Read The Strangler's Honeymoon Online
Authors: Hakan Nesser
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
‘Yes, I can understand that,’ said Van Veeteren, taking out his cigarette machine. ‘But I think I’ve already remembered everything it’s possible to remember. I spoke to Moreno about it a month ago, after all. On my initiative, note that.’
‘Yes, I know about that,’ said Reinhart. ‘We don’t intend to arrest you just yet. Have you anything against my trying to reel off what you said, and you can squeal whenever I put a foot wrong?’
‘Fire away,’ said Van Veeteren. ‘As long as I can smoke in peace and quiet.’
Reinhart leaned back, took a deep breath, and started off.
‘Pastor Gassel comes in to see you at Krantze’s and wants to talk to you. Date: fifteenth of September. Is that right?’
‘Yes.’
‘You turn him down, but nevertheless you have the impression there’s something he wants to get off his chest . . . Something he’s been told, that is covered by his vow of silence. He mentions the word “she”.’
Van Veeteren nodded and began rolling a cigarette.
‘A reasonable assumption to make, in the light of what happened later, is that he was referring to Monica Kammerle. Or possibly her mother, although that is significantly less likely as it was in the girl’s room that we found his name, and it was in her handwriting. In any case, “she” must have told this priest about some problem or other. Central to this problem is an unknown person, probably a man, who eventually makes sure all those involved are removed out of the way. Gassel. Martina Kammerle. Monica Kammerle. We haven’t yet found the last-named, but unfortunately that’s probably only a matter of time. Anyway, that’s more or less the scenario as we see it. One of the possibilities, at least.’
Van Veeteren lit his cigarette.
‘Yes,’ he said. ‘It fits together, just as you say. There’s only one question mark, as far as I can see.’
‘Really?’ said Reinhart.
‘I know what the chief . . . I know what you mean,’ said Münster. ‘You are referring to the minor detail of who did it. The perpetrator. Is that right?’
‘Yes,’ said Van Veeteren. ‘There must be some bastard behind all this.’
Reinhart started working on his pipe and tobacco.
‘That thought had occurred to me as well,’ he muttered. ‘Believe it or not. It’s amazing how a former chief inspector can still hit the nail on the head in certain circumstances. Anyway, what indications did you get of a perpetrator of this nature during your conversation with the priest?’
Van Veeteren thought that over for about five seconds.
‘None at all,’ he said. ‘It was hardly a conversation, incidentally. He was with me for about two minutes at most.’
‘Are you sure? There’s nothing you’ve forgotten?’
Van Veeteren snorted.
‘Of course I’m damned well sure. What are you getting at? If there’s one place in this world where I feel at home, it’s inside my own head.’
‘Congratulations,’ said Reinhart. ‘Forgive my insistent style – it would be great fun to submit you to a proper interrogation one of these days, but I don’t suppose that’s likely to happen . . .’
‘I tread the straight and narrow,’ said Van Veeteren grumpily. ‘I don’t suppose you’ve ever heard of that.’
Reinhart lit his pipe and transformed his mouth into something that might – just possibly – be interpreted as a smile.
‘Anyway,’ he said, ‘back to business. I spent four hours this morning studying old cases involving strangulation. I can tell you that it made inspiring reading. But I suppose I ought to devote myself now to cases involving victims being pushed under trains . . .’
‘Sounds interesting,’ said Münster. ‘And it would be even more interesting to hear if you found anything.’
‘Keep plodding away and eventually you’ll come across something,’ said Reinhart. ‘Yes, I think so. If we accept the ten-year time limit, as I suggested yesterday, there are only two unsolved cases in the whole country similar to this one – strangulation cases, that is. If I were pressed to be more rigorous, I’d say in fact just one.’
‘So you’re saying he’s been at it before?’ asked Van Veeteren.
‘Yes,’ said Reinhart, pulling a face again. ‘I think that’s what I’m saying. It’s all hypothetical, of course, but the more it rains, the more flourishing theories tend to look. There was a case up at Wallburg last summer which could well have involved a murderer like ours. A twenty-six-year-old woman strangled in her flat. From behind. I’m told it’s more difficult to do from behind. Bare hands. No clues and no suspects. I’m waiting for a call from Wallburg, but I intend to ask Meusse to take a look into it at any event, and come up with an informed guess.’
‘Meusse doesn’t know the meaning of the term uninformed guess,’ said Münster.
‘Exactly,’ said Reinhart.
Van Veeteren stood up and walked over to the window.
