She shook her head vigorously. “Not her style.”
“Did he show his resentment after losing to her?”
“Yes, of course he did,” she said, as if it should have been obvious. “Things like being disruptive at meetings, coming in late, interrupting my aunt, and claiming she wasn’t following various protocols. Mean-spirited, spiteful little man who couldn’t stand the thought that a woman, if you please, had beaten him.”
Dawson nodded. He knew a few men like that. “Did he ever make any threats to her?”
“Not that I know of, but there’s no doubt he hated her.”
“I understand he strongly criticized your aunt on that radio program.”
“Criticize?” Smith-Aidoo lifted her chin slightly “No, Inspector Dawson—it was a tirade.”
“Did he have animosity toward your uncle as well?”
“He did, because after the broadcast, Uncle Charles went to the STMA offices and lambasted him. DeSouza tried to hit back by saying, ‘Just you try setting up a business in this town and see how far you get.’ ” She rolled her eyes. “Empty vessels make the most noise.”
Dawson found her indignation attractive. “Do you believe that Mr. DeSouza hated your aunt and uncle enough to kill them in such a brutal way?”
“What do you think my very biased answer to that is, Inspector?” she said, a little mockingly, perhaps.
That’s a yes, Dawson thought with a slight smile. He was eager to talk to DeSouza and find out for himself if he was as detestable as the doctor made him out to be.
“May I look through the rest of these boxes?” he asked her.
“Yes, feel free.” She stood up. “I’m going downstairs to talk to Gamal for a moment, so help yourself. I’ll be back in a little while.”
“Okay, Doc.”
He examined the other documents in the STMA box, many of them minutes of different meetings. One of them caught his eye.
MALGAM OIL: ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT
Attendance Register
Meeting location: Raybow Hotel Conference Center
Date: 8th March, 2012
The attendees had signed in with their phone numbers, email addresses, and the organization each represented. Charles Smith-Aidoo had been present, with an environmental advisor from the Malgam head office in Accra, a district finance officer, an engineer, Fiona Smith-Aidoo, Kwesi DeSouza, and Reggie Cardiman, owner of Ezile Bay Resort.
Dawson turned the page.
Mr. Reggie Cardiman (RC) stated that he was very concerned that he had yet to see a detailed plan from Malgam Oil on what specific measures they will take to protect the shoreline from destruction in the event of an oil spill. RC stated that Cape Three Points, where the Ezile Bay Resort is located, is a major nursing ground for marine turtles from August to March. Dolphins and whales also inhabit this area between October and December. Many birds feed in shallow waters at Cape Three Points, and their habitat is delicate.
In response, environmental consultant Hayford Nkrumah (HN) stated that Malgam Oil and the Ghana government were drawing up policies to delineate environmental measures and corporate responsibility in the face of oil exploration and production. Charles Smith-Aidoo (CSA), Malgam Corporate Relations Director, said he wanted to assure RC that a significant oil spill that would affect the flora and fauna of the shoreline was highly unlikely.
However, RC said that CSA’s declaration regarding the small likelihood of a harmful oil spill was unsatisfactory, as oil spills occur regularly worldwide, citing the Gulf of Mexico disaster of 2010. RC stated that even discharge of ballast water from tankers could affect the integrity of the coastal environment. HN stated that the vast volumes of water in the Gulf of Guinea would dilute the ballast waters.
RC disagreed with HN’s above statement, stating it was disingenuous and designed to allow Malgam to get away with polluting activities with impunity. Kwesi DeSouza requested that the meeting move on to the next item on the agenda regarding waste disposal at the hangars (warehouses) on the Ghana Air Force Base.
The box contained a lot more concerning the STMA. Dawson could spend hours on this. For now, he moved on to the Malgam box, which held policies and procedures, lists of personnel in Malgam, and available positions. The legal papers container included Malgam contracts and personal ones involving the Smith-Aidoo residences in Takoradi and Accra and some land in the Eastern Region.
