Thin Ice: An Inspector Gunna Mystery (Gunnhildur Mystery Book 5) (14 page)

BOOK: Thin Ice: An Inspector Gunna Mystery (Gunnhildur Mystery Book 5)
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‘Really? Just the two of you?’

‘Yep, going to Portugal with her parents, her brother and his wife. You know Halla’s family’s loaded? They have a villa out there and there’s room for the whole herd, and Halla and I are going to rent a car for a few days and go off on our own for a bit.’

‘Sounds great.’

‘Yeah. The only downside is that the old boy will want to drag me around the bloody golf course and make sure I lose by a decent margin.’

‘And will you?’

‘I’ll make sure I do. No point upsetting him.’

‘Good. Sensible man. Now, back to business. The fire in Hafnarfjördur on Thursday morning.’

Helgi raised his hand in a mock salute.

‘Your word is my command, dear lady,’ he said. ‘May I ask what you’re up to?’

‘I thought I’d go and get my hair done and then go shopping for shoes while you and Eiríkur do the hard work. Then when you two have the bad guys under lock and key, and all the paperwork’s in order, I’ll take the credit for it. How does that sound?’

‘I’d expect nothing less of you.’

‘Good. Because I’m going for a drive in the country while you do all that hard work.’

* * *

 

Össur liked having an en-suite room. He had never had as much space as this to call his own, and while he would have liked a drink to go with it, now that he had cigarettes, a bag of good grass and a television, he was as content with the door locked behind him as he could ever remember being.

He tried to swat away the recurring thought that it couldn’t last. They would have to leave soon, or he would have to leave soon, regardless of what the others decided to do, and he would prefer to get away without taking them with him. The best option would be to get to Akureyri and hope to get a flight from there. It didn’t really matter where to as long as it was far enough away from Alli the Cornershop. The thought of the vindictive old man sitting in his gloomy sitting room and issuing orders made him shudder.

He thought idly of taking the car, but deep inside he knew he wouldn’t get far on his own. He wondered if there might be another way to get to Akureyri. The main international airport at Keflavík would be better as from there he could fly anywhere, but he had the nagging feeling that Alli the Cornershop would have his feelers out for him there, and he preferred the idea of what he hoped would be a sleepy regional airport, hopefully with a more relaxed attitude to security. Or maybe a ship? Could he get a berth on a ship going abroad? Magni would know about things like that, and he reflected with chagrin that the half-drunk beefcake he had taken on, imagining him to be fairly dull-witted, had proved to be anything but stupid.

It was time to take some emergency measures. He counted out a hundred thousand euros in the highest denomination notes and wrapped them in a towel, ripped in half to make a tight bundle, which he secured with a roll of tape taken from the office while Magni had been out the previous afternoon.

Then he wrapped the towel in a carrier bag, and then a second bag, taping both up tightly. In the bathroom he stood on the cistern and gently lifted a panel in the ceiling. It was a struggle, and by the time he’d jumped up to haul himself into the roof space, he was perspiring. The hotel was an old building and the surprisingly low roof space was deep in dust. He decided against finding a special hiding place and just placed the package between two rafters, easily reached but out of sight of anyone who might casually poke their head up through the access hatch.

He slid the panel back in place and sat on the toilet seat to get his breath back. His arms were covered in dust and he ran a hand over his head to find it was caked in cobwebs. Although it wasn’t a comfortable idea, Össur decided it might be time to make use of the en-suite shower for the first time, but felt happier knowing that at least part of the cash had been hidden away for a rainy day.

 

The wind whistled through the partly open window as she sat in the car pool Golf and looked at the petrol station, a lonely building that had the look of having been planted in one piece in the middle of a bare plain between the sea and the mountains, hardly visible in the thick clouds that were heavy with snow ready to be scattered. The reason for its position was clear enough, placed as it was opposite a junction where an unmade road turned off to snake into the distance.

‘This is the place,’ Lárus Erlendsson of the Selfoss police force said. ‘Doesn’t look much at this time of year, but it’s a busy enough road in the summer.’

‘You spoke to the manager?’

‘He’s waiting for us,’ he said, pointing to a large 4x4 that almost dwarfed the building. ‘His truck’s over there.’

‘Come on, then.’

The filling station’s manager was almost as large as his car, a broad-shouldered character with a belly that preceded him.

