There was no garage. Griessel parked in the street behind a black Mercedes SLK 200 convertible, two police vehicles and a white Nissan with the SAPS emblem on the door and Social Services under it in black type. Forensics' minibus was parked across the road. Thick and Thin. They must have come direct from Long Street.
A uniformed policeman stopped him at the big wooden front door. He showed his identification. 'You will have to go around the back, Inspector; the sitting room is a crime scene,' he said. Griessel nodded in satisfaction.
'I think they are still in the kitchen, sir. You can go right here and then around the house.'
'Thank you.'
He walked around. There was not much garden between the wall and the house. The trees and shrubs were old, large and somewhat overgrown. Behind the house there was a view of Lion's Head. Another policeman was on duty at the back door. He took his SAPS ID out of his wallet again and showed it to the Constable.
'The Inspector is expecting you.'
'Thank you,' he said, and went in through a laundry room and opened the inner door. Dekker sat at the kitchen table, a mug of coffee in his hands and a pen and notebook in front of him. He was totally focused on the coloured woman opposite him. She wore a pink and white domestic uniform and held a handkerchief in her hands, her eyes red from crying. She was plump, her age difficult to judge.
'Fransman ...' said Griessel.
Dekker looked up irritably. 'Benny.' As an afterthought, he said: 'Come in.' He was a tall, athletic, coloured man, broad-shouldered and strong, with a face from a cigarette advert, handsome in a rugged way.
Griessel went up to the table and shook Dekker's hand.
'This is Mrs Sylvia Buys. She's the domestic worker here.'
'Good morning,' said Sylvia Buys solemnly.
'Morning, Mrs Buys.'
Dekker pushed his mug of coffee away as if to distance himself from it, and pulled his notebook closer with a hint of reluctance. 'Mrs Buys arrived at work ...' he consulted the notebook,'... at six forty-five and tidied up and made coffee in the kitchen before moving to inspect the living area at... seven o'clock ...'
'Damage assessment,' said Sylvia Buys spitefully. 'That woman can make a mess.'
'...where she discovered the deceased, Mr Adam Barnard, and the suspect, Mrs Sandra Barnard ...'
'She's really Alexandra .. .'With distaste.
Dekker made a note and said: 'Mrs Alexandra Barnard. Mrs Buys found them in the library on the first floor. At seven o'clock. The firearm was on the carpet next to Mrs Barnard ...'
'Not to mention the booze. She's an alky, drinking like a fish every night and Mr Adam ...' Sylvia lifted the handkerchief, and dab-dabbed at her nose. Her voice grew thinner, shriller.
'Was she under the influence last night?' Griessel asked.
'She's as drunk as a lord every night. I went home at half past four and she was well on her way - by that time of the afternoon she's talking to herself already.'
'Mrs Buys says when she left the house yesterday the suspect was alone. She does not know what time the deceased came home.'
'He was a good man. Always a kind word. I don't understand it. Why did she shoot him? What for? He did her no wrong, he took all of her milly, all her drinking, he just took it, every night he would put her in bed and what did she go and shoot him for?' She wept, shaking her head.
'Sister, you're traumatised. We'll get you some counselling.'
'I don't want counselling,' sobbed Sylvia Buys. 'Where will I get another job at my age?'
'It's not as simple as that,' said Dekker as he climbed the yellowwood stairs to the library. 'You'll see.'
Griessel could sense the tension in the man. He knew his colleagues called Dekker 'Fronsman' behind his back, a reference to his frowning lack of humour and consuming ambition. He had heard the stories, because in the corridors of the Provincial Task Force, they liked to gossip about up-and-coming stars. Dekker was the son of a French rugby player. His mother, a coloured woman from the poverty of Atlantis township, was young and buxom in the Seventies when she worked as a cleaner at the Koeberg nuclear power station. Apparently the rugby player was older, long past his glory days, by then a liaison officer for the French consortium that built and maintained Koeberg. There had been just one encounter and shortly afterwards the rugby player returned to France, without knowing of his offspring. Dekker's mother could not remember his name, so she simply christened her son Fransman, the Afrikaans for Frenchman.
How much of this was true, Griessel could not say. But the child had apparently inherited his father's Gallic nose, build and straight black hair - now trimmed in a brush cut - and his mother's coffee-coloured complexion.
I le followed Dekker into the library. Thick and Thin were at work in the room. They looked up as the detectives entered. 'We can't go on meeting like this, Benny, people will talk,' said Jimmy.
An old joke, but Benny grinned, then looked at the victim lying on the left side of the room. Black trousers, white shirt with no tie, one shoe missing, and two gunshot wounds to the chest. Adam Barnard had been tall and strong. His black hair was cut in a Seventies style, over the ears and collar, with elegant grey wings at the temples. In death his eyes were open, making him seem mildly surprised.
Dekker folded his arms expectantly. Thick and Thin stood watching him.
Griessel approached carefully, taking in the book shelves, the Persian carpet, the paintings, the liquor bottle and glass beside the chair on the right side of the room. The firearm was in a transparent plastic evidence bag on the ground, where Forensics had circled it with white chalk. 'She was on this side?' he asked Dekker.
'She was.'
'The Oracle at work,' said Thick.
'Fuck off, Arnold,' said Griessel. 'Had the pistol been fired?'
'Quite recently,' said Arnold.
'But not here.'
'Bingo,' said Arnold.
'I told you he would get it straight away,' said Jimmy.
'Yes,' said Dekker. He sounded disappointed. 'It's an automatic pistol, three rounds are missing from the magazine, but there are no casings here. No blood on the floor, no bullet holes in the walls or book shelves and the shoe is missing. I have gone through the whole house. Jimmy and Co have searched the garden. She didn't klap him here. We have to search the car in the street...'
'Where is she?'
'In the sitting room with Social Services. Tinkie Kellerman.'
'Knock, knock,' said someone from the door. The long-haired photographer.
'Come in,' said Dekker. 'You're late.'
'Because I had to make bloody prints first ...' He spotted Griessel. His manner quickly changed. 'Vusi has his photos, Benny.'
'Thanks.'
'Jimmy, did you test her for GSR?' asked Dekker.
'Not yet. But I did put her hands in paper. She didn't like that.'
'Can you do it now? I can't talk to her with paper bags over her hands.'
'If she touched the pistol she will have GSR. I don't know if you can do anything with that.'
'Let me worry about that, Jimmy.'
'I'm just saying. Gunshot residue isn't what it used to be. The lawyers are getting too clever.' Jimmy took a box out of his case. It was marked 'SEM Examination'. He went to the stairs with both detectives in tow.
'Fransman, you've done a good job,' said Griessel.
'I know,' said Dekker.
The CCTV control room of the Metro Police was an impressive space. It had twenty flickering TV screens, a whole bank of video recorders and a control panel that looked as though it belonged to the space shuttle. Inspector Vusi Ndabeni stood looking at a screen, watching the grainy image of a small figure running under the street lights of Long Street. Nine seconds of material, now in slow motion: seven shadowy people in a desperate race from left to right across the screen. The girl was in front, only recognisable thanks to the dark hump of the rucksack. Here, between Leeuwen and Pepper Street, she was only three steps ahead of the nearest assailant, her arms and legs pumping high in flight. Another five people were sixteen to seventeen metres behind. In the last frame just before she disappeared off the screen, Ndabeni could see her turn her head as if to see how close they were.