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Phantom Page 7


  “If you haven’t found the gun yet—”

  “The prosecutor doesn’t need the gun, Harry.”

  He nodded. Gunshot residue on his hands. Witnesses who had seen him showing off with the gun. His DNA on the dead boy.

  Ahead of them, leaning against a green iron bench, two white boys in gray hoodies saw them, put their heads together and shuffled off down the path.

  “Looks like pushers can still smell the cop in you, Harry.”

  “Mm. Thought it was just Moroccans who sold hash here.”

  “Competition has moved in. Kosovar Albanians, Somalis, Eastern Europeans. Asylum seekers selling the whole spectrum. Speed, methamphetamine, Ecstasy, morphine.”

  “Heroin.”

  “Doubtful. There’s almost no standard heroin to be found in Oslo. Violin is what counts, and you can get that only around Plata. Unless you want to travel to Gothenburg or Copenhagen, where apparently violin has made a recent appearance.”

  “I keep hearing about this violin stuff. What is it?”

  “New synthetic dope. It doesn’t hinder breathing as much as standard heroin, so even if it ruins lives, there are fewer overdoses. Extremely addictive. Everyone who tries it wants more. But it’s so expensive not many can afford it.”

  “So they buy other dope instead?”

  “There’s a morphine bonanza.”

  “One step forward, two steps back.”

  Beate shook her head. “It’s the war on heroin that’s important. And he’s won that one.”

  “Bellman?”

  “So you’ve heard?”

  “Hagen said he’s busted most of the heroin gangs.”

  “The Pakistani gangs. The Vietnamese. Dagbladet called him General Rommel after he smashed a major network of North Africans. The motorcycle gang in Alnabru. They’re all in jail.”

  “The bikers? In my time biker boys sold speed and shot heroin like crazy.”

  “Los Lobos. Hells Angels wannabes. We figure they were one of only two networks dealing in violin. But they were caught in a mass arrest with a subsequent raid in Alnabru. You should have seen the smirk on Bellman’s chops in the papers. He was there when they carried out the operation.”

  “Let’s do some good?”

  Beate laughed. Another feature he liked about her: She was enough of a film buff to be on the ball when he quoted semi-good lines from semi-bad films. Harry offered her a cigarette, which she declined. He lit up.

  “Mm. How the hell did Bellman achieve what the Narc Unit wasn’t even close to achieving in all the years I was at HQ?”

  “I know you don’t like him, but in fact he’s a good leader. They loved him at Kripos, and they’re pissed off with the Chief of Police for taking him to Police HQ.”

  “Mm.” Harry inhaled. Felt it pacify his blood’s hunger. Nicotine. A polysyllabic word, like heroin, like violin. “So who’s left?”

  “That’s the snag with exterminating pests. You upset a food chain and you don’t know if all you’ve done is make way for something else. Something worse than what you removed …”

  “Any evidence of that?”

  Beate shrugged.

  “All of a sudden we’re not getting any info off the streets. Our informers don’t know anything. Or they’re keeping mum. There are just whispers about the man from Dubai. No one has seen him, no one knows his name—he’s a kind of invisible puppeteer. We can see violin is being sold, but we can’t trace it back to its source. The pushers we nab say they’ve bought it off other sellers at the same level. It’s not normal for tracks to be covered so well. And that tells us this is a simple, very professional outfit controlling import and distribution.”

  “The man from Dubai. The mysterious mastermind. Haven’t we heard that story before? And then he turns out to be a run-of-the-mill crook.”

  “This is different, Harry. There were a number of drug-related murders over the New Year. A type of brutality we hadn’t seen before. And no one said a word. Two Vietnamese dealers were found hanging upside down from a beam in the flat where they worked. Drowned. Each one had a plastic bag filled with water on his head.”

  “That’s not an Arab method—it’s Russian.”

  “Sorry?”

  “They hang them upside down, put a plastic bag over their heads and tie it loosely, around the neck. Then they begin to pour water down their heels. It follows the body down to the bag and fills it up. The method’s called the Man on the Moon.”

