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Authors: Corban Addison

BOOK: The Garden of Burning Sand
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Zoe took a breath. “We think her rapist may have been a client of yours or Bella’s. Can you think of any man who showed an interest in her?”

Doris shook her head. “Kuyeya was like a shadow. A spirit. When Bella put her in the bathroom, she gave her medicine to sleep. The men left her alone.”

Zoe sat back against the couch. Doris’s lifestyle and Bella’s history were interesting but irrelevant without a connection to a suspect. Then an idea came to her. It was bizarre, really—on the far side of remote. But she had no other cards to play.

“Did you ever keep a record of your clients? Did Bella?”

Doris narrowed her eyes and vanished into the hallway, returning moments later with a spiral-bound notebook. “Bella liked to write,” she said, handing the book to Zoe. “I am not good at reading, but I kept it. Other than Kuyeya, it was her most precious possession.”

Zoe studied the notebook. Its cover was worn, its pages dog-eared. On the inside cover, Bella had written in English: “V
OLUME
3: A
PRIL
2004—”

“When did Bella die?” she asked Doris quietly.

“The winter of 2009. July, I think.”

Zoe pointed at the inside cover. “This says ‘Volume 3.’ Are there other notebooks?”

“That’s the only one I have seen.”

“Zikomo,”
Zoe said. “I’m sorry to ask such difficult questions.”

“Life is difficult,” Doris replied. “Is the child well?”

“She’s in good hands.”

Doris nodded gratefully. “I owe Bella a debt I can never repay.”

“What do you mean?”

“Ask her,” Doris said, gesturing at the book. “I think she will tell you.”

When Zoe emerged from the apartment, the sun hung low and molten above the horizon, and traffic on Chilimbulu Road was at a near standstill. She glanced at her watch and searched the crowded roadway for Joseph. It was almost 5:30 p.m. He was nowhere to be seen.

She leaned against the fender of his truck, waiting. She saw a group of boys knocking a soccer ball around. One of them gave the ball a swift kick—too swift for the intended recipient—and the ball rolled in Zoe’s direction. She scooped it up and walked toward them, intending to ask about Joseph, when she saw him striding toward her, holding a stuffed doll and a pair of wire-framed eyeglasses.

“Where did you find those?” she asked, tossing the ball back to the boys.

“I could ask you the same thing,” he said, eyeing the notebook in her hands.

“I asked first.”

He grinned. “I’ll show you.”

She followed him down the road. When traffic began to move again, she caught sight of a pickup truck carrying a group of young Zambians in green T-shirts. She grabbed Joseph’s arm, looking for the bandana-clad gang leader. It took her a second to realize that everything about the vehicle was different—the paint color, the model, the driver, the boys in the flatbed. Her dread quickly turned into irritation.
Get a grip! They’re harmless
.

“Are you all right?” Joseph gave her a concerned look.

She nodded, starting to walk again. “I’ll be glad when the election is over.”

Joseph led her to the entrance of a walled alley separating two apartment blocks. The alley was rutted with tire tracks and littered with piles of trash and dog scat. “I found the doll here,” he said, showing her a knee-high pile of cinderblocks. “The glasses were beside it.”

“They could be anyone’s,” Zoe objected.

“It’s possible. But I found a girl named Given who saw a silver SUV on Saturday at nineteen hundred. She said it was parked right here. I asked the neighbors to make sure, and no one claimed them. Where they were sitting, they could have gone days without being noticed.”

Zoe gave him an intense look. “Did Given see the driver?”

“Only his back. She confirmed he was tall. I showed her the symbol that Dominic drew in the dirt. She recognized it, but she didn’t know what it was.”

“Did she see Kuyeya?”

“No. The man was climbing into the vehicle. The girl must have been inside already.”

Zoe sighed.
Another witness who can be neutralized
.

They walked back to Joseph’s truck, and he handed her the doll and glasses. “I hope you’re not in a hurry to get home,” he said, gesturing at the traffic crawling by.

She shook her head. “Nothing waiting for me but a swim and this notebook.”

His eyes moved to the bound volume in her hands.

She smiled. “I’ll tell you on the drive.”

Forty-five minutes later, Zoe sat on a chair beside the pool, her skin tingling from an exhilarating cold-water swim. The sun was gone, leaving the garden in shadow, but the tall sky held the afterglow like the embers of a dying fire. She took long breaths, allowing the scented air to reach deep into her lungs. Overhead, in the jacaranda that shaded the pool, a Heuglin’s Robin sang.

