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Arctic Chill de-7




  Arctic Chill

  ( Detective Erlendur - 7 )

  Arnaldur Indridason

  Reykjavik police detective Erlendur Sveinsson and his team investigate the murder of a dark-skinned Asian boy, found frozen in his own blood one midwinter day outside a rundown apartment block. The author imbues the self-doubting Erlendur with enormous depth, as an insecure father unable to show his love for his errant son and daughter as well as a troubled professional who’s made pain his constant companion. Indridason also lays bare the plight of Thai women brought to Iceland, married and soon divorced by Icelanders, left to raise their children alone in a culture, a climate and a language they don’t understand. On top of this national tragedy is the universal problem of bored, unsupervised youth, raised with no respect for authority and awash in fast food, rock music and violent computer games. Indridason has produced a stunning indictment of contemporary society.

  Arctic Chill

  by Arnaldur Indridason

  In memory of Bernard Scudder

  Am I the one, who lives on,

  or the other, who died?

  Steinn Steinarr, In a Cemetery

  1

  They were able to guess his age, but had more trouble determining which part of the world he came from.

  They thought he was about ten years old. He was wearing a grey anorak, unzipped, with a hood, and military-style camouflage trousers. His school bag was on his back. One of his boots had come off and there was a hole in his sock. One toe poked through. The boy was not wearing gloves or a hat. His black hair was already frozen to the ice. He lay on his stomach with one cheek turned up towards them, and they saw his broken eyes staring along the frozen earth. The puddle of blood underneath him had started to freeze.

  Elinborg knelt down beside the body.

  “Oh my God,” she groaned. “What on earth is happening?”

  She held out her hand, as though she wanted to touch the body. The boy looked as if he had lain down to take a rest. She had difficulty controlling herself, did not want to believe what she saw.

  “Don’t move him,” Erlendur said calmly. He was standing by the body with Sigurdur Oli.

  “He must have been cold,” Elinborg muttered, withdrawing her hand and slowly getting to her feet.

  It was the middle of January. The winter had been reasonable until the New Year, when the temperature dropped sharply. The ground was now covered in a solid coating of ice and the north wind howled and sang around the blocks of flats. Rippling sheets of snow swept along the ground. They collected into little drifts here and there and fine powder snow swirled away from them. Straight from the Arctic, the wind bit their faces and penetrated their clothes, cutting to the bone. Erlendur thrust his hands deep into the pockets of his winter coat and shuddered. The sky was heavy with cloud and it was dark, although it had only just turned four o’clock.

  “Why do they make military trousers like that for children?” he asked.

  The three of them stood hunched over the boy’s body. The blue flashing lights of the police cars bounced off the surrounding houses and blocks of flats. A few passers-by had gathered by the cars. The first reporters had arrived. Forensics were photographing the scene, their flashes vying with the blue lights. They sketched the layout of the area where the boy was lying and the immediate surroundings. The forensic investigation was in its initial stages.

  “Those trousers are in fashion,” Elinborg said.

  “Do you think there’s something wrong with that?” Sigurdur Oli asked. “Kids wearing trousers like those?”

  “I don’t know,” Erlendur said. “Yes, I find it odd,” he added after a pause.

  He looked up at the block of flats. People were outside on the balconies watching, in spite of the cold. Others stayed indoors and made do with the view through the window. But most were still at work and their windows were dark. The officers would have to go to all the apartments and talk to the residents. The witness who had found the boy said that he lived there. Perhaps he had been alone and had fallen off the balcony, in which case this could be recorded as a nonsensical accident. Erlendur preferred that theory to the idea of the boy having been murdered. He could not pursue that thought through to the end.

  He scrutinised the surroundings. The garden behind the flats did not seem well kept. In the middle was a patch of gravel that served as a little playground. There were two swings, one broken so that the seat hung down to ground level and spun around in the wind; a battered slide that had originally been painted red but was now patchy and rusty, and a simple see-saw with two little seats made from bits of wood, one end frozen solid to the ground and the other standing up in the air like the barrel of a large gun.

  “We need to find his boot,” Sigurdur Oli said.

  They all looked at the sock with the hole in it.

  “This can’t be happening,” Elinborg sighed.

  Detectives were searching for footprints in the garden but darkness was falling and they couldn’t see much on the frozen ground. The garden was covered with a coat of slippery ice, occasional clusters of grass poking through it. The district medical officer had confirmed the death and was standing where he thought he would be sheltered from the gale, trying to light a cigarette. He was uncertain about the time of death. Somewhere in the past hour, he thought. He had explained that the forensic pathologist would calculate the exact time of death by correlating the degrees of frost with the body temperature. On first impression the doctor could not identify a cause of death. Possibly a fall, he said, looking up at the gloomy block.

  The body had not been disturbed. The pathologist was on his way. If possible he preferred to visit the crime scene and examine the surroundings with the police. Erlendur was concerned at the ever-growing crowd gathering at the corner of the block, who could see the body lit up by the flashing cameras. Cars cruised slowly past, their passengers absorbing the scene. A small floodlight was being erected to enable a closer examination of the site. Erlendur told a policeman to cordon off the area.

