Black Ice (28 page)

Read Black Ice Online

Authors: Colin Dunne

'I heard  them  talking,' he said.  'They are  not so sure.' He pointed   across   town,  past  where  the  Hallgrimskirkja's new tower soared  to the skies. 'They've taken him to the mortuary.' I set off back to the jeep when he grabbed my arm. 'Don't say

I  told  you,'  he  said  out  of  the  side  of  his  mouth, like  real reporters do, 'but  his fingers- ugh, they were a horrible  mess.' Much against his wishes, I dropped Christopher at his hotel.

I was  beginning to think  he couldn't be Batty's mail,  or  he would surely  have identified  himself to me by now. And if he wasn't, then  whose man  was he?

I  drove   straight  round   to  the  state   hospital   which  also doubles  as the medical  school and  the mortuary. Standing in the doorway  was Petursson. As he saw me, he shook hands with a white-coated elderly doctor  and  walked across.

'I would have let you know but it was something of a rush,' he said,  bending his head down to see through the Daihatsu's side window.  He was looking grave and  thoughtful.

'Palli?'

'Yes. Your friend.'

Well, he didn't have a lot of friends and if they wanted  to put my name in, they could. He never did get around to going back to America.  Now he was in a cool steel drawer in there. At least that   was  as  much   American  as  it  was  Scandinavian:  all stainless steel  and  controlled   temperatures. It  never  seemed quite  right  to me in  Britain. I always  thought our  morgues ought   to have  them  dressed   in  cardigans and  sitting   up  in rocking-chairs holding  the Radio Times.

'A violent  man,  a violent end,' he added.

'Not  drowning?'

'No,  not drowning.' He paused  and  moved his head  to look around. Mid-morning. The lawns were quiet and peaceful. The sun lit up the white buildings. He seemed to take in some of that tranquillity before he began  to explain.

'His fingers were smashed. The finger-ends, I mean.' He rubbed his own  together  to show  what  he meant. 'The nails were  broken,  the  flesh  was  torn  and  lacerated. They  looked like ... stubbed-out cigars.'

'Nasty. But you don't die of biting  your finger-nails.'

'No, and  he didn't drown. At first we thought he did. People who drown  generally go a strange pink  colour,  but  in Palli's case, the pinkness- a sort of dusky discoloration- was limited to the knees, the elbows and  the hips. We cannot confirm  this until a full post-mortem, but there doesn't seem to be any froth in the air  passages  and  lungs either.'

'Which means?'

'Which means  he didn't drown.' He  stood  up  and  leaned back so he could still see me. 'Palli  was frozen to death  .. .'

Then  I did  remember what  Palli had said.

'Hop in,'  I said.  'I think  you're  going to like this.'

 

 

45

 

 

Like new lovers, the sea and the boats played all afternoon. The sea surged  in with sloppy kisses, the boats giggled and wriggled like schoolgirls.

'What are  they cooking  up? What  the hell are they cooking up?'

Dempsie   had  been  asking  the  same  question, in  assorted forms, all afternoon.

We were sitting in an  unmarked car at  the top of the slope that led down  to the harbour. Below us, the Pushkin was tucked hard  against the wall.

We'd   been  there  for  four  hours,  waiting  for  Petursson   to arrive with the necessary  authority to board  the vessel. He was clearly having problems. He'd said himself that his government wouldn't like it. No one particularly wanted  to go and kick the Soviet  Union  on the shin  if they could  avoid it.

It  was  when   he'd   said   Palli  had  frozen  to  death   that   I remembered what  he'd  said  to me. He pretended that  I'd  said Solrun  was on the Pushkin. He'd  done it to save my life, I knew that.  Oscar was going  to throw  me under  the waterfall  again, and  I wouldn't have stood  another minute of sub-aqua rope tricks  by that  time.  He'd  pretended they'd  beaten  the answer out of me. But there was more to it than that. He wasn't a stupid man.  He wouldn't have suggested it unless he thought it could be true.

And  the Pushkin was a freezer  trawler.

Dempsie and  f had  spent  four  hours  sitting in the car,  me thinking about the stateless man  in the cold steel drawer, and

Dempsie trying  to read the minds of the men below decks on the trawler. There was little enough  life on board. Two fishermen real  sloppy   unshaven  fishermen,  not  the  clean-cut  military types - had  come ashore and  returned with  some  shopping. Three of them  had  been doing  some repair  work to the gantry

over the aft-deck. Otherwise, it was quiet.

