Felicity Shadbolt was fit, athletic. The kind of person who took part in spartan challenges, who’d run and bushwalk regularly in the baking heat of her remote Western Australian town.
On January 13, the 36-year-old, known to her friends and family as ‘Flick’, did just that. Though temperatures would peak that day at 46C, the mother-of-two set out for a walking track at Mount Nameless, roughly 10km from her home in Tom Price.
She left home for the routine jog at roughly 11.30am, and according to 9 News, roughly an hour and twenty minutes later texted her family to say she’d be “back in 20 minutes”.
She never returned.
Felicity’s car was discovered near the start of the track that afternoon. She was nowhere to be seen and her mobile phone couldn’t be reached.
For four days, authorities and dozens of SES volunteers scoured the area, enduring temperatures that climbed above 40C. Then, on the evening of January 16, Western Australia Police confirmed the worst. Felicity’s body had been discovered in Mount Nameless bushland.
So what happened to Felicity Shadbolt?
The cause of Felicity’s death remains under investigation, though is not believed to be suspicious.
Still, until the results of an autopsy and forensic testing are released, police are unable to say what happened to her.
Homicide investigators were flown in to assist local detectives last week, though Western Australia Police Police Inspector Ray Thompson said that didn’t necessarily indicate the mother had met with foul play.