Authors: Anne; Holt
âBack about five,' she said. âYou can put Jack out on his lead in the garden. And thank you, Mum!'
She completely forgot to explain why there was a biography drying on a string between two dining chairs.
*
Alvhild was worse. The smell of onions had returned. The old lady was in bed and the nurse instructed Johanne not to stay long.
âI'll be back in a quarter of an hour,' she threatened.
âHi,' said Johanne. âIt's me. Johanne.'
Alvhild struggled to open her eyes. Johanne pulled up a chair and carefully laid her hand on the old lady's hand. It was cold and dry.
âJohanne,' repeated Alvhild. âI've been waiting for you. Do tell.'
She gave a dry cough and tried to turn away. Her pillow was too deep and her head seemed to be stuck and she stared at the ceiling. Johanne took a paper tissue from a box on the bedside table and dried around her mouth.
âDo you want some water?'
âNo. I want to hear what you found out when you went to Lillestrøm.'
âAre you sure . . . I can come again tomorrow . . . You're too tired now, Alvhild.'
âI'll be the judge of that.'
She coughed painfully again.
âTell me,' ordered Alvhild.
And Johanne told her. For a while she was unsure whether Alvhild was actually awake. But then a smile forced its way on to the old lady's lips; Johanne should just carry on.
âAnd then today,' she said finally. âToday I discovered that Astor Kongsbakken is Asbjørn Revheim's father.'
âI knew that,' whispered Alvhild.
âYou knew that?'
âYes. Kongsbakken was an imposing character. He had a very high standing in legal circles in the fifties and early sixties. There was a lot of whispering about how embarrassing it must be for him to have a son who wrote books like that. He . . . But I didn't know that Revheim had anything to do with the Seier case.'
âIt's not entirely certain that he does.'
Alvhild struggled with the pillow. She wanted to sit up. Her hand fumbled to find the small box that regulated the bed.
âAre you sure that's good for you?' asked Johanne, and gently pushed a green button.
Alvhild nodded weakly and nodded again when she was satisfied. Pearls of sweat appeared on her forehead.
âWhen Fever Chill was published in . . .'
â1961,' said Johanne. She had read most of the biography.
âYes, that sounds right. There was a terrible to-do. Not just because of the pornographic content, but perhaps even more because of the bitter attacks on the Church. It must have been the same year that Astor Kongsbakken stepped down as public prosecutor and joined the Ministry as an adviser. He . . .'
Alvhild gasped for breath.
â. . . water in my lungs,' she smiled weakly. âJust wait a little bit.'
The nurse had come back.
âNow I'm being serious,' she said. Her large bosom jumped in time with the words. âThis is not good for Alvhild.'
âAstor Kongsbakken,' wheezed Alvhild with great effort, âwas a good friend of the director general. The one who asked me to . . .'
âGo,' said the nurse, and pointed to the door; she prepared an injection with practised movements.
âI'm going,' said Johanne. âI'm going now.'
âThey were friends from university,' whispered Alvhild. âCome back again, Johanne.'
âYes,' said Johanne. âI'll come back when you're better.'
The look the nurse gave her said that she might as well wait till Hell froze over.
*
When Johanne got home, it smelt clean. Kristiane was still sleeping. The living room had been aired and the curtains taken down. Even the bookcase had been tidied: books that had been piled on top of each other in a rush were now put back in their rightful place. The massive heap of old newspapers by the front door had disappeared. So had Jack.
âA walk will do your father good,' said her mother. âIt's not long since they left. The curtains desperately needed a wash. And here . . .'
She handed her the Asbjørn Revheim biography. It looked as if it had been read front to back and was well worn, but it was still hanging together and it was dry.
âI used the hair dryer,' said her mother and smiled. âIt was actually quite fun to see if I could save it. And . . .'
She tilted her head almost imperceptibly and raised an eyebrow.
