“And the fourth?”
Sillanpää gazed out at the rain sweeping the street as if he found the natural phenomenon truly fascinating. “It’s raining pretty hard… The fourth was Max Oxbaum.”
Sillanpää saw my face, and could tell I was seriously ticked off.
“Sorry. We hadn’t agreed on cooperation at that point. Now I’m playing with an open hand. Oxbaum came here two days before he was killed. He came in the middle of the day and was inside for twenty minutes or so.”
“I suppose you talked to him, too?”
“He was an attorney and a sly old fox. We decided it was wisest to not expose ourselves.”
And now I decided it was time for me to show my hand.
“That story about a Russian gangster visiting Finland was a complete fabrication. You said you were playing with an open hand.”
Sillanpää knew how to maintain a poker face. “Says who?”
“You think Nurmio is here to kill the new Israeli Minister of Justice, Haim Levi, who is coming to Finland in a week.”
Sillanpää considered this for a moment. “All right. Open hand. We didn’t want to tell you about Levi, because we suspected that your brother was involved. We do believe that Levi is the target, but we don’t suspect your brother any more.”
“Why not?”
“Something turned up.”
There was no point pressing him. Sillanpää wouldn’t give me anything more about Eli. On the other hand, what he had told me put my mind at ease.
“Max must have been in touch with Norm. We could compare his telecommunications data with Jacobson’s.”
“Good. Do it.”
“Who paid the rent on his place?”
“Nurmio paid half a year’s rent in advance. The money came through an Estonian bank, a former shell company. Oxbaum bought it three months ago and is on the board. Nurmio’s name doesn’t appear anywhere.”
“I’m assuming you guys tapped Nurmio’s place?”
“No. There was a deadbolt. We decided it was best not to try so we wouldn’t tip him off. Mossad training means noticing visits like that.”
“Regardless of whether or not Nurmio had Mossad training, there’s no point waiting around any more. Let’s go over and see what we can find.”
“You think so?”
“Yup. There must be some clues in there.”
The thought clearly appealed to Sillanpää. “I have to talk to my boss.” He went into the kitchen and made a call. I waited at least five minutes, listening to a hole being drilled into the wall in the next apartment over.
“They’ve been remodelling for two weeks,” the agent at the camera said.
“You guys only have one man staking out at a time?” I asked.
“At first there were two of us, but we used up our overtime pretty fast, so we had to scale back to one.”
Sillanpää returned from his expedition to the kitchen. “OK. We’re good. Our lock guy will meet us there.”
“What about me?” the agent asked as we were leaving.
“You stay here. Warn us if you see him approaching, even though I doubt he’s coming back.”
We waited outside for the SUPO lock specialist to arrive. Once he got there, we negotiated in the car for a minute and then decided to go in through the back door. To get to it, we had to head around to the back and down to the basement. We stopped at a grey door. The door had two locks: a normal house-key lock and a Boda deadbolt. The Boda looked brand new.
Sillanpää gave the order: “Go for it.” He had promised we didn’t have to worry about leaving signs of a break-in; the main thing now was getting the door open. Calling in the building super would have required too much explaining.
The specialist drilled a hole an inch in diameter between the locks, at the point where the door and the jamb met. He slid in a crowbar. One powerful wrench, and the door popped open.
Sillanpää peered in. He didn’t see anything, so he continued in. I followed.
The back door opened onto a hallway with a bathroom off to the side. That led to an unfurnished back room and the street-side storefront, where the large display window had been covered with blinds.
The main room contained a desk, a couple of armchairs, a computer, an almost-empty bookshelf and a dead body. It was lying on its back near the middle of the floor, its half-open eyes staring blankly at the ceiling. A pistol with a silencer lay next to one hand. There was a bullet hole right under the eye, another in the temple.
“Don’t touch anything,” I instinctively ordered Sillanpää. He stopped and looked at the body.
“It’s not Nurmio.”
I had noticed the same thing. The deceased looked like a foreigner.
I bent down and went through his pockets. The wallet held a driver’s licence issued in St Petersburg. According to it, the man’s name was Igor Semeyev.
“Russian.”
“He has a gun, too. What the fuck happened here?” Sillanpää growled.
“Probably what it looks like. There was a shoot-out, and Nurmio shot our friend Igor Semeyev here.”
“No wonder Nurmio split,” Sillanpää said.
23
I was sitting at my window, watching flashes light up the southern sky somewhere above Suomenlinna. I counted the seconds: one, two, three, four… ten. A scattered rumbling rolled between the buildings and deepened to a drum-like thud.
Ten times the speed of sound in a second. The thunderstorm was two miles away.
I had always liked storms and thunder, but only on land. They scared me at sea. When we were kids, Dad would take us to down the Kaivopuisto marina, where the waves would crash onto the rocks and the wind would hurl salt spray in our faces. Dad had loved it, too. Eli, on the other hand, had always been terrified of storms and thunder. He’d drag his feet and shriek until Dad would be forced to lug him down the shore. Things like that had to leave indelible trauma.
The wind rattled the open ventilation window, and the raindrops pelted my face. The sensation of water and wind felt like a caress from Mother Nature.
My beautiful scheme, which had been based on Nurmio’s culpability, was completely demolished, and I hadn’t managed to piece together a new one in its place.
The dead body that had been found in Nurmio’s room had been confirmed as the person indicated on the licence. The St Petersburg police had corroborated his identity. He was a criminal that the Russian police were more than familiar with, a paid hitman for the Minsk mafia. It was a pretty sure bet that he was also the man I had seen at Max’s boat, as well as the one Jari Wallius had seen leaving the Jacobsons’ house.
After receiving this information, it felt like I was trying to put together two different puzzles whose pieces had been scrambled up. No matter how hard I tried to fit them together, I couldn’t form a picture that made any sense.
Was the mafia killer after Nurmio, or vice versa? Or had they been working together and then argued about something? When two killers argued, more often than not dead bodies would result.
Semeyev must have entered through the back door, because the SUPO stake-out man hadn’t noticed him. I almost felt sorry for the guy who had been on duty at the time.
Nurmio presumably knew Semeyev, because he had let him in. The gun we had found at Semeyev’s side had been fired once. A.22 calibre bullet was found in one of the cupboards in the kitchenette. It had pierced the door and bored into the back wall. In addition to being the right calibre, Semeyev’s gun was the right make, a Margolin. It looked like Semeyev had killed both Max and Jacobson.