Authors: Jarkko Sipila
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Police Procedurals, #Thrillers & Suspense, #Crime, #Crime Fiction
“W
ell, someone definitely did.”
“I
agree,” Joutsamo said. “So it didn’t occur to you guys to figure out who that might be?”
“H
ell, how would we have figured that out? Besides, it was a cut-and-dried case.”
Joutsamo
spoke in a needlessly sardonic tone: “All cases are cut-and-dried if that’s the way they’re investigated.”
“A
ha, so now you’re exporting your Helsinki BS out here to the provinces. You guys are worse than those arrogant
besserwissers
at the NBI. Don’t you go trying anything now, missy.”
“I
’m not trying anything, I’m just asking.”
Leinonen turned
back to his computer. “Well, the answer is that it’s been eight years since that woman’s murder, and I don’t remember. Believe it or not, we actually have more recent cases to work on.”
Jackass,
thought Joutsamo. Actually more than that, a stupid jackass, because he wasn’t capable of admitting to himself that he was a jackass. “One more thing.”
“O
h, you’re still there. I was hoping you had disappeared.”
“
Tell it to your fairy godmother.”
Leinonen
responded with a mocking smile. “So what else did you need, missy?”
Jou
tsamo felt like smiling back, because whenever men started calling her “missy” she knew she had won. It was a sign that they couldn’t come up with any rational justifications.
“I
need your signature on this.”
“W
hat is it?”
“W
e need Timo Repo’s DNA, and it presumably exists in the forensic evidence. According to the report, the evidence includes at least Arja Repo’s shirt and trousers, the knife, and Timo Repo’s blood-stained shirt.”
Leinonen
laughed arrogantly. “You’re wasting your time, missy. It’s been eight years. It’s probably been destroyed.”
“N
o, it hasn’t.” Joutsamo said calmly. She brought the paper over to Leinonen’s desk. “I called your evidence clerk. The box is still there on the shelf.”
“I
t is?” Leinonen sounded genuinely surprised. “Well, if you want those old rags and the knife, you can have them. I guess there’s probably still the kid’s stuffed animal, too. There was also some blood on that.”
Leinonen
scratched his name on the document indicating transfer
of the forensic evidence to the Helsinki Police Department. Joutsamo thanked him and left.
She was
slightly—only very slightly, when it came down to it—ashamed of the fact that she had been forced to lie to the lieutenant. A DNA sample had already been taken from Repo in prison in early 2007, when new legislation had enabled samples to be taken from all felons. Presumably Arja Repo’s blood and maybe Timo Repo’s blood would turn up in the evidence, but would it also contain DNA from some third party?
CHAPTER 13
WEDNE
SDAY, 9:50 A.M.
MALMI
, NORTHERN HELSINKI
Repo was lying on the couch, staring up at the ceiling. In prison, that had mean either ugly concrete or the bottom of an upper bunk. In Karppi’s home, the ceiling was made of wood that still showed the grain and the knots, although the material had darkened over the years.
Repo
had returned to the house in the middle of the night and tried to enter as silently as possible with the keys he had borrowed from Karppi’s coat pocket. He had slept for three hours, but then his thoughts had infiltrated his dreams.
Time went by slowly lying on the sofa, but it had
gone by slowly in his cell, too.
Repo
heard the front door open. He could feel a current of air. Repo waited for the door to squeak or creak, but it opened silently.
The
escaped convict wondered if he should turn his head or just keep staring at the ceiling. What difference did it make? None, presumably. Repo had left the stolen car a couple of hundred yards from the house. He knew he’d need it again. A large shoulder bag was on the floor at his feet.
Someone had entered. The foot
steps were light, so the intruder wasn’t a police officer. Repo heard the old man’s voice.
“W
here have you been?”
Repo
closed his eyes for three seconds and sat up on the sofa. “I went out for a couple of beers.”
“D
on’t lie to me!”
“L
ie or not, it’s none of your business.”
“A
s long as you’re staying here, it is.”
“Y
ou won’t have to worry about that for long,” Repo said. His exhaustion had taken the form of physical pain, and he had to lie
back down.
