you too.'
Apprehension clenches in my gut like the moment before you go over the lip of the rollercoaster. I never liked rollercoasters. Gio swings me towards a table occupied by a small cluster of painfully hip people with expensive haircuts. There is a very pierced and inked woman with violently red hair and Bettie Page eyes, and two men, one in a hideous paisley print shirt and gelled spikes, the other in his early forties, a war photographer's waistcoat and a crafted coating of cynicism. They're all clustered around a big camera with a serious lens, examining the display on the back.
'Oh, ick,' says the woman, pushing the camera away just as we reach the table. 'Why would you show me that?' She hits the photographer on the shoulder, but it's a playful punch, the kind that says, I really like you, even though you show me gruesome photographs, maybe even
'Photos of the homeless guy who was killed,' says Laconic Photographer Guy, the Dave in question.
'Ooooh, cool,' Gio says. 'I'd dig to check those out. You know, we have this new gross-out feature in
'Not much adventure in getting beaten up and set on fire. Cut him up pretty bad. Especially his face. Cut off his fingers too.'
'Are you really going to publish these in
'We're a men's magazine,' Gio shrugs. 'Men are brutal.' And then adds hastily, 'I'm not saying women aren't.'
'They just hide it better,' I say. Everyone looks at me, and then they all simultaneously switch their focus to Sloth. Paisley Shirt smirks. I put up my hand, like a kid at school volunteering the answer everyone's waiting for. 'Hi, I'm Zinzi.'
'Sorry, yeah, guys, this is my friend I told you about?' Gio's tone is loaded with things left unsaid. 'Zinzi December. We used to work together.' Sleep together. Take drugs together. Sleep together while taking drugs together at work together. It was a simple relationship, really.
Piercing Girl scootches round to make space for us to sit on the plush velvet bank while Gio does the introductions – the
Piercing Girl is a hardcore music journalist when she's not being mom to a two year-old she calls Toddlersaurus. 'Juliette writes for
Piercing Girl/Juliette rolls her eyes in pleased fake modesty, which I take to mean it's all true. 'And what do you do now, Zinzi?' she asks sympathetically, leaning forward, giving me the benefit of her full attention. It's only three-quarters patronising.
'I find lost things.'
'Like stolen goods?' Henry pipes up. 'Because my parents' place was broken into last week and they got my grandfather's watch. It was a fob watch, you know, the one with the chain, like 102 years old-'
'No, like lost things. As I said. Car keys. Missing wills.'
'For money?' He raises his eyebrows, as if this is more ludicrous than toasters with built-in MP3 players.
'I charge a reasonable rate for my time.'
He warms to the idea. 'Hey, you know, you could totally work at an old-age home where they have, like, senile dementia or what's that forgetty disease?'
'Alzheimer's,' Piercing Girl provides.
'Yeah, I bet they lose stuff all the time, and you could take it back to them and charge them, and they'd forget they paid you already and you could charge them again.'
'I don't think it works like that,' Piercing Girl says, clearly having decided to adopt me as her pet cause. 'Does it, Zinzi?'
'Who knows how it works?' I know I'm being antagonistic.
'But aren't there tests? I thought they did a full analysis?'
'Human lab-rats!' says Henry enthusiastically. 'Only I guess sometimes there are actual rats, right? That must be confusing.'
'In the US, Australia, Iran, places like that, they do a full head-to-toe, CAT scans, brain scans, endochrine system analysis, the works. In South Africa, we're protected by the Constitution.' And the prohibitive costs of all that invasive testing. There are better things to spend government funds on, like nuclear submarines or official pocket-lining. They do a few basic measurements to try and quantify your
'How are your parents? Do you still, uh-' Gio falters, sensing he's blundered close to the edge.
'It's all right, Gio. I Google them occasionally. They seem to be doing fine. Still divorced. My mom's living in Zurich now. Dad's in Cape Town teaching theory of film to rich kids who are more interested in special effects than subtext.'
'I didn't know they were… oh. Right.'
'Couple of months before the trial.'
An uncomfortable silence stretches out. Drops into freefall, hits terminal velocity and keeps on going.
'But Giovanni said you're writing again?' Piercing Girl prompts. As a professional interviewer, she's probably used to picking up conversations that have crashed to the floor and setting them spinning again. 'A music piece? That's why you're here tonight?'
'I'm doing a book. A trend bible slash pop history of Jozi youth culture. Music, fashion, technology.' The more I say it, the more credible it sounds. Do-able even. Possibly profitable.
'You got a publisher yet?'
'I'm starting with a feature article for
'
'She's great,' I say. I haven't got as far into my cover as actually contacting the commissioning editor. I chalk it up on my to-do list. But things go more smoothly after that. Apart from the moment when I catch Henry trying to sniff Sloth's fur.
Dave doesn't say much, other than to offer to show me the photographs when an argument starts about whether it's morally bankrupt to print such horrific images. I skim them, scrolling as quickly as possible. They're as bad as you'd expect, taken with a forensic distance, even in the pics he's framed with shocked bystanders, for mood.
'Do they know who he was?' I say, handing the camera back.
'Drifter. Been sleeping rough. They're still trying to get a name. Might have been a zoo, they're not sure. Do you mind?' he says, raising the camera. 'Atmosphere stuff.'
'Uh.'
'Group photo!' Piercing Girl yelps, and Dave snaps a couple of awkwardly posed shots, before disappearing towards the stage as the band makes its appearance, only an hour and a half late: an all-girl Afrikaans/seSotho glam punk electro-rock number called 'Nesting Mares'.