“Nowhere, I’m sorry.”

“It’s all right, man.”

Kramer kicked at a stone.

“How about that stained-glass of Georgie’s? Could that have affected observation?”

“The theatre light was on. I don’t know, it might I suppose. But isn’t this a rather trivial point?”

“Yes, but strange.”

“Let’s have another look, shall we? I’ve got time before punishment.”

“What’s it, four o’clock?”

“Twenty past.”

“That’s pushing it. Like you said, it’s a small point.”

“Please yourself.”

Kramer helped him off with the apron as Zondi came over smelling his hands gingerly.

“Perhaps you have some tissues in your bag for my sergeant,” Kramer asked.

Dr Strydom looked a little surprised but began to rummage about.

“He’s driving my car, you see.”

“Ah, of course. What about some TCP? That should do the trick. And spirits to dry it off.”

“Ta,” Kramer said, leaving the effusive thanks to a dutiful Zondi.

Then the meat wagon took a short leap at them. Van Rensberg leaned across the front seat and bawled his farewells over and under the roar of the engine. Kramer caught a line about working office hours and returned the salute. That got rid of him. Off he hurtled, clearing the traffic for them all the way back into Trekkersburg.

“I’ll take you up on that offer, Doctor,” Kramer said suddenly. “Come on Zondi, don’t bugger about, man. It’ll stop you picking your nose.”

They detoured to pass the Market Square, with Dr Strydom still tailing them, and confirmed that the yellow Dodge had left it.

“This shouldn’t take long but I want to see Farthing if I can,” Kramer explained. “So I want you to leave the car with me and get down to Trichaard Street on foot. Don’t do too much or get too close. You could ask Maisy if Gershwin’s mob have been in for extra booze lately.”

“Okay, boss.”

“If I finish early, then I’ll drive down Trichaard Street once, fast, and you meet me in Buller’s Walk.”

“Got it.”

“And if not, then come back to the office by seven.”

“Yes, boss.”

Zondi got out at the next traffic light and Kramer drove the rest of the way cursing himself for not thinking of radioing headquarters earlier and asking them to warn Mr Abbott they were coming.

But there he was, scrubbing away at his palm in the yard doorway to the mortuary. He looked somewhat perplexed by the sudden arrival of the law. And a little concerned. Poor Georgie.

“Well, what can I do for you this time?” he asked.

“Tell me the colour of Miss Le Roux’s eyes.”

“Hey? Blue of course.”

“Why: Of course?”

“Because her hair’s such a lovely blonde.”

It was not very pleasant when a man in his profession spoke of the dead in the present tense. It could be just a slip of the tongue though, just as thinking a blonde had blue eyes could be a mere slip of the mind.

“Thank you, Georgie. Now our friend Dr Strydom would like another look at the person in question.”

“Certainly, certainly, come through, gentlemen. Please don’t mind the mess.”

The mess he referred to was a very orderly arrangement comprising a trolley of embalming instruments, two arterial drains on stands and an enamel bucket of viscera. At the centre of them a small, shrivelled man of about eighty lay on the table with his shroud pulled up.

“Nice neat sutures,” Dr Strydom said, casting a professional glance over Mr Abbott’s work.

“He’s an American,” Mr Abbott confided in almost a whisper. “Poor chap only just got off the ship for a tour. Stroke. I’ve got to have him on a plane in Durban tomorrow early.”

That explained the extra care taken with the sutures-it was a matter of national pride.

“Won’t keep you long,” Dr Strydom said, pulling out Miss Le Roux’s tray. “Can we have a bit of extra light here, do you think?”

He waited until Mr Abbott had supplied it before he drew back the sheet.

“Christ, what’s happened to her face?” Kramer said.

“Nothing to worry about, just a touch of mottling,” Mr Abbott assured him. “I can get rid of it quite easily with talc.”

“I haven’t come to bloody take her out,” Kramer responded.

“Steady, man,” Dr Strydom cautioned. “We’ve had a bad day, Georgie-a bloater out on the veld.”

“I understand.”

Nevertheless, he backed away hurt.

“Now let’s see the eyes,” Kramer snapped.

Dr Strydom placed a hand on either side of the face and pushed up on the eyelids with his thumbs. The irises were brown, deep brown with no little flecks of hazel or yellow.

“You pressed down very hard,” Kramer muttered.

“One doesn’t have to be gentle! Besides, they’re apt to be a bit sticky.”

“I thought you needed pennies…?”

“Not always. Depends.”

Kramer took a deep breath.

“Can I have a go?”

“Georgie, get us some more gloves, will you?”

Kramer and Mr Abbott made their peace as they struggled with the gloves which were a size too small. Then Kramer adopted exactly the same procedure as Dr Strydom.

God, her head felt hard. The lids, however, moved easily, like grape skins. His stomach knotted.

“Well?” There was more than a hint of challenge in Dr Strydom’s tone.

“Just a minute.”

Using his fingertips now, which were much more sensitive than the edge of his thumbs, Kramer felt all the way up each lid to the edge of the eyesocket.

“Doctor, do you have little lumps up here?” he asked very quietly.

“Tear glands. No, not there-closer to the nose.”

“Here is where I mean.”

“I shouldn’t think so.”

“Feel for yourself.”

Dr Strydom reached out with confidence and drew back again plainly shaken.

“I’d like to take a look underneath if I may?”

“You may,” replied Kramer, doing what the Widow Fourie hated him to do with his mouth. He shuddered involuntarily as he removed the borrowed gloves.

Mr Abbott brought a small tray over from one of the wall cabinets and Dr Strydom shakily selected a slender probe. Kramer looked away and studied the American visitor’s face; he had a moustache just like Wyatt Earp.

“Here, Lieutenant.”

Dr Strydom’s voice was barely audible. In his hand lay two tiny glass dishes. And they were a deep blue, except for a circle in the middle which was clear.

“Contact lenses!” exclaimed Mr Abbott. “My goodness, they don’t half give us trouble.”

“I-I must have shoved them up there-pushed a little too hard, perhaps-they were sort of wedged-probably slipped up before my thumbs reached them-there’s this bend where the eyeball presses against the bone, the superior helix, I…”

“Forget it,” Kramer said.

“Please, Lieutenant, allow me to explain.”

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