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Under a flame tree, he stood pondering which MP could be involved in a corruption scheme with the oil companies. Technically, any of them. However, the most likely were those with direct dealings. He began checking off as many ministerial posts as he could remember: Finance, Environment Science and Technology, Lands and Natural Resources, Interior… For a moment, he drew a blank until a thought hit him like a brick to the head. Back at the Raybow Hotel when Dawson had met with Sapphire to talk, she had told him that Terence Amihere, the Minister of Energy, was the BNI director’s half brother. Dawson now saw a possible scenario. An oil company was paying Amihere a kickback to allow them to bypass regulations and cut environmental corners. When Tetteh took over the leadership of Goilco, he got wind of this corrupt scheme and confronted Amihere, who got scared of being exposed and turned to his brother at BNI. They come up with a plan to quickly and cleanly kill Tetteh. Either Amihere’s people or the BNI could carry out the assassination. The BNI director, through some wrangling at the top echelons, takes over the case from CID and pins the murder on poor Silas.

Then where did Charles come in? Suppose Tetteh talked to him as well, telling him what was going on. Would Charles be a danger to Amihere as well? Possibly. If the oil company involved in the kickback is a Malgam Oil competitor, it could be in Malgam’s interest to expose the corruption. Or, perhaps Charles tried to blackmail Amihere after having learned about the corruption scheme.

Dawson nodded to himself, so deep in thought that he had become unaware of his surroundings. Questions remained, however. Why was the signature in Tetteh’s murder so different from that of the Smith-Aidoos? Did the BNI stage it to look like some kind of bizarre ritual sacrifice?

Second, why didn’t the BNI wrestle the Smith-Aidoo case away from the CID the way they had done the Tetteh murder? Probably because they simply couldn’t, despite their efforts. Dawson saw Chief Superintendent Lartey’s possible hand in this. Lartey detested the BNI director and over his dead body would he have allowed yet another case to go to the Bureau.

Third, who had put pressure on Hammond to stay clear of anything to do with the Tetteh investigation? Most likely a BNI person, but it was possible that someone high up in the police service could be involved in the scenario Dawson was proposing. That worried him, because if he was going to expose the BNI and the web extended into the police force, then he was going up against two very large and powerful organizations that could crush him to pieces.

If someone had been watching Dawson from a distance, they would have seen a worried man with his hands in his pockets and his head bent in concentration. Every once in a while, he nodded or shook his head, muttering to himself. He looked like a madman.

Chapter 31

AS HE RETURNED TO Takoradi in a taxi, Dawson received a call from Chikata. He was back from Axim again and still with no interesting news. He had interviewed three members of FOAX to no avail. It appeared that this was a dead end. Dawson was sorry that Chikata hadn’t hit any leads, but it had been a good exercise for him. Dawson told him he would stop by the hotel in about twenty minutes, but as he ended the call, he received a text from Sapphire that she had left a pen drive with Gamal for Dawson to pick up. Instead of going to the hotel, Dawson asked the taxi driver to go straight through Shippers Circle to Beach Road. The gate to the Smith-Aidoos’ house was open, and Gamal had the pen drive ready and waiting.

DAWSON WALKED INTO Chikata’s room and held the pen drive out to him.

“Massa, what’s on it?”

“I got it from the doctor,” Dawson said. “I’m hoping it has some information about her uncle that will help us.”

They sat on the love seat and perched the laptop on the coffee table in front of them. Chikata opened up the drive and went through the files. One PowerPoint detailed recent oil discoveries in African countries. The rest was a collection of photographs taken at different events focusing on oil production in Ghana.

“ ‘First oil,’ ” Chikata said, reading the caption below the image of the President of Ghana symbolically turning the wheel that had opened up the valve for the maiden flow of oil. The caption below another photograph described Roger Calmy-Rey and Charles meeting with the local press and the Parliamentary Committee on Energy Policy.

Dawson clicked through, coming to a set of images taken at a black tie event that Calmy-Rey had attended with his senior management team.

“That’s the Minister of Energy, Terence Amihere,” Dawson said, pointing to a man in the photograph holding a cocktail glass as he conversed with a white woman in an off-the-shoulder black dress.

“You know him?” Chikata asked.

“I’ve met him once. We’ll talk some more about him in a minute.”

Chikata shot him a quick, puzzled look, but said nothing.

In the next image, Amihere was in conversation with Charles.

“Who’s this guy?” Chikata asked, pointing to someone in the right background, and then referring to the caption. “Oh, it’s Lawrence Tetteh, the Goilco CEO. More evidence that he and Charles knew each other.”

Dawson peered at the image, first close up and then from a distance. “Tetteh seems to be looking directly at Amihere. How would you describe the look on his face? Questioning?”

“Maybe something like that,” Chikata said speculatively, “But to me it looks more on the side of contempt, or disgust.”

“That would fit.”

“Are you going to tell me what happened today, or just keep me wondering?”

Dawson related his confrontation with Hammond and then the revelation the superintendent had made. As he described the superintendent’s description of the MP corruption scandal, Chikata’s face reflected the seriousness of the implications.

“What do you plan on doing?” he asked Dawson.

“Well, in the first place, we need to be careful. If we are going to be dealing with thugs who assassinate their enemies and chop people’s heads off, then we need to ask ourselves if we want to get in the middle of this. What I fear the most are threats against my family.”

Chikata swore under his breath. “Oh, no. Not that. Dawson, I think we have to go straight to Uncle Theo. I’m positive he knows nothing about this.”

“We have to go to him, yes, but we need more information in order to make a strong and clear case to him.”

“All right, but how?”

“That’s the question.”

“Do you have the answer?”

Dawson delivered a brisk slap to the side of Chikata’s head and the sergeant fell over with laughter.

“Insubordination, Sergeant,” Dawson muttered, a smile playing at his lips. He grew serious again. “There’s something that connects the Tetteh and the Smith-Aidoo murders. We just haven’t found it. I was hoping this pen drive would shed some light, but it hasn’t added much.”

The two men sat back pondering for a while. Finally, Dawson sighed and shook his head. “I’m not sure about the next step,” he said. “Anyway, leaving that aside for a moment, in the time being, I haven’t told you about my expedition to the rig.”

“Oh, yes!” Chikata said, smiling. “I want to hear about it. Were you scared when you were in the helicopter?”

“At first I was very nervous,” Dawson admitted, “but then I quickly got used to it.”

He gave the fascinated sergeant a detailed account of the journey to the rig and the time he spent on it, as well as his conversations with Mr. Glagah and Clifford. “What that trip impressed on me, Chikata,” Dawson said, getting to his feet and leaning against the desk, “is how impossible it would have been to carry out this murder without involving someone who knows the Atlantic backward and forward. So even though we’ve been going after possible suspects like Jason Sarbah and Reggie Cardiman who might have had a grudge against Charles-and we should-we have to start giving more attention to the strong possibility that there was also a fisherman who might have had something against them.”