Pierced (44 page)

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Authors: Thomas Enger

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Crime Fiction

BOOK: Pierced
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‘What about the knuckle-duster? How did she get hold of that?’

Henning scratches his forehead. ‘When Tore Pulli quit debt-collecting, he hung the knuckle-duster on the wall of his study at home as a symbolic gesture. I believe he made a big deal of it, and it was something that everyone who knew Tore would know about. One night when the Fighting Fit gang was back at Pulli’s discussing what to do about Jocke Brolenius, Dokken stole it. She used to live on the streets and had nicked plenty of things in her lifetime.’

Iver nods. He is impressed. They sit for a while in silence.

‘However,’ Henning says, and gets up. ‘I haven’t come all this way just to make small talk to an invalid like you.’

‘No, I didn’t think so.’

‘I have a question for you. From Petter Holte.’

Chapter 117
 
 

A week after Gunhild Dokken’s arrest, Henning meets Veronica Nansen outside Sognsvann Station. She gives him a long, warm embrace.

‘Good to see you, Henning,’ she says.

‘Likewise. How are you?’

‘I’m not too bad. How about you? I hear you’ve been a busy boy recently.’

‘Yes, there turned out to be a lot of stories to tell,’ he says and smiles reluctantly.

They pass the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences and walk down towards the lake. People with prams and men and women in tracksuits stroll up and down past them.

‘I didn’t think that Petter would ever have agreed to talk to the press,’ Nansen says. ‘And, what’s more, to be so open and honest about being in custody, how he thought about what had happened to Tore and dreading that he, too, would be fitted up for something he hadn’t done. You did a great job, Henning.’

‘Thank you,’ he says, blushing. ‘And it wasn’t the only thing he came clean about.’

Henning tells her how the same fear prompted Holte to put his cards on the table and admit to the assault on Iver Gundersen. Kent Harry Hansen was fuming when he returned to Fighting Fit after being interviewed by Iver. Holte went into his office, and Hansen told him what had happened. Later that night, when Iver visited Åsgard, he met Holte at the door. Holte decided to take matters into his own hands. He saw an opportunity to protect his friends and increase his status in their eyes. But he never intended to injure Iver quite so severely. He just wasn’t very good at knowing when to stop.

‘That’s so like him,’ Nansen says. ‘What’s going to happen to him as far as that charge is concerned?’

‘I’m not really sure. I asked Iver if he would consider drawing a line under the whole business, and he said he would think about it. But even so, Holte could still be charged.’

Nansen nods and takes Henning’s arm. They turn on to a broad path. Henning kicks a pine cone which jumps up and rolls away. A runner passes them, wheezing and checking his pulse monitor.

‘I heard it was a T-shirt that led you to identify Gunhild as the killer?’

Henning starts to laugh. ‘I think that’s a case of Chinese whispers. But it’s true that I saw a T-shirt in Holte’s flat which I guessed must be hers. It turned out that Gunhild’s washing machine had broken down, and Holte, being the wimp he is, had offered her the use of his.’

‘Poor guy. I bet he thought it might help win her back.’

‘Yes. And I’m sure he believed that he had succeeded when she turned up at his place after killing Robert van Derksen. But she went there purely to return Holte’s gun and his shoes which she had taken earlier. I spoke to one of the officers who arrested Holte and he said that Holte’s face was practically euphoric that morning.’

‘So Gunhild spent the night with him?’

Henning nods. ‘One night probably made no difference to her.’

Nansen shakes her head. ‘I’ve tried to look back,’ she says after a pause. ‘I’ve tried to remember if Gunhild ever did anything that I should have noticed so that some of this might have been avoided. But I haven’t been able to think of a single thing.’

Henning nods while he recalls the book he saw on Petter Holte’s bedside table.
A Gentle Axe
by R. N. Morris. And he thinks about the T-shirt Gunhild wore the first time he met her. With the logo for Axe men’s deodorant. There was something provocative about the way she pushed her chest up and out, almost as if she wanted him to notice her. It might have been a coincidence. Or it could have been Gunhild’s substitute for heroin surrounding herself with subtle hints of what she had done while believing that nobody would ever be able to expose her. Henning realises that he is inspired to explore not just her wardrobe but her whole life for other references to the murder of Jocke Brolenius. Though this would be purely to satisfy his own curiosity.

