The Redeemer
'Now I'll distribute a few presents of my own,' Møller said. 'From the deceased's estate, so to speak. First of all, there is this magnifying glass.'
He held it up in front of his face and the others laughed at the ex- PAS's distorted features.
'This goes to a girl who is every bit as good a detective and police officer as her father was. Who never takes the credit for her work, but prefers to let us shine in Crime Squad. As you know, she has been the subject of research by brain specialists as she is blessed with the very rare fusiform gyrus, which allows her to remember every single face she has seen.'
Harry saw Beate blush. She didn't like the attention, least of all concerning this exceptional gift that meant she was still being used to identify grainy images of ex-cons on bank-raid videos.
'I hope,' Møller said, 'that you won't forget this face even though you won't see it for a while. And if you have cause to doubt, you can use this.'
Halvorsen nudged Beate in the back. When Møller gave her a hug as well as the magnifying glass and the audience applauded, even her forehead went a fiery red.
'The next heirloom is my office chair,' Bjarne said. 'You see, I found out that my successor Gunnar Hagen has put in for a new one in black leather with a high back and other features.'
Møller sent a smile to Hagen, who did not return it, but gave a brief nod.
'The chair goes to an officer from Steinkjer who ever since he came here has been banished to an office with the biggest troublemaker in the building. And forced to sit on a defective chair. Junior, I think it's time.'
'Yippee,' Halvorsen said.
Everyone turned and laughed, and Halvorsen laughed in return.
'And, to conclude, a technical aid for someone who is very special to me. He has been my best investigator and my worst nightmare. To the man who always follows his nose, his own agenda and – unhappily for those of us who try to get you to turn up on time for morning meetings – his own watch.' Møller took a wristwatch from his jacket pocket. 'I hope this will make you work in the same time frame as the others do. Anyway, I have more or less set it to Crime Squad clocks. And, well, there was a lot between the lines there, Harry.'
Scattered applause as Harry went forward to receive the watch with a plain black leather strap. The brand was unfamiliar to him.
'Thanks,' Harry said.
The two tall men embraced.
'I put it two minutes fast so that you're in time for what you thought you would miss,' Møller whispered. 'No more warnings. Do what you have to.'
'Thanks,' Harry repeated, thinking Møller was holding him for a bit too long. He reminded himself he had to leave the present he had brought with him from home. Fortunately he had never got round to ripping off the plastic cover of All About Eve.
5
Monday, 15 December. The Lighthouse.
JON FOUND ROBERT IN THE BACKYARD OF FRETEX, THE Salvation Army shop in Kirkeveien.
He was leaning against the door frame with his arms crossed watching the guys carrying the bin bags from the lorry into the storeroom in the shop. They were blowing white speech bubbles which they filled with swear words in a variety of dialects and languages.
'Good catch?' Jon asked.
Robert shrugged. 'People happily give away their whole summer wardrobe so that they can buy new clothes next year. But it's winter clothes we need now.'
'Your boys use colourful language. Paragraph twelve types – doing social work instead of prison?'
'I counted up yesterday. We've now got twice as many volunteers doing a stretch as we have people who have turned to Jesus.'
Jon smiled. 'Untilled fields for missionaries. Just a question of getting started.'
Robert called one of the boys, who threw him a pack of cigarettes. Robert put a coffin nail between his lips, no filter.
'Take it out,' Jon said. 'Soldier's vows. You could be dismissed.'
'I wasn't thinking of lighting it, bruv. What do you want?'
Jon shrugged. 'A chat.'
'What about?'
Jon chuckled. 'It's quite normal for brothers to have a chat now and then.'
Robert nodded and picked flakes of tobacco off his tongue. 'When you say chat, you usually mean you're going to tell me how to lead my life.'
'Come on.'
'What is it then?'
'Nothing! I was wondering how you were.'
Robert took out the cigarette and spat in the snow. Then he peered up into the high, white cloud cover.
'I'm bloody sick of this job. I'm bloody sick of the flat. I'm bloody sick of the shrivelled-up, hypocritical sergeant major running the show here. If she weren't so ugly I would . . .' Robert grinned, '. . . fuck the old prune face stupid.'
'I'm freezing,' Jon said. 'Can we go in?'
Robert walked ahead into the tiny office and sat on a chair squeezed between a cluttered desk, a narrow window with a view of the backyard and a red-and-yellow flag with the Salvation Army's motto and emblem 'Fire and Blood'. Jon lifted a heap of papers, some yellowing with age, off a wooden chair he knew Robert had pinched from the Majorstuen Corps' room next door.