‘Stranglers are not among my favourite people,’ he said, gazing out over Wejmargraacht and the misty-grey Wollerimsparken. ‘There’s something extra unpleasant about a murderer who doesn’t even need a weapon.’
‘Perhaps he’s an Eco-murderer?’ suggested Münster. ‘No environmentally damaging aids needed. All natural and healthy.’
‘For Christ’s sake,’ said Reinhart. ‘If I had thoughts like that I’d seek help.’
‘I’m not saying I’m guilty of anything,’ said Van Veeteren, swirling the wine around in his glass. ‘I’m just saying that if . . .
if
I’d made time to listen to him, maybe two people, and possibly even three, would still be alive, instead of . . . Ah well, that’s all I’m saying. Nothing more.’
‘So I gather,’ said Ulrike Fremdli. ‘You’ve explained that three times now.’
‘Have I?’ said Van Veeteren, staring at his glass in genuine surprise. ‘I suppose that must mean I’m going gaga . . . This is a very good wine, where did you get it from?’
‘The supermarket in Löhr,’ said Ulrike. ‘It’s Californian.’
‘Californian?’
‘Yes.’
‘The times are out of joint,’ muttered Van Veeteren. ‘I’d have sworn it was Saint-Émilion at the very least.’
‘I don’t think it’s got anything at all to do with going gaga,’ said Ulrike after a while, contemplating him over the top of her reading glasses. ‘You have a policeman’s soul deep down inside you, and that’s what drives you when something like this crops up. And as you often say, if something keeps us awake at night, we have to come to grips with it. No matter what it is. And anything we dream of more than twice.’
‘Is that what I say?’ asked Van Veeteren. ‘I must be pretty brainy.’
Ulrike laughed and stroked his cheek.
‘I like you so very, very much – do you know that? My mature and serious lover.’
‘Huh. Reinhart maintained that I was looking much younger. But in any case, you’re right. And I’m right as well. There’s somebody at large in this town who in all probability has killed three people, and maybe more. With his bare hands. I don’t like it. I wish I could stop thinking about it, but I can’t . . . What did you say it was, a copper’s soul?’
‘A policeman’s soul,’ said Ulrike. ‘You could also call it your conscience if you wanted to be pedantic about it. Or your duty. Are you intending to devote all your efforts to this business?’
Van Veeteren emptied his glass and sighed.
‘I don’t think so,’ he said. ‘I might do if they ask me to, but I don’t suppose they dare . . . We’ll see. Anyway, while we’re on the subject . . . I’ve told you all about this business, but there’s one aspect I’m starting to wonder more and more about.’
‘What’s that?’
‘What’s behind it all. What exactly it was that the priest wanted to tell me, and what made the killer murder three people – assuming the girl is also dead.’
Ulrike took off her glasses and stared up at the ceiling.
‘I can see your problem,’ she said. ‘Something must have been badly wrong even when he came to see you, of course. No, I have no idea. Have you?’
Van Veeteren shook his head and sat in silence for a while.
‘Speaking of coincidences,’ he said eventually, ‘do you know what turned up at the bookshop today?’
He stood up and went to fetch some books from his briefcase in the study. He handed them over to Ulrike.
‘
Deter
. . .
The Determinant
?’ she said in surprise. That’s what you keep going on about and I can never understand. What’s it all about?’
Van Veeteren thought for a moment.
‘What you’ve just said might be the best way of describing it,’ he said. ‘The tiny driving force that governs everything that happens, although we don’t realize that it’s doing so. Something we don’t have a name for yet. I’m looking for the question whose answer is “life”, as it were.’
‘Rappaport?’ said Ulrike, scrutinizing the covers, one mainly red and the other mainly white. ‘Have you read them?’
‘No,’ said Van Veeteren. ‘I can’t read Swedish, unfortunately.’
21
‘Inspector Baasteuwel from Wallburg. Am I speaking to Chief Inspector Reinhart?’
‘You certainly are. What did you say your name was? Baas- . . . ?’
‘. . . -teuwel. I’m ringing in connection with that strangulation case last summer you were wondering about. I was in charge of it. We got nowhere, unfortunately – but that happens in the best of families.’
‘So they say,’ said Reinhart.
‘Incidentally, I know a pretty young cop in Maardam by the name of Moreno: I met her out at Lejnice last summer. Give her a kiss from me, assuming you haven’t cocked things up and let her slip through your fingers.’
Reinhart thought for a moment,
‘Baasteuwel?’ he said. ‘I do believe we’ve met. Are you small and ugly and smoke like a chimney?’
