Read Harry Hole Mysteries 3-Book Bundle Online
Authors: Jo Nesbo
‘We have a witness. The owner of Leon. And we have photos connecting Vetlesen with the place.’
‘I hate to say this,’ said Espen Lepsvik, ‘but I know the Leon guy, and he will never testify. The case won’t stick; you’ll have to release Vetlesen within twenty-four hours, no question.’
‘I know,’ Harry said, looking at his watch. He was working out how long it would take to drive to Bygdøy. ‘And it’s incredible what people can find to say in that space of time.’
Harry pressed the doorbell once more, thinking it was like the summer holidays when he was small and everyone had gone and he was the only boy left in Oppsal. When he had stood there ringing the bell at Øystein’s place or one of the others’, hoping by some miracle that someone would be at home and not with Grandma in Halden or in a cabin in Son or camping in Denmark. He had pressed the bells again and again until he knew that only one possibility remained. Tresko. Tresko, with whom Øystein and he never wanted to play, but who still hung around like a shadow waiting for them to change their minds, to bring him in from the cold, temporarily. He must have chosen Harry and Øystein because they weren’t the most popular either, so he reckoned if he was going to be accepted into a club this was where his greatest hope lay. And now this was his opportunity because he was the only one left and Harry knew that Tresko was always at home because his family could never afford to go anywhere and he had no other friends to play with.
Harry heard slippers shuffling inside, and the door opened a crack. The woman’s face lit up. Just like Tresko’s mother’s face had lit up when she saw Harry. She never invited him in, just called Tresko, went to get him, gave him an earful, shoved him into his ugly parka and pushed him out onto the step where he stood looking sulkily at Harry. And Harry knew Tresko knew. And felt his mute hatred as they walked down to the kiosk. But that was fine. It helped time pass.
‘I’m afraid Idar’s not here,’ fru Vetlesen said. ‘But won’t you come in and wait? He was just going out for a little drive, he said.’
Harry shook his head, wondering if she could see the blue lights piercing the evening darkness of Bygdøy on the street behind him. He bet it was Skarre who had put them on, the numbskull.
‘When did he leave?’
‘Just before five.’
‘But that’s several hours ago,’ Harry said. ‘Did he say where he was going?’
She shook her head. ‘Never tells me anything. What do you think about that? Doesn’t even want to let his own mother know what he’s doing.’
Harry thanked her and said he would be back later. Then he walked down the gravel path and the steps to the wicket gate. They hadn’t found Idar Vetlesen at his office or at Hotel Leon, and the curling club had been shut up and dark. Harry closed the gate behind him and walked over to the car. The uniformed officer rolled down the window.
‘Switch off the blue lights,’ Harry said, turning to Skarre on the back seat. ‘She says he’s not at home, and she’s probably telling the truth. You’ll have to wait and see if he returns. Ring the duty officer and tell them to mount a manhunt. Nothing over the police radio, OK?’
On the way back to town Harry rang Telenor switchboard where he was informed that Torkildsen had gone home for the day and that enquiries regarding the location of Idar Vetlesen’s mobile phone would have to go through formal channels early the following morning. He rang off and turned up the volume of Slipknot’s ‘Vermilion’, but sensed he wasn’t in the mood and pressed the eject button to change to a Gil Evans CD he had rediscovered at the back of the glove compartment. NRK 24-Hour News was jabbering away on the radio as he fidgeted with the CD cover.
‘The police are searching for a male doctor in his thirties, a resident of Bygdøy. He is thought to be connected to the Snowman murders.’
‘Fuck!’ Harry yelled, throwing Gil Evans at the windscreen and
showering the car with bits of plastic. The disc rolled into the footwell. In sheer frustration Harry stamped on the accelerator and passed a tanker, which was in the left lane. Twenty minutes. It had taken them twenty minutes. Why didn’t they just give Police HQ a microphone and live airtime?
The police canteen was closed and deserted for the evening, but that was where Harry found her, her and sandwiches at a table for two. Harry sat on the other chair.
‘Thank you for not telling anyone I lost it on Finnøy,’ she said softly.
Harry nodded. ‘What did you do?’
‘I checked out and caught the three o’clock flight. I just had to get away.’ She looked down into her cup of tea. ‘I’m … sorry.’
‘It’s fine,’ Harry said, regarding her slim bent neck, pinned-up hair and the petite hand placed on the table. He saw her differently now. ‘When the tough nuts crack, they crack in style.’
‘Why?’
