"And you've never used body parts, like a finger for example, in your black magic?" he went on.
With less synchronization: "No."
"And you don't recognize this magic symbol?" Matthew threw a drawing of the magic symbol that had been carved into Harald's chest onto the table.
In unison again: "No."
"That would be more convincing if you looked at the paper," Matthew said sarcastically. None had done more than barely glance at the drawing.
"The cops showed us that symbol. We know perfectly well what you're talking about," drawled Marta Mist. She laid her hand casually on Dóri's thigh.
"Fair enoughI understand. But can you tell us what happened to all the money Harald transferred to Iceland shortly before he died?" asked Matthew.
"No, we don't know anything about that. We were Harald's friends, not his accountants."
"Did he buy anything, or talk about buying something?" Thóra asked, directing her words at Bríet, whom she thought most likely to tell the truth.
"He was always buying things," Bríet said, darting her eyes toward Marta Mist and Dóri. Noticing the former's hand on the latter's thigh, she turned back to Thóra and added: "If not for himself, then for Dóri. They were so close." She smiled maliciously.
Thóra noticed a blush fill Dóri's cheeks. "What did he buy for you, and why?" she asked.
Dóri rocked awkwardly on the sofa. "It wasn't like that. Sometimes he gave me this or that in exchange for the help I gave him."
Thóra refused to let him off the hook. "Like what?"
Dóri blushed even more. "Just stuff." He flicked his hair back over his eyes.
Matthew slapped his thigh againmore determined now than before. "Well, folks. I have an idea. Marta Mist, Bríet, Brjánn, and Andriyou don't know anything, so you claim, and there doesn't seem much to be had out of you. How about you going home to study, or to class, or whatever it is you're so busy withand Thóra and I can have a quiet chat with Dóri?" He addressed Halldór. "Isn't that best? It might be less awkward."
"As if!" Marta Mist shrieked. "Dóri doesn't know any more than the rest of us." She turned to Dóri. "You don't have to stay. Let's all leave."
Dóri said nothing at first, then brushed her hand from his thigh and shrugged. "Okay."
"Okay? Okay what? Are you coming with us?" Marta Mist asked irritably.
"No," replied Dóri. "I want to get this over with. I'm staying."
Marta Mist's expression darkened, but she restrained herself and feigned indifference. She bent over Dóri and whispered something to him before standing up. He nodded vacantly. Thóra watched as Marta Mist planted a soft kiss on Dóri's head and Bríet pretended not to notice. Andri and Brjánn busily put out their cigarettes and got to their feet. There was no mistaking their relief.
CHAPTER 22
Matthew showed the students to the door. Meanwhile, Thóra and Dóri sat in the modern living room with the horrors of the past all around them. Thóra felt sorry for the young man, who obviously wished he was somewhere else. In a way the circumstances reminded her of her own sona young man locked in a mysterious inner struggle.
"You know we're just looking for the truth, don't you? We're not wondering about anything stupid you may have been up to," she said to break the silence and lighten the oppressive atmosphere. "Really, we agree with you on the basics of the casethat Hugi is innocent, or at least facing more serious charges than he deserves."
Dóri avoided looking at her. "I don't believe Hugi killed him," he said in a low voice. "It's a load of bullshit."
"You're fond of your friend, I can tell," said Thóra. "If you want to help him, by far the best course is not to conceal anything from us. Remember that your friend can't expect help from anyone except us."
Dóri grunted, without indicating whether or not he would help them.
Matthew came back and threw himself down in the chair. He watched Dóri thoughtfully for a while. "A strange circle of friends you've got. The girls didn't exactly look like they'd fall into each other's arms on the way out."
Dóri shrugged. "They're all kind of down at the moment."
"I see. Well, shouldn't we get down to business?" asked Matthew.
"I don't mind," Dóri replied. "Just ask and I'll try to answer." When he reached out for a cigarette, Thóra noticed his hands were shaking.
"Okay, buddy," said Matthew, sounding almost paternal. "We're interested in a number of points you can surely help us with. One is the money that Harald spent and another is the historical research you worked on with him. Let's begin with the money. What can you tell us about his finances?"
"Finances? I knew nothing about that, I swear. But you didn't have to be Einstein to see that he was filthy rich." Dóri gestured around the room, then shrugged. "His car was pretty flashy, too, and he dined out a lot. Unfortunately it wasn't a lifestyle the rest of us could afford."
"Did he dine out by himself?" asked Thóra. "Since you were poor students."
This was clearly an uncomfortable question. "Well, sometimes." He puffed on his cigarette. "Sometimes I went with him. He invited me."
"So he took you along and paid the bill, is that it?" Matthew asked, and Dóri nodded. "More often than he dined alone?" Dóri nodded again. "What else did he treat you to?"
Dóri was seized with a sudden interest in the ashtray and stared at it as if the answer to the question was to be found there. "Well, just stuff."
"That's not an answer," Thóra said calmly. "Just tell uswe haven't come here to pass judgment on you or Harald."
A short pause and then: "He paid for all sorts of stuff for me. My rent, textbooks, clothes, taxis. Dope. Everything really."
"Why?" asked Matthew.
Dóri shrugged. "Harald said the money was his to do with as he pleasedhe never denied himself something just because his friends were broke. I found it embarrassing, but I was flat broke and he was such a fun guy. There were never any hassles. I tried to repay him by helping with those translations and other stuff."
"What kind of stuff?" Matthew asked.
"Nothing." Dóri's blushing cheeks grew even redder. "It was nothing sexual, if that's what you think. Neither Harald nor I were, are, on that side of the fence. There have been plenty of girls."