‘Don’t beat yourself up, Veronica,’ he says. ‘It won’t make it any easier.’

She looks at him as she attempts a smile. ‘I’ll try not to.’

They walk for a while in silence.

‘How is the investigation into . . . into what happened to Tore going?’

‘Slowly,’ Henning says. ‘The man they arrested, Ørjan Mjønes, hasn’t said one word during interviews. But the police have found incriminating evidence on his laptop. Mjønes appears to have carried out extensive research about an extremely deadly nerve poison called batrachotoxin. It comes from a frog in Colombia. Choco Indians dip their darts in it. The frog is actually called the poison dart frog, and a single frog contains enough poison to kill anywhere between fifty and one hundred people.’

‘And that was the poison given to Tore?’

‘The Institute of Public Health is still checking it, but it very much looks like it. There will be a story about it in the paper tomorrow. A dose of one hundred micrograms is enough to kill an adult, and all you need to do is scratch their skin.’

Nansen nods pensively. ‘Imagine if they ever came to Norway.’

‘The frogs, you mean? That’s the fascinating bit. They can’t produce their poison anywhere except the western slopes of the Andes because the ants and the insects on which they feed form a unique chemical bond in the frog that creates the poison.’

‘Mjønes went to South America?’

‘Most probably. But he isn’t saying anything. Not yet, anyway.’

‘Isn’t that unusual?’

‘Yes, perhaps. But I’m guessing he’s keeping his mouth shut because he’s banking on the evidence against him being purely circumstantial. However, it would take a lot for him not to be convicted. A receptionist at the mountain hotel close to where the body of Thorleif Brenden was found has said that Mjønes impersonated a police officer looking for Brenden. A chalet girl in the area also alerted them to a break-in in a cabin where Brenden’s notes were later found. In them he describes Mjønes and the events that happened in the days leading up to Tore’s death in considerable detail. That plus the frog poison will weigh heavily against him in court.’

There might be two other reasons, Henning thinks, why Mjønes won’t talk. Firstly, he knows that the money he was paid for killing Pulli is waiting for him somewhere when he has served his sentence. Secondly, he might also be scared that what happened to Pulli could happen to him even though he might not know the identity of his employer and so couldn’t give him up even if he wanted to. Most orders for hits are made in code and under fictitious names.

The smell of a barbecue wafts towards them. Soon they reach a gravel path. The sunlight sparkles in the water. In the distance a red kayak slices through the dark-blue surface. Nansen and Henning sit down on a bench overlooking the lake.

‘I need to ask you something,’ he begins. ‘You usually visited Tore once a week while he was inside. During that time did he ever seem . . . how can I put it? . . . more tense or nervous than usual?’

She turns to him. ‘His mood varied, but I can’t think of anything in particular. Why do you ask?’

‘Because . . . ’

Henning looks down and thinks about Pia Nøkleby. When he spoke to her a couple of days after the arrest of Gunhild Dokken, he asked again if the police had put in a request for Pulli’s telephone records from the prison. Her reply had been no, they hadn’t prioritised it. And Knut Olav Nordbø from Oslo Prison confirmed the same day that it was now too late.

‘I think Tore was killed because he knew who was behind the fire in my flat,’ Henning says. ‘I don’t think that Tore contacting me was the direct cause, but that he might have been speaking to someone else about it
before
he called me.’

‘Why would Tore have done that?’

‘I don’t know. Because he thought it might be to his advantage?’

‘How?’

‘If Tore knew who torched my flat, he might have tried to use that knowledge as leverage against that man or whoever that man works for. People who are in the same line of business as he used to be in and who might be coerced into helping him.’

‘Tore would never have threatened anyone,’ Nansen says, shaking her head. ‘Not any more.’

