Read The Case of the Disappearing Corpse Online

Authors: June Whyte

Tags: #Children's Mystery

The Case of the Disappearing Corpse (4 page)

This must be Embarrass Chiana Day.

I could feel my face growing hot and wondered if they’d notice if I buried my head in a nearby bin-tidy.

“Hi Patsy,” I said, closing the door so quickly I almost chopped off little Johnny’s tongue. “How’s it going?”

Patsy looked up from the book she was reading and gave me a wobbly smile. “Pretty lousy, if you
really
want to know.”

“It must have been mega-scary tripping over a dead body like that.”

“You gotta believe it.”

I dragged a chair from the corner, turned it back to front and sat down. Just like you see P.I.’s do in the movies. After all, this was my chance to grill a star witness. I rolled both shoulders slowly and sat up straight before starting the interrogation.

“Jack says you knew the dead guy.”

Patsy frowned. “Not really. That morning was the first time I’d ever laid eyes on him. And when I arrived home was the second.” She suddenly shivered, wrapped both arms around her body. “But by then he was dead!”

My shoulders slumped. “Gross.”

“Yeah. So much for the doctor prescribing a visit to a Laughing Class for therapy. Since Zane left me I’ve been on a bit of a downer and the doctor said laughter was the best medicine. It wasn’t. I felt like an idiot. It’s put me off laughing for life. When the class finished I told the leader where she could stick her class in future.”

Knowing that once Patsy got her teeth into a subject, it was hard to pry her away, I quickly butted in. “Patsy, can you describe the dead guy to me?”

She gave me a suspicious stare. “Why?”

“Umm…just curious.”

“Well…he was sort of creepy. Said his name was Frank Skinner. Shifty eyes. Long pointy nose. Looked the type who went around raiding little kids’ piggy-banks, if you ask me.” She rolled her eyes skywards. “What made it worse, he flirted with me. Yuk! Of course I told the sleaze to
drop dead…
but hey, how was I to know he’d actually
do
it.”

Patsy just sat there. Head in her hands, scraggly ginger hair coming undone from her bun. When she spoke again, I had to lean closer to hear her.

“Oh, Cha. What if the killer comes back for
me
?”

She began shaking. All over. I’d never seen Patsy come unglued like this before. From the time she was sixteen, trying to earn extra money to buy make-up and clothes by babysitting, she’d always been so sure of herself. Yet here she was falling apart in front of me.

Seeing Patsy’s fear gave me goose bumps. Hit me with a thwump right in the gut. This wasn’t a game. It was murder. Chips of ice settled in my chest and threatened to cut off my air supply. What the heck was I doing here? Who did I think I was—acting like some storybook detective?

Patsy dragged her handkerchief out of her pocket and wiped her eyes. The scent of tropical mango spilled out into the room making me blink.

Handkerchief?

Like magic my fear disappeared and my newly-found P.I. instincts kicked in again.

“Er…Patsy. Do you or Zoë know anyone whose name starts with a K?”

She blew her nose. “Not that I can think of.”

“You don’t know anyone called Katherine? Katy? Kerry? Kimberley?”

“No. I used to know a Katrina but she shifted to Queensland a couple of years ago. Why?”

“Oh—no reason.” Changing the subject I said, “When are the police letting you back into your house?”

“I’m
never
going back there. Neither is Zoë. She’s shifted in with another friend and I’m staying here for a while.”

Her face had that drawn look you sometimes see on TV when they flash across to a person who has just fallen off a three-story building and the interviewer says, “And how do you feel?”

Patsy’s eyes grew bigger as she looked at me. “I’m too scared to even go back and clean the place.”

I sat up straighter. Hey, here was a perfect opportunity to see inside Patsy’s house. “Don’t worry,” I said. “Tayla and I will clean the house for you.”

A wobbly smile trembled at the corners of Patsy’s lips. “Would you really?”

“No problems.”

“My brother Josh said he’d collect my things in his van but if you and Tayla could tidy up a bit—” She leaned across to the dresser, pulled a key off her key-ring and handed it to me. “I’ll pay you. How about ten bucks each?”

“Great.”

Ten dollars should help talk Tayla into helping me.

“Thanks, Cha.”

While I had her in a good mood it was time to push on.

“Patsy, can you tell me what sort of knife the killer used?”

