The two of them talked together into the night while the rain beat down on the windows and the autumn winds howled. She asked him why he was rubbing his chest, almost instinctively. Erlendur told her about the pains he’d been feeling. He blamed his old mattress but Eva Lind ordered him to see a doctor. He wasn’t keen on the idea.
“What do you mean, you’re not going to the doctor?” she said and Erlendur immediately regret-ted having admitted to his pain.
“It’s nothing,” he said.
“How many have you smoked today?”
“What is all this?”
“Hang on, you’ve got chest pains, you smoke like a chimney, never go anywhere except by car, you live on deep-fried junk food and refuse to get yourself looked at! And then you hurl abuse at me about my lifestyle until I end up crying like a little baby. Do you think that’s normal? Are you crazy?”
Eva Lind was standing up, glaring down, like the god of thunder, at her father who flinched from looking up at her and stared sheepishly at the floor.
“I’ll have it looked at,” he said at last.
“Have it looked at! You bet you’ll have it looked at!” Eva Lind shouted. “And you should have done long ago. Wimp.”
“First thing tomorrow morning,” he said, looking at his daughter.
“Just as well,” she said.
Erlendur was going to bed when the phone rang. It was Sigurdur Oli to tell him that the police had received a report of a break-in at the morgue on Baronsstigur.
“The morgue on Baronsstigur,” Sigurdur Oli repeated when he received no response from Erlendur.
“Oh Christ,” Erlendur groaned. “And?”
“I don’t know,” Sigurdur Oli said. “The report just came in. They called me and I said I’d contact you. They don’t know anything about the motive. Is there anything except dead bodies down there?”
“I’ll meet you there,” Erlendur said. “Get the pathologist down there too,” he added and put the phone down.
Eva Lind was asleep in the sitting room when he put on his coat and hat and looked at the clock. It was past midnight. He closed the door carefully behind him so as not to wake his daughter, then hurried down the stairs and into his car.
When he reached the morgue three police cars with flashing lights were parked outside. He recognised Sigurdur Oli’s car and just as Erlendur was entering the building he saw the pathologist turn the corner, his tyres screeching on the wet tarmac. The pathologist had a ferocious look on his face. Erlendur hurried down the long corridor lined with policemen and Sigurdur Oli came out of the operating theatre.
“Nothing seems to be missing,” Sigurdur Oli said when he saw Erlendur storming down the corridor.
“Tell me what happened,” Erlendur said and went into the operating theatre with him. The operating tables were empty, all the cupboards were closed and there was no evidence of a break-in there.
“There were footprints all over the floor in here but they’ve mostly dried up now,” Sigurdur Oli said. “The building’s connected to an alarm system that calls the security company’s headquarters and they contacted us about 15 minutes ago. It looks as though the burglar smashed a window at the back and put his hand through to undo the lock. Not very complicated. As soon as he entered the building the alarm went off. He wouldn’t have had much time to do anything.”
“Definitely enough time,” Erlendur said. The pathologist had joined them and was visibly disturbed.
“Who the hell breaks into a morgue?” he said.
“Where are Holberg and Audur?” Erlendur asked.
The pathologist looked at Erlendur.
“Is this anything to do with Holberg’s murder?” he asked.
“It could be,” Erlendur said. “Quick, quick, quick.”
“They keep the bodies in this side room here,” the pathologist said and showed them to a door which he opened.
“Are these doors always unlocked?” Sigurdur Oli asked.
“Who steals bodies?” the pathologist snapped, but he stopped in his tracks when he looked inside the room.
“What now?” Erlendur asked.
“The girl’s gone,” the pathologist said as if he couldn’t believe his eyes. He hurried through the storage room, opened another door inside it and switched on the light.
“What?” Erlendur asked.
“Her coffin’s gone too,” the pathologist said. He looked at Sigurdur Oli and Erlendur in turn. “We’d got a new coffin for her. Who does that sort of thing? Who would ever think of such a perversion?”
“His name’s Einar,” Erlendur said, “and it’s not a perversion.”
He turned round. Sigurdur Oli followed fast behind and they hurried out of the morgue.
43
There wasn’t much traffic on the Keflavik road that night and Erlendur drove as fast as his little ten-year-old Japanese car could manage. The rain pounded on the windscreen too hard for the wipers to clear and Erlendur thought back to the first time he went to see Elin a few days before. It was like it would never stop raining.
He had ordered Sigurdur Oli to put the Keflavik police on alert and make sure that a back-up force from Reykjavik was available. Also to contact Einar’s mother and warn her about the recent turn of events. He wanted to drive directly to the cemetery himself in the hope that Einar would be there with Audur’s body. He could only imagine that Einar intended to return his sister to her grave.
When Erlendur pulled up by Hvalsnes cemetery gate he could see Einar’s car there with the driver’s door and one of the rear doors open. Erlendur switched off the engine, stepped out into the rain and looked at Einar’s car. He strained to listen but could only hear the rain dropping vertically to the ground. There was no wind and he looked up into the black sky. In the distance he could see a light above the entrance to the church and when he looked across the cemetery he saw a gleam where Audur’s grave was. He thought he could make out something moving at the graveside.
And the miniature white coffin.
He set off cautiously and crept up to the man he took to be Einar. The light came from a powerful lantern that the man had brought with him and put down on the ground by the coffin. Erlendur stepped slowly into the light. He looked up from what he was doing and stared into Erlendur’s eyes. Erlendur had seen photographs of Holberg as a young man and there was no question about the resemblance. His forehead was low and a little rounded, his eyebrows thick, eyes close together, prominent cheekbones on a thin face and slightly protruding teeth. His nose was narrow and so were his lips, but his chin was large and his neck long. They looked each other in the eye for an instant.
“Who are you?” Einar asked.
“I’m Erlendur. Holberg’s my case.”
“Are you surprised how much I look like him?” Einar said.
“There is a certain resemblance,” Erlendur said.
“You know he raped my mother,” Einar said.
“That’s not your fault,” Erlendur said.
“He was my father.”
“That’s not your fault either.”
“You shouldn’t have done this,” Einar said, pointing to the coffin.
“I felt I had to,” Erlendur said. “I found out that she died from the same disease as your daughter.”
“I’m going to put her back where she belongs,” Einar said.
“That’s all right,” Erlendur said, inching his way over to the coffin. “You’ll surely want to put this in the grave too.” Erlendur held out the black leather case that he’d kept in his car ever since he left the collector.