  “How do you know that?”

  Harry shrugged. “There was a wealthy surgeon named Birayev. In the eighties he got his hands on one of the original astronaut suits from Apollo 11. Two million dollars on the black market. Anyone who tried to pull a fast one on Birayev or didn’t pay a debt was put in the suit. They filmed the face of the poor guy as they poured in the water. Afterward the film was sent around to other debtors.”

  Harry blew smoke toward the ceiling.

  Beate sent him a lingering look and slowly shook her head. “What have you been doing in Hong Kong, Harry?”

  “You asked me that on the phone.”

  “And you didn’t answer.”

  “Exactly. Hagen said he could give me another case instead of this one. Mentioned something about an undercover guy who was killed.”

  “Yes,” Beate said, sounding relieved that they were no longer talking about the Gusto case and Oleg.

  “What was that about?”

  “A young undercover Narc agent. He was washed ashore where the Opera House slopes into the water. Tourists, children and so on. Big hullabaloo.”

  “Shot?”

  “Drowned.”

  “And how do you know it was murder?”

  “No external injuries; in fact, it looked as if he might have fallen into the sea by accident—his beat was the area around the Opera House. But then Bjørn Holm checked his lungs. Turned out it was fresh water. And Oslo Fjord is salt water, as you know. Looks like someone chucked him in the sea to make it look as if he had drowned there.”

  “Well,” Harry said, “as a Narc agent he must have wandered up and down the river. That’s fresh water and it flows into the sea by the Opera House.”

  Beate smiled. “Good to have you back, Harry. But Bjørn thought about that, and compared the bacterial flora, the content of microorganisms and so on. The water in his lungs was too clean to have come from the Akerselva. It had been through water filters. My guess is he drowned in a bath. Or in a pool below the water-purification plant. Or …”

  Harry threw the butt down on the path in front of him. “A plastic bag.”

  “Yes.”

  “The man from Dubai. What do you know about him?”

  “What I’ve just told you, Harry.”

  “You didn’t tell me anything.”

  “Exactly.”

  They stopped by Anker Bridge. Harry checked his watch.

  “Going somewhere?” Beate asked.

  “Nope,” Harry answered. “I did it to give you a pretext to say you’ve got to be going, without feeling you were dumping me.”

  Beate smiled. She was quite attractive when she smiled, Harry thought. Strange that she wasn’t with someone. Or perhaps she was. One of the eight on his phone contacts list, and he didn’t even know that.

  B for Beate.

  H was for Halvorsen, Harry’s ex-colleague and the father of Beate’s child. Killed in active duty. But his number still hadn’t been deleted.

  “Have you contacted Rakel?” Beate asked.

  R. Harry wondered if her name had come up as a result of association with the word dumping. He shook his head. Beate waited. But he had nothing to add.

  They both started to speak at the same time.

  “I suppose you’ve—”

  “In fact, I have—”

  She smiled. “Got to go.”

  “Of course.”

  He watched her walk up toward the road.

  Then he sat on one of the benches and stared at the river, at the ducks paddling
in a quiet backwater.

  The two hoodies returned. Came over to him.

  “Are you five-oh?”

  American slang for police, stolen from a supposedly authentic TV series. It was Beate they had smelled, not him.

  Harry shook his head.

  “After some …?”

  “Some peace,” Harry completed. “Peace and quiet.”

  He took a pair of Prada sunglasses from his inside pocket. He had been given them by a shopowner on Canton Road who was a little behind with payments, but who considered himself fairly treated. They were a ladies’ model, but Harry didn’t care—he liked them.

  “By the way,” he called after them, “got any violin?”

  One snorted by way of response. “Downtown,” the other said, pointing over his shoulder.

  “Where, precisely?”

  “Look for Van Persie or Fàbregas.” Their laughter faded as they headed toward Blå, the jazz club.

