name is Musa Zakari. I haven’t seen him for ten days. As soon as I saw the picture in the newspaper, I knew it was him.”
Regina pulled out a mobile from her jeans pocket. “Mr. Darko, I took some pictures of Akosua and Musa some weeks ago, if you want to have a look. Then you can see how he looks like.”
Dawson and Chikata came around so they could see her phone screen. Akosua looked on as Regina went through each of four photographs, all containing Musa. One of them really got Dawson’s attention. Musa was standing behind Akosua with his arms around her, his smiling face nuzzling against her neck as she leaned against him. Comparing a drawing to a photo was often difficult, and the facial features were not a dead-on likeness to Kirezi’s sketch. But the smile . It was the smile with the same missing cuspid that did it. Somehow, Kirezi had captured it perfectly.
“That’s a fine picture of you and Musa,” Dawson said to Akosua.
She smiled tentatively, a smile marred by sadness.
“How did he lose his tooth?” Dawson asked.
Akosua cleared her throat. “Please, about three months ago, some thieves at Agbogbloshie Market beat him and stole his money. His mouth was bleeding and his tooth was loose, and it was paining him so he pulled it out and he was going to throw it away, but I said no, don’t throw it away—give it to me, and he said, Ah, but what will you do with it? And I said I would make a necklace with it, so when I wear it I know I have you with me even if you are not there.”
Without warning, tears erupted, running down her cheeks, and a whimper escaped her.
Regina gave her friend a handkerchief and then rubbed Akosua’s back soothingly. “You’re doing well,” she said.
Dawson squeezed the girl’s hand encouragingly. “I know this is tough. Try for me, eh? I’m very glad you came to see me.”
She pressed the handkerchief against her eyes. Dawson gave her a chance to recover. He asked her gently, “Did you make the necklace with the tooth?”
Akosua nodded, taking a grimy piece of paper carefully out of her pocket. She unfolded it gingerly, revealing a thin strand of leather with a single strung item—a tooth. Dawson picked up the necklace and examined it. The tooth, one of the cuspids, was dazzling white and smooth as pearl. In a minute hole drilled through its base was a small metal loop, to which the leather string was attached. Dawson felt that surge of excitement that came with a significant break.
“You made this, Akosua?”
She shook her head. “Regina’s husband—he makes jewelry at the Arts Center.”
“Oh, very good.” Dawson acknowledged Regina. She smiled, looking proud.
Dawson looked up at Chikata. “Can you get me one more chair?”
“Sure.” Chikata left the room.
“When was the last time you saw Musa?” Dawson asked Akosua.
“The Saturday before last.”
“That’s the fifth of June, the day before the body was found.”
“Yes, please.”
“Where did you see Musa that day?”
“We went to Nima Market.”
“At what time?”
“In the evening about six o’clock.”
“Did Musa live in Nima?”
“No, please. He stayed at different places. He was a truck pusher, so he stayed anywhere he had work.”
“He lived on the street?” Dawson asked.
“Yes, please.”
“Did he have any family?”
“Please, no. He came from the north. He didn’t have anyone here.”
Chikata came back with a borrowed chair. Dawson sat down at a comfortable angle from Akosua. His previous position, sitting on the edge of the desk, which forced her to look up at him, had seemed dominating. He wanted her to feel at ease.
“What you’ve done,” he said, “bringing us Musa’s tooth, is a very good thing, Akosua, because we can test it to see if it belongs to the person in the lagoon. If it does, then it means that the person in the lagoon was Musa.”
“Yes, please.”
“But we have to keep the tooth for some time,” Dawson went on. “We won’t
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