'Harry.' To his surprise, the voice was clear and distinct.
Harry pulled over a free chair from a neighbouring table.
'Travelling through?' asked Bjarne Moller.
'Yes.'
'How did you find me?'
Harry didn't answer. He had been prepared, but still he could hardly believe what he was seeing.
'So they're gossiping at the station, are they? Well, well.' Moller took another deep draught from the glass. 'Strange change of roles, isn't it. It used to be me who found you like this. Beer?'
Harry leaned over the table. 'What's happened, boss?'
'What's usually happened when a grown man drinks during working hours, Harry?'
'He's either been given the sack or his wife's left him.'
'I haven't been given the boot yet. As far as I know.' Moller laughed. His shoulders shook, but no sound came out.
'Has Kari…?' Harry stopped, not knowing quite how to formulate the words.
'She and the kids didn't come with me. That's OK. That was decided in advance.'
'What?'
'I miss the boys, of course I do. I'm managing though. This is just… what do they call it?… a passing phase… but there's a more elegant word… trans… no.' Bjarne Moller's head had sunk down over his glass.
'Let's go for a walk,' Harry said, waving his hand for the bill.
Twenty-five minutes later Harry and Bjarne Moller were standing in the same rain cloud by a railing on Floien mountain, looking down on what might have been Bergen. A cable car sliced diagonally like a piece of cake and pulled by thick steel wires had transported them up from the town centre.
'Was that why you came here?' Harry asked. 'Because you and Kari were going to split up.'
'It rains here as much as they say,' Moller said.
Harry sighed. 'Drinking doesn't help, boss. Things get worse.'
'That's my line, Harry. How are you getting on with Gunnar Hagen?'
'OK. Good lecturer.'
'Don't make the mistake of underestimating him, Harry. He's more than a lecturer. Gunnar Hagen was in FSK for seven years.'
'Special Forces?' Harry asked in surprise.
'Indeed. I was told that by the Chief Superintendent. Hagen was redeployed in FSK in 1981 when the force was set up to protect our oil rigs in the North Sea. As it's secret service, it's never been on any CV.'
'FSK,' Harry said, conscious that the ice-cold rain was seeping through his jacket onto his shoulders. 'I've heard the loyalty there is uncommonly fierce.'
'It's like a brotherhood,' Moller said. 'Impenetrable.'
'Do you know anyone else who's been in it?'
Moller shook his head. He already looked sober. 'Anything new in the investigation? I've been given some insider information.'
'We don't even have a motive.'
'The motive's money,' Moller said, clearing his throat. 'Greed, the illusion that things will change if you have money. That you can change.'
'Money.' Harry looked at Moller. 'Maybe,' he demurred.
Moller spat with disgust into the grey soup in front of them. 'Find the money. Find the money and follow it. It will always lead you to the answer.'
Harry had never heard him talk like that before, not with this bitter certainty, as though he had an insight he would have preferred not to possess.
Harry breathed in and took the plunge. 'Boss, you know I don't like to beat about the bush, so here it is. You and I are the types of people who don't have many friends. And even though you may not regard me as a friend I am at any rate something of the kind.'
Harry watched Moller, but there was no response.
'I came here to find out whether there was anything I could do. Anything you wanted to talk about or…'
Still no response.
'Well, I'm buggered if I know why I came, boss. But I'm here now anyway.'
Moller leaned his head back to face the sky. 'Did you know that Bergensians call what's behind us mountains? And in fact they are. Real mountains. Six minutes on the cable car from the centre of the second biggest town in Norway there are people who get lost and die. Funny, isn't it.'
Harry shrugged.
Moller sighed. 'The rain's not going to stop. Let's take the tin can back down.'
At the bottom they walked to the taxi rank.
'It'll take twenty minutes to Flesland Airport now, before the rush hour,' Moller said.
Harry nodded and waited before he got in. His jacket was drenched.
'Follow the money,' Moller said, putting a hand on Harry's shoulder. 'Do whatever you have to do.'
'You too, boss.'
