Chapter 29
Dambuza drove out
to Delly’s. He still hadn’t processed what he’d heard in Tito’s office. What the hell kind of place was Maun? A man
is chopping off pieces of bodies at the government morgue and taking them back
to his lab to watch bugs eat them? Then when he’s done with the parts, he
throws them in the back of his bakkie, drives out to the bush and buries the
lot in a big hole. Meanwhile the prestigious new laboratory is fronting as a
hero in the fight against HIV/AIDS and may be building biological weapons in
the back office. Doctors are beating the
shit out of their mistresses. And then on top of that people are disappearing
like ghosts in the night. When Dambuza was transferred from Francistown he
thought lazy Maun was going to bore him out of his mind. Was this really
happening in Botswana? Quiet, stable Botswana? It seemed impossible.
If this girl,
Annah, had been taken or killed, Dambuza couldn’t help but be blamed. She had
begged him to put her in the jail; she knew she was in danger. But he’d been
confident they would collect both men the same night. And besides he was
positive Renet was their guy, the leader of the entire thing, he was sure the
whole thing was over it was just a matter of tying up loose ends. When they
hadn’t found Pops, he somehow forgot about Annah. He was so caught up in his
own drama with Bontle coming that a scared girl had been forgotten, and now she
might be dead.
Dambuza parked the
Corolla outside Delly’s plot as there were quite a few cars already parked inside.
As he walked up to the house, he could see there was some sort of meeting
taking place in the office. Delly was sitting at the front but when she saw
Dambuza she came out.
“It’s the family
and some neighbours. They’re about to go out again to look for her. She just
disappeared. The mother says she was behind the house washing clothes. When it
got dark she went out back to see if she was finished and she wasn’t there.
From the look of the washing, she must have been taken shortly after she
started. Dambuza, she’s just a kid. I’ve known her since she was born. She used
to come and ride her bike in the driveway when she was small. Have they found
the other guy?”
“No.”
“No? But you said
they’d get him that night. Why didn’t someone tell the family? They might have
been more cautious knowing the man their daughter was accusing of kidnapping
and killing five people was out on the loose. Someone fucked up, Dambuza!”
“Yeah, you’re
right. It was me. I should have done it. I knew she was scared and she was right
to be.” He rubbed his forehead and sighed. “Are there any leads at all?”
“We haven’t found
anything. We have a Bushman guide following the trail but it stops at the
tarred road and he’s can’t find anything from there.”
Dambuza nodded at
the crowd in the office. “What’s their plan?”
“As you can
imagine they’re pretty worked up. About half of them are heading out to
Makalamabedi, the rest are going to keep searching Maun. They want to find
Pops, and I think when they do they won’t be very kind to him.”
Dambuza felt
impotent. This didn’t need to happen. He’d been careless and selfish and
stupid. She’d been so frightened; she’d begged him to keep her safe. He was
failing everyone everywhere he turned.
He heard movement and looked up to see the meeting was disbursing. He needed to alert the boss about what was
going on. Some uniforms needed to get to Makalamabedi because if this mob found
Pops, in the excited state they were in, they’d likely kill him.
He called Tito and
let him know what was going on, but then Dambuza didn’t know what to do. He
needed to find the girl- but how? Then he remembered the traditional doctor in
Makalamabedi, Khathurima. Dambuza had no other leads, maybe he could help. He
headed for the Corolla.
Delly rushed after
him. “Dambuza, I’m sorry, about what I said. How were you to know they’d come
after her? You were sure Pops would be caught.”
They both knew her
words weren’t honest. He was supposed to do his job, that was it, and he
hadn’t. She was trying to make him feel better but they both knew it was
futile.
“No, Delly, I
messed up. You’re right. It seems to be all I can do lately. I let Gopolong
nearly kill Neo, and now this. I can’t get my head straight. For now on I need
to focus, focus on my job before anyone else gets hurt.”