“Cha…what’s with you? You’re a kid. You don’t want to know these things.”

“I’m going to be a writer when I leave school. Write crime stories. So yeah, I
do
want to know these things.”

“Since when have you decided to be a writer? Just six months ago you told me you wanted to be a mountain-climber.”

“That’s baby stuff. And anyway, I’m not real good with heights. Come on, Patsy. Can you remember anything about the murder weapon?”

“Murder weapon?”

“The knife.”

“Oh. I dunno.” She stood up and started pacing up and down the room. “I guess it was narrow. Sharp. Looked something like one of those Chinese daggers you see in Kung Fu movies.”

Hmmm…what did we have so far? The suspect was a kung-fu, dagger toting, Chinese female carrying a pink handkerchief. Shouldn’t be too hard to find.

“Who do
you
think killed Frank?”

Patsy shrugged. “Hey, I didn’t even know the guy.” A thoughtful frown flitted across her forehead. “But come to think of it, there were a couple of men watching Frank outside the class. When they poked their heads around the door Frank got real agitated and sort of tried to hide behind me. I quickly shoved him away though.”

“What did they look like?”

Could they be members of the Chinese woman’s gang?

“Wasn’t paying much attention at the time but I remember they both wore overalls. You know—like painters.”

“What happened to the body?” I asked standing up and watching Patsy pace.

She blinked, shook her head as though she was having trouble keeping up with me. “That’s the funny part,” she answered at last. “I went inside to ring the police and when I came back out, the body was gone. Thought I heard a car, but couldn’t be certain. You know, like my heart was pounding so loud I could barely hear the cop on the phone.”

“You mean someone pinched the body?”

“How do
I
know?” She shook her head, let me out of the sleep-out and closed the door behind her. “I guess some people will pinch anything.”

“But a body?”

“Hey, all I know is Frank was gone. There was just a flattened row of pansies to show where he’d been.” She led the way through the house. “Weird.”

“Totally,” I agreed, clasping the key to Patsy’s house in my sweaty little hand as I waved goodbye at the front door.

“Hey, Cha,” Patsy called as I started down the driveway. “Funny you should ask about knowing someone whose name starts with a K.”

I stopped. “Yeah?”

“Krystal Masters is the leader of our Laughing Class.”

Six

Krystal Masters?

Hmm…that didn’t sound much like a Kung fu, dagger throwing Chinese woman who carried a pink handkerchief. Oh well…I guess she could have changed her name when she decided to become a crook.

A sudden gust of wind straight off the sea stood my hair on end, tugging at it like a giant vacuum cleaner. I staggered toward my bike and unchained it from the fence. Now what? I didn’t want to go home—that wasn’t a fun place to be—so figured I’d go dig up more clues.

Which sounded pretty cool. But how?

There was always the Semaphore public library. I could spend an hour searching through old newspapers, hoping Krystal Masters’ name popped up somewhere in the crime pages.

Sounded a bit dull though.

Or, being dead keen to practice more P.I. stuff, I could ride my bike to the church hall. Who knows? Someone other than Patsy might have seen those two suspicious painters hanging around.

Arriving at the hall, I chained my bike to the fence and looked around. Not a soul in sight, which meant I had to knock on doors.

Aaaargh!

My stomach did a double somersault with a twist. Perhaps I should have left the questioning until the following morning and brought Tayla with me. Her curly hair, big blue eyes and sweet smile could get answers from a fence post. Me—I seemed to have the opposite effect on people.

Okay…stop with the negative thoughts.

I lifted my chin, straightened my shoulders and banged the heel of my hand against my forehead.

“Get lost bad thoughts,” I shouted, scaring a scavenging seagull into flight.

Now…think like a professional. P.I.s do not need big blue eyes. They need sneakiness, brains and the right clothes.

I glanced down at my raggedy kneed jeans, sloppy Harry Potter tee-shirt and scuffed sneakers and a tiny negative thought tried to sneak its way back in again. I growled and batted it away. Okay, these clothes may not be standard Private Investigator gear, but hey, I could always poke around in the Op shop—see if
they
had a trench coat, beret and a long silk scarf. Today would be a practice run.

From this moment, I am Chiana Ryan, Private Investigator, ready to grill witnesses, take notes and get a lead on the two dodgy painter guys.