âA man came here. A certain Adam Stubo. He was delivering a T-shirt. It was obviously yours because it had Vik written on the back. Had he borrowed it from you? Who is he? I think he could at least have washed it.'
T
he pathologist was alone in the office. It was late on Sunday 4 June and he was hopelessly behind in his work. He was getting on for sixty-five and in many ways he felt that he was hopelessly behind in many areas. For years he'd put up with bad working conditions, too much to do and a salary that in his opinion bore no relation to the pressures of the job, but now he was starting to get angry. In terms of professional satisfaction, he had no regrets. But now that he was nearing retirement, he wished he had a better income. He earned just under six hundred thousand kroner a year, when you included teaching and overtime. Which he'd stopped counting. His wife reckoned it must be about a thousand hours a year. It was of no concern to him that most other people thought his salary was impressive. His twin brother, who was also a doctor, had pursued a career in surgery. He had his own clinic, a house in Provence and a taxable fortune worth seven million, according to the last tax rolls.
Sunday was his reading day. His position was actually supposed to allow him time to keep up to date with developments in the field within normal working hours. In the past decade, he had virtually never read an article between nine and four o'clock. Instead, he got up very early on Sunday morning, put a packed lunch and thermos in his rucksack and walked the half-hour to work.
He was depressed by the time he had sorted the magazines, periodicals and theses into two piles: one must read and the
other can wait. The latter was very small. The former towered from the floor to knee height. At a loss, he grabbed the publication on top and poured himself a cup of strong coffee.
Excitation-concentration coupling in normal and failing cardiomyocytes.
The thesis was from January 1999 and had been there for a while. He was not familiar with the author. It was difficult to say whether the thesis was relevant without taking a closer look. He was tempted to pick something else out of the pile. But he pulled himself together and started to read.
The pathologist's hands were shaking. He put the publication down. It was so alarming and at the same time so obvious that he was afraid, for many reasons. The answer was not in the thesis itself. It had just made him think. He felt his adrenalin levels rising, his pulse racing and his breathing quickening. He had to get hold of a pharmacist. The telephone directory fell on the floor as he tried to find the number of his wife's best friend, who owned a chemist at TÃ¥sen. She was at home. The conversation lasted for ten minutes. The pathologist forgot to thank her for her help.
Adam Stubo had left his card. The pathologist searched among all the paper and Post-it notes, penholders and reports, but the card had vanished. He finally remembered that he had stuck it up on the corkboard. He had to punch the number into his mobile twice. His fingers felt sticky.
âStubo,' said a voice from the ether.
The pathologist took a minute to explain why he had phoned. There was silence on the other end of the phone.
âHello?'
âYes, I'm still here,' said Stubo. âWhat sort of stuff is it?'
âPotassium.'
âWhat is potassium?'
âIt's one of the substances in our cells.'
âI'm sorry, I don't understand. How . . .'
The pathologist was still shaking. He was clutching the phone and changed his grip in an attempt to calm down.
âTo put it as simply as possible, so simply that it's nearly imprecise,' he started and coughed. âThere is a certain level of potassium in human cells, which is essential for our survival. When we die â how can I put this â our cells start to . . . leak. In the course of an hour or two, the level of potassium in the fluid surrounding the cells will rise sharply. Which is in fact an obvious sign that you are dead.'
The pathologist was sweating; his shirt was sticking to his body and he tried to breathe slowly.
âSo the fact that potassium levels around each cell have risen since the time of death is in itself not remarkable. It's normal.'
âAnd . . .?'
âThe problem is that this level will also rise if you supply the body with potassium in some way. When the person is alive, that is. But then . . . they die. A rise in the potassium level results in heart failure.'
âBut then it must be easy to trace the stuff?'
The pathologist raised his voice:
âListen to what I'm saying! If you get an injection of potassium and die of it, the cause of death cannot be proven unless the autopsy is carried out immediately! A delay of one to two hours is sufficient. Then the higher potassium levels will simply be ascribed to the death of that person! The autopsy won't show anything at all, except that the person in question is no longer alive and that there is no evidence of the cause of death.'
