Read The Satanic Mechanic Online
Authors: Sally Andrew
CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX
I let my chickens out of their hok and saw what looked like big rooikat tracks in the sand, but I didn't study them. I had coffee, pills and bread and jam and headed into town. I was glad to see Jessie's red scooter and Hattie's car were already outside the
Gazette
office. I was impatient to talk to them, so I parked my bakkie dangerously close to Hattie's Etios.
âMaria, darling. How are you?' said Hattie, giving me a hug but not creasing her cream top. âHow absolutely dreadful this must be for you. Jessie's been telling me all about it. Let me make you some coffee.'
âThey didn't find her. Geraldine,' said Jessie. âI spoke to Reghardt. They found a place where she'd crushed some herbs that threw the dogs off the scent.'
âI can't believe she did it,' I said.
âNo,' said Jessie.
âBut it seems such a coincidence . . .' said Hattie. âThey were looking for her in connection with Slimkat's death, and now she pops up at another murder.' As she spoke, I quietly took over the coffee making. Hattie's tea is fine, but she never gets the coffee right.
âBut she's a healer, not a killer,' I said.
âA person can be both, you know,' said Hattie.
âThe Bushmen are the ones who have been attacked,' said Jessie. âThe police want to make a scapegoat out of Ystervark or Ousies instead of investigating the case properly.'
âWell, it is suspicious that the knife was there. And that the old woman's just disappeared,' said Hattie. âTwice now after a murder. Very suspicious.'
âI bet Ricus knows where she is,' I said.
âSo, if she didn't do it, who did?' said Hattie. âHave they brought Ystervark in for questioning?'
âThey questioned him after Slimkat's murder,' said Jessie. âHe went back up north for the funeral.'
âAre you sure he didn't come back?' said Hattie.
âOh, Hattie, give these guys a break.'
âI suppose the police will look into it,' said Hattie.
âJohannes told Detective Kannemeyer that he doesn't know Slimkat or Ystervark,' I said. âBut the detective doesn't believe him. I just can't believe anyone in my group could've done it.'
âI can,' said Jessie. âThat bastard Dirk is capable of anything.'
âNow, Jessie, he was cleared of the last murder,' said Hattie.
âMaybe he didn't kill his wife, but he beat her.'
âHe feels very bad about what he did,' I said.
âOh, come on, Tannie Maria. Don't defend him. They all say that. You know that.'
I couldn't argue with her there. Maybe Dirk had fooled me, like my own husband had fooled me so many times before. He'd say he was really sorry, then he'd do it again.
âHe was the one holding a gun,' I said.
âMy, oh my,' said Hattie.
âBut he said he didn't shoot it. The police did tests for gunshot powder.'
âWhen a gun is fired, it leaves gunshot residue on the fingers,' explained Jessie.
âWell then, we'll know soon enough,' said Hattie.
âI bet it was him,' said Jessie. âHe was only going to that group because Anna pressured him.'
âWell, at least he did go,' said Hattie.
âHuh,' said Jessie. âI don't understand why Anna is friends with him. She was in love with his wife, who he abused.'
âShe certainly used to hate him,' said Hattie. âYes, their friendship is a strange thing. Cemented by guns and alcohol, from what you two told me.'
âThey both loved Martine and missed her when she was killed,' I said.
âRemember how they sang “'n Liedjie Van Verlange” together? That Song Of Longing? In some ways, they have a lot in common, Anna and Dirk. Maybe that's why she forgave him.'
âPff,' said Jessie. âHe's an arsehole. Forgiving him is not going to change that.'
âMaybe if he forgave himself . . .' I said, offering a mosbolletjie rusk to Jessie.
She took my rusk but not my maybe.
âDirk was in the army,' said Jessie, âin the bad old days. He's a rat's arse.'
âJessie,' said Hattie. âLanguage.'
âSorry, Hattie, but there are no nice words for people like that. They crossed over illegally into neighbouring countries to kill anyone who supported the ANC. Back in the day when the ANC was fighting for the oppressed and not for the black elite.'
Jessie was too young to have been around for all of that, but she knew a lot about South African history. She'd done that journalism course in Grahamstown.
âTata Radebe,' I said. âThe man who was shot. I think he might've been in the ANC underground. He'd been tortured.'
âThere! You see,' said Jessie. âTortured by someone like Dirk. They are old enemies. Dirk killed him.'
âHeavens,' said Hattie. âThat war is long over.'
âFor some people it's never over,' said Jessie. âThose white boys were trained to hate the terrorists for ever.'
