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He made a note in his book. What else?

He must call Thick and Thin. They must search Rachel Anderson's luggage for any sign of drugs.

He looked for their number on his cell phone, found it, but hesitated. Would it help?

The laboratory was six months behind, understaffed, overworked.

Later. First they must find Rachel Anderson.

Fransman Dekker hesitated in AfriSound's large reception room until the beautiful coloured woman got up and approached him.

'Can I help you?' she asked with the same subdued manner as the black woman on the ground floor, but with more interest.

'Inspector Fransman Dekker.' He held out his hand. 'I am sorry for your loss.'

She lowered her eyes. 'Natasha Abader. Thank you.' Her hand felt small and cool in his.

'I'm looking for Inspector Benny Griessel.'

'He's in the conference room.' Her inspection of his fingers for a ring was smooth and practised. She gave nothing away when she saw the thin gold band, but looked him in the eye.

'There is a journalist downstairs at your front door. Please don't let them come up.'

'I will tell Naomi. Can I offer you some coffee? Tea? Anything.' The last was said with a measured smile, perfect white teeth.

'No, thank you,' he replied and looked away. He didn't want to . start something now. Under no circumstances.

Chapter 18

'I'm sorry,' said Josh Geyser.

'No need to be sorry.'

'It's just... she's everything to me.'

'I understand,' said Griessel.

'I was finished,' said Geyser. 'I was nothing. Then she took me ...'

Josh Geyser started at the beginning. Griessel let him talk.

Geyser had his feelings under control now, elbows on the table. Staring at the wall behind Griessel. He had been on the wrong road, he said. He had been a Gladiator on TV - women, drink, cocaine and steroids. A celebrity, with big money and fame. Then the SABC cancelled the show. Overnight. Everything changed. Not immediately; there was still appearance money at the Gauteng casinos for a while, still something in the bank. But seven months later he could no longer afford the rent of the double-storey house in Sandton. They evicted him and the Sheriff took his furniture and the bank took back the BMW and his friends weren't his friends any more.

Three months of bewilderment, of sleeping on other people's couches and asking for a few rand from people who were tired of him and his troubles. Then he found Jesus. In the House of Faith, the big charismatic church in Bryanston, Johannesburg, and his whole life changed. Because it was genuine. Everything. The friendships, the love, the compassion, the concern, the forgiveness for what he had been.

Then one day the pastor said they needed baritones for the Praise Singers, the huge church choir. Josh could always sing, since he was a boy. He had the voice, the instinctive feel for harmony, he was born with it, but his life had taken other directions and he had drifted away from that. So he became a Praise Singer - and on the first day he saw Melinda, this pretty woman with the angel face smiling over the heads of the tenors at him.

After practice she came to him and said: 'I know you, you're White Lightning.'

He said not any more, and then her eyes went all soft and said: 'Come ...' and took his hand.

In the church coffee bar they exchanged stories. She was a divorcee from Bloemfontein, a former singer in her ex-husband's band, with a life full of sin. After the divorce she had been rudderless and moved to Johannesburg in the hope of finding work. The House of Faith was her salvation, her lifebuoy in the stormy seas of life. They both knew it straight away that night... But when you've been so down, so destroyed, you are careful, you talk first, long hours in the safety of the church social spot. Night after night. One day, three weeks later, they were there after choir practice when she asked: 'Do you know "Down to the River to Pray", the Negro spiritual?' He said he didn't and she began to sing the simple melody in her lovely voice, until he had it too and began to sing along in harmony. They sang quietly, just the two of them looking into each other's eyes, because they knew these two voices were perfectly matched. 'It was magic,' said Josh, still staring at the wall, 'like a shaft of light from heaven.' They sang louder, still the same song, and the coffee bar went quiet, dead quiet, until they had finished.

'That's where it all began,' he said.

'I see.'

'She's my everything ...'

'Mr Geyser ...'

'Just call me Josh.'

'Josh, I need to know what happened yesterday.'

He looked at Griessel and lifted his hands helplessly. 'It was too much for me.' Griessel just nodded.

'We knew nothing about Adam Barnard. Our first CD came out on the Chorus label. It's a small gospel studio in Centurion.

Adam came to talk to us, said we were too good to be hidden away - we had a wonderful message that the world needed to hear. Ever so holy, called himself a child of God, he just wanted to help ... so we signed and came to Cape Town. I only heard about his ways then.'

'What ways?'

'You know ...'

There was a quiet knock on the door. Griessel said 'Come in.'

The door opened. Fransman Dekker put a head inside. 'Benny ...'

Griessel stood up. 'Excuse me just a moment.' He went to the door and pulled it shut behind him.

'Your cell phone is off,' Dekker whispered.

'I know.' He didn't want interruptions like this now.

'I just wanted to tell you I'm here. They're looking for a place where I can talk to her.'

'I'll come when I'm finished.'

Natasha, the beautiful personal assistant, came walking down the passage. 'Fransman ...' she called.

Griessel raised his eyebrows.

'What?' asked Dekker.

'First-name terms already ...' murmured Griessel.

Dekker shrugged 'Story of my life.'

'Fransman, you can sit in the studio,' said Natasha. 'Give us ten minutes.'

Ponytail brought in a tray with a teapot and the necessary tea things. He put it down three tables away from Vusi and walked out again.

Vusi stood up and went over to the tray.

They would all be like this. The Van Hunks employees. Aggressive and unhelpful. He would get nothing out of them, he realised. It was a waste of time, because the theory of drug mules made sense.

He poured tea into a cup, added milk and sugar, then carried the whole tray over to his table.

Oliver Sands had said that Anderson had suddenly changed. He sat down, put the cup aside and paged through his notebook until he found the reference. At Lake Kariba. She had become morose. That must have been when they got the drugs. Or realised they had gone? That might be it.

She and Erin were to bring the drugs like this, because tourists were Africa's new gold, waved easily through the border posts. Maybe they had brought the drugs from America, maybe from Malawi or Zambia. He didn't know how these things worked. It might not be their first time.

And then something happened, or they sold it somewhere else, and then they came and told Demidov here at the club, or Galia Federova or the night manager, Petr. Then they walked back to the Youth Hostel and a minute or two later Demidov sent his thugs to make an example of them, the chase that began somewhere beyond Longmarket Street. They caught Erin up at the church and cut her throat.

'They do that, the Russians. Show their network they don't take shit,' Vaughn Cupido had said.

Was Erin Russel the team leader? Or was Rachel Anderson just lucky to escape?

It was Demidov's people hunting Anderson now. The question was, how did he prove it? How did he stop them?

He reached for the teacup. He must try Griessel again. He picked up his phone and punched in the number. Voice mail again.