Authors: Karin Fossum
"We'll bring them home to you as soon as possible," Sejer said.
Gunder nodded. "It'll be good to have something," he said bravely.
"There's one more thing," Sejer said. "We've received a letter from the police in New Delhi. You can see it if you wish."
He nodded and took the sheet of paper. Struggled a bit with the English wording.
"Mr. Shiraz Bai, living in New Delhi, confirms one sister, Poona, born on June 1st, 1962. Left for Norway on August 19th. Mr. Bai will come to Oslo on September 10th to take his sister home."
Gunder gasped. "Back? To India? But she's my wife! I've got the marriage certificate here. Surely I'm her closest relative? Can he do this?" Gunder was so upset that he stood on the floor, shaking. The blue eyes shone with fear and the letter trembled in his hands.
Sejer tried to calm him down. "We'll help you with this. I'm sure we'll find a solution."
"I must have some rights. A marriage is a marriage."
"It is," Sejer said. He opened a drawer in his desk. "However, at least I can let you take this home." He handed Gunder a slim envelope. "Her brooch."
Gunder had to wipe away a tear when he saw the beautiful piece of jewelry.
"She'll be buried with this," he said firmly.
Carefully he put the brooch in his inside pocket and hugged his jacket tightly around himself.
"We're chipping away at this case," Sejer said. "It will be solved."
Gunder looked down at the floor.
"I know that you've other things on your mind," Sejer said. "You're a widower now."
This made Gunder raise his head. Sejer had called him a widower. It felt like restitution. He drove home and called his brother-in-law to tell him about Marie. He always did that when he returned from the hospital. Though there wasn't much to tell.
"It's odd that someone can lie as still as that," he said to Karsten. "And not even blink. Imagine if she loses her voice."
"It'll just be a bit hoarse," Karsten said. "They can probably rehabilitate it."
"Everything will need rehabilitating," Gunder said sadly. "Her muscles are wasting away. They say that her body is turning soft. They say..."
"All right, all right. We'll just have to be patient. I don't want to hear any more. I don't understand a word of it, anyway."
Fear crept into his voice. Karsten had not mentioned Poona at all, though by now it had leaked out who she actually was. Gunder was deeply hurt. He stood there, fiddling with the curly telephone cord. Karsten didn't come to the hospital. Gunder personally was happy to sit by his sister's bedside. He spoke quietly and somberly to her about everything that had happened. They've found her suitcase now, Marie. With her clothes. And her brother's coming. I'm so worried. I took his sister from him. True, Poona said they weren't especially close, but all the same. He advised her against going. And he was right.
He sat there, talking in this way. Thus he coped with his thoughts, one by one.
He was still on sick leave and did not want to return to work. The days came and went. Sometimes Bjørnsson called to chat. He seemed perky. He had finally gotten the chance to show them what he was made of, now that their senior salesperson was away. But Svarstad had asked for Jomann. And according to Bjørnsson had stood there gawking in the doorway when he heard the lengthy story. He had never believed that Jomann had the courage to go abroad and find himself a wife.
***
"In an earlier interview with one of our officers, Jacob Skarre, you stated that you were with your girlfriend, Ulla, on the evening of August 20th."
Sejer looked at Gøran Seter, who smiled back at him. The scratches on his face were now reduced to faint lines. "That's correct."
"However, the interview with the young lady revealed the following: She's no longer your girlfriend and she didn't spend the evening with you. You worked out together at Adonis Studio from 6
P.M.
to around 8
P.M.
Thereafter she ended the relationship. At which point you drove off in anger, alone in the car. And subsequently passed Hvitemoen sometime between 8:30
P.M.
and 9
P.M.
"
Gøran Seter's eyes widened. He was a heavily built man, with blond hair with bright red stripes. His hair stood up. His eyes shone intensely. Sejer was reminded of pearls of mercury.
"So Ulla's ended it again?" He let out a bemused laugh. "She tends to do that. It happens all the time—I've stopped taking it seriously."
