Authors: Jo Nesbø
Harry’s question was purely a reflex action: ‘Who will get Stine’s block now?’
‘The other grandchildren,’ Grette answered with revulsion in his voice. ‘And now you’re going to check their alibis, aren’t you?’
‘Do you think we should?’ Harry asked.
Grette was about to answer, but paused when his eyes met Harry’s. He bit his lower lip.
‘I apologise,’ he said, running a hand across his unshaven face. ‘Of course I ought to be glad that you’re examining every possibility. It all just seems so hopeless. And meaningless. Even if you catch him, I’ll never get back what he’s taken from me. Not even the death penalty would do that. Losing your life is not the worst thing that can happen.’ Harry already knew how he would continue. ‘The worst thing is to lose your reason for living.’
‘Yes,’ Harry said, standing up. ‘This is my card. Ring me if anything occurs to you. You can also ask to speak to Beate Lønn.’
Grette had turned to face the window again and didn’t see Harry holding out his card, so he left it on the table. Outside, it was
becoming darker and they were seeing semi-transparent reflections in the window, like ghosts.
‘I have a feeling I’ve seen him,’ Grette said. ‘On Fridays I usually go straight from work to play squash at the Focus centre in Sporveisgata. I didn’t have a partner and so I went into the fitness room instead. Lifted weights, cycled, that sort of thing. There are so many people at that time you often have to queue.’
‘That’s right,’ Harry said.
‘When Stine was killed, I was in there. Three hundred metres down from the bank. Looking forward to a shower and going home and starting to cook. I always cooked the meal on Fridays. I liked waiting for her. Liked . . . waiting. Not all men do.’
‘What do you mean you saw him?’ Beate asked.
‘I saw someone walk past me into the changing room. He was wearing baggy, black clothes. Like overalls.’
‘Balaclava?’
Grette shook his head.
‘Cap with a peak maybe?’ Harry asked.
‘He was holding some headgear in his hand. It might have been a balaclava. Or a peaked cap.’
‘Did you see his fa—?’ Harry began, but was interrupted by Beate.
‘Height?’
‘Don’t know,’ Grette said. ‘Average height. What’s average though? 1.80?’
‘Why didn’t you tell us this before?’ Harry asked.
‘Because,’ Grette said, pressing his fingers against the glass, ‘it’s just a feeling. I know it wasn’t him.’
‘How can you be so sure?’ Harry asked.
‘Because two of your colleagues were here a few days ago. They were both called Li.’ He swivelled round and looked at Harry. ‘Are they related?’
‘No. What did they want?’
Grette took his hand away. The window had misted up around the greasy marks.
‘They wanted to check if Stine might have been involved in some way with the bank robber. And they showed me photos of the robbery.’
‘And?’
‘The overalls were black without any markings. Those I saw at the Focus centre had large white letters on the back.’
‘What letters?’ Beate asked.
‘P
-O-L-I-T-I
,’ Grette said, rubbing the greasy marks off. ‘When I was in the street afterwards, I could hear police sirens in Majorstuen. The first thing I thought was how strange it was that thieves could escape with such a large police presence.’
‘Yes, indeed. What made you think that?’
‘I don’t know. Perhaps because someone had just stolen my squash racquet from the changing room while I was training. My next thought was that Stine’s bank was being robbed. That’s how your mind works when your imagination runs wild, isn’t it. Then I went home and made lasagne. Stine loved lasagne.’ Grette made an attempt at a smile. Then the tears began to flow.
Harry fixed his eyes on the piece of paper Grette had written on so as not to see the grown man crying.
‘I saw from your six-monthly bank statement there had been a large withdrawal.’ Beate’s voice sounded harsh and metallic. ‘Thirty thousand kroner in São Paulo. What did you spend it on?’
Harry looked up at her in surprise. She seemed quite untouched by the situation.
Grette smiled through his tears. ‘Stine and I celebrated our tenth wedding anniversary there. She had some holiday due and went a week before me. That was the longest we had ever been apart.’
‘I asked you what you spent the thirty thousand in Brazilian currency on,’ Beate said.
Grette turned to the window. ‘That’s a private matter.’
‘And this is a murder case, herr Grette.’
Grette fixed her with a long, hard look. ‘You’ve obviously never been in love with anyone, have you.’
Beate’s brow darkened.
‘The German jewellers in São Paulo are reckoned to be among the best in the world,’ Grette said. ‘I bought the diamond ring Stine was wearing when she died.’
Two carers came for Grette. Lunch. Harry and Beate stood by the window watching him while they waited for the carer to show them the way out.
‘I’m sorry,’ Beate said. ‘I made a fool of myself. I . . .’
‘It was fine,’ Harry said.
‘We always check the finances of suspects in bank cases, but I probably went too far this time . . .’
‘I said it was fine, Beate. Never apologise for the questions you asked; apologise for the ones you didn’t ask.’
The carer arrived and unlocked the door.
‘How long will he be here?’ Harry asked.
‘He’s being sent home on Wednesday,’ the carer said.
In the car on the way to the city centre Harry asked Beate why carers always ‘send patients home’. After all, they didn’t provide the transport, did they. And the patients decided themselves if they wanted to go home, or anywhere else, didn’t they. So why couldn’t they say ‘were going home’? Or ‘were being discharged’?
Beate didn’t have a view on this, and Harry focused on the grey weather, thinking he had begun to sound like a grumpy old man. Before, he had only been grumpy.
‘He’s changed his hair,’ Beate said. ‘And he’s wearing glasses.’
‘Who’s that?’
‘The carer.’
‘Oh, I didn’t know you knew each other.’
‘We don’t. I saw him on the beach in Huk once. And in Eldorado. And in Stortingsgata. I think it was Stortingsgata . . . must be five years ago.’
Harry studied her. ‘I didn’t realise he was your type.’
‘It’s not that,’ she said.
‘Ah,’ Harry said. ‘I forgot. It’s that brain defect of yours.’
She smiled. ‘Oslo’s a small town.’
‘Oh yes? How many times had you seen me before you came to Police HQ?’
‘Once. Five years ago.’
‘Where was that?’
‘On TV. You had solved that case in Sydney.’
‘Mm. I guess that must have made an impression.’
‘I only remember it irritated me that you came over as a hero even though you had failed.’
‘Oh.’
‘You never brought the murderer to court, you shot him dead.’
Harry closed his eyes and thought about how good the first drag of his next cigarette would be. He patted his chest to feel if the packet was in his inside pocket and pulled out the folded piece of paper to show to Beate.
‘What’s that?’ Beate asked.
‘The page Grette was scribbling on.’
‘A Wonderful Day,’ she read.
‘He’s written it thirteen times. A bit like
The Shining
, isn’t it.’
‘
The Shining
?’
‘You know, the horror film. Stanley Kubrick.’ He shot her a glance from the corner of his eye. ‘The one where Jack Nicholson is sitting in a hotel writing the same sentence again and again.’
‘I don’t like horror films,’ she said quietly.
Harry faced her. He was on the point of saying something, but then felt it was best to leave it.
‘Where do you live?’ she asked.
‘Bislett.’
‘It’s on the way.’
‘Hm. What to?’
‘Oppsal.’
‘Yes? Where in Oppsal?’
‘Vetlandsveien. Right by the station. Do you know where Jørnsløkkveien is?’
‘Yes, there’s a big yellow timber house on the corner.’
‘Exactly. That’s where I live. On the first floor. My mother lives on the ground floor. I grew up in that house.’
‘I grew up in Oppsal, too,’ Harry said. ‘Perhaps we know the same people?’
‘Perhaps,’ Beate said, looking out through the window.
‘Have to check that out some time,’ Harry said.
Neither of them said another word.
The evening came and the wind picked up. The weather report forecast storms south of Stadt and squalls in the north. Harry coughed. He took out the sweater his mother had knitted for his father and which he had given Harry as a Christmas present some years after her death. A strange thing to do, Harry mused. He heated the pasta and meatballs, and then rang Rakel and told her about the house where he had grown up.
She didn’t say much, but he could tell she liked hearing him talk about his bedroom. About his games and the little dressing table. About how he had made up stories from the wallpaper pattern, as if they were fairy tales written in code. And one drawer in the dressing table which his mother and he had agreed was only his, and she would never touch.
‘I kept my football cards there,’ said Harry. ‘Tom Lund’s autograph. A letter from Sølvi, a girl I met one summer holiday in Åndalsnes. Later, my first packet of cigarettes. A packet of condoms. They lay there unopened until they had passed the sell-by date. Then, when my sister and I blew them up, they were so dry they split.’
Rakel laughed. Harry carried on, just to hear her laughing.
After the call he paced up and down restlessly. The news was a reprise of the day before. Squalls building up over Jalalabad.