He turned his attention to the bookcase against the wall by the window. A framed photograph of Charles and Fiona stood at an angle on one shelf. They were both well dressed for an obvious studio pose complete with misty borders. Charles appeared friendly, with a vanishing hairline and an expanding waist. Fiona looked intelligent and attractive; head tilted, she wore crimson lipstick and her hair was stylishly tucked behind ears that flashed pearls at the lobes.
Dawson examined the books. Oil, oil production, economics of oil production, rig technology, and one called Environmental Impact: How the Petroleum Industry Affects Indigenous Peoples. Dawson thumbed through the case studies: Nigeria, Ecuador, Norway, Equatorial Guinea, and the Gulf of Mexico. He supposed Ghana would be included in the next edition. He replaced the heavy book on the shelf and went to the window, where he stood watching Sapphire talking to Gamal as he finished wiping down the Jaguar, which looked as glossy as glass now. Baah was leaning casually against his taxi.
Dawson took down a box that had been thrown up on the top shelf and found a jumble of discarded items that people never knew what to do with—electronic cables, electrical outlet plugs, a damaged power strip, and two battered, old style Nokia phones. He switched on one of them. It still had a little battery life left. He went to the inbox and found five text messages to Fiona.
The battery of the other Nokia went completely out. He looked for and found the phone’s charger, plugged it in, and connected it to the Nokia. He went to the log of received calls. They were from Fiona, Sapphire, twins Paul and Paula, and a few other names that weren’t familiar. Dawson’s guess was that the phone had belonged to Charles.
He came to one that made his scrolling finger stop.
Lawrence Tetteh, 020-156-4676, 19:46 27 Mar
Lawrence Tetteh, CEO of Goilco? Voice mail, a more recent addition to mobile service in Ghana, was not available on his phone. Dawson went to the log of text messages received and scrolled again. He found three sets of messages received from Lawrence Tetteh, all on Friday, 4th May.
The first one said HOW R U
The second and third messages were:
DOING OK, NEED TO CHT WITH U IN PRSON
CALL ME WHEN U R IN WE CAN MEET
Of course, “prson” meant “person,” Dawson thought, smiling at the way he had for an instant interpreted it as “prison.” Too much time being a detective.
He went to the messages sent list and found the corresponding replies:
IM GOOD & U
WILL B IN ACCRA TUE
OK
He dialed 020-156-4676, and it rang repeatedly until it abruptly cut off without any kind of error message. He went through the phone’s menu and found that the provider was Vodafone, which was good, since the company seemed to have an overwhelming presence in Takoradi. It should be possible to find out if this was the right Lawrence Tetteh.
“Are you okay, Inspector Dawson?”
He started slightly. Dr. Smith-Aidoo had returned. “Yes, thank you, Doctor.”
“Find anything of interest?”
“Who owned these phones, do you know?”
“This was Uncle’s before he got his iPhone. The other one belongs to Auntie Fio.”
“Do you know if your uncle knew the CEO of Goilco, a man called Lawrence Tetteh?”
She shook her head slowly. “The name doesn’t ring a bell, no.”
Dawson wondered what Lawrence Tetteh had wanted to discuss with Charles. He had sounded serious and terse in his text. “In person” could have signified that he didn’t want to risk speaking or texting about the subject on
the phone for security reasons. Dawson checked his ruminations. Before he began all this speculation, he needed to find out if this was really the Lawrence Tetteh of Goilco. Neither “Lawrence” nor “Tetteh” was an uncommon name, and he wasn’t going to embarrass himself by getting the wrong LT.
“Can I take the phones with me?” he asked the doctor. “I’d like to look through the calls and text messages. I would also like the STMA box. There’s more in there that I need to look at.”
“Yes, of course. Whatever you need.”
“Thank you.” He looked around the room again. “Please, Doc, don’t forget to let me know if you come across your uncle’s laptop.”
“I won’t forget.”
“Do you mind if I look in their bedroom?”
He followed her out of the office to the master bedroom at the other end of the hall. A large mask on the wall by the bed startled Dawson. Made of matte blackened wood, it looked at him from dark triangular eyes set below a dome-shaped forehead and smiled at him with jagged teeth.
