“Stop!” DeGraft cried.
Calmy-Rey’s face crumpled and his shoulders collapsed. “He seemed to smile,” he said, “and I couldn’t understand why. Then he said the words, ‘pen drive.’ Seconds after I shot him, I realized I should have found out what he meant.”
Chapter 38
IT WAS NO SURPRISE that Dawson could not sleep that night. Like a pendulum, he went back and forth as he thought about the day’s events. Roger Calmy-Rey had fully confessed to murdering Lawrence Tetteh. However, he had not killed Charles and Fiona Smith-Aidoo, nor had he contracted anyone to kill them. It was clear. Dawson believed him. Calmy-Rey had cherished Charles and adored Fiona. Charles had been a faithful and resourceful Malgam employee and an asset to the company and Calmy-Rey. The killing simply did not fit no matter what angle Dawson tried.
Even though the hour was late, he called Christine to give her an update.
“I think it’s marvelous,” she declared.
“You do?”
“As usual, you don’t give yourself enough credit,” she chided. “You’ve done several things at once. You’ve found Tetteh’s true murderer and now an innocent man—that poor Silas—will go free. You’ve uncovered a corruption scheme, and hopefully we can now clean out these thieves at the top.”
“Yes, I suppose so.”
“You’re going to be all right, Dark. You know you get like this during a case. Come home soon, okay? We miss you.”
“I will.”
HE GAVE UP the idea of sleep and went to the sitting room where he pored over his notes page by page from the very beginning—that Tuesday the canoe containing two corpses drifted into the restricted area around the Thor Sterke, and not far away, two men in another canoe watched. They were not fishing—not on a Tuesday. They must have been the murderers, brazenly watching the scene of the crime. Who had the kind of rage needed to behead Charles Smith-Aidoo? Dawson thought about all the people he had met. Beautiful Sapphire Smith-Aidoo, the Sarbahs, DeSouza, Cardiman, Calmy-Rey, Clay, Forjoe, Gamal … perhaps even cousin Abe. Yes, he found himself reconsidering that painful possibility. A sign of just how desperate I am, he thought. What or whom had Dawson missed? A motive somewhere, an alibi, an opportunity?
He wandered outside wearing only his briefs. The cool night air bathed his skin. He looked up at the sky. The streetlamp on the corner had gone out, but Takoradi’s city lights meant it was still not dark enough to see the Milky Way. His favorite secondary school science teacher had once told him, “It’s there, but you can’t always see it.”
Just like this case, he thought. The murderer is there. I just can’t see him.
How long would it take to travel to one of those Milky Way stars? He didn’t know, but it would be a terrific alibi.
“I couldn’t have murdered the Smith-Aidoos,” he said aloud. “I was traveling to the Milky Way at the time.”
And that’s when he realized what he had missed.
ON THE WAY, Dawson called Superintendent Hammond to tell him where he was going. The superintendent told him to be careful. Dawson had the taxi drop him off well before Richard Sarbah’s house and he walked the rest of the way. When he was close, he ducked behind a neem bush. A single light sat on top of Sarbah’s gate. Forjoe was on duty as watchman, sitting not far from the spot the plumbers had been working on the pipe.
A stack of wooden boards stood to one side of the hole that dipped underneath the wall, presumably to cover the pit if it rained. Dawson intended to use it to get into the yard on the other side of the wall, but he would never be able to do that with Forjoe guarding the place. He was hoping Forjoe would get up and take a patrol around the sides and the back of the house.
For almost an hour, nothing happened. Then Forjoe stood up and stretched.
Come on, Dawson thought. Move.
Forjoe went off to the end of the wall to Dawson’s left, unzipped his fly, and stepped around the corner to urinate. Dawson moved quickly, sprinting on his toes. He went head first inside the hole. Feet first, he might well end up stuck. Either way, he found little space for both him and the water pipe. He stopped moving as he heard Forjoe’s footfall. He was returning. This could be a problem. The next piss break might not be for hours.
