Harry Hole Mysteries 3-Book Bundle (15 page)

‘Would you like to come with me, and we’ll see if we can find your father?’ he asked.

Harry knocked gently on the office door with the sign saying
Prof. Filip Becker
.

As there was no answer, he opened it.

The man behind the desk raised his head from his hands. ‘Did I say you could come in …?’

He paused when he saw Harry. And shifted his gaze down to the boy standing next to him.

‘Jonas!’ Filip Becker said, the tone somewhere between bewilderment
and a reprimand. His eyes were red-rimmed. ‘Didn’t I say you should sit quietly?’

‘I brought him with me,’ Harry said.

‘Oh?’ Becker looked at his watch and stood up.

‘Your students have left,’ Harry said.

‘Have they?’ Becker dropped back into his chair. ‘I … I only meant to give them a break.’

‘I was there,’ Harry said.

‘Were you? Why …?’

‘We all need a break once in a while. Can we have a chat?’

‘I didn’t want him to go to school,’ Becker explained after sending Jonas into the coffee room with instructions to wait there. ‘All the questions, speculation, I quite simply didn’t want it. Well, I’m sure you understand.’

‘Yes.’ Harry took out a packet of cigarettes, shot Becker a questioning look and put it back when the professor firmly shook his head. ‘That at any rate is much easier to understand than what was on the board.’

‘It’s quantum physics.’

‘Sounds weird.’

‘The world of atoms is weird.’

‘In what way?’

‘They break our most fundamental physical laws. Like the one about an object not being able to be in two places at the same time. Niels Bohr once said that if you aren’t profoundly shocked by quantum physics, then you haven’t understood it.’

‘But you understand it?’

‘No – are you crazy? It’s pure chaos. But I prefer that chaos to this chaos.’

‘Which one?’

Becker sighed. ‘Our generation has turned itself into servants and secretaries of our children. That applies to Birte as well, I’m afraid. There are so many appointments and birthdays and favourite foods and football sessions that it drives me insane. Today someone rang from a doctor’s surgery in Bygdøy because Jonas hadn’t turned up for an appointment.
And this afternoon he has training God knows where, and his generation has never heard of the possibility of catching a bus.’

‘What’s wrong with Jonas?’ Harry took out the notepad he never wrote in, but from experience it seemed to focus people’s minds.

‘Nothing. Standard check-up, I assume.’ Becker dismissed it with an irritated flick of the hand. ‘And I assume you’re here for a different reason?’

‘Yes,’ Harry said. ‘I want to know where you were yesterday afternoon and evening.’

‘What?’

‘Just routine, Becker.’

‘Has this anything to do with … with …?’ Becker nodded towards the
Dagbladet
newspaper lying on top of a pile of papers.

‘We don’t know,’ Harry said. ‘Just answer me, please.’

‘Tell me, are you all out of your minds?’

Harry looked at his watch without answering.

Becker groaned. ‘Alright, I do want to help you. Last night I sat here working on an article about wavelengths of hydrogen, which I hope to have published.’

‘Any colleagues who can vouch for you?’

‘The reason that Norwegian research contributes so little to the world is that the self-satisfaction of Norwegian academics is surpassed only by their indolence. I was, as usual, utterly on my own.’

‘And Jonas?’

‘He made himself some food and sat watching TV until I got home.’

‘Which was when?’

‘Just past nine, I think.’

‘Mm.’ Harry pretended to take notes. ‘Have you been through Birte’s things?’

‘Yes.’

‘Found anything?’

Filip Becker stroked the corner of his mouth with one finger and shook his head. Harry held his gaze, using the silence as leverage. But Becker had shut up shop.

‘Thank you for your help,’ Harry said, stuffing his notepad into his jacket pocket and getting up. ‘I’ll tell Jonas he can come in.’

‘Wait a moment please.’

Harry found the coffee room where Jonas was sitting and drawing, the tip of his tongue poking out from his mouth. He stood beside the boy, peering down at the paper on which, for the moment, were two uneven circles.

‘A snowman.’

‘Yes,’ Jonas said, glancing up. ‘How could you see that?’

‘Why was your mother taking you to the doctor’s, Jonas?’

‘Don’t know.’ Jonas drew a head on the snowman.

‘What’s the name of the doctor?’

‘Don’t know.’

‘Where was it?’

‘I’m not allowed to tell anyone. Not even Dad.’ Jonas leaned over the paper and drew hair on the snowman’s head. Long hair.

‘I’m a policeman, Jonas. I’m trying to find your mother.’