  From the garden, none of the doors appeared to open out onto a balcony from which the boy might have fallen. The windows were all shut. This was a large block of flats by Icelandic standards, six storeys high with four stairwells. It was in a poor state of repair. The iron railings round the balconies were rusty. The paint was faded and in some places it had flaked off the concrete. Two sitting-room windows with a single large crack in each were visible from where Erlendur stood. No one had bothered to replace them.

  “Do you suppose it’s racially motivated?” Sigurdur Oli said, looking down at the boy’s body.

  “I don’t think we should jump to conclusions,” Erlendur said.

  “Could he have been climbing up the wall?” Elinborg asked as she, too, looked up at the apartment block.

  “Kids do the unlikeliest things,” Sigurdur Oli remarked.

  “We need to establish whether he might have been climbing up between the balconies,” Erlendur said.

  “Where do you think he’s from?” Sigurdur Oli wondered.

  “He looks Asian to me,” Elinborg said.

  “Could be Thai, Filipino, Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese, Chinese,” Sigurdur Oli reeled off.

  “Shouldn’t we say he’s an Icelander until we find out otherwise?” Erlendur said.

  They stood in silence in the cold, watching the drifting snow pile up around the boy. Erlendur looked at the curious bystanders at the corner where the police cars were parked. Then he took off his coat and draped it over the body.

  “Is it safe doing that?” Elinborg asked with a glance in the direction of the forensics team. According to procedure they were not even supposed to stand over the body until fore
nsics had granted permission.

  “I don’t know,” Erlendur said.

  “Not very professional,” Sigurdur Oli said.

  “Has no one reported the boy missing?” Erlendur asked, ignoring his remark. “No enquiries about a lost boy of this age?”

  “I checked that on the way here,” Elinborg said. “The police haven’t been notified of any.”

  Erlendur glanced down at his coat. He was cold.

  “Where’s the person who found him?”

  “We’ve got him in one of the stairwells,” Sigurdur Oli said. “He waited for us. Called from his mobile. Every kid carries a mobile phone these days. He said he’d taken a shortcut through the garden on his way home from school and stumbled across the body.”

  “I’ll talk to him,” Erlendur said. “You check whether they can find the boy’s tracks through the garden. If he was bleeding he might have left a trail. Maybe he didn’t fall.”

  “Shouldn’t forensics handle that?” Sigurdur Oli mumbled to deaf ears.

  “He doesn’t appear to have been attacked here in the garden,” Elinborg said.

  “And for God’s sake, try to find his boot,” Erlendur said as he walked off.

  “The boy who found him …” Sigurdur Oli began.

  “Yes,” Erlendur said, turning round.

  “He’s also col…” Sigurdur Oli hesitated.

  “What?”

  “An immigrant kid,” Sigurdur Oli said.

  The boy sat on a step in one of the stairwells of the block of flats, a policewoman sat with him. He had his sports kit wrapped up in a yellow plastic bag and eyed Erlendur with suspicion. They had not wanted to make him sit in a police car. That could have led people to conclude that he was implicated in the boy’s death, so someone had suggested that he wait in the stairwell instead.

  The corridor was dirty. An unhygienic odour pervaded the air, mingling with cigarette smoke and cooking smells from the flats. The floor was covered in worn linoleum and the graffiti on the wall seemed illegible to Erlendur. The boy’s parents were still at work. They had been notified. He was dark-skinned with straight jet-black hair that was still damp after his shower, and big white teeth. He was dressed in an anorak and jeans, and holding a woollen hat in his hands.

  “It’s awfully cold,” Erlendur said, rubbing his hands.

  The boy was silent.

  Erlendur sat down beside him. The boy said that his name was Stefan and he was thirteen. He lived in the next block of flats up from this one and had done so for as long as he could remember. His mother was from the Philippines, he said.

  “You must have been shocked when you found him,” Erlendur said after a lengthy silence.

  “Yes.”

  And you recognised him? You knew him?”

  Stefan had told the police the boy’s name and where he lived. It was in this block but on another staircase and the police were trying to locate his parents. All Stefan knew about the boy was that his mother made chocolate and he had one brother. He said he had not known him particularly well, nor his brother. They had only quite recently moved to the area.

  “He was called Elli,” the boy said. “His name was Elias.”

  “Was he dead when you found him?”

  “Yes, I think so. I shook him but nothing happened.”

  “And you phoned us?” Erlendur said, feeling he ought to try to cheer the lad up. “That was a good thing to do. Absolutely the right thing. What did you mean when you said his mother makes chocolate?”

  “She works in a chocolate factory”

  “Do you know what could have happened to Elli?”

  “No.”

  “Do you know any of his friends?”

  “Not really.”

  “What did you do after you shook him?”

  “Nothing,” the boy said. “I just called the cops.”

  “You know the cops” number?”

  “Yes. I come home from school on my own and Mum likes to keep an eye on me. She …”

  “She what?”

  “She always tells me to phone the police immediately if…”

  “If what?”

