quickly around. First order of business, get Akosua off this stage and away from this audience. Covering her face with her hands, she had quieted down now, only whimpering slightly, breathing quickly and deeply.
Dawson touched her shoulder. “Akosua, I’m Darko. Can you stand up?”
She nodded, still hiding her face, as though scared to face the world.
“Come on, then. I’ll help you.”
Dawson took her arm and supported her as she shakily got to her feet. To Constable Simon, he said, “Please get her some water.”
To talk to her, he needed a relatively quiet and private place, which could be difficult to find at CID. One of the secretaries in the Public Relations Office was standing nearby. Dawson knew she worked in a small office with only one other woman.
“Can we use your room for a moment?”
She nodded. “No problem, sir. It’s free.”
The audience began to disperse, the spectacle of the day over.
Akosua, still unsteady on her feet, leaned against Regina as they followed Dawson down the corridor. Chikata accompanied them into the office, where there were two desks, one with a computer that was switched off. Dawson wondered if it worked. Many of CID’s computers were old, burned-out fixtures.
Chikata moved the chairs from behind the desks, offering them to the young women. Akosua was trembling. Her eyes were bloodshot and as painfully swollen as those of a pummeled boxer. Now, Dawson could get a good look at her. While Regina was around twenty, twenty-one, Akosua couldn’t have been more than about seventeen. She was built very slightly, with a mousy, anxious face. She had a small tribal mark on her left cheek. Her hair was badly cut and straightened, but she had made an effort to gather it back and look sophisticated. Her dress, a Ghanaian print, was on the shabby side with oil stains. She wore cheap plastic slippers. Yet Dawson could see the care she had put into her appearance.
Physically, she and Regina could not have been more unlike each other. Regina was richly made, her body forcing her blouse and tight jeans to conform to her curves. Akosua looked like she ate once every other day.
Constable Simon came in with a bottle of Voltic water.
“Thank you, Simon,” Dawson said.
“No problem, massa. Please, do you need anything else?”
“No, thank you. You can go.”
Dawson snapped the seal on the top of the bottle and handed it to Akosua. “Have water. You need it. Take your time.”
For the first time, Akosua looked up at him and met his gaze. “Thank you,” she whispered, taking the bottle.
Regina, supportively holding her friend’s free hand, watched as she tilted her head back and drank thirstily, her glottis loudly registering each gulp.
“Ei!” Regina exclaimed with a half laugh. “Take a breath, Akosua.”
The girl did, stopping only briefly, and then finished up the bottle.
Dawson took it from her. “Better?”
Akosua nodded, wiping her chin with the back of her hand. “Please, yes. Thank you.”
Dawson perched on the side of the desk, the one with the computer. “So. You wanted to talk to me. Here I am.”
She might have felt intimidated by him or been shy, or both. She looked uncertainly at Regina, who took up the slack and said, “Please, Mr. Dawson, we came to look for you yesterday afternoon, but they said you weren’t here and we should come back today.”
Dawson didn’t comment, but his not hearing about who had come looking for him was a common occurrence. More often than not, the receptionists did not take a message, verbal or written, nor did they pass it on. “Come back tomorrow” was an all-too-frequent response to the visitor in search of a CID officer.
“I’m sorry I was so hard to find, Akosua,” Dawson said, addressing her rather than Regina, trying to coax her out. “You say the drawing of the boy resembles your boyfriend?”
“Yes, please,” she said softly, her hands wringing in her lap.
“What is his name?”
“Please, his
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