when he picked up. ‘Riedwaan. Someone has found India King.’ She could hear him exhale.
‘Where?’ he asked. ‘Who found her? When?’
‘On the beach outside Sushi-Zen at about midnight. There is a bus stop there, two palm trees. She’s there.’ Clare could hear him scribbling it down. ‘Giscard told me. It was his friend who found her – he works there.’
‘I’ll send Rita with a car to fetch Giscard. We will also have to find this friend of his.’ He put down the phone.
Clare stood up. ‘I’ll make us some coffee. The police are on their way.’
Giscard looked longingly at the door.
‘Giscard, you knew you would have to speak to them if you came to me.’ She poured his coffee, handed him the sugar. ‘Why did you do it?’
‘Xavier, my friend, he stays with me because he is also from DRC. He came home tonight and he was very, very strange. He was talking about the dead girl, the dead girl. He keep saying he touch her. That it is wrong that he touch her because she is dead. But he say he did not know she is dead.’ He stirred more sugar into the coffee, as if trying to make sense of Xavier’s incoherence.
‘What else?’ asked Clare. She took the spoon from him. The sound of it scraping on the bottom of the cup was grating her nerves raw.
‘He have blood on his new Nikes. I asked him how it got there but he say to me he did nothing. Just that he found her. He saw her when he was waiting for the bus.’ He looked up at Clare. ‘Please help me, Clare. I must come to you because he came on the bus. Maybe the driver sees the blood and tells the police. I say to him: come with me to the police. You must tell the truth or they will find you. I tell him that the police in South Africa will find you. It is not like DRC. They will want to find who killed this white girl. But he won’t come. He is too afraid.’
‘He won’t be deported if he has his papers.’
Giscard stared at her. ‘He is not afraid of them. He is afraid of her. Her body is warm when he touch her, like she is alive.’
They drank their coffee and waited for the car. Clare craved a cigarette as desperately as if she had given up yesterday, rather than five years before.
‘The police will want to question Xavier,’ said Clare. ‘Is he at home now?’
‘Is that necessary?’ asked Giscard. ‘I come to you already.’
Clare put her hand on his shoulder. ‘He will have to make a statement. They will want to question him, find out what he was doing there. They will want to know what he knows of the other girls.’
‘Why? He is innocent. He just found her there.’
The doorbell went and Clare buzzed in Rita Mkhize and a uniformed officer. ‘They will take you to pick up Xavier,’ said Clare.
Giscard stood up to follow the officers to the car, his shoulders slumped in defeat. ‘I wish I not tell you this, Madame. Not good for me to do good thing.’
Clare had no comfort for him. She locked up, wondered how long it would be before he was deported. Then she drove down to join Riedwaan.
33
The scrappy stretch of beach was full of lights and people. A small crowd had gathered to watch from the other side of the police tape. The police photographer was busy. Clare looked up at the darkened restaurant where people had been chatting and eating and drinking just an hour before. Riedwaan came up to her, his eyes dark with anger.
‘Come and look, Clare,’ he said. He took her arm and walked her over, holding the tape up so that she could easily step under it.
‘Due west,’ said Clare, moving around the body. She had seen a photo of India while she was alive. In it, she was laughing, animated, her hands and hair a blur of enthusiasm. But this was a broken doll. The arrangement of the body was the same – the bound hand, the tarty clothes. Clare made herself look at the girl, keeping revulsion at bay, trying to pinpoint what was eluding her.
‘It’s the fury,’ said Riedwaan. ‘He slashed her throat to the bone. Either the fantasy is not working out right. Or something else rattled him. Or she fought too hard.’
‘He needs co-operation. Or some semblance of participation,’ said Clare. ‘He believes, I would imagine, that these girls want to be part of his game.’
‘Look here,’ said Riedwaan. Clare knelt beside him. The grass on the slope below the girl’s body gleamed in the moonlight. Clare put out her finger. Touched it. It was sticky with blood. India King’s throat gaped like a sacrificial lamb’s where it had been cut in full view of the road, of the restaurant, of the block of flats over the road.
Clare turned away and was unexpectedly and violently sick. Riedwaan stood by, knowing her well enough to let her purge herself and regain control.
‘I can’t believe that nobody in the restaurant saw anything,’ said Clare.
‘Let’s go and check what you can see from up there,’ said Riedwaan.
They crossed the road and made their way to the entrance. The restaurant was closed but Riedwaan’s badge convinced the security guard let them in. It was very quiet, with just a murmur of voices in the kitchen. Riedwaan went in search of the owner. Clare walked over to a table by the sliding doors and looked out. She could not see anything other than a snarl of black rocks, the ocean and the island in the distance. She moved to another table. The same view. The balcony blocked the view of the road. The grassy slope and the beach were invisible, something you would know only if you had been inside the restaurant. Clare slid open the glass doors. It was very cold on the balcony. It had been so all evening, and the tables there had not been laid. Now they were chained together in a corner.
She looked down again. Even from here, it would have been difficult to see anything happening on the beach below. She looked up at the apartment block. Nefertiti Heights was new and unoccupied. There was nobody there either to have witnessed anything. Clare looked back down at the beach. India’s face had at last been covered and her body strapped to a gurney. The paramedics, barely older than India had been, were carrying her corpse to the waiting ambulance. Clare’s eyes filled with tears. The beach was empty, except for one wakeful gull circling overhead. She watched it trace a silver arc against the night sky, white feathers glinting in the moonlight. The bird landed in front of a huge storm-water drain, a dark maw leading under the road into the belly of the city. The ambulance flashed its light and pulled away, heading for the morgue. There would be no peace for India yet, thought Clare grimly. Dr Mouton would spend hours tomorrow carefully puzzling over how she had died and when.
Riedwaan came up to her. ‘Just that little patch is hidden from view.’
‘I can’t help thinking that he must have known that. Can we borrow their booking list?’
‘I’ve already asked the owner for it. We’ll get it as we go out.’ He turned to leave. Clare stayed him with a touch to his arm, but she felt the heat of him through his jacket, and pulled her hand away.
‘The display of the bodies is contradictory,’ said Clare. ‘Very public, but no witnesses.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘Well, the first one you would have expected to show up on the CCTV, but that camera was false. Could have been a fluke, but I don’t think so,’ said Clare. She paced up and down the balcony, speaking more to herself than to Riedwaan. ‘The second girl was dumped at Graaff’s Pool. There are no cameras there, although there are a few on the pathway that leads down to the beach. But the killer could have used the old tunnel under Beach Road.’
‘There is no physical evidence to support that,’ said Riedwaan.
‘No,’ said Clare. ‘But I’m sure that’s what he did. A boat would have been impossible to land that night and the cameras would have picked him up going there.’
‘Here he knew exactly the spot where the body wouldn’t be seen. Even though when she was found, it appeared so shockingly public.’
Clare stopped and looked thoughtfully across at the busy police scene. ‘He’s playing with us. But I don’t think he wants to be caught. At first I thought he was asking to be caught, to be stopped. That’s not unusual, a killer wanting to be stopped, convinced that he’s killing because the police aren’t doing their job. But I don’t think that is