  Harry leaned back and studied the ducks’ strangely efficient kick, which allowed them to glide across the water like speed skaters on black ice.

  Oleg was keeping his mouth shut. The way the guilty keep their mouths shut. That is their privilege and sole rational strategy. So where to go from here? How do you investigate something that is already solved, answer questions that have already found adequate answers? What did he think he could achieve? Defeat the truth by denying it? The way he, in his role as a Crime Squad detective, had seen relatives produce the pathetic refrain “My son? Not a chance!” He knew why he wanted to investigate crimes. Because it was the only thing he could do. The only thing he had to contribute. He was the housewife who insisted on cooking at her son’s wake, the musician who took his instrument to his friend’s funeral. The need to do something, as a distraction or a gesture of comfort.

  One of the ducks glided toward him, hoping for a few crumbs of bread, perhaps. Not because it was confident, but you never knew. It had calculated consumption of energy versus probability of reward. Hope. Black ice.

  Harry sat up with a start. Took the keys from his jacket pocket. He had just remembered why he had bought the padlock that time. It hadn’t been for himself. It had been for the speed skater. For Oleg.

  Officer Truls Berntsen had had a brief discussion with the duty inspector at the airport. Berntsen had said yes, he knew the airport was in the Romerike Police District, and he had nothing to do with the arrest, but as a Special Operations detective he had been keeping an eye on the arrested man for a while and had been informed by one of his sources that Tord Schultz had been caught with narcotics in his possession. He had held up his ID card, showing he was a Grade 3 police officer, employed in Oslo Police District by Special Operations and Orgkrim. The inspector had shrugged and without further ado taken him to one of the three cells.

  After the cell door had slammed behind Truls he looked around to ensure the corridor and the other two cells were empty. Then he sat down on the toilet lid and looked at the slat bed and the man with his head buried in his hands.

  “Tord Schultz?”

  The man raised his head. He had removed his jacket, and had it not been for the stripes on his shirt Berntsen would not have recognized him as the chief pilot of an aircraft. Captains should not look like this. Not petrified and pale, with pupils that were large and black with shock. On the other hand, it was how most people looked after they had been apprehended for the first time. It had taken Berntsen a little while to locate Tord Schultz in the airport. But the rest was easy. According to STRASAK, the official criminal database, Schultz did not have a record, had never had any dealings with the police and was, according to their unofficial register, not someone with known links to the drug community.

  “Who are you?”

  “I’m here on behalf of the people you work for, Schultz, and I don’t mean the airline. Screw the rest. All right?”

  Schultz pointed to the ID card hanging from a string around Berntsen’s neck. “You’re a policeman. You’re trying to trick me.”

  “It would be good news if I was, Schultz. It would be a breach of procedures and a chance for your lawyer to have you acquitted. But we’ll manage this without lawyers. All right?”

  The airline captain continued to stare, his dilated pupils absorbing all the light they could, showing the slightest glimpse of optimism. Truls Berntsen sighed. He could only hope that what he was going to say would sink in.

  “Do you know what a ‘burner’ is?” Berntsen asked, pausing only briefly for an answer. “It’s someone who destroys police cases. He makes sure that evidence becomes contaminated or goes missing, that mistakes are made in legal procedures, thus preventing a case from being brought to court, or that everyday blunders are made in the investigation, thus allowing the suspect to walk away free. Do you understand?”

  Schultz blinked twice. And nodded slowly.

  “Great,” Berntsen said. “The situation is that we are two men in free fall with the one parachute between us. I’ve jumped out of the plane to rescue you, and for the moment you can spare me the gratitude, but you must trust me one hundred percent; otherwise we’ll both hit the ground. Capisce?”

  More blinking. Obviously not.

