‘Shorty de Lange tell you that?’ Februarie guessed.

‘He did,’ said Riedwaan.

‘All I know is they pulled that case from me quicker than a virgin crosses her legs.’ Februarie drained his glass.

‘You think it was a gang hit?’ Clare asked.

‘Nah,’ said Februarie. ‘Andrew,’ he called the barman over. ‘Pour me another beer; you’re not pretty enough to be useful just standing around.’ He turned to Riedwaan again. ‘I thought it was something else. They tortured him first. It looked professional to me, not the usual mess a tik-head leaves. Whoever did it wanted something specific.’

‘Have you got any idea what?’ asked Riedwaan.

Februarie shrugged. ‘He was in the army. Old regime. Special ops. He probably knew stuff. They all did, those fuckers. The list of people who want them dead is longer than the list that wants them alive.’

‘What did he know?’

‘I’m speculating. The case was pulled, I told you. Some desk jockey said they were shifting it higher. Giving it priority.’

‘What happened?’

‘Don’t fuck with me, Faizal. You know what happens when that happens. The case dies.’

Februarie drank his beer. Riedwaan drank his Coke. Clare watched them.

‘There was one thing,’ Februarie said at last.

‘I thought there might be,’ said Riedwaan. ‘You follow it up?’

‘Of course I did.’ Februarie was affronted. ‘That’s when the case was kicked upstairs and I got stolen-bicycle duty.’

‘Sorry.’ Riedwaan put down enough money to cover the drinks. ‘What was it?’

‘They were army,’ Februarie continued. ‘The killers.’

‘How do you know?’ asked Clare.

‘The way he was tortured. They used to do that in Namibia. To insurgents, if they caught them. To civilians, if they were bored.’

Riedwaan was quiet.

‘So watch your back in Walvis Bay,’ muttered Februarie.

‘That’s touching,’ said Riedwaan. ‘You find out anything else?’

‘After I got taken off the case?’

‘Ja.’

‘Sommer for the cause of justice?’ said Februarie.

‘Something like that.’

‘Do I look like I have a death wish? My life might look like a fuck-up, but it’s the only one I’ve got.’

Riedwaan waited. He and Februarie went back a long way and he had learnt to read the man’s silences. The barman went to the other end of the counter to serve a new customer.

‘I’ve got an old friend,’ said Februarie. ‘She did a search for me. Nothing on Hofmeyr. Fuck-all in any army record, old or new.’ He looked up at Riedwaan. ‘Funny that, for a decorated major, wouldn’t you say?’

‘Hilarious,’ said Riedwaan.

‘His unit’s there on the record,’ said Februarie. ‘But no Major Hofmeyr. No fellow officers either, those ones you’ll find in the picture in his study. Erased, all of them.’

‘So you gave up?’

‘Nearly,’ said Februarie, finishing his beer.

‘Then I found a footnote in one of those truth and reconciliation cases that went nowhere. Some secret weapons-testing site up north.’

‘Yes?’ said Riedwaan.

‘There was a reference to this covert unit in Walvis Bay. There was a Hofmeyr there. A major. He and a couple of friends were implicated. The whole thing folded, so nothing more was heard about Major Hofmeyr.’

‘Until he was shot.’

‘Exactly,’ said Februarie. ‘Until he was shot.’

‘I owe you,’ said Riedwaan.

‘You want me to check out his friends?’ asked Februarie.

‘Depends how many bicycles get stolen.’

‘Fuck you too, Faizal.’ Februarie counted the money Riedwaan had left on the bar and ordered another beer.

The gathering clouds had thickened when Clare and Riedwaan got outside. It was starting to drizzle.

‘I’ll be in Walvis Bay in a day or two,’ Riedwaan said. ‘I’ll see what I can find out by then.’

Clare checked her watch. ‘I hope I’m going to make it to the airport,’ she said.

‘You are going to make it,’ said Riedwaan. There had been an accident on the highway. Rubbernecking drivers had slowed the traffic to a crawl. He pulled in to the emergency lane and speeded past, siren blaring.

‘I always wondered why you kept that thing,’ said Clare, with a smile.

‘You’re going to make it,’ said Riedwaan, taking the plunge, ‘without asking me a single question.’

‘I need to think,’ said Clare. ‘It’s not making sense. It could be that the gun used to kill Hofmeyr was sold or stolen. Male victims, there’s a match, I suppose, but Hofmeyr was cut up before he was shot.’

‘I wasn’t thinking about Hofmeyr.’

‘I know,’ said Clare, ‘it’s those boys that get me.’

The rain started to come down in earnest, making it difficult to see through the windscreen.

‘I was thinking about us,’ said Riedwaan.

‘Don’t start again,’ said Clare, holding her hands up. ‘This is your thing, your wife here, all that. Why must I take the responsibility for talking about it?’

Riedwaan took the airport turn-off, parking outside the international departure drop-in. He turned to face Clare. ‘She never came.’

Clare glanced at her watch again. She had five minutes before check-in closed. ‘Why didn’t you say anything?’

‘I tried to talk to you,’ said Riedwaan. ‘I’ve e-mailed you, but you disappear behind work and theories and business.’ He stopped, startled at this uncharacteristic burst of articulateness. It was a mistake. Clare opened the car door, slipping her bag over shoulder and the thin Hofmeyr file underarm.

‘You know this whole debacle could’ve been avoided if you’d just said something in the beginning?’

‘I know.’ Riedwaan’s dark eyes flashed with the temper he had been keeping in check. ‘And you wouldn’t give me an inch. I’m trying to fix things, with Shazia, with my daughter.’ Riedwaan got out of the car too. He leant on the roof, his eyes on Clare until she looked away. ‘With you too,’ he said softly.

‘Riedwaan, it’s not going to fix, especially not in the five minutes I have before the flight is closed. Just forget it. Let’s just get this case done.’ Clare was through the automatic doors before Riedwaan could say another word. They closed behind her, leaving him with nothing but his own reflection and a couple of porters shaking their heads in sympathy.

‘Women,’ said one of them mournfully.

‘Women,’ agreed Riedwaan.

Five o’clock the next morning and Riedwaan was throwing a couple of pairs of jeans, four clean shirts and underwear into the bike’s pannier. He wheeled his bike into the cobbled street. The foghorn wailed as the sea mist stole through the sleeping suburbs fringing the Atlantic. In the distance, the whine of a car or two. Clubbers heading home, Riedwaan’s favourite time of day. He fired the bike’s engine. Two minutes and he was on the elevated freeway above the harbour, where construction cranes, still as herons at the water’s edge, waited for the day’s activity to return.

Riedwaan accelerated north where the road ribboned into the clear morning. He had hairpinned up the first mountain pass by the time the sun was up, the roar of the bike lifting his mood.

It was getting hot when he refuelled. Riedwaan checked his map. A hundred or so kilometres to the Namibian border.

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