âIt seems so unlikely,' said Hattie. âOld animosity suddenly flaring up like that.'
âMaybe Tata knew something from the past about Dirk,' I said. âSomething that Dirk would rather keep hidden.'
âWhatever,' said Jessie. âThe point is, he's a bastard. A dangerous bastard who should be locked away. Hopefully he will be soon. If one of his police buddies doesn't happen to “lose” the gun-residue test . . .'
âWell, let's wait for the facts, shall we?' said Hattie. âRemember facts? Those things journalists so value.'
âOh, Hattie, I'm not going to write any of this. I'm just giving my opinion. Journalists are allowed to have opinions.'
The office phone rang. It was Henk. âWe need your written statement about last night,' he said. âWarrant Officer Smit will take it from you. But come talk to me first. I've got some information and I'd like to hear what you think.'
âI'm on my way,' I said.
I put down the phone and said to Jessie and Hattie, âDetective Kannemeyer wants my opinion about some facts.'
CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN
I parked under a rubber tree; Piet met me and led me inside to Henk's office and then disappeared. Henk was behind his big teak desk, on the phone. There were some new wooden shelves and metal filing cabinets in his office. His moustache tips were neatly waxed, and his white cotton shirt was freshly ironed. I sat down on a comfortable leather and wood chair. The sun shone in through the branches of a thorn tree outside his window.
I looked for the photograph of him and his wife smiling at each other. It wasn't on his desk. But then I saw it up on a shelf alongside some files and papers, turned towards him. I thought about baking a cake. But what kind? Henk was still on the phone, writing on a notepad in front of him.
âJa. Ja, right. Thank you,' Henk said. âOkay, but as soon as you have them . . . Thanks. Bye.'
âMaria,' he said. His eyes were friendly, but he wasn't smiling. âHow are you?'
I nodded. I glanced up at the wedding picture, and Henk followed my gaze then looked back at me.
âI'm sorry I was a bit short with you last night,' he said. âI was upset you didn't tell me sooner about Geraldine. We might have caught her.'
âYou haven't found her yet?'
He shook his head. âThis is a difficult case for me. Not just because of your involvement. But because a man died on my watch. Again.'
âI'm sorry.'
âIt's not your fault. As much as I'd like to leave you out of it, you're in the middle of this one.'
âHow can I help?'
âWe suspect Ricus knows where Geraldine is, but he's saying nothing,' said Henk. âGeraldine comes from Kuruman, near Hotazel where Ricus used to live. Do you know what their connection is? Were they both mixed up in the satanist church?'
âI don't think so. She's a healer.'
âWhat did those masked people want? That night they came to the group? One of them was Ricus's girlfriend?'
âMaybe it's better you ask him.'
âRight now I am asking you.'
I looked down at my hands then up again.
âMaria, this is a murder investigation,' he said. âOne that I intend to solve. Are you going to help or make it difficult for me?'
âI'm sorry. You're right.' I took a deep breath. âShe's his ex-girlfriend. Her first name is Elmari. She wanted a black stone heart that he was wearing around his neck.'
âHmm,' said Henk. âThe Order of the Black Heart is the name of the satanist church in Hotazel.'
âShe called it an amulet. It sounded like he'd given it to her and then taken it when he'd left. The other night he gave her the stone back again; he'd coated it with gold.'
âWhy won't he lay charges against her?'
âSome people are loyal to their girlfriends. Their ex-girlfriends.' I didn't look at the picture of Henk's wife as I spoke. âHe loved her, once.'
A bird landed in the tree outside. I saw a flash of cinnamon and blue amongst the branches.
âShe might still be upset with Ricus,' said Henk. âAnd did the other visitors have issues with him?'
âIt seemed they were just there to help Elmari get the stone. But maybe they had their own problems with Ricus.'
âMight they shoot at people in his group to pay him back?'
âI doubt it. Elmari got what she wanted. Did you find them and their red car?'
âNot yet. But we will.'
âAnd have you had answers yet, from the gunpowder tests?'
âJa. Yours came out clear.'
âYou wouldn't think I . . .'
âOf course I don't think you'd kill anyone. But you needed to be in the clear before I could speak to you.'
âAnd Dirk â have you had his results?'
âYes.'
âAnd?'
âI don't know how much to share with you.' He twirled the tip of his moustache with a finger.
âHenk,' I said, sitting up very straight. âIf you want my help, then you need to give me the facts.'
âDirk didn't do it.'