We  waited.   Dempsie smoked  his  menthol   cigarettes and

opened  the windows so the smoke was swept  away.

He squeezed  his fleshy face between his fingers and  pounded at his knee with his fist. 'Come on, what is it they're lining up for us? I know these bastards. Every time we work out one move, they've  made  three more. Where are they taking  us? What are they leading  us into? Christ, Sam,  here he is.'

It was Petursson. If he could feel the pressure from Dempsie urging him on, he didn't let it show. Stone-faced, he unwound

without haste  from  the back of the official Volvo and  the two uniformed   men  accompanying him  waited  while  the  driver passed out his hat and his raincoat. Again, as though  preparing for a stroll  through  the park,  he put on the latter  and  held the former and  marched up to the gangplank of the Pushkin.

'What're they  saying,  dammit?' Dempsie   muttered as  he leaned  this way and  that  to try to make sense out of the babble of voices. A tall woman in a straight grey dress appeared to be Petursson's interpreter. She stood  between  him and  a skinny wilting figure,  wearing  what  looked like a soiled vest under  a heavy overcoat. Beside him was the wide-bodied man-woman I'd  greeted  a few days  earlier. By the way she  pushed  in she must  be the commissar.

Then  Petursson raised  one arm  and  waved  me down.

'Don't let  him  foul  it  up,'  Dempsie said.  He  knew  there wasn't a chance  of smuggling an American intelligence agent like himself on board.

'It has been made clear to the captain here,'  Petursson said, as I ran  up to them,  'that this document here authorises us to board  this vessel. Follow me.'

With  delicate  steps,  he picked  his way  up  the gangplank,

with  me,  the interpreter and  the  two uniformed  men  in tow. The  captain - in the grubby vest and overcoat- shouted, and the woman grunted at the captain and jabbed  him in the back. But they parted.

'Hurry,'  Petursson whispered  to me, taking  me by the arm.

'Once the Soviet  Embassy  gets here,  things  will become  very difficult.'

I  followed  him  down   into   the   belly  of  the  ship.   Steep

companionways let  out  into  dark  narrow   corridors. On  the mess deck a dozen or so men were watching a film. It was either porn or the history  of a pink blancmange factory. They  hardly gave  us a glance  as we clattered by. A minute later  we heard them  cheer:  presumably the pink blancmanges had clashed.

We  went  past  the  gutting benches  and  the  vertical   plate freezers,  down  through the  factory  floor  until  we came  to a steel  cover in the deck.  Petursson had  to put on his hat so he could  use both  hands  to move it. I took hold of the iron-ring beneath and  heaved  out  the foot-deep  plug which blocked the hatch.

The  gasp  of cold  air  that  swirled  out  behind  it was like a draught from the grave. We both peered down  into the half-lit space  around the ladder.

'So,'  Petursson said.  'No Oscar.'

That didn't bother  me too much,  but  then  I didn't have to justify  raiding Soviet ships.

He handed me a pocket torch. 'You first.'  I turned  and went down  the steel-runged ladder.

It was only  about a seven-foot  drop  and  when  I got  to the bottom  I turned and  swung  the torch  beam  round. I've  never seen  so many  damned eyes in all  my life, and  they  were all looking at me.

I was in a space  maybe  a yard square. On  all sides, stacked from  deck  to ceiling,  were  slabs  of frozen  fish. Wherever the torch  beam  went,  it found  glittering silver  bodies, caught and crammed  and   crushed  into   hundredweight  blocks.  Tails, gaping  mouths, scales  and   fins  all  solidified  in  motionless shoals, shimmering in the  torchlight. But  mostly  it was eyes, bulging, white-framed, glassy, glossy eyes that caught  the light. When  I  breathed in,  the  air  was  like broken  glass.  It was thirty  below.  The  cold  bit like a rusty  razor  and  was just  as deadly. A weak  yellow light  in the deckhead hardly  took  the edge off the dark  once  I moved  the torch  away.  And  the only sound  was the soft groan  of the generator- to remind  you that you were  being frozen  to death.

Forty-five   minutes, the  pathologist had  said.  That's  how long a fit man could live in those conditions. I shivered. And it had  nothing to do with the temperature.

What  had it really been like for Palli down there? There was only one way to find out.

'Drop the bung  back in.'

Petursson's face,  unusually anxious,  appeared above  me.

'There is no need for that.'

'Seriously. Put it back in place.'

