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Hypothermia Page 10


  Orri opened the door.

  ‘What about this Tryggvi?’ Erlendur asked.

  ‘Tryggvi? I think that was his name. They described him as a burn-out. You must have heard of the type. An outstanding student who lost the plot. Quit his studies. I’ve no idea where he is today.’

  ‘Was Baldvin involved?’

  ‘That’s what they always said: him and his friend the medic. I have a feeling the medic might have been Tryggvi’s cousin; they were related somehow. They used to be great mates.’

  ‘What happened?’

  ‘You haven’t heard?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Tryggvi’s supposed to have asked his cousin to—’

  Othello came storming down the corridor with Desdemona on his heels. He was dressed as an American colonel, she in a light blue summer suit and bouffant blonde wig. Othello’s head was shaven and sweat was already breaking out on his scalp.

  ‘Let’s get this bloody nightmare over,’ Othello boomed, dragging Iago off towards the stage. Desdemona smiled sweetly at Erlendur.

  ‘What did Tryggvi ask him to do?’ Erlendur called after them.

  Orri stopped and looked back at Erlendur.

  ‘I don’t know if there’s any truth in it but it’s what I heard years ago.’

  ‘What? What did you hear?’

  ‘Tryggvi asked him to kill him.’

  ‘Kill him? Is he dead?’

  ‘No, full of beans but weird in the head.’

  ‘What are you trying to tell me? I don’t under—’

  ‘It was an experiment that the cousin carried out on Tryggvi.’

  ‘What kind of experiment?’

  ‘The way I heard it, he stopped Tryggvi’s heart for several minutes before resuscitating him. They said Tryggvi was never the same again.’

  And with that the trio stormed on stage.

  Next day, Erlendur dug up the old reports in the police archives about the incident on Lake Thingvallavatn. He read the statement by María’s mother Leonóra, as well as the expert witness’s verdict on the boat and outboard motor. He found a postmortem report in the files indicating that Magnús had drowned in the cold water. Apparently, no statement had been taken from the little girl. The case was treated as an accident. Erlendur checked who had led the investigation. It was an officer called Níels. He sighed. He had never had any time for Níels. They had been working for the CID for an equal length of time but, unlike Erlendur, Níels was dilatory; his cases had a tendency to become drawn out to the point of invalidation, and were almost invariably sloppily handled.

  Níels was on his coffee break. He was joking with the women in the cafeteria when Erlendur asked if he could have a word.

  ‘What was it you wanted, Erlendur old chap?’ Níels asked, with his habitual air of empty condescension. ‘Friend’ and ‘chap’, ‘chum’ and ‘my old mate’ were words he appended to every sentence, insignificant in themselves but deeply meaningful in the mouth of Níels who had full confidence in his own superiority, despite the lack of any foundation for this.

  Erlendur drew him aside and sat down with him in the cafeteria before asking if he remembered the accident on Lake Thingvallavatn, and Leonóra and her daughter María.

  ‘It was an open-and-shut case, wasn’t it?’

  ‘Yes, I expect so. You don’t happen to remember anything unusual about the circumstances: the people involved or the accident itself?’

  Níels adopted an expression intended to convey the idea that he was racking his brains in an effort to recall the events at Lake Thingvallavatn.

  ‘You’re not trying to uncover a crime after all these years?’ he asked.

  ‘No, far from it. The little girl you saw at the scene with her mother died the other day. It was her father who drowned.’

  ‘I don’t recall anything unusual in connection with that investigation,’ Níels said.

  ‘How did the propeller come loose from the engine?’

  ‘Well, naturally I don’t have the exact details on the tip of my tongue,’ Níels answered warily. He regarded Erlendur with suspicion. Not everyone at the police station appreciated it when Erlendur started digging up old cases.

  ‘Do you remember what forensics said?’

  ‘Wear and tear, wasn’t it?’ Níels asked.