âOh my God . . .'
Stubo swallowed so loudly that the pathologist heard.
âBut where would he get the poison?'
âIt isn't a poison, for Christ's sake!'
The pathologist was practically shouting. When he opened his mouth again, his voice was trembling and low:
âFirst of all, both you and I take in potassium every day. In our normal food. Not significant amounts, granted, but all the same . . . You can buy potassium by the kilo from the chemist! That is, you can buy potassium chloride. If that is then injected into the bloodstream, it separates into potassium and chlorides, to put it simply. The potassium chloride has to be diluted so that it's not too strong, as it can damage tissues and veins.'
âCan be bought at the chemist's? But who . . .?'
âWithout a prescription.'
âWithout a prescription?'
âYes, but as far as I know, very few chemists actually stock it. It can be ordered. There is also a special potassium chloride product that you can only get with a prescription, which is used by patients who are losing potassium. I should imagine that most intensive care units would have some in stock.'
âTell me if I've understood this correctly,' said Stubo slowly. âIf someone gives me an injection with enough diluted potassium, I'll die. And then if you get me on your slab more than one hour later, you would only be able to confirm that I'm dead, and not how I died. Is that what you're saying?'
âYes. But I would still see a syringe mark.'
âSyringe mar . . . But there weren't any injection marks on Kim and Sarah?'
âNo, not that I saw.'
âNot that you saw? You did check the children for injections?'
âOf course.'
The pathologist felt exhausted. His pulse was still high and he breathed in deeply.
âBut I have to admit that I didn't shave them.'
âShave? We're talking about two small kids.'
âOn the head. We try to minimise incisions and interference when we do an autopsy, as we don't want the family to be offended or shocked by what we're required to do. It's possible
to make an injection in the temple area. Not easy, but possible. I have to confess . . .'
He could hear Stubo holding his breath at the other end of the phone.
â. . . I didn't check for syringe marks around the temples. I just didn't think about it.'
They were both thinking the same thing. Neither dared say it. Sarah's body was still available to the pathologist. Kim had already been buried.
âThank goodness we refused permission to cremate,' said Adam eventually.
âI apologise,' said the pathologist. âI really do apologise. With all my heart.'
âI'm sorry too,' said Adam. âAs far as I understand, you've just described the perfect murder to me.'
âM
y son-in-law is in Copenhagen,' said Adam, and put a small boy down on the floor.
The child was somewhere between two and three. He had brown eyes and black hair and smiled shyly at Johanne while keeping a firm hold of his grandfather's calf.
âHe's coming back tomorrow morning. I normally have Amund on Tuesdays and every other weekend, but the way things have been recently . . . I haven't had a chance to do that. And this was an emergency so I couldn't say no.'
He squatted down. The boy didn't want to take off his jacket. Adam pulled down the zip and let him keep it on. Then he tapped the boy gently on the bottom and said:
âJohanne has got some great toys, I'm sure.'
Why didn't you ask me to come to you? she thought. I've never been to your house and it's past eight. You knew that Kristiane was with Isak and this child should be in bed. I could have come to you.
âCome,' she said, and took the boy by the hand. âLet's see what we can find.'
Amund beamed when she led him to the box of cars. He grabbed a tractor and held it up in the air.
âRed tractor,' he said. âRed lorry. Red bus.'
âHe's a bit obsessed with colours at the moment,' said Adam.
âHe'll have a boring time here then,' said Johanne, and helped Amund with a bulldozer that had lost its front wheels.
âIt's exactly a month since Emilie disappeared. Have you thought about that?'
âNo,' he said. âBut you're right. Fourth of May. Where's Jack?'
âI think . . .' Johanne started. The boy dropped the bulldozer and studied an ambulance that Isak had painted with bright-red enamel.