Már appeared as he approached eleven kilometers, a towel around his neck to soak up some of the sweat a session on the rowing machine had produced. He nodded at the girl on the exercise bike in front and winked. Jóel Ingi grinned back. Már made a drinking motion and he nodded back, holding up two fingers to signify two more minutes.
“Didn’t expect to see you here,” Már said, handing him a bottle of chilled water.
“Ach. I had to get out of the house, y’know. Agnes is …” he shook his head.
“Agnes is what? She’s okay, isn’t she?”
“Yeah, she’s fine. She’s just being a bit hard work at the moment.”
“As long as she’s okay,” Már said doubtfully.
“I said, she’s fine, all right?” Jóel Ingi snapped, and immediately regretted the sharp tone. Már had known Agnes since childhood and had introduced them. But still Jóel Ingi sometimes resented her affection for Már and that the friendship pre-dated his and Agnes’s relationship, as well as the nagging curiosity that sometimes irked him. He wanted to know if Már’s and Agnes’s friendship had been anything more than that, but had never dared ask.
“Does she know?”
“About what?”
“About the computer you mislaid?”
As far as Már knew, the missing laptop in its bag had been lifted from Jóel Ingi’s shoulder by a pair of teenagers, one on a mountain bike, who pedaled along Pósthússstræti into the evening darkness, while his friend had been the distraction. Only Hinrik knew what had really happened, and he knew only a fraction of the truth, just enough to allow him to get CCTV stills from the hotel. Jóel Ingi didn’t even want to ask how he had obtained the pictures so rapidly, guessing that someone on the hotel staff had either been bribed or intimidated into extracting them from the surveillance system.
His mind elsewhere, Jóel Ingi realized that Már was speaking.
“Look, can’t you take some time off? You’re wandering around in a daze. Ægir’s noticed you’ve gone off the boil and he’ll rip you up if you put a foot wrong.”
“I’m all right. I can hold my own against that overblown windbag.”
“You think so? The minister hangs on his every word. He can blight your career like that,” he said, snapping his fingers to illustrate the point. “You’re like me. No friends or relatives upstairs to fight our corner. Be careful.”
Jóel Ingi scowled and said nothing, sipping from his bottle of water and watching as a gaggle of toned teenagers strolled through the chairs scattered around the gym’s health bar.
“So what are you doing about this?”
“Don’t worry. I have someone looking after it.”
“Police?”
“Hell, no! A friend. Well, a friend of a friend.”
Már’s eyes narrowed. “Explain, will you?”
“Look, it’s all in hand,” Jóel Ingi told him, breathing deeply to keep his temper intact. “It’s a friend of someone my brother knows.”
“Your brother’s not the most reliable character, is he?”
“Junkies aren’t normally the most reliable people.”
“So is his friend trustworthy?”
“I don’t suppose so. But there’s money involved and he’s being paid to do a job.”
“I’m not going to ask who this person is, but wouldn’t you be safer going to the police?”
“Yeah. The police already know, and I’ll bet you anything they’ve filed it away and forgotten about it. If I thought they’d actually do something, I wouldn’t have had to find someone else to do the job. Anyway, I don’t know the guy who’s doing this, and it’s better if I don’t.”
He almost wanted to cry when he saw how much his stash of foreign currency had been depleted. Everyone had thought he was mad at the time, selling his shareholdings just as everything had been going up, and leaving the financial sector for a boring job with a bunch of grey-faced old men at the ministry. But as the currency tumbled and the banks tottered, Jóel Ingi quietly congratulated himself on his astuteness. Another six months and things would have been very different, painfully different, he reflected.
But the stacks of euro notes that he’d originally stored in a bank deposit box, having decided that a foreign exchange account wasn’t the safest option, was now looking decidedly thinner, and the equivalent of another million krónur in Hinrik’s pocket was painful.
This time they met at a bookshop; they were practically the only people there who weren’t sitting behind laptops and tablets over their designer coffees. Hinrik sipped his coffee with distaste. A proper drink would have been preferable at this late hour of the afternoon. Jóel Ingi had a tall glass in front of him that Hinrik eyed with suspicion.
“What’s that, then?”
“Latte. Try one.”
Hinrik wrinkled his nose. “Nah. Not for me. Got it?”
“Half,” he said and watched Hinrik’s eyes narrow in suspicion. “No results yet. Half now, and half when there’s a name and address.” Jóel Ingi pushed a padded envelope across the table between the cups. “Cash. In euros,” he added.
The sour expression across Hinrik’s face lingered and then dissolved into a smile devoid of any warmth. “In that case, as you’re a valued customer, leave it with me.” The smile vanished as if it had been turned off at the mains. “But we’re a little light on information and you haven’t given us a lot to go on. What’s going on here? You’re complaining that this isn’t moving fast enough, but you won’t tell me what I need to get the job done fast.”
Jóel Ingi stared back at him.
“I mean,” Hinrik continued, almost disconcerted by Jóel Ingi’s dispassionate look, which told him nothing about what was happening behind those grey eyes. “You want this done quick, so give me an idea what it’s all about,” he said, lowering his voice. “You know I offer a comprehensive service, don’t you? No need to get your own hands dirty.”
“I’ll think about it.”
Hekla was exhausted. The day since she had returned from the pool so abruptly had dragged by and she had been unable to settle into doing anything. She sat at the kitchen table, Alda happily coloring in a picture and Alli spellbound by the TV as Hekla flipped through the newspapers she had picked up at the garage that morning. Without reading anything much, she took in the headlines and checked that her own advertisement was still among the classifieds, not that she’d be renewing it. The morning’s scare had told her that line of business had to come to an end, and immediately.
She listened to the radio, punctuated by the whine of Pétur’s lathe in the garage, where he sat propped on a stool as he carefully turned out dishes, cups and ornaments from the lengths of wood stacked on the bench next to him. The whine stopped but she only noticed as the click of Pétur’s crutch told her he was on the way along the short corridor; she wondered how long he would be able to get in and out without help.
“There’s coffee in the machine,” she said without turning around as she heard the clicks that accompanied the shuffle of every step Pétur took. He stooped to kiss the back of her neck, wincing as he straightened up again and smiling as he watched Alda concentrating on the coloring book.
Hekla turned a page in the paper and felt a chill run through her as coffee gurgled into Pétur’s mug. He turned to her. “D’you want some as well?”
She felt unable to speak, transfixed by the picture in front of her.
“Are you all right, love?” Pétur asked, bemused. “Something interesting?”
Hekla shook herself back to reality. “No, fine. Just someone I thought I knew, but it’s not. Yes, please,” she added, pushing a mug to the edge of the table.
Mug in hand, Pétur looked at her fondly and made for the door again. “I’ll do another hour and then call it a day,” he said.