Nemesis (50 page)

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Authors: Jo Nesbø

BOOK: Nemesis
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‘There was a boy in my class called Ludwig Alexander,’ Harry said out loud.

The smokers stamped their feet and looked at the inspector.

‘He was linguistically inclined and was called Kebab. Because once in the English lesson he had been stupid enough to tell the teacher he liked the word “barbecue” spelt as “BBQ” because that would be kebab backwards. When the snows came, there was a snowball fight between the classes in every break. Kebab didn’t want to join in, but we forced him to. It was the only thing we let him join in. As cannon fodder. He was so bad at throwing that all he managed was a few weak lobs. The other class had Roar, a fat kid who played handball for Oppsal. He used to head Kebab’s snowballs away for fun and then pepper him black and blue with his underarm swings. One day Kebab put a big stone in a snowball and threw it as high as he could. Roar jumped up with a smile and headed it. The sound was like a stone hitting a stone in shallow water, hard and soft at the same time. That was the only time I saw an ambulance in the school yard.’

Harry sucked hard on his cigarette.

‘In the staff room they argued for days about whether Kebab should be punished. After all, he hadn’t thrown the snowball at
anyone, so the question was: Should a person be punished for showing no consideration towards an idiot behaving like an idiot?’

Harry stubbed out his cigarette and went inside.

It was after half past four. The cold wind had picked up speed in the open stretch between the Akerselva and the metro station in Grønlands torv. Schoolchildren and pensioners were giving way to women and men with closed faces and ties hurrying home from their offices. Harry bumped into one of them as he ran down the stairs into the underground and a swear word echoed between the walls and followed him. He stopped in front of the window between the toilets. It was the same elderly lady who had sat there last time.

‘I have to talk to Simon right now.’

Her calm, brown eyes took him in.

‘He’s not in Tøyen,’ Harry said. ‘Everyone has left.’

The woman shrugged her shoulders, bewildered.

‘Say it’s Harry.’

She shook her head and waved him away.

Harry leaned over to the glass separating them. ‘Say it’s the
spiuni gjerman
.’

Simon drove down Enebakkveien instead of taking the long Ekeberg tunnel.

‘I don’t like tunnels, you know,’ he explained as they crept up the side of the mountain at snail’s pace in the afternoon rush hour.

‘So the two brothers who had run away to Norway and grown up together in a caravan fell out because they were in love with the same girl?’ Harry said.

‘Maria came from a very respectable Lovarra family. They lived in Sweden where her daddy was the
bulibas.
She married Stefan and moved to Oslo when she was just thirteen and he was eighteen. Stefan was so in love with her he would have died for her. At that time
Raskol was in hiding in Russia, you know. Not from the police, but from some Kosovo-Albanians in Germany who thought he had cheated them in some business.’

‘Business?’

‘They found an empty trailer by the autobahn near Hamburg.’ Simon smiled.

‘But Raskol returned?’

‘One sunny May day he returned to Tøyen. That was when Maria and he saw each other for the first time.’ Simon laughed. ‘My God, how they stared at each other. I had to inspect the heavens to see if thunder was on its way, the air was so tense.’

‘So they fell for each other?’

‘In seconds. While everyone was watching. Some of the women were embarrassed.’

‘But if it was so obvious, the relatives must have reacted, didn’t they?’

‘They didn’t think it was so dangerous. You mustn’t forget we marry earlier than you do, you know. We cannot stop the young ones. They fall in love. Thirteen, you can imagine . . .’

‘I can.’ Harry rubbed the back of his neck.

‘But this was a serious business, you see. She was married to Stefan and loved Raskol from the first day she saw him. And even though she and Stefan lived in their own caravan, she met Raskol, who was there the whole time. So things took the course they had to take. When Anna was born, only Stefan and Raskol were not aware Raskol was the father.’

‘Poor girl.’

‘And poor Raskol. The only person who was happy was Stefan. He walked three metres tall, you know. He said Anna was as good-looking as her daddy.’ Stefan smiled with sad eyes. ‘Perhaps it could have gone on like that. If Stefan and Raskol hadn’t decided to rob a bank.’

‘And it went wrong?’

The queue of cars moved towards Ryen crossroads.