***
Like before,
Khathurima seemed to be waiting for him. Before Dambuza could explain why he’d
come, Khathurima spoke. “She’s dead, but you already know that.”
He was right. As
soon as he’d arrived at Delly’s place, Dambuza knew it was too late. He knew
the girl was dead. “Where is she?”
“Not far from
home. By the water, hidden, in the reeds. You’ll find her. You will.”
Dambuza got up to
leave but Khathurima grabbed his arm with his large, strong hand. “Be cautious,
ngwanake, you’ve made enemies, bitter enemies. They are not finished harming
those you love. They are in danger, the closer you come to the answer, the more
danger they will be in.”
“Who? Who is in
danger?”
Khathurima shook
his head. “I can’t see clearly, but it is someone near to your heart. Be very
careful or the person will die.”
***
It was already
night by the time Dambuza turned back to Maun, the moon rose massive and orange
in front of him. A haunting moon- was it a foreshadow of what was to come? Who
could Khathurima be speaking about? Could Bontle and the children be in some
sort of danger? And how would solving this case cause harm to them?
He drove quickly
toward Maun. If he could do nothing else, he wanted to find Annah’s body for
her family. He decided to pass by Delly first. He didn’t relish traipsing
around along the river with Kgosi and his archenemy patrolling the shores.
Delly would know better where to look and how to do it safely.
He found her
sitting at the back of her office at the edge of the parking lot waiting,
smoking a cigarette. “I didn’t know you smoked,” Dambuza said pulling up next
to her.
She shook her
head. She suddenly looked her age sitting so still on the edge of the stoop. “I
don’t really, not anymore. It was the only thing I could think of doing.”
Dambuza explained
what Khathurima had told him, leaving out the warning. Delly went in the office
and came out with two powerful torches and they headed down to the river with
Bob trailing behind. The moon was now high in the sky, white and full, casting
a silver glow on everything. They started at Delly’s house and headed up river.
They walked slowly shining their beams carefully back and forth in the tall
reeds. Neither one of them felt like talking, they both seemed to accept the
traditional doctor’s words as the truth and knew they were searching for the
young woman’s body.
They walked for
close to two hours and had found nothing. Twice Dambuza heard the deep rumble of
a hippo, but Delly assured him, though it sounded near, it was quite far away.
“Do you think we should turn back? Maybe we need to retrace where we’ve been.
He said she was near to her home, we’re quite far now,” Dambuza said.
“Not really…wait…what’s
that?” Delly focussed her torch beam near the water. There she was. The body
was laying half submerged in mud; only her shoulders, arms, and head were out
of the water. Dambuza looked at her delicate hand laying in the water, her fist
half open, and he was sure he could feel her grabbing his arm and begging to be
kept safe.
Dambuza and Delly
guarded the body until the uniforms and the forensic staff arrived. They’d not
touched anything just watched the young girl in the muddy water, protecting her
from any more harm. They sat in silence, only the lapping of the water against
the reeds filled the night air.
Once the team
arrived they made their way back to Delly’s place. Dambuza slumped into one of
the low chairs on the veranda. He told her about Renet trying to put off the
conversation he knew they both wanted to have.
Delly handed him a
beer and sat down next to him. “It’s not your fault, really, it’s not,” she
said. “Some asshole killed her, he’s to blame.”
“I may not have
killed her, but I didn’t stop it from happening either. And I had the chance,
that’s the thing, I had the chance to save this one. I don’t think I have a
chance with the other ones, not anymore.”
“No one’s perfect.
You made a mistake. But actually you thought they’d get him, just like we got
Lebo. Renet was in jail. You thought she’d be fine.”
“Yeah... well she
wasn’t.” Dambuza was tired of talking about this since he and Delly both knew
he’d fucked up so anything else she said was just words. “How’s Neo?”
“She’s been
staying with Nana. Wants to get back to work tomorrow, but she looks like
shit. The story she’s telling is she
fell down. Not very creative but that’s it. No one’s gonna buy it of course.”
