Dying to Live

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Dying to Live Page 1

by Michael Stanley




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  Table of Contents

  About the Authors

  Copyright Page

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  To our partners,

  Pat Cretchley and Mette Nielsen,

  with thanks

  NOTE

  The peoples of Southern Africa have integrated many words of their own languages into colloquial English. For authenticity and color, we have used these occasionally when appropriate. Most of the time, the meanings are clear from the context, but for interest, we have included a glossary at the end of the book.

  For information about Botswana, the book, and its protagonist, please visit http://www.detectivekubu.com. You can sign up there for an occasional newsletter. We are also active on Facebook at www.facebook.com/MichaelStanleyBooks, and on Twitter as @detectivekubu.

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  Approximate phonetic pronunciations are given in square brackets. Foreign and unfamiliar words are listed in a glossary at the back of the book.

  Banda, Edison

  Detective in the Botswana Criminal Investigation Department [Edison BUN-duh]

  Bengu, Amantle

  Kubu’s mother [Uh-MUN-tleh BEN-goo]

  Bengu, David “Kubu”

  Assistant superintendent in the Botswana Criminal Investigation Department [David “KOO-boo” BEN-goo]

  Bengu, Joy

  Kubu’s wife [Joy BEN-goo]

  Bengu, Nono

  Joy and Kubu’s adopted daughter [NO-no BEN-goo (no pronounced as the no in nor)]

  Bengu, Tumi

  Joy and Kubu’s daughter [TOO-me BEN-goo]

  Chan

  Official in the Chinese embassy in Gaborone

  Collins, Christopher

  Researcher from the University of Minnesota

  Collins, Petra

  Christopher Collins’s wife

  Dlamini, Zanele

  Forensics expert [Zuh-NEH-leh Dluh-MEE-nee]

  Gampone, Jonah

  Owner of import/export business in Gaborone [Jonah Gam-PONY]

  Hairong, Feng

  Chinese man living in Botswana

  Heiseb

  Old Bushman [HAY-seb]

  Ixau

  Bushman constable in the Botswana Police Service, based in New Xade [i-XAU, where the X is like the sound used to make a horse go faster and AU rhymes with the word how]

  Khama, Samantha

  First female detective in the Botswana Criminal Investigation Department [Samantha KAH-muh]

  Mabaku, Jacob

  Director of the Botswana Criminal Investigation Department [Jacob Mah-BAH-koo]

  MacGregor, Ian

  Pathologist for the Botswana Police Service

  Moeng, Festus

  Private eye in Gaborone [FEST-is MO-eng]

  Ramala, Botlele

  Famous witch doctor [Bot-LEH-leh Ruh-MAH-luh]

  Ross, Brian

  CEO of an American pharmaceutical company

  Segodi, Batwe

  Detective sergeant in the Botswana Police Service, based in Ghanzi [BUT-weh Se-GO-dee]

  Serome, Pleasant

  Joy Bengu’s sister [Pleasant Seh-ROE-meh]

  Thabo, Sichle

  Professor of anthropology at the University of Botswana [SICH-leh TA-bow (CH as in church)]

  PART 1

  CHAPTER 1

  Detective Sergeant Segodi looked down at the dead Bushman and frowned. He didn’t have much time for the diminutive people of the Kalahari. Somehow they always caused trouble, whether they meant to or not, and this was a case in point.

  The Bushman was very old. That much was obvious. His skin was a web of wrinkles, and there wasn’t a smooth area even the size of a thebe coin on his face. The lips were cracked and parched. But the most striking thing was the short crinkly hair covering the wizened head. It was pure white. Segodi couldn’t remember ever seeing a Bushman with pure-white hair before; it was a sign of age so advanced that few Bushmen, with their challenging lifestyle, ever attained it.

  The detective cursed.

  What was the man doing out here alone? he wondered. He should have been with his family group in nearby New Xade. Or, if he’d walked into the desert to die in peace, why had he chosen to do so in sight of the road into the Central Kalahari Game Reserve rather than somewhere private in the middle of nowhere?

  Instead, foreign tourists driving to the game reserve had spotted the body being checked out by a scavenger and reported it to the police station at New Xade, thirty miles up the road. Constable Ixau—who was the New Xade police force—had investigated and called the Criminal Investigation Department in Ghanzi. Which was why Segodi was sweltering in the Kalahari sun, with a mask over his nose and mouth, instead of being in the relative comfort of his office.

  Now there would be paperwork and aggravation, to say nothing of having to share the Land Rover with the corpse for a hundred miles before it was disposed of in the public cemetery.

  The area around the body was scuffed and trampled, which could have been caused by the shocked tourists. When he scanned the surroundings, he spotted something important—there were two sets of footprints coming out of the desert and ending at the body. This had been no lonely leave-taking; someone had walked with the Bushman to this spot before he died.

  “What do you make of that?” Segodi asked the constable.

  Constable Ixau followed the sergeant’s eyes. “Someone was walking with him in the desert.”

