Harry Hole Mysteries 3-Book Bundle (158 page)

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Harry stopped at a petrol station on the E6 and bought a coffee. He got back into the car and looked in the mirror. Isabelle had given him a plaster for the graze on his forehead, the opportunity to join her at the premiere of
Don Giovanni
at the Opera House (‘… impossible to find a date taller than my chin when I wear heels … looks bad in the newspapers …’) and a firm departing hug. Harry took out his mobile and picked up the message.

‘Where have you been?’ Beate asked.

‘Bit of fieldwork,’ Harry said.

‘There wasn’t much to help us at the crime scene in Gardermoen. My people have hoovered the place. Nada. The only thing we found out is that the nails are a standard steel variety, with extra-large sixteen-millimetre aluminium heads, and that the brick probably comes from a property in Oslo built at the end of the 1800s.’

‘Oh?’

‘We found pig’s blood and horse hair in the mortar. There was a well-known Oslo bricklayer who used to mix it in, there’s loads of it in the city-centre apartment blocks. You can make mortar with anything.’

‘Mm.’

‘So, no lead there, either.’

‘Either?’

‘Yes, that visit you were talking about. It must have been to somewhere else, not Police HQ, because no Tord Schultz has been registered. The visitor’s pass only says Oslo Politidistrikt and there are similar ones in several police stations.’

‘OK. Thank you.’

Harry searched his pockets until he found what he was after. Tord Schultz’s visitor’s pass. And his, the one he’d been given when he visited Hagen at Crime Squad on the first day in Oslo. He placed them beside each other on the dashboard. Studied them. Drew his conclusions and stuffed them back in his pocket. Turned the ignition key, breathed in through his nostrils, confirmed he could still smell horse and decided to visit an old rival at Høyenhall.

24

IT STARTED TO RAIN AT
about five, and when Harry rang the bell of the large house at six it was as dark as a Christmas night in Høyenhall. The house bore all the signs of being newly built; there were still the remains of building materials stacked beside the garage, and under the steps he saw paint pots and insulation packaging.

Harry saw a figure move behind the decorative bevelled glass and felt the hairs rising on the back of his neck.

Then the door opened, quick, fierce, the movements of a man who has nothing to fear from anyone. Nevertheless, he stiffened when he saw Harry.

‘Evening, Bellman,’ Harry said.

‘Harry Hole. Well, I must say.’

‘Say what?’

Bellman chuckled. ‘It’s a surprise to see you here at my door. How did you find out where I live?’

‘Everyone knows the monkey, but the monkey knows no one. In most other countries the head of Organised Crime would have a bodyguard, did you know that? Am I interrupting anything?’

‘Not at all,’ Bellman said, scratching his chin. ‘I’m wondering whether to invite you in or not.’

‘Well,’ Harry said, ‘it’s wet out here. And I come in peace.’

‘You don’t know what the word means,’ Bellman said, pulling back the door. ‘Wipe your feet.’

Mikael Bellman led Harry through the hall, past the tower of cardboard boxes, a kitchen in which there were as yet no white goods, and into a living room. Not luxurious in the way he had seen some houses in Oslo West, but solid and spacious enough for a family. The view of Kværner Valley, Oslo Central Station and the city centre was fantastic. Harry noticed that.

‘The plot cost nearly as much as the house,’ Bellman said. ‘You’ll have to excuse the mess. We’ve just moved in. We’re having a housewarming party next week.’

‘And you forgot to ask me?’ Harry said, taking off his wet jacket.

Bellman smiled. ‘I can offer you a drink now. What about—’

‘I don’t drink,’ Harry smiled back.

‘Oh, damn,’ Bellman said without any sign of remorse, ‘one forgets so quickly. See if you can a find a chair somewhere, and I’ll see if I can find a coffee pot and two cups.’

Ten minutes later they were sitting by the windows overlooking the terrace and the view. Harry got straight down to business. Mikael Bellman listened without interrupting, even when Harry could see disbelief in his eyes. When Harry had finished Bellman summed up.

‘So you think that the pilot, Tord Schultz, was trying to smuggle violin out of the country. He was arrested, but released after a burner carrying police ID had exchanged the violin for potato flour. And that Schultz was executed in his home after release, probably because his employer had discovered that he’d visited the police and was scared he would tell what he knew.’

‘Mm.’

‘And you support your claim that he had been to Police HQ with the fact that he had a visitor’s pass with Oslo Politidistrikt written on?’

