A Cracking Debut: Read a Sample Chapter of Brunswick Street Blues by Sally Bothroyd

A Cracking Debut: Read a Sample Chapter of Brunswick Street Blues by Sally Bothroyd

October 2007

This wasn’t the first time I’d encountered a dead body.

Having grown up in inner Melbourne in the 1990s when heroin was at its peak, I’d passed the occasional overdosed junkie on the way to school. I couldn’t immediately see the man’s face, but this didn’t look like an overdosed stranger.

The bright white hair made him unmistakable—it was Mayor Dickie Ruffhead. His leering portrait hung in the foyer of the council’s chambers, and when I took a few more steps towards the body, I could see that even in death he had the same smile on his smarmy, perma-tanned face, although his dentures were now on the floor among a scattering of bulldog clips and I couldn’t help noticing that his pinstriped trousers were down around his ankles.

It was true that the mayor had been missing for several days, but no one seemed too concerned. Council gossip suggested his wife had sent him to rehab again for sex addiction—or gambling, drinking or possibly cocaine; the mayor was a man of varied interests. I took a closer look at his mottled face. Stroke or heart attack was my guess. On the plus side, the discovery explained the weird smell on the second floor of the council building, which had been a hot topic of discussion for several days. (It had been mooted that a disgruntled rate payer had hidden prawn heads in an aircon duct again.) Of course, no one had checked the archives storage. No one had checked anywhere. Council staff were sticklers for job descriptions and frowned on anyone who strayed outside of their strict parameters. Even cleaning out the office fridge was unthinkable.

I’d lived in Melbourne all my life. In 170 years the city had grown from a scrawny settlement founded by the syphilitic son of a convict on the banks of the Yarra River to an unwieldy metropolis. I’ve heard it said that John Batman was the only person in Australia’s colonial history to attempt a treaty with the Kulin people whose land he wanted. It was an unfair contract, of course, but that’s bureaucracy for you.

Recently, the city had become my employer and as far I could see, Batman’s act set the tone for Melbourne and the ongoing management of its boroughs. I had a PR job and I hated it, but the money was good and it was nine to five, which meant I could keep working nights for my Uncle Baz.

He owned a pub in Fitzroy, an inner suburb just north of Melbourne city known for its live music, coffee culture and a football team that had moved to Brisbane in the 1990s due to money troubles…

Continue reading the extract here…

Buy a copy of Brunswick Street Blues here.

Publisher details

Synopsis

Winner of the inaugural ASA/HQ Commercial Fiction Prize. The twists keep piling up in this fun and distinctively Australian debut mystery, perfect for readers of The Thursday Murder Club and Janet Evanovich.

Brick Brown has problems: she hates her day job, and her beloved Uncle Baz has gone missing.

Although a bartender by trade, Brick Brown has finagled herself a job on the city council to investigate a complaint that threatens to close her uncle's well-loved blues club in the heart of Melbourne.

Brick suspects something strange is going on, but when her amateur sleuthing uncovers the mayor's dead body in a locked room, she's dragged into the dangerous world of dodgy developers with the reluctant help of Mitch Mitchell, a prickly war correspondent turned investigative journalist.

Relying on her street smarts and an unlikely band of allies, Brick and Mitchell unearth corruption that runs deeper than just local government, and the stakes are higher than they banked on. And when Brick also discovers some terrifying information about her past, the stakes turn deadly...

Sally Bothroyd
About the author

Sally Bothroyd

Sally Bothroyd lives in Darwin with her partner and daughter. She's currently the director of the Northern Territory Writers' Centre, but before that worked for many years as a journalist - both in broadcast and in print. Sally grew up in Victoria and lived in Melbourne in the 1990s. She returned there for a period in the 2000s to study filmmaking at the Victoria College of the Arts. She has made several short films which have appeared at film festivals around Australia and overseas. She's a longtime fan of crime fiction and had a short story shortlisted for the 2020 Scarlet Stiletto Awards, run by Sisters in Crime.

Books by Sally Bothroyd

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