Authors: David Szalay
It is five kilometres to Königstein, the sign says. They do not stop. It is high summer. The light will last for hours. They have time to walk it, if they want to.
Lascia Amor e siegui Marte!
Every morning he takes his daughters to school, or in the summer holidays to their tennis lesson. It is usually the only time he sees them during the day, since he arrives home late, long after they are asleep. So he has promised to take them to school in the morning, or to their tennis lesson. It is a promise he has kept so far.
Their school is on his way to work anyway. The Dansk Tennis Klub involves a detour. To drive there takes twenty minutes at least. The traffic is quite heavy at that time in the morning. He talks to them, his daughters, Tine and Vikki, while he drives â about television and pop music and famous people mostly. Tine is eleven. Vikki is eight. They like to talk about television stars. Pop stars. He knows quite a lot about that, even though it is no longer his area of particular expertise, as it once was.
They arrive at the tennis club at about ten to nine, and the girls spill out with their stuff, their water and tennis equipment, and wave perfunctorily as he turns in his seat to see them off. When they are inside he pulls away, and puts the radio on. Usually he does not put the radio on until he has dropped them off, though sometimes they listen to music together as they drive, and sometimes they sing along to songs they know.
On his own, he listens to the news. It is usually the sport at that time, five to nine, as he drives past Søerne, the lakes.
The Audi is quite new â less than a year â and he still enjoys driving it. An A4, silver, with black leather seats. An unobtrusive executive saloon. Anonymous, almost. When he was deciding what sort of car to get he found a website that said of this model that it was âcoldly, rationally competent in just about every department'. He immediately liked the sound of it.
From the tennis club, it takes another ten minutes or so, depending on the traffic, to get to his office in town.
Sometimes he is a few minutes late for the morning meeting, and slips in to take the seat nearest the door while Elin is already talking.
This morning there is a special meeting. Elin phoned him very late last night and said she had just spoken to Jeppe, the news editor. He'd told her about a story he had. It was about the defence minister, Edvard Dahlin, and an affair he was supposedly having with a married woman.
âHas Jeppe spoken to you about this?' Elin asked him.
âNo', Kristian said.
Jeppe had told her he was sure the story was true because he had access to phone data that left no doubt â highly suggestive metadata, and also, more significantly, the actual words of text messages. Elin wanted to know how Jeppe had got his hands on that information, whether anything illegal had been done. He told her that if it had, no one on the paper's payroll was directly involved.
After telling all that to Kristian, she asked him what he thought.
He said he would need to see the information first.
This morning they're meeting to discuss it.
When he arrives, Kristian finds Jeppe and his deputy David Jespersen waiting outside the meeting room. Jeppe, obese, is sitting on the only seat, a plastic cup of water in his hand.
âElin here yet?' Kristian asks.
âShe's in there with Morten,' Jeppe says. He must be nearly sixty now. