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‘This assegai is, I suspect, judging by the length of its shaft and the
mopane
wood used, and look here – the way the blade is attached – yes, definitely this assegai is almost certainly turn of the century before last, from one of the tribes on the western limits of South Africa, perhaps the
Batlhaping
or the
Bakgalagadi
or perhaps the
Buhurutsi
or
Barolong
. I will not be able to tell for certain until I see the tip of the blade.'

‘I'll ring the police,' said Tom reaching for the phone on the Librarian's desk.

‘Wait!' The Dean caught Tom's wrist in a surprisingly powerful grip and held it firm.

‘Let's just think about this for a minute, shall we?' he said quietly.

Tom almost laughed.

‘You're surely not going to suggest we
don't
call the police, are you?'

A silence followed. All three men looked at one another. Both the Dean and this new man were excited.

‘Tom,' began the Dean, talking to him, but looking at the arrival. ‘This sort of thing comes along only once in a generation. There is a chance to prove something here. Whose methods work best? The police, with their size 13 boots and flashing blue lights and stupid questions from men who can't even write “bum” on a wall, or ours, with recourse to experimental scientific methods and recondite knowledge such as Wikipedia's here.'

Now Professor Wikipedia introduced himself with a long, thin, tepid hand. Tom shook it. It was like gripping a dead eel.

‘Professor Aldous Wikipedia,' he smiled, revealing two rows of tiny sharp teeth. ‘Reader in Scientific Detection and Pro-Vice Chancellor of the University. Pleased to meet you. The Dean is, if anything, understating the case here, Tom, if I may call you that?'

Tom nodded.

‘You see,' continued Wikipedia. ‘With all this terrorism in the headlines, we have been losing ground to thrillers. You know the sort: government agencies, global conspiracies, multinationals and unknowable biochemical Jihadis with their dirty bombs lurking in every distant cave you care to mention. Death has become random now. It's all suicide bombers and Operation Wrath of God. We need to get back to the personal again, Tom, where individuals can make a difference.

‘It is a strange literary fact, not wholly germane to our conversation, true, but worth noting nonetheless, that those people who vote ‘to get the government off their backs' always want to read about the Government intruding in other people's lives: an intrusion that usually takes the shape of a Chinook helicopter overhead and the muzzle of a machine gun in your face.'

He turned to the body of Claire with a zealot's gleam in his eye.

‘This, on the other hand, is
a body in the library
!'

Had Wikipedia or the Dean been younger or American, they might have whooped or done a dance of victory here. Their elation was almost sexual. Tom felt suddenly uncomfortable, the odd man out.

‘So, Dean,' Wikipedia said. ‘What you are proposing is a competition between us and the modern state. Whoever solves the crime first wins? Nothing but intellectual pride at stake. Rather unfair, don't you think? Harharhar.'

He had an unpleasant forced laugh that cut itself off dead.

‘The police must, of course, remain within the law,' the Dean continued, ‘and they don't know they are in a competition, but they have far greater resources at their disposal.'

Wikipedia rubbed his hands together. Tom could hardly take his eyes off them: it was like watching snakes writhe.

‘Tom, you ring the police,' suggested Wikipedia. ‘Tell them we have found A Body in the Library. They'll never believe you, of course. I'll have a look at this spear and the aforementioned body, if I may.'

Wikipedia squatted down and touched her forehead.

‘Still warm,' he murmured to the Dean, who squatted next to him. Tom, using the phone on the desk, got through to the police station at St Aldgate's. It took him a full five minutes to persuade someone he was not wasting police time. Eventually the police agreed to come. He put the phone down and joined the two men.

‘Now,' said the Dean. ‘The first question we have to ask ourselves is whether Claire had any enemies.'

‘Enemies?' said Wikipedia ‘Good Lord! Did she have any
friends
?'

‘Yes, well, it doesn't make it any easier,' agreed the Dean. ‘We shall have to draw up a longlist. Tom? Grab a pencil and paper, will you? We should write this down. I am thinking first of Yardley, who hated her for not using his books on her course, and whom she regularly teased about his speech impediment. Then there is Mrs Robinson, who hates – hated I should say, dear God – her because she was always so rude about her cooking. Then there is Rex, of course, whom she thought elderly and homosexualist – a fatal combination – and then poor dear Celia, who so hated Claire for telling Rex about all those previous engagements. Then there is Miss Featherstonehaugh, whom she ridiculed for being A Bit Like Miss Marple, but who might be thought of as being a touch on the frail side for fighting with spears, which might, I suppose, rule her out, but then there is Lord Denbeigh, who detested her because she was c-o-m-m-o-n.'

