“Jóhannes Karlsson, the haddock baron from Húsavík. Shot his bolt at the glorious Gullfoss Hotel in more ways than one. How the hell is there a connection with this lad the dog walker found this morning?”
“There isn’t one. Or at least so far there isn’t one that’s staring me in the face.”
“But it smells that way, does it, Gunnhildur?”
“That’s about it. It stinks.”
A hint of a smile played around Ívar Laxdal’s black-bristled face as he punched a button to summon the lift. “Well, you’ve been right once or twice before when the rest of us thought you were losing the plot, so the benefit of the doubt is yours,” he said, and Gunna recognized that this was high praise from a man so sparing with his compliments.
“Thank you,” she said finally. “There are links, of course, but they’re tenuous so far. I have a feeling there’s a whole racket going on that we haven’t had a clue about, and it may be that the haddock baron giving up the ghost on the job is what brings it to our attention.”
“Right. Good.” He stepped into the lift with Gunna behind him. Standing close together, she was uncomfortably reminded that Ívar Laxdal was half a head shorter than her, putting his eyes in line with her chin. “I can authorize overtime,” he said after they had traveled to the ground floor in silence. “But keep it within reasonable limits, would you?”
“I’ll do my best.”
“What do you need?”
“What do you mean?”
“More bodies, or what?”
“Nothing right now. Eiríkur and Helgi will do just fine for the moment. But it would be helpful if you could keep Sævaldur off my back.”
Gunna had already clashed more than once with the force’s newest chief inspector, Sævaldur Bogason, and while her team wasn’t part of his immediate department, she suspected that he wanted it to be.
“Don’t you worry about Sævaldur. I’m trying to persuade him to apply for a post in Afghanistan. He won’t go for it, as the man hasn’t a shred of imagination between his flapping ears,” he said. Gunna was almost shocked to hear him speak so freely about another officer and wondered if he was joking. “I’ll leave you to it as much as I can, but …” he said.
“Is this where you tell me that Jóhannes Karlsson has influential friends who don’t want to see any dirty washing aired in public?”
Ívar Laxdal flashed a sharp look at Gunna as they stepped out into the cold of the car park, and she wondered if it had been a remark too far.
“No,” he said with a chuckle in his baritone. “Not yet, at any rate. I know very little about the man, but I’d guess that as he owned quotas, he probably had some influential friends. I understand that he dabbled in politics, and that he was probably a mason, a councilor and a pillar of his community, so I’m already being given encouragement for this to be dealt with promptly. Nothing for you to worry about, but the quicker you can get this wrapped up, the better.”
He clicked the fob of his car keys and a brooding black car on the far side flashed its lights in recognition. This time Ívar Laxdal really did laugh, albeit fleetingly. “I hear congratulations are in order. Is that right?”
“Why’s that?” Gunna asked, nonplussed.
“Imminent grandparenthood, I’m told.”
“Oh, that. Yes. Thanks. But I didn’t have anything to do with it and wasn’t asked if I wanted to become a grandmother.”
“It’s not so bad,” Ívar Laxdal said almost wistfully. “It’s rather enjoyable, in fact. I’ll see you in the morning,” he added, stalking across the car park in the dark and leaving Gunna with an incongruous mental image of Ívar Laxdal dandling an infant on his knee.
The car stank and Baddó was concerned that the reek of petrol would cling to him as well. He stood upwind as the flames began to lick at the car, waiting for the fire to catch properly. He backed away, expecting a sudden blaze, and was rewarded with a burst of flame and a roar of sound as the fire caught the petrol the seats had been soaked with, sucking in oxygen and illuminating the rusted containers and abandoned vehicles on what was left of the shrinking patch of wasteground near Reykjavík’s harbor.
Baddó turned and walked quickly, making his way along the unlit path and around the next corner toward the new shops and, ironically, he thought, the Harbourside Hotel, where the car’s owner had worked until his unfortunate accident. He was still cursing the interfering dog walker who’d found the boy’s body out there in the lava fields, where he should have been able to lie for years without anyone stumbling across him. He was also cursing himself for not making the whimpering fool of a boy walk a few hundred meters further through the lava crags before wringing his miserable neck.
Leaving the darkness, Baddó went along the wall at his side; as far as anyone watching would be concerned, he was just another city dweller walking home from one of the new harbor area shops.
He would have preferred to dispose of the car somewhere more discreet, preferably somewhere out of town that would take the fire brigade half an hour to reach, by which time there wouldn’t be much of a fire left to put out. But with no other transport and no appetite for asking that boneheaded thug Hinrik to help him out, it had to be settled somewhere uncomfortably public. He just hoped that the intense heat generated by ten liters of unleaded splashed over the interior would be enough to make the car unidentifiable, at least until he had finished the job in hand and figured out how to make a little extra from it that Hinrik wouldn’t expect or even need to know about.
This time he needed to run; he felt he had to exhaust himself physically to match the emotional turmoil within. He stared at the screens above the bank of running machines, the chainsaw heavy metal that accompanied him bearing no relation to the subtitled news footage on the screens as he felt his legs ache and complain, forcing himself to ignore the pain until he could run no further. He collapsed onto a bench and chugged a bottle of chilled water, the muscles in his legs trembling.
He closed his eyes, held his head in his hands and made himself stand up. Half an hour later, showered and clean, but no less tense, he shouldered his sports bag and made his way to the lobby, stopping short in abrupt amazement as a heavy figure in a parka and a baseball cap appeared in his field of vision.
Unable to restrain himself, he marched up to the figure leaning against the counter and grabbed a shoulder of the oversized parka, hauling its wearer around in an undignified half-circle.
“Hey, what the hell …?”
“Why are you following me?” He yelled, trembling as his fingers clung to the slippery material, shaking it until the figure’s baseball cap fell off to reveal blonde curls and an earring.
“What the hell are you talking about, you idiot?” the girl shot back. “I don’t know who you are.”
“You’ve been following me. Yesterday in town, and the day before. Why? Who are you? Who sent you?”
“Look, pal. I don’t know what you’re talking about. I just come here to train, the same as you,” the girl protested and stood up to her full height, equalling his, as a pair of bulky young men in shorts and tight singlets appeared on either side of him.
“Anything the matter?” one of the two lifeguards asked politely.
“Yeah, this perv just came and grabbed my coat,” the girl said quickly as the woman behind the counter nodded sadly in corroboration.
“I think you’d best leave, don’t you?”
“No, you’ve got it wrong. She’s been harassing me,” Jóel Ingi protested.
The two men looked at each other.
“I don’t think so,” the second one said, looking at the blonde girl. “D’you want us to call the police?”
“No … it must be just a mistake.”
“You’d best be leaving, pal, before someone does call the law,” the first one said slowly.
The two men nodded and between them they marched him to the door by his arms, Jóel Ingi’s feet half dragging on the floor until he found himself outside with the cold air rapidly clearing his head as he asked himself what he had done.