“What kind of mask is that?” he asked, moving closer to it.
“Interesting, isn’t it?” She came up behind, and he became aware of her lingering fragrance. “Uncle told me it’s a ceremonial mask from the Dogon people of Burkina Fasso.”
“Was he particularly interested in the Dogon?”
“Yes, but he and Auntie Fiona simply liked to collect masks, as you can see.”
He looked around. Several masks of various sizes hung on the walls. To Dawson, many were beautiful, but others were not what he would like to see late at night.
“Do you know what all of them mean?”
“Not really.”
He looked at her. “Were your aunt and uncle superstitious at all?”
“No.”
“Did they have any dealings with fetish priests or traditional healers?”
She laughed. “No, they were thoroughly modern, especially my uncle. Liked all the new gadgets—iPhone, i-this, i-that.”
“They could still have some traditional beliefs,” Dawson pointed out. “Many modern Ghanaians do.”
“Not Uncle Charles, though.” She appeared both puzzled and amused. “Their being mask collectors doesn’t mean they were superstitious—or even spiritual, for that matter. Why do you ask?”
“I was just curious.”
“Oh,” she said, as it dawned on her. “I see. You’re wondering if the beheading was related to some kind of … magical powers, or juju.”
“Yes. I’m sorry to bring up the beheading again.”
“It’s okay, Inspector. You’re doing your job.”
She turned to gaze out of the window at the view of the back garden and the beach. Dawson looked around the room. The open closets were full of male and female attire. A magazine was open on the bed, as was a container of face powder on the makeup stand, and towels were hanging on the rack in the en suite bathroom. The place looked like it was in use.
“Is someone staying here?” he asked.
“No,” she said. “I left everything exactly the way it was when they left that morning for Cape Three Points. Their bedroom isn’t like the office—it’s much more personal, and I can’t bring myself to disturb anything. If you need to go through their effects, feel free.”
“Just one thing I’d like to check,” he said. “The pockets of his suits. Do you mind?”
“No, not at all.”
She watched him do that, and Dawson felt intrusive performing this necessary evil. He found nothing and was glad in a way. Some secret item in those pockets could have been awkward for them both.
“Thank you, Doc.”
She smiled. “You’re welcome. Do you need to see anything more?”
“I think I’m fine for now.”
He collected the boxes of documents from the office, and she accompanied him downstairs back to the taxi. He asked her to get in touch with him if she remembered or came across anything that might be important. As he and Baah left, Dawson called Jason Sarbah’s number and left a voice mail explaining who he was and requesting a meeting.
He thought about the potential suspects so far: DeSouza, Cardiman, and Sarbah. They all had reason to hate Charles and Fiona, but under different circumstances and for different reasons. According to Dr. Smith-Aidoo, Mr. DeSouza, the chief executive officer of the powerful STMA, hated and resented Fiona for unseating him and hated her husband for his hostile visit to DeSouza after the radio “tirade” was broadcast.
Reggie Cardiman, the Ezile Bay owner Dawson had not yet met, was evidently in fierce opposition to Malgam Oil because of its potential threat to the survival of the flora and fauna of the sea and coast. Charles Smith-Aidoo, whose job it was to show his company in the best possible light, embodied the public face of Malgam, and for Cardiman, he would have been the most accessible and symbolic target for murderous wrath. The killing occurred not far from Ezile Bay and not long after Charles and Fiona Smith-Aidoo had left Cardiman. What had happened at their meeting? Perhaps it was acrimonious, leaving Cardiman infuriated and motivated to kill.
Jason Sarbah, too, could have had a strong motive to kill if he viewed Charles Smith-Aidoo, his cousin, as the person most responsible for the death of Jason’s beloved daughter Angela. Charles had refused to help Jason out financially, and Dawson could imagine how much pain and fury that might have engendered in Jason. This hadn’t merely been an appeal for assistance with buying something or paying the rent, this was a cry for help in saving a life. Charles’s point of view was that there were other ways to solve the problem, but that could hardly have been any comfort to Jason.
