Gold of Our Fathers - [16]
Returning to the site where the body had been dug out, Dawson saw a man and woman alighting from a silver-gray Toyota Prado at the edge of the site, where the crowd had now thinned out to just a half dozen or so. The man had a TV camera on his shoulder. Dawson made short work of the space between him and them.
“There’s no filming allowed,” he called out as he approached them. “This is a fresh crime scene we are still investigating. Please put the camera away.”
The man hesitated and didn’t quite obey.
“And who might you be?” the woman asked.
“Detective Chief Inspector Darko Dawson. And you are?”
“Good morning, Chief Inspector. Akua Helmsley. Environmental reporter for TheGuardian newspaper. I’m doing a documentary on illegal gold mining in Ghana.”
She had a British accent. Her skin was fair and flawless. She was tall for a woman-just a couple of inches shorter than Dawson. She gestured to the man behind her. “That’s my cameraman, Joshua Samuels.”
“Please, Mr. Samuels,” Dawson said, “put the camera back in the vehicle.”
Sullenly, Samuels put the camera down in the front passenger seat.
“What are you doing here?” Dawson asked Helmsley.
She seemed to smile somewhat as she considered him, as if a little amused. He didn’t let it bother him.
A light breeze lifted her flowing black hair slightly off her shoulders. “You’ve got a dead Chinese man, I understand, Chief Inspector,” she said. “Do you know who he is?”
“The investigation is only in its preliminary stages,” Dawson said. “I know almost nothing about him.”
“He was buried in that mound of mud over there?” she asked, pointing.
“Yes. How did you know?”
“Your Sergeant Obeng told me,” she said, flashing a smile. She was almost too pretty to be surrounded by this wrecked landscape. “I met him back at the taxi where he’s holding the suspect.”
Evidently, Obeng had let her charm information out of him. How annoying.
“Definitely homicide, I suppose?” she said.
“Nothing is definite yet,” he countered. Her knowing tone was getting on his nerves. “We have to get the body to the mortuary for a full autopsy.”
“Ah,” she said. “Are you aware just how backed up they are with bodies at the KATH mortuary?”
“Yes, of course,” he said, matching her self-assuredness. “All hospital mortuaries in Ghana are backed up.”
She smiled again, her eyes shrewd and dazzling. “I like ‘detective chief inspector’ on you. It suits you well. You say we can’t film the crime scene. What about still photos?”
“You can take photos of the surrounding area”-he pointed in all directions-“but not the crime scene itself.”
“But it’s so common in Ghana even to see photos of murdered victims right on the front page of a newspaper,” she pointed out.
That was true. “Yes, and I hate that,” Dawson said. “Bad police work.”
“I’m impressed,” she said. “Nice to meet someone who knows best practice. I’ve been back and forth to the Ashanti Region from England regularly over the past year, but I’ve never met you. Are you new around here?”
“I was transferred here from CID Central in Accra-arrived only yesterday. What is your documentary about?”
“It’s an in-depth look at all aspects of the gold mining industry in Ghana, but particularly the phenomenon of the mass influx of Chinese illegals.”
Dawson saw his opportunity. “Maybe you can explain how this Chinese invasion happened, Miss Helmsley, because I don’t understand it well.”
“Okay,” she said, propping a foot on a fallen, decaying tree trunk. Her jeans were a snug fit, and Dawson noticed the fine curve of her hamstring muscles. “Quick tutorial. Ready? The people of Shanglin County in China’s Guangxi Province have had a gold-mining tradition for centuries. Basically, they mined their own land dry as a bone, so they began looking elsewhere in China to get their gold. But the Chinese government said, ‘Oh no you don’t. We’re not giving out licenses to small fries like you. Go somewhere else.’”
“And so they heard that Ghana was the second highest gold producer in Africa and came running here?” Dawson asked sardonically.
“More or less,” she said. “Stories circulated in China about miners coming to Ghana for gold and returning home as millionaires. Much of it could have been urban legend, but they called the thousands of Shanglin miners flocking to Ghana the ‘Shanglin Gang.’”
“And all of them are illegal?”
“Yes, because it’s illegal for foreigners to engage in galamsey, or small-scale surface mining-whatever your term of preference. But who cares, right? Visa brokers in Ghana can get on-arrival visas for incoming Chinese workers by bribing officials in the Ghana Immigration Service. There’s also a trafficking system involving Togo and other countries.”