'She says you're a malingerer,' Jon said.
'Who?'
'Sergeant Major Rue.' Jon grimaced. 'Prune face.'
'So she rang you. Is that how it is?' Robert poked around in the desk with his pocket knife, then burst out: 'Oh, yes, I forgot. You're the new admin boss, the boss of the whole shebang.'
'No decision has been made yet. It might well be Rikard.'
'Whatever.' Robert carved two semicircles in the desk to form a heart. 'You've said what you came to say. Before you bugger off, can I have the five hundred for your shift tomorrow?'
Jon took the money from his wallet and laid it on the desk in front of his brother. Robert stroked the blade of the knife against his chin. The black bristles rasped. 'And I'll remind you of one more thing.'
Jon knew what was coming and swallowed. 'And what's that?'
Over Robert's shoulder he could see it had begun to snow, but the rising heat from the houses around the backyard made the flimsy white flakes stand still in the air outside the window, as though listening.
Robert placed the point of the knife in the centre of the heart. 'If I find you even once in the vicinity of you know who . . .' He put his hand around the shaft of the knife and leaned forward. His body weight forced the blade into the dry wood with a crunch. 'I'll destroy you, Jon. I swear I will.'
'Am I disturbing?' came a voice from the door.
'Not at all, fru Rue,' Robert said, as sweet as pie. 'My brother was just about to leave.'
The Chief Superintendent and the new POB, Gunnar Hagen, stopped talking when Bjarne Møller came into his office. Which of course was no longer his.
'Well, do you like the view?' Møller asked in what he hoped was a cheery tone. And added: 'Gunnar.' The name felt strange on his tongue.
'Mm, Oslo is always a sad sight in December,' Gunnar Hagen said. 'But we'll have to see whether we can sort that out, too.'
Møller felt an urge to ask what he meant by 'too', but stopped when he saw the Chief Superintendent give a nod of approval.
'I was giving Gunnar the low-down on the people around here. In all confidence, you understand.'
'Ah, yes, you two know each other from before.'
'Yes indeed,' said the Chief Superintendent. 'Gunnar and I have known each other ever since we were cadets at what used to be called Police School.'
'It said in the memo that you do the Birkebeiner race every year,' Møller said, turning to Gunnar Hagen. 'Did you know that the Chief Superintendent does, too?'
'Oh, yes, indeed.' Hagen looked over at the Chief Superintendent with a smile. 'Sometimes Torleif and I go together. And try to outdo each other in the final spurt.'
'Well, I never,' Møller said, amused. 'So if the Chief had been on the appointment board, he could have been accused of cronyism.'
The Chief Superintendent gave a dry chuckle and Bjarne Møller an ad
monitory glance.
'I was telling Gunnar about the man you so generously presented with a watch.'
'Harry Hole?'
'Yes,' Gunnar Hagen said. 'I know he's the man who killed an inspector in connection with that tedious smuggling business. Tore the man's arm off in a lift, I heard. And now he's also under suspicion of leaking the case to the press. Not good.'
'First of all, the "tedious smuggling business" was a gang of pros, with offshoots in the police, who flooded Oslo with cheap handguns for years,' Bjarne Møller said, trying in vain to keep the irritation out of his voice. 'A case which Hole, despite the resistance here in HQ, solved unaided thanks to many years of painstaking police work. Secondly, he killed Waaler in self-defence and it was the lift that tore off his arm. And, thirdly, we have no evidence whatsoever regarding who leaked what.'
Gunnar Hagen and the Chief Superintendent exchanged glances.
'Be that as it may,' the Chief Superintendent said, 'he's someone you'll have to keep an eye on, Gunnar. From what I gather his girlfriend left him of late. And we know that men with Harry's bad habits are extra susceptible to relapses. Which, of course, we cannot accept, however many cases he's solved in this unit.'
'I'll keep him in line,' Hagen said.
'He's an inspector,' Møller said, closing his eyes. 'Not rank and file. Not very keen on being kept in line, either.'
Gunnar Hagen nodded slowly as his hand went up through his thick wreath of hair.
'When is it you begin in Bergen . . .' Hagen lowered his hand, 'Bjarne?'
Møller guessed his name sounded just as strange on the other man's tongue.
Harry wandered down Urtegata and could see by the footwear of the people he met that he was getting close to the Lighthouse. The guys in the Narco Unit used to say that no one did more for the identification of addicts than the Army & Navy surplus stores. Because sooner or later military footwear ended up on junkies' feet via the Salvation Army. In the summer it was blue trainers; in the winter, like now, the junkie's uniform was black military boots together with a green plastic bag containing a Salvation Army packed lunch.