‘I compared it with the pass I got when I visited Hagen. The print on the bar of the ‘H’s is faint on both. Definitely the same printer.’

‘I won’t ask you how you got hold of Schultz’s visitor’s pass, but how
can you be so certain that this was not a normal visit? Perhaps he wanted to explain the potato flour, make sure we believed him.’

‘Because his name has been deleted from the visitors’ book. It was important that this visit was kept secret.’

Mikael Bellman sighed. ‘It’s what I’ve always thought, Harry. We should have worked with each other, not against each other. You would have liked Kripos.’

‘What are you talking about?’

‘Before I say anything else, I have a favour to ask you. Please keep quiet about what I’m going to tell you.’

‘OK.’

‘This case has already put me in an embarrassing situation. It was me Schultz visited. And, you’re quite right, he did want to tell me what he knew. Among other things he told me what I had long suspected: that we have a burner among us. Someone, I believe, who works at HQ, close to Orgkrim cases. I told him to wait at home while I spoke to my superior. I had to tread warily so as not to alarm the burner. But caution often means things move slowly. I spoke to the retiring Chief of Police, but he left it to me to find a way to tackle this.’

‘Why?’

‘As I said, he is retiring. He has no wish to have a case involving a corrupt police officer as a parting gift.’

‘So he wanted to keep it under wraps until he was gone?’

Bellman stared into his coffee cup. ‘It’s very likely that I will be the new Chief of Police, Harry.’

‘You?’

‘And I might as well kick off with a shit case, he probably thought. The problem is I was too slow on the trigger. I racked my brains. We could have got Schultz to reveal the burner’s identity straight away. But then all the others would have gone into hiding. I thought, what if we put a wire on Schultz, make him lead us to the others we were after first? Who knows, perhaps all the way to the present Mr Big in Oslo.’

‘Dubai.’

Bellman nodded. ‘The problem was: who could I trust at HQ and who couldn’t I? I had just hand-picked a small group of officers, checked them out thoroughly, then news came in of an anonymous tip-off …’

‘Tord Schultz had been found dead,’ Harry said.

Bellman eyed him sharply.

‘And now,’ Harry said, ‘your problem is that if it gets out you’ve slipped up that could put a spoke in your appointment as Chief of Police.’

‘Well, there is that,’ Bellman said. ‘But that’s not what worries me most. The problem is that nothing of what Schultz told me can be used. We’re no further than before. This alleged policeman who visited Schultz in his cell and may have exchanged the dope …’

‘Yes?’

‘He identified himself as a policeman. The inspector at Gardermoen appears to remember his name was Thomas something or other. We have five Thomases at Police HQ. None of them at Orgkrim, by the way. I sent over the photos of our Thomases, but he didn’t recognise any of them. So, for all we know, the burner may not even be in the police.’

‘Mm. So a person with false police ID. Or, more likely, someone like me, an ex-policeman.’

‘Why?’

Harry shrugged. ‘It takes a policeman to trick a policeman.’

The front door clicked.

‘Darling!’ Bellman called. ‘We’re in here.’

The lounge door opened, and the sweet, suntanned face of a woman in her thirties appeared. Her blonde hair was tied up in a ponytail, and Harry was reminded of Tiger Woods’s ex-wife.

‘I’ve dropped the kids off at Mum’s. Are you coming, honeybunch?’

Bellman coughed. ‘We have a visitor.’

She tilted her head. ‘I can see that, honey.’

Bellman looked at Harry with a resigned what-can-you-do? expression.

‘Hi,’ she said and sent Harry a teasing look. ‘Dad and I have got another load on the trailer. Feel like …?’

‘Bad back and a sudden longing for home,’ Harry mumbled, draining his coffee cup and jumping to his feet.

‘One more thing,’ Harry said as he and Bellman stood outside in the porch. ‘The visit I told you about, to the Radium Hospital?’

‘Yes?’

‘There’s a man there, a scientist. Martin Pran. Just a gut instinct, but I wonder if you could check him out for me.’

‘For you?’

‘Sorry, old habit. For the police. For the country. For humanity.’

‘Gut instinct?’

‘By and large that’s all I have to offer as far as this case is concerned. If you could let me know what you find …’

‘I’ll consider it.’

‘Thank you, Mikael.’ Harry could feel how strange the man’s Christian name felt on his tongue. Wondered if he’d ever said it before. Mikael opened the door to the rainy weather, and cold air gusted in.