The Dean spelled the word out, peering around him as he did, as if just saying it were enough to evoke the forces of darkness.

‘As good a reason as any to murder someone,' chimed Wikipedia. ‘Happens all the time.'

Tom scribbled away.

‘Then there is poor Father Dennis,' continued the Dean, ‘whom she persuaded that people had been lying to him all his life and that he was not, in fact, black but a Native American Indian. He might, now that I come to think of it, be the most natural person to be throwing a spear about the place, were it not for the fact that he is blind. Again, that is something that might just rule him out, unless he did it in cahoots with Thorneycroft, whose deafness has only served to enhance his sense of touchiness, and who hated Claire for calling him Ironsides and ‘The-seeing-eye-dog-of-Tonto' in that absurd cod ‘Red Injun' voice she used to put on, although to be fair, this part of the Library is not equipped for wheelchair access, and so that might rule him out too.'

‘I sense we are getting somewhere,' said Wikipedia, wiggling his eyebrows.

‘And then there is Drover, whom she was always calling fat but who thought of himself as merely portly and who hated her because she would not come on the Gay Rights march in London last year and who thought she was a hypocrite for not publicly admitting her love for Dr Burrows, whose marriage she had ruined by stalking her so incessantly, even while she was married to her own husband, who then committed suicide, but whose sister, Nurse Lane, is the Matron and whom you, Tom, saw earlier this afternoon. How did she seem?'

‘Oh,' said Tom, a little lost. ‘Fine, I think.'

‘That's all very well,' said Wikipedia. ‘They were all in the College at the time of the death and they all had a motive, if not the means, but it is this spear that really intrigues me.'

Tom sensed that something had changed. He had been sure they were right to concentrate on the list of people with the motives and perhaps the means to kill Claire, and that they ought to consult the porters in their cabin to find out if anyone had come or gone through the gates in the last couple of hours. Yet here he was, having to concentrate on the spear. He was being corralled in a direction he did not necessarily want to go. This was the sort of thing that only usually happened in films.

‘Wait a minute—' he began. ‘The police will be here any minute. They won't want you to disturb the—'

But Wikipedia had wrapped his silk handkerchief around the shaft of the spear and pulled it from Claire's body with the sound of someone removing a spade from wet sand. Tom looked away as he wiped the sticky blood from its vicious tip.

‘Hmmm,' he said. ‘Very interesting. Look at this. It is extraordinarily ornate. Too ornate for the
Batlhaping
. It must have been made by the
Bamangwato
of what we used to call Northern Bechuanaland, now Botswana. They were the finest metalworkers in southern Africa, you know. Even then the detail is really remarkable. This must have been made for a king. Look at the decoration here. Very ornate. Very rare. I know of only one like this in existence: in the National Museum in Gaborone in Botswana.'

‘Who could have got hold of a spear like this?' asked the Dean. Tom was, despite himself, interested in this development. A rare antique as a murder weapon had a nice, familiar chime.

‘Obviously it's a message,' Wikipedia said, looking at the Dean with a significant leer.

‘You don't think?' The Dean looked aghast at some fresh possibility. Wikipedia nodded, enjoying the gravity of the moment.

‘Have you told him?' he asked, tilting his strange-shaped head towards Tom. Tom could see he was being drawn into something else again here. The atmosphere changed and it seemed as if the lights had dimmed around them. For a moment he managed to forget that at their feet was the bulky body of his erstwhile Head of Department.

‘What?' Tom asked, speaking in a whisper.

‘Tom, the police will be here soon and so we do not have much time. There has been some trouble here at the College in the last few months. You may have heard something? And not just here. All over the place. It started with just the odd slip-up. A case unsolved, unresolved. Once or twice this is all right – terribly po-mo – but it has been happening too often and people do not like it. The reading public like to be reassured that, through whatever means, disorder is contained and transgression punished.'

