Read In the Company of Cheerful Ladies Online

Authors: Alexander McCall Smith

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women private investigators, #General, #Women Sleuths, #No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency (Imaginary organization), #Ramotswe; Precious (Fictitious character), #Women private investigators - Botswana, #Mystery Fiction, #Botswana, #Political

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BOOK: In the Company of Cheerful Ladies
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her new tea-pot with Mr J.L.B. Matekoni—nobody would mind that—but sharing with the apprentices was another matter altogether.

She decided to voice her concerns to Mma Ramotswe. “What about Mr J.L.B. Matekoni?” she asked. “Will he drink …”

“Bush tea,” said Mma Ramotswe quickly. “That is the best tea for a man. It is well-known. He will drink bush tea.”

“And the apprentices?”

Mma Ramotswe rolled her eyes towards the ceiling. “Perhaps they should have bush tea too,” she said. “Although, heaven knows, it’s not doing them much good.”

With those decisions made, Mma Makutsi put on the kettle and, watched by Mma Ramotswe, she ladled into the new tea-pot a quantity of her tea, her ordinary tea. Then she fetched Mma Ramotswe’s tea-pot, which looked distinctly battered beside the fine new china tea-pot, and into this she put the correct quantity of bush tea. They waited for the kettle to boil, each of them silent, each of them alone with her thoughts. Mma Makutsi was thinking with relief of the generous response that Mma Ramotswe

had shown to her confession, which seemed so like an act of disloyalty, of treachery even. Her employer had made it so easy that she felt a flood of gratitude for her. Mma Ramotswe was

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undoubtedly one of the finest women in all Botswana. Mma Makutsi had always known this, but here was another instance which spoke to those qualities of understanding and sympathy. And for her part, Mma Ramotswe thought of what a loyal, fine woman was Mma Makutsi. Other employees would have complained,

or moaned about drinking tea they did not like, but she had said nothing. And more than that, she had given the impression

that she was enjoying what was given to her, as a polite guest will eat or drink what is laid upon the host’s table. This was further

evidence of those very qualities which obviously had been revealed at the Botswana Secretarial College and which had resulted in her astonishingly high marks. Mma Makutsi was surely a gem.

CHAPTER FIVE
AN ENCOUNTER WITH A BICYCLE

FOR THE REST of that day, with the issue of tea tactfully settled,

Mma Ramotswe and Mma Makutsi continued with their attempts to find out about the missing Zambian. This was the office stage of the project; they knew that in a day or so they would have to go out and seek people who might give them information,

unless, of course, one of the letters which Mma Makutsi wrote or the telephone conversations which Mma Ramotswe conducted yielded results. At a quarter to five, when the afternoon

heat had abated and the sky was beginning to redden over the Kalahari, Mma Ramotswe announced that although the working day still technically had fifteen minutes to run, they had achieved so much that they might in good conscience stop.

“I’ve made so many phone calls,” she said. “I cannot speak any more.”

“And are we any closer to finding him?” asked Mma Makutsi doubtfully.

Mma Ramotswe was not one to be defeatist. “Yes, we are,” she said. “Even if we have not discovered anything concrete, every step along the path is one step closer to the solution. Mr Andersen says, doesn’t he, that if there are one hundred quesI

N T H E C O M P A N Y O F C H E E R F U L L A D I E S 4 5

tions to be asked in an investigation, you have to go through every one of them, and so you achieve something even if you get no answer. That is what he wrote.”

“He must be right,” said Mma Makutsi. “But I am not sure that we will ever find this man. He is too smart. He is not a man to be caught all that easily.”

“But we are smart too,” said Mma Ramotswe. “There are two smart ladies after him, and he is just one man. No man will escape in such circumstances.”

Mma Makutsi still looked doubtful. “I hope that you’re right, Mma,” she said.

“I am,” said Mma Ramotswe simply. And with that conclusion

she stood up and began to gather her things together. “I can take you home,” she said. “I am going that way.”

They locked the office behind them and made their way round to the place where the tiny white van awaited them under its acacia tree. Mma Makutsi got into the passenger seat, next to Mma Ramotswe, who strapped herself in and started the engine. As she did so, Mma Makutsi suddenly grabbed her arm and pointed to something that was happening outside the garage.

