Somsak go hand in hand.
âWe have all put a quarter of that into a trust fund, the balance to be paid incrementally as the project proceeds. Some months ago Lu was rumoured to be having financial difficulties and was struggling to raise the capital for his deposit. Suddenly, without warning, he made an approach to Stanley to buy out Stanleyâs share for a very hefty profit.â Sami paused and stared into space for a moment, watching a war bird slash across the horizon, heading east. âI guess Lu figured that of all the partners, Stanley, the quiet one, was the soft target.â
âLu obviously doesnât know about your connection to Stanley!â I said, stating it as a fact not a question, knowing that if that connection had been common knowledge, no one in their right mind would have messed with Stanley.
âThey didnât know. Very few people do and they are all pledged to silence.â Sami gave a tired smile. We both knew the penalty for breaking that silence. Loyalty was everything with my friend. To betray his trust was to ensure very quick and terrible retribution. âIf Lu had known about the connection, he would have most certainly stayed away from Stanley. Again, Daniel, that was my fault.â
âItâs not your fucking fault,â I snapped. âShit happens, Sami. For Godâs sake, you of all people know that for a fact.â
âYeah,â he admitted, rubbing a hand over his face. âYou are, of course, right, old friend. Shit happens!â
âSo where did Lu score the cash? I mean if he tried to buy Stanley out, he found big bucks somewhere?â
âA South American drug cartel, Colombians,â Sami replied. He reached out and tapped the keyboard on his laptop once more. There were three men in the full-screen coloured shot. They were a heavyset trio of Spanish extraction and all bore similar features that the inevitable dark glasses couldnât hide. They were brothers or a father and siblings. Their ages ranged from maybe mid-thirties to perhaps early sixties. The elder man had a badly pockmarked face, the middle one sported a vivid scar across his forehead. The younger of the three didnât bear any obvious scars but dark glasses or not, I could sense mad eyes staring out at the camera.
âBefore you ask how I know, I have someone in Luâs camp,â Sami said in answer to my unasked question. âThese gentlemen are the Mendez brothers out of Bogota. Carlo, the oldest, Marco, the middle one and Raymond. The Americans have been hitting them hard and they havenât been able to launder their billions north of Panama. Theyâre choking on their profits and looking for investments that the Feds canât touch.â
âSo Lu goes to them with a proposition and suddenly they see a big juicy pie sitting there half way around the world and they want a slice or two?â I was guessing, of course, but I figured it would be close to the mark. Sami nodded.
âThey want it all, and the way they play, theyâd get it in the end if they manage to secure a foothold. We donât need Lu or his money and we certainly donât want theirs. There are plenty of other investors who want in; Intella Island is the hottest property in Asia and thatâs not simply media hype. Lu only got invited into the syndicate because of his history with several of the others. At the end Stanley, bless his soul, knew that if he could give the others hard evidence on what Lu was planning, Lu was out and Intella was safe from the South Americans.â
âSo Stanley records the offer Lu makes. He refuses and Lu tries to kill him.â
âYes, in a nutshell. Obviously the Colombians are leaning on him really heavily. According to Stanley, he is terrified of them and sweating on it. They agreed to make up Luâs shortfall on the condition he got them a full share of the action. The rest you know. Lu unfortunately saw the