“Man, I think you did well there, even if she is screaming her panties blue.”
“Sir?”
Kramer motioned for him to take his chair again, and then said, “Let’s hear it all from the beginning.”
“Her manner was very aggressive when I entered the premises,” Marais began, after a long pause to collect himself. “She wanted to see my search warrant, but backed down when I said they were issued only in suspicious circumstances… It was the girl to blame for telling her about the button actually.”
“Uh-huh?”
“First Zondi put it in my wrong pocket and then-”
“ Ach, no. What did Ma Shirley do next?”
Marais dithered and said, “You want it step by step? But I told you even with the button error I’m convinced-”
“Every detail,” snapped Kramer.
“Okay. So she went up the stairs to call the girl and get the shirts for me. She was still under suspicion at that stage, so I deliberately allowed her to think she could be giving me the slip. But I then followed right on her tail and found her in the suspect’s bedroom in a state of agitation, saying she did not know where the dress shirts were kept.”
“What interval did you follow at?”
“Only seconds, sir. Then she called the girl, Martha, to show her where to find them. I examined the shirts and found they were all in order, with no new buttons or signs of every button being changed. There were five shirts in all, and the girl verified this was the correct number. I felt therefore satisfied that the button did not belong to any of the suspect’s shirts.”
“What was her manner?”
“Aggressive, sir.”
“Not nervous in any way?”
“I didn’t see any reason to think so. It’s just I think she has some kind of grudge against me-I don’t know why.”
“And you are positively certain she did not have time to conceal a shirt and to tip off the girl there were then only five?”
“The girl was working at the other end of the wing. It would have been impossible to reach her in the time I allowed her.”
“But the girl, seeing there were five shirts, could simply agree this was the correct number-not wishing to cross swords with her employer or, as you say, have her bum removed from the butter?”
“There’s no love lost between those two, sir; I can tell you that for a fact.”
“Zondi?”
“She shows no respect, Lieutenant.”
Marais lifted an upturned thumb at him and winked.
“Where were these shirts, Sergeant?”
“On a shelf in the wardrobe.”
“Not difficult to see?”
“You know that sort of woman, sir. She wouldn’t know where to find herself without-”
“So this could all be camouflage,” Kramer said. “The shirt had already been taken care of, and this act with the servant was just to make you think she wouldn’t know where to start, et cetera. Her attitude to the girl could be an act, too, aimed at making us think it impossible she could have conspired with her over the times.”
“Then I’d still have expected some reaction when the button first came up, but she seemed hardly to hear what the girl said.”
“Like a twitch, you mean?”
Marais nodded his thick head.
“I think you see too many films,” said Kramer, getting up to pace the floor. “Let’s stick to basics that are with us in real life. We have a killer, and protecting a killer is a woman’s job- wife, mother, girlfriend. Men do it, but only for money. Ma Shirley was the first member of the household interviewed.”
“Ja.”
“When that interview was over, did she have any opportunity of instructing the girl as to what she should say to you?”
“Um, I suppose she did. She went to fetch her from the kitchen.”
“When she could have rung?”
“I didn’t see a-”
“And was Shirley out of your hearing, and possibly in her company, before he made his statement to you?”
“He went to get some fresh tea.”
“Sir, can I say something?” Wessels asked. “All this suggests the alibi was concocted on the spur of the moment. Why wouldn’t Shirley and her have got it fixed up from the start?”
Kramer swung around and said with a smile, “Would you tell your ma you’d done a thing like that?”
“Christ, never!”
“But she’s your ma, remember-wouldn’t she guess you were in some kind of trouble?”
“A mother always knows,” said Zondi.
And every man in the room showed he agreed with that.
Then Marais scratched his head to show his uncertainty implied no criticism and said, “Except she calls her son all those names and makes out she doesn’t give a bugger for him.”
“That’s something Martha said,” Zondi piped up. “How the madam was so quick to call the young master a liar and send him away from her-that was when he was a small boy and did mischief.”
“What mother doesn’t do that at some time?”
“She seemed a hard woman, Lieutenant.”
“They’re all hard, up there. But can’t you see? If she plays this up with us, doesn’t that help her case even more?”
“True,” said Wessels.
Kramer sat down again, drumming his fingers on the desktop, making everyone else stir restlessly.
“What else did you other two pick up?” he asked, pointing at Zondi to finish his turn first.
“Nothing special. She just talks of when the man was young and would do foolish things with his catapult.”
Wessels laughed and said, “I bet she didn’t tell you he once lobbed some bloody rocks at her in her kia when she was in bed with a bloke! That’s all I got-from an old Bantu constable at the local cop shop. Does that count as a background of violence, sir?”
“There were actual injuries?” Kramer asked, smiling but interested.
“Oh, ja, and a hell of a shindig, but when uniformed got there the guy had buggered off with his war wounds. The usual old thing: he was on the premises illicitly without a permit. They say-What’s up, sir?”
“Marais, you remember that car park where Stevenson had his own slot? Wouldn’t a swanky-puss like Shirley-”
“Hell, that’s a hell of an idea, sir! They’ve got a boy guarding it down at the entrance and sports cars are always something people notice! The time he left there?”
“You’ve got it. Find me that boy.”
Kramer would have sent Zondi around with Marais, but the sensitive little sod had disappeared before anyone noticed- which wasn’t at all strange in the circumstances.
Marais tried again. The wog was really giving him trouble. And people using the car park were watching.
“Were you, or were you not, on duty on Saturday night?”
“ Aikona. ”
“But your boss says you were!”
“The manager says that? But he knows the shift is changing Sunday.”
“Then who was on duty at half-past twelve-you understand that?”
Marais pointed out the exact position of the hands on his navigator’s wrist watch, which the attendant much admired and offered three rand for.
“You answer me!”
“At that time, sir, it was me here on duty.”
“Jesus H. Christ!”
“Amen, hallelujah,” murmured the attendant, rolling his eyes.
Marais grabbed him by the lapels. “Look!”
“That is Sunday-not Saturday, sir.”
“So you’re a clever dick, hey? Think you’re smart? Then I’ll tell you something-you’re under bloody arrest.” “ Hau! ” The lieutenant’s pet monkey could deal with him.
Kramer was caught right in the act.
“I heard from Wessels you’d got an idea to crack the alibi,” the colonel said, sitting down on the corner of the desk. “But that didn’t sound like this inquiry to me.”
“Marais has been gone about half an hour, sir. If you like to wait a minute, maybe you’ll hear the result.” Kramer moved his hand casually from the telephone receiver he had just replaced in its cradle.
“And who were you talking to?” the colonel persisted.
“That? Just a nun I know.”
“You let her ring you at work?”
Kramer’s grin pleased the colonel and they both eased the tension.