Who knows, if I cracked this case wide open, I might even make a name for myself. In six months’ time, when I turned thirteen, Ken could nail a brass plate on our front door, saying,
Chiana Ryan: Teenage Private
Investigator for Hire
.

I paused for a mega-chilling thought.

What if I got myself killed looking for Frank Skinner’s murderer and never made it to thirteen?

Pushing that image from my mind as too
icky
to spend time on, I used my fingers to tame my wind-blown long hair. Then I put on the chewed sunglasses Leroy had mistaken for a Tim Tam and strode toward the first house. It was an old cottage, rusty, run-down, and tired looking. Lace curtains out of place with the crumbling window frames and the front door had a crack wide enough to stick two fingers in.

I knocked softly. Waited. Nibbled my thumb nail. Then waited some more. Butterflies and moths and even a couple of possums started having a party in my stomach. What was I
really
doing here? No-one in their right mind would talk to a twelve year old kid with bird’s nest hair and freckles marching across her nose.

I stood first on one foot then the other, but no-one answered the door. Good. Now, I could go spend the two dollars in my pocket on a chocolate bar and eat it sitting on the beach watching seagulls peck at each other. Instead of investigating bad guys. There were plenty of true crimes already solved that I could use for my book. Why did I need a ‘happening now’ crime?

In self-disgust, I trudged towards the half-open gate, kicking at the sea of junk mail on the path. This wouldn’t have happened to a real P.I. A real P.I. would ring first to arrange an appointment.

“Yeah. Wottayawant, kid?” The abrasive voice came from behind, making me jump. “If ya after money, I aint got any.”

One hand on the rusty iron gate, I turned and pasted a size ten smile on my face. “Good afternoon, madam, do—”

“Nah…don’t want none.”

The woman peered at me through her long dirty yellow hair, a half-smoked cigarette dangling from her stained fingers.

“But I’m not
selling
anything,” I bleated as the woman went to shuffle back inside. She turned and stood one hand on her hip, the other on the door handle.

“Well,” she barked, “I aint got all day, kid. Spit it out! Wottayawant?”

My smile a bit wobbly, I took a step forward. “Hi, I’m Chiana Ryan and I’m here about a murder. I’d like to—”

The door banged. The hinges jerked. And the crack widened to three fingers.

Hmm…perhaps I shouldn’t have brought up the word ‘murder’ quite so early in the conversation.

Across the road, a bent old man in a gray cardigan and baggy trousers was pruning his roses. Okay, I was a fast learner. This time I wouldn’t come on so strong. I’d just lean over the fence, not mention the word
murder
and ask if he’d seen anything suspicious going on outside the church hall the day before.

I hitched my shoulder-bag a little higher, pushed the stained hem of my tee into my jeans out of sight, and crossed the road.

“Hi, Mister,” I began, checking him out for ‘scary’ or ‘dangerous.’ “Bit cold and windy today.”

“I love the cold,” the old man answered, looking at me and smiling. “I was born and raised in Tasmania. High up in the snow country.” His smile was really sweet, even if his false teeth did distract me by jumping up and down as he spoke.

“Do you spend much time outside?” I asked, leading him on in my best P.I. manner.

“As much as I can.”

Great!

“I don’t suppose you were out in your garden around, say, one o’clock yesterday?”

I held my breath, crossed my fingers, and even tried crossing my eyes.

“One o’clock…just after lunch.” The man thought for a while then put down his pruning shears and adjusted his teeth. “Why, yes, I was spreading pigeon poo on my roses at around that time.”

That explained the stink. For a moment there, I thought it was the old man’s armpits.

“Did you happen to see anyone acting suspicious near the church hall while you were putting the…er…poo…on your roses?”

“Acting suspicious?” he repeated, slowly. “Well, now you mention it. Yes, I did.”

Resisting the urge to jump the fence and hug the old guy, I dived nose first into my bag. Scrunched up tissues, loose jellybeans, a brush with no handle, the mobile phone Mum always insisted I carry in case I got run over by a bus and was going to be late home for tea—

Ah…there it was. My trusty notebook and cool black and gold biro.

“What were these suspicious looking people doing?” I asked in my most grown-up voice.

The man examined the sky, did up the top button on his gray cardigan, then scratched his chin. “They were on the roof.”

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