CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE

The phone rang. Hattie answered it then handed it to me.

‘It’s your detective,’ she said.

‘Maria,’ my detective said.

‘Did you catch them?’ I asked.

‘The people from Hotazel? Yes. We have them. But that wasn’t why I was phoning. In your written statement, you didn’t mention that Ousies made that smoke after every session. And that Johannes was making a noise under the panel van.’

‘Oh, I didn’t think it important.’

‘It is.’

‘What do they say, the people from Hotazel?’

‘They admit they were in town but claim they have an alibi for last night. They say they spent some hours after sunset with a respectable woman in her home. They were there at 8.30 p.m. – the time of the murder.’

‘You don’t believe them?’

‘The respectable woman won’t talk to us.’

‘Who is she?’

‘A religious lady. She won’t deny or confirm it and gets very upset when we ask questions.’

‘Is it the NGK dominee’s wife? Was she trying to convert them?’

With so many churches in Ladismith, and not a lot of residents, people spend much of their time trying to convert each other. The NGK dominee’s wife was the most famous for her efforts.

‘No.’ He paused, and I could hear Jessie typing on her computer and the rough caw of a crow outside. ‘She’s someone you know. That Seventh-day Adventist priestess.’

‘Georgie!’

‘Yes, her.’

‘I’d like to talk to her.’

‘I’ve typed up what you said about Ousies and Johannes. It just needs your signature.’

‘She might be willing to talk to me. We’re quite friendly.’

‘The threesome admitted they were satanists and said they had an evening of religious discussion with her. But it’s obvious they’re lying. They don’t even hide their smiles.’

‘It can’t do any harm. Maybe I’ll find out something.’

‘I know by now that I can’t tell you what to do, Maria.’

When I put down the phone, I sat down at my desk to think. Getting Georgie to talk was not going to be easy. I’d need help. I glanced down at my recipe for the pear cake. I was not a religious woman, but I knew that the recipe had come to me for a reason. The cake had a purpose, and I had a plan.

‘Jessie,’ I said. ‘I need your help.’

When I told Jessie my idea, she googled the vegan ingredients that could replace the butter, eggs and cream cheese in my recipe. Then she followed my bakkie on her little red scooter, and we shopped at the health store and the Spar. While I popped in to sign my statement at the police station, Jessie bought chicken pies from the Route 62 Café. We left her scooter outside the café and drove together in my bakkie to my house. We ate the chicken pies on my stoep, then got down to making those cakes. We made a vegan one and a normal one, and when they were ready, we tested them. Both were excellent.

As I ate a mouthful of nutty pear cake, I looked out onto the Karoo veld and the big blue sky. That cake was just what I needed. There had been another murder, my boyfriend might still be in love with his late wife, and I had secrets that I couldn’t share with him. The cake knew all this and somehow convinced me that everything was going to be okay. Jessie licked ginger icing off her finger and then stroked the gecko tattoo on her arm.

Now we had to test the cake on Georgie. We travelled in my bakkie across the veld, back into town. My car’s the colour of the Karoo sky that surrounded us, and as I drove with Jessie at my side I felt that we had no beginning or end, and that together we could do anything.

We parked in front of Georgie’s house. It was one of those rectangular ones that were built in the seventies and did not have the charm of the Victorian houses. But it was nice enough and had a little garden. Georgie and her husband had been amongst the Seventh-day Adventists who had stayed on in Ladismith after the failed ascension. But after a short while, her husband had left her. The rumour was there was another woman involved, but I wasn’t one to listen to small-town gossip, though it’s hard not to hear it. It goes on all the time in the background, like the sound of the trucks that travel along Route 62.

As we opened the garden gate, I saw a curtain in the front room twitch.

‘She’s home,’ said Jessie.

We walked up the path that crossed the neatly mown lawn and knocked at the front door. On either side of us were flowerbeds. There were pink roses that looked thirsty and tired, and ericas and proteas that looked healthy. Fynbos likes the dry soil and empty skies of the Karoo. It was brave of Georgie to plant her roots in a new place.

She took a while to come to the door. Perhaps getting herself ready. She wore a clean white shirt with one of the buttons done up wrong. Her reddish-grey hair was freshly brushed and her face washed, but she looked a little wilted. Her eyes were red; I suspect she’d lost some water from crying.

Jessie smiled at her, and I said, ‘Georgie. We’ve come for tea.’ I held the cake tin in front of me.

She stepped back to let us in, her eyes a bit wider than they should be, and I realised it was sleep that she’d lost as well as water.

‘The kitchen’s this way,’ Georgie said.

We followed her through the lounge and along a short corridor with a beige carpet, passing a bedroom with the door slightly open. In the kitchen, she turned on the kettle, and Jessie helped her lay out cups and saucers.

‘How are you, Tannie Maria?’ she said, but she didn’t wait for a reply. ‘Sugar? Sorry I only have soy milk.’ She didn’t eat dairy, but the kitchen counter was the colour of cream, the walls were butter-yellow and the curtains a cheddar-cheese orange.

‘Sit down,’ she said. But there was only one seat at the kitchen counter. ‘Oooh wooo.’ She blushed a rosy-pink colour. ‘The chairs are in the bedroom. I’m sorry.’ Her hands shook a little as she poured soy milk into a small jug. ‘I’ll fetch them.’

‘It’s okay,’ said Jessie. ‘We’ll get them.’ I followed Jessie.

We walked down the corridor to Georgie’s bedroom.

The bed was very neatly made, as if it had been ironed. At the foot of the bed, facing it, were two chairs. On the floor were some pieces of popcorn. I looked at Jess and she raised her eyebrows, but we said nothing as we carried the chairs back to the kitchen.

‘Oooh wooo,’ said Georgie, ‘I am very sorry.’ She looked as if she might burst into tears.

‘We brought you some cake,’ I said, opening the tin to show her.

‘Cake,’ she said, gazing at it with longing. ‘I’ve been so hungry since last night. It looks . . . delicious. But I can’t.’

‘It’s a vegan cake.’

‘No dairy at all?’

‘Nope.’

‘No milk, butter, eggs?’

‘Not a drop. We made the cream cheese with almond milk we got from the health shop.’

‘Oh. Oh. You really mean I’m allowed to eat that . . .?’

‘Yes,’ I said, cutting her a big piece and putting it on a small plate that Jessie handed me. It looked very pretty with the cinnamon and the thinly sliced dried pears on top of the white icing.

I put a piece on a plate, and she took a big bite.

‘Aa oo sure ah’m allowed this?’ she said through the cake, before she actually chewed it.

‘One hundred per cent,’ I said. ‘You can ask Jessie. She googled all the vegan stuff and made it with me.’

Jessie nodded, and Georgie closed her eyes and chewed. Then she put her hands to her face and crumpled into tears.

And that is how the whole story came out.