Moller raised a hand in the air and began to walk, but turned when Harry got into the taxi and shouted something that was drowned by the traffic. Harry switched on his mobile phone as they roared across Danmarks plass. A text message was waiting from Halvorsen telling him to ring back. Harry dialled the number.
'We've got Stankic's credit card,' Halvorsen said. 'The cash machine in Youngstorget ate it last night around twelve.'
'So that's where he was coming from when we raided the Hostel', Harry said.
'Yes'
'Youngstorget is a good distance from there,' Harry said. 'He must have gone there because he was frightened we would trace the card to somewhere near the Hostel. And it suggests he's in desperate need of money.'
'But it gets better,' Halvorsen said. 'The cash machine's under a surveillance camera of course.'
'Yeah?'
Halvorsen paused for effect.
'Come on,' Harry said. 'He doesn't hide his face, is that it?'
'He smiled straight into the camera like a film star,' Halvorsen said.
'Has Beate got the recording?'
'She's sitting in the House of Pain going through it now.'
Ragnhild Gilstrup thought about Johannes. About how different everything could have been. If only she had followed her heart, which had always been wiser than her head. It was strange that she had never been that unhappy and yet she had never wanted to live as much as right now.
To live a bit longer.
Because she knew everything now.
She stared into a black muzzle and she knew what she saw.
And what would happen.
Her scream was drowned by the roar of a very simple motor of a Siemens VS08G2040. A chair fell to the floor. The muzzle with the powerful suction approached her eye. She tried to squeeze her eyelids shut, but they were held open by strong fingers that wanted her to see. And she saw. And knew, knew what was going to happen.
17 Thursday, 18 December. The Face.
THE WALL CLOCK OVER THE COUNTER IN THE BIG CHEMIST'S shop showed half past nine. People sat around the room coughing, closed sleepy eyes or alternated glances between the red digital figure on the wall and their queue number as though it were their lottery ticket for life and every ping a new draw.
He had not taken a number from the machine; he wanted to sit by the heaters in the shop, but he had a feeling the blue jacket was attracting unwanted attention because the staff were beginning to send him looks. He gazed out of the window. Behind the mist he could make out the contours of a feeble, impotent sun. A police car passed by. They had security cameras in here. He had to move on, but where to? Without any money he would be thrown out of cafes and bars. Now he didn't even have the credit card any more. Last night he had decided he would withdraw money even though he knew there was a risk the card would be traced. He had searched on his evening walk from the Hostel, and in the end found an ATM some distance away. But the machine had just eaten his card without giving him anything, except for confirmation of what he already knew: they were encircling him; he was under siege again.
The semi-deserted Biscuit restaurant was immersed in pan-pipe music. It was the quiet period after lunch and before evening meals, so Tore Bjorgen had positioned himself by the window and was staring dreamily out at Karl Johans gate. Not because the view was so appealing, but because the radiators were under the windows and he couldn't seem to get warm. He was in a bad mood. He had to pick up the plane ticket to Cape Town within the next two days and he had just concluded what he had known for a long time: he didn't have enough money. Even though he had worked hard, it wasn't there. There was the rococo mirror he had bought for the flat in the autumn, of course, but there had been too much champagne, cocaine and other expensive jollities. Not that he had lost his grip on things, but to be honest it was time he escaped from the vicious circle of coke for parties, pills to sleep and coke to give him the energy to do enough overtime to finance his bad habits. And right now he didn't have a bean in his account. For the last five years he had celebrated Christmas and New Year in Cape Town instead of going home to the village of Vegardshei, to religious narrow-mindedness, his parents' silent accusations and his uncles' and his nephews' thinly disguised revulsion. He exchanged three weeks of unbearable freezing temperatures, dismal darkness and tedium for sun, beautiful people and pulsating nightlife. And games. Dangerous games. In December and January Cape Town was invaded by European advertising agencies, film crews and models, female and male. And this was where he found like-minded individuals. The game he liked best was blind date. In a place like Cape Town there was always a certain risk involved, but to meet a man amid the shacks in Cape Flats you were risking your life. And yet that was what he did. He didn't always know why he did these idiotic things; all he knew was that he needed danger to feel he was alive. The game had to have a potential penalty to be interesting.