The pencil scratched harder and harder, and the hair became blacker and blacker.

‘I don’t know what the place’s called.’

‘Do you remember anything nearby?’

‘The king’s cows.’

‘The king’s cows?’

Jonas nodded. ‘The woman sitting behind the window is called Borghild. I got a lollipop because I let her take blood with one of those needles.’

‘Are you drawing anything in particular?’ Harry asked.

‘No,’ Jonas said, concentrating on the eyelashes.

Filip Becker stood by the window watching Harry Hole cross the car park. Lost in thought, he slapped the small black notebook against the palm of his hand. He was wondering whether Hole had believed him
when he pretended not to know that the policeman had attended his lecture. Or when he said he had been working on an article the previous evening. Or that he hadn’t found anything among Birte’s things. The black notebook had been in her desk drawer; she hadn’t even made an attempt to conceal it. And what was written there …

He almost had to laugh. The simpleton had believed she could trick him.

11
DAY 4
.
Death Mask.

K
ATRINE
B
RATT
WAS BENT OVER HER COMPUTER WHEN
Harry poked his head in.

‘Find any matches?’

‘Nothing much,’ Katrine said. ‘All the women had blue eyes. Apart from that they’re all quite different in appearance. They all had husbands and children.’

‘I have somewhere we can begin,’ Harry said. ‘Birte Becker took Jonas to a doctor close to the king’s cows. That has to be the royal Kongsgården estate in Bygdøy. And you said the twins were at the Kon-Tiki Museum after a visit to the doctor’s. Also Bygdøy. Filip Becker didn’t know anything about the doctor, but Rolf Ottersen might.’

‘I’ll call him.’

‘Then come and see me.’

In his office Harry picked up the handcuffs, put one round his wrist and smacked the other against the table leg while listening to his voicemail. Rakel said Oleg was bringing a pal along to Valle Hovin. The message was unnecessary. He knew it was a reminder in disguise, in case Harry had forgotten the whole thing. To date, Harry had never forgotten an arrangement with Oleg, but he accepted these little nudges which others might have taken as a declaration of mistrust. Indeed,
what was more, he
liked
them. Because it said something about what kind of mother she was. And because she disguised the reminder so as not to offend him.

Katrine walked in without knocking.

‘Kinky,’ she said, nodding towards the table leg Harry was cuffed to. ‘But I like it.’

‘Single-handed speed-cuffing,’ Harry smiled. ‘Some crap I picked up in the States.’

‘You should try the new Hiatt speedcuffs. You don’t even need to think whether you’re going to approach from the left or the right, the cuff arm will close around your wrist whatever, so long as you get a clean hit. And then you practise with two sets of cuffs, one round each wrist, so that you have two attempts at hitting.’

‘Mm.’ Harry unlocked the handcuffs. ‘What’s on your mind?’

‘Rolf Ottersen hasn’t heard of any doctor’s appointment or any doctor in Bygdøy. In fact, they have their own doctor in Bærum. I can ask the twins if either of them remembers the doctor, or we can ring the surgeries in Bygdøy and check ourselves. There are only four of them. Here.’

She put a yellow Post-it on his desk.

‘They aren’t allowed to disclose names of patients,’ he said.

‘I’ll talk to the twins when they’re back from school.’

‘Wait,’ Harry said, lifting the telephone and dialling the first number.

A nasal voice answered with the name of the surgery.

‘Is Borghild there?’ Harry asked.

No Borghild.

At the second number an equally nasal answermachine said that the surgery only received calls during a restricted two-hour period, and this had passed some time ago.

Finally, at the fourth attempt, a chirpy, almost laughing voice gave him what he had been hoping for.

‘Yes, that’s me.’

‘Hello, Borghild, this is Inspector Harry Hole, Oslo Police.’

‘Date of birth?’

‘Sometime in spring. I’m calling about a murder case. I assume you’ve read the papers today. What I want to know is whether you saw Sylvia Ottersen last week?’

There was silence at the other end of the line.

‘One moment,’ she said.

Harry heard her getting up, and waited. Then she was back. ‘I’m sorry, herr Hole. Information about patients is confidential. And I think the police know that.’

‘We do. But if I’m not mistaken, it’s the daughters who are patients, not Sylvia.’

‘Nevertheless. You’re asking for information which indirectly might reveal the identies of our patients.’

‘I would remind you that this is a murder investigation.’

‘I would remind you that you can come back to us with a search warrant. We might perhaps be more guarded with patient information than most, but that’s the nature of our work.’

