Authors: Graham Masterton
âSeems like it isn't free,' Conor told her. âThis gentleman must have thought we were burglars or
something. We're really very sorry. I'll get back to the agents and tell them what klutzes they are.'
It was then that Conor really saw Magda at work: or, rather, Hetti. She reached out and clasped the man's hand in a handshake; while at the same time she touched his shoulder in the kind of gesture that only intimate friends would make.
âMaybe you forget something,' she said, in a voice as slippery as satin. âWhat did you forget?'
The man stared at her and it was obvious from his eyes that she had completely hypnotized him. He swallowed, and then he said, âI forgot my sweater. I left my sweater in the bottom of the closet.'
âSo you have to get your sweater?'
âIt's going to be very cold. I have to get my sweater.'
âCan
I
ask him questions?' Conor interrupted.
âSure you can. Just make sure that they're very calm and inductive. Don't try to cross swords with him, if you know what I mean. He may wake up. Even worse, he may tell you a whole pack of lies. And â yes, before you ask â people
can
lie under hypnosis. Everybody is a storyteller, in their own way.'
Conor came closer. The young Norwegian had a pale, gummy-colored complexion, and a noticeable squint.
âSo what's your name?' Conor asked him.
âToralf Kielland.'
âThat's a good name, Toralf. That's a name to be proud of.'
âMy father's name.'
âSo you forgot your sweater, Toralf?'
â
Ja
, it cost me a lot of money. It's the new Olympic design.'
âYou could have left it here, couldn't you, if you're still living here?'
Toralf blinked in uncertainty. Magda said, âIs this something you've been told to keep a secret?'
âYes.' And in a different voice, whiplike, snappy, â“
Don't say anything to anyone
.”'
âSo what is it?' asked Magda. âYou're going away for a while?'
â“
Don't say anything to anyone
.”'
âWho was it, Toralf? Who told you not to say anything to anyone?'
âI don't remember. “
Don't say anything to anyone
.”'
âListen to that accent,' put in Conor. â“Don't say any-
thung
to
any â wern
.” Western Texas, if you ask me.'
Magda said, âI want you to relax, Toralf. Right now you're worried. Right now you're feeling very tense. But if you let yourself go deeper, if you really relax, you won't have to worry about telling us anything. It won't be you at all. You â you'll be asleep. Your mind can talk to us by itself. Your mind trusts us, Toralf. Your mind knows that we can keep your secret perfectly safe.'
Toralf's eyes closed. His head tilted back a little. His mouth opened and he began to breathe deeply and harshly.
âWhere are you going, Toralf?' Conor asked him. âWhy do you need to take your sweater?'
At first Toralf said nothing, but then Magda
approached him and took off his leather cap. She started to stroke his forehead with the tip of her middle finger, and ssh him. âWhere are you going, Toralf? Where are you taking all of those boxes? Mr Branch wouldn't mind you telling us. Dennis wants us to know. You want to please Mr Branch, don't you?'
âHe says to call him Dennis. He says everybody is equal under God.'
âWell, he's quite right. You're equal and I'm equal and my friend here, he's equal, too. And because we're equal, he wants us to know what you know. He wants you to tell us where you're going.'
Toralf twitched his head and began to look agitated. As a precaution, Conor stepped forward and lifted the gun out of his pocket, a little Browning .22. It wasn't a guaranteed manstopper but you wouldn't want a bullet between the eyes. Magda raised one finger to indicate that he should stay as still as possible. She was taking him deeper and deeper and she didn't want his trance disrupted.
âCome on, Toralf. You don't want to keep Dennis waiting, do you? He wants you to tell us where you're going and he wants you to tell us quick.'
Toralf staggered and swayed. He swayed so much that Conor thought he was going to fall over. He opened his mouth three or four times without saying anything, but then he whispered, â
Tromso
.'
âYou're going to Tromso? That's way up north. I mean, that's way,
way
up north. Why are you going to Tromso?'
âGod told Dennis what he must do. Dennis has to go to Tromso.'
âAnd why does Dennis have to go to Tromso?'
âTo find the sword. Dennis has to find the sword.'
âThe sword? What sword?'