Dambuza was always
surprised at how Delly’s veranda relaxed him. Hanging out over the ledge, the branches
of trees jutting onto the deck, the river a few metres away. He never thought
much about the restorative powers of nature, but he had to admit sitting back
there was almost always the medicine that he needed, that and ample alcohol.
Delly had slipped a bottle of Jack Daniels and a shot glass on the table in
front of him and as they spoke he’d forgotten how many shots he drank, though
the magic of the liquid was beginning to take its effect. And the cold, hard truths of life were
receding into the background getting fuzzy and warm and far less sharp.
He leaned back in
his chair and tried to clear his mind. He didn’t want to think about dead young
women or beaten up researchers or pieces of human bodies used for science or
wives that were gone forever. Closing his eyes he felt the cool night breeze
blow over his body and took in the scent of wild sage and lavender. This crazy
mad place had something that he was settling into. “Do you think when my kids
come during school holidays you can take us out into the Delta?”
“I’d love to.
Despite your city ways, I have a feeling you and the fabulous Okavango Delta
are going to become fast friends,” Delly said.
Dambuza opened his
eyes and looked at her. “You know, I can’t believe it really, but sometimes I
think you know me better than I know me, but we’ve only known each other for a
few months. How did that happen?”
“I’ve always
thought there are people who just find each other. It’s meant to be. I was
meant to find you. Maybe so I could start my new career as a private
detective.” Her laugh boomed out over the river. Bob got up from the corner and
stood next to Delly, his tail wagging, but when he realised nothing fun was
going to happen, he sat down next to her and let his big heavy head fall onto
her lap.
“Ko! Ko!”
As soon as he
heard the first ‘Ko’, Dambuza knew it was Nana. Did he need more drama in this
day? He’d been avoiding her since the incident at the bar. He still hadn’t
figured out what it all meant. He didn’t want to feel anything and that
wonderful state was hard to maintain whenever Nana was around.
Nana bent down and
kissed her mother then sat down on the sofa. She reached forward for the bottle
on the table, poured herself a shot, and drank it down in one gulp. “That’ll
help.”
She got up and
went into the house for a beer and still hadn’t greeted Dambuza. She came back
and sat down. “In my world,” she started in the middle, as if the conversation
was continuing from the other night in the bar, “a man doesn’t kiss a woman and
run.”
Dambuza kept quiet
and the air prickled with anticipation, unanswered questions.
“Okay then…” Delly
stood up, suddenly very uncomfortable in her own house. “I think I’ll go fetch
us a pizza in town.” Neither Dambuza nor Nana acknowledged Delly’s leaving.
“Okay, yeah,
you’re right,” Dambuza said. “But please, if you care anything about me at all,
don’t force me into discussing this now. I will explain everything, I will I
promise. As soon as I figure it all out, I’ll let you know. But another time,
any other time- except tonight. I’ve had a crap day of epic proportions
preceded by a weekend that might have killed a weaker man, and all I want is to
get quietly drunk and speak of nice things. Please, I beg you to have mercy on
me just this once.”
Nana sat back on
the sofa and sighed, then smiled. “Okay. In fact, Mum called and told me a bit.
I will acquiesce to your wish kind sir.”
“Thank you.”
Nana stood up in
front of him where he sat on his chair and held out her hands. He took her
hands in his and she pulled him to his feet and led him to the sofa where she’d
been sitting. She laid him carefully down and then sat at the end. Placing his
head in her lap. She slowly rubbed his head, her fingers making circular
motions, moving slowly to every patch of his scalp. The pressure relaxed his entire body and all
of his senses were attuned to her expert hands. With every circle of her fingers,
he could feel the tension dissipating. Soon all he focussed on was the movement
of her hands and the pressure of her fingers. And then she began to speak,
softly.