In the distance, he heard the rumble of a diesel truck coming closer. It might be a noisy bola truck carrying its trash to a dump somewhere. He hoped it was, and that it was coming this way. The ground trembled as the truck transmitted its impact over potholes. The ear-jarring sound of the diesel engine drew closer. Dawson began to move forward. As the truck reached its crescendo, he pulled his way through, coming out on the other side of the wall with dirt in his face and grit in his mouth. His head popped up over the top of the hole and he looked around. No one was in the yard. He pulled himself the rest of the way out and stayed still for a moment, listening for any sign that Forjoe had heard anything. Dawson heard him yawn languidly and mutter something to himself. The coast was clear.
The sitting room was in darkness. Dawson quickly shone his flashlight beam through the window to confirm no one was inside. The glass portion of the window was open, leaving the screen to let in a breeze while keeping out the mosquitoes. One whined in his ear, and he swiped it away. He took out his pocketknife, cut a small slit in the netting, put his hand in and found the latch, which he pulled back. The window opened with a small squeak that seemed loud enough for the whole world to hear.
Dawson vaulted through the window and stayed motionless for a while. He heard a rhythmic, machine-like buzzing, which after a moment he realized was Richard snoring from a room around the corner. Please be a heavy sleeper. Dawson slowly shut the window behind him, wincing at the squeak.
Pointing his flashlight beam downward, he moved to the dining area next to the kitchen, where he opened the sideboard door and took out the four hefty photo albums that Richard had shown him on the first visit.
Dawson turned the thick pages of the first book, scanning the photographs as quickly as possible with the flashlight. He shook his head. This could take him half the night.
Each photo in the album was highly posed, some with Richard as a boy—similar to the framed photo on the sideboard—and some without. Also featured was the beautiful Bessie with her radiant skin and dark eyes—all before she married Robert, of course.
Dawson got through the first album and paused listen to the snoring, making sure there was no telltale change in the pattern that might indicate Richard was stirring. For a moment it stopped, and Dawson began to plan an escape if it became necessary. But the drone started up again, so he began on the second album. Interesting black-and-white and sepia photographs of various people … but still no sign of what he was looking for.
It was on the second-to-last page, as he was just about to give up, that Dawson found it. The photograph was remarkable for the period in that the two people involved, Richard and his father, Tiberius, were interacting with each other in a way quite unlike the stiff, unsmiling poses of all the other images. Here, Richard, at the age of about seven, was looking up toward Tiberius, who was smartly dressed in a vest and white shirt with long, broad lapels, and a dark tie. Probably around forty at the time, he was in turn looking down and regarding his son with a hint of an affectionate smile. It was far more of a candid shot than anything else Dawson had seen so far—perhaps a moment deliberately captured by a visionary photographer, or quite by accident.
The delight that was so evident on Richard’s face was over an item his father was dangling from his fingers. The glinting object was round, made of silver with a dark center.
“There it is,” Dawson whispered. “The pocket watch.”
Chapter 39
DAWSON HEARD RICHARD GRUNT and then mutter something. Was he having a dream? The mattress creaked as if he were sitting up. Dawson started to move toward the window, but stopped as he heard Richard’s footfall because he realized he would never get there without being discovered.
The refrigerator was somewhat pulled
out from the wall. Dawson thought he could fit in the space, but for one panicked moment as he squeezed in, he thought he had made a mistake. He pushed out all the air in his chest to flatten himself further and moved all the way into the corner. The loud background hum of the refrigerator drowned out any rustle of his clothing against the wall.
The kitchen lights came on and Richard opened the refrigerator door and pulled something out. Dawson heard his rhythmic glottal sound as he took a drink—Dawson assumed water. He hardly dared to breathe. The heat from the back of the refrigerator was beginning to make him sweat.
The refrigerator door closed and the light went out again. Dawson heard Richard shuffle back to bed, but he stayed where he was for a while to be safe and then moved out from the tight space, his nose tingling from the dust. It was mind over matter not to sneeze.
It was time to get out. He returned to the sitting room window, opened it carefully, and slid out.