Toralf extended both arms as if he were holding a double-handed broadsword and made a sweeping gesture from side to side. âThe sword of the angels. To cut down the sinners.'
âAre you going to Tromso, too?'
âOf course. Dennis has promised to give me the glory.'
âKid's brainwashed,' said Conor. âSwords, angels, glory. Jesus Christ. Ask him how he's getting to Tromso.'
âWe fly,' said Toralf. âDennis chartered a plane from Wideroe. We leave twenty-one hundred. “
Don't say anything to anyone
.”'
âI don't think he's going to tell us much more,' said Magda. âI don't think he
knows
much more.'
âIn that case you'd better wake him up and send him on his way.'
Magda leaned close to Toralf's ear and whispered something to him. Conor paced around the empty apartment feeling tired and gritty-eyed and angry at himself for allowing Dennis Evelyn Branch to escape him so easily. At least they knew where he was going, but they still didn't know for sure what he intended to do, or how close he was to doing it. What was the sword, to cut down the sinners? And where did Dennis Evelyn Branch think that he was going to find it?
âWhen I count to three, you will wake up,' Magda told Toralf. âOne â two â three â you're awake!'
Toralf opened his eyes, and immediately smiled at
them. âWell,' he said, cheerfully, âI'm sorry I disturbed you. I'd better pick up my sweater and get going.'
He went into the bedroom, whistling a little tune. He came back with his sweater under his arm and shook them both by the hand. Conor looked at Magda and shook his head in disbelief.
âCome on, we'd better leave, too,' said Conor, once Toralf had gone. âIt looks like we're on our way to Tromso tomorrow.'
They waited for the elevator to come back up. Conor said, âWhat did you say to him?'
âI told him to forget he ever saw us, and I told him to forget he ever had a gun.'
âAnd he will?'
âOf course. One of my greatest talents is post-hypnotic suggestion. I could hypnotize a man, and then three weeks later, at precisely four o'clock, I could make him prick his finger with a pin.'
They stepped out of the apartment building into the street. There was a black VW Jetta parked at the curb. It hadn't been there when they first arrived, so presumably it was Toralf's. Conor looked left and right and saw Toralf with his shoulders hunched, walking toward Trondheimsveien.
âWhere the hell is he going?'
Magda shrugged and turned away. There was something about the way she did it that aroused Conor's suspicions. He took hold of her shoulder and demanded, âWhere's he going, Magda? What have you told him to do?'
âI told him nothing. What do you think I am?'
Conor hesitated for a second. Then he started
walking quickly after Toralf, shouting out his name. âConor â leave him!' called Magda, but Conor shouted, â
Toralf
!' yet again, and broke into a jog.
Toralf had almost reached the intersection with Trondheimsveien. Conor was only 50 feet behind him, but he didn't seem to hear. Without hesitation, he stepped off the curb and walked into the traffic. It wasn't heavy, but it was fast. Two cars blared their horns at him and another skidded wildly sideways to avoid hitting him.
Conor reached the curb. â
Toralf
!' he yelled. â
Toralf, wake up
!'
But Toralf was oblivious to everything around him. A bus was approaching with the sign JERBANE-TORGET on the front. The driver blew his horn and flashed his lights. But instead of carrying on walking, Toralf stopped, and faced it.
â
Toralf
!' Conor roared at him. But the bus hit him with a crunching thud, and he flew across the street, arms and legs flying, almost as if he were turning celebratory cartwheels. He ended up in the gutter, face down, and by the time Conor reached him his blood was already flowing down a drain. A middle-aged woman was kneeling beside him, one hand helplessly stretched out above his head.
âDon't touch him,' Conor warned her, taking out his phone. âWhat's the emergency number?'
âFor ambulance, 113.'
Magda had reached him by now. The bus had pulled over to the side of the road and most of the passengers had disembarked and were shuffling around in silent shock. Conor looked up at Magda and said, âHe's dead.'
âYes,' she replied, with a challenging stare. âLike Ramon.'
Conor stood up. âDid you do this?' he demanded.
Magda gave him the ghost of a smile. âEven if I did, how could you possibly prove it?'
