Dawson sat forward with increasing excitement. “Cardiman didn’t say that at all. He said quite the opposite-that he had parted with Smith-Aidoo on good terms.”
“Doesn’t sound like good terms to me,” Chikata said, flatly. “Now listen to this: While he was on the phone with Duodo, Charles said that he and his wife were debating whether to drive up to the lighthouse. Cardiman had told them as they were leaving that the view of Cape Three Points was spectacular and that they must see it before they leave.”
“Now you’re talking.” Dawson exclaimed. “Because Cardiman told us it was about fifteen minutes from Ezile to the lighthouse.”
“Yes, that puts the time at twelve forty-five when the Smith-Aidoos get up to the lighthouse. They spend about twenty minutes looking at the view, or who knows, maybe they even go up in the lighthouse. It’s now five after one or a little later. Meanwhile, Cardiman has already left Ezile and-”
“Now he has enough time to lie in wait for them,” Dawson finished.
“Exactly.”
“Good job,” Dawson said. He slapped palms with his sergeant, ending it with the customary Ghanaian mutual snap of the fingers. “This means Cardiman is still a suspect, and he has some explaining to do.”
Chapter 23
TUESDAY MORNING, THE SUN was hot and bright under a pale blue sky as Dawson and Chikata arrived at the Malgam office. A guard escorted them to the top floor, where the receptionist asked them to take a seat. The first-floor lobby was nice to look at, but this suite at the pinnacle of the building was spectacular. Geometrically placed Adinkra symbols, each with specific meanings, alternated with the Malgam logo patterned the gleaming wood floor. Overstuffed leather armchairs were set around the room with studied casualness. A skylight provided bright, airy illumination.
“Imagine what it’s like to be king of all this,” Chikata said under his breath, so that the receptionist couldn’t hear him.
Dawson grunted, but made no comment. He picked up a business magazine from the table and flicked through the pages with passing interest.
They looked up as a white man in a dark suit appeared from the hallway. Dressed in a crisp white shirt, navy tie, and dark blue slacks, he was short, late fifties, and expanding around the middle. His brown hair was thinning on the top and speckled with grey at his temples.
“Inspector Dawson?”
They stood up as the man came around the table with his hand extended.
“Good morning. I’m Roger Calmy-Rey. What a pleasure, Inspector. Jason Sarbah has told me about you. Good to have you here.”
“Thank you, sir. This is Detective Sergeant Chikata who is working with me on the case.”
“How do you do? Please, do come this way.”
They followed him to the right down the hallway to an automatic glass door that silently slid open as they approached. Beyond that, in a carpeted anteroom, an attractive, light-skinned woman sat in front of the computer on her shiny desk.
“Good morning,” she flashed a dazzling smile at them.
“Janice, please hold my calls while I’m meeting with Inspector Dawson, would you?” Calmy-Rey said.
“Of course, sir.” Her accent spoke of Ghanaian sophistication.
Calmy-Rey opened the last door, which was solid mahogany, and ushered him in. Dawson was sure he had never seen an office as large as this. In the foreground, a set of armchairs surrounded a coffee table. Calmy-Rey’s large polished desk was to the left, positioned at an angle. Beyond that was an executive meeting table with room for eight, a flat-screen TV on the wall facing a sectional black leather sofa, and farther still in the background another door. A floor-to-ceiling window offered a panorama of the city and the Atlantic Ocean.
“Do make yourselves comfortable,” Calmy-Rey said, gesturing to a couple of the armchairs. He couldn’t be more different from the tall, aloof man Dawson had pictured. He was friendly, and his voice was warm.
“Can I offer you anything to drink? A soft drink? Water?”
“Oh, no, we’re fine,” Dawson said. “Thank you, sir.”
Calmy-Rey took his seat in the facing chair, inclining himself not away, but toward them. Perhaps he had learned that with years of practice. Regardless, Dawson found it an appealing gesture that seemed genuine.
“I can’t tell you how glad I was when Jason told me you were here from Accra to help with the investigation into Charles’s death,” Calmy-Rey said. “It deeply and personally affected all of us at Malgam. Not only in Ghana. It had a strong ripple effect in our offices in London and all over the world where Malgam has activity. For me, Charles wasn’t simply an employee. I considered him a good friend, and so was Fiona.”
“Were you in Ghana when you heard the news of his death?” Dawson asked.
“No, I was on holiday in Crete. Once I heard what had happened, I flew into Accra the following day. It was important to give moral support at a time like that.”
“I’m sure that was appreciated,” Dawson said, wondering for a moment what life on Crete was like.
“It was my duty as CEO.”
“Did you spend time with Mr. Smith-Aidoo outside of the workplace?”
“As much as time allowed.” Calmy-Rey’s eyes became softer. “He was outgoing, charming, wonderfully funny… just so likeable and good to be around.”
“But evidently someone didn’t like him,” Dawson observed.
Calmy-Rey nodded, his gaze dropping contemplatively. “It’s a tragedy. Charles’s career could not have been on a better track.” He paused, and it seemed to Dawson that he was carefully choosing his next words. “Em… I think the state of family was where the trouble was-issues with his sister, Eileen, and his brother, Brian. The only day I ever saw Charles even remotely upset was after he’d had an argument with Brian.”
Dawson sat up a little. “When was this, Mr. Calmy-Rey?”
“It could have been in April of this year. Or May, perhaps.”
“Did he say what this argument was about?”
“Not really, but I think money was involved.” He looked uneasy. “I’m sorry, perhaps it would be best to ask Sapphire about it. I feel uncomfortable that I may give you the wrong facts.”
Dawson nodded. “I understand. Are you aware of anyone who might have wanted Charles Smith-Aidoo and/or his wife dead?”
“There are any number of activists and advocates who see the oil companies as dire enemies bent on destroying the livelihoods of fishermen. Charles was our public face and the most accessible. Sure, one or two of these people might like to kill me-” a smile crept to Calmy-Rey’s face “-but it’s a lot harder to get to me than it was Charles.”
“You say ‘one or two people’ might like to kill you. Are you referring to anyone specific?”
“No, I’m not. I haven’t met any of these activist types, although Charles had. I do know that the most vocal is a man by the name of Quashie Quarshie, who is the head of an NGO called Friends of Axim, or FOAX, as they call it. Mind you, in mentioning him, I’m not directing an accusation at him.”
Something clicked in Dawson’s brain. “Reportedly, when the Smith-Aidoos visited Mr. Cardiman at Ezile Bay, they were coming from a function in Axim. Could that have been a meeting with the FOAX people?”
“It might have, I don’t know,” Calmy-Rey said, standing up, “but we can easily find out.”
He opened the office door, put his head around it, and asked Janice to look up Charles’s calendar for that week in July. She came into the office two minutes later and quietly handed Calmy-Rey a sheet of paper.
“You were right,” he said to Dawson. “This shows his schedule for the entire month, and on Monday, the seventh of July, he was due for a meeting at eight o’clock in the morning with FOAX.”
He leaned forward to hand the paper to Dawson, who studied it with Chikata looking on. Other meetings during the month seemed innocuous and routine, but the one with FOAX might have been significant. What if there had been acrimony between Charles and the activists, and one or more of them had decided that Charles Smith-Aidoo had to be eliminated? He, or they, could have followed him and his wife to Ezile Bay and ambushed them on their way back.