MALE HANDS again, but this time in thin rubber gloves, which made the hands pale and unfinished, like a white man's hands.

'Do you feel any pain here? No? And here?'

She shook her head.

'I think that the baby is all right. And up here, where these marks are. Is there pain just on the outside, or is it deeper in?'

'It is just the outside.'

'I see. I am going to have to put in stitches here. All the way across here, because the skin has parted so badly. I'll spray something on to take the pain away but maybe it's better for you not to watch me while I'm sewing! Some people say men can't sew, but we doctors aren't too bad at it!'

She closed her eyes and heard a hissing sound. There was cold spray against her skin and then a numbness as the doctor worked on the wound.

'This was your husband's doing? Am I right?'

She opened her eyes. The doctor had finished the suture and had handed something to the nurse. He was looking at her now as he peeled off the gloves.

'How many times has this happened before? Is there anybody to look after you?'

'I don't know. I don't know.'

'I suppose you're going to go back to him?'

She opened her mouth to speak, but he interrupted her.

'Of course you are. It's always the same. The woman goes back for more.'

He sighed. 'I'll probably see you again, you know. But I hope I don't. Just be careful.'

SHE WENT back the next day, a scarf tied around her face to hide the bruises and the cuts. She ached in her arms and in her stomach, and the sutured wound stung sharply. They had given her pills at the hospital, and she had taken one just before she left on the bus. This seemed to help the pain, and she took another on the journey.

The door was open. She went in, her heart thumping within her chest, and saw what had happened. The room was empty, apart from the furniture. He had taken his tapes, and their new metal trunk, and the yellow curtains too. And in the bedroom, he had slashed the mattress with a knife, and there was kapok lying about, making it look like a shearing room.

She sat down on the bed and was still sitting there, staring at the floor, when the neighbour came in and said that she would get somebody to take her in a truck back to Mochudi, to Obed, to her father.

There she stayed, looking after her father, for the next fourteen years. He died shortly after her thirty-fourth birthday, and that was the point at which Precious Ramotswe, now parent-less, veteran of a nightmare marriage, and mother, for a brief and lovely five days, became the first lady private detective in Botswana.

CHAPTER FIVE

WHAT YOU NEED TO OPEN A DETECTIVE AGENCY

MMA RAMOTSWE had thought that it would not be easy to open a detective agency. People always made the mistake of thinking that starting a business was simple and then found that there were all sorts of hidden problems and unforeseen demands. She had heard of people opening businesses that lasted four or five weeks before they ran out of money or stock, or both. It was always more difficult than you thought it would be.

She went to the lawyer at Pilane, who had arranged for her to get her father's money. He had organised the sale of the cattle, and had got a good price for them.

'I have got a lot of money for you,' he said. 'Your father's herd had grown and grown.'

She took the cheque and the sheet of paper that he handed her. It was more than she had imagined possible. But there it was-all that money, made payable to Precious Ramotswe, on presentation to Barclays Bank of Botswana.

'You can buy a house with that,' said the lawyer. 'And a business.'

'I am going to buy both of those.'

The lawyer looked interested. 'What sort of business? A store? I can give you advice, you know.'

'A detective agency.'

The lawyer looked blank.

'There are none for sale. There are none of those.'

Mma Ramotswe nodded. 'I know that. I am going to have to start from scratch.'

The lawyer winced as she spoke. 'It's easy to lose money in business,' he said. 'Especially when you don't know anything about what you're doing.' He stared at her hard. 'Especially then. And anyway, can women be detectives? Do you think they can?'

'Why not?' said Mma Ramotswe. She had heard that people did not like lawyers, and now she thought she could see why. This man was so certain of himself, so utterly convinced. What had it to do with him what she did? It was her money, her future. And how dare he say that about women, when he didn't even know that his zip was half undone! Should she tell him?

'Women are the ones who know what's going on,' she said quietly. 'They are the ones with eyes. Have you not heard of Agatha Christie?'

The lawyer looked taken aback. 'Agatha Christie? Of course I know her. Yes, that is true. A woman sees more than a man sees. That is well-known.'

'So,' said Mma Ramotswe, 'when people see a sign saying

No. 1 ladies' detective agency, what will they think? They'll think those ladies will know what's going on. They're the ones.'

The lawyer stroked his chin. 'Maybe.'

'Yes,' said Mma Ramotswe. 'Maybe.' Adding, 'Your zip, Rra. I think you may not have noticed…'

SHE FOUND the house first, on a corner plot in Zebra Drive. It was expensive, and she decided to take out a bond on part of it, so that she could afford to buy somewhere for the business too. That was more difficult, but at last she found a small place near Kgale Hill, on the edge of town, where she could set up. It was a good place, because a lot of people walked down that road every day and would see the sign. It would be almost as effective as having an advertisement in the Daily News or the Botswana Guardian. Everybody would soon know about her.

The building she bought had originally been a general dealer's shop, but had been converted into a dry cleaners and finally a bottle store. For a year or so it had lain empty, and had been lived in by squatters. They had made fires inside, and in each of the rooms there was a part of the wall where the plaster had been charred and burned. The owner had eventually returned from Francistown and had driven out the squatters and placed the dejected-looking building on the market. There had been one or two prospective purchasers, but they had been repelled by its condition and the price had dropped. When Mma Ramotswe had offered cash, the seller had leapt at her offer and she received the deeds within days.

There was a lot to do. A builder was called in to replace the damaged plaster and to repair the tin roof and, again with the offer of cash, this was accomplished within a week. Then Mma Ramotswe set to the task of painting, and she had soon completed the outside in ochre and the inside in white. She bought fresh yellow curtains for the windows and, in an unusual moment of extravagance, splashed out on a brand new office set of two desks and two chairs. Her friend, Mr J.L.B. Matekoni, proprietor of Tlokweng Road Speedy Motors, brought her an old typewriter which was surplus to his own requirements and which worked quite well, and with that the office was ready to open-once she had a secretary.

This was the easiest part of all. A telephone call to the Botswana College of Secretarial and Office Skills brought an immediate response. They had just the woman, they said. Mma Makutsi was the widow of a teacher

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