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“Hey?” said Marais.

“The actual reason Mr. Stevenson wanted to see Miss Sexy Snake Seventy- voetsak -and the actual nature of the business. Am I right?”

The prisoner sat down just where he was on the floor.

Marais looked almost sorry for him.

But Kramer had just had another thought, and picked up the statement made by the cleaner. There was still the matter of the rigor mortis to tidy up.

“According to the boy Joseph, you dismissed him before entering the dressing room a second time. Did you in fact enter it?”

Stevenson took all the breath he could hold and said, “Only for a moment. I couldn’t stomach the smell then-nor the sight. It haunted me all Sunday in nightmares, quite different if you-I mean, I’d had too long to think about it. And that’s the honest reason why I was turned up when I telephoned and-”

“If you want to know, that was your big mistake.”

“Saying she was stiff,” added Marais.

“But she was dead and don’t all…?”

“ Ach, these laymen,” sighed Marais, getting him to his feet.

“So you never even touched her the first time,” Kramer said, finding that a more interesting comment.

“I-I could see all I wanted to. Her breasts weren’t moving- and she did look stiff! Like sticks, those arms were.”

“And how did you know her heart had stopped? Or would you get lipstick on you doing the kiss of life?”

“ What? Oh, dear God, is that what all this has been about? You mean she might still have been alive? Like a drowned person? That I could have-y’know?”

Kramer, who had only just had the idea, shrugged.

“The post-mortem report will be here in a few minutes if you’d like to wait,” he said matter-of-factly.

Emmerentia, who was Strydom’s lovely and gifted small granddaughter, called Trekkersburg Natural History Museum the “dead zoo.”

He was thinking of this with a fond smile as he walked up the steps into its entrance hall and stopped at the reptile cases, which were new.

And yet, Strydom discovered, not everything in this section was as dead as it looked. By waiting patiently, and watching for a flicker of tongue, it was possible to distinguish between exhibits that were inanimate and those that were lifeless, so to speak.

The excellence of the preserved specimens was such that he was sure he had come to the right place. In fact, he would have returned for a second look, had not a Zulu attendant-with immense wooden plugs in his earlobes-pounced suddenly to polish his breath marks from the glass.

Strydom continued down a short passage and into the large mammals hall. It was huge and vaulted, with a gallery for insects and anthropology, and echoed so readily that he went up on tiptoe to skirt a charging bull elephant. A pair of giggling children-which reminded him it was the Michaelmas holidays-were comparing the back ends of the black and the white rhino.

And there were more children, only Bantu this time, and in their best bib and tucker, in a solemn line outside the door he had been told to make for. There a harassed museum official was trying to explain something to the black teacher in charge. Strydom hoped it would not take all day.

“Then if you only read the poster about the wildlife film show for the kiddies from a bus, you can hardly blame us for the disappointment,” the official was saying. “There’s plenty else to look at.”

“‘For Whites Only’ was in very small writing,” the teacher replied, showing not anger but a certain stubbornness. “To tell you the truth, when I brought my pupils in just now, I again failed to notice the restriction concerning the film theater.”

“Well, I’m glad you’re prepared to tell the truth!” said the official, trying to laugh it off.

“I simply thought, sir, as the theater is not even a quarter occupied, that under the circumstances we may be allowed to stand at the back.”

“Not my ruling. Sorry. Don’t make the rules. And I’ve got a boss waiting, so that’s the end of it.”

The teacher turned away and told the children it was time to go and buy their cold drinks. He would pay.

“I’m Smith,” the official said, shaking Strydom’s free hand. “I was sent down to meet you and-oh, never mind. It’s this way. That’s quite a size. Bose as in rose.”

Smith opened a door for Strydom at the top of three flights of stairs and excused himself.

The room had a very high ceiling and enormous windows which filled it with the cold light of the rain clouds. The furnishings were awesomely Victorian, and Strydom felt as though he had stepped back through time to his medical school. Some of the smells were familiar, too.

“Good afternoon. I’m Strydom, the DS,” he said to a large man with white hair working at a table. “You’re Mr. Bose?”

The expert turned round and stared vaguely, as if he wasn’t prepared to say anything until this vision had fully materialized. Then his manner changed.

“The python?” he asked softly.

“That’s right. Here-you take it and tell me what you can do for me, what the chances are.”

Strydom drifted over to the table and saw that Bose had been engaged in painting a perfect plaster cast of a puff adder, applying his colors a scale at a time. So that was how it was done.

“Not what I expected,” said Bose.

Strydom looked round. The python had been laid out along the edge of a bench and Bose was gently feeling its middle.

“Well, I did describe the circumstances.”

“That’s just it. Or did you break its back?”

6

When the full post-mortem report on Sonja Bergst-room arrived by messenger from the district surgeon’s office, Kramer took Marais aside and handed him a page.

“What’s all that boil down to?” he asked

Marais read carefully and then said, “Instantaneous?”

“Uh-huh, near enough. But there’s no need to go shouting about it.”

“Why? Don’t you think he’s telling the whole truth yet, sir?”

“Man, I’m not sure. It sounds okay-but I think you should first worry him a bit more. You never know. Here-look at this.”

And he handed Marais another page.

“Hell, a semen stain!”

“External. No sign of sexual interference or recent intercourse, Doc notes. He’s just put it down for the record, query analysis. Could be older than Saturday night and we don’t know the young woman’s bathing habits. With her kind, that’s show business, Marais.”

“But it’ll give us a group?”

“Uh-huh.”

“And if it’s the same as…”

“Not much relevance in court, but the idea will fry the bastard nicely all the same. She took a break between acts-get what I mean?”

Marais got. He reddened, being young for his age.

“But how do we…?”

“I’ll think of something,” said Kramer, beginning to stroll back to his office. “She had a divan in there, right? And an ashtray? Waste bin? What kind does he smoke?”

“Small cheroots. But with all due respect, sir, I mean-is this really necess-er?”

“Ask her next of kin when you see them again, old son. That’s who I work for.”

She had none, but Marais seemed to get the point all the better for that.

Zondi tried three informants, and lost each in a cloud of dust at the mention of Chainpuller Mabatso. As the lieutenant said on these occasions, it was like trying to interest virgins in a rape course. Whatever that meant exactly.

But as far as Chainpuller himself was concerned, Zondi now felt there was little doubt involved.

The how and why were another matter.

Chainpuller put a shudder through most men. Not because he was big-he was five foot one; or because he was enormously strong-he used two hands to shell a peanut. But because he was tangibly evil.

Whereas Zondi would throw himself on a man half again as big as himself, prepared to gouge and bite and take as much in return, the thought of touching Chainpuller lightly with one finger was more than he considered the call of duty. It was like being expected to handle one of those flat scorpions, the dull gray kind that skitter in the corner of rooms where dead tramps are found, somehow very wise and aware of your fear of them.