  Segodi frowned, wondering why he wasted his breath. Ixau was clearly more than half Bushman. Surely he knew something about tracking in the desert. The detective examined the footprints more carefully. The sand was the soft, gray powder of the Kalahari, and it was difficult to make out much about the tracks.

  Ixau joined him. “They came from there,” he said, pointing to the left.

  Looking down the road, the sergeant saw a second set of tracks—again of two people—some distance away. He walked over to check, and indeed, these were heading into the desert, away from the road.

  “Fetch me the camera,” he ordered the constable. “And bring the gloves.” He was starting to have a bad feeling.

  When he’d photographed the body from various angles and taken multiple shots of the two sets of tracks—the one leading into the desert and the other ending at the body—he put on the latex gloves and kneeled next to the body. There were no obvious injuries. Without much difficulty, he lifted the right arm for a closer look. Apparently the man had been dead for some time, and the rigor mortis was starting to recede. There were contusions on the wrist. Perhaps that was the result of how the body had fallen, he thought.

  He checked the other hand, but it seemed fine. But there was something odd about the neck. The angle didn’t seem quite right. And there was a scratch and other abrasions on the side of the face.

  Segodi sighed. There was more trouble here than just paperwork. Someone had walked out of the desert with the Bushman, perhaps there had been a fight, and now the Bushman was dead.

  What had happened to the other person? he wondered. Only a Bushman could surv
ive out here on foot in the middle of nowhere.

  Segodi glanced at the road. There were tire marks at the side, but that was probably the tourists’ vehicle. Nevertheless, he took a number of pictures.

  Segodi told the constable to be careful with the body when they lifted it onto the body bag. He was going to send it for an autopsy. That would have to be in Gaborone, seven hours away from Ghanzi by van.

  The corpse was even lighter than they’d imagined, and they carried the body bag to the Land Rover without difficulty. Segodi told the constable to mark the area where the body had been with stones while he noted the GPS coordinates. When that was done, Ixau drew the sergeant’s attention back to the tracks. “I think these are the victim’s,” he said, pointing at the ones on the right. “He was a small man. You can see they are not as deep as the others, and not as big.”

  Segodi turned to the footprints again. He examined them closely and realized that the constable was right. He grunted agreement.

  An idea struck him. Was it possible one of the tourists had followed the Bushman’s tracks? He’d need to check if he could contact them. It seemed unlikely, but that would explain the double tracks very neatly. He was of two minds whether to follow them. They might go a long way, and the corpse was already stinking up his vehicle.

  “Shouldn’t we see where they go?” Ixau asked.

  Segodi gave him an angry look. Now he had no choice.

  “Come on, then,” he replied. “We’ll start where they head into the desert.”

  “Wait a minute,” Ixau said. “Someone was running along the road here.” He pointed at scuff marks on the verge of the road.

  To Segodi the marks could have been anything, but he was beginning to respect the Bushman’s observations. “How do you know he was running?”

  “The gaps between them are too long,” Ixau replied.

  “The Bushman?”

  Ixau shook his head. “The gaps between them are too long,” he repeated.

  Segodi frowned, puzzled. “Someone ran from there?” he asked, pointing back to where the body had been. “Maybe after killing the Bushman?”

  Ixau thought about it, then shook his head. “I think running towards the body.”

  It made no sense to Segodi, and he shrugged it off. “Let’s follow the tracks.”

  Moving parallel to the pair of footprints so as not to disturb them, they walked for about a mile through the desert. The tracks wandered to and fro, crossed themselves, and then headed off again, as though the walkers had been looking for something.

  In some places, the ground was the calcrete limestone common in this part of the Kalahari, and the tracks disappeared altogether. When that happened, Ixau headed straight on, and soon the tracks reappeared. The two people had made no effort to hide the signs of their progress.

  Eventually they came to a depression surrounded by small sand drifts and calcrete scree. Apparently the men had spent some time here, and it seemed that they’d taken samples, because there were several small pits dug in the stony ground. Prospecting? Segodi wondered. Someone looking for the hidden gems of the Kalahari? He snorted. Not that old nonsense again. Or was it something else?

  He squatted and felt around in one of the holes, still wearing the latex gloves, but found nothing except a few root fibers, sand, and calcrete pebbles. He let them run through his fingers and stood up.

  “You make anything of this?” he asked the constable. Ixau shook his head.

  After that, the tracks headed directly back toward the road, without the detours and crossings that had marked their progress into the desert. After a short time the two policemen were back at the vehicle.

  “Okay, let’s head back,” Segodi said, wiping the sweat pouring off his face. “As soon as we get to New Xade, radio Ghanzi and tell them to drive a van towards New Xade. I’ll meet them on the way. We need to get that body to Gaborone as soon as possible.”

  CHAPTER 2

  It was a slow Friday. Assistant Superintendent David “Kubu” Bengu was looking forward to the weekend with his family, especially as his mother would be joining them.

  It’ll be a treat for the kids, he thought. In fact, for all of us.

