maiden name. We started working together as domestics at the hospital in 1959. We were inseparable. Dances, fishing, working. There were three of us. The third was Elsie, but her nickname was Iris.' Her tone changed. âThe three of us got married around the same time. Come, let's go upstairs. Oh, who's this?'
Phoebe had pushed through the cat flap on the screen door and was brushing against Mum's legs.
The dogs were scratching at the laundry door. I let them in and they rushed to Mum. I introduced Buzarr and Sissy and showed Mum to her room, itching for her to continue her story. Once we got all the luggage upstairs, Mum started unpacking the eskies of exotic cheeses and pastes and dips, and a box of fine foods and crackers with flash names like wafers and lavash. She knew I'd only have basic food. At home, Mum kept the cheapest water crackers for me and ham and cheddar cheese. She refused to waste good money on what she and Dad called my âNeanderthal palate'.
Mum was quiet, concentrating as she unpacked. A couple of times, I found her shaking her head, then staring into the distance. I couldn't help myself. âMum, you started talking about Iris.'
âYes.' She put some cheese in the pantry. âGod, what am I doing?'
âMum, you're miles away. What's going on?'
âOh, darling. Just being here has brought back all these memories. Things I'd forgotten, tried very hard to forget.'
âWhat things?' I knew I was on shaky ground here.
She sighed. âIt took Iris years to fall pregnant, not like Lily and me. After the baby, she should have been happy, but she became sad, very sad . . .'
âMum?'
âShe was the life of the party, a real comedian.
Matha laugh, make us proper gussor
. Then the baby, Coral, changed her.' She let out another long sigh and handed me some deli parcels wrapped in butcher's paper to squeeze into the already full fridge. I didn't want to interrupt her so I put them in the freezer. âYour father had been transferred to Cairns and we had less than a week left on TI. The three of us were trying to spend as much time together. Lily and I went around to Iris's house one day, with our children in prams. Lily had three girls and a baby boy, Kibbim, his name was. I had your brothers then. We wanted her to come and see the visiting navy ship. We were always trying to cheer her up those days. Lily waited downstairs with our kids and I knocked on the door. No answer. Iris should have been home. I came downstairs, confused, then followed a muffled noise to the shed. I found her husband with a young girl, Iris's niece. He didn't stop. He just flicked his chin to me as if to say, go away. I told Lily and we agonised about telling Iris. Your father and I left days later. I haven't spoken to Lily since. I just couldn't.'
âWhere's Iris? Will you see her now you are here?'
Mum eyed me with suspicion. âHang on, how well do you know Lily?'
âWe're having dinner with her tonight,' I said.
âReally?' Her hands flew to her mouth and she took a few deep breaths. âWell, it's been 40 years, you know, and I'm not getting any younger. Long enough not to talk to your best friend.' She suddenly seemed revitalised, piling packets and jars on the bench with her usual energetic speed. âLily and her husband treated your father like family. I'll get the food from my suitcase.'
âMum, there is something I have to tell you.'
âIt sounds serious.' She handed me some flat round tins with pictures of grape leaves on them.
âI have a boyfriend, so . . .'
âI'm so happy for you. I expected you to be working so hard . . .' She paused. âIs your boyfriend coming to dinner? You'll have to check with Lily.
Yu no sabe ilan man
. They don't like surprises.'
âShe won't mind,' I said. Just as I was about to explain about Jonah, the screen door downstairs slammed. The dogs rushed to the door at the top of the stairs and skidded on the lino.
âWhat a commotion,' said Mum as Jonah entered the lounge room. âHello. I'm Masalgi, Ebithea's mother.'
âWelcome back,' said Jonah, crushing Mum into a hug.
âWhat family are you from?'
âMum, this is Jonah, who is really Kibbim, Lily's baby.'
â
Yu lie
.'
âNo.'
âKibbim was so small and skinny.
Shuddup
.' She waved one hand in the air and put the other over her mouth. She was fighting back tears. This was not my educated, cultured and reserved mother. This was an island woman who looked like my mother.
Mum threw herself into Kibbim's, no, Jonah's arms, howling. âKibbim, my baby. It's been too long. Didn't Lily tell you?' Jonah and I looked at each other. The floor shifted. âShe must have.'
Then it hit me. Tyko. The boy who smashed the window at the Railway. I felt sick. Was Mum about to tell me that Jonah and I were cousins or half-siblings and I had been traditionally adopted to Mum? I would do more than smash a window. Surely Yenah would have forbidden it months ago, but what if she didn't know? Perhaps Mum had had an affair with Jonah's father or uncle in Cairns or maybe I had been adopted from someone who'd had a secret affair with Jonah's dad? It was too confusing and I couldn't think clearly.
âAre you sure she didn't tell you?'
I held my balled fists behind my back. âTell us what, Mum?'
âI was there when Lily went into labour. Kaigus was working on the cargo boats. You weren't due for another two months. She was so happy when you were born, a boy, until she realised you would probably die. Didn't she tell you?' Tears streamed down her face.
I was relieved and confused at the same time. So we weren't related and the baby obviously survived. If there was a happy ending, why was she howling?
âYou struggled for a few days till Kaigus came back from crayfishing. As soon as he sat down next to your crib, you picked up. He didn't leave your side and talked and sang to you the whole time. He named you Kibbim after the small, dark fish with a very painful sting. He said although you were small, you'd be strong like a
kibbim
.
âAnd I was still feeding William, so I gave you
susu
to make sure you had extra. Before our eyes, you filled out your long skinny arms and legs and you survived.
Now look yu
.' She was beaming. âWhere's Lily?'
âShe's at home,' said Jonah.
âCome, we go.'
We set off for Yenah's house. Mum was between Jonah and me, gripping our hands. But I had a bad taste in my mouth recalling that Mum and Yenah hadn't spoken for 40 years. Jonah called for his mother as we got to the top step. Yenah came out, wiping floury hands on her
sweater
. âMy boy, that tap you been fixâ'
She stopped at the sight of Mum, who let go of our hands. It was a stand-off. I found myself holding my breath.
Mum opened her arms and moved towards Yenah. Her voice was faint. âLily?'