‘G’day, Lárus,’ he said, popping open a can of Coke and looking at Gunna. ‘You’re the copper from Reykjavík, I take it?’

‘That’s me. You must be Ástmar?’

‘That’s me. We run three of these places, one in Selfoss and two out here in the country.’

Gunna flipped open her folder of notes.

‘This is what I’m interested in,’ she said, tapping the scanned transaction document the bank had sent. ‘Someone bought fuel here at 16:28 yesterday. Do you know who was here then?’

‘There wasn’t anyone here then. This time of year the place is open ten to four only, Monday to Saturday. Summertimes we’re open from seven until ten at night all through the week, but there’s so little traffic in winter we don’t open more than we have to.

‘Everything is logged here, isn’t it? Can you find that in your system?’’

More than my life’s worth,’ Ástmar grumbled. ‘If we don’t keep track of every penny and every drop of fuel, then we’d be in no end of shit. Like gold dust these days, petrol is.’

The petrol station’s computer whirred into life and Ástmar clicked at the screen.

‘Eighty-five litres of unleaded, so something with a big tank that wasn’t far off being empty, I reckon. Finished pumping at 16:28, like you said. That’s the only one between . . .’ He scrolled up and then down. ‘One at 15:05 and then there was one more at 19:49. That’s it. Not much business yesterday and the margin on every litre is pennies,’ he grumbled.

‘How do you make a living on this if it’s that low?’ Gunna asked.

‘Cans of drink, hot dogs and that kind of shit during the summer. I’d close the place completely in the winter if I could, but the franchise stipulates we have to stay open all year round, and to be honest, it’s a public service as much as anything else.’

‘And how about CCTV?’

He took off a pair of thick glasses and polished them on a fold of his shirt.

‘Well, we do have CCTV, but it’s not all that reliable. Hang on, it’s a stand-alone system so I’ll have to go and get the memory card from the camera.’

Outside a white van pulled up and a man swathed in a heavy blue padded overall with his hat pulled down to his eyebrows slotted his card into the pump and waited impatiently for the machine to accept it before he could pump fuel.

‘Here it is,’ Ástmar said, and slotted the card into the computer. ‘It has a motion sensor so it’s supposed to start recording when it senses something. The trouble is it’s a bit too sensitive and a fox running over the forecourt or even long grass waving in the wind will set it off,’ he muttered as he scrolled through the files. ‘Ah, here we are.’

Some very clear footage with the camera at an alarming angle showed a pickup truck at the pump, the driver chewing a toothpick as he gazed around before driving away.

‘That was the 15:05 sale, and it keeps going for a minute or so after,’ Ástmar explained. ‘Here it is.’

Gunna leaned close to the screen while Lárus Erlendsson sat back and watched with little apparent interest. This time the vehicle had pulled up on the opposite side of the pumps, so the view of the driver and the car was obscured, but Gunna could still make out the white Ford Explorer, and instead of Erna Brandsen or Tinna Lind, a bear of a man stood for a long time as the tank filled.

‘Must have been almost running on fumes. Those things have a seventy-five litre tank, if I recall correctly,’ Lárus observed. ‘How come he bought eighty-five litres of fuel?’

‘That’s how,’ Gunna said, watching as the man opened the back of the car and took out three five-litre cans. ‘You can’t see his face at all,’ she said.

‘You can see he’s clocked where the camera is. He’s being careful not to look at it and his coat’s pulled up over his face,’ Lárus added, and watched as the transaction was completed with the man standing with his back to the camera.

‘Pause there, please,’ Gunna instructed as the car began to pull away. She peered at the screen. ‘That’s it. That’s definitely our missing person’s vehicle.’

‘He’s a cheeky bastard, isn’t he?’ Lárus said.

‘Either cheeky or desperate. My guess is he had no choice. He had to get petrol there because he was probably already running on empty. So where did he go after that? He must have gone to Selfoss, or through Selfoss? Lárus, are there any cameras in the town that might have picked him up?’

* * *

 

Magni noticed that Össur had, at last, taken a shower, and that could only be an improvement. The Explorer was back in the restaurant, this time without any additional scratches to the bodywork, and Erna seemed, for the moment, mollified.