"I'm less interested in whether you're still in a relationship or not. You have previously stated that you were with her later that evening, at her sister's, and that's not correct."
"It is. But excuse me, why do I have to answer this?"
"We're investigating a murder. A great many people have to answer a great many questions. You are, in other words, just one of many. If that makes you feel better."
"I don't need to feel better."
Gøran was strong and convincing. The smile never left his face.
"Ulla likes to make trouble," he explained. "Not according to my officer."
"Well, he spoke to her for a few minutes. I've known her for over a year."
"So you still maintain that you spent the evening with her?"
"Yes. We were babysitting."
"Why would Ulla lie about this? To a police officer?"
"If he was attractive, that would probably be reason enough. She goes for everyone. Wanted to appear available, I guess."
"That's a bit cheap, in my opinion."
"You don't have any idea what lengths girls will go to to make themselves look interesting. They'll stop at nothing. Ulla is no exception."
"Have you been to her sister's house before?"
"Yes." His smile broadened. "So I can describe to you the living room and the kitchen and the bathroom. What a shame, eh?"
"How were you dressed when you left Adonis?"
"Tennis shirt. White probably. Black Levi's. That's what I wear."
"You showered after the workout?"
"Of course."
"Nevertheless, you took another shower later on?" Brief pause.
"How do you know that?"
"I've been speaking to your mother. You were home by 11
P.M.
Went straight to the shower."
"If you say so."
Still he smiled. No fear or anxiety. The heavy body rested in the chair, carefully sculpted.
"Why?"
"Felt like it."
"Your mother also said that when you came home that night you were wearing a blue T-shirt and gray jogging pants. Did you change again after your workout?"
"My mom's memory is not all that great, in my opinion."
"So you're the only one in the village who can think straight, is that it, Gøran?"
"No. But honestly, she doesn't notice stuff like that. However, I do work out in a blue T-shirt and gray jogging pants."
"So after you left Adonis wearing a clean white shirt and before you came home, did you change back into your sweaty workout clothes?"
"No, I'm telling you. It's Mom who's getting it mixed up."
"What did you wear on your feet?"
"Sneakers. These ones."
He stretched out his legs and showed Sejer.
"They look new."
"Not at all. They've been worn."
"Can I see the soles?"
He lifted his feet. The soles of the sneakers were white as chalk.
"Who did you call?"
"Call? When?"
"You made a call in your car. Ulla saw you."
For the first time Gøran looked serious.
"I called someone I know. Simple as that."
Sejer considered this. "This is your situation as of today. You passed the crime scene in your car at the crucial time. You drive a red Golf. A similar car was seen at the scene, parked on the roadside. A witness saw a man wearing a white shirt out in the meadow. He was with a woman. You're lying about where you spent the evening. Several witnesses have remarked that your face was scratched when you turned up at Einar's Café on the 21st, the day after the murder. Your face is still scratched. I'm sure you can appreciate that I need an explanation for this."
"I had a fight with my dog. And I don't go around assaulting women. I don't need to. I have Ulla."
"That's not what she says, Gøran."
"Ulla says a lot of things." He was no longer smiling.
"I don't think so. I'll be back."
"No. I won't have you bothering me. Screw you."
"My only concern is for the dead woman, no one else," Sejer said.
"Your type is never concerned about anyone."
Sejer went out into the yard. He had a strong feeling that Gøran Seter was hiding something. But everyone is, he thought, and it doesn't have to be a murder. That's what made this job so difficult: There was a touch of guilt in everyone, which put them in a bad light, sometimes quite undeservedly. The ruthlessness of it, digging into other people's lives, was the part of the job he most disliked. So he closed his eyes and summoned up the image of Poona's battered head.
Sara was waiting for him, sitting on the sofa, with a pot of coffee ready. Kollberg was lying at her feet. The dog was dreaming he was chasing something; his paws were twitching as though he was racing at great speed. Sejer wondered if dogs experienced the same nightmarish feelings when they dreamed, the sensation of running in place.
"He'll never grow up," Sejer mused. "He's just an overgrown puppy."