‘There were three of them. Stefan was the oldest, so he was the first in and the last out. While the other two ran out with the money to fetch the getaway car, Stefan stayed inside the bank with his pistol raised so they would not set off the alarm. They were amateurs, they didn’t even know that the bank had a silent alarm. When they drove up to collect Stefan, he was stretched out over the bonnet of a police car. One officer had put handcuffs on him. Raskol was driving. He was only seventeen and didn’t even have a licence. He rolled down the window. With three thousand on the back seat, he slowly drove up to the police car where his brother was struggling on the bonnet. Then Raskol and the officer had eye contact. My God, the air was as thick as when he and Maria met. Their mutual staring went on for ever. I was frightened Raskol would yell, but he didn’t say a word. He just drove on. That was the first time they saw each other.’

‘Raskol and Jørgen Lønn?’

Simon nodded. They came off the roundabout and went into the bend in Ryen. Simon signalled then braked by a petrol station. They pulled up in front of a twelve-storey building. The DnB logo flashed from a blue neon sign over the entrance nearby.

‘Stefan got four years because he had fired his gun in the air,’ Simon said. ‘But after the trial, you know, something odd happens. Raskol visits Stefan in Botsen and the day after one of the guards says he thinks the new prisoner has changed appearance. His superior says it’s normal for first-time prisoners. He tells him about wives who haven’t recognised their own husbands on their first visit. The guard is reassured, but a few days later a woman phones the prison. She says they have the wrong prisoner. Stefan Baxhet’s little brother has taken his place and they have to let the prisoner go.’

‘Is that really true?’ Harry asks, pulling out his lighter and putting it to the end of his cigarette. ‘Yes, it is,’ Simon says. ‘It’s quite normal among gypsies in southern Europe for the younger sibling, or the son, to serve the convicted person’s sentence, if he has a family to feed. As Stefan did. For us, it is a matter of honour, you know.’

‘But the authorities would soon discover the mistake, wouldn’t they?’

‘Hah!’ Simon threw out his arms. ‘For you a gypsy is a gypsy. If he’s in prison for something he didn’t do, he’s sure to have been guilty of something else.’

‘Who rang in?’

‘They never found out, but Maria vanished the same night. They never saw her again. The police drove Raskol to Tøyen in the middle of the night and Stefan was dragged kicking and swearing out of the caravan. Anna was two years old and lay in bed screaming for her mummy and there was no one, no man and no woman, who could stop her howling. Until Raskol went in and lifted her up.’

They stared at the entrance to the bank. Harry glanced at his watch. Only a couple of minutes until it closed. ‘What happened then?’

‘When Stefan had served his sentence, he immediately left the country. I talked to him on the phone now and then. He travelled a lot.’

‘And Anna?’

‘She grew up in the caravan, you know. Raskol sent her to school. She had
gadjo
friends.
Gadjo
habits. She didn’t want to live like us; she wanted to do what her friends did – make her own decisions, earn her own money and have her own place to live. Since she inherited her grandmother’s flat and moved into Sorgenfrigata, we haven’t had anything to do with her. She . . . well, she chose to move. The only person she had any contact with was Raskol.’

‘Do you think she knew he was her father?’

Simon shrugged. ‘As far as I know, no one said anything, but I’m sure she knew.’

They sat in silence.

‘This is where it happened,’ Simon said.

‘Just before closing time,’ Harry said. ‘Like now.’

‘He wouldn’t have shot Lønn if he hadn’t been forced to,’ Simon said. ‘But he does what he has to do. He’s a warrior, you know.’

‘No giggling concubines.’

‘What?’

‘Nothing. Where is Stefan, Simon?’

‘I don’t know.’

Harry waited. They watched a bank employee lock the door from the inside. Harry continued to wait.

‘The last time I talked to him, he was ringing from a town in Sweden,’ Simon said. ‘Gothenburg. That’s all I can help you with.’

‘It’s not me you’re helping.’

‘I know,’ Simon sighed. ‘I know.’

Harry found the yellow house in Vetlandsveien. The lights on both floors were lit. He parked, got out and stood looking at the metro station. That was where they had met on the first dark autumn evenings to go apple scrumping. Sigge, Tore, Kristian, Torkild, Øystein and Harry. That was the fixed team line-up. They had cycled to Nordstrand because the apples were bigger there and the chances of anyone knowing your father smaller. Sigge had climbed over the fence first and Øystein had kept lookout. Harry had been the tallest and could reach the biggest apples. One evening, however, they hadn’t felt like cycling so far and they had gone scrumping in their local neighbourhood.

