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Authors: James McClure

BOOK: Snake
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“Then wait in your office, okay? Sorry, but this officer here has got pictures to take, and you’ll be in his way.”

“Okay,” said Da Gama, and went upstairs.

“How’s it?” asked Gardiner, stopping by while he changed lenses.

“How do you think, man?”

“I heard Wessels maybe had an ident on one of them.”

“Ja, but he says they were in heavy shade all the time. Still, I’ve sent him back to CID to look through the books.”

“And Zondi?”

“Zero.”

“So we go through the motions,” said Gardiner, and wandered off behind the counter to take a wide shot.

But Kramer refused to succumb to the shoulder-sagging apathy that had begun to pervade the place. Perhaps a proper look at the corpse might restore a sense of purpose.

He walked over briskly and stood beside Strydom, careful not to get in his light.

Jose Funchal had a hole where his thick eyebrows met that looked like a jab made with a red-hot poker. After that you noticed the deeply bruised eyelids, the cigarette burn on the broad upper lip, and the stubble on the bull-mastiff cheek. He wore a gold signet ring, bearing the same design as the one Da Gama had, and no other jewelry. His clothes were freshly laundered, but obviously bought at a bazaar. Which all fitted the legend.

“Losing faith in me?” asked Strydom.

“Always.”

“It’s the twenty-two again.”

“Uh-huh. Nice neat hole, hey? Perfect round shape.”

“The bullet must have struck at right angles almost precisely, level with the ground, which may give you some idea of the assailant’s height. The shot must have been fired sighting on the eye.”

“Same again then, Doc? Around five-eight?”

“Ja, that should narrow things down by a few million,” said Strydom, closing his notebook and pointing with his pen to the area around the wound.

“No tattoos from powder, no smoke marks. Range the usual three feet to thirty.”

“Say four, with the counter taking up two of them.”

“Say what you like, Tromp, but this isn’t how we’re going to catch them.”

Strydom stood up and made a face to convey his apologies for that remark.

“True, but it just shows what cold-blooded bastards they are. No warning, no struggle—just bam. And another thing I don’t get: they’re damn crack with their guns. Where did they practice?”

“Now you’re just trying to add to your problems.”

“No, I mean it.”

They moved over to a table and sat down, waiting for Kloppers to arrive. Strydom began to thumb through his notebook.

“What you really mean is they fire one shot and they’re away.”

“They have to, for the speed,” said Kramer.

“Ja, but in the matter of accuracy, take the butcher, for instance: that twenty-two was fired inches from him and went in at an angle. In Lucky’s case, they hit him as he was turning away, and the thirty-eight traveled just inside the skull up the left-hand side. Only one of the others came near to being a fluke like this one, and then it wasn’t nearly as good.”

“Uh-huh? And what’s a fluke? Getting something right and then letting it become a matter of opinion?”

Strydom laughed and threw down the paper napkin he had been fiddling with.

“Okay, you win on words,” he said. “But in practical terms, could you guarantee the same result with a twenty-two in your hand—even four feet away?”

Kramer shook his head.

“But tell me, Tromp, there is something behind this nonsense of yours. What is it?”

Kloppers had clumped in with his metal tray before the right reply had been found—or something close to it.

“Doc, if crime was a sport, what would these buggers be? Champions?”

“Too true!”

“And what does a boxing champ do before his first big fight?”

“I see! He works his way up on small purses.”


Ach
, no. He gets himself some bloody sparring partners and works on his weaknesses. You think about it.”

Strydom had not moved much when Kramer glanced back at him through the café window.

10

B
UT THE COLONEL
found Kramer’s notion fanciful, and suggested some good sense of his own.

“Now listen, Tromp, you know how their mind works. If a man is white, then he is automatically rich. It doesn’t matter whether you and me can see he couldn’t find two cents to pay the rent with; as far as they are concerned, white is the color of money.”

“True,” Kramer conceded, flicking his match into the CID courtyard below. “But that’s with your petty criminal.”