“W
here were you?” the old man insisted.
Repo
didn’t answer.
“T
he police were here looking for you,” Karppi continued.
“H
ere?”
“Y
our dad’s house and here, too. Asked if I had seen you.”
Repo
was now sitting up again. “Well, had you?”
Karppi
shook his head. “No. Not yet.”
“N
ot yet?”
“N
ot yet.”
Repo
stood, because there was no way he was going to get any sleep now, thanks to the ornery old man. And he wouldn’t have anyway. Maybe he’d better make some coffee.
Karppi
moved over so he was standing in front of Repo, blocking him from going into the kitchen.
“I
was thinking I’d make some coffee.”
The men
stood there, face to face.
“L
isten here. I’ve helped you because your father wanted me to. He asked me in the hospital, on his deathbed, to help you if you came here. Well, I’vedone that.”
Repo
looked at Karppi. “He asked you to do that?”
Karppi
nodded.
“T
hanks for the help, then.”
“H
e also told me some other things.”
“I
need coffee,” Repo growled, gently thrusting the old man out of his path. The escapee continued toward the kitchen.
The infuriated
Karppi raised his voice and circled around in front of Repo: “You will not push me around in my house!”
“T
ake it easy,” Repo said, passing the other man without touching him.
Karppi
huffed, but took a couple of steps backwards. Repo turned and ran water from the tap into the coffee pot. Two, three cups would do it. The coffee was in the cupboard, and Repo eyeballed roughly the right amount as he poured it into the filter.
Repo
turned and noticed that Karppi was crouching down at the end of the couch, where he had left his shoulder bag. Repo marched into the living room. Karppi rose. The couch stood between them.
Karppi
looked Repo in the eye. “What is it you’re planning on doing?”
“I
’ll say it one more time: it’s none of your business.”
“W
here’d you get that?” Karppi asked, glancing into the shoulder bag. “Tell me.”
“F
ound it in town,” Repo said. He started circling the couch from the right.
Karppi
took a couple of steps left. Even though he leaned against the couch as he moved, his voice remained forceful. “Timo! You’re doing something I don’t want to be a part of; as a matter of fact, I don’t even want to know about it.”
“S
o stop asking then,” Repo said from the foot of the sofa. Now he was closer to the bag.
“I
’m asking for your own sake. You’re planning on doing something evil.”
“I
n prison, you have time to think about all kinds of things,” Repo said, taking a step toward the old man, who was now standing about ten feet away.
“I
think we need to call this game
off right now,” Karppi said, picking up his cordless phone from the table. “I’m going to call the police and tell them what’s going on before you can do anything irreversible with that.”
“L
ife is irreversible,” Repo said, lunging at Karppi.
“S
top!” cried the old man. “Wait.”
Repo
stepped closer and Karppi stepped back. Karppi looked at his phone and typed in 000 before he realized that the emergency number had changed; it was now 112 everywhere in Europe.
Karppi
raised his hand from the phone just as Repo came within arm’s reach. His right hand grabbed for the phone.
“Y
ou’re not calling anyone.”
“S
top! Listen!” Karppi, terrified, stepped backwards. Repo’s palm smacked the old man’s shoulder hard. Karppi lost his balance and fell. He tried to break his fall with his hand, but his head cracked against the corner of the oak dining table.
A voice came from the phone
: “112, what is your emergency?”
Karppi
felt a blackness filling his head. He could see the ceiling, and the pain gradually faded. He tried to talk, but was incapable of making a sound. He heard a rattling in his breath, and then the blackness ended too.
What
Repo saw was an old man sprawled on the floor with a bleeding head. Karppi’s mouth was agape, but he was silent.
The woman’s voice
repeated: “112, what is your emergency?”
Repo
raised the phone from the floor, “Sorry, it was a mistake.”
He
gazed at the old man from a distance of a couple of yards. The pool of blood slowly began to grow.
“S
ir, is there an emergency?”
“E
verything’s fine,” Repo said. “My kid was just playing with the phone. Sorry,” he managed to say.