‘Are you sure about that, Veronica? Prison is hell, and it’s even worse if you’re innocent. I don’t have a problem believing that Tore was desperate – especially since his appeal was about to be heard. I can easily imagine that the person or persons who were responsible for the death of my son didn’t want that information to come out.’

Nansen looks at him before she bows her head. ‘And now we’ll never know what it was,’ she says.

‘No,’ Henning sighs. ‘I don’t suppose we will.’

Chapter 118
 
 

Special offers from supermarkets, requests from estate agents looking for a property just like his, furniture sales – Henning fails to catch all the junk mail that spills from his mailbox as he opens it. He bends down, picks it up and flicks through his post with lukewarm interest. But he freezes when he sees the name Erling Ophus and his address in Leirsund written on the back of an A4 envelope.

The police report, Henning thinks.

He runs up the stairs as quickly as he can and opens his brand-new front door. Once he has sat down on the sofa, he tears open the envelope and pulls out two sheets. He reads:

 

Venue and Fire Investigation Report

Commissioning party:
Chief Inspector Tom Arne Sveen, E-section, Oslo Police Station.

Remit:
Location investigation following a fire at 23 Markveien, Oslo, at approximately 20.35.

Date of request:
Tuesday 12 September 2007 at 08.10.

Investigators:
The scene of the fire was examined by Engineering Inspector Rune Olsen, Oslo Electricity Board, Fire Chief Nicolai Juve, Oslo Fire Service, and Chief Inspector Tom Arne Sveen who prepared this report at 10.00 on 12 September 2007.

Conclusion

After examining the scene of the fire and considering other information relating to this incident, it is my opinion that:

• the fire originated in the hallway behind the front door of the second-floor flat belonging to HENNING JUUL, but that

• the cause of the fire remains unknown.

Location of the fire

23 Markveien is an apartment block containing thirteen flats and a full basement. The flat on the second floor is accessed through a communal front door.

Additional information

The door to the second-floor flat was unlocked. The communal front door at street level was also open.

Investigation of the scene of the fire

The fire started in the hallway behind the front door to the left when viewed from the landing outside. There is most damage to the surface of the internal west-facing wall. Here the internal wall has completely burned away and there is substantial damage to the back of the external wall.

The wall between the hallway and the stairwell was badly damaged as the internal wall had been destroyed, but the fire damage was considerably less on the back of the panel.

Having removed debris from the floor in the hallway near the stairwell, we noticed that the floor covering (linoleum) and chipboard flooring were badly charred and there were some burn marks to the surface of the underlying wooden floor. This damaged area extended across the whole floor, all the way to the walls.

Samples taken

A section of partly charred woodwork was taken from the internal west wall.

Examination of material

This sample will be sent to Kripos to be tested for accelerants.

 

Observations

The photo shows that the fire started low, in the hallway right inside the front door leading to the flat. The damage was relatively major and the fire spread to large parts of the flat.

The open kitchen window caused the fire to spread quickly.

The front door showed no signs of forced entry.

 

Chief Inspector Tom Arne Sveen

Henning puts down the report. So the kitchen window
was
open, he thinks, though he can’t remember why. Perhaps they had been frying eggs, Jonas and him, and needed to air the room. If only they had eaten crispbread instead.

He looks inside the envelope and discovers a yellow Post-it note that must have fallen off the report. He takes it out. The note says
Ring me when you have read the report
, and Ophus’s initials and mobile number are written below the message. Henning rings him immediately and introduces himself when Ophus answers.

‘Oh, hi,’ Ophus says. ‘It’s you, is it? You’ve got the report, I gather?’

‘Yes.’

‘I didn’t get the chance to send you the photographs, and they wouldn’t have been very helpful either, as photocopies. Black and white, you know. Everything looks like soot.’

‘Hm.’

‘But I wanted to ask you about your front door. I remember us talking about how you always locked it, but that you couldn’t remember if you had locked it that day. Is that right?’

‘Yes,’ Henning replies, intrigued.

‘The report says that your front door was unlocked and that there was no sign of forced entry.’

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