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Barry took the binoculars and held them to his eyes again. 'Hang on ...'

He followed Strathcona to where it led into Marmion, which was thickly lined with trees. The binoculars stripped the image of perspective, there were too many double storeys and it was too overgrown; only here and there could he see the western pavement and parts of the street surface. He followed the trajectory north towards the city, glanced swiftly at the map. Marmion ended in ... Montrose. She ought to turn left there, if she wanted to reach the city.

Binoculars again. He found Montrose, broad and more visible from here. He followed it west. Nothing. Would she have turned right? East?

'Barry?'

'Yeah?'

'We're at the Landy. We're going to Marmion.'

'OK,' he said, still looking through the binoculars.

He saw her, far and tiny in the lenses, but unmistakable. She crossed the intersection.

'I have her. She's in Montrose ...' He looked down at the map. 'She just crossed Forest, heading east.'

'OK. We're in Glencoe. Now just don't lose her.'

Chapter 13

John Afrika walked out of the glass doors of casualty alone. Apparently, Willie Mouton and the sombre lawyer, Regardt Groenewald, had gone into the hospital. 'Good news, kerels,' said John Afrika as he took his place in the circle. 'Alexa Barnard is out of danger. The damage is not so bad, she's just lost a lot of blood, they're keeping her... Oh, Vusi, morning, what are you doing here?'

'I'm sorry, sir, I know you're busy, but I thought I should come and ask for help ...'

'Don't apologise, Vusi. What can I do?'

'The American girl at the church ... there were two of them, we know that now ...' Vusi Ndabeni took out his notebook from the pocket of his neat jacket, stood up straight and said, 'The victim is Miss Erin Russel. Her friend is Miss Rachel Anderson. They came in with a tour group yesterday. Miss Anderson was seen on Signal Hill at approximately six o'clock this morning, pursued by assailants. Sir, she's an eyewitness, and she's in great danger. We need to find her.'

'Damn,' said John Afrika, but the English expletive seemed ineffective in his mouth.

'Pursued by assailants? What assailants?'

'Apparently five or six young men, some white, some black, the witness says.'

'And who is this witness?'

'A lady by the name of ... Sybil Gravett. She was walking her dog along Signal Hill when Miss Anderson came up to her and asked her for help. She then ran in the direction of Camps Bay after she asked Mrs Gravett to call the police. A few minutes later the young men came running past.'

The Commissioner checked his watch. 'Fuck it, Vusi, that was more than three hours ago ...'

'I know. That's why I need more people, sir.'

'Bliksem.' Afrika rubbed a hand over his jaw. 'I don't have more people. We'll have to get the stations involved.'

'I've already asked the stations, sir. But Caledon Square has to police a union march to Parliament, and Camps Bay has only two vehicles in operation. The SC says they lost one patrol van to theft on New Year's Eve and the other one was crashed ...'

'Neeo bliksem,' Afrika swore before Vusi could finish.

'I've put out another bulletin, sir, but I thought if we could get the chopper, and put some pressure on the SCs ...'

Afrika took out his cell phone. 'Let me see what I can do ... Who the hell is chasing her?'

'I don't know, sir. But they were at a nightclub last night. Van Hunks ...'

'Jissis,' said John Afrika and called a number. 'When are we going to clean out those dens?'

Rachel Anderson walked in through the front door of Carlucci's Quality Food Store, straight up to the counter where a young man in a white apron was busy taking change out of small plastic bags.

'Is there a telephone I can use?' Her voice was expressionless.

'Over there, next to the ATM,' he said and then he looked up. He saw the stains on her clothes, the dried blood on her face and knees. 'Hi... Are you OK?'

'No, I'm not. I need to make an urgent call, please.'

'It's not a card phone. Would you like some change?'

Rachel took the rucksack off her back. 'I've got some.' She went in the direction he had indicated.

He noticed her beauty, despite the state she was in. 'Can I help you with something?' She didn't answer. He watched her with concern.

'Jesus Christ,' Barry said over the cell phone. 'She's just gone into a fucking restaurant or something.' 'Shit. Which one?'

'It's on the corner of Montrose and ... I think it's Upper Orange .. .Yes that's it.'

'We'll be there in two minutes. Just keep looking ...'

'I'm not taking my eyes off the place.'

The ringing of the phone woke Bill Anderson in his house in West Lafayette, Indiana. With his first attempt he knocked off the receiver, so he had to sit up and swing his feet off the bed to reach it.

'What is it?' his wife asked beside him, confused.

'Daddy?' he heard as he picked up the receiver. He lifted it to his ear.

'Baby?'

'Daddy!' said his daughter, Rachel, thirty thousand kilometres away, and she began to cry.

Bill Anderson's guts contracted; suddenly he was wide awake. 'Honey, what's wrong?'

'Erin is dead, Daddy.'

'Oh, my God, baby, what happened?'

'Daddy, you have to help me. They want to kill me too.'

To her left was a large window looking out on Montrose Avenue; in front of her was the deli counter, where three coloured people exchanged looks when they heard her words.

'Honey, are you sure?' her father asked, his voice so terribly near.

'They cut her throat last night, Daddy. I saw it ...' Her voice caught.

'Oh, my God,' said Bill Anderson. 'Where are you?'

'I don't have much time, Daddy. I'm in Cape Town . . . the police, I can't even go to the police ...' She heard the screech of tyres on the road outside. She looked up and out. A new white Land Rover Defender stopped outside. She knew the occupants.

'They're here, Daddy, please help me ...'

'Who's there? Who killed Erin?' her father asked urgently, but she had seen the two men leap out of the Land Rover and run to the main door of the shop. She threw the receiver down and fled through the shop, past the dumbstruck women behind the deli counter, to a white wooden door at the back. She shoved it violently open. As she ran out she heard the man in the apron shout: 'Hey!' She was in a long narrow passage between the building and a high white wall. Along the top of the wall was a long row of broken glass. The only way out was at the end of the passage to the right - another wooden door. She sprinted, the awful terror upon her again.

If that door was locked ...

The soles of her running shoes slapped loudly in the narrow space. She pulled at the door. It wouldn't open. Behind her she heard the deli door open. She looked back. They saw her. She focused on the door in front of her. There was a Yale lock. She turned it. A small, anxious sound exploded from her lips. She jerked the door open. They were too close. She went out and slammed it shut behind her. She saw the street before her, realised the door had a bolt on this side, turned and her fingers worked in haste, it wouldn't budge, she heard them at the lock on the other side. She banged the bolt with the palm of her hand; pain shot up her arm. The bolt slid and the door was barred. They jerked at it from the other side.

'Bitch!' one of them shouted.

She raced down four concrete steps. She was in the street, kept running, left, down the long slope of Upper Orange Street, her eyes searching for a way out, because they were too close, even if they went back through the shop, they were as close as they had been last night, just before they caught Erin.