Gold of Our Fathers - страница 14
CHAPTER FIVE
Dawson slept badly that night. The skeletal mattress was lumpy and smelled stale. He was almost glad to rise early and freshen up for the day. The bathroom was dingy, with mold growing in the grout of the shower stall. While the cool water trickled anemically over him, he kept his slippers on, not wanting to pick up some kind of infection on his feet.
He could not wait to be out of this hotel when Gifty’s Kumasi house was ready. As planned, Christine had traveled from Accra to take a look at the house her mother had offered them and to secure a school for the boys. She had been successful with the latter, but the lodgings had been in bad shape. Whoever was supposed to have been maintaining the property had been doing a terrible job and lying about it.
Embarrassed, Gifty had scrambled to find a foreman to get the place back in decent shape. It would take another two weeks, or so he had said. Dawson had been tempted to suggest to Christine that they simply look for accommodations elsewhere, but he knew what that would get him: a whole lot of trouble. He could hear his mother-in-law launching her high-pitched complaint, What, my house is not good enough for you? Besides, rents in Ghana had become exorbitant, some landlords demanding not one, but two years in advance. Dawson could not afford that.
Dressed and groomed, he felt much better as he left the hotel for the walk to the station. It was a little past six and he was eager to get a head start on the paper mess in the office.
At 6:18, with HQ within sight, Dawson’s phone rang. It was Obeng.
“Good morning, sir. Please, I have received a call from Dunkwa Police Station, sir. They say someone found a dead body at one of the galamsey sites.”
The town of Dunkwa was about forty kilometers southwest of Obuasi.
“Please, I am going to Dunkwa Police Station now,” Obeng continued.
“Have they secured the area in question?” Dawson asked.
“Well, they say they have a constable there.”
“Then wait for me at the Dunkwa station. I’ll join you there.”
Dawson felt excitement as he sprinted the rest of the way to HQ. A murder-barely a day after I arrived here. He was hoping the station vehicle was available, but it was not. Commander Longdon had it-a meeting in Kumasi, the desk sergeant said.
Realizing his expectations of transportation in an official police vehicle had been a little optimistic, Dawson flagged down a taxi, bargained the fare, and hopped in. For police officers everywhere in Ghana, especially in smaller municipalities, getting to a crime scene was always by a mishmash of means. Often, the detective took a taxi, or the family of the victim gave him or her a ride. Every once in a while, an actual police vehicle was available to transport an officer to the scene, but more likely than not, it was in use by the commander of the unit. Use was a loose term that included anything from legit police business to a shopping spree for the commander’s wife. As they left Obuasi, Dawson noticed a slate-gray hill towering above the outskirts of the town. “What is that mountain?” he asked the taxi driver, pointing.
“Be from digging the deep mines.”
Oh! Dawson thought in shock. It was an entirely man-made elevation.
“It be one of the AngloGold Ashanti mine,” the taxi driver explained further.
They drove along Obuasi High Street, which turned to Goldfinger West Road before a roundabout with a gold-colored statue of a worker drilling in a mine shaft.
“The old AGA office dey there,” the taxi driver said, pointing to a dilapidated AngloGold Ashanti sign to the right, in front of an equally run-down building with a rusty corrugated metal roof.
Leaving Obuasi, the taxi driver, whose name was Kofi, passed through Anyinam, a township that housed the mine workers in green, almost lush surroundings. The distinction between the workers’ quarters and the houses belonging to management was obvious to Dawson.
Turning his attention away for a minute as the residential setting thinned out and was superseded by bush on the open road, Dawson looked forward to meeting up with the most admired and influential man in his life-not his father, but a father