Harry Hole Mysteries 3-Book Bundle (76 page)

‘Her mother confirmed it was her daughter’s handwriting,’ the inspector said and explained that at the mother’s insistence they had checked and found Adele Vetlesen’s name on the passenger list of a Brussels Airlines flight to Kigali via Entebbe in Uganda on the
25
th of November. Furthermore, they had carried out a hotel search through Interpol, and a hotel in Kigali – the inspector read out his notes: the Gorilla Hotel! – had indeed had an Adele Vetlesen down as a guest the same night she arrived by plane. The only reason Adele Vetlesen was still on the missing persons list was that they didn’t know precisely where she was now, and that a postcard from abroad did not technically change her status as missing.

‘Besides, we’re not exactly talking about the civilised part of the world here,’ the inspector said, throwing up his arms. ‘Huti, Tutsu, or whatever they’re called. Machetes. Two million dead. Get me?’

Harry saw Kaja close her eyes as the inspector with the schoolmaster’s voice and a string of interpolated dependent clauses explained how little life was worth in Africa, where human trafficking was hardly an unknown phenomenon, and how in theory Adele could have been abducted and forced to write a postcard, since blacks would pay a year’s salary to sink their teeth into a blonde Norwegian girl, wouldn’t they.

Harry examined the postcard and tried to block out the pumpkin man’s voice. A conical mountain with a cloud around the peak. He glanced up when the inspector with the forgettable name cleared his throat.

‘Yes, now and then you can understand them, can’t you?’ he said with a conspiratorial smile directed at Harry.

Harry got up and said work was waiting in Oslo. Would Drammen be so kind as to scan the postcard and email it on for them?

‘To a handwriting expert?’ the inspector asked, clearly displeased, and studied the address Kaja had noted down for him.

‘Volcano expert,’ Harry said. ‘I’d like you to send him the picture and ask if he can identify the mountain.’

‘Identify the mountain?’

‘He’s a specialist. He travels around examining them.’

The inspector shrugged, but nodded. Then he accompanied them to the main door. Harry asked if they had checked whether there had been any calls on Adele’s mobile phone since she left.

‘We know our job, Hole,’ the inspector said. ‘No outgoing calls. But you can imagine the mobile network in a country like Rwanda …’

‘Actually I can’t,’ Harry said. ‘But then I’ve never been there.’

‘A postcard!’ Kaja groaned when they were standing on the square by the unmarked police car they had requisitioned from Police HQ. ‘Plane ticket and hotel record in Rwanda! Why couldn’t your computer freak in Bergen have found that, so we wouldn’t have had to waste half a day in fucking Drammen?’

‘Thought that would put you in a great mood,’ Harry said, unlocking the door. ‘Got yourself a new friend, and perhaps Adele isn’t dead after all.’

‘Are
you
in a great mood?’ Kaja asked.

Harry looked at the car keys. ‘Feel like driving?’

‘Yes!’

Strangely enough, none of the speed boxes flashed, and they were back in Oslo in twenty minutes flat.

They agreed they would take the light things, the office equipment and the desk drawers, to Police HQ first, and wait with the heavy things until the day after. They put them on the same trolley Harry had used when they were fitting out their office.

‘Have you been given an office yet?’ Kaja asked when they were halfway down the culvert. Her voice cast long echoes.

Harry shook his head. ‘We’ll put the things in yours.’

‘Have you applied for an office?’ she asked, and stopped.

Harry kept going.

‘Harry!’

He stopped.

‘You asked about my father,’ he said.

‘I didn’t mean to …’

‘No, of course not. But he hasn’t got much time left. OK? After that I’ll be off again. I just wanted to …’

‘Wanted to what?’

‘Have you heard of the Dead Policemen’s Society?’

‘What is it?’

‘People who worked at Crime Squad. People I cared about. I don’t know if I owe them something, but that’s the tribe.’

‘What?’

‘It’s not much, but it’s all I have, Kaja. They’re the only ones I have any reason to feel loyalty towards.’

‘A police unit?’

Harry started walking. ‘I know, and it’ll probably pass. The world will go on. It’s just restructuring, isn’t it? The stories are in the walls, and now the walls are coming down. You and yours will have to make new stories, Kaja.’

‘Are you drunk?’

Harry laughed. ‘I’m just beaten. Finished. And it’s fine. Absolutely fine.’