  “If anything happens.”

  “What do you think happened to Elli?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Were you born in Iceland?”

  “Yes.”

  “Elli too, do you know?”

  The boy had been staring down at the linoleum on the stairwell floor all the time, but now he looked Erlendur in the face.

  “Yes,” he answered.

  The front door swung open and Elinborg was blown indoors. A thin sheet of glass separated the stairwell from the entrance and Erlendur saw that she was carrying his overcoat. With a smile he told the boy he might talk to him again later, then stood up and walked over to Elinborg.

  “You know you must only interrogate children in the presence of a parent or guardian or child welfare officer and all that,” she snapped as she handed him his coat.

  “I wasn’t interrogating him,” Erlendur said. “Just asking about things in general.” He looked at his overcoat. “Has the body been removed?”

  “It’s on its way to the morgue. He didn’t fall. They found a trail.”

  Erlendur grimaced.

  “The boy entered the garden from the west side,” Elinborg said. “There’s a path there. It’s supposed to be lit but one of the residents told us there’s only one lamp-post and the bulbs are always getting smashed. He got into the garden by climbing over the fence. We found blood on it. He lost his boot there, probably when he was clambering over.”

  Elinborg took a deep breath.

  “Someone stabbed him,” she said. “He probably died from a knife wound to the stomach. There was a pool of blood underneath him that froze more or less directly it formed.”

  Elinborg fell silent.

  “He was probably going home,” she said eventually.

  “Can we trace where he was stabbed?”

  “We’re working on it.”

  “Have his parents been contacted?”

  “His mother’s on the way. Her name’s Sunee. She’s Thai. We haven’t told her what’s happened yet. That’ll be terrible.”

  “You go and be with her,” Erlendur said. “What about the father?”

  “I don’t know. There are three names on the entryphone. One looked something like Niran.”

  “I understand he has a brother,” Erlendur said.

  He opened the door for her and they went out into the howling north wind. Elinborg waited for the mother. She would go to the morgue with her. A policeman accompanied Stefan home; they would take a statement from him there. Erlendur went back into the garden. He put on his overcoat. The grass was dark where the boy had been lying.

  I am felled to the ground.

  A snatch of old verse entered Erlendur’s mind as he stood, silent and deep in thought, looking down at the patch where the boy had been lying. He took a last glance up the length of the gloomy block of flats, then carefully picked his way over the icy ground towards the playground, where he grasped the cold steel of the slide with one hand. He felt the piercing cold crawl up his arm.

  I am felled to the ground,

  frozen and cannot be freed . . .

  2

  Elinborg accompanied the boy’s mother to the morgue on Baronsstigur. She was a short, petite woman, in her mid-thirties and tired after a long day at work. Her thick, dark hair was tied in a ponytail, her face round and friendly. The police had found out where she worked and two men were sent to collect her. It took them some time to explain to her what had happened and that she had to go with them. They drove up to the flats where Elinborg joined them in the car and realised that they needed an interpreter. One of the policemen contacted the Multicultural Centre, which sent a woman to meet them at the morgue.

  The interpreter had not yet turned up when Elinborg arrived with the mother. She accompanied the woman straight into the morgue where the pathologist was waiting for th
em. When the mother saw her son she let out a piercing howl and slumped into Elinborg’s arms. She screamed something in her own language. At that moment the interpreter walked in, an Icelandic woman about the same age as the mother, and together she and Elinborg tried to comfort her. Elinborg got the impression that the two women were acquainted. The interpreter tried to talk to the mother in a soothing tone but, out of her wits with grief and helplessness, she tore herself loose, threw herself onto the boy and cried at the top of her voice.

  Eventually they managed to get her out of the morgue and into a police car, which drove her straight home. Elinborg told the interpreter that the mother ought to ask a member of her family or a friend to be with her during this painful ordeal, someone close to her, someone she trusted. The interpreter passed on the message but the mother showed no response.

  Elinborg explained to the interpreter how Elias had been found lying in the garden behind the block of flats. She described the police investigation and asked her to inform the mother.

  “She has a brother in Iceland,” the interpreter said. “I’ll contact him.”

  “Do you know this woman?” Elinborg asked.

  The interpreter nodded.

  “Have you lived in Thailand?”

  “Yes, for several years,” the interpreter said. “I first went there as an exchange student.”

  She said her name was Gudny, and she was slender and quite short, with dark hair and large glasses. She wore a thick woollen sweater and jeans under a black coat, and had a white woollen shawl over her shoulders.

  When they arrived back at the flats, the woman asked to be shown where her son was found and they took her into the garden. It was pitch dark by now but the forensics team had set up lights and cordoned off the area. News of the murder had spread rapidly. Elinborg noticed two bouquets of flowers laid against the wall of the block of flats, where a growing crowd was gathering by the police cars, looking on in silence.

  The mother went through the police cordon. Forensics technicians in white overalls stopped their work and watched her. She was soon standing alone but for the interpreter at the place where her son had been found dead. She knelt down, placed the palm of her hand on the ground and wept.