Zoe opened Bella’s notebook and read the first page. It was a letter written in English.

Dear Jan
,

Yesterday I argued with the girls again. They tell me I should pay more rent. They do not listen when I tell them I have no money. Kuyeya had a fever and the
nganga
charged one hundred pin for medicine. I paid him two hundred pin last week. The blisters were bad again, and I couldn’t work. The girls stole my notebook and threw it in the toilet. It is ruined now. This is the second notebook I have lost. I should probably stop writing. But it is all I have, along with Kuyeya
.

I need more money. The bars are too crowded. The men pay less than they used to. Girls make more on Addis Ababa. But some die, too. A girl
told me about Johannesburg. She made videos and earned two million kwacha. But I am not as pretty as before. I am older and sick. Sometimes I dream that I am going to die. But if I die, what will happen to Kuyeya? I need to find another place to stay
.

Zoe turned the page and found another letter:

Dear Jan
,

Last night I went to Addis Ababa. Men stopped and talked to me. One was white. He sounded British. We did business in the car. He was rough, but he paid me a hundred pin. Later a colored man asked if I would come with him to the Intercontinental. He gave the guard money and took me in the back. There was another colored man in his room. They hurt me and only one of them paid
.

I hate the street. But Kuyeya needs surgery. Her eyes are bad. I walked to the Pamodzi to find another customer. Some girls were there. They yelled at me and told me to go away. One of them hit me with a bag. I went to the Ndeke Hotel and an old man picked me up. He told me he was from Kinshasha. He was dirty, but at least he was kind
.

On the following page, Zoe found a third letter addressed to “Jan.” The letter read a lot like the first two—a lament of poverty, disease, and violence—but by now Bella was living with Doris. Kuyeya was ill again, this time with a rash on her face. A client had asked for unprotected sex, and she had consented, but he had paid her the condom price and hit her when she protested. Another client—one of her steadies—had stayed the night with her and woken with a terrible hangover. When he saw Kuyeya’s rash, he screamed at her, terrifying the child.

Zoe read until she could no longer see the notebook. Every page contained an undated letter, and all were addressed to Jan. Each letter
carried the same matter-of-fact tone, the same relentlessly depressing news. Bella used descriptions, not names, to refer to her clients. Among them were the “truck driver from Nairobi,” the “man with the penguin suit,” the “the AirTel boy,” the “man who paid double for all night,” and “the minister who thinks he should be president.” Jan himself remained a mystery. The only revealing reference in the first ten letters was a comment about
Mosi-oa-Tunya
—Victoria Falls.

She went inside and warmed up leftover
nshima
and
ndiwo
—relish made of groundnuts, beans and collard greens—from lunch the day before. Setting the food on the dining room table, she uncorked a bottle of South African pinotage and lit a candle. Then she turned on some Johnny Cash and placed the notebook beside her. Somewhere buried in Bella’s mordant recollections was a clue, Zoe was sure.

She would read until she found it.

Chapter 5

On Wednesday morning, Zoe drove to the office, feeling inspired. Her examination of Bella’s notebook had revealed nothing about a suspect, but the handwritten letters had afforded her tantalizing glimpses into Bella’s past. The more she had read, the more she had convinced herself that the missing pieces of the woman’s story could shed light on the investigation.

At nine o’clock, the response team met in the conference room. Joseph laid the doll and glasses on the table, and Zoe placed the notebook beside them.

“It seems we’ve had developments,” Mariam remarked. “Please fill us in.”

Zoe traded a glance with Joseph, and he surprised her with a nod that said,
Go ahead
.

After collecting her thoughts, she offered the team a summary of their meetings with Doris, the discovery of the doll and glasses, and the appearance of a second eyewitness—Given. Joseph chimed in a few details but otherwise left the narrative in her hands.

At the end of her report, Zoe held up the notebook. “In the last five years of her life, Bella wrote one hundred and eighty-nine letters to a person named Jan. In them she describes the disintegration of her health, her desperate attempts to provide for Kuyeya, and her
work as a prostitute. Joseph and I agree that Kuyeya’s rape was likely premeditated. If that’s true, the obvious suspects are customers. Unfortunately, Bella never named names. She referred to her clients in code. In addition, she never mentioned a client with an interest in her daughter.”