‘You see,' took over Wikipedia, ‘too many of our alumni are reporting mistakes or, worse, blank walls, dead ends. At first we thought it might mean increasingly cunning criminals, increasingly interesting Crime Fiction, but then we started getting the letters.'

‘Letters?'

‘In the post. From all over the world. Someone is trying to undermine us, Tom. Trying to catch us out, trying to show that the current crop of literary detectives are no good; unsettling them and destroying their confidence. There have been cases of them acting strangely: taking to drink, or giving it up. Someone is challenging us. This,' he held up the spear, ‘is just another sign. It is a summons. One of us needs to get out to Botswana and find out what all this is about.'

‘But—' began Tom.

The Dean held up a hand.

‘Tom, even to so much as suggest there may be alternative courses of action, such as waiting for the police, even to suggest we may be wrong about this, is to lose the plot; lose the game; lose the audience; the reader. Surely you know that?'

This was one of the Basic Rules of the Genre, something Tom had known in theory almost all his life. He had not realised how hard it was to rub up against it in real life.

‘We have a contact in Botswana, of course. Delicious Ontoaste; class of '74. You may have heard of her?'

Of course Tom had heard of Delicious Ontoaste. She had been one of the College's great successes of the last ten years. Despite having started with a minor academic publisher, she had become a word-of-mouth bestseller – the best kind of bestseller.

‘And you want me to go, don't you? Because of my father?'

Wikipedia nodded sharply. Then he tossed the spear up in the air, its point missing Tom's eye by an inch, caught it by the shaft and plunged it back into the wound in Claire's chest with a glutinous squeal. The body gave a kind of a sigh and deflated.

‘Always wanted to do that,' he said and smiled.

At that point they heard a voice at the door – a curious high-pitched squeak – and together all three whirled around. Alice Appleton. Tom's first sight of her after ten years was just as she twisted at her knees and fainted to the floor in a heap.

‘Oh dear,' said the Dean.

Part II
The 11 O'Clock Moral Dilemma
CHAPTER ONE

The Tiny White Aeroplane and the man in the uniform of the Botswana Postal Service both make an appearance.

Mma Delicious Ontoaste, redoubtable founder of
The Best
Detective Agency in the World Ever! No. 2
, was sitting beneath a striped parasol outside the café at the Sir Seretse Kharma International Airport in Gaborone. On the table in front of her was a mug of foaming bush tea and the sky above her was of the colour it usually assumed at ten o'clock in the morning: clear, blue and cloudless. It was a good sky, Mma Ontoaste sometimes thought; the best sky in the world, stretching all the way to the horizon of the best country in the world, and she was the best woman in the world, sitting there, still with that mug of foaming bush tea, still thinking strange thoughts, except that today Mma Ontoaste was not thinking strange thoughts about the sky. Mma Ontoaste was thinking strange thoughts about the tiny white aeroplane and the Very Important Person on board whom she had come to the airport to meet.

It had begun a few days before, when Mma Ontoaste had been sitting in her office on Merchistone Drive, sipping bush tea from her own mug, the one her dear late daddy – that good man – had passed on to her, and listening to her new assistant, Mma Murakami – that good woman – as she typed very quickly in the grass hut next door. Outside nothing except the air moved. It was one of those long hot African days, when there seemed to be no escape from the heat. The sun beat down on the grass roof of the hut and the cattle sought out the shade of the acacia tree. The red soil bounced the heat back up and it seemed as if between them the sun and the earth had declared war on anything cool and green and living.

Behind the steady clatter of Mma Murakami's typewriter, Mma Ontoaste could hear a radio playing some jazz music. It was Mma Murakami's radio, a leather-encased Roberts radio, with a wire clothes-hanger in place of the original aerial, which Mma Ontoaste assumed had been broken off in some accident or other in the past. Ordinarily jazz was the outward sign of deep inner corruption or incurable evil, of course and, had Mma Ontoaste known that her new assistant Mma Murakami not only had a radio, but that she also listened to jazz while she typed, then it is doubtful that Mma Ontoaste would have given Mma Murakami the job in the first place, even if she had, as she claimed, got 98 per cent in her final exam at the Napier Secretarial College.

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