Gold of Our Fathers - страница 21
She could be useful to the case, he thought as they traded their contact information. Very useful. There was also something exciting about her, like a bright strand of gold in a length of fabric one can’t resist touching.
CHAPTER SEVEN
It had taken three hours for Bao Liu’s corpse to be picked up and transported to the mortuary at KATH. Wei was in custody at the Dunkwa Police Station, at first loudly protesting and then falling silent and brooding.
Dawson’s search of the site where Bao had been discovered had turned up no traces of blood, and besides, the area had been trampled with a thousand footprints of meddling onlookers. None of the galamsey boys who had reportedly found the body were around to be questioned, and no one knew where they were-or no one admitted to it.
Dawson and Obeng went into town to look for a Chinese interpreter to help question Wei. They split up and began popping into gold-selling and -buying stores on either side of the street. Dawson first tried the shop he’d seen earlier-Ofin Gold Trading Company. In a small room, he found an impeccably turned out Ghanaian in a white linen shirt sitting at his desk weighing a lump of gold on a digital scale. The Chinese man who had brought it in waited anxiously for the verdict: the weight, the trading price, and how much cash he was going to get.
“Fourteen point one six grams,” the Ghanaian man said. “Which is almost half an ounce, or twenty blades.”
Dawson had never heard of a “blade,” but obviously forty blades equaled an ounce.
“Four hundred dollars,” the Ghanaian man said.
“Eh?” the Chinese man said, looking put out.
“Four hundred.”
“You pay me six hundred dollar.”
The Ghanaian smiled. “Six! I don’t think so, my friend. The gold is not pure. Sorry.”
The Chinese man looked at the buyer and back to the gold, undecided. “No,” he said finally, shaking his head. “Today you no good.”
He took his gold nugget back and left. The Ghanaian man shrugged and laughed. “He won’t get a better price anywhere else,” he said to Dawson, as if he had been in on the conversation from the start.
“How much is gold going for at the moment?” Dawson asked.
“Almost thirteen hundred dollars per ounce,” the man replied. “Are you buying or selling?”
“Neither.” He showed his badge. “Detective Chief Inspector Dawson, CID.”
“George Danquah,” the man said, rising to shake hands. He was clean-shaven, neat, and was wearing a subtle fragrance. “Please, have a seat.”
Dawson took the stool on the other side of the table. “I’m investigating the death of a Chinese man at a mining site.”
“Is Bao Liu the dead man you are speaking of?”
“Yes. You knew him?”
“Like I know the other Chinese miners,” Danquah said with something of a smirk. “They come and they go. I do business with them, but I have no interest in them personally.”
“What was Mr. Liu like?”
George pulled a face, as if he had smelled something bad. “Unpleasant, always losing his temper, shouting, calling people stupid.” Raising his voice, he launched into a singsong, mocking imitation of Chinese, which Dawson admitted sounded quite authentic. It probably wouldn’t to a Chinese speaker, of course.
“But for sure,” George added, “he knew how to mine for gold and he brought me good material.”
“Do you know anyone who might have wanted to kill him?” Dawson asked.
“Not specifically. I do know that he wasn’t consistent about paying his galamsey boys at the end of the day. So they might have resented him for that. I’m just speculating.”
“Explain that-paying the boys at the end of the day.”
George nodded. “The miners wash the gold ore they dig up all day long, and any gold that falls out is mixed with mercury to form an amalgam. After that, they burn the mercury off and the gold is left behind.”
“And that’s what they bring to you?”
“Or we go to the site and pay them on the spot,” George said. “Whichever way, it’s something of a gentleman’s agreement that you as a boss make sure you pay your boys for the day’s yield.”
“Did you go to his site often?”
“Often enough.”
“What about last night?”