‘That’s me,’ said Baasteuwel. ‘An IQ of two hundred and ten, and the favourite of all the ladies as well. Where do you reckon we met?’
‘Wernerhaven, if I’m not much mistaken,’ said Reinhart. ‘Five or six years ago. A conference about the reorganization of the police force or some similar crap, I don’t remember exactly.’
‘Aha,’ said Baasteuwel. ‘Yes, I forget the details as well. But I do remember this damned Kristine Kortsmaa case. A sad business. I spent an awful lot of time on it, in fact . . . last June, it was, but we didn’t get anywhere. Which annoyed me no end, to tell you the truth.’
‘I’ve read about it,’ said Reinhart. ‘You don’t even have a suspect, is that right?’
‘Not a trace of one. The lady was found dead in her flat. Naked, strangled. As clear as day. She’d been out eating and dancing, picked up a bloke and took him home. There wasn’t even anything to suggest they’d had sex . . . The bloody irritating thing is that there were loads of witnesses who saw them dancing at that restaurant. We even had a mock-up image of him to work with, but it didn’t help. Most irritating.’
‘What did he look like?’ asked Reinhart.
‘Quite tall, quite strong, according to what everybody said. About forty or just over, most of them thought. The colour of his hair varied between medium blond and coal black, and some people thought he had the beginnings of a beard . . . Obviously it wasn’t easy to build up a good phantom image, but I can fax you the one we used, if you like. If you think there’s any point.’
‘Yes, please do send it,’ said Reinhart. ‘But I’ll keep it to myself for the time being, for safety’s sake. It would be silly to give the team preconceived ideas. I assume you checked back as well – cases similar to that one?’
‘Oh yes,’ sighed Baasteuwel, ‘you can bet your bloody life I did. I rooted around among a few dozen attractive women’s bodies . . . Great fun, but no luck, of course. We drew another blank. This girl Kortsmaa had passed her exams the same week as it happened, by the way. Qualified as a physiotherapist after three years of studies – that’s why she was out celebrating. He gave her an excellent present, there’s no denying that.’
‘A lovely present,’ said Reinhart.
‘It would bring great satisfaction into my black copper’s soul if we can catch the bugger this time round, make no mistake about that. Assuming it’s the same swine, that is.’
‘It’s certainly a possibility, to say the least,’ said Reinhart. ‘We’ll do the best we can. Was there anything else?’
‘I don’t think so,’ said Baasteuwel. ‘Assuming you really do have all the documentation you say you have . . . I’ve scraped together a few thousand wasted working hours, of course, and I can fax you documentation about those if you like.’
‘That’s not necessary,’ said Reinhart. ‘We’ve got more of such stuff than we can cope with already. But if we come across a light shining in the darkness, maybe we could meet and talk things over?’
‘There’s nothing I’d like better,’ said Baasteuwel. ‘And don’t forget to give that inspector a kiss from me.’
‘If I dare,’ said Reinhart, and hung up.
Ten seconds later Baasteuwel phoned again.
‘There’s one thing I forgot to ask,’ he said. ‘Have you any recent similar cases? I mean, he might have been busy between the Kristine Kurtsmaa case and the one we’re busy with now.’
‘It doesn’t seem like it,’ said Reinhart. ‘There’s nothing that’s been documented at least.’
‘That’s a pretty long gap,’ said Baasteuwel. ‘Over a year. But then, you never know how bastards like him operate – not until you meet them, at least.’
‘I’ve set my mind on meeting this particular bastard,’ said Reinhart. ‘I’ll be in touch as soon as I get a sniff of him.’
‘Good hunting,’ said Inspector Baasteuwel.
During the course of Thursday Ewa Moreno talked to seven persons in all that Rooth had dug out of Martina Kammerle’s somewhat worse-for-wear address book, and it was a pretty depressing operation.
All seven admitted that they knew what had happened, thanks to reports in the newspapers and on the television. All seven admitted reluctantly that they knew who Martina Kammerle was. All seven insisted that they were not close to the murdered woman in any way, and that they hadn’t seen her since her husband died four-and-a-half years ago.
Two of the seven were colleagues from one of the short periods when Martina had had some sort of job. Two were women she had met in hospital, one of them in Gemejnte, and the other out at Majorna. One was a man she had had a brief affair with eighteen years ago, one was a retired therapist she had visited three times, and the seventh was an old schoolmate who had been confined to a wheelchair for the last twenty years, and hadn’t seen Martina since they were in class seven together, he claimed.