The police would soon come looking, he decided. Before long there would be a search for the two women and there had to be a trace of them somewhere providing a trail that could be followed. Then there was the old man down the valley, and Magni had no doubt that he would turn up again. Unlike the others with their city-dweller habits, Magni knew perfectly well that country people keep an eye on each others’ comings and goings, and he was certain that movements would be watched even in somewhere as remote as the district around Hotel Hraun.

‘Is there a radio anywhere?’ he asked as a thought occurred to him.

‘There’s one in the lounge,’ Tinna Lind said, her mind elsewhere. ‘Why?’ she asked, turning to him.

‘Because I’m an idiot and ought to have more sense,’ he said.

‘My big idiot,’ she said fondly.

‘I ought to have figured out that there’s bound to be something on the news about you and your mum. If you’re reported missing, that’s where there’ll be an appeal or an announcement or something. Why didn’t I think of that before? Shit, I can be dumb sometimes.’

‘Not that dumb. You’ve thought of it now, haven’t you?’

It took a while to find the radio. Magni switched it on and the muted sound of Channel Two whispered through the speakers.

‘There. Now we wait for the news, I suppose.’

‘You’re worried, aren’t you?’ Tinna Lind said.

‘Well . . .’

‘You don’t show it, but you are.’

Magni chopped an onion on the kitchen table with more force than was strictly necessary.

‘It’s Árni. Össur’s sure he’s the one who died in that fire.’

Tinna Lind’s eyebrows knitted in puzzlement. ‘All right, so just who is this Árni?’

‘He was supposed to be the driver. I told you before, didn’t I?’

‘Yeah, maybe, but I don’t see how he fits in.’

Magni lifted one of the two fish fillets, laid it flat and worked the knife carefully between the meat and the skin, pinching its tail with the fingers of his free hand.

‘It’s Össur’s job. He had the idea and the inside information, so I guess he knew when the old guy was going to have all that money ready. Árni and me, we were just the hired help, independent sub-contractors, if you like.’

‘I get that, but he wasn’t with you on Thursday? So why’s he dead?’

Magni pushed the knife forward with a single smooth motion and held up the skin, leaving the fillet on the table.

‘Y’see,’ he said, working the knife into the tail of the second fillet and repeating the operation. ‘You see, it was Össur’s job, but with me to help out, like a minder. I was flat broke and he offered me a payday to just go with him and watch his back. Árni was supposed to be the driver. He was supposed to turn up outside the old guy’s place just as we came out the door.’

‘Right, so what went wrong?’

‘No idea,’ Magni said, slicing the fish fillet into steaks. ‘We came out the door. We’d left Árni round the corner and told him five minutes. I’m not sure Árni knew what it was all about, if he’d figured out what Össur was going to do. Maybe he was held up, or just didn’t think he had to be there right on the dot of three. Anyway, out we came, expecting to jump straight into his truck and off to the airport, but he wasn’t there, so we had to run for it.’

‘And you ran into us?’

‘Yep. Össur was frantic.’

‘It could have been an accident. Nothing to do with the old guy you robbed.’

‘That’s just it. We don’t know what went wrong, and it’s not as if Árni can tell us now. But if it’s something to do with Alli, then we’re properly screwed if he gets hold of us.’

Tinna Lind watched in fascination as Magni dipped the fish pieces in egg and then breadcrumbs, laying them carefully in the pan one by one.

‘Did you know how dangerous this job was going to be?’

‘Hadn’t a clue,’ Magni said with a scowl. ‘I thought it might be a bit hairy, but not like this. If I’d known he was going to bump the old bastard for all that cash, I’d have backed out right away. But I thought he was just collecting some small amount he was owed; never thought it was going to be this hardcore.’

‘Why did you take the job?’

‘Because I needed the money, and because I was drunk,’ he said, flipping the fish in the pan. ‘Drain those potatoes, will you? And call the others. This’ll be ready in a few minutes.’

 

Gunna plugged the memory card from the petrol station into her computer and watched the same footage half a dozen times without getting a decent view of the man’s face. She was staring at it yet again when Eiríkur came in and sat down.

‘Any luck?’

‘The fire investigator has confirmed that the fire was started deliberately, and it seems the dead man had been working for Alli the Cornershop.’

BOOK: Thin Ice: An Inspector Gunna Mystery (Gunnhildur Mystery Book 5)
4.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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