CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Holt Amberson has been in the global beer and beverage industry for seventeen years. His expertise in international expansion has introduced Stookey’s Lite to several emerging markets including Latin America and Asia.
Previously Chairman of Tandemico, a logistics company jointly owned by the UG Group and Consolidated Breweries, Mr Amberson is also industry chairman of Globas, a US trade organisation promoting responsible alcohol consumption.
He earned his MBA from Olin Business School at Washington University, St Louis.
As well as his corporate bio, the UG Group website also featured a clip of Amberson reciting the brewery’s policy on ethical responsibility and environmental stewardship. Stood awkwardly in front of a row of books, a balding and slightly jaundiced Amberson read his assurances off centre so he only engaged the viewer at the beginning and end of his speech.
He was in his late thirties and blinked his weak blue eyes nervously throughout his address. Carla tried not to think of his hands taped over them in the photo posted on the website.
Apart from numerous trade references, there was little other background information online. He had a wife and two children; Carla knew that and felt a hollow of sickness open up when she thought of the family grouped on the couch. There was no evidence of them or his life outside of commerce. He obviously kept his private world as sacred as Will.
She speculated about the family in Ellicott City and if they would be linked by industry. Will and Ingram International had no explicit connection to the UG Group. Perhaps there was some indirect association though. UG was a multi-tentacled organisation.
She’d noted UG’s trade connections with Asia, but the Stookey’s brewing plant was in Ban Song, which was way outside Ingram’s territory. Maybe she was still looking for something that wasn’t there. Ingram advocated ethical practices, but vociferous objectors were always waiting on the sidelines as soon as you sunk a spade into the soil. Major and minor lawsuits were constantly pending. Her work for the Water Aid Alliance had been accused of being a smokescreen or, at the very best, penitence for Ingram’s worldwide monopoly.
What could Ingram possibly be accused of to justify murdering innocent families? Will had spearheaded the secondary pipe op in Southeast Asia, but they’d never once encountered the mafia presence or the territorial racketeering they’d been prepared for.
She drifted her cursor over the next house, but no address had been inputted. In the left corner of her screen she had the GPS tracking map window. According to the site Libby was still in her hotel; her mobile had obviously been left behind.
With repeater triangulation the app could pinpoint Will’s location via his mobile within twenty metres in the USA. But the tiny, isolated red dot signifying his current location made her feel even more redundant.
She played the clip of Amberson again, as if looking into his face and hearing his voice would reveal something more about the man behind the scant data. What had he done to deserve his life and the lives of his wife and children being taken in such a way? What could anybody do to warrant that? Will had said nothing of how he’d found the next victims. She knew he was withholding details from her. Protecting her again.
She searched again for the Ellicott City address, hoping she would find a name. A lot of US properties were rented, however, and she found no details of its occupants. They would know soon enough.
She had to keep refining the small amount of information they had. It was all she could do to stop herself thinking about what Libby was enduring. She was alive, Carla was positive of that – had to be.
She wasn’t about to lose her. Life had already taken enough of the people she loved. At thirteen, her parents’ death had been unfathomable to her. One severe November night several elements had conspired against them as they’d returned from a rare night out, having left Carla with a babysitter. Their car had skidded on black ice, hit an already weakened barrier and dropped them into the path of traffic on the motorway below. Senseless, but beyond anyone’s control. She was still trying to accept that, the randomness of events.
She’d met Will in his second year at university when his mother had just passed away. He’d lost his father the winter before. Their long illnesses and deaths had blighted his life outside of his studies. Justifying their investment in his education had become his only focus. Minor relationships with Eva Lockwood and Jenny Sturgess were short lived, which meant he was still a virgin when they got together. She’d lost hers to a mature student, Chris Wing. Not mature enough to make allowances for her loss though. She’d split with him the same time Will had been dumped.
Nobody else there had a frame of reference for what they’d both experienced. Losing both parents was an exclusive connection neither wanted. As two only children it certainly reinforced their need to establish a safe haven for their own family. Easton Grey was the fortress they’d thought they could be secure inside. And until the previous summer it had felt like they’d been invincible there.
What was happening to them now wasn’t random. It was premeditated and they were being led to believe they could still control the outcome. Her career in corporate law had cast her as a facilitator rather than the adversarial figure of her counterparts in trial law. But piecemeal negotiation was a process she spent most of her professional life engaged in.
She couldn’t begin to determine why Will was being dispatched to the locations on the site, but until his grim journey was completed they were at least being asked to believe Libby would remain safe. There was always room for manoeuvre, but at that moment the dialogue was one way. They had to engage somehow, demand proof of Libby’s wellbeing and find another form of leverage in the meantime.