I let out a sigh and relaxed into my chair. I don't know why I felt so relieved. Jessie was right: he was a bastard. But he was a bastard I quite liked.
âHis test shows no residue,' said Henk. âAnd the bullet's not from his gun.'
âAnd Ousies? And Ricus?'
âNone of the people tested had residue on their hands.'
âPhew.' The bird outside started singing. Coocoo kurukutu-coo. It was a laughing dove.
âIncluding Johannes?' I asked.
âAlso clear. But he may have had time to scrub his hands or remove gloves.'
âOh . . . Have you spoken to Ystervark? Asked him about that knife?'
âHis Oudtshoorn family say he's up at the Kuruman Reserve. The police up north will track him down. See if he has an alibi.'
Henk leant forward onto his wooden desk. âYou are sure no one around the fire had gloves?'
âI didn't see any.'
âAnd no one left the fire before I got there?'
âNo.'
âIt must have been someone from outside. Maybe with the help of someone on the inside. But no one in your circle fired a gun. Tell me, this thing Ousies did with the smoke. She did that at the end of every session?'
âYes. I told you about it last night; it's a cleansing thing. She sings when she does it. It was quite . . . magical.'
âShe sang. Loudly?'
âNot loud. It was kind of like the wind.'
âBut it got your attention. Enough to distract you from other sounds?'
âI don't know. I could still hear the sound of Johannes working on his panel van.'
âSo he was also making a noise?'
âI wouldn't call it a noise; he was just busy. You spoke about the bullet. You said it wasn't Dirk's?'
âNo. It was a .22.'
âSo it
was
the same as the satanist's gun?'
âNo. That was an airgun with .22 pellets. In Tata Radebe's heart was a .22 bullet. Probably from a rifle. We haven't found the weapon. Yet. It would've been hard to hide a gun so quickly, but we'll keep looking. My men are there again this morning. But it's most likely gone with the shooter.'
âAnd the tracks? Vorster saw tracks of someone running away?'
Henk fiddled with his notepad. âThose were my tracks,' he said, then looked up. âPiet reckons someone could have moved carefully across the stony ground all the way to the dirt road or the tar road. The ground is rough with sheep hooves. There are some tracks that could be from shoes, and places where the fence might've been climbed over. Nothing conclusive.'
âI am so glad.'
âWe haven't caught them yet.'
âSorry, you're right. Just glad that it was none of the people in the group. They . . . we matter to each other, you know. We help each other . . .'
âThere will be no more meetings. For a while, anyway.'
âOh.'
âI have spoken to Ricus. It's too dangerous.'
âOh.'
âHe agrees. Of course when the case is solved, if you really want to . . .'
âYes. I do.'
âI am sure we'll find them soon,' he said, sounding too sure.
The laughing dove called again.
âYou still have that picture, of your wife,' I said.
âYes,' he said.
CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT
I gave my statement to Warrant Officer Smit at the main desk. He wrote it up, and I signed it. On the way back from the police station, I drove past a sign at the Spar, advertising half-price coffee cakes. I parked a couple of jacaranda trees away from Hattie's car and took a diet tablet.
I walked along the pavement, stepping on the shadows of the tree branches and on leaves that had fallen. The shadows and fallen leaves were part of the tree but not part of the tree. Maybe in a way that an ex-wife or an ex-husband can be part of your life even if they aren't there any more. I could hardly say that Fanie was no longer part of my life. I didn't keep photographs of him, but that doesn't mean I didn't see him or feel him.
And Henk loved his wife. She was a good woman. She was not a wife-beater or a satanist or a murderer. There was no reason I should mind that he still kept a picture of her in his office. None at all. A pear cake with cream-cheese icing came to mind. That might do the trick.
Jessie jumped up and put on the kettle when I came in.
âAnd so?' she said.
âDo tell,' said Hattie.
âThe gunpowder tests show that none of us did it.'
âWhat?' said Jessie.
âAnd the bullet wasn't from Dirk's gun.'
Jessie sat down heavily on her chair. âBut who else?'
âMaybe those masked visitors. With some inside help. It sounds like the police still suspect Ousies and Johannes.'
âHave they found those satanists yet?' asked Jessie. She got up to make us coffee.
âThey're looking for them. Their car is red with flames; if they're in town, they won't be hard to find.'
âThey're from Hotazel . . .' said Jessie. âSlimkat's reserve isn't far from there, on the Kuruman River.'
âAnd Ricus and Ousies met in Hotazel,' I added.
âIt is all rather a coincidence,' said Hattie.
âI can't believe Ousies is involved,' said Jessie.
