And the man on the drawing, what… ?”
“He could well have been Icelandic”
“Icelandic?”
“Yes. I didn’t want to be nosy but I had the feeling that Elias liked him a lot.”
Andres leaned back in his chair in the interview room. A click was heard as the tape came to an end and stopped recording. Sigurdur Oli reached out, turned the tape over and started the recording again. Erlendur stared at Andres all the time.
“What’s that about the nightmare you can never shake off?” he asked. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“I doubt you’d want to hear it,” Andres said. “I doubt anyone would want to hear about such evil.”
“Who is this man?” Sigurdur Oli asked.
“Do you mean he did something to you?”
Andres said nothing.
“Are you saying he’s a paedophile?” Erlendur asked.
Andres sat in silence, looking at Erlendur.
“I haven’t seen him for years,” he said eventually. “Years on end. Not until suddenly … I guess it was a year ago.” Andres stopped talking.
“And?”
“It was like meeting your executioner,” Andres said. “He didn’t see me. He doesn’t know that I know about him. I know where he lives.”
“Where’s that? Where does he live? Who is this man?” Sigurdur Oli showered Andres with questions but he sat completely unmoved, looking at Sigurdur Oli as if he were absolutely irrelevant to him.
“I might well pay him a visit one day,” Andres said. “To say hello. I reckon I could handle him now. I reckon I could get the better of him.”
“But first you needed some Dutch courage,” Erlendur said.
Andres did not answer.
“You had to run off and hide first?”
“I always hid. You should know how good I was at concealing myself. I found new hiding places all the time and tried to make myself as small as I could.”
“Do you think he hurt the boy?” Erlendur asked.
“Maybe he gave up ages ago. I don’t know. Like I say, I haven’t seen him all these years and suddenly he’s my neighbour. Suddenly, after all these years, he walks past on the other side of the street from where I live. You can’t imagine what I really saw when he walked past. I mean up here,” Andres said, tapping his index finger against his temple.
“Do you think he’s on our paedophile register?” Erlendur asked.
“I doubt it.”
“Are you going to tell us how to find him?” Sigurdur Oli asked.
Andres did not reply.
“Who is he?” Sigurdur Oli asked, trying a new approach. “We can help you to get him. If you want to charge him. We can lock him up with your help. Is that what you want? Will you tell us who he is so we can throw him in the nick?”
Andres started to laugh in his face.
“This guy’s the dog’s bollocks,” he said with a look at Erlendur.
Then suddenly he stopped laughing. He leaned forward in Sigurdur Oli’s direction.
“Who’s going to believe a scumbag like me?”
Erlendur’s mobile phone started to ring. “The Ode to Joy” filled the interview room and Erlendur tried to dig out his phone as fast as he could. He hated that ringtone. He pressed the answer button. Sigurdur Oli watched him. Andres had clammed up. Erlendur listened and his face darkened. He rang off without saying goodbye and cursed as he leaped to his feet.
“Can this bloody mess get any worse?” he hissed through clenched teeth and rushed out of the room.
The police officer had second thoughts on his way back to the block of flats. The interpreter had popped out in her car but on the way she had asked him to fetch some bread and milk for the Thai woman and her son, who were alone in the flat. He had been in the force for two years and didn’t find this job worse than any other. He had been caught up in the downtown melees when the weekend celebrations reached their peak. He had been called out to terrible road accidents. None of them affected him much. They described him as promising. He aimed for promotion within the police. Now he had been given the job of standing guard at the home of the Thai woman and her son. All morning, a series of experts from various agencies had trooped up the stairs to her flat, and he had stood there, asking their names, occupations and business. He let them all in. They all came straight back down. The Thai woman wanted to be left alone with her child. He could understand that. What a tragedy she had suffered.
Then the interpreter came hurrying downstairs, handed him some money and a small shopping list and asked him to buy the items for the mother and son upstairs. He refused politely, shaking his head with a smile and saying he was not allowed to leave. Unfortunately, he just couldn’t. He was a policeman. Not an errand boy.
“It’ll only take five minutes,” the interpreter said. “I’d do it myself but I’m in a rush.”
Then she ran over to her car and drove off.
He was left standing there with the shopping list and the banknote and a conscience that he struggled with, but only for a moment. Then he hurried off too. He wasn’t long at all, as he told that Erlendur bloke who tore him off such a strip that he almost burst into tears. Perhaps he should have called for assistance. Perhaps he should not have gone on that ridiculous errand, which reminded him of when he was a child and his mother was always sending him out to the shop. Perhaps that was the point: he had acted instinctively and forgot himself for a moment. He had flicked through a trashy magazine containing stories of celebrity divorces, but did not dare to tell the inspector about that part of his journey. The old man was so worked up that he thought he would knock him senseless. Sigurdur Oli, whom he knew slightly, had to step in to restrain the inspector.
When he came back from the shop he ran up the stairs and rang the bell. Then he knocked on the door but there was no reply. Eventually he opened it and called in, “Hello!” The door was not locked. No one answered him. He walked around the flat, calling out in all directions. He received no reply. The flat was empty.
He stood like an idiot with a plastic shopping bag in his hand and could hardly muster the courage to inform the station that Sunee and her boy had gone missing.
13
Erlendur did not blame the officer for Sunee and Niran’s disappearance although the man had showed incredible and incomprehensible neglect in the course of duty. He was convinced that the interpreter, who was the last to leave the mother and her son, had helped them to go into hiding. She had persuaded the officer to leave for a moment and then drove them off to a place that she would not name. After grilling the officer Erlendur sent for the interpreter. In the meantime the police looked for clues as to where Sunee could have taken her son. Her telephone did not have a caller ID, but Elinborg applied to the District Court to be given a list of Sunee’s incoming and outgoing calls during the previous month.
Elinborg called Erlendur and told him about her conversation with the teacher from Elias’s old school.
“Don’t you think she’s trying to protect him by running away?” she asked Erlendur when he told her that the mother and son had gone missing.
“The explanation is obviously something like that,” Erlendur said. “The question is who she thinks she’s protecting him from.”
“Maybe he’s told her something.”
Erlendur had just finished talking to Elinborg when his mobile rang again. The head of narcotics told him that they had located a girl at the school who had been trying to sell drugs in the playground. She had not been involved with the narcotics squad before but her older sister was well known to the police, a hardened addict with a string of arrests for drug offences. The two sisters had an elder brother who was in prison for manslaughter; he had attacked a passer-by in the centre of Reykjavik, inflicting wounds that led to his death.