A large, silver-coloured car, a Mercedes-Benz, had drawn up at the road side. The windows of this vehicle were slightly tinted, but a woman could be made out at the driving wheel. No sooner had she stopped, than Charlie, the older apprentice, appeared from the front of the garage, sauntered across the ground between the garage and the road, and casually climbed into the passenger seat of the expensive car.

Mma Ramotswe looked at Mma Makutsi. They were both clearly thinking the same thing; Charlie had produced a roll of notes that morning, and Mma Makutsi had quite astutely suggested

that he was seeing a rich woman. Well, here was a rich woman in a rich woman’s car, and there was Charlie setting off

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with her at the end of work. There was only one interpretation

that anybody could put on that.

“Well,” exclaimed Mma Makutsi. “That’s that then.”

Mma Ramotswe stared in fascination. “Who would have thought that that silly boy could take up with a woman like that? Who would have thought it?”

“There are some women like that,” said Mma Makutsi, a strong note of disapproval in her voice. “They call them cradle-snatchers. That is because they take young men away from girls of their own age. They steal these boys away.”

“So that woman is a cradle-snatcher,” said Mma Ramotswe. “That is very interesting.” She paused, and then turned to Mma Makutsi. “I think that we shall have to come back on duty right now,” she said. “I think that we should follow that car, just to see where they go.”

“That’s a very good idea,” said Mma Makutsi. “I do not mind being back on duty.”

The opulent silver car set off towards town, and as it did so the tiny white van swung out from the side of the garage and set off behind the other car, but at a respectable distance. For a powerful car, the Mercedes-Benz was being driven slowly; most Mercedes-Benz drivers, Mma Ramotswe had observed, seemed to be in a hurry to get somewhere, but this one, this woman of whom they had had only the briefest glimpse, seemed to be content to amble along.

“She’s in no hurry,” said Mma Ramotswe. “They must be talking.”

“I can just imagine it,” said Mma Makutsi grimly. “He’ll be telling her some tale about us, Mma. She’ll be laughing and urging

him on.”

When they reached the old Game Stores, the silver car suddenly

turned into the Village and made its way down Odi Drive. The tiny white van, holding back in case the apprentice should turn and see them, proceeded at a safe distance, following the

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quarry past the school and the new flats until they reached the University gate. Now came a surprise: instead of turning left, which would have led them into town, the silver car went to the right, towards the prison and the old Gaborone Club.

“This is very odd,” said Mma Makutsi. “I would have thought that they would be going somewhere like the Sun Hotel. What is there for them along here?”

“Maybe she lives along this way,” said Mma Ramotswe. “But we shall see soon enough.”

Mma Ramotswe turned to Mma Makutsi and smiled conspiratorially.

The two women were enjoying themselves. There was no real reason for them to follow the apprentice and this woman. Indeed, had they stopped to consider what they were doing, they would have had to admit that it was surely no more than idle curiosity—nosiness, indeed, that motivated them. And it was interesting, in a gossipy sort of way. If Charlie was seeing an older woman, then it would be fascinating to see what sort of woman she would be. Not that there was much doubt about that, thought Mma Ramotswe.

“What would Mr J.L.B. Matekoni think of us?” ventured Mma Makutsi, giggling. “Would he approve?”

Mma Ramotswe shook her head. “He would say that we were two nosy women,” she said. “And I think he would be more interested

in the Mercedes-Benz than the people in it. That is what mechanics are like. They think …”

She did not complete her sentence. The silver car was now near the old Botswana Defence Force Club and was slowing down. Then an indicator light started to flash and the car turned into a driveway—into the driveway of Mr J.L.B. Matekoni’s house.

When she saw the car turn, Mma Ramotswe swerved the tiny white van so violently that Mma Makutsi shouted out in alarm. A cyclist, who had been coming in the opposite direction, swerved too, wobbling off the road to avoid the van. Mma Ramotswe drew to a halt and climbed out.

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“Rra, oh Rra,” she shouted, as she ran towards the fallen man. “I’m so sorry, Rra.”

The man picked himself up off the ground and then dusted his trousers. He used careful, deliberate gestures, as might be used by one who is dressed in expensive clothes; but his were worn, and crumpled. Then he looked up, and Mma Ramotswe saw that there were tears in his eyes.

“Oh, Rra,” she said. “I’ve hurt you. I’m so sorry. I will take you straight to a doctor.”