“Once when I was a
little girl, my mother told me the most wonderful story. It was about a woman,
an old woman who’d lost her son,” Nana began. “He’d been a good son. He worked
hard to help his mother when he was young and when he grew up he finished
school and got a fine job. His mother worked as a maid for some people, mean
people, but the mother stayed so she could pay for her son’s school fees. She
stayed to pay his university fees. He promised that once he got a good paying
job, he would buy her a house and pay for a maid to take care of her instead.
But just after finishing school, he suddenly disappeared. The old woman was
frantic with heartache. Time passed and only the franticness wore off, the
heartache grew roots and took up everything inside of her. Everyone told the
old woman- your son is dead. Your son has run away forever. The old woman
didn’t want to believe it. She knew her son was alive somewhere. All she had to
do was wait, and so she waited at the house where she worked, with the horrible
people, but her son never came. Her will was strong, though. Somewhere inside
she knew her son would return.”
“One day she sat
on the stoop, for she was old now and could do very little work, but the
horrible people made her polish the stoop anyway, but to do this she had to sit
down and scoot along, one bit at a time. She looked up. She wasn’t sure why,
she just felt the longing to look up, and then she saw him. She saw her son.
But he was not in the form of the young man who disappeared so long ago, but it
was her son in every other way. The young woman came forward and took the old
woman by the hand. She helped her to her feet. They walked hand-in-hand away
from that place, the place of sadness and horrible people. The young woman, the
old woman’s son in another form, took the old woman to a beautiful house where
maids took care of her and soothed all of the sadness and waiting from her
aching body and the two; the old woman and her son, the young woman who he
arrived in, lived happily ever after.”
Dambuza listened
to the song of Nana’s voice and felt the medicine of her fingers and soon he
was better. His problems receded and he was only a man lying in a woman’s lap
in the breeze of an African night and that was all there was in the world. He
recognised the story, of course. He knew it was Delly trying to tell Nana the
truth about her father, but not having the courage to tell her everything. It
was a beautiful story, a story he hoped would come true.
Chapter 30
Dambuza woke up
and looked around. He was in his bedroom. It was dark outside the window, but
the sound of the rooster three houses away told him morning was not far away
and next to him lying in his arms was Nana. That’s all he knew. How they got
there, what happened between that point and now, these things were a mystery to
him.
“Good morning,”
Nana said.
Dambuza looked
under the blankets and they were both wearing their clothes so that told him an
important detail. “Did you bring me home?”
“Yes, and I hope
you don’t mind me staying over.”
“No, I need to
admit I’m a bit foggy on what took place, though. Sorry.”
“Nothing took
place. You were very sleepy, I drove you here and then we lay down on the bed
and fell asleep. That’s it. Promise.”
Dambuza remembered
the story and Nana massaging his head. “Yes, okay, it’s coming back. Thanks for
giving me a break last night though I’m not sure I deserved it. I didn’t mean
to run out on you at Chuck’s, I didn’t mean to kiss you either. I was working
on autopilot I think.”
Nana sat up in
bed, a sign that some serious talk was about to happen. Dambuza sat up too.
“You promised me an explanation,” Nana said. “Any chance I might get it now?”
“Yes, yes I did.
Okay… that night, I didn’t want to start anything because Bontle was coming, my
ex-wife. She came on Friday. She’d called, she wanted to see me. She wanted to
get back together.”
“Back together?
Wasn’t she the one who initiated the divorce?”
“Yes, but that
doesn’t really matter. It could have been either one of us, she was just
first.”
“So what
happened?”
“Yeah, well she
came. I was really trying not to feel. Nana, I want to be honest with you,
completely. I can’t lie and say I don’t love Bontle, I do, I love her. And I
feel sick from missing my kids and I can’t even think about what a divorce is
going to do to them. I wanted it all to be fixed. I wanted us to be a family
again. When she said she wanted to get back together, I tried not to be happy,
tried not to feel excited. I thought I was doing okay. I wasn’t.”
