We Shall Inherit the Wind (12 page)

Read We Shall Inherit the Wind Online

Authors: Gunnar Staalesen

On Thursday morning I rang Karin to hear how she had got on. She was on the bus and answered that the night had passed without any difficulties and suggested we talk later.

While eating my breakfast, I wondered how I should go about my new assignment. Going to the council building in Eivindvik and hoping the fish would bite at the Housing and Properties office seemed a touch optimistic. Furthermore, Eivindvik was almost as long a drive as Brennøy. Perhaps it would be best to start with Bringeland, who, by all accounts, had a copy of the contract in his office in the centre of Bergen. When I rang his number I got no further than his secretary, who after some to-ing and fro-ing was able to confirm that Bringeland could spare me five minutes at a quarter to ten. I accepted the appointment, finished breakfast and set off. The five minutes promised could soon become ten once I had a foot in his office.

On my way I bought my regular dose of newspapers and popped by my office to flick through them. The case had filled the front pages of the tabloids and had comprehensive coverage in others.
Crucified for the Environment
was one tabloid headline.
Killed by Eco-Warriors
? said another. But from reading the papers I could see that neither the name of the deceased nor any further details had been released yet. Most was speculation about how far NmV was involved. One of the articles in the biggest local newspaper was entitled:
We are not terrorists, says Ole Rørdal. Strilen
was the only paper to have photos of the crime scene, but it had little more than I had observed myself. One of the nationals had invested in a helicopter trip to Brennøy and was able to print a very impressive aerial photo in which the tall cross could be seen in
all its glory. But the body had already been taken down, to the editor’s undoubted disappointment.

I put all the papers in a heap on my desk, quickly went through the window envelopes I had brought up with me from the post box, confirmed that there were no important e-mails and then took the quickest route to Valkensdorfs gate.

There are no fixed rules and apparently no limits to how a solicitor’s office should look. I had been to some that looked like anything from a broom cupboard to the audience chamber at the Royal Palace in Oslo. Experience had taught me to be sceptical about such offices. The broom cupboard revealed the total lack of any clientele, quite probably for professional reasons. The audience chamber indicated that fees were sky high, the same level as the importance with which the solicitors regarded themselves. You were safest – here as in most other areas of life – in the sober, middle layer, without visible extravagance as regards furniture, more partners than strictly speaking necessary and a battery of secretaries and ante-room ladies who made the barrier to the holy of holies practically impenetrable.

Bringeland & Kleve were located on the third floor somewhere in Valkendorfs gate, in common with most of the solicitors’ offices in Bergen, at a suitable walk from the Courthouse. The secretary was a friendly but prim woman in her fifties of the ilk that usually rule most of the offices I have seen. I saw nothing of Kleve, and when I was ushered in to Bringeland he was putting a thick wad of paper in a briefcase and already appeared to be on his way out.

‘I have only five minutes, Veum.’

‘I’ll get straight to the point then. Have you got a copy of the contract between Per Nordbø and Mons Mæland?’

He scrutinised me, suspicion glinting in his eyes. ‘What do you want with it?’

‘I’ve been asked to look into that case as well – and it would save me a trip to Eivindvik if you had a copy to spare.’

‘Asked by whom, if I may be so bold.’

‘I’m not sure if I …’

‘Then you can forget it!’

I reflected quickly. She hadn’t mentioned any necessity for secrecy. ‘Alright then: TWO.’

‘The opposition, in other words.’

‘I can assure you, Bringeland, I have no axe to grind. All I want are facts.’

He scowled at me, then shrugged his shoulders. ‘Well, I suppose it can’t hurt. The case is open and shut anyway, from my point of view.’ He went to a filing cabinet, pulled out a drawer, chose a file, opened it and extracted a sheet. ‘You can see it, but I’m not going to give you a copy.’

‘Why not?’

‘You can do as I did and contact the council in Eivindvik.’

He passed me the contract. I cast a quick glance at it, established that it had been signed by the shaky hand of the old man, Per Norbø, and that the signature had been confirmed by two witnesses: Bjørn Brekkhus and Gunvor Matre.

‘Have you been in touch with them? With Brekkhus and Matre, I mean.’

‘That’s the contract you wanted to see, isn’t it? I have nothing else to show you.’ He had his coat on. He held out his hand.

Reluctantly I passed him back the contract and watched as he returned it to the filing cabinet. He pushed in the drawer and headed for the door. ‘I’m afraid I have to go now. I’m due in court. Come on.’

I followed him out. On the way down the stairs, I asked: ‘And Stein Svenson, how’s he doing?’

‘He’s picking up. He had a nasty bump to the head and the doctor diagnosed mild concussion. He was told to stay at home until further notice.’

‘And where is home?’

He sent me a scornful look. ‘Aren’t you a kind of investigator?’

‘What did the police say, then?’

