"You know this as fact?" Sara asked.
Straley nodded.
"After years of arguing she forced the issue with me. We spent an entire night staying up and talking right here in this room over a bottle of Scotch. She wanted me to understand why she lived as she did."
"What did you learn?" Sara asked.
"That she saw no reason not to find pleasure with men. That few could match her as equals. That she had no desire to be possessed or owned.
She firmly believed she could live by her own rules."
"Was she faithful to the ambassador?" Kerney inquired.
"Until the point of their separation, I'd say yes."
"What caused the break?" Sara asked.
"She never said, but it came suddenly. I assume Hamilton tried to dominate or control her, which was something that wouldn't do with Phyllis. After all, he had spent many years in the military as a high ranking officer and was used to being in command. Starting out, I think Phyllis may have been drawn to the qualities of leadership she saw in Hamilton. Perhaps she felt she'd found that perfect match," Sara asked questions about the ambassador's personal qualities. Straley sketched Terrell as confident, mature, responsible, and even tempered.
He noted that Terrell had been aware of Phyllis's reputation, appeared unconcerned about it, and seemed very much in love with her.
It wasn't a portrait of the bullying, self-serving officer Kerney remembered from Vietnam. Either Straley wasn't as sharp as he seemed, or Terrell had done one hell of an acting job.
Kerney approached the issue from a different angle.
"How did Terrell wind up on the Trade Source board of directors?"
"I recommended him at his request," Straley said.
"He was between diplomatic appointments at the time, and with his government and military background I thought he could serve the corporation well."
"In what ways?" Kerney asked.
"Trade Source was founded as a venture capital company looking to expand into South American media, publishing, print, and television markets.
The Hispanic population is burgeoning, becoming more sophisticated, especially in large South American cities. That caught my interest as an investor. In Hamilton's prior diplomatic postings he'd worked closely with foreign officials who could open doors to overseas investors. We wanted to make sure each entry into a foreign market would have strong local appeal."
Sara picked up the thread.
"From what I've learned, Trade Source doesn't have a strong media focus anymore," she said.
"Which is why I left the board," Straley said.
"I'm a media man, always have been. Newspapers, magazines, television, the Internet, and radio stations interest me. That's where my corporate expansion goals lie."
"Why did Trade Source veer off in a different direction?" Sara asked.
"Hamilton brought a proposal to the board that had the strong backing of the Commerce, Treasury, and State Departments. They were interested in helping developing nations in South America establish a banking and financial technological infrastructure without using foreign aid appropriations. Trade Source was asked to provide the venture capital, identify subcontractors, and oversee the initiative under a memorandum of understanding that guaranteed reimbursement for all costs plus an equitable profit margin. I opposed it."
"Why?"
"It wasn't where I wanted the company to go, and I didn't think we had the resources to take on two major corporate initiatives simultaneously."
"How did it play out?" Kerney asked.
"Hamilton arranged important meetings between Trade Source corporate officers and ranking financial leaders and money managers in Peru, Venezuela, and Ecuador. Ultimately, Trade Source signed contracts to supply hardware and software products, plus provide technical assistance and training."
"Was Trade Source acting as an agent for a U. S. Government foreign aid package?"
Kerney asked.
"You could look at it that way," Straley replied, "but it wouldn't be accurate.
Using privatization strategies to achieve government goals has become commonplace on the federal level."
"Why did Trade Source buy APT Performa?" Kerney asked.
"As I understand it, that was done based on Hamilton's recommendation.
I was off the board by then, but I heard that APT Per forma had exactly what was needed to begin putting the necessary systems together."
"Do you know Clarence Thayer?" Kerney asked.
"Only by reputation. I understand he runs a tight ship and knows his business."
"What about SWAMI?" Kerney asked.
"That's another issue entirely. As I understand it, Thayer sold the company but kept the rights of certain proprietary inventions. SWAMI was one of those. It was at an early stage of development at the time and not much was made of it.
From what I've read recently it's about to make Thayer and his outside investors very rich men."
"Do you know anything about Terrell's personal finances?" Sara asked.
"Hamilton lives comfortably," Straley said.
"He's not rich by any means, although I know he'd like to be."
"What if he's found a way to become rich?"
Straley gave Sara a studied look.
"Are you suggesting Hamilton may have held back what he knew about SWAMI from the board for a piece of the action from APT Performa?"
"Why not?" Sara replied.
"A technological breakthrough like SWAMI is almost priceless. Granted, Terrell would have eventually made some profits through the stock he held as a board member if Trade Source had secured the rights to SWAMI."
"But what if he cut a sweetheart deal with Thayer to keep SWAMI off the negotiating table for a bigger piece of the pie?"
Straley cocked his head.
"Hamilton has always wanted to be a major money player."
"Think about it," Sara said.
"Terrell brought the APT Performa proposal to the Trade Source board, made the arrangements to bring various federal agencies to the table, and coordinated meetings with South American financial representatives.
Did he do it solely for patriotic reasons?"
"I doubt it," Straley said, holding up a hand to stop further questions.
"But what does any of this have to do with your contention that Scott Gatlin may not have murdered my daughter?"
"We think your daughter was killed because of what she knew," Kerney said, "not because of who she slept with. We believe she learned secrets about her husband's activities that may be directly related to Trade Source, APT Performa, and the SWAMI project."
"What do you think she knew?" Straley asked.
"First, let me give you some facts," Kerney said. He highlighted the major points, concentrating on the FBI cover-up of Phyllis Terrell's murder, her connection to. Father Mitchell, the priest's probe into intelligence operations in South America, and Hamilton Terrell's involvement in the coverup.
"These facts are fully documented?" Straley asked when Kerney stopped talking.
"They are."
"So, what did my daughter learn that got her killed?"
"That, we don't know," Kerney said.
"But, one way or another it directly relates to your son-in-law."
"If it's a government secret, you're never going to know," Straley said.
"Are you willing to share your documentation with me?"
"This isn't a news story, Mr. Straley," Sara said.
Straley looked at Sara straight on.
"I know how the government can manipulate the media under the guise of national security to suit its own purposes, young lady. I have no intention of falling into that trap. But I want to look at your facts for myself before I decide what to do."
"What can you do?" Kerney asked.
"If Terrell played an active role in causing my daughter's death, as you've suggested, I will find a way to poison his reputation. Sometimes innuendo can ruin a career just as quickly as a front-page scandal headline."