He went into his bedroom and switched on the computer. As it
creaked and hummed he saw that he had received another e-mail. He felt his pulse race when he saw the address. He clicked.
Hi Harry
The game has begun. The post-mortem established you could have been present when she died. Is that why you’re keeping it to yourself? Probably very wise. Even if it looks like suicide. There are a couple of things that don’t tally, though, aren’t there? Your move.
S
2
MN
A bang made Harry jump and he realised he had smacked his palm down on the table with all his strength. He looked around the dark room. He was angry and frightened, but the frustrating thing was his instinct that the e-mail writer was so . . . close at hand. Harry stretched out his arm and placed his still-smarting hand against the screen. The cold glass cooled his skin, but he could feel heat, a kind of body heat, building up inside the machine.
E
LMER SCAMPERED DOWN
G
RØNLANDSLEIRET WITH A QUICK
greeting and smile to customers and employees in neighbouring shops. He was annoyed with himself. Once again he had run out of change and been obliged to hang up a
BACK SOON
sign on the door while he nipped into the bank.
He pulled open the door, strode into the bank, sang out his usual ‘Good morning’ and hurried over to take a ticket. No one answered, but he was used to that by now – only white Norwegians worked here. There was a man who seemed to be repairing the ATM and the only customers he could see were standing by the window overlooking the street. It was unusually quiet. Was something going on he hadn’t quite caught wind of?
‘Twenty,’ a woman’s voice called out. Elmer looked at the number on his ticket. It said 51, but since all the positions were closed, he went to the till where the woman’s voice came from.
‘Hello, Catherine, my love,’ he said, inquisitively peering through the window. ‘Five rolls of fives and ones, please.’
‘Twenty-one.’ He looked at Catherine Schøyen in surprise and only then did he notice the man standing beside her. At first glance,
he thought it was a black man, but then he saw it was a man wearing a black balaclava. The barrel of his AG3 swung away from her and stopped at Elmer.
‘Twenty-two,’ Catherine called out in a tin-can voice.
‘Why here?’ Halvorsen asked, peering down at Oslo fjord beneath them. The wind tossed his fringe hither and thither. It had taken them less than five minutes to drive up from the exhaust fumes of Grønland to Ekeberg, which protruded like a green watchtower in the south-east corner of Oslo. They had found a bench under the trees with a view of the beautiful old brick building Harry still called the Seamen’s School, even though it currently ran courses for business managers.
‘First of all, because it’s wonderful here,’ Harry said. ‘Second of all, to teach a foreigner a little about the history of Oslo. The “Os” of Oslo means “ridge”, the hillside we’re sitting on now. Ekeberg Ridge. And “lo” is the plain you can see down there.’ He pointed. ‘And third of all, we sit looking up at this ridge every single day and it is important to find out what’s behind it, don’t you think?’
Halvorsen didn’t answer.
‘I didn’t want to do this at the office,’ Harry said. ‘Or at Elmer’s. There is something I have to tell you.’ Although they were high above the fjord, Harry thought he could still taste salt water in the wind. ‘I knew Anna Bethsen.’
Halvorsen nodded.
‘You don’t exactly look gobsmacked,’ Harry remarked.
‘I reckoned it was something like that.’
‘But there is more.’
‘Oh, yes?’
Harry poked an unlit cigarette between his lips. ‘Before I go on, I have to warn you. What I am going to say must remain between you and me, and that could pose a dilemma for you. Do you understand?
So, if you don’t want to be involved, I don’t need to say any more and we’ll stop there. Would you like to hear more or not?’
Halvorsen searched Harry’s face. If he was reflecting, he didn’t need long. He nodded.
‘Someone has started sending me e-mails,’ Harry said. ‘About Anna’s death.’
‘Someone you know?’
‘Haven’t a clue. The address means nothing to me.’
‘That’s why you asked me about tracing e-mail addresses yesterday?’
‘I’m not remotely computer-savvy. But you are.’ Harry failed in an attempt to light his cigarette in the wind. ‘I need help. I think Anna was murdered.’
As the north-west wind stripped the trees of their leaves on Ekeberg, Harry talked about the strange e-mails he had received from someone who seemed to know everything they knew, and probably more. He didn’t mention that the e-mails placed Harry at the scene of the crime the night Anna died. But he did mention that the gun was in Anna’s right hand even though her palette proved she was left-handed. The photograph in the shoe. And the conversation with Astrid Monsen.