Thóra and Matthew exchanged a look. The spending that Dóri described was peanuts compared with the amount that had disappeared. "Do you know of any large investment Harald made just before the murder?"
Dóri looked up. From his expression it was plain that he was telling the truth. "No, no idea. He never mentioned anything like that. Actually, I hardly saw him the week beforehe was busy and I was trying to catch up on my course work."
"You don't know what he was up to, or why he didn't meet you on those days?" Thóra interjected.
"No. I phoned him a few times and he just wasn't in the mood to do anything. I don't know why."
"So you hadn't seen him for several days when he was murdered?" asked Matthew.
"Nojust talked to him on the phone."
"Didn't that strike you as odd? Or was he in the habit of locking himself away for days on end?" Matthew persisted.
Dóri thought about it. "I didn't wonder about it then, but now that you mention it, it was a bit unusual. It hadn't happened before, anyway, I don't think it had. I asked him what was going on, but he said he just needed a bit of time by himself. But he was cheerful and all that."
"Didn't you develop a grudge against him over that time?" asked Thóra. It must have been strange for him to lose his best friend for several days with no explanation, considering how much time they spent together.
"No, not like that. I had plenty to do for my classes anyway. And I took shifts and stuff like that. So I had lots of other things to think about."
"You work at the hospital in Fossvogur, don't you?" Thóra asked. Dóri nodded. "How do you manage to work there, study medicine, and do all that partying?"
Dóri shrugged. "It isn't a full-time job, no way. I do the occasional relief shift, that's all. I work there over summer vacations, and if there's a crisis in the winter, I cover if someone's sick or can't come in. As far as my courses go, I'm just incredibly organized about studying. I've always found learning easy."
"What do you do at the hospital?" asked Matthew.
"This and that. I work as an assistant in surgeryclean the instruments after operations, clear up, that sort of thing. Nothing important."
Matthew gave him a meaningful look. "Clear up what? I'm just curious to ask, I know very little about hospitals."
"Just stuff," Dóri replied, reaching for his cigarettes again. "Garbage and things."
"Aha!" Matthew cried. "What's the name of your superior, or someone we could ask about this workin particular about the night Harald was murdered?"
Dóri picked at one of the studded straps on his left wrist and clearly did not know how to reply. "Gunnur Helgadóttir," he eventually muttered in a sullen voice. "She's the senior surgical nurse."
"I have a question," said Thóra as she scribbled down the name. "Who did Harald's tongue job? It was you, wasn't it?"
Dóri was about to light a cigarette but stopped, startled. "Why? What difference does that make?"
"I want to know. Harald has photos on his computer showing the operation and it was done in someone's house. Presumably someone he knew. The operation isn't the issueI just want to know."
Hesitantly, Dóri looked at each of them in turn. Thóra thought he was probably weighing whether the operation required professional qualifications or was illegal. After biting his lower lip for a while he finally said: "No. I didn't do it."
"May I see your upper arm?" Thóra asked, smiling as she remembered what Hugi had said about Dóri's regrets over the tattoo he had there.
"Why?" replied Dóri, leaning back in the sofa to put more distance between them.
"We just want to," said Matthew, moving to the edge of his chair. He had no idea where Thóra was taking this. "Be a good boy and roll up your sleeves for the nice lady."
Dóri went red as a beet. Matthew moved even farther forward on the edge of his seat, and Dóri edged farther back in the sofa. Suddenly he lost his nerve. Glowering, he rolled up his sleeves. "Here," he snapped, and held out his arms. Thóra leaned forward and smiled. "'Crap'?" she read, looking at his right arm just above the wrist.
"So?" Dóri said, rolling his sleeves down again.
"Interesting," Thóra said. "The person who performed the operation on Harald had exactly the same tattoo." She grinned at Dóri as she pointed at his right arm. "So, what's the story?"
"Nothing," Dóri said slowly. He ran his fingers through his hair, then squeezed his eyes shut. "Okay, I did it. We were at Hugi's place. Harald had been pestering me for ages to do it for him and in the end I gave in. I borrowed the instruments from the hospital and stole some anesthetic. Nobody missed it. Hugi helped me. It was pretty disgusting. But it looked cool."
It sure did,
Thóra thought. "I wouldn't imagine the hospital would be very pleased to hear that you were stealing drugswould they?"
"Of course not. That's why I don't want word to get around," replied Dóri. "It's not something most people would understand, and I don't want to get called a freak."
Matthew shook his head, then suddenly changed tack. "I'd like to ask you about one thing that may sound rather strangeor perhaps not; you've presumably been around a bit." After a quick pause in which he caught Dóri's gaze with his own, he continued. "Were you ever aware that Harald practiced sex using asphyxiation to increase the pleasure?"
Dóri's face went bright red again. "I don't want to discuss that," he retorted.
"Why not?" Matthew asked. "Who knows, it may have led to Harald's death."
Dóri's knees bounced up and down as he tapped his feet on the shiny veneered floor. "He didn't die like that," he said in a half whisper.
Thóra spoke. "How would you know that?"
The beat of Dóri's feet grew faster. He remained silent. Neither Thóra nor Matthew said anythingthey just stared at the young man and waited. In the end he gave in, took a deep breath, and spoke. "Fuck knows what this has to do with anything, but yes, I knew Harald did that a bit."
"And you know this from whom?" Matthew asked sharply.
Dóri's feet stopped tapping. "He told me. He suggested I try it." He said no more, his eyes flicking from Matthew to Thóra.
"And did you?" she asked.
"No," he answered firmly, and Thóra believed him. "I might do some crazy things but that's the craziest shit I've ever seen."