It was then a name occurred to her. She looked at her watch. It was only forty minutes since she’d put the telephone down on Will so he could rest. She knew he would be doing the same as her though.
“Anything?” He picked up halfway through the first ring.
Carla realised it was pointless remonstrating with him. “Nothing significant. You?”
“I’m peeling away UG’s subsidiaries, our paths must have crossed.” His voice sounded spent.
“Should I call Anwar?”
“We can’t call anyone.” But he had paused before replying.
Carla let him take a breath before she continued. “Let me call Anwar this morning. I’ll ask him if he has any background info on Amberson. I won’t tell him why I need to know. If he’s just been found murdered, a lot of people will be asking questions. Looks like his UG Group had interests in Asia. If anyone knows anything about them, Anwar will.”
She waited. His room was so far away from her, but its TV, the creak of the mattress and his breathing trickled into her ear. It was excruciating. She could only listen in, not touch him or make him lay down for even a minute.
“OK.” He sounded as if OK was the last thing it was. “Any information on the family in Ellicott City?”
“Nothing. We’ll just have to wait for the police to find them.”
They both let the delayed sound of their TVs fill in the gap while they considered how many hours that could be. How long the dead family would be their secret.
“I could call it in. Anonymously,” he said stolidly. “Pretend to be a neighbour. I don’t think them being found is important to whoever’s holding Libby. But the quicker the police do, the sooner we’ll know who they are.”
“No.” Carla said firmly, even though she could see it made perfect sense. “We can’t call in the police, even if we’re not telling them about Libby’s abduction. They may well have found them by now anyway…”
“Some people watched me leave the house. Perhaps they dialled 911.”
Carla could tell he was burnt out. He uttered the words like he was under hypnosis. She would start having blackouts herself soon, but, at that moment, she didn’t even want to blink and give exhaustion a chance. “I’ll keep searching for information on Amberson and call Anwar.”
“You know how to handle him.”
“I do. Just close your eyes for a while. Do it for Libby. I’ll watch the website and wake you.”
“Just thought I’d let you know, you’re officially infringing my Internet porn time.” Weaver absently squeezed at his blister pack of nicotine gum, but it was empty.
Weaver was the only man Pope knew who referred to porn as a legitimate hobby. He’d said it was the only pleasure his alimony payments hadn’t robbed him of. Pope held his hand up while he listened to his own voice chip in on his message at home. Lenora had insisted on him saying his name while she recorded the rest. It finished and he tried to sound as weary and reluctant as possible. “Hi, babes, looks like I’m going to be stuck downtown for the foreseeable, so don’t wait up for me. Say ‘hi’ to the girls.” He imagined her and the wine cooler cougars from the block listening to him or making too much noise to hear.
He rang off and regarded Weaver’s puffy eyes. “How can you look so tired? You’ve only been on the clock since lunchtime.”
“With you. I had an early start covering the fluoridation protest this morning. I’m dead on my feet.”
Pope leaned his body towards the iPad in Weaver’s lap. “Any change? I don’t want us getting on the wrong flight.”
Weaver checked the site again. “Nothing new.” He ran his finger along the row of houses. “Fuck…this is some piece of work.”
“Any luck tracing the site?” Pope looked at his watch again.
“Finding where a domain is registered is usually easy, but the IP address has been buried amongst a tangle of dead-end email addresses and Liberian servers.”
“OK – I understood the bit about it being a piece of work.” There was no way Pope could have expected Weaver to be his crew without showing him the site. Plus, Pope’s IT knowledge was pretty limited. It was also going to dictate their travel arrangements, so he estimated it would be easier to take him into his confidence. Access to the information they had might enable them to record incidents as they happened rather than having to beg for scraps at the crime scenes. If they got lucky he would worry about constructing a plausible story for their presence after the event.
Maybe there was a substantial connection between the houses, something he could say had prompted them to act on a hunch. Did Frost already know what it was? The website was like a perverse treasure map revealing a little at a time. Was it doing so exclusively to keep the murder locations concealed until Frost reached them or was there a bigger punchline in store for him?
Pope wondered if, as the victims were ID’d, he could figure out what it was, if only to give them a credible story for being adjacent to a homicide. But perhaps this was a personal thing Frost alone could solve. He needed to uncover more about him and Holt Amberson, beyond the fact that they were both powerful men. He knew how he’d be spending the flight and took the iPad from Weaver.
“You positive the channel has cleared this trip, Pope?”