"Maybe something happened in his childhood." Sara laughed and poured him some coffee. "What do you know about Kollberg's first weeks?"
Sejer thought back. "He wasn't quick enough. Always the last one to get to the food. Pushed around by the other puppies. It was a big litter, thirteen in all."
"Then he's been starved for attention. And you picked the puppy you ought never to have taken."
Sejer chose to ignore this. "But since then he's had far too much. This starvation—it'll pass, surely?"
"Something like that never passes," Sara said.
They turned off the lamps and sat in the twilight. A candle burned on the table. Sejer thought of Poona.
"Why did he destroy her face?" he said. "What does that mean?"
"I don't know," she said.
"There must have been a reason for it."
"Perhaps he thought she was ugly."
Sejer was astonished. "What makes you say so?"
"Sometimes it's that simple. You're fucking ugly, too, he thinks. His fury is provoked and he crosses a line." She sipped her coffee. "What do you think? Is he desperately unhappy now?"
"Not necessarily. But I'd like to think he was."
"You're so upright," she smiled. "You'd like remorse."
"In this case it would be entirely appropriate. But when we catch him he'll above all be concerned with his own survival. Make excuses for himself. Defend himself. He has rights, too, he'll say."
Sara got up and squatted on the floor next to Kollberg, scratching his back. Sejer saw the heavy animal rock backward and forward contentedly beneath her hands.
"He has a lump under his coat," she said. "Here. On his back."
Sejer gave her an uneasy look.
"In fact, several," she said. "Three or four. Have you noticed, Konrad?"
"No," he said.
"You need to get him to a vet."
There was a trace of fear in his normally calm face.
"You know," she said, "at his age these things happen. And a dog his size—how old is he now?"
"Ten."
Sejer remained on the sofa. Didn't want to touch the lumps. Fear filled him like freezing water. He got up reluctantly and searched with his fingers through the thick fur.
"I'll call first thing in the morning."
He sat down again and reached for his tobacco pouch to make a cigarette. His daily ration was one whiskey and one cigarette. Sara looked at him lovingly.
"You're a man with enormous self-control."
Sejer had shut her out. Escaped from this business with the dog and gone to some other place. She could tell in his eyes.
"There's not much through traffic in the area," he said in a faraway voice.
"Where are you now?" Sara said, confused.
"In Elvestad. Chances are that he's local."
"Good for you. I don't suppose many people live there?"
"More than 2,000."
"I could call the vet and make an appointment. Or I could take him. You've got a lot going on."
He lit the cigarette. It was unusually thick.
"You might as well roll two slim ones," she teased him.
"They might just be cysts. Filled with fluid."
She heard the anxiety in his voice and how he suppressed his fear. The lumps did not contain fluid. She was sure of that.
"We've got to get them looked at. He's finding the stairs difficult."
"For all I know we've already spoken to the killer," he said.
Sara shook her head. She kept on stroking Kollberg's back. The dog was aging. He didn't want to see it. His brow was deeply furrowed. The business with the lumps reminded him of something. He was in a place that was shut off to her.
"He's thinner, too. When did you last weigh him?"
"He weighs 150 pounds," Sejer said stubbornly.
"I'll get the bathroom scale."
"Are you crazy?" He frowned. Once she was out of sight he sprang up from the sofa and knelt down. Raised the dog's heavy head and looked into the black eyes.
"You're not sick, are you, old pal? You're just getting on a bit. So am I."
He placed the head softly on the dog's front paws. Sara came back with the scale.
"Hang on," he said. "He's not a circus elephant."
"We'll try," she said. "I'll get a cold potato."
The dog sensed that something was about to happen and got up eagerly. They reset the scale to zero and nudged him onto it. They pushed his paws together and Sara supported his sides. He recognized the familiar smell of food and wanted to cooperate. After much encouragement Kollberg finally shook hands while he stood wobbling on his three remaining legs. Sejer looked down at the digital display: 120.78 pounds.
"He's lost 30 pounds," said Sara.
"It's his age," he said.
Kollberg swallowed the potato and lay down.