The Sunday Hangman

The Sunday Hangman by James McClure Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Sunday Hangman by James McClure Read Free Book Online
Authors: James McClure
Tags: Mystery
have them return with me, and to discuss exactly what they had seen upon arrival. They told me it is their custom to hide behind a tree while they ascertain whether the occupant of any parked vehicle—they had, of course, seen the deceased’s car from a distance—will take exception to their presence.”
    “Uh huh, so they hide behind tree
A
—it’s the farthest back,” said Kramer, trying to speed this up.
    “Correct, Lieutenant. Except when the sun comes out and the day grows hot, then they may wait by another one.”
    “Why?” asked Strydom.
    “The ants, Doctor, sir.”
    “Oh, ja.”
    “This has some bearing?” Kramer grumbled. “Come on, I can see you’re enjoying this, but get to the bloody point.”
    “May I speak without reservation, sir?”
    “You heard what I said, man!”
    “Then I must confess shamefully that the children of my people have very crude natures,” Zondi went on, and Strydom nodded. “Urination affords them many primitive delights. It gives them a true sense of power to see the creature upon which they have committed this act hop so swiftly away. Then there is the pleasure they take in seeing a man doing such a babyish thing as to wet down his trousers when he is drunk. For them to see a European—”
    “Zondi! You’re a bastard, aren’t you?” Kramer laughed, his memory of an investigation in which ants had provided vital evidence, along with a caterpillar, suddenly restored. “History repeats itself?”
    “Lieutenant?”
    But Zondi hadn’t recalled the case; his bewilderment was as great as that being shown by Doc Strydom, who was becoming very irritable, too.
    “Just get on with it,” Kramer sighed.
    “Well, sir, all that happened was that these children expressed some surprise to find the ants still in their home beneath the place where the deceased was hanging. Ngidi had told me of the unfortunate condition of the trousers in question, and I could see what they were saying was true. It is common knowledge that ants will take away their eggs if someone makes water on them. But those ants are all happy—as you may come and see.”
    They did just that, to suppressed giggling from the far side of the fence, and Strydom finished up on his hands and knees, grinning down the ant hole.
    “So who gets the Nobel this time?” he said over his shoulder to Kramer. “Yet those umfaans are quite right. These little chaps would have still been in there before eight, having their kip, and that’s why none of this occurred to Sergeant Arnot—he was here too early.”
    “It also clinches your theory, Doc.”
    “Too right, it does!”
    Kramer helped him back onto his feet, and checked to see what time it was: five on the dot, and getting pretty late, considering he and Zondi hadn’t stopped in more than twenty-four hours.
    “Now, what about the other thing you mentioned?” he asked, lighting a Lucky. “Let’s hear it, then get the hell out of here.”
    Zondi lost some of his confidence, and pointed to the taller child.
    “I am not so sure if this is important, Lieutenant, but that one picked up a bag near the stone this morning. He didn’t tell Ngidi because the question put to him was had he taken from the deceased’s car or person?”
    Familiar with how literal the illiterate poor could be in their interpretations, Kramer found nothing remarkable in this, but he did wonder why Zondi was being so half-hearted. And he said so.
    “It is a worthless cloth bag, sir. The only thing special is that it was not here yesterday, although I could not see a connection between—”
    “Not perhaps a bank’s bag?”
    “Oh, no, Lieutenant—proper trash, and not strong enough to carry money, even notes. I will get it for you, as I left it in his possession.”
    The bag that Zondi brought back to them was black and made of a cheap cotton fabric, hand-stitched clumsily up the sides. There was no drawstring, nor any indication of what it might have been used for. Kramer looked down

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