His phone rang. It was Bjørn.

‘I left my Hank biography on my desk,’ he said.

‘I’ve got it here,’ Harry said.

‘What a sound. Are you in a church?’

‘The culvert.’

‘Jeez, you’ve got coverage there?’

‘Seems we’ve got a better phone network than Rwanda. I’ll leave the book in reception.’

‘That’s the second time I’ve heard Rwanda and mobile phones mentioned in the same breath today. Tell them I’ll pick it up tomorrow, OK?’

‘What did you hear about Rwanda?’

‘It was something Beate said. About coltan – you know the bits of metal we found on the teeth of the two with the stab wounds in their mouths.’

‘The Terminator.’

‘Eh?’

‘Nothing. What’s that got to do with Rwanda?’

‘Coltan’s used in mobile phones. It’s a rare metal and the Democratic Republic of the Congo has almost the entire world supply. Snag is that the deposits are in the war zone where no one keeps an eye on it, so smart operators are pinching it in all the chaos and shipping it over to Rwanda.’

‘Mm.’

‘See you.’

Harry was about to pocket his phone when he noticed he had an unread text message. He opened it.

Mt Nyiragongo. Last eruption
2002.
One of few volcanoes with lava lake in crater. In DR Congo by Goma. Felix.

Goma. Harry stood watching the drips from a pipe in the ceiling. That was where Kluit’s instruments of torture originated.

‘What’s up?’ Kaja asked.

‘Ustaoset,’ Harry said. ‘And the Congo.’

‘And what’s that supposed to mean?’

‘I don’t know,’ Harry said. ‘But I’m a non-believer as far as coincidences are concerned.’ He grabbed the trolley and swung it round.

‘What are you doing?’ Kaja asked.

‘U-turn,’ Harry said. ‘We’ve still got more than twenty-four hours left.’

29
Kluit

I
T WAS AN UNUSUALLY MILD EVENING IN
H
ONG
K
ONG.
T
HE
skyscrapers cast long shadows over The Peak, some almost as far as the house where Herman Kluit was sitting on the terrace with a blood-red Singapore sling in one hand and the telephone in the other. He was listening while watching the lights in the queues of traffic twisting and turning like fireworms way below.

He liked Harry Hole, had liked him from the first moment he had clapped eyes on the tall, athletic, but obviously alcoholic Norwegian stepping into Happy Valley to put his last money on the wrong horse. There was something about the aggressive expression, the arrogant bearing, the alert body language that reminded him of himself as a young mercenary soldier in Africa. Herman Kluit had fought everywhere, on all sides, serving the paymasters. In Angola, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Sierra Leone, Liberia. All countries with dark pasts and even darker futures. But nowhere darker than the country about which Harry had asked. The Congo. That was where they had eventually found the vein of gold. In the form of diamonds. And cobalt. And coltan. The village chief belonged to the Mai Mai, who thought water made them invulnerable. But otherwise he was a sensible man. There was nothing you couldn’t fix in Africa with a bundle of notes or – at a pinch – a supply of Kalashnikovs. In the course of one year Herman Kluit became a rich man. In the course of three he was wealthy beyond anyone’s wildest dreams. Once a month they had travelled to the closest town, Goma, and slept in beds instead of on the
jungle floor where a carpet of mysterious bloodsucking flies emerged from holes every night and you woke up like a half-eaten corpse. Goma. Black lava, black money, black beauties, black sins. Half of the men in the jungle had contracted malaria, the rest sicknesses with which no white doctor was conversant and which were subsumed under the generic term ‘jungle fever’. That was the affliction Herman Kluit suffered from, and even though it left him in peace for long periods, he was never completely free. The only remedy Herman Kluit knew of was Singapore sling. He had been introduced to the drink in Goma by a Belgian who owned a fantastic house that had reportedly been built by King Leopold in the period when the country was known as the Congo Free State and was the monarch’s private playpen and treasure chest. The house was situated down by the banks of Lake Kivu with women and sunsets so beautiful that for a while you could forget the jungle, Mai Mai and earth flies.