‘Perhaps because they haven’t had enough practice at losing control.’
Katrine nodded, still staring at the teacup with the the police sports team logo.
‘You’re a control freak too, Harry. Don’t you ever lose it?’
She raised her eyes, and Harry thought it must have been the intense light in her irises that lent her whites a bluish shimmer. He groped for his cigarettes. ‘I’ve had masses of practice at it. I’ve hardly trained at anything else except freaking out. I’ve got a black belt in losing control.’
She gave a faint smile by way of response.
‘They’ve measured the brain activity of experienced boxers,’ he said. ‘Did you know that they lose consciousness several times in the course of a fight? A fraction of a second here, a fraction of a second there. But somehow they still manage to stay on their feet. As if the body knows it’s temporary, assumes control and holds them up for as long as it takes them to regain consciousness.’ Harry tapped out a cigarette. ‘I also
lost it at the cabin. The difference is that, after all these years, my body knows that control will return.’
‘But what do you do,’ Katrine asked, stroking a wisp of hair from her face, ‘not to be knocked out by the first blow?’
‘Do what boxers do, sway with the punches. Don’t resist. If any of what happens at work gets to you, just let it. You won’t be able to shut it out in the long term anyway. Take it bit by bit, release it like a dam, don’t let it collect until the wall develops cracks.’
He poked the unlit cigarette between his lips.
‘Yes, I know. The police psychologist told you all this when you were a cadet. My point is this: even when you release it into real life you have to feel what it’s doing to you, feel if it’s destroying you.’
‘OK,’ Katrine said. ‘And what do you do if you feel it’s destroying you?’
‘Then you get yourself another job.’
She gave him a long stare.
‘And what did you do, Harry? What did you do when you felt it was destroying you?’
Harry bit lightly into the filter, feeling its soft dry fibre rub against his teeth. Thinking she could have been his sister or daughter, they were made of the same stern stuff. Solid, heavy, ungiving building material with big cracks.
‘I forgot to look for another job,’ he said.
She beamed. ‘Do you know what?’ she whispered.
‘What?’
She stretched out her hand, grabbed the cigarette from his mouth and leaned across the table.
‘I think –’
The canteen door burst open. It was Holm.
‘TV2,’ he said. ‘It’s on the news now. Names and photos of Rafto and Vetlesen.’
* * *
And with that came the chaos. Even though it was eleven o’clock at night, within half an hour the foyer of Police HQ was full of journalists and photographers. They were all waiting for Kripos head, Espen Lepsvik, or Hagen, the head of the Crime Squad, the Chief Superintendent, the Chief Constable, or basically anyone, to come down and say something. Mumbling among themselves that the police had to acknowledge their responsibility to keep the general public informed about such a serious, shocking and circulation-increasing matter.
Harry stood by the banister in the atrium looking down at them. They were circling like restless sharks, consulting each other, duping each other, helping each other, bluffing and scenting titbits. Had anyone heard anything? Would there be a press conference tonight? Or at least an impromptu briefing? Was Vetlesen already on his way to Thailand? The deadline was looming, something had to happen.
Harry had read that the word
deadline
originated from the battlefields of the American Civil War when, for lack of anything material to lock prisoners behind, they were gathered together and a line was drawn around them in the dirt. Which became known as the dead line, and anyone who strayed beyond it was shot. And that was precisely what they were, the news warriors down there in the foyer: prisoners of war restrained by a deadline.
Harry was on his way to the meeting room with the others when his mobile phone rang. It was Mathias.
‘Have you listened to the voicemail I left you?’ he asked.
‘Haven’t had the chance, things are hotting up here,’ Harry said. ‘Can we talk about it later?’
‘Of course,’ Mathias said. ‘But it’s about Idar. I saw on the news that he was a wanted man.’
Harry shifted the phone to his other hand. ‘Tell me now then.’
‘Idar rang me early today. He was asking about carnadrioxide. He often rings me to ask about medicines – pharmacy’s not Idar’s strong suit – so I didn’t think too much about it at the time. I’m ringing because carnadrioxide is an extremely dangerous medicine. Just thought you would want to know.’
‘Sure, sure,’ Harry said, rummaging through his pockets until he found a half-chewed pencil and a tram ticket. ‘Carna …?’
‘Carnadrioxide. It contains venom from the cone snail and is used as a painkiller for cancer and HIV patients. It’s a thousand times stronger than morphine and just a tiny overdose will paralyse muscles with immediate effect. The respiratory organs and heart will stop and you will die instantly.’