‘They said nothing to me. He was questioned, but, as he said when they found him, he couldn’t remember anything. Not unusual with concussion, the doctor affirmed.’  

We were on the street and striding towards the Courthouse.

‘I can find my own way, Veum.’

‘I’m going in that direction anyway. So he didn’t say anything to you, either?’

‘Svenson? About the attack? Let me put it like this, Veum. We’re quite sure it wasn’t Mons Mæland. Otherwise the possibilities are legion.’

‘You pointed a finger at Trond Tangenes while we were there.’

‘Well …’

‘And Jarle Glosvik.’

‘I have nothing else to say, Veum.’ He stopped in front of the stone sculptures of the four cardinal virtues, watching over the entrance to the Courthouse. ‘You can say hello to your employers from me and they can forget it. There will be no wind farm on Brennøy for the next ten years. I’ll make sure of that.’ Then he turned on his heel, dashed up the last steps and disappeared into the great hall.

I was left with the four stone figures: Force, his arm around a pillar, ready for action; Moderation, clutching a jug of wine in his hand – consolation for when the case was finally lost and there was no reason to continue any longer; Justice, with scales and sword – the scales to weigh the solicitors’ efforts in gold and the sword to strike at the head of anyone who dared protest at the decision; and furthest to the east, Wisdom, with the serpent and the book, obviously poisoned by knowledge.

I was not at all sure which of them I trusted most. With a shrug of my shoulders I steered towards the street called Fortunen and down again to my office. If nothing else I should at least find out where Stein Svenson lived. I was sure he wouldn’t mind a little visit from a concerned fellow-Norwegian.

Stein Svenson had an address in Bontveit, in what had once been Fana municipality. After a quick parallel check between the land registry and the local map I walked back up to Skansen, fetched my car and drove off. I had no intention of giving him any warning.

I followed the E39 to Lake Kaland and turned off at the Bontveit intersection. Thereafter the road rose steeply to Frotveit and on to the long valley between Livarden and Hausdalshorgi. Stein Svenson’s tumbledown little smallholding, purchased, according to my information, four years before, was isolated, at the end of a forest road on the slope up to Mount Livgarden. The air was clear and pure, and up here in the mountains there was a touch of autumn in the air.

I turned into the yard in front of the two bedraggled buildings: a shed with what red paint there was hanging off it like dandruff and a small farmhouse that had been painted yellow not so long ago. I parked and sat in the car. In front of the houses there were two other cars. One was a three-year-old Saab 900, which was not the first car I would have chosen if I had a leading job in an environmental organisation. The second I had seen before. It was an Audi A4 with the same registration number as the one that had been parked at Naustvik on Brennøy.

I got out of my car, closed the door quietly behind me and walked carefully towards the house. From inside I heard irregular muffled sounds, like a fight in a cotton warehouse, and two angry voices: one loud and falsetto; the other dark and menacing.

I looked around for something I could use as a weapon. All I could find was a bit of plank lying on the ground by the steps to the front door. I doubted it would have much effect.

I tried the door. It was unlocked. I pushed it and the noises grew
louder. Leaving the door open behind me, to keep my lines of retreat clear, I walked quickly through the porch, noticed an open door to the left, walked over and stood on the threshold.

‘Hey, hey, hey!’ I said, slowly increasing the volume, and not just to attract their attention. ‘Let’s cool it, shall we?’ But I could feel my neck muscles tautening and my stomach churning.

Trond Tangenes had Stein Svenson pressed up against the wall and was holding him off the ground with his forearm. He hung there, his feet thrashing around wildly, ten to fifteen centimetres above the floor. Tangenes’ other fist was primed to strike, and judging by the marks on Svenson’s face he had already scored several direct hits.

Tangenes turned to face me. ‘Keep your distance. This has nothing to do with you.’

I could hear he recognised me. ‘Yes, it has. I have something to discuss with Svenson, and right now you’re in my way.’

He bored his eyes into me. ‘You’ll have to move me then.’

Svenson was still thrashing around. ‘Hey, lemme go, will you!’

Tangenes pressed him harder against the wall, and Svenson’s face went red. ‘He-ey …,’ he whimpered.

‘Shut your mouth!’

‘Listen, Tangenes …’

He didn’t like me knowing what his name was, that much was clear. I continued quickly: ‘Everyone knows who you are. The police, Svenson’s solicitor, me. Right now your fist is telling me that it was you who attacked Svenson on Brennøy. I would recommend you put him down carefully and come with me outside for a chat. And don’t try anything. A lot of people know where I am at this minute.’

‘Oh, yes?’

‘Old rule of the mountains. Let people know where you are.’

I could see his brain working inside his thick skull. Then he made a decision. He loosened his grip on Svenson, let him slowly slide to the floor, grabbed his shoulders and shoved him hard onto the bed in one corner of the room, where he sat staring up at us and gasping for breath with the air of an aggrieved child.  

