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‘I’m glad you came,’ Petra had told Konrád as he was leaving. ‘I hope I’ve been able to help. To be honest, my mother was terribly bothered about all this before she died. Plagued with guilt about withholding information.’

‘Surely there was no need for that,’ Konrád replied, not knowing what else to say.

‘She was afraid she’d unwittingly caused trouble for someone,’ said Petra, ‘but felt it was far too late to make amends. She was desperate to relieve her conscience. Do you think this Stefán — Thorson — could have been killed because of what she knew?’

‘Oh no, that’s very unlikely,’ Konrád said reassuringly, though privately he was beginning to wonder.

‘Or someone else could have suffered because she kept quiet? Though Mother didn’t think anyone had been arrested or tried for the murder.’

‘No, I can’t find any evidence of that either.’

‘Perhaps she should have told the whole truth.’

‘Presumably she was reluctant to report unfounded suspicions, as you said. She must have been in a real quandary.’

‘Do you think you’ll ever find out what happened?’

‘Who knows? It’s probably too late now.’

Konrád pulled out one file after another. As he flicked through their contents he kept an eye out for references to Rósamunda, Thorson or a student connected to the case. Every now and then he came across the name of the detective, Flóvent, who had been conducting the inquiry with Thorson, but never in connection with Rósamunda. Flóvent had investigated all kinds of routine offences: burglaries, smuggling, car thefts and cases of assault, as well as the odd serious incident, until his name disappeared from the records shortly after the war.

While Konrád was leafing through paperwork from the time of the occupation, he reflected on what he knew about the Situation. He had recently read a newspaper article about the prejudice that Icelandic women who had fraternised with soldiers had faced for many years after the war and the stigma attached to the children of such unions, though attitudes had gradually changed and softened with the passing of time and the influence of the feminist movement. According to the article, the war had effectively emancipated Icelandic women from the patriarchy of the old farming society. The unprecedented degree of independence they enjoyed was one reason why resentment about the Situation had been so fierce. After all, a woman who washed laundry for the army was an independent businesswoman with an income many times greater than that of her unskilled sisters. No longer subject to the traditional authority of the male householder, and spared the need to find herself a husband straight out of a turf hovel, she found herself free to indulge her desire for adventure, to sail to far-off lands with a man from another world on her arm. Besides, as the women themselves pointed out, the foreign soldiers — polite, personable and clean — seemed like fairy-tale princes compared to the Icelandic men on offer.

Smiling to himself at the thought of his boorish countrymen, Konrád kept going back in time, looking for information about a girl who might have paid a heavy price for that new-found freedom. He had got back as far as 1941 when he discovered two loose handwritten sheets. They weren’t in a file and lacked both date and author; presumably they had ended up in the wrong place when someone was clearing out old files or in the midst of a move. Perhaps someone had just forgotten to throw them out. The handwriting was neat and legible, and the pages appeared to sum up an interview with a man who was not identified by name. It wasn’t an official report, more like a policeman’s notes to himself, stating that the man had been brought in for questioning and held in the cells on Skólavördustígur under strong protest. During questioning it had emerged that he knew ‘the girl up north’ — as it was phrased — and had taken some mending to a shop called The Stitch, where Rósamunda used to work. He was a student of Icelandic and history at the University of Iceland, it continued, with a special interest in folklore and legends, on which he was writing a thesis. Added at the bottom in different ink but in the same hand was a sentence which seemed strangely at odds with the dry tone of the preceding account, like a heartfelt outburst by the author: What happened was a tragedy.

That was all that the pages told him. Konrád tracked down some typewritten reports signed by Flóvent, and, comparing them to the notes, concluded that the handwriting on the loose sheets of paper could well be his. He continued rummaging through the filing cabinets, pulling out drawers and leafing through reports, but turned up nothing else of interest. Although the reference to the girl up north was puzzling, it appeared that the student in question had been suspected of Rósamunda’s murder. Evidently, the case had not been solved by his arrest, though, since it never went to court and nobody was ever found guilty. It was as if the inquiry had been abruptly terminated. Was there any chance that the suspect could have been linked to the influential family Petra had mentioned? A member of parliament was involved, after all. Could the investigation have been dropped as a result of political pressure?

A student of Icelandic and history.

A student.

Was this unnamed suspect the student Thorson had muttered about as he was leaving Petra’s home?

Two hours later, when it was clear that he was getting nowhere, Konrád abandoned his ferreting and went to see Marta. She told him glumly that they were making next to no progress with the inquiry. On her desk was a pile of recordings from CCTV cameras near Thorson’s home, labelled with the names of a shop, a bank and a school.

‘We’re starting to slog through this lot,’ said Marta, gesturing to the pile as she pulled on her coat. ‘In case we spot any of the usual suspects. Apart from that we haven’t a clue what we’re looking for.’

‘Have fun,’ said Konrád.

‘Have you got anything for us?’

‘Nothing concrete.’

‘We’re starting to think that the old guy took his own life,’ said Marta.

‘Smothered himself? Is that possible?’ asked Konrád incredulously.

‘Think about it, Konrád,’ said Marta. ‘He was old and knackered.’ She was late for a meeting, and clearly had no time to talk. ‘We’ve hit a brick wall. We can find no one who had any reason to harm him. There was no forced entry. Nothing was stolen. Motive? Absolutely no idea. He had no family here, no circle of friends as far as we know. Nothing to look forward to except spending the rest of his days mouldering away in a nursing home. See what I mean?’

‘Wrong,’ said Konrád. ‘Totally wrong. That’s a million miles from what was going on in his head. On the contrary, he had every reason to live. He was actively engaged in looking into that cold case involving the girl behind the theatre, a case he himself investigated back when he was a military policeman during the war. And I have reason to believe he was making progress with his enquiries. That’s where you’ll find the reason for his death. There’s your motive.’

‘All right,’ said Marta. ‘Could you send us a short report? We’ll take a look at it.’

The phone on her desk was ringing and the instant she picked it up, her mobile chimed in.

‘My report-writing days are over,’ said Konrád curtly. ‘You know where to find me.’