  ‘Something like that,’ Erlendur replied. ‘Not that that explains much. The engine was old and clapped out and hadn’t received any particular maintenance. What did they tell you that didn’t go in the report?’

  ‘Gudfinnur was in charge of the examination. But he’s dead now.’

  ‘So we can’t ask him. You know that not everything goes into the reports.’

  ‘What is it with you and the past?’

  Erlendur shrugged.

  ‘What are you trying to get at, old chap?’

  ‘Nothing,’ Erlendur said, controlling his impatience.

  ‘What exactly do you need to know?’ Níels asked.

  ‘How did they react, the wife and daughter? Can you remember?’

  ‘There was nothing unnatural about their reactions. It was a tragic accident. Everyone could see that. The woman almost had a breakdown.’

  ‘The propeller was never found.’

  ‘No.’

  ‘And there was no way of establishing exactly how it had come loose?’

  ‘No. The man was alone in the boat and probably started tinkering with the engine, fell overboard and drowned. His wife didn’t see what happened, nor did the girl. The wife suddenly noticed that the boat was empty. Then she heard the man cry out briefly but by then it was too late.’

  ‘Do you remember . . .?’

  ‘We talked to the retailer,’ Níels said. ‘Or Gudfinnur did. Talked to someone at the company that sold the outboard motors.’

  ‘Yes, it’s in the report.’

  ‘He said the propeller wouldn’t come off that easily. It required some effort.’

  ‘Could it have gone aground?’

  ‘There was no evidence of that. But the wife told us that her husband had been messing around with the engine the day before. She didn’t ask him about it and didn’t know what he was doing. He might have loosened the propeller accidentally.’

  ‘Her husband?’

  ‘Yes.’

  Erlendur recalled Ingvar telling him that Magnús did not have the first clue about engines.

  ‘Do you remember the girl’s reaction when you arrived on the scene?’ he asked.

  ‘Wasn’t she only about ten or so?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Well, of course she was like any child who suffers a shock. She clung to her mother. Never left her side.’

  ‘I can’t see from the reports that you spoke to her at all.’

  ‘No, we didn’t, or at least not to any extent. We didn’t see any reason to. Children aren’t the most reliable witnesses.’

  Erlendur was on the point of objecting when he was interrupted by two uniformed officers entering the cafeteria and hailing Níels.

  ‘Where are you going with this?’ Níels asked. ‘What’s it all about?’

  ‘Fear of the dark,’ Erlendur replied. ‘Simple fear of the dark.’

  14

  María’s friend Karen met Erlendur at the door of her home, a spacious flat in a block situated in the west end of Reykjavík. She had been expecting him and invited him inside. When he had called her after their meeting at the police station she had given him a list of names of people connected with María, as well as discussing their friendship that had begun when they were eleven and had shared a desk at their new school. Leonóra had recently moved María to a different school due to her dissatisfaction with the governors and teachers at her previous one where she had been subjected to minor bullying. Given little say in the matter, María was trying her best to find her feet among the unfamiliar faces at her new school. Karen meanwhile had just moved to the neighbourhood and knew no one. Leonóra used to drive María to school every morning and fetch her in the afte
rnoons, and once María asked if Karen would like to come home with her. Leonóra welcomed Karen as her daughter’s new friend, and from then on their friendship quickly blossomed under her protection.

  ‘Actually her mother was a bit overbearing,’ Karen told Erlendur. ‘She enrolled us for ballet, which neither of us could stand, took us to the cinema, arranged for me to come for sleep-overs with them in Grafarvogur, though my mum never let me go for sleepovers with any other friends. She organised cinema tickets, made popcorn for us when we were watching TV. We hardly had a moment to play by ourselves. Leonóra was very kind, don’t get me wrong, but sometimes you’d just had enough of her. She wrapped María in cotton wool. But although she was spoilt to death in my opinion, María never lorded it over other people: she was always polite and dutiful and good – it was her nature.’