“
All right, sir.” The operator ended the call.
Repo
bent over and felt Karppi’s throat for a pulse. There wasn’t one. Goddammit, he swore. He stood and rubbed his face. Why did this have to happen? He hadn’t intended for things to go this way. He hadn’t wanted to kill Karppi. Repo wanted to shout that it had been an accident. This wasn’t supposed to happen!
He
tried to calm himself, but he couldn’t. He looked into the dead man’s gaping eyes. Why did Karppi have to try to resist him? It didn’t make any sense. Why had he come to the old man’s house in the first place? You should never mix others up in your business, but that’s exactly what he had done.
Repo
couldn’t stand looking at the body, so he went and took a sheet from the old man’s bed. The fugitive spread it across the corpse. A corner of the sheet was immediately soaked in blood.
Repo
stepped back over to the couch and sat. He was tired, but he wondered whether the woman at emergency response believed him. Did she think everything was all right, or were an ambulance and the cops already on their way? Repo picked up his bag from the floor and pulled out the Luger. He was exhausted, but he couldn’t stay here.
God-fucking-dammit
. What just happened? And why? Why did things always have to turn out this way?
CHAPTER 14
WEDNESDAY
, 10:20 A.M.
KALLIO
NEIGHBORHOOD, HELSINKI
Suhonen was at home in his one-bedroom Kallio apartment, lying in bed in his underwear. He wasn’t asleep, but he didn’t have the energy to get up either. He had made it home around four, and Raija had left at seven without saying a word. Suhonen had tried to give her a kiss, but she had just walked out.
I
could get up in a bit and make some coffee, Suhonen thought. Or maybe he’d wait until the noon meeting that Takamäki had sent him the text message about. Suhonen ruminated about breakfast, but couldn’t decide: cold cereal, granola, hot cereal, sandwich? Maybe he wasn’t hungry yet; he had dropped by a 24-hour deli around three and chowed down a double-sausage meat pie.
Suhonen
rubbed his face-stubble. His hair felt greasy, too. He needed a shower.
His
phone rang. Suhonen could tell it was his off-the-record phone and rushed into the entryway to dig it out of his jacket pocket. The phone displayed the caller’s number, but Suhonen didn’t recognize it.
“Y
eah,” Suhonen answered.
“Is that
Suikkanen?”
“Y
eah,” Suhonen said. He was standing in front of the mirror and could see all his scars. He turned his back to the mirror.
“H
ey, man,” answered a male voice. “We met at the bar yesterday. Yugi.”
Suhonen
remembered Arsenal Fan. “Yeah, what do you want?”
“Y
ou promised me a C-note for that clown Saarnikangas.”
“W
here is he?”
“R
ight here in my kitchen. I found him at Itäkeskus Mall this morning and brought him here. Tied him to a chair.”
Fuck
, thought Suhonen.
Yugi
continued, “He says he doesn’t have any money. I can take care of him for you for five grand. No one will ever hear from him again.”
“N
o!” Suhonen said emphatically. “I need to talk to him.”
“
Can I take care of him afterwards?”
Suhonen felt like being the
man from Del Monte and saying
yes
. Because the world would doubtless be a better place if Saarnikangas weren’t in it and Yugi were behind bars, but unfortunately that wasn’t an option. “Where do you live?”
“
Eastern Helsinki,” Yugi said and gave Suhonen the address.
“I
’ll be there in fifteen minutes. Don’t touch him.”
Yugi
’s voice sounded disappointed. “Okay. He’s in pretty bad shape, though. Shivering and whining, says he needs a fix.”
Suhonen
ended the call and swore. He went into the bathroom and took a zip-lock bag from the medicine cabinet that contained several packs of drugs. He dug out three packs, wrapped a rubber band around them, and put them in the inside pocket of his leather jacket.
He had to keep
Saarnikangas coherent. He retrieved an ancient light blue Nokia cell phone from his nightstand drawer and inserted a prepaid SIM card into it.