‘Nature of your work?’

‘Our areas of expertise.’

‘Which are?’

‘Plastic surgery and specialist operations. See our website – www.kirklinikk.no.’

‘Thank you, but I think I’ve learned enough for the time being.’

‘If you say so.’

She put down the phone.

‘Well?’ Katrine asked.

‘Jonas and the twins have been to the same doctor,’ Harry said, leaning back in the chair. ‘And that means we’re in business.’

Harry could feel the adrenalin rush, the trembling that always came when he got first scent of the brute. And after the rush came the Great Obsession. Which was everything at once: love and intoxication, blindness and clear-sightedness, meaning and madness. Colleagues spoke now and then about excitement, but this was something else, something special. He had never told anyone about the Obsession or made any attempt to analyse it. He hadn’t dared. All he knew was that it
helped him, drove him, fuelled the job he was appointed to perform. He didn’t want to know any more. He really didn’t.

‘And now?’ Katrine asked.

Harry opened his eyes and leapt off his seat. ‘Now we’re going shopping.’

The shop Taste of Africa was situated close to the busiest street in Majorstuen, Bogstadveien. But unfortunately its location fourteen metres down a side street meant that it was still on the periphery.

A bell rang as Harry and Katrine entered. In the muted lighting – or to be more precise: the lack of lighting – he saw brightly coloured coarse-weave rugs, sarong-like materials, large cushions with West African patterns, small coffee tables that looked as if they had been carved straight out of the rainforest, and tall thin wooden figures representing Masai tribesmen and a selection of the savannah’s best-known animals. Everything seemed carefully planned and executed: there were no visible price tags, the colours complemented each other and the products were placed in pairs like in Noah’s ark. In short, it looked more like an exhibition than a shop. A somewhat dusty exhibition. This impression was reinforced by the almost unnatural stillness after the door closed behind them and the bell stopped ringing.

‘Hello?’ called a voice from inside the shop.

Harry followed the sound. In the darkness at the back of the room, behind an enormous wooden giraffe and illuminated only by a single spotlight, he saw the back of a woman who was standing on a chair. She was hanging up a grinning wooden black mask on the wall.

‘What is it?’ she said without turning.

She gave the impression she was conditioned to expect the unexpected, not customers though.

‘We’re from the police.’

‘Oh, yes.’ The woman turned and the spotlight fell on her face. Harry
felt his heart stop, and he automatically took a step back. It was Sylvia Ottersen.

‘Something wrong?’ she asked with a frown between the lenses of her glasses.

‘Who … are you?’

‘Ane Pedersen,’ she said, instantly twigging the obvious reason for Harry’s perplexed expression. ‘I’m Sylvia’s sister. We’re twins.’

Harry began to cough.

‘This is Inspector Harry Hole,’ he heard Katrine say behind him. ‘And I’m Katrine Bratt. We were hoping to find Rolf here.’

‘He’s at the funeral parlour.’ Ane Pedersen paused, and at that moment all three of them knew what the others were thinking: how do you actually bury a head?

‘And you’ve stepped into the breach?’ Katrine rallied.

Ane Pedersen smiled briefly. ‘Yes.’ She stepped down from the chair with care, still holding the wooden mask.

‘Ceremonial or spiritual mask?’ Katrine asked.

‘Ceremonial,’ she said. ‘Hutu. Eastern Congo.’

Harry looked at his watch. ‘When will he be back?’

‘I don’t know.’

‘Any guesses?’

‘As I said, I don’t –’

‘That really is a beautiful mask,’ Katrine interrupted. ‘You’ve been to the Congo, and you bought it yourself, didn’t you.’

Ane sent her a look of amazement. ‘How did you know?’

‘I can see by the way you’re holding it, not covering the eyes or mouth. You respect the spirits.’

‘Are you interested in masks?’

‘Sort of,’ Katrine said, pointing to a black mask with small arms at the side and legs hanging underneath. The face was half human, half animal. ‘That’s a Kpelie mask, isn’t it.’

‘Yes, from the Ivory Coast. Senufo.’

Other books

Scandal's Daughter by Carola Dunn
No Different Flesh by Zenna Henderson
Cry Father by Benjamin Whitmer
The Shadow and the Star by Laura Kinsale
Compass by Jeanne McDonald
CHERUB: The Sleepwalker by Robert Muchamore
In Green's Jungles by Gene Wolfe
The Hanged Man by Walter Satterthwait
Years of Red Dust by Qiu Xiaolong