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Suhonen said nothing, not that Salmela had expected him to. The lot had spaces for maybe fifteen cars but now there were only five. Nobody else was around.

“You did right by me last night…just like a friend ought to. First I figured I’d just get hammered, but then I got a taste for blood in my mouth. That’s why I picked this up…” Salmela pulled out a stout, short-barreled pistol.

“What the hell have you done?” Suhonen hissed. Salmela’s gaze was cold and unflinching.

* * *

Mari Lehtonen was sitting in her cubicle, her mind still at the police station, her work piling up on her desk.

A smiling Essi Saari popped her head around the corner. “Hey, you eaten yet?”

Lehtonen shook her head.

“Wanna go? Salad bar today.”

“Not hungry.”

“What is it? Something wrong?”

Lehtonen paused just a bit too long. “No…it’s nothing.”

“Come on…I know you,” she said, as she came round the partition and approached Lehtonen. “So, what is it?”

Lehtonen didn’t respond.

“So you told them.”

“Yes, but don’t start with your lectures, I didn’t…”

“I’m not gonna lecture you. Actually, thinking back, I think you were right. If you hadn’t already called, I would’ve made you.”

Her words were comforting. “Really?”

“Yep, we gotta side with the good guys… So what was it like?”

“They said I can’t talk about it.” Her mood seemed to lift somewhat.

Saari seemed disappointed. “Come on, you can tell me something.”

“I don’t really know what’s so secret about it. They showed me some pictures and one was of the guy I saw in the car. So I told that to the cop, and she typed it out on her computer and then had me sign it. That’s all it really was.”

“Who was the guy?”

“I dunno. The lady cop seemed really surprised when I pointed at him.”

“So it must be one of their repeat customers if they already had a picture of him.”

“I guess.”

“Is he dangerous?”

“She didn’t really say anything about him.”

“Well, you already have some experience with psychos,” Saari laughed.

“I guess.” Lehtonen couldn’t bring herself to smile. “Anyway, I doubt anything bad will happen. He’ll probably just go to prison.”

“Yeah. Should we go eat now?”

Mari got up. “Sure.”

Then she stopped. “What do you think I should tell my daughter?”

* * *

Takamäki scrolled through his cellphone directory till he landed on the number. He pressed “Call.”

“Nykänen,” answered a raspy voice. Lieutenant Jaakko Nykänen had been a detective on Takamäki’s team until a few years ago, when the walrus-whiskered veteran had been promoted to lieutenant in the neighboring city of Espoo’s narcotics unit, and then last spring to the intelligence unit at the National Bureau of Investigation. A number of these units were established throughout the country in 2004 to help gather and coordinate actionable intelligence on organized crime. In addition to the police force, the border patrol and customs were also involved.

“Hey, it’s Takamäki.”

Due to the interdepartmental squabbling of the last few years, Takamäki’s relations with the NBI were rather cool, but when it came to his old colleague and family friend, they were still quite warm.

“Hey there.”

“You in a hurry?”

Nykänen gave a dry laugh. “What, in this job? We’re never in a hurry. Intel just rolls in and we mull it over and hatch our clever theories. How’s the boys’ hockey going?”

“Fine. No games yet, but they were at camp last weekend. Gets pretty crazy with soccer and hockey doubled up in the fall.”

“The coaches pushing them into one or the

other yet?”

“No. Kalle’s definitely better at hockey, but they’re both doing well.”

“Yeah. Keep ’em in hockey. It’s a fine sport. I’ll have to come to a game sometime.” Nykänen guessed that Takamäki was probably busy, so he wrapped up the chitchat. “So?”

“We’re on the hunt for one Risto Korpi,” said Takamäki. He outlined the main points leading up to Nyberg’s arrest. Nykänen was tapping on his keyboard on the other end.

“Sounds like a tough case,” said Nykänen. “I remember Korpi from a drug case back in Espoo. We got a tip about his involvement, but the case dried up because no one had the balls to testify against him. Out of several pounds of dope, we couldn’t pin any of it on Korpi.”

“Yeah. Apparently a pretty violent guy.”

Nykänen kept typing. “Makes good on his threats. Says here he rules by fear. Only reason people respect him is because they’re afraid, not because he’s a born leader. Looks like nothing acute going on with him at the moment.”

“What’s acute mean in your language?”

“None of our units have any open investigations on him. He lands in the three-to-five-year bracket here. In other words, we’re looking to open a case and bust up his little outfit within that time frame. His gang is classified as organized crime, though…”

“So why such a long time frame?”

“Not enough boots on the ground. Resources are slim and we gotta set priorities. Maybe things will improve next year. Apparently the interior ministry’s making organized crime the big theme for next year. Might actually get some funding.”

“That’s ridiculous.”

“Gotta set priorities,” said Nykänen, his voice filled with sarcasm. “We got about a thousand criminals in the database that make up these gangs. About a hundred and fifty are behind bars and about the same number are foreigners. Just think how much manpower we’d need to track them all.”

“I know. The numbers are never pretty.”

“Say we need ten cops minimum for every bad guy. That makes about ten thousand cops over here at the NBI. And I’m talking good street-smart cops.”

“Yeah,” Takamäki grumbled.

Nykänen returned to Korpi. “Yeah is right. Anyway, I did get a couple hits. Korpi was spotted in June in a Kannelmäki liquor store with the same Nyberg you got in the cooler. Then in early August he was seen with a gangster by the name of Jere Siikala meeting some Estonian guy in the West Harbor.”

“So you have him under surveillance, then?” Takamäki wondered.

“Nah…just stuff we’ve gotten in connection with other investigations. Our guys were after someone else and Korpi just happened to be there.”

“You don’t have an address, do you? We’ve got a couple questions for him.”

“Sorry. Don’t see anything here.”

“So nobody has an open case on Korpi?”

“No, but I’ll put a note here that you do.”

“Good. We might be able to get a life sentence… Anything to help clear your logjam.”

Nykänen knew his ex-boss meant business.

* * *

Suhonen and Salmela stepped out of the van just as a light drizzle began to fall. The fine mist didn’t have the weight to penetrate their coats, but the men could feel it on their faces.

“This way,” Salmela said, as he circled a gray office building toward the rear.

“Where we going?”

“Patience. You’ll see.”

Suhonen’s hand found its way to his hip pouch where he could feel the butt of a Glock 26 through the fabric. Salmela’s reticence had started to make him suspicious, though Suhonen doubted his old friend would set him up.

The two high-stepped through a thicket toward the rear of the building. Once past the office building, they continued on between two houses and into a small forested area.

Salmela looked back. “Kinda reminds me of playing cowboys and indians in the woods back

in Lahti.”

“More like cops and robbers,” said Suhonen. Salmela laughed.