* * *
Ten minutes later
, Suhonen parked his car on Manor Road. The building’s balconies protruded from its brown
stucco wall in the style of the ’60s. It was only three stories tall, but it had several entrances. Suhonen mused that in the US such buildings had been built upwards, while in Finland they had grown horizontally.
He
got out of the car and walked to the door leading to Yugi’s stairwell. He pressed the buzzer, and a few seconds later the lock clicked.
Suhonen
took the elevator up to Yugi’s floor and checked on the landing to make sure that his Glock was within easy reach. Suhonen didn’t actually think he needed the weapon; the gesture was primarily directed at Yugi, just in case he was watching through the peephole.
Suhonen
pressed the doorbell and the door popped open.
“H
ey,” Yugi said. There was a victorious smile on his face and a touch of fear in his voice.
Suhonen
handed over two fifties to Yugi, who was still wearing the same Arsenal tracksuit. “Where is he?”
“I
n the kitchen.”
“Y
ou lead the way.”
Yugi
led. The apartment was grim, with hardly any furniture. On the way, Suhonen glanced into the bedroom, where there was only a mattress, no bed. The living room was the exception, containing a sofa, a thirty-two-inch flat-screen TV, DVD player, Xbox 360 console, and three piles of movies and games on the floor.
Yugi
hadn’t lied; Saarnikangas was sitting at the kitchen table, with his hands tied to the chair behind his back. Suhonen had seen the mug shot taken of Juha during his last trip to the clink, but he probably wouldn’t have recognized this crater-faced skeleton from it. His cheeks were
hollow and his brown hair matted. He was wearing a brown T-shirt so splotchy that Suhonen wondered if it had originally been white.
“H
ere,” Yugi announced.
“G
ood. Untie him.”
Yugi
was visibly disappointed. No doubt he wanted to watch Suikkanen rough up the poor junkie. He unknotted the laundry line. Saarnikangas tried to say something, but couldn’t get form the words.
“D
id he have a coat?” Suhonen asked.
“Y
eah,” Yugi said, stepping over to the balcony door. “I had to put it outside, because it smelled so fucking bad.”
He
retrieved the coat and handed it over to the quivering druggie.
“I
hope you get what you deserve.”
“A
ll right, let’s move,” Suhonen said, pushing Saarnikangas in front of him. Despite the brief airing, the
army jacket reeked like a disgusting blend of dirt, dog shit, and puke.
In under a minute
, Suhonen and Saarnikangas were out of the apartment. Yugi came to the door. “Hey, Suikkanen, don’t you think I deserve some thanks?”
Suhonen
pressed the elevator button and gave Yugi a cold stare.
“O
ne. Never say my name in the presence of the target. Two. You already got your money.”
Suhonen
opened the elevator door and shoved Saarnikangas in. Luckily he was able to stand, so Suhonen didn’t have to carry him. The junkie leaned against the brown wall as the elevator shuddered downwards to the floor. Suhonen dug a white tablet out of his pocket, peeled off the plastic, and handed it to Saarnikangas. The junkie gave the man in the leather jacket a questioning look.
“
Subu,” Suhonen said.
Saarnikangas
snapped the pill in two. He put half under his tongue and slipped the other half into the pocket of his jeans. Suhonen was sure he would shoot it. Subutex-brand buprenorphine had taken a firm foothold in the Helsinki drug market as the fighting in Afghanistan was cutting into heroin production. In France a Subu pill cost two euros; in Helsinki, twenty.
Suhonen
quickly escorted Saarnikangas to the passenger seat of his car. Suhonen got in behind the wheel and headed out. He opened both front windows a good couple of inches so the worst of the stench would dissipate. The car clock read 11:09 a.m.
By the time they
hit the Itäkeskus Mall on the Eastern Expressway, Saarnikangas had found his tongue.
“W
ho are you?”
“D
oes it matter?”
“W
hat’s up with all this? That Arsenal retard kept talking on and on about some debt.”
“F
orget the debt.”
“B
ut there’s gotta be some reason for all this.”
Suhonen
pushed it up to fifty-five, passing a red Volvo with a ski rack. Traffic was heavy. “I need your help.”
