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* BrokenPedastel: Vaugh is somewhat disheartened to learn that the guy who illustrated the children's books he read to his daughters is a pedophile.
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[[quoteright:312:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_first_rule_of_survival.jpg]]

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* EveryoneHasStandards: While Thulani is a careerist jerk he DOES have lines he won't cross, most notably displayed in Book 2.

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* EveryoneHasStandards: While Thulani is a careerist jerk he DOES does have lines he won't cross, most notably displayed in Book 2.2 when he saves Vaughn's life and calls out a Black Politician for committing various crimes to get rid of potential opposition to the ANC.



* HateSink: Vaughn's former commander Kobus Nel.

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* HateSink: Vaughn's former commander Kobus Nel. 23 years after causing the death of a family he's unrepentantly racist and vile.


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* ShootTheDog: Marantz does this in First Rule of Survival. He realizes that Vaughn wants to murder Nicholas Steinhauer and realizes that as a former spy he'll be able to get away with it more easily. So he breaks into Nicholas's house, tortures him into giving up his information, and than kills him by setting the house on fire with Nick inside.

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* AbusiveParents: Hubert Steinhauser, father of the central suspects, is implied to have perpetuated a cycle of abuse leading to the trafficking of stolen boys by his sons.

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* AbusiveParents: Hubert Steinhauser, Steinhauer, father of the central suspects, is implied to have perpetuated a cycle of abuse leading to the trafficking of stolen boys by his sons. sons.
* AssholeVictim: Nicholas Steinhauer. Kobus Nel in book 2.



* EveryoneHasStandards: While Thulani is a careerist jerk he DOES have lines he won't cross, most notably displayed in Book 2.



* ObstructiveBureaucrat: General Thulani, the new SAPD police chief with a political agenda.

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* HateSink: Vaughn's former commander Kobus Nel.
* ObstructiveBureaucrat: General Thulani, the new SAPD police chief with a political agenda.agenda, though he does have an honorable side.
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* SmugSnake: Nicholas Steinhauer, albeit a more competent one than most

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This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[UsefulNotes/TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''Literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.

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This is a novel by Paul Mendelson of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[UsefulNotes/TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''Literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.


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This book is followed by 3 sequels:
*''The Serpentine Road''
*''The History of Blood''
*''Apostle Lodge''
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This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''Literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.

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This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[TheApartheidEra [[UsefulNotes/TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''Literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.
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This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]'s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''Literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.

to:

This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]'s.2000]]s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''Literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.
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*CowboyCop: De Vries, when he needs to be.

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adding tropes


This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]'s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.

to:

This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]'s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''literature/IndecentExposure'' ''Literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.



!!Cape Town sees an outbreak of the following tropes:

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!!Cape Town sees an outbreak of the following tropes:tropes:
*AbusiveParents: Hubert Steinhauser, father of the central suspects, is implied to have perpetuated a cycle of abuse leading to the trafficking of stolen boys by his sons.
*FrameUp: In an attempt to discredit de Vries, evidence is retrospectively fabricated and added to the 2007 case-file. This is to make it look as if the original case was incompetently handled and obvious leads were not followed through. The fact a man who - while no angel - is implicated who is innocent of ''this'' crime is, in some eyes, a bonus.
*ObstructiveBureaucrat: General Thulani, the new SAPD police chief with a political agenda.
*SecretPolice: Colonel Wertner, the mixed-race Internal Security chief, a successor to the old BOSS.
*StateSec: the SAPD's Internal Security bureau.
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This is a novel of the South African Police Force in the [[TurnOfTheMillennium first decades of the 2000]]'s. UsefulNotes/SouthAfrica is still making the transition from [[TheApartheidEra an apartheid state]] into an inclusive modern democracy. Its police force has undergone a series of transformations, some helpful, some unhelpful, as the new state tries to work out what sort of a police force it wants to have. A small group of older officers who began their police careers during the apartheid era are still present, struggling with change, and trying to function as responsible conscientious coppers amidst all the political infighting, and set against what they are coming to realise is at best an unhelpful and out-of-touch bureaucracy. This is a long way from the incompetent and toxic policing described in works like Creator/TomSharpe's ''literature/IndecentExposure'' and ''Literature/RiotousAssembly''. [[note]]Both books are alluded to[[/note]]. Colonel Vaughan de Vries is coming to realise that the new management considers officers like him to be an anachronism and an embarrassment, and that the new General commanding the Pretoria force, a careerist Zulu placed in post for political reasons, wants him out. This is despite de Vries being a generally good and conscientious officer who even in apartheid days tried to police as well and as fairly as he could, who is aware that his Afrikaaner upbringing has given him lots of unhelpful prejudices and who actively tries to compensate for the bias and prejudice he was brought up with. He is also aware of the new generation of "internal security" officers who are potentially as dangerous and as toxic as the old BOSS - this time against white officers. Both he and his superior, Brigadier de Toit, are aware they are marked men for the new leadership.

In the midst of all the politicking and infighting, an old case concerning missing boys is unexpectedly reopened. De Vries not only has to fight his superiors; the nature of the case means a lot of prominent and well-connected people are potentially involved in a child-sex and human trafficking operation.

!!Cape Town sees an outbreak of the following tropes:

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