Harry looked across at the garden on the other side of the road.

They had already filled their pockets when he had discovered the face staring down at them from the illuminated window on the first floor. Without saying a word. It was Kebab.

Harry opened the gate and went up to the door.
JØRGEN AND KRISTIN LØNN
was painted on the porcelain sign over the two bells. Harry rang the top one.

Beate didn’t answer until he had pressed twice.

She asked if he wanted tea, but he shook his head and she went into the kitchen while he kicked off his boots in the hallway.

‘Why’s your father’s name still on the sign?’ he asked when she
came into the sitting room with a cup. ‘So that strangers will think a man lives in the house?’

She shrugged and settled into a deep armchair. ‘We’ve never got round to doing anything about it. His name has probably been there so long we don’t see it any more.’

‘Mm.’ Harry pressed his palms together. ‘That’s basically what I wanted to talk about.’

‘The door sign?’

‘No. Dysosmia. Not being able to smell bodies.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘I was standing in the hall yesterday looking at the first e-mail I’d received from Anna’s murderer. It was the same as with your door sign. The senses registered it, but not the brain. That’s what dysosmia is. The printout had been hanging there for so long I had stopped seeing it, just like the photo of Sis and me. When it was stolen, I only noticed something was different, but not what it was. Do you know why?’

Beate shook her head.

‘Because nothing had happened to me which would make me see things differently. I saw only what I assumed to be there. Something happened yesterday, though. Ali said he had seen a woman’s back by the cellar door. It suddenly struck me that all the time I had assumed Anna’s murderer was a man, without realising it. Whenever you make the mistake of imagining what you think you’re looking for, you don’t see the other things you find. That made me see the e-mail with new eyes.’

Beate’s eyebrows formed two quotation marks. ‘Do you mean to say it wasn’t Alf Gunnerud who killed Anna Bethsen?’

‘You know what an anagram is, don’t you,’ Harry said.

‘A letter game . . .’

‘Anna’s murderer left a
patrin
for me. A sign. I saw it in the mirror. The e-mail was signed with a woman’s name. Back to front. So I sent the e-mail to Aune, who contacted a specialist in cognitive psychology and language. From a single sentence in an anonymous
threatening letter he had been able to determine gender, age and origins of the person. In this case, he was able to say the e-mails were written by a person of either gender, between twenty and seventy and potentially from anywhere in the country. Not much help, in other words. Except that he thought it may have been a woman. Because of one single word. It says “you policemen” and not “you police” or some non-specific collective term. He says the sender may have chosen that word unconsciously because it makes a distinction between the gender of the receiver and the sender.’

Harry leaned back in the chair.

Beate put down her cup. ‘I can’t exactly say I’m convinced, Harry. An unidentified woman in the stairwell, a code which is a woman’s name backwards and a psychologist who thinks Alf Gunnerud chose a female way of expressing himself.’

‘Mm,’ Harry nodded. ‘Agreed. First of all, I want to tell you what put me onto this trail. But before I tell you who killed Anna, I would like to ask you if you can help me find a missing person.’

‘Of course. But why ask me? Missing persons are not—’

‘Yes, they are.’ Harry smiled sadly. ‘Missing persons are your field.’

43
Ramona

H
ARRY FOUND
V
IGDIS
A
LBU DOWN BY THE BEACH.
S
HE WAS
sitting on the same smooth rock where he had fallen asleep with his hands around his knees staring into the fjord. In the morning mist the sun resembled a pale imprint of itself. Gregor ran up to Harry wagging his tail. It was low tide and the sea smelt of seaweed and oil. Harry sat down on a small rock behind her and flipped out a cigarette.

‘Did
you
find him?’ she asked, without turning. Harry wondered how long she had been waiting for him.

‘Many people found Arne Albu,’ he answered. ‘I was one of them.’

She stroked away a wisp of hair dancing in front of her face in the wind. ‘Me, too. But that was a long, long time ago. You may not believe me, but I loved him once.’

Harry clicked the lighter. ‘Why shouldn’t I believe you?’

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