  Karen and María’s friendship grew closer by the year. They graduated from sixth-form college together, Karen embarked on a teaching degree and María read history, they travelled abroad together, formed a sewing circle that eventually fizzled out, took holidays together, spent weekends in the country and went out on the town together.

  Erlendur now had a better appreciation of why Karen had come to see him at the police station after her close friend’s suicide and had claimed that there must have been something more to it than bottomless despair.

  ‘What did you think of the seance?’ Karen asked.

  ‘Did you know about her going to this seance?’ he asked, evading the question.

  ‘I drove her there,’ Karen said. ‘The medium’s called Andersen.’

  ‘Apparently Leonóra was going to let María know if she found herself in some sort of afterlife,’ Erlendur said.

  ‘I don’t see anything odd about that,’ Karen said. ‘We often discussed it, María and I. She told me about Proust. How do you explain something like that?’

  ‘Well, there are a number of possible explanations,’ Erlendur said.

  ‘You don’t believe in that sort of thing, do you?’ Karen said.

  ‘No,’ Erlendur replied. ‘But I understand María. I can well understand why she chose to speak to a medium.’

  ‘A lot of people do believe in life after death.’

  ‘Yes,’ Erlendur said, ‘but I’m not one of them. What people on the point of death describe as a bright light and tunnel are to my mind nothing more than the brain sending out its final messages before shutting down.’

  ‘María thought differently.’

  ‘Did she tell anyone else apart from you about the Proust business?’

  ‘I don’t know.’

  Karen sat staring at Erlendur as if wondering whether he was the right man to talk to, whether she had made a mistake. Erlendur met her gaze. The light in the room was fading.

  ‘There’s probably no point telling you what María told me only a short while ago.’

  ‘You needn’t tell me anything unless you want to. The fact of the matter is that your friend took her own life. You may find it hard to face up to – but then, a lot of things happen in this world that we find it hard to reconcile ourselves to.’

  ‘I’m perfectly well aware of that and I know how María felt after Leonóra died but I still find it a bit odd.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘María said she’d seen her mother.’

  ‘You mean after Leonóra died?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Saw her at a seance?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘I gather María used to see a lot of things and was petrified of the dark.’

  ‘I know all that,’ Karen said. ‘This was slightly different.’

  ‘How?’

  ‘María woke up one night several weeks ago to find Leonóra standing at the bedroom door, dressed in summer clothes with a ribbon in her hair and wearing a yellow jumper. She beckoned her to follow her out of the room. Then she vanished round the doorpost and when María came out she was nowhere to be seen.’

  ‘You can see what a strain the poor woman was under,’ Erlendur commented.

  ‘I would be wary of judging her,’ Karen said. ‘You heard on the tape how Leonóra meant to make contact?’

  ‘Yes,’ Erlendur said.

  ‘And?’

  ‘And nothing. The book must have fallen on the floor. It happens.’

  ‘Precisely that book?’

  ‘Perhaps she had taken it out herself and forgotten. Perhaps she told Baldvin about the book and he took it out and then forgot. Perhaps she told some visitor and they fiddled with the book. She told you about it.’

  ‘Yes, but I would never have dropped the book on the floor and left it there,’ Karen pointed out.

  ‘I believe in coincidence,’ Erlendur said. ‘Anyway, Leonóra’s apparition seems to have been prowling round the house, large as life. I’d have thought that would have been more than sufficient as proof of life after death. María’s old boyfriend said she was forever seeing things in some kind of dream state; people she knew and so on.’

  There was a long silence.

  ‘Anyway, so you know the identity of the medium on the tape?’ Erlendur said at last.

  ‘Yes. He’s not very well known. I directed María to him. I heard about him from another friend of mine who went to see him.’

  ‘How did the recording end up with you?’

  ‘María lent it to me the other day. I was curious to listen to a seance because I’ve never been to a medium myself.’

  ‘Do you know if she went to see any other psychics?’

  ‘Apart from this one, there was another whom she saw very recently. Just before she died.’