  “There was once a German policeman, a burner. He worked for a gang of Kosovar Albanians importing heroin via the Balkan route. The drugs were driven in trucks from the opium fields in Afghanistan to Turkey, then transported onward through ex-Yugoslavia to Amsterdam, where the Albanians channeled it on to Scandinavia. Loads of borders to cross, loads of people to be paid. Among them, this burner. And one day a young Kosovar Albanian is caught with a gas tank full of raw opium—the clumps weren’t wrapped up, just put straight into the gas. He was taken into custody, and the same day the Kosovar Albanians contacted their German burner. He went to the young man, explained that he was his burner and he could relax now—they would fix this. The burner said he would be back the next day and tell him what statement to make to the police. All he had to do was keep his mouth shut. But this guy who had been nabbed red-handed had never served time before. He had probably heard too many stories about bending over in the prison showers for the soap; at any rate, he cracked like an egg in the microwave at the first interview and blew the whistle on the burner in the hope that he would receive favorable treatment from the judge. So, in order to get evidence against the burner, the police put a hidden microphone in the cell. But the burner, the corrupt policeman, did not turn up as arranged. They found him six months later. Spread over a tulip field in bits. I’m a city boy myself, but I’ve heard bodies make good manure.”

  Berntsen stopped and looked at the pilot while waiting for the usual question.

  The pilot had sat up straight on the bed, recovered some color in his face and at length cleared his throat. “Why … erm, the burner? He wasn’t the one who snitched.”

  “Because there is no justice, Schultz. There are only necessary solutions to practical problems. The burner who was going to destroy the evidence had become evidence himself. He had been compromised, and if the police caught him he could lead the detectives to the Kosovar Albanians. Since he wasn’t one of their brothers, only a corrupt cop, it was logical to expedite him into the beyond. And they knew this was the murder of a policeman the police would not prioritize. Why should they? The burner had already received his punishment, and the police don’t set up an investigation where the only thing they will achieve is informing the public about police corruption. Agreed?”

  Schultz didn’t answer.

  Berntsen leaned forward. The voice went down in volume and up in intensity. “I do not want to be found in a tulip field, Schultz. Our only way out of this is to trust each other. One parachute. Got that?”

  The pilot cleared his throat. “What about the Kosovar Albanian? Did he have his sentence commuted?”

  “Hard to say. He was found hanging from the cell wall before the case came to court. Someone had smashed his head against a clothes hook.”

  The captain’s face lost
its color again.

  “Breathe, Schultz,” Truls Berntsen said. That was what he liked best about this job. The feeling that he was in charge for once.

  Schultz leaned back and rested his head against the wall. Closed his eyes. “And if I decline your help outright and we pretend you’ve never been here?”

  “Won’t do. Your employer and mine don’t want you on the witness stand.”

  “So what you’re saying is I have no choice?”

  Berntsen smiled. And uttered his favorite sentence: “Schultz, it’s been a long time since you’ve had any choice.”

  VALLE HOVIN STADIUM. A little oasis of concrete in the middle of a desert of green lawns, birch trees, gardens and verandas with flower boxes. In the winter it was used as a skating rink, in the summer as a concert venue, by and large for dinosaurs like The Rolling Stones, Prince and Bruce Springsteen. Rakel had even persuaded Harry to go along with her to see U2, although he had always been a club man and hated stadium concerts. Afterward she had teased Harry that in his heart of hearts he was a closet music purist.

  Most of the time, however, Valle Hovin was, as now, deserted, run-down, like a disused factory that had manufactured a product that was no longer popular. Harry’s best memories from here were seeing Oleg training on the ice. Sitting and watching him try his hardest. Fighting. Failing. Failing. Then succeeding. Not great achievements: a new personal best, second place in a club championship for his age group. But more than enough to make Harry’s foolish heart swell to such an absurd size that he had to adopt an indifferent air so as not to embarrass both of them. “Not bad, Oleg.”

  Harry looked around. Not a soul in sight. Then he inserted the Ving key in the lock of the dressing-room door beneath the stands. Inside, everything was as before, except it looked more worn. There was garbage on the floor; it had clearly been a long time since anyone had been here. It was a place you could be alone. Harry walked between the lockers. Most were not locked. But then he found what he was looking for, the Abus padlock.