Part 19 (2/2)

She made a weak attempt to wave off the reference to her famous father. ”Pa didn't pay any attention to the stories written about him. He liked better to work in his orchard than to speak to a hall full of people.”

Like many powerful men, it appeared that Frikkie van Brandenburg had greatness thrust upon him.

”He was a homebody?” Emmanuel asked with a smile. The newly written history books made a point of mentioning van Brandenburg's zeal in spreading the message of white superiority and redemption. No meeting was too small or insignificant. No town too isolated to escape the gospel according to Frikkie. The great prophet traveled to them all.

”He was home when he could be. We knew how important his work was for our country. Four of my brothers followed in his steps and became ministers of the Dutch Reformed Church. My two sisters are married to ministers.”

”You're the odd one out.”

”Not at all,” Mrs. Pretorius answered. ”Willem could easily have become a minister of the church. He had the strength for it but he wasn't called.”

”I see,” Emmanuel said. Perhaps the captain realized early in life that the path of moral rect.i.tude wasn't for him. Beating a small-time p.o.r.nographer with your bare fists was not on the list of pastoral duties. And of course, Celestial Pleasures Celestial Pleasures wasn't required reading at the seminary. wasn't required reading at the seminary.

”Louis is going to be a minister,” Mrs. Pretorius said with satisfaction. ”This was his first year at theological college.”

Emmanuel didn't show his surprise. After witnessing Louis ha.s.sling Tiny for booze and smokes, it was hard to imagine him leading a congregation or dispensing Christian wisdom.

”What's he doing home?” It wasn't holiday time. All the schools and colleges were still in full swing. The summer break would begin in late December.

Mrs. Pretorius sipped her tea and considered her answer. It took her a few moments to find the correct words. ”Louis wants to be part of our people's new covenant with G.o.d, but he's too young to be away from home. The separation didn't suit him.”

Emmanuel waited. He'd seen a flash of doubt escape through a c.h.i.n.k in the widow's holy armor. Louis was her weak spot and there was something more to his early return from theological college.

”My father took a break from his studies, you know. When he returned to the church he was stronger than before, more able to lead the people on the Way. Louis will spend time on Johannes's farm, get to know the land and the concerns of the volk...he'll go back to theological college and when he comes out he'll be a lion of G.o.d.”

There was absolute belief in her eyes.

”Maybe Louis will be a farmer or a businessman like his brothers?”

”No. Not Louis.” Her smile formed icicles on the rim of her teacup. ”He's not like the others. Even as a child he had a gift for gentleness and compa.s.sion. He is destined for greater things than what can be found in this town.”

Mrs. Pretorius dreamed big, he'd give her that. Her sons ruled Jacob's Rest but her ambitions were grander. She wanted a leader of the people who could make the nation into a holy land. The boy's total unsuitability for the job was a fact that escaped her completely.

”Did the captain share your dreams for Louis?”

”They're not my dreams, Detective Cooper. They're Louis's.” This time Emmanuel felt the chill from her smile in his bones. She was certainly van Brandenburg's daughter. To go against her wishes was to go against the wishes of G.o.d.

It was no wonder Willem Pretorius and his son traveled the kaffir paths in the dark. A woman with fire in her eyes and ice in her heart ruled their home.

Emmanuel drank his tea. Mrs. Pretorius's home was a showcase for her vision of how Afrikaner life should be. If he proved a link between the captain and the importation of banned materials, she'd burn the house down to purify it.

”Willem loved this place and these people.” The widow's blue eyes glistened with tears as she looked over the back fence to the veldt. ”He was like a native that way. The land was all. I know you English laugh at our belief that we are the white tribe of Africa, but in Willem's case it was true. He was an African man.”

The captain certainly had an affinity with the Africans. His closeness with Shabalala was the source of Sarel Uys's bitterness and maybe the lieutenant wasn't the only one uncomfortable with Willem Pretorius's relations.h.i.+p with the black constable.