To his left stood the toolshed he had noticed the first time he had been here. He kept low while running to it. Shielding his flashlight beam, he examined the door. A padlock hung carelessly open on the latch. He pulled on the door and opened it slightly. It whined and he swore under his breath. His heart was banging hard and fast in his chest. He went in, pulling the door closed behind him and swung his flashlight from right to left. The beam went past something, and he brought it back. A few meters away, a small tarpaulin draped over a bulky object on a wooden stand. He lifted the tarpaulin and looked underneath. An outboard motor.
Dawson put the tarpaulin on the floor. Made by Suzuki, it was a 25 hp model, adequate for a medium-sized canoe. It was old, but it appeared to be well oiled and in good shape. Dawson was about to put the tarpaulin back when the door behind him squeaked. He jumped and turned around. The light came on. Richard Sarbah was standing in the doorway with a raised revolver.
“What are you doing here?” he asked coldly.
“Is this the outboard motor you used on the canoe to take the Smith-Aidoos out to sea?” Dawson said.
“Kneel on the floor with your hands crossed behind your neck.”
Dawson got down slowly, his heart thumping, blood rushing through his head.
“How did you get in?” Sarbah asked.
“The dug-out hole under your wall.”
“I ought to shoot that worthless Forjoe.”
“You shoot a lot of people, don’t you?” Dawson remarked.
Richard’s lip curled. “You’re stupid if you think you’ll make it out of here alive.”
“Superintendent Hammond knows where I am,” Dawson said with confidence, but his legs were trembling. “You’ll be facing three counts of murder.”
“Three? Where do you get the other two?”
“Count one, Charles Smith-Aidoo. Count two, his wife, Fiona.”
“I don’t know what you are talking about.”
“The silver pocket watch with the onyx center that was stuffed in Charles’s mouth and scratched with the message, ‘blood runs deep’ belonged to your father Tiberius. You put it in Charles’s mouth.”
Richard froze then tried to recover. “Lies. Inspector Dawson, you’re a liar looking for a scapegoat.”
“You loved that pocket watch, remember?” Dawson said, raising his eyebrows. “Remember how your father used to dangle it in front of you when you were a boy?”
Richard swallowed hard. “You’re going to die, and Forjoe and I are taking you out to sea tonight. Forjoe will do anything for me because he is a fool. He believed me when I told him that his daughter would get better if we offered Charles’s head to the sea god.” He laughed. “Thank heavens for superstition. He was so petrified that I, the old man, had to do the shooting and the beheading.” He clicked his tongue disapprovingly and shook his head. “These young folks nowadays. Cowards, the whole lot. It was only Forjoe’s annoying weeping that stopped me from removing Charles’s second eye—even though I knew very well that you should never let a dead man see what you are doing to him, or they will bear witness to the gods when they reach the other side.”
Richard came forward and pressed the revolver to his head. “This is going to be just like Charles and Fiona—except there will be no second canoe.”
“Why did you do it?” Dawson asked hoarsely.
Richard giggled and stroked Dawson’s cheek with the gun barrel. “I like to see you shaking. You’re not such a big shot now, are you?”
“Why did you do it?” Dawson insisted. If he was going to die, and there was a good chance he was, he wanted to know Richard’s motive before death came.
“I don’t have to tell you anything I don’t want to, Inspector,” Richard said, grinding the muzzle against Dawson’s head. It was clear that it gave him pleasure to do so. “Suffice it to say,” he continued in a smug fashion, “that now the score between the Smith-Aidoos and the Sarbahs is settled. After generations of their maltreating us, you don’t conspire to kill my granddaughter, Angela, and not expect me to take action. Jason would certainly never do it, so I did it for him. I love that boy. He never deserved the loss of his beloved daughter. Say goodbye now, Inspector Dawson. It’s all over for you.”
Chapter 40
SUPERINTENDENT HAMMOND WAS CARRYING his pistol, but he hoped he would not have to use it because he was badly out of practice. The front gate of Richard Sarbah’s house was open and the yard was clear. Ahead, Hammond saw the light from the shed doorway. His stomach plunged when he heard the gun blast. He sprinted, gasping. Oh, God. Dawson.