âJessie, you never believe the underdogs can be baddies,' said Hattie.
âAg, Hattie. They are good people who have had a hard time.'
âWhich may well be a motive for committing a crime. Even if the crime is justified, it's still a crime.'
âI wonder if those people from Hotazel have got something against the Bushmen,' said Jessie.
âBut why would they kill that old man, Tata Radebe?' Hattie said.
âKannemeyer wonders if the ex-girlfriend and her friends are upset with Ricus. If they might have attacked the group to get back at him.'
âMaybe they are just bonkers,' said Hattie. âThey might have all sorts of batty reasons to kill someone.'
âIn gangs, killing someone is sometimes an initiation rite for a new member,' said Jessie. She handed me a cup of coffee and a mosbolletjie rusk.
âAlthough you'd think satanists would have their own barmy tricks,' said Hattie. âLike eating a black mamba live.'
Jessie laughed, but my mind was on the image of a black mamba: not one that was being eaten, but one that was moving amongst us, as a human. It gave me the shivers. I tried to shake the feeling off with a sip of coffee and a bite of my rusk. Jessie made a good cup of coffee.
We pulled ourselves away from the murder story and got on with some
Gazette
work. I had a pile of letters as usual. I recognised one of them but decided to save it as a treat until later. I read a letter from a woman who was in love with a married man. The man had a wife who âdidn't understand him'. The woman wanted recipes to make the man leave his wife. But I told her to let him go. I gave her my great aunt's
malva pudding recipe to comfort her and help her be strong on her own. And a slow, complex recipe for a Dutch fruit cake. I hoped this would keep her mind off her problems and keep her busy in her own home.
The other tricky letter was from a girl who was in love with her teacher and wanted to bake him some cookies. I knew it'd do no good to tell her to give up her crush. She would see him every day. But I gave her what I told her was a âsophisticated' recipe for cookies. They looked good but were in fact quite tasteless â so boring that they could've been on my diet sheet. The teacher wouldn't like them at all.
I felt bad, not giving the woman and the girl the recipes they asked for. But sometimes what you want and what you need are not the same thing. And I wasn't willing to give them recipes that could make a man do the wrong thing. The man might do the wrong thing anyway, but I didn't want to help him do it.
I was happy when I opened a third letter from a man who wanted to make a special meal for his girlfriend on her birthday, and I gave him some easy and delicious ideas.
Another letter was from a man who was still in love with his ex-wife. Now that she was gone, he seemed to think she was just perfect in every way. He wanted some perfect meals, like the ones she used to make. I did not answer that letter, because I was suddenly getting some excellent ideas for a pear cake recipe. I would make it with honey and hazelnuts, and a ginger cream-cheese icing.
To celebrate my great invention, I opened the letter I'd recognised â the one from my friend, the Scottish lady.
Tannie Maria
,
I am very happy. Not just because I got your fine meat recipes, but because he said yes! It's not as simple as it seems, and to tell you the truth I wasn't all that happy to begin with. But over the years, I've learnt to be realistic, and grateful for big mercies
.
Remember I said there were some issues he needed to sort out? Well, he brought them to meet me. He has a young woman and a son!
The woman is very shy and bonny. The little boy loves my shortbread
and speaks good English. He translates for his mother, who speaks French and an African language that I don't understand. They all three of them have lovely smiles. Like I said when I was waxing lyrical, my big lad's smile reminds me of the moon. His is like the almost-full moon, the lass's is a crescent, and the little boy's is like the half-moon. How could I say no?
Well, the long and the short of it is they will all be moving in to my cottage this weekend! I know his culture is different from mine, and I admit this did take me by surprise. However, I'm not totally ignorant of African customs. After all, I could do with some more help around the house these days. (Did I mention my health took a turn for the worse?)
I would appreciate a family dinner recipe â for the woman to make when they arrive. Something welcoming but simple (I am not yet sure how good a cook she is)
.
I will also ask the lass to make your Van der Hum recipe. (I know you'll have a good one up your sleeve, and will send it soon if you haven't already.) Oh, Tannie Maria, I feel like we are old friends. Thank you for your kind ear
.
With many fond regards
Gay Lassie
I put down the letter from the happy lass. Then I typed up a simple and delicious recipe for her and her new family. A stew with potatoes, onions, green beans, nutmeg, white pepper and black pepper. You can also use cabbage or spinach. I call it a saamgooibredie. A throw-together stew, where you put all sorts of different ingredients together in a pot, cook it with love, and it just works out . . .