“And then there’s
you. We have something. I’m not sure it’s very healthy, healthy for either of
us, but then too, I’m not sure I’m built for health, mental or otherwise. I’m
just banging along. So now Bontle was here and I’d kissed you and I wanted my
family back and I couldn’t stand that Bontle had been with someone else and
then there was that Tebogo at the bar. …It’s a mess…I’m a mess. It’s just a
huge fucking complicated mess. The first night it was working with Bontle and
by morning it was gone. We can’t be together, at least now, maybe never.”
Dambuza stopped.
He’d never said that out loud before, that he and Bontle might really and truly
be finished. He’d held out that all of this was temporary or not real somehow,
that he and Bontle would get back together some way, sometime. But when he said
that, when he admitted the possibility that they wouldn’t, it all seemed
suddenly real. It could happen. For a moment he couldn’t breathe with the
thought of it, he felt sick.
Nana grabbed him
in her arms and held him, rocking gently. And then it happened, the thing he
never wanted, he heard himself sobbing in her arms. A Motswana man crying in a
woman’s arms? But he couldn’t stop himself. Wild messy waves of emotions poured
out of his body and he could stop none of it. When the room became silent
again, he couldn’t say how much time had passed. He laid back weak from what
had happened and then he was embarrassed.
“Nana…I…I’m sorry,
I don’t know what happened…”
“No, say nothing.
God, Dambuza, you’ve had a horrible time. How long did you think you could hold
it in?”
He lay back and
she crawled into the crook of his arm. He held her and it felt wonderful. He
thought about the night before and the story she’d told him, a story Delly had
told her as a young girl. But he knew it wasn’t just a story. He knew Delly had
told her a wish. Perhaps he was wrong to reveal what he was about to, but he
felt beholden to Nana and he wanted to return a gift to her.
“Your story last
night, the one Delly told you…” Dambuza started.
“Yes?” Nana looked
up at him.
“It’s not a
story,” Dambuza said. He explained what Delly had told him about Nana’s father
and her grandmother waiting for her return. “Please don’t blame Delly for not
telling you. She was scared.”
Nana listened
carefully. “No, I never would. I completely understand what Mum did. But I must
go to her. I must go to my grandmother. She’s waiting for me.”
“Yes, yes you
should.”
“Yes, quickly. As
soon as I’m sure Neo is alright, I’m going. I’ll go with Delly if she’ll
agree.” She got out of bed, suddenly very excited. Then she got back in bed and
kissed Dambuza. “Thanks. You’ll never know what a wonderful thing you’ve done
for me. I know you think you’re a mess, an emotional mess, someone set out to
make a wreck of everything he touches, but you’re wrong. You’re a blessing, and,
honestly, everyone you touch is made better by you.”
She jumped out of
the bed. By the time he got up, she was gone.
***
“Howzit Dambuza?”
Blue said when he got to the station. “Hey where’s that woman of yours?”
“Blue, you nearly
lost your tongue last time she was here, what do you want her for now?”
“Just wondering.
Hey, the boss says you should pass by his office when you arrive.”
Tito was on the
phone when Dambuza got to his office. “Ee,” he said. “Okay, I’ve got it. I
expected as much.”
He hung up the
phone. “Well that was Manga the pathologist. About that dead young woman, Annah
Ditiro, she was strangled, dead before they threw her in the river.”
“Has anyone found
Pops yet?” Dambuza asked.
“No, and now we
have that riled up group looking for him too. It’s making it all more
problematic. I really do not know what has happened to this town. And we can’t
seem to make any headway in this case. Just more and more problems.”
The phone rang.
Tito listened but said little. He hung up and looked at Dambuza for a moment
before speaking, his face fallen. “Well... they found Pops.”
“Where? Is he
talking?”
“Nope, he’s not
talking. They found him out past Khwai. Seems he found a bit of guilt for what
he’d done,” Tito said. “They found him dead, hanging from a tree.”
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