Harry made notes. ‘OK. What else did he say?’
‘Nothing. He sounded stressed. Thanked me and rang off.’
‘Any idea where he was ringing from?’
‘No, but there was something odd about the acoustics. He certainly wasn’t calling from his consulting room. It sounded as if he was in a church or a cave – do you understand what I mean?’
‘I understand. Thank you, Mathias. We’ll call you back if we need to know any more.’
‘Just happy to –’
Harry didn’t catch the rest as he pressed the end-call button and the line was cut.
Inside K1, the whole of the small investigation team was sitting with cups of coffee – a fresh pot was simmering on the machine – and jackets were hanging from chairs. Skarre had just returned from Bygdøy. He reported back on the conversations he had had with Idar Vetlesen’s mother, who had repeated that she didn’t know anything and the whole thing must be an enormous misunderstanding.
Katrine had phoned his assistant, Borghild Moen, who had expressed the same sentiments.
‘We’ll question them tomorrow if need be,’ Harry said. ‘Now, I’m afraid, we have a more pressing problem.’
The three others looked at Harry as he summarised the conversation with Mathias. Reading from the back of a tram ticket. Carnadrioxide.
‘Do you think he murdered them?’ Holm asked. ‘With paralysing medicine?’
‘There we have it,’ Skarre interrupted. ‘That’s why he has to hide
the bodies. So that the medicine isn’t discovered at the autopsy and traced back to him.’
‘The only thing we know,’ Harry said, ‘is that Idar Vetlesen is out of control. And if he’s the Snowman, he’s breaking the pattern.’
‘The question,’ Katrine said, ‘is who he’s after now. Someone’s definitely going to die from that stuff soon.’
Harry rubbed his neck. ‘Did you get a printout of Vetlesen’s phone calls, Katrine?’
‘Yes, I was given names for the numbers and went through them with Borghild. Most were patients. And there were two conversations with Krohn, his solicitor, and the one you just summarised with Lund-Helgesen. In addition, there was a number registered under Popper Publishing.’
‘We haven’t got much to work on,’ Harry said. ‘We can sit here and drink coffee and scratch our stupid heads. Or we can go home and return with the same stupid, but not quite so exhausted, heads tomorrow.’
The others just stared at him.
‘I’m not joking,’ he said. ‘Get the hell home.’
Harry offered to drop Katrine off in the former workers’ district of Grünerløkka where, following her instructions, he stopped outside an old four-storey block in Seilduksgata.
‘Which flat?’ he asked, leaning forward.
‘Second floor, on the right.’
He peered up. All the windows were dark. He didn’t see any curtains. ‘Doesn’t look like your husband’s at home. Or perhaps he’s gone to bed.’
‘Perhaps,’ she said, not making a move. ‘Harry?’
He looked at her quizzically.
‘When I said the question was who the Snowman was after now, did you know who I meant?’
‘Maybe,’ he said.
‘What we found on Finnøy was not the random murder of someone who knew too much. It had been planned long before then.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘I mean that if Rafto had in fact been on his trail, then that was planned too.’
‘Katrine …’
‘Wait. Rafto was the best detective in Bergen. You’re the best in Oslo. He could predict that it would be you who would investigate these murders, Harry. That was why you received the letter. I’m merely saying you should be careful.’
‘Are you trying to put the frighteners on me?’
She shrugged. ‘If you’re frightened, do you know what that means?’
‘No?’
Katrine opened the car door. ‘That you should find yourself another job.’
Harry unlocked his flat, took off his boots and stopped at the threshold to the sitting room. The room was completely dismantled now, like a building kit in reverse. The moonlight fell on something white on the bare red wall. He went in. It was a number eight, drawn in chalk. He stretched out his hand and touched it. It must have been done by the mould man, but what did it mean? Perhaps a code to tell him which liquid to apply there.
For the rest of the night wild nightmares racked Harry’s body, turning him this way and that. He dreamt that something was forced into his mouth and he had to breathe through some kind of opening so as not to die from suffocation. It tasted of oil, metal and gunpowder, and in the end there was no more air left inside, just a vacuum. Then he spat the thing out and discovered it was not the barrel of a gun, but a figure eight he had been breathing through. An eight with a large circle below, a smaller one above. The big circle at the bottom, the little one at the top. Gradually the figure eight acquired a third, a smaller circle on top.
A head. Sylvia Ottersen’s head. She tried to scream, tried to tell him what had happened, but she couldn’t. Her lips were sewn together.