Saarnikangas
didn’t respond, he just looked at Suhonen. “He said your name was Suikkanen.”
Suhonen
eyed the gaunt junkie. The trembling had stopped.
“L
ook, Suikkanen, are you a cop?”
“H
ow so?”
“N
o real gangster that looks like you would give a rat’s ass about a speed freak like me. They would’ve let that Arsenal spaz take care of me. You’re not from the AIDS support center either, and I’ve never seen you at the needle exchanges, so that doesn’t leave many alternatives.”
Suhonen
thought for a second. “I’m not a cop. Cops don’t give junkies drugs,” he said with a smile.
“T
here’s a first time for everything. At least for me.” Saarnikangas grinned. Suhonen wished the guy would have kept his mouth shut. A few teeth were missing, and the ones he had were in bad shape. “What do you want?”
“I
’m looking for a friend of yours.”
“D
o I have any friends?”
“F
rom what I’ve heard, you know this guy.”
“W
ho?”
“T
imo Repo.”
Saarnikangas
furrowed his skinny brow. “Repo? That sap who wrapped a pretty necklace around his wife’s throat? He’s still in the hole.”
“N
ot any more.”
“H
e skipped out?”
S
uhonen nodded. “A couple of days ago.”
They passed
the Kulosaari metro station on the right.
“S
o where’s this taxi headed?”
“Y
ou get to decide. If you promise to help me, I’ll take you wherever you want, but if you don’t I’ll take you straight to police headquarters. You’ve got a big stack of unpaid fines on the books, and society needs you in jail to make good on them.”
“S
o Repo escaped,” Saarnikangas said.
“D
oes that surprise you?”
“A
little. He was basically a nothing. Losers always stick together, and that goes for the joint, too. That’s why we used to talk. Okay, so he’s bitter, but I always thought he’d tough it out. If you’ve already done eight years of a life sentence, it doesn’t make any sense to cut out.”
“W
hy did he take off?”
“H
e had a chip on his shoulder a hell of a lot bigger than Lance Armstrong’s, but he didn’t really talk about it in recent years. You could sense a stifled rage in him. See, I’m a good judge of people. And sensing what they want.”
Once they hit the end of the Eastern Expressway,
Suhonen turned into the lane leading to Teollisuus Street. Police headquarters was more or less just down the road.
“W
ell, then you probably know what I want.”
“
Repo back in the pen.”
“R
ight. You are good,” Suhonen said. “So what’s it gonna be? You decided where we’re headed?”
“O
ne more question. What do I get?”
“A
pack of Subu,” Suhonen said. That was seven tablets.
Saarnikang
as tried to bargain: “Two.”
“T
his isn’t an auction. So, police headquarters it is.”
Suhonen
drove under the Sture Street bridge, and the smell of the coffee factory reminded him that he hadn’t had his morning coffee yet.
“O
kay, Okay. One’s good,” Saarnikangas said. “But I need a phone. Mine’s...at the pawnshop.”
Sure
, thought Suhonen. Pawnshops didn’t take phones. Suhonen dug the old Nokia 6110 out of his pocket and handed it to the junkie.
“W
hat the hell is this? No one uses these anymore.”
“T
hat’s why I happen to have an extra one,” Suhonen replied. At one point he had bought a few from Salmela precisely for situations like this. “Do you have your own SIM card? Because there’s a new one in there.”
“W
hat good is that going to do me?” Saarnikangas said, taking the phone’s back cover off. He dug his old SIM card out of his inside pocket of his jacket and switched it into the phone. But somehow Suhonen’s SIM card still disappeared into his pocket.
“S
o the deal is simple. If Repo calls you, you set up a meeting with him and you tell us. After that, you get...”
Saarnikangas
shook his head. “No way. I’ll get a rep as a snitch. I’ll find out where he is and tell you. You guys grab him in a way that I don’t get burned.”
“T
hat’ll work,” Suhonen said. The car was stopped at a red light at the end of Teollisuus Street. The Pasila rail yard was in front of them, and beyond it the forbidding office blocks of West Pasila.