Tangenes nodded towards the door. ‘Out!’

I backed out slowly, keeping an eye on him and straining all my muscles as I went. In the yard I strode away from the house and turned round. He came after me and stopped four to five metres away.

He grinned. ‘Are you frightened of me, Veum?’

‘Has no one told you your breath stinks?’

He stopped grinning. His eyes narrowed. ‘Get to the point. What was it you wanted to talk about?’

‘I know that Jarle Glosvik is paying you.’

‘Who?’

‘Don’t make me laugh. We all saw you talking on Brennøy.’

‘Now you listen here, Veum. We know all about you.’

‘We?’

‘We know who you are, where you live, where your office is and …’ He glanced at my car. ‘What car you drive. Just like you, I keep my mouth shut about who employs me. Was there anything else you wanted?’

‘It’s very clear that Svenson is the target of your assignment, and that can only be for one reason: the lawsuit he is pursuing against the council with regard to the dubious property deal in 1988. My guess is you were hired to frighten him into dropping it.’

‘You look a bit jumpy yourself, Veum.’

‘You’re wrong there. I know people like you are big mouths, but I’ve been round the block a few times and I’m not impressed. Let me return the warning, Tangenes. Go back to where you came from. You’ve been far too visible on this terrain. I would imagine Hamre gave you the same message when you spoke.’

Tangenes’ jaw tautened. ‘Cops are cops wherever they are in the world. So long as we stay off their hunting grounds they couldn’t care less.’

‘Don’t be too sure about that. Hamre’s not one of them. I know that from my own experience.’

Tangenes suddenly lunged towards me. I reacted immediately and ran.  

He grinned. ‘You’re scared stiff. Boo, Veum! The bogeyman’s coming to get you. Any other messages you wanted to give me?’

I kept a wary eye on him. ‘No. Go home and say you haven’t been here.’

He stood his ground, ruminating. Then he shrugged. ‘Fine. I will. Where’d you like to meet next time? At your girlfriend’s place? In Fløenbakken …’

A chill finger ran down my spine. I could hear they had done their research. ‘Keep well away, Tangenes! Do you hear me!’

He smirked. ‘I’m not promising anything. Let’s leave it like that, eh, Veum? We’ll keep in touch, OK?’ Then he turned, shot the house a final glance, rolled his shoulders back and strolled towards the parked cars.

I looked up at the house, too. Behind one of the unwashed windows I glimpsed the pale face of Stein Svenson watching us.

I stood without stirring until Tangenes had got into his black Audi, started up and accelerated onto the gravel road leaving a cloud of dust behind him. Then I ambled back to the house and went in to see Svenson.

The furniture in the small sitting room, which I assumed from the presence of a bed doubled as a bedroom, looked as if it had come with the house when he bought it: shabby, painted chairs – two of them overturned on the floor – and a wooden table that had seen its best years. The room was dominated by the piles of reading material, most of it on the floor: newspapers, magazines and books. On the table there was a laptop and a portable radio. That was the extent of the modern technology.

Svenson was waiting for me. He was unshaven. His short, red hair was tucked under a large bandage, and he was wearing a faded, dark-blue T-shirt over deep-green combat trousers. His face was not a pleasant sight. Swellings had appeared where Trond Tangenes’ punches had struck home and he stood swaying in the middle of the floor, as if dizzy.

I watched and waited. When nothing was forthcoming, I said: ‘What about: thanks for your help?’

‘No one invited you, did they.’  

‘You would have preferred him to finish the job, would you?’

He sighed involuntarily and gasped for breath. Then he made an attempt to pull himself together. ‘I need some coffee. Find something to sit on.’

He walked past me into the kitchen, and I could hear that he was running water into a kettle. I flipped up the two chairs with my foot and placed one of them at the table. The other I carried to the window where I stood for a while making sure that Tangenes didn’t reappear.

As the water was heating he came to the kitchen door and glared at me. ‘Who are you, actually?’

‘We met on Brennøy. I was one of the people who found you after you’d been trussed up.’

He pinched the bridge of this nose. ‘Yes, I remember you. You’re from TWO, aren’t you?’

‘What makes you think that?’

‘Because you keep trying to deny it.’

‘I’m not sure I understand the logic, but …’

‘And your name …?’

‘Veum. Varg Veum. I’m a private investigator.’

‘Right?’ He appeared unable to absorb this. Then the water boiled and he went back into the kitchen. He clattered around, then returned with a mug in each hand. ‘Only got instant, and nothing to put in it.’

‘That’s fine.’ I took the mug. He made a move towards the table. I checked the window for a last time. All looked nice and peaceful. We sat down on the wooden chairs; his didn’t seem comfortable, either. ‘What did Tangenes want from you?’

‘Tangenes?’