“And what are these? Okay, so they can shoot, and they can drive, and they can run bloody fast, but what else can you say about them? They’re bloody stupid, like all the rest. I tell you what did me good today: I had lunch with the brigadier and we discussed this matter. ‘Hans,’ he says to me, ‘what do you blokes think you’re doing? Just stop a moment and see this in its true perspective. Tell me how many cases of armed robbery on small businesses you’ve dealt with, and how many times you found one eyewitness to help solve who did it.’ Then I had to admit that in all my years it was only twice, and both times a European came forward. All the other times we acted on information received once the bastards started spending their money or getting drunk and boasting in the shebeens. ‘That’s how it is with robbery investigation,’ the brigadier said, and I tell you that made me feel a fool.”

“In other words, sir?”

“With murder, you look for a motive,” the colonel said, his tone becoming circumspect, “but with robbery, it is staring you in the face. They want money, so they kill and rob for it—every day, all over the country. Life? Life matters nothing to them. Yet now you start trying to read something new into this, as if it was a specific case where you were asking, Why kill this man?”

Kramer watched a bird fly up from the single rosebush to peck at the fruit on the palm tree. His cigarette grew a long ash, unheeded.

“Hell, is there some personal involvement I don’t know about?” the colonel said, laughing softly and nudging him in the side. But his eyes gleamed shrewdly.

“I drop this for the Bergstroom case until someone starts talking?”

“Never. People are at risk with these lunatics running round—don’t get me wrong. Marais can carry on with the routine meantime. It seems a hard thing to say, but that was only a one-off when we come to choosing priorities. Plus I’ve got doubts now about that snake thing Old Stry—”

“Two, if you count Stevenson.”

“Man, you’re quibbling, hey? You’re still thinking too much. Let’s have some action. Tell Zondi to get his finger out and try and get something from the other side; that’s our only chance. And see you chase him.”

“And who’s going to chase Marais?”

“Not me,” said the colonel, walking off to his office.

It hadn’t been bad sense after all.

Wessels was waiting for Kramer with a photograph in his hand, taken from one of the books he had been told to go through.

“I’ve got a possible here, sir,” he said eagerly.

“Who’s he when he’s at home?”

“Gosh Twala, Bantu male, aged forty-three.”

“Never heard of him. Come.”

They went the length of the corridor and into Kramer’s office. Zondi had his feet comfortably arranged up against the filing cabinet.

“Hey! Wake up, you! Gosh Twala—know him?”

“Small time, boss.”

“Doing what?”

“Stealing cars, got eight years in sixty-six for it—Sithole’s case.”

“And recently?”

“Last I know of him, he was working at the brickworks.”

“That
skabengas’
paradise! But that means he’s pretty washed up, then, in with the hard-case assaults and the rest.”

Zondi nodded, and said, “Terrible work, that, many men getting hit with the blow back. But the trouble with Twala is that he tells Sithole who buys the cars from him and he took three others inside. Now nobody will buy from him; he is finished.”

“Yet I’m almost sure it’s the same one as was driving the car,” said Wessels. “Had a longer look at him than the other, and there’s the same flatness to the back of the head, and the ears that stick out.”

“Well, Zondi? Worth picking him up?”

“He is a good driver, and has got many licenses.”

“Need help?”

Zondi shook his head, flipped his hat onto it, and sauntered out.

“What do I do now, sir?” asked Wessels, as Kramer flopped back in his chair and stared at the wall.

“I think it’s time you took that wig off and put on some clothes.”

“Sir?”

“You’re the nearest we’ve got to an eyewitness, so I’ve fixed with the colonel for you to be transferred to us meantime. Okay?”

“Fine, sir!”

“Then report back in one hour. Go.”

As Wessels sped from the room, the telephone rang. Kramer ignored it for a while and then lifted the receiver. A yellow Ford, NTK 4544, had been found abandoned not a quarter of a mile from the café, and Fingerprints were investigating.

The lanes dividing the block behind the courthouse had once been what Marais liked best about Trekkersburg, if he had to like anything. They were like the windbreaks in a plantation, zigzagging here and there and crisscrossing, all without any apparent plan, yet leaving you sure there was one. While the plaster twirly-whirlies and pillars and hanging signs with fancy lettering, creaking on their brackets, made you think you were in a Three Musketeers film.

But he had had a gutsful of superior bastards, and they had spoiled everything for him. They had spoiled his morning, his toasted cheese sandwich, and now they had done damage to his afternoon.