She showed them the inside cover of the notebook. “That said, this is the third volume; the first volume, apparently, was lost and the second was destroyed. We know nothing about what Bella did before April of 2004. In the absence of a better approach, I propose that we fill in the gaps. I have a hunch that Bella will lead us to the man who raped her daughter.”

After a pause Niza was the first to speak. “I’ll admit I haven’t read the letters, but Bella’s past seems like an odd place to look for a suspect.”

“Granted,” Zoe said. “But even if I’m wrong, what I’m proposing should give us confirmation of Kuyeya’s age.”

Until now Sarge had been leaning back in his chair. At the mention of age, he perked up. In contrast to adult rape, defilement was a strict liability crime, meaning that consent was not an issue so long as the prosecution could establish that the victim was under the age of sixteen.

“Please explain,” he said.

Zoe nodded. “Bella says surprisingly little about her childhood, but it’s clear she grew up near Livingstone. She talks about Victoria Falls and her grandmother’s village. She also dropped a hint that she studied nursing. There’s a nursing school at the Livingstone General Hospital. According to Doris, her parents are probably dead. But I bet we could find someone from her extended family who could establish Kuyeya’s date of birth.”

Niza shook her head. “Without a suspect in custody, evidence of
age is meaningless. You could spend weeks tracking down her family and get us nowhere.”

Zoe’s eyes flashed. “We’ll get nowhere sitting at our desks.”

Mariam looked dubious. She turned to Joseph. “What’s your opinion?”

“It’s an intriguing theory,” Joseph said. “But I suggest we wait on a trip to Livingstone.”

Zoe frowned. “You have a better idea?”

“Not better,” he replied. “More pressing.” He fished in his pocket and removed his digital camera. “I took this on the way here,” he said, handing it to her.

Zoe looked at the image in the frame. A black BMW sedan was parked beside a tall fence. In the background, slightly blurred, was the sign for the British High Commission.

“Look above the bumper,” he said.

Zoe’s heart lurched. Beside the license plate was a sky blue crest with an X at its center. Except the X was not a character of the alphabet. It was a pair of golf clubs crossed at the neck. The clubs were overlaid with three stenciled letters: LGC.

“The Lusaka Golf Club,” she said softly.

“Let me see that,” Niza said, taking the camera from her. She stared at the screen while Sarge and Mariam crowded around. “How can you be sure this is the right symbol?”

“I’ll confirm it with our witnesses,” Joseph replied.

“Are you going to stake out the golf club?” Zoe asked.

Joseph nodded.

“Can I come along?”

He smiled. “The more the happier.”

She laughed. “Merrier, you mean.”

He rolled his eyes. “Whatever.”

Zoe was tempted to accompany Joseph to Kanyama to question Dominic about the bumper sticker, but the memory of the gang leader in the bandana dissuaded her. Until the election was over, she intended to stay out of the compounds. Agreeing to meet Joseph at noon, she climbed into her Land Rover and placed the doll and glasses on the seat beside her. If the objects were indeed Kuyeya’s, she needed to give them back.

The drive to the children’s home took half an hour. She parked in the scarlet shade of the poinsettia tree and found Sister Anica in the breezeway beside the courtyard. “We’ve made progress,” she said, giving the nun an outline of their discoveries. “Her name is Kuyeya.”

“So that’s how you pronounce it,” the nun replied. “Sister Irina said ‘Kuwia.’”

Zoe was instantly curious. “She started to talk?”

“A little. Come, they’re in the garden.”

Zoe followed the nun through a trellis of bougainvillea to a cultivated field brimming with plants and herbs in the first stages of growth. She saw the girl rocking quietly on a bench, Sister Irina beside her.

“She spends hours here,” Sister Anica said. “It’s her favorite place.”

Zoe recalled the fingernail marks in Doris’s apartment.
You’re learning to see the sun
, she thought. “How is she handling the pain?”

“She’s taking her Tylenol,” replied the nun, “but I doubt she’ll run for a while.”

They greeted Sister Irina, and Zoe sat beside Kuyeya on the bench. “Hi there,” she said to the girl, wondering if she understood English. “Do you remember me?”

Kuyeya pressed her lips together and made the balloon sound.

“She does that when she’s happy,” Sister Irina explained.

“Hi, Zoe,” Kuyeya said spontaneously, her tone flat and her speech slightly slurred.

“I taught her your name,” Sister Irina explained. “She likes to say it.”

Zoe laughed. “I have a present for you, Kuyeya. I bet you like presents.”

