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“Who’s wheels?”

“Mike’s,” she answered, braking at the intersection. “He thought you’d want a proper ride.”

She turned onto the old Lahti Highway heading south.

“From you, sure… Where we going?”

Sara smiled at her bald-headed man. “Kalastajatorppa. Mike got us a suite there.”

Kalastajatorppa was one of the finest hotels in Helsinki, located on a sprawling campus overlooking the sea. Its beauty and remote location had made it a favorite for visiting statesmen.

Sara’s right hand slipped from the stick shift to his thigh.

* * *

Suhonen strode down the bleak, fluorescent hallway of the Violent Crimes Unit. The undercover officer glanced into Takamäki’s office, but the detective lieutenant was away.

The floor was quiet. He wondered if something serious had happened-where was everybody?

He walked into the detectives’ shared office and saw Sergeant Joutsamo staring at her monitor, presumably typing out some case notes.

“Hey,” Suhonen said as he proceeded to his desk in the corner.

“Take a look at this,” Joutsamo said before Suhonen could take off his coat.

Suhonen circled behind Joutsamo and shrugged off his jacket.

Joutsamo pointed at the screen. “This is last night’s security footage from a downtown restaurant.”

The video was dark but clear, though jumpy, as it only recorded one frame per second. The time appeared in the lower right corner: 2:45 A.M. The seconds ticked by one by one.

The video began with a view of a street and a group of four young men staggering down the sidewalk-obviously drunk. Suhonen fully expected one of them to throw a punch and for the victim to fall over and crack his head on the asphalt.

But that didn’t happen. Instead, one of the guys ran across the street and climbed onto a metal bridge railing. A set of train tracks ran fifty feet below. The other three came closer and cheered him on.

Joutsamo slowed down the tape. Nonetheless, things happened quickly. In the lower corner, the restaurant’s burly bouncer took a couple of steps toward the group and apparently said something, since one of the men turned his head to look. The man on the railing was still standing upright, but in the next frame he was pitched backwards at a peculiar angle with his arms spread wide, and in the following frame, he had disappeared. In the next three frames, the trio and the bouncer dashed to the railing.

Joutsamo stopped the video. “He died immediately.”

“How old?”

“Twenty-two. The night-shift guys interviewed his friends at the scene. They were university students celebrating their friend’s birthday, and this twenty-two year-old got the drunken notion that he should jump onto the railing for a balancing act. No mental health problems, suicide threats or anything like that.”

“Finnish machismo,” Suhonen yawned.

Every year, about six hundred young men died of violent causes or of accidents, so there was nothing extraordinary about the incident…except to his family and friends.

“I guess. Risky behavior in a blur of booze,” she went on. “This morning I went to deliver the bad news and the parents took it pretty hard.”

“Not many laugh in that situation. Crime scenes are a piece of cake compared to that.”

Suhonen laid his hand on her shoulder.

“The mom cried the whole time and the dad went mute from shock. I listened to her cry for an hour, but then I had to leave. Apparently, he was a good kid. The police pastor stayed with them for support.”

“Accidents happen,” Suhonen said. He returned to his desk, tossed his jacket over the chair and booted up the computer. He took his keys out of his pocket and checked to see that his gun was still in the bottom drawer. Check.

“How was Estonia?”

Instead of answering, Suhonen tossed out a question. “Did you know that Estonia’s Supreme Court ruled that if a defendant changes his testimony in court, then the court can only take the new testimony into account. So all police interviews have to be scrapped. And if the defendant doesn’t testify, then none of the police interviews are admissible.”

She nodded. “I heard about that, but I meant your case.”

“Oh, some progress. Face-to-face meetings are always better than phone conversations,” he said evasively. He hadn’t told Joutsamo about his dinner in Tallinn. “Toomas recognized the guy in the photo as an Estonian-Russian named Sergei Zubrov.”

“Means nothing to me.”

“Same here, so far.”

* * *

Dressed only in boxers, Larsson gazed out the bedroom window of their suite at the Kalastajatorppa resort. The gangster’s body was almost entirely etched in ink, from just below his knees to the nape of his neck. The sea looked just as gray as the sky. It was almost dark outside, though it was just past noon.

At least the view here was better than staring at the fields surrounding the Turku brig.

Sara had gotten the key from the lobby and Larsson had come straight to the suite from the garage. He knew his appearance attracted attention, and that cops paid the porters for information on interesting guests.

The suite had two rooms: a bedroom with a large bed, and a living room with a sofa and wet bar. A bottle of champagne on ice had been waiting for them in the living room and they had popped the cork before decamping to the bedroom.

Now Sara was lying on the bed, watching pay-per-view.

Gonzales had arranged this nicely. The room had been ready right away in the morning, not at two in the afternoon, which was the usual check-in time. Maybe he had slipped the porters a little extra. The 350-euro check had been pre-paid. Larsson wondered why Mike seemed so eager to please. What was behind all this? He’d have time to reflect on that later.

“What movie’s this?”

“It’s not a movie. It’s a TV series called Rome. First season.”

Larsson glanced at the enormous screen. Legionnaires were smacking at each other with swords. It couldn’t have interested Larsson less. “Uh-huh. Looks good.”

“It is. Sex and violence. Just like our life.” Sara reached for the half-empty glass on the nightstand. “We were born at the wrong time. Should’ve lived with these guys.”

Wrong time, wrong place, thought Larsson. An airplane cleaved through the sky.

He needed to get the Skulls out of their slump and back on their feet. The simultaneous sentences of the kingpin and second-in-command had weakened the gang. Their president was doing life for shooting a businessman six years ago. He had carried out a contract and taken the life sentence rather than rat on the customer. That was the right attitude.

The cops had lucked out too often. Sara had told him that Alanen and Lintula had been locked up for the pizzeria extortion case. Out of a good two dozen gang members, about ten were sitting in cells now.

The president, who had been with Larsson in the Turku pen, agreed. The gang’s scope needed to be broadened and strengthened.

The champagne bottle was in an ice pail next to the TV. Larsson filled his glass with the last few drops.

“We need more of this.”

“There’s more in the fridge,” she said without looking away from the screen.

“You warm up the sauna?” Larsson asked, slamming the champagne.

“No need. It’s one of those rapid-ready ones. Just lift the cover off the stove and it’ll warm up.”

“OK.”

His plans weren’t so urgent that they couldn’t take a sauna. But at some point, he should call Aronen and summon the gang for tomorrow. For now, he could borrow Sara’s phone, but he’d have to get his own soon.

* * *

The jukebox at the Corner Pub was playing something new for a change. Happoradio’s lead singer belted out their recent hit “Che Guevara,” “In clouds of smoke, we rebel. Against the machine, we raise hell,” The words were inaudible in the back corner, but not the pounding rhythm.