There was nothing romantic about the lanes any longer; they were just grubby passageways between offices with empty, forbidding hallways, and shops that sold cracked vases and dirty spoons kept in glass cases, while the odd glimpse of a haughty typist painting her nails was about as off-putting as the unpleasant smell of duplicating ink.

He stopped for a moment to watch an old black crone flattening out a cardboard carton she had taken from a stack of refuse awaiting removal. She stamped on it, crawled on it, and then added it to a pile already so big she would never lift it. The pile shifted and he saw she had a homemade wheelbarrow underneath. It was true what they said, some of them were beginning to use brains instead of backsides.

Marais was stalling, although he would not admit it. He was trying to delay his entrance into the hallway of number 22, right opposite, by wondering if the crone was committing an offense, and then drifting into the dizzying legalities of how you established the ownership of rubbish between its disposal and its collection. No good, he would just have to get on with the job and have done with it.

“Whoa—where do you think you’re going?” a voice boomed out behind him, making him slide on the coconut matting.

It was Goldstein the lawyer, shouting down at him from his second-floor office on the other side.

“I’m making inquiries,” Marais replied stiffly.

“What, in his place? My boy, you don’t know the
trouble
you’re making! From two to four, my friend there is in special consultation.”

“That’s not my worry.”

“Tell me you’re joking! Tell me your heart is not so hardened against the world! Would you tear a man from the very bosom of his personal—”

“Oh, do bugger off, Ben!” another voice called out, from somewhere directly overhead.

Ben waved his cigar at whoever it was.

“Who is the little twit down there anyway?” the voice above asked lazily.

“Tomorrow in A Court I take you apart a piece at a time,” Ben shouted across with massive mock confidence. “Don’t be late, you hear?”

Then he puckered up, blew his unseen rival a kiss, and closed the window.

Marais, who had other fish to fry, walked straight out and never went back.

Beneath one of four towering chimney stacks, Zondi stood and waited impatiently. The brick dust was terrible; not only was the ground covered with it, but the air itself was gritty.

Then the foreman came out of his office, shaking one sandal to dislodge a stone caught between his fat pink toes, and beckoned to him.

“Next time you bring a chit with you, see?”

“The lieutenant said all right?”

“No, he bloody didn’t. He wasn’t there, but some other European knows you, so I suppose you can go ahead. It’s just I’m not having any damn wog coming here thinking he can do what he likes and starting trouble with my boys. Twala? Was that the one?”

“Yes, please, sir. He is at work today?”

“How the hell am I supposed to know that? You ask his
induna
, he gives me the absentees list.”

“Where do I find him?”

“The
induna
?”

“Yes, sir.”

This delay was beginning to seriously worry Zondi. He had already felt long, sullen glares being made in his direction from the ragged men hand-pushing trucks of brick from the kilns. Many of them knew him, and soon the alert would have reached the farthest corner of the works.


Ach
, I’m not here to do your work for you. Ask that
keshla
over there,” said the foreman, completing his scrutiny of Zondi’s identity card and handing it back.

The old-timer was hardly any more cooperative. He pulled his torn jacket over the burn marks on his chest, which looked like splatters of tar, the scarring was so thick, and mumbled something about oven number 9.

“Have I asked a simple man a simple question?” Zondi snapped.

“Who do you seek?”

“Twala.”


Hau!
He is a bad one—you must go carefully with him.”

“Would you like to see that?”

The
keshla
grinned, showing he still had three teeth in the front, and began to lead the way, skipping nimbly on his bowed legs over the rubble of spoiled bricks.

They went under an overhead passageway and Zondi realized he was right beside the firing house itself, with the kiln entrances, round-topped and low, set in its curving wall at intervals of about twenty yards. The
keshla
explained that those that had been bricked up were awaiting the heat to give the bricks their hardness. The men sealing number 8 stopped work as Zondi approached and backed aside to allow him to pass, the cement sliding from their trowels unnoticed in their undisguised loathing for him. One face, hooded by a sack which was protecting the shoulders for carrying, turned quickly away—but not before Zondi had recognized a once notorious illicit liquor distiller, whom he had put behind bars and out of business. Truly, with all the fires and the dangers, the place was close to a hell itself, he thought soberly. Better to dig ditches all day in the sun.

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