  He leaned back in his chair and crossed his legs on his desk. He was feeling content—there were no serious cases awaiting his attention, and he’d caught up with the dreaded paperwork.

  Then he heard the sound he didn’t want to hear: his telephone ringing. He grabbed it.

  “Assistant Superintendent Bengu,” he said gruffly.

  “Kubu, it’s Ian. Have you got a moment?”

  Kubu sat up. Ian MacGregor was the forensic pathologist for the Botswana police and was very good at his job. He was also a friend and shared Kubu’s taste for interesting cases. Kubu would always have a moment for him.

  “Of course, Ian. What’s up?”

  “It’s very odd.” Uncharacteristically, the pathologist hesitated. “It’s that Bushman they sent over from Ghanzi.”

  Kubu sighed. He’d had his fill of cases involving the Bushmen. “It’s not my case, Ian. Ghanzi CID has the jurisdiction for that one.”

  Ian hesitated again. “I know that. But this is very strange indeed. It’s hard to explain.”

  Kubu relented. “Try.”

  “Well, when I did the autopsy, it’s true about his neck being broken, but…” The pathologist trailed off. “I think you’d better come over and see for yourself.”

  Kubu was intrigued. He’d known Ian for many years, more or less from when the pathologist had arrived in Gaborone from his native Scotland. He was many things, but certainly not indecisive. Kubu scanned his pleasantly clean desk. He had the time.

  “I’ll see you in half an hour,” he said.

  * * *

  KUBU FOUND IAN in his tiny office off the mortuary, sucking on his usual pipe full of unlit tobacco and contemplating a desert scene he’d painted himself. He’d pulled down his surgical mask and left it hanging round his neck.

  After a perfunctory greeting, Kubu asked him what was so puzzling.

  “I’ll show you,” Ian replied. “Get togged up.” He pointed to a lab coat that had some hope of getting around Kubu’s bulk, handed him a mask, and passed him a box of latex gloves. He pulled on a pair himself, adjusted his mask, and led the way to the room where the autopsy had taken place. Kubu was glad that lunch was still a way off; he was not fond of dead bodies under the best of circumstances, and cut up ones that had been lying in the desert for a few days certainly weren’t the best of circumstances.

  They walked over to a corpse lying on a slab.

  “Cause of death is a broken neck, snapped between C2 and C3—the second and third cervical vertebrae. The spinal cord is damaged there, so he would’ve stopped breathing and died within a couple of minutes. Now take a look at this.” He indicated the left side of the head. “It looks as though he was hit on the side of the face. There’s bruising, and there are abrasions as a result of the blow. It seems the blow was hard enough to break the neck. But that’s very unusual. There’s not that much damage to the face—no cracked cheekbones, for example—so I don’t think the blow was very severe. You’d expect the head to whip sideways, but not the neck to break.”

  “What if someone broke his neck deliberately? Held him and then sharply twisted his head? If the bones are as brittle as you say, that would’ve been easy.”

  “Well, there’s only bruising on one side of the head, and there’s no evidence of a struggle. He would’ve fought back, and there would’ve been evidence. Skin under the fingernails or the like. There’s nothing.”

  “Could it have been an accident? He was hit on the face and broke his neck in the fall?”

  Ian shook his head. “I can’t see how he’d fall on his head. And look at this.”

  He lifted the right arm and showed Kubu the wrist, which was badly bruised.

  Kubu looked carefully at the damage and nodded.

  “He also has a distal radial fracture,” Ian added. �
��That’s a broken wrist.”

  “What could’ve caused that?”

  Ian shrugged. “Given how weak his bones are, a rough grip from a strong man might’ve done it. If he fell, that bone’s the one that breaks when you try to save yourself, but given the damage to his spinal cord, that’s very unlikely.”

  “When did he die?”

  “Judging by what Detective Sergeant Segodi said about the state of rigor mortis, probably the day before the tourists found the body. I can’t do much better than that at this point.” He paused.

  Kubu waited. So far, nothing particularly strange had been revealed, but he was sure there was more to come.

  “He’s old, all right,” Ian continued. “Bushmen always have faces like walnuts from all that sun, even the young ones. But look at the hair. Pure white. And his bones are showing signs of severe osteoporosis. That’s leaching of the calcium. It happens in old people and makes the bones brittle. That may be why that blow snapped his neck, and the radius cracked under a rough grip.”

  Kubu nodded. So the man was old. That was no surprise either.

  Now doubt entered Ian’s voice. “And yet, look at this.” He offered Kubu an unidentified organ in a glass jar filled with clear liquid. “Go on, take it. Look closely.” Kubu did, then handed it back, none the wiser.

  “That’s the liver of a young man, Kubu. Maybe a forty-year-old who didn’t drink. And then there’s this.” He handed Kubu a container with what was clearly a heart. “That ticker would’ve gone on pumping for years. All of the internal organs are like that. It’s only the skin, the bones, and the hair that belong to a seventy- or eighty-year-old.”

  Kubu frowned. “How can he be forty inside and seventy outside? Could it be just genetics? He chose his parents well?”

 

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