What troubled Dawson most about these three as suspects was that he couldn’t see any of them committing the crime without assistance. First, it would have been difficult for one person to handle two dead bodies. Second, someone knowledgeable about sea navigation would have been needed to take the bodies out as far as the Malgam rig. That was why Dawson was eager to speak with Abe’s fisherman friend, Forjoe, who might have heard, for example, that a fellow fisherman had been hired for a “job” of some kind. Dawson would then simply make the connections. Who knows, he could be close to wrapping this case up in record time. Stop that, he scolded himself. It was exactly that kind of thinking that got him into deep trouble.
Chapter 10
ABRAHAM WAS ELATED AT the idea of Christine coming with the boys to stay at the lodge for the weekend. Putting down some extra bedding would not be a problem.
“Thank you, Abe,” Dawson said.
“Don’t thank me. You’re flesh and blood, remember?”
That oddly reminded Dawson of the inscription in the old pocket watch. Blood runs deep.
In the afternoon, having reached Forjoe by phone, Abraham took Dawson on a trip to Sekondi Harbor along the coastal road. Dawson gazed at the seawall of large boulders along the route. Glancing farther out to sea, he saw the dark, squat shape on the horizon.
“Is that an oil rig?” he asked.
Abraham glanced over. “No, it’s an accommodation barge for temporary workers who don’t need to stay on the rig.”
On their left, rows of faded old buildings appeared. Going up an incline, they entered downtown old Sekondi with its haggard British colonial buildings, including an ancient but still functioning post office. In the shadow of the seventeenth-century Fort Orange at the hill’s pinnacle, the fishing harbor came into view with large and small canoes adorned with colorful flags and religious declarations painted on their hulls.
They parked near the marketplace and walked downhill through the maze of market stalls and over pocked, rocky terrain. Women and men carried pungent loads of fish on their heads in heavy, metal basins. To prevent an accident of equilibrium, they had to keep their forward momentum, knocking to the side anyone who was unfortunate enough to be in the way. Calling out “pure water” in a singsong voice, other women head-carried bins of iced drinking water in plastic sachets that were a major source of the trash casually tossed into the
gutters of Ghana’s cities.
Under a long shaded structure with open sides, both men and women sorted through the fishermen’s catches and displayed some of the largest fish Dawson had ever seen. Abraham pointed out different ones as they walked along—grouper, swordfish, tuna, and red snapper.
Just beyond that was the wharf where large trawlers were moored and crowds of fishermen carried on a brisk and noisy business with market women. Some of the women carted off their purchases on their own heads, while others used a professional porter.
“See that guy?” Abraham said, pointing to a compact older man who was moving off with a punishingly heavy bin full of fish on his head. “He’s about sixty years old—been doing this since he was a teenager.”
And all of it in the harsh sun, Dawson thought, wiping his drenched forehead.
Abraham led the way to a quieter part of the harbor, weaving in between shacks where mechanics were repairing outboard motors and carpenters were building new trawlers. Compared to the area they had just left, the vessels here were canoes of different sizes pulled up on the shore or moored in shallow water with makeshift cloth canopies for shade.
One of the fishermen, a densely muscular man of thirty-ish, was darning his fishing net, a portion of it hooked over his big toe to keep the net’s tension as he deftly repaired holes and tears with a large needle. His deeply black skin glistened in the sun.
“Clay!” Abraham called out.
The man looked up and grinned as he saw them approaching. He put down the net and skipped out of the canoe.
“Abe, my brother! How are you?”
Abraham introduced Dawson as his cousin and asked Clay if Forjoe was around.
“I haven’t seen him today,” Clay said.
He called out to three fishermen on an adjacent canoe, asking them if they knew where Forjoe was.
“I think he went to the house,” one of them replied.
Abe thanked them and went on with Dawson. At the top of the incline not far from where they had parked, they crossed the street to a ramshackle group of houses around a small compound. A teenage boy was washing clothes in a wide metal pan, and a woman was hanging them out to dry on the line.
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