‘The guy we turfed out.’

His eyes wandered. ‘He said we should drop the lawsuit.’

‘The land deal?’

‘Yes.’

‘Anything about the wind farm?’

‘Nope.’

‘Did he say who’d sent him?’

He started to shake his head, but stopped and groaned. ‘Shit!’

‘Sore head?’

‘Well deduced. No, he didn’t say who’d sent him, and I don’t give a rat shit.’

‘Are you going to follow his advice?’

He stared at me defiantly. ‘You clearly don’t know Stein Svenson. I don’t buckle that easily.’

‘Do you think it was him who attacked you on Brennøy?’

Carefully, he shrugged his shoulders. ‘Don’t ask me. I don’t remember a thing.’ He held the back of his head. ‘But I do know this. Whoever it was, came from behind.’

‘I should tell you something. The night before, I was woken by a heated argument outside my window. When I went to see who it was, I saw you and Ole Rørdal having a go at each other …’

‘Oh, yes? So? Are you trying to say that it was Ole who …?’ He pointed to his head and raised his eyebrows.

‘You slept on the boat, and when Ole and Else passed underneath my window I heard Ole say very clearly: “We aren’t terrorists!”’

‘Right, and?’

‘My conclusion is that the disagreement between you and Ole was about something he called “terrorism”.’ As he didn’t respond, I added: ‘Others might call it drastic action.’

His eyes were heavy and sad. ‘I still don’t understand where this is going …’

‘The murder of Mons Mæland, for example.’

‘The murder of … Are you out of your mind? Do you think anyone in an environmental organisation would go that far to promote their cause?’

‘That’s one of the main theories in the papers today.’

‘The papers! Pah! Surely you don’t bloody believe what they write? They’ve been after us ever since we set up.’

‘Why?’

‘We’re not house-trained enough. We barge in where others fear to tread. We’re the only bloody people who dare to say what these wind farms along the coast will really do.’  

‘There have been other critical voices, too …’

‘Yes, but we … We take action, right?’

‘Yes, exactly.’ I leaned forward. ‘And what sort?’

He sighed. ‘Yes, drastic action. But murder? You’re way off target.’

‘Well, give me examples of the action you’ve planned then!’

‘Why should I? So that you can run off to TWO and warn them?’

‘I don’t represent …’ But upon mature reflection, that was exactly what I was doing. Instead, I changed the topic. ‘This land deal, where did the idea come from?’

‘Are we back to that?’

I nodded. ‘Glosvik and Tangenes are not the only ones preoccupied by it, you know.’

‘So? That could be called pretty drastic action, couldn’t it?’

‘Hardly drastic enough for it to be called terrorism. It would have to be something like hijacking a plane after sending an application in triplicate two weeks in advance.’

‘You’ll see – it will delay the whole process long enough for people to see the light before the farm is completed.’

‘See the light about what?’

‘Wind turbines! Isn’t that what this is about?’

‘Yes, probably.’

‘Probably?’

‘How did you get onto this land deal idea?’

‘Get onto? We trawled through public documents and then this name cropped up. Per Nordbø. I knew we had someone called Nordbø in the family, so I kept at it and then we realised that, well, in fact I had a claim.’

‘But the assertion that Per Nordbø was not of sound mind when he signed …’

‘Yes, that was Bringe– …’ He caught himself too late.

I nodded. ‘That was Bringeland’s idea. Thought so. How much commission have you agreed if the land ends up in your hands?’

He wouldn’t answer the question. Instead he said: ‘You can interview the people who signed the purchase agreement. The crown witnesses.’  

‘Bjørn Brekkhus and Gunvor Matre?’

‘Yeah. Think that’s their names … maybe.’

‘I’ll follow your advice. I’ll talk to them.’

‘Have fun!’

I took a sip of coffee. He did the same. We sat staring at each other.

‘There’s one other matter I was wondering about, Svenson. The first two times we met you asked if I was from Norcraft. Why?’

His eyes narrowed again. ‘I asked, that was all.’ I waited for him to go on, and he was unable to resist. ‘I had a suspicion.’

‘A suspicion about what?’

‘That they would try to buy him off.’

‘Buy whom off? Ole Rørdal?’

‘It was likely they would try anyway, and Ole … Well, perhaps, he’s not quite as strong as he appears.’

‘Was this what was behind your disagreement?’

‘Probably, yes. He’d suddenly started to lose his steel. Wasn’t willing to go as far as … some of us wanted.’

‘You suspected he’d been bought?’

He shrugged. ‘How can I know? Anything can happen in this dirty business.’

I opened my mouth, but he interrupted. ‘I’ve got nothing else to say.’

‘Fine. So what now? Are you going to report the assault to the police?’

His eyes went walkabout. ‘This today?’

‘Yes, I wasn’t thinking of the previous occasion. They already know about that one.’

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