”Do you think some whites resented the captain's good relations.h.i.+p with the natives?” he asked. He was thinking of Uys and the fact he'd just returned from Mozambique. Did the hard-faced little man park his car across the border, swim the width of the river then back again after committing the crime? He would have had two days to lie low and get a suntan before showing up at Jacob's Rest again.

”Willem didn't mix with them socially,” Mrs. Pretorius said firmly. ”He knew all of them because he grew up here. As police captain he had to talk with them and spend time among them. People understood that.”

”Of course.” Emmanuel set his teacup down. Willem Pretorius did more than police the native community. He'd chosen Shabalala and Aggie the arthritic old maid to keep his secrets safe. That implied trust.

The new segregation laws formalized the long-standing idea that the Black tribe and the White tribe were created by G.o.d to be separate and to develop along separate lines. Each tribe had its own natural sphere. Only degenerates crossed over into unnatural territory. In the eyes of some whites, Captain Pretorius might have done just that: crossed the line into the black world.

”He's not like other Dutchmen.” That was what Shabalala said on the first day of the investigation. Maybe that difference got the captain killed.

”Thank you for the tea, Mrs. Pretorius.” Emmanuel retrieved the molester files from the floor. He had to see Erich and then he'd dig deeper into the ”white man gone to black” lead.

”I'll be in contact if there are any developments.” He held his hand out, aware that this was the last time he'd have physical contact with her. After he interviewed her son, Mrs. Pretorius would freeze him out.

She shook his hand and stared at the police file. ”What's that?” she asked.

”A file on the molestation case involving some of the coloured women in town.” He told her the truth. She didn't like dirt in her house and he wanted to gauge her reaction to the news that Willem Pretorius had brought darkness into her world.

”Oh...” She took a half step back. ”Was it in the spare room?”

”Yes,” Emmanuel said. ”The case was unsolved and probably due for a review to see if any fresh leads came up.”

Her brow wrinkled with distaste. ”It was most likely one of them. One of their own who did it.”

”Did Captain Pretorius say that?”

”He didn't have to.” She regained her composure and moved on to a topic she knew a lot about, the weakness of others. ”The man who committed these acts still has strong primitive traits. We Europeans are further away from the animal state than the blacks or the coloureds.”

Emmanuel wanted to tell her that every night he dreamed of the terrible things that civilized Europeans did to each other with guns, knives and firebombs.

He slipped the file under his arm. Every hour of every day someone somewhere in South Africa commented on the strange behavior of those outside their own racial group. The Indians, the blacks, the coloureds and the whites pointed the finger at each other with equal enthusiasm.

”Strange...” Mrs. Pretorius's voice was soft. ”Willem didn't say anything about working on the case. He said it was closed.”

The widow looked at the bulging file with a hungry curiosity. It was as if she wanted a taste of the shadow world her husband had worked to contain.

”Did he discuss his cases with you?”

”Not all of them,” she said. ”But this one was special. It upset him to work on it. There were nights he couldn't sleep for worrying about the town's morality.”

”Unsolved cases can do that to a policeman.”

”That's why...” Her focus on the file was complete. ”I don't understand why he didn't say he was looking it over again. He...Willem told me everything.”

The presence of the file in her house without her knowledge cracked the foundation of Mrs. Pretorius's fantasy world. The certainty of her true Christian union with the captain had been called into question.

”I'm sure he didn't want to trouble you.” Emmanuel gave her an easy way out. She'd face a real test of her beliefs if he found the captain's business in Mozambique was criminal.

”Of course.” She smiled at her own doubts. ”Willem was a natural protector. He lived to keep our family and the town safe.”

The tears returned as the word ”lived” left her mouth. It was the past tense. Every conversation she held about her husband was now a conversation about the past. Mrs. Pretorius's sorrow was genuine but he had a feeling that if she'd caught her beloved Willem in an immoral act she'd have pulled the trigger herself.

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