In the doorway, he brought up his pistol and crouched, ready.
Dawson swung around and raised his hand. “Don’t shoot, sir!” He breathed again as Hammond lowered his weapon. Forjoe stood next to Sarbah’s dead body, looking down at it as if numb. In the few moments before Hammond’s arrival, Forjoe had relinquished his firearm to Dawson and offered his wrists for handcuffing. Dawson did not do it.
Forjoe heaved a big sigh. “I heard everything he said. A man like that doesn’t deserve to live.”
Hammond circled around the growing pool of blood. It was a fatal head wound from Forjoe’s weapon at close range.
Hammond looked at Dawson. “Are you okay?”
He checked himself. “It seems so, sir.”
“Why was he trying to kill you?”
“Because I found out that he murdered Charles and Fiona Smith-Aidoo.”
“Richard Sarbah did?” Hammond said, surprised.
“Yes.” He gestured at Forjoe. “And this man saved my life. I would have been dead by now if not for him. Sarbah was just about to shoot me in the head.”
Hammond looked at Forjoe. “Thank you, my friend. God bless you.”
As he shook hands with the superintendent, Forjoe looked at Dawson with a question on his face. Dawson shook his head imperceptibly. Do not say anything. You are, after all, a hero, Forjoe. Keep your mouth shut, and I will do the same. No one will ever know the role you played in the death of Charles and Fiona Smith-Aidoo.
Chapter 41
“PLEASE, UNCLE,” CHIKATA HAD said to Lartey in his well-practiced dejected voice, “Dawson has captured not one, but two murderers. Can we be nice to him and bring him home in a nice vehicle instead of him traveling in a State Transport Bus?”
Lartey, who could not resist his nephew’s sad eyes, had agreed, if somewhat reluctantly with a lot of grumbling.
Now a satisfied Chikata sat in the back seat of a shiny, dark blue air-conditioned police BMW, respectfully waiting for Dawson as he embraced Abraham and Akosua in preparation to leave the lodge.
“Don’t be such a stranger, Darko,” Abraham said, shaking his finger with mock sternness. “Come back and see us often and bring Christine and the boys.”
“They already want to come back,” Dawson said.
“Are they doing okay now?” Akosua asked. “No more nightmares?”
Dawson smiled. “No more nightmares.”
He got into the back seat with Chikata and buckled up as the driver sta
rted the softly purring engine. The car smelled of sweet, pristine leather.
A glossy, Jaguar pulled up, blocking their exit.
“Wait just a second,” Dawson said, alighting.
He walked over to the Jaguar as Sapphire got out. She smiled at him.
“On your way, Inspector Dawson?”
“Yes, Doc.”
“I wanted to thank you,” she said sincerely. “With all my heart.”
He nodded. “I hope you’ll find at least a little bit of peace now.”
“I think I will.”
“I learned something from the experience,” Dawson said.
She inclined her head with curiosity. “Really? What?”
“It’s all about family,” he said, nodding with certainty. “In the end, that’s all that matters.”
“It is, isn’t it?” she said. “Speaking of which, we’re having a family reunion of sorts next weekend. My father; my brother, Trevor; and Auntie Eileen will be there, and the twins will join us from the States. You’re officially invited.”
“Thank you, Doc. I appreciate your kind invitation.”
“Not at all,” she said, shaking her head. “Listen, if there’s anything you ever need assistance with—a medical consultation for your family members, anything at all, don’t hesitate to get in touch with me.”
“Thank you for the offer,” he said. “Please, Doc, actually there is something you might be able to help with, even though it doesn’t concern a family member.”
“Oh, yes—of course,” she said attentively.
“Marvelous, the daughter of the man who saved my life, is suffering from kidney failure and she needs dialysis, which Forjoe cannot possibly afford. Can you see to it that Marvelous gets the right care?”
“Absolutely,” Dr. Smith-Aidoo said enthusiastically. “Have him call me today, and I’ll get things moving for him and Marvelous.” She put out her hand, and he shook it.
Murder at Cape Three Points Page 29