As they flew even further northward, the sun began to set, until it was nothing more than a faint halo of orange light behind the clouds. By the time they crossed the Arctic Circle it was dark, and it was only 4:35 p.m.
Eleanor slept most of the way. Their pursuit of Dennis Evelyn Branch was beginning to take its toll on her, and this morning Conor had tried to persuade her to stay behind in Oslo, or even to go back to New York. But she was adamant. âI've never given up on anything I've set out to do, not ever, and I'm not going to start now. Besides.'
âBesides what?'
âJust besides, that's all.'
Magda drank two vodka-tonics and stared out of the window at the gathering gloom. âThis is like the end of the world,' she said. âThe place where the Snow Queen and Santa Claus live.'
Conor didn't answer. He was still angry at Magda for Toralf's death. The longer he stayed with her, the less he seemed to know her. Her personality was all shadows and reflections. Yet she was very alluring in a strange, outdated way. He could imagine her in Paris in the days of Toulouse-Lautrec, or Berlin in the 1930s.
He tried to read the NorskAir brochure from the seat-pocket in front of him, but it had a special
Norwegian dullness all its own. âMassive erosion during the Ice Age scoured the fiords and the lakes, which are the deepest in Europe, and formed a scattering of islands along the coast, over one hundred and fifty thousand of them. There is a treacherous tidal current between the islands, the Maelstrom, which was said in legend to suck ships down to the bottom of the sea.
âAlong with storms, avalanches and floods, such dangerous natural phenomena led to a wealth of supernatural stories about trolls and giants. Norse mythology also had its destructive gods, like Thor, with his mighty hammer; and Woden, who took the bravest of the dead from the battlefield so that they could enjoy an afterlife of feasting in Valhalla, the Hall of the Slain.
âMost of all, the Norwegian imagination was stimulated by the long dark winters, when storytelling was the only form of entertainment.'
They circled the island of Tromso â a sparse scattering of lights in the Arctic darkness. As they came in to land, the plane was buffeted by a gusty east wind â a wind that blew all the way from northern Russia. The ground crew who waved the aircraft on to its stand were bundled up like polar explorers.
Inside the small terminal building, it was uncomfortably warm and glaringly lit. A few passengers were sitting around waiting for flights to Stavanger or Bergen â miners in jeans and reindeer sweaters and tired-looking businessmen in fur-collared parkas. There was also a family of Sami, or Lapps, in traditional costume, their faces burnished by a lifetime of summer sun and winter cold.
âWhere do we go from here?' asked Eleanor, lighting a cigarette and inhaling deeply.
âFirst of all we find out where Branch and his people are staying.'
âOh, yes? And how do we do that?'
Conor walked across to the Wideroe airline desk, where a blond girl in a gray sweater was laughing with a balding, dark-haired man.
âExcuse me⦠I'm looking for a customer of mine. He flew up here today from Oslo. I was supposed to give him some schematics for his equipment but I was held up in traffic and I missed him.'
âWhat name?' asked the girl, checking her computer screen.
âBranch. Dennis Evelyn Branch. But he may have been traveling under his company name, GMM.'
The girl rattled her keyboard. âSorry. There was nobody on that flight called Branch. No GMM, either.'
âWell, he had a whole lot of equipment with him. Boxes. Laboratory glassware, that kind of stuff.'
âOh,
ja
,' the man put in. âI remember him. The handlers dropped one of the boxes and there was a big argument. They had to fill out insurance forms, all that kind of thing.' He went to a gray steel filing cabinet behind the desk and pulled out the second drawer. âHere it is ⦠William Graham. Northern Scientific, s.a.'
What a nerve
, thought Conor.
An evangelist extremist traveling under the pseudonym âBilly Graham
'.
âDo you have an address?' he asked.
âSure. Breivika Havnegata 22.' He took out a map
of Tromso island and pointed to it.
âOne more favor,' said Conor. âCan you recommend a good hotel?'
Outside the terminal building it was so chilly that Eleanor wrapped her scarf around the lower part of her face, so that only her eyes looked out. The wind made a thin, penetrating noise like somebody whistling between their teeth. All three of them had invested in winter coats and scarves and gloves before they left Oslo. It wouldn't be long before northern Norway was plunged into months of cold and overwhelming darkness.