It was the Belgian who had shown Herman Kluit the king’s little treasury in the cellar. There he had collected everything, from the world’s most advanced clocks, rare weapons and imaginative instruments of torture to gold nuggets, unpolished diamonds and preserved human heads. That was where Herman Kluit had first come face to face with what they called a Leopold’s apple. By all accounts it had been developed by one of the king’s Belgian engineers to use on recalcitrant tribal chiefs who would not say where they found their diamonds. The earlier method had been to use buffaloes. They covered the chief in honey, tied him to a tree and brought along a captured forest buffalo, which began to lick off the honey. The point of this was that the buffalo’s tongue was so coarse that it licked off skin and flesh with it. But it took time to catch a buffalo, and they could be hard to stop once they had started. Hence Leopold’s apple. Not that it was particularly effective from a torturer’s angle – after all, the apple prevented the prisoner from speaking. But the effect on the natives who witnessed what happened when the interrogator pulled the string for the second time was exemplary. The next man asked to open wide couldn’t speak fast enough.

Herman Kluit nodded to his Filipina housemaid for her to take away the empty glass.

‘You remember rightly, Harry,’ Herman Kluit said. ‘It’s still on my mantelpiece. Fortunately I do not know if it has ever been used. A souvenir. It reminds me of what there is in the heart of darkness. That’s always useful, Harry. No, I’ve neither seen it nor heard of it being used anywhere else. It’s a complicated piece of technology, you know, with all these springs and needles. Requires a special alloy. Coltan is correct. Yes indeed. Very rare. The person from whom I purchased my apple, Eddie Van Boorst, claimed only twenty-four had been made, and that he had twenty-two of them, one of which was twenty-four-carat gold. That’s right, there are twenty-four needles as well. How did you know? Apparently the number twenty-four had something to do with the engineer’s sister, I don’t recall what. But that may also have been something Van Boorst said to push up the price. He’s Belgian, isn’t he.’

Kluit’s laughter transmuted into coughing. Damned fever.

‘However, he ought to have some idea of where the apples are. He lived in a splendid house in Goma, in north Kivu, by the border to Rwanda. The address?’ Kluit coughed again. ‘Goma gets a new street every day, and now and then half the town is buried under lava, so addresses don’t exist, Harry. But the post office has a list of all the whites. No, I have no idea if he still lives in Goma. Or whether he is still alive, for that matter. Life expectancy in the Congo is thirty-something, Harry. For whites also. Besides, the town is as good as under siege. Exactly. No, of course you haven’t heard of the war. No one has.’

Dumbfounded, Gunnar Hagen stared at Harry and leaned across his desk.

‘You want to go to Rwanda?’ he said.

‘Just a flying visit,’ Harry said. ‘Two days including the flights.’

‘To investigate what?’

‘What I said. A missing persons case. Adele Vetlesen. Kaja will go to Ustaoset to see if she can find out who Adele was travelling with before she disappeared.’

‘Why can’t you just ring up and ask them to check the guest book?’

‘Because the cabin in Håvass is self-service,’ said Kaja, who had settled
in the chair next to Harry’s. ‘But anyone who stays in a Tourist Association cabin has to sign the guest book and state their destination. It’s compulsory because if anyone’s reported missing in the mountains, the search party will know where to concentrate their efforts. I’m hoping Adele and her companion gave a full name and address.’

Gunnar Hagen scratched his wreath of hair with both hands. ‘And none of this has anything to do with the other murders?’

Harry stuck out his bottom lip. ‘Not as far as I can see, boss. Can you?’

‘Hm. And why should I decimate the travel budget for such an extravagant trip?’

‘Because human trafficking is a priority,’ Kaja said. ‘Hence the Minister of Justice’s statement to the press earlier this week.’

‘Anyway,’ Harry said, stretching upwards and entwining his fingers behind his head, ‘it may well be that other things come to light in the process, things which might lead to us cracking other cases.’

Gunnar Hagen scrutinised his inspector thoughtfully.

‘Boss,’ Harry added.

30
Guest Book

A
SIGN ON AN UNASSUMING YELLOW STATION BUILDING
announced that they were in Ustaoset. Kaja checked that they had arrived on schedule,
10.44.
She looked out. The sun was shining on the snow-covered plains and porcelain-white mountains. Apart from a clump of houses and a two-storey hotel, Ustaoset was bare rock. To be fair, there were small cabins dotted around and the odd confused shrub, but it was still a wilderness. Beside the station building, almost on the platform itself, stood a lonely SUV with the engine idling. From the train it had seemed as if there wasn’t a breath of wind. But when Kaja alighted, the wind seemed to pierce right through her clothing: special thermal underwear, anorak, ski boots.

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