  ‘Who was that?’

  ‘María said the medium knew everything about her. Literally everything. She said it was unbelievable. It was one of my last conversations with her. I knew she wasn’t in a good way but I didn’t know she was that far gone.’

  ‘Do you know who the psychic was?’

  ‘No, she didn’t tell me but I got the impression that María liked and trusted her.’

  ‘So it was a woman?’

  ‘Yes.’

  Karen sat in silence, staring out of the large sitting-room window into the dusk.

  ‘Have you heard what happened at Lake Thingvallavatn?’ she asked out of the blue.

  ‘Yes, I’ve heard.’

  ‘I’ve always had the feeling that something went on at the lake that has never come to light,’ Karen said.

  ‘Such as?’ Erlendur asked.

  ‘María never referred to it explicitly but she was haunted by something. Something from her past that she would never talk about, connected to that terrible accident.’

  ‘Do you know Thorgerdur who studied history with her?’

  ‘Yes, I know who she is.’

  ‘She spoke along similar lines and thinks it might have been linked to María’s father. As if he was meant to die. Does that sound familiar?’

  ‘No. “As if he was meant to die”?’

  ‘It was something that María let slip; it could mean anything.’

  ‘As if his time had come?’

  ‘Possibly. In the sense that it was his fate to die that day and that nothing could have changed it.’

  ‘I never heard her say anything like that.’

  ‘One could also put another construction on her words,’ Erlendur said.

  ‘You mean . . . as if he had deserved it?’

  ‘Possibly, but why?’ Erlendur asked.

  ‘That it wasn’t an accident? That . . .’

  Karen stared at Erlendur.

  ‘That it wasn’t an accident?’

  ‘I really couldn’t say,’ Erlendur answered. ‘The case was investigated at the time. We didn’t find anything out of the ordinary. Then years later someone quotes this remark of María’s. Did she ever say anything of the sort in your hearing?’

  ‘No, never,’ Karen said.

  ‘There’s a voice that comes through on the recording of the seance,’ Erlendur went on.

&nbs
p; ‘Yes?’

  ‘A deep masculine voice that tells María to be careful, that she doesn’t know what she’s doing.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Did she have any explanation for that?’

  ‘The voice reminded her of her father.’

  ‘Yes, that’s clear on the tape.’

  ‘All I know is that something happened at the lake. I sensed it so often from her behaviour. Something connected to her father Magnús – that she couldn’t bring herself to tell anyone.’

  ‘Tell me something else: have you ever heard of a man called Tryggvi who studied medicine at the same time as Baldvin?’

  Karen thought, then shook her head.

  ‘No,’ she said. ‘I don’t know of any Tryggvi.’

  ‘Did María never mention the name?’

  ‘I don’t think so. Who is he?’

  ‘All I know is that he was at university with Baldvin,’ Erlendur said, deciding not to reveal what Orri Fjeldsted had told him about Tryggvi.

  Erlendur left shortly afterwards. Karen watched him get into his car, an old black model with round rear lights in the parking lot. She didn’t recognise the make. But instead of starting the engine and driving away, he sat tight. Before long cigarette smoke began to curl out of the driver’s window. It was forty minutes before the round lights finally came on and the car moved slowly away.

  He used to long to dream about his brother when he was younger. He would find something that had belonged to Bergur – a small toy or a jumper that his mother had carefully folded away, because she never threw out any of his things – and put the object under his pillow before going to sleep; something different each time. At first he wanted to know if Bergur would appear to him in a dream and help him in his search. Later he simply wanted to see him, to remember him as he had been when he went missing.

  But he never dreamed of Bergur.

  It was not until many years later, alone in a chilly hotel room, that he finally dreamed of his brother. His dream lingered with him after he awoke and, in the liminal state between waking and sleeping, he saw his brother huddled shivering in a corner of the room. He felt as if he could touch him. Then the vision disappeared and he was left alone once more with an old yearning for the reunion that would never be.