‘Sorry to hear about the boy,’ Bellman said.

‘Which one?’

‘Both.’

‘Mm.’

‘Know what? I met Gusto Hanssen once. He came here.’

‘Here?’

‘Yes. A stunningly attractive boy. The kind …’ Bellman searched for the words. Gave up. ‘Were you in love with Elvis when you were a boy? Man crush, as the Americans say.’

‘Well,’ Harry said, taking out a pack of cigarettes. ‘No.’

He could have sworn he saw a flicker of red in Mikael Bellman’s white pigment stains.

‘The boy had that kind of face. And charisma.’

‘What did he want here?’

‘To talk to a policeman. I had a gang of colleagues helping out. When you only have a police salary you have to do most things yourself, you know.’

‘Who did he talk to?’

‘Who?’ Bellman looked at Harry, although his eyes were fixed elsewhere, on something he had seen. ‘I don’t remember. These dopeheads are always ready to grass on somebody if it’ll give them a thousand kroner for a shot. Goodnight, Harry.’

Harry was walking through Kvadraturen. A camper van stopped further up the street by a black prostitute. The door opened and three boys – they couldn’t have been older than twenty – jumped out. One filmed while a second turned to the woman. She shook her head. Probably didn’t want to do a gang-bang film which would go on YouPorn. They had Internet where she came from as well. Family, relatives. Perhaps they thought the money she sent home was from her waitressing job. Or perhaps they didn’t, and preferred not to ask. As Harry went closer one of the boys spat on the tarmac in front of her and said in a shrill, drunken voice: ‘Cheap nigger ass.’

Harry met the black woman’s tired gaze. They nodded as if they both saw something they recognised. The two other boys noticed Harry and straightened up. Big, well-fed boys. Apple cheeks, biceps from a fitness studio, maybe done a year’s kick-boxing or karate.

‘Good evening, kind folk,’ Harry smiled, without slowing his pace.

Then he was past and heard the camper door slam and the engine rev up.

It was the same tune that always rang out. ‘Come As You Are’. The invitation.

Harry slowed his pace. For a moment.

Then he increased it again, walked on without a backward glance.

Harry was woken next morning by the ringing of his mobile. He sat up, squinted into the light from the curtainless window, stretched out his arm for the jacket hanging over the chair, rummaged through the pockets until he found the phone.

‘Speak.’

‘It’s Rakel.’ She was breathless with excitement. ‘They’ve released Oleg. He’s free, Harry!’

25

HARRY STOOD IN THE MIDDLE
of the hotel room, bathed in the morning light. Apart from the phone covering his right ear he was naked. In the room across the yard a woman sat watching him with sleepy eyes, her head angled as she slowly chewed a slice of bread.

‘Hans Christian wasn’t told until he turned up at work fifteen minutes ago,’ Rakel said. ‘They released Oleg late yesterday afternoon. Someone else has confessed to the murder of Gusto Hanssen. Isn’t that fantastic, Harry?’

Yes indeed, thought Harry. It was fantastic. As in un-believe-able.

‘Who confessed?’

‘Someone called Chris Reddy, alias Adidas. He’s a junkie. He shot Gusto because he owed him money for amphetamines.’

‘Where’s Oleg now?’

‘We don’t know. We’ve only just been told.’

‘Think, Rakel! Where could he be?’ Harry’s voice sounded sterner than he had meant.

‘What … what’s the matter?’

‘The confession. The confession’s the matter, Rakel.’

‘What about it?’

‘Don’t you understand? The confession’s a fabrication!’

‘No, no, no. Hans Christian says it’s detailed and extremely credible. That’s why they’ve already released Oleg.’

‘This Adidas says he shot Gusto because he was owed money. So he’s an ice-cold, cynical murderer. Who suffers pangs of conscience and simply has to confess?’

‘But when he saw the wrong person was about to be convicted for—’

‘Forget it! A desperate drug addict has one thing in his head: getting high. There isn’t any room for a conscience, believe me. This Adidas is so desperate that, for suitable compensation, he’s more than willing to confess to a murder and then withdraw his confession later, after the main suspect has been released. Don’t you see the plot here? If the cat knows it can’t get close to the caged bird—’

‘Stop!’ Rakel screamed, in tears now.

But Harry didn’t stop. ‘—the bird has to come out of the cage.’

He heard her crying. Knew that he had probably put into words what she had half considered herself.

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