After they paid, Juliette guided Patterson to a booth for four and sat down.
Then a third party appeared: Max himself. The consultant realized, of course, that he’d been lured into a trap. “Aw c’mon now, don’t be like that,” Max said. “Your food’s getting cold.”
Patterson was ready for the worst, and it showed, so he got out in front of it. “I’m sorry, Max. I had no choice. He forced me …”
“I’ll take care of Roberge some other time. Juliette and I’ve got better things to do, like finding the guys who killed David.”
“I have to understand what happened,” Juliette said.
For an instant, Patterson seemed to be sizing up the situation. Then, as though he’d settled on something, he asked Max, “What exactly do you want to know?”
“The connections between David and Stewart-Cooper International.”
“SCI?”
Juliette told him what she’d found, and Patterson frowned. “Where was the connection with David? I mean, what are you driving at?”
“Terry Hoberman, their communications guy, talked about trouble on the site: bureaucracy, delays from subcontractors, tangled connections with the Indian authorities.”
Patterson sighed.
“Look, don’t come on all righteous and indignant with me, okay? If the company hired you, it wasn’t about delays. No one thinks it was a bed of roses over there. The employees needed to figure out how to muddle through.”
But Patterson was still maintaining radio silence.
“What really happened at Rashidabad?” Max asked.
“Bureaucracy, delays, of course, but mostly threats, acts of intimidation, sabotage.… The Indian Army got called in, but it didn’t help, so the company had to hire private security to protect the workers. Rotten atmosphere, and pretty soon unsustainable. The site was shut down for long periods, and the company’s schedule went to hell. The budget doubled, then tripled, and the place was costing a fortune. The bosses in Hamilton were threatening to pack up and go build that dam somewhere else. In China, for instance, just over the mountain there had to be plenty of rivers like the Jhelum, and a more amenable population.”
“Where’d the violence come from? The jihadists? Hizb-ul-Mujahideen?”
“That’s what the authorities first thought, separatist rebels, who were unhappy that the population was putting aside their demands to court international capital and the promises of jobs with SCI, but that wasn’t it. It was the Hinduists. The extremists weren’t about to let the Muslims — and indirectly Pakistan — benefit from the plant. The dam was built only a few kilometres from the Line of Control. One assault and a surprise attack by the Pakistanis and they’d take control of the central committee and use it for themselves, but instead of caving in, Griffith decided to stand up to the extremists. She went to see the Hinduists at Jammu and confront them. She tried for three days. The hydroelectric installations wouldn’t serve one group more than another, just Indians, period. No exceptions. She was even ready to establish quotas by working with Hindus and Muslims, for instance, verifiable by any and all. She had a commitment from headquarters to correct things as soon as any abuse or omission was pointed out.”
The Hinduists had finally ceased hostilities, a real feat.
“So the violence stopped?”
“Right. They even came in on schedule. Griffith could now go back to Hamilton with her head held high.”
“No wonder the board made her CEO,” Max exclaimed.
Patterson nodded. “Too bad the real war blew it all away, for the time being anyway.”
“So what exactly was in this agreement?”
“You’d have to ask Raymond Bernatchez about that.”
Patterson explained the startup of the central committee at Rashidabad had been planned behind closed doors in the office of the high commissioner, and Griffith wound up in New Delhi from time to time in order to solve some new problem, take care of some new boo-boo.
So, thought Max, she went to the high commissioner’s place and got to know his wife, and the IndiaCare idea came to fruition? Sure, why not? Griffith had played her cards right: make sure you win over Geneviève Bernatchez, so you get the number one of Canadian diplomacy in India on board.
Raymond Bernatchez and Susan Griffith became the spearhead of a campaign aimed at various government departments and even Prime Minister Vajpayee, from what Bernatchez told Patterson. The rain was nonstop, so dykes had to be built, and for this they needed the Indian Army.
“Did they get it?” asked Juliette.
“Oh yes. The government is co-owner of the installations.”
“And SCI is taking part in the Montreal conference, right?” asked Max after a moment’s pause.
“Of course, they’re one of the chief sponsors.”
“Even though they’re temporarily shut down. It’s an open secret within the industry, and if they ever gave in to panic, it would be a disaster. Hell, I’d go invest in Thailand or buy from Venezuela.”
“Did David ever talk to you about a journalist called Ahmed Zaheer?”
Patterson had never heard the name from David or Bernatchez. He knew nothing about him, so Max brought him up to speed about the research, his “natural” death at the Falls, Joan Tourigny’s phone number, the kind of explosive used in Rashidabad and on David, all trails leading to the business in Hamilton, not to mention Zaheer’s interest in ecology.
“Hell of a lot more interesting than what the Indian authorities are working on, right?” said Juliette.
“You gotta go to the police with this.”
Max just smiled. “Like Josh Walkins, for instance? He’s a stand-in over there in Delhi. Luc Roberge, why not?”
“The cops have shown no interest at all in any of this,” added Juliette.
“Well, they had no evidence to get their hands on. Now, though …”
“More like trails that Juliette and I have followed the best we can. Now that we’ve started, you want me to just hand things over so they can sit on them?”
Patterson turned to the young woman. “You’re playing one hell of a dangerous game, Juliette.”
“She’s playing with me, and that makes it a whole lot safer,” Max cut in.
Three phone calls when they got back to the car and drove away. The first was from Jayesh in Kashmir.
“Good news. The engineer gave me a run for my money. Nobody at his old Srinagar address, the one I found at the newspaper’s offices. Klean Kashmir, they called it. After the factory and dam were built, farewell all! He collected his marbles and left the region. Then I discreetly got some info, and I walked all over the neighbourhood. I went to the mosque, the butcher shop, and the café. Finally, I stumbled on an old friend of his …”
“Jayesh …”
“Okay, in the summer of 2001, Najam Sattar went back to his home village to take care of his family. According to this guy, he’s still there.”
“What’s it called?”
“Chakothi in Azad Kashmir.”
“Pakistan?”
“I’m doing the best I can.”
The