Dawson shook his head slowly, feeling a stab of anger over the depth of the corruption involved. “All the trouble they go through must be worth its weight in gold,” he commented.
“Nice one, Chief Inspector,” Helmsley said. “It’s true. Even though western mining companies like AngloGold with its massive deep mining sites produce more than seventy percent of Ghana’s gold and the
"Searing and original and done just right… Inspector Darko Dawson is relentless, and I look forward to riding with him again." – Michael ConnellyIn the slums of Accra, Ghana's fast-moving, cosmopolitan capital, teenagers are turning up dead. Inspector Darko Dawson has seen many crimes, but this latest string of murders – in which all the young victims bear a chilling signature – is the most unsettling of his career. Are these heinous acts a form of ritual killing or the work of a lone, cold-blooded monster? With time running out, Dawson embarks on a harrowing journey through the city's underbelly and confronts the brutal world of the urban poor, where street children are forced to fight for their very survival – and a cunning killer seems just out of reach.
At Cape Three Points on the beautiful Ghanaian coast, a canoe washes up at an oil rig site. The two bodies in the canoe – who turn out to be a prominent, wealthy, middle-aged married couple – have obviously been murdered; the way Mr. Smith-Aidoo has been gruesomely decapitated suggests the killer was trying to send a specific message – but what, and to whom, is a mystery.The Smith-Aidoos, pillars in their community, are mourned by everyone, but especially by their niece Sapphire, a successful pediatric surgeon in Ghana's capital, Accra.
Однажды в руки безработной журналистки Екатерины Голицыной и её друга Николая Артюхова попадает странная флешка с видеозаписью. Известный американский писатель Майкл Доусон просит помочь ему в поисках исчезнувшей жены, Лии, родители которой погибли от рук китайской секты «Чёрное Братство». Следы Лии ведут в Россию.Старая китайская легенда неожиданно оживает в наши дни. Маленький научный городок Техногорск становится центром борьбы добра и зла. Оборотни, карлики, московский вор в законе, всемогущий мэр города и сам Магистр «Черного Братства».Кто может противостоять им? К тому же Николай исчезает самым странным образом.
Ирину Александрову в последнее время преследовали одни несчастья: смерть дяди, гибель тети, странные голоса по ночам, толчок в спину под колеса поезда — все эти события были связаны между собой. Но как — ответа не было. А ощущение чего-то страшного, неотвратимого, что должно произойти, нарастало.
Заместитель командира воинской части в/ч № 755605 — собственно воинской частью был научно-исследовательский институт военно-морского ведомства — капитан первого ранга Гаврилов был обнаружен мертвым в своем рабочем кабинете. Прибывшая опергруппа не обнаружили каких-либо следов, отпечатков и других зацепок. Дело было поручено следователю военной прокуратуры Паламарчуку Василию Аполлинарьевичу.
From the international bestselling author, Hans Olav Lahlum, comes Chameleon People, the fourth murder mystery in the K2 and Patricia series.1972. On a cold March morning the weekend peace is broken when a frantic young cyclist rings on Inspector Kolbjorn 'K2' Kristiansen's doorbell, desperate to speak to the detective.Compelled to help, K2 lets the boy inside, only to discover that he is being pursued by K2's colleagues in the Oslo police. A bloody knife is quickly found in the young man's pocket: a knife that matches the stab wounds of a politician murdered just a few streets away.The evidence seems clear-cut, and the arrest couldn't be easier.
A handsome young New York professor comes to Phoenix to research his new book. But when he's brutally murdered, police connect him to one of the world's most deadly drug cartels. This shouldn't be a case for historian-turned-deputy David Mapstone – except the victim has been dating David's sister-in-law Robin and now she's a target, too. David's wife Lindsey is in Washington with an elite anti-cyber terror unit and she makes one demand of him: protect Robin.This won't be an easy job with the city police suspicious of Robin and trying to pressure her.
From the creator of the groundbreaking crime-fiction magazine THUGLIT comes…DIRTY WORDS.The first collection from award-winning short story writer, Todd Robinson.Featuring:SO LONG JOHNNIE SCUMBAG – selected for The Year's Best Writing 2003 by Writer's Digest.The Derringer Award nominated short, ROSES AT HIS FEET.THE LONG COUNT – selected as a Notable Story of the Year in Best American Mystery Stories 2005.PLUS eight more tales of in-your-face crime fiction.