The girl nodded, beginning to smile.

Zoe took out the glasses and tried them on her. They fit perfectly. The girl looked toward the trellis of bougainvillea in the distance. After a moment, she made the balloon sound again. This time it carried a faint chime of laughter.
She’s nearsighted
, Zoe thought.

“I have another present for you,” she said, handing over the doll.

The sight of the stuffed toy transformed Kuyeya. She snatched it away and began to rock back and forth, groaning softly under her breath. Suddenly, she spoke. “Baby is hurt. Baby is not bad. Baby is hurt.”

Zoe felt a chill. “Who is the baby?” she asked, but Kuyeya didn’t seem to hear her. Zoe looked at Sister Irina. “Has she talked about a baby before?”

The young nun shook her head.

“It might be a projection. She could be talking about herself.” Zoe turned back to Kuyeya. “Who hurt the baby?” she asked slowly.

Instead of responding, the girl rocked faster.

Zoe tried again: “How is the baby hurt?”

Kuyeya crossed her eyes, then refocused. At last, she gave an answer: “The man hurt Baby. The man is bad. Baby is not bad.”

At once, Zoe found herself acutely conscious of her surroundings. She heard the drone of an airplane overhead, the voices of children nearby, the whistle of the breeze in her ears.

“Who hurt the baby?” she probed. She willed Kuyeya to speak again, but the girl gave her nothing more. She gritted her teeth in frustration.
You saw his face. What is his name?

She turned to Sister Irina. “It would be helpful to know what she says. Would you mind keeping notes?”

“I’d be happy to,” the nun said.

Zoe touched Kuyeya’s shoulder. “We need you to talk to us. Please talk to us.”

Leaving St. Francis, Zoe dropped by her flat and made two brown-bag lunches. Then she drove to the golf club to meet Joseph. She parked at the edge of the lot beneath a jacaranda tree. The spot gave her a view of the gate and the clubhouse—a compact, single-story building with the familiar blue crest above the entrance. She scanned the lot and saw at least a dozen SUVs, including one that appeared to be silver sitting in the far corner.

Joseph arrived just after noon and parked in the space beside her. “Dominic confirmed it,” he said, joining her in the Land Rover. “It’s the symbol he saw.”

Zoe nodded. “How do you want to do this?”

Joseph surveyed the lot. “I’m going to walk around. You stay here. Your face is too memorable.”

“I’ll take that as a compliment. There’s a silver SUV on the far side.”

“I noticed,” he replied, and slipped out of the cabin.

Zoe watched as Joseph canvassed the ranks of parked vehicles, angling toward the silver SUV. He barely glanced at the vehicle before entering the clubhouse. A minute later, he returned to the lot with keys in hand, as if he had remembered something.

“It doesn’t have a sticker,” he said, climbing in again. “I only saw a couple of them in the lot. The lady in the club said they don’t make them anymore.”

“That’ll make our suspect easier to find,” Zoe replied. She reached into the back seat and handed him a brown bag. “I made you a sandwich.”

His lips widened into a smile. “That’s very kind of you.”

The gift of food seemed to unlock something in Joseph. Suddenly, he became a conversationalist, engaging Zoe about everything from his childhood in the Southern Province to the issues at stake in the election. As the afternoon deepened and the sun traced out its westward arc, at least two dozen automobiles came and went. Zoe kept watch for another silver SUV but saw only rainbow colors in the parade.

Around four o’clock, their fortunes turned. A silver Lexus RX270 pulled into the lot and parked in their row. Two Zambian men—one tall and trim, the other shorter and muscular—collected golf clubs from the trunk and strolled toward the clubhouse.

“I’ll check it out,” Joseph said, leaving the cab. He wandered down the lane and continued into the clubhouse, emerging five minutes later with a troubled look in his eyes. He took out his camera and snapped a photo of the Lexus. Then he returned to the Land Rover.

“The crest is there, but it’s on the wrong side,” he said, showing her the photo and Dominic’s sketch from his notebook. The boy had placed the crest to the left of the license plate. On the Lexus, the crest was to the right.

“Maybe he misremembered,” she said. “It was dark.”

Joseph frowned. “Right now his memory is the best evidence we have. There’s something else. I talked to the men. I asked if they’d played over the weekend. The tall one said he was in Johannesburg on business.”

Zoe sighed, dejected. “We should confirm that. We also need to double-check Dominic’s recollection.”

Joseph nodded. “I’ll run the plate.”

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