The man shook his head, and then wiped at his eyes with the back of a hand.

“I am not hurt,” he said. “I am shaken, but I am not hurt.”

“I was looking at something else,” said Mma Ramotswe, reaching out to take the man’s hand. “It was very silly of me. I took my eyes off the road, and then suddenly I saw you.”

The man said nothing. Turning to his bicycle, he picked it up. The front wheel, which must have been caught in a rut in the ground, was now slightly twisted, and the handlebars were at a strange angle. He looked mutely at the bicycle, before trying, unsuccessfully, to straighten the handlebars.

Mma Ramotswe turned and beckoned to Mma Makutsi to come out of the van. She had been holding back, out of a mixture of tact and embarrassment, but now she appeared and made a sympathetic remark to the man.

“I will take you to where you are going,” said Mma Ramotswe.

“We can put the bike in the back of the van and then I shall take that to your place, wherever that is.”

The man pointed back towards Tlokweng. “I live over that way,” he said. “I would prefer to go home now. I do not want to go to the other place.”

They lifted up the bicycle together and placed it in the back of the van. Then Mma Ramotswe and Mma Makutsi got into the tiny white van on one side and the man on the other. With the

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three of them in the cab, there was barely enough room for Mma Ramotswe to change gear, and each time she did it she dug Mma Makutsi in the ribs.

“This is not a big van,” Mma Ramotswe said brightly to their passenger. “But it always goes. So it will get us to Tlokweng very easily.”

She looked sideways at the man. He looked as if he was in his late forties. He had a good face, she thought; an intelligent face, the face of a teacher, perhaps, or of a senior clerk. And he spoke well too, enunciating each word clearly, as if he meant it. So many people spoke carelessly these days, she thought, running their words together so that it was sometimes quite difficult to make out what they were saying. And as for people on the radio, these so-called disc jockeys, they spoke as if they had hiccups. Presumably they thought that it was fashionable to talk like this; that it made them more alluring, which it probably did if one was star-struck, and with nothing much in one’s head, but which only sounded ridiculous to her.

“I will have your bicycle fixed for you,” she said to the man. “It will be made as good as new. I promise you that.”

The man nodded. “I cannot pay myself,” he said. “I have not got the money for that.”

Mma Ramotswe nodded. She had thought as much. In spite of all the progress which Botswana had made, and in spite of the prosperity which the diamonds had brought to the country, there were still many, many poor people. They should not be forgotten. But why was this man, who seemed to be educated, not in a job? She knew that there were many people who could not find a job, but usually these were people who had no skills. This man did not seem to be like that.

It was Mma Makutsi who asked the question for her. She had been thinking the same thing as Mma Ramotswe. She had noticed the disparity between the signs of poverty—something

5 0

that Mma Makutsi knew all about—and the educated voice. She had seen, too, that the man’s hands were what she would describe

as well-kept. These were not the hands of a manual labourer, nor those of a man who tended the land. She noticed such hands at her part-time typing classes at the Kalahari Typing School for Men. Many of her pupils there, who worked in offices, had hands like this man’s.

“Do you work in an office, Rra?” she asked. “And may I ask you: What is your name?”

The man glanced at her, and then turned away.

“My name is Polopetsi,” he said. “And no, I have no work. I am looking for work, but there is no place that will take me.”

Mma Ramotswe frowned. “It is hard now,” she said. “That must be very bad for you.” She paused. “What did you do before?”

Mr Polopetsi did not answer directly, and the question seemed to hang in the air for a while. Then he spoke.

“I was in prison for two years. I have been out for six months.”

The tiny white van swerved slightly, almost imperceptibly. “And nobody will give you a job?” asked Mma Ramotswe.

“They will not,” he answered.

“And you always tell them that you have been in prison?” interjected Mma Makutsi.

“I do,” said Mr Polopetsi. “I am an honest man. I cannot lie to them when they say what have you been doing this last year. I cannot tell them that I was in Johannesburg or something like that. I cannot tell them that I have been working.”

“So, you are an honest man,” said Mma Ramotswe. “But why were you in prison? Are there honest men in prison?” She asked the question before she thought about it and she immediately realised that it sounded very rude; as if she were questioning the man’s story.

He did not seem to take objection. “I was not sent to prison for dishonesty,” he said. “But there are honest men in prison, by the way. There are some very dishonest men there, and some very

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