It dropped in with a heavy sigh. I switched off the torch. The deckhead lamp was no more than  a clouded  moon of light. In the dark,  the generator's hum sounded  like the voice of the cold itself,  sawing  roughly  into  your  bones.  Tiny  flashes  of light darted between  the heaped  shoals so that  I glimpsed  a lolling mouth,  a fierce eye, a sudden  sweep of the iron-coloured fish.

I climbed two rungs up the ladder and switched  the torch on. Dark stains,  black by torchlight, marked  the steel rim. Where a ragged  lip of metal  stuck out,  I found  a sliver of ripped  flesh. Then  more, where he'd rammed  his fingers into a crack to try to tear his way out.

I banged  the underside of the bung. I was ready to come out.

The  silence  that  followed  was  too long.  I  flashed  the  torch around at  the  banks  of gaping  fish and  the shiver  which  ran through  my body owed nothing  to the freezing air: that one was hatched  in the imagination. Briefly I knew the fear that  Palli must have faced. Then  the bung rose and with relief I saw Petursson's friendly face.

'That's where he got his manicure.' I heard  him curse at the grisly sight.

'And  that,' he said,  pointing  to ripped  wires on the deck, 'is where they disconnected the emergency alarm.'

'Probably spoiling  their film-show.'

The  bottom of the plug, which was made out of some sort of cork-type insulating material, was rough cast and it had taken tiny chunks of flesh off his fingers where he'd been scraping and pushing  at  it.  And  all  the  time  he'd  be getting weaker  and slower, the warmth of his body draining away until he folded up and  died.  In the dark,  with only his terror  for company.

Even for Palli, it was a hell of a way to die.

 

 

46

 

 

'There's only  two  ways  you  can  hold  a  fork,'  Dempsie  was saying. 'There's the logical way and there's upside down. How do the Brits hold it? Upside down. Perverse? They are the most perverse nation  on God's earth.'

He gave one of his deep-belly chuckles.

I was finishing off a light meal that Hulda  had knocked up for me when the two of them, Dempsie and Petursson, came round. The first thing I noticed was that  the American had eased  back into  his mood of effortless charm  as though  it was an old sofa. Petursson didn't attempt to hide his concern.

Ostensibly  they'd   called   to   tell  me  about   the   Pushlcin.

Between   the   lines  of  the   Russian   protest   and   their   own inquiries, it looked  as though  Palli and  Oscar had  raided  the fishing-boat looking  for  Solrun   the  previous   night.  There'd been a hell of a set-to,  by all accounts, and Oscar had escaped. They'd stuck  Palli in the deep-freeze and transferred him to the lake later  in the hope it would look like a drowning.

By way of trade,  I told  them  about  Solrun's visit the night before. That brought them upright  and shoulders-back in their chairs. There was  a  pause  while  they  restrained  themselves from laying me on the floor and jumping up and down on me for letting  her go.

They  listened  quietly  while  I told them,  as well as I could recall it, what  she'd  said.

'I don't get  it,'  Dempsie  said.  'She  said  she  was scared  of Oscar but he was her first choice?'

'That's how I understood it.' In daylight, before witnesses, it did sound  ambiguous to say the least.

'Her next  choice  is  the  Russian. Don't   forget.'  Petursson frowned  at the American.

I thought of offering some cheerful  comment on the fascinating unpredictability of women,  but decided  against  it.

'What advice did you offer?' Dempsie asked. He was leaning forward, his arms resting on his knees, and the hard intelligence shone  in his eyes.

'None.'

'None.' He repeated it. What  he left unsaid  was more interesting: it was a long explosive rant about how I do nothing to restrain the one woman  the whole island  is looking for, and then decline  the chance  to advise  her.

But he didn't say it, and  he didn't say it for the same reason he'd  put his charm  on full-beam. He needed  me.

'Sam,' he said.  He stopped there,  leaning  forward  with  his hands   dangling between   his  knees  and   his  face  turned   up towards  me for maximum sincerity. 'You know they're going to come for you again?'

'I think  so,'  said   Petursson, anxious   to  put  in  his  two

penn'orth.

'Why?'

'Let's talk it through,' the American said,  although it was obvious  he and  Pete  had  done  plenty  of talking  through  and that's why they were here. 'The Soviets see you as neutral. No disrespect, you're entitled to your views, but they see you as an uncommitted sort of guy. Is that  it?'

'I don't see why that should  interest them.'

He looked up at Petursson who was leaning with his elbow on the mantlepiece. I didn't know how he'd found  room between the photographs.

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