Harry swung through the door with a nod to the guard wearing the Salvation Army hoody.
'Anything?' the guard asked.
Harry patted his pockets. 'Nothing.'
A sign on the wall said all alcohol had to be handed in at the door and taken away when leaving. Harry knew they had given up on drugs and the equipment. No junkie would hand that in.
Harry entered, poured himself a cup of coffee and sat on the bench by the wall. Fyrlyset, the Lighthouse, was the Army's café, the new millennium's version of the soup kitchen where the needy were given free snacks and coffee. A cosy, well-lit room where the only difference between this and the usual cappuccino bar was the clientele. Ninety per cent of drug users were male. They ate slices of white bread with Norwegian brown or white cheese, read the newspapers and had quiet conversations round the tables. It was a free zone, a chance to thaw out and have a breather from the search for the day's fix. Although undercover police dropped by now and again, there was a tacit agreement that no arrests would be made inside.
A man sitting next to Harry had frozen into a deep bow. His head hung down over the table and in front of him black fingers held a cigarette paper. There were a few emptied dog-ends scattered around.
Harry noticed the uniformed back of a mini-woman changing burnt-down candles on a table with four picture frames. Inside three of them were individual photographs; inside the fourth a cross and a name on a white background. Harry stood up and walked over.
'What are they?' he asked.
Perhaps it was the slim neck or the grace of the movement, or the smooth, raven-black, almost unnatural, shiny hair that made Harry think of a cat even before she had turned round. The impression was reinforced by the small face with the disproportionately broad mouth and the pertest of noses possible, like those the characters in Harry's Japanese comics had. But, more than anything else, it was the eyes. He couldn't put his finger on why, but something about them was not right.
'November,' she answered.
She had a calm, deep, gentle alto voice that made Harry wonder if it was natural or a way of speaking she had acquired. He had known women who did that, who changed their voices the way they changed clothes. One voice for home use; one for first impressions and social occasions; and one for night-time intimacies.
'What do you mean?' Harry asked.
'Our November crop of deaths.'
Harry looked at the photos and he realised what she meant.
'Four?' he said in a low voice. In front of the pictures was a letter written with an unsteady hand in pencilled capitals.
'On average one customer dies a week. Four is not out of the ordinary. Our remembrance day is on the first Wednesday of every month. Is there anyone you . . . ?'
Harry shook his head. 'My dearest Geir,' the letter began. No flowers.
'Is there anything I can help you with?' she asked.
It struck Harry that she may not have had any other voices in her repertoire, just this deep, warm tone.
'Per Holmen . . .' Harry started, not knowing quite how to finish.
'Poor Per, yes. We'll have a remembrance day for him in January.
Harry nodded. 'First Wednesday.'
'That's it. And you're very welcome to come, brother.'
This 'brother' was enunciated with such unforced ease, like an underplayed and hence almost unarticulated appendix to the sentence. For a moment Harry almost believed her.
'I'm a detective,' Harry said.
The difference in height between them was so great that she had to crane her neck to see him clearly.
'I've seen you before, I think, but it must be years ago.'
Harry nodded. 'Maybe. I've been here once or twice, but I haven't seen you.'
'I'm part-time here. Otherwise I'm at the Salvation Army headquarters. And you work in the drugs division?'
Harry shook his head. 'Murder investigations.'
'Murder. But Per wasn't murdered . . . ?'
'Can we sit down for a moment?'
She hesitated and looked round.
'Busy?' Harry asked.
'Not at all, it's unusually quiet. On a normal day we serve 1,800 slices of bread. But today's dole day.'
She called one of the boys behind the counter, who agreed to take over. Harry caught her name at the same time. Martine. The head of the man with the empty cigarette paper had been ratcheted down a few more notches.
'There are a couple of things that don't check out,' Harry said after sitting down. 'What sort of person was he?'
'Hard to say,' she said. Harry's quizzical expression produced a sigh. 'When you've been on drugs for so many years, like Per, the brain is so destroyed that it's hard to see a personality. The urge to get high is all-pervasive.'
'I know that, but I mean . . . to people who knew him well . . .'
'Can't help, I'm afraid. You can ask Per's father how much of his son's personality was left. He came down here a couple of times to collect him. In the end, he gave up. He said Per had started to threaten them at home, because they locked away all their valuables when he was around. He asked me to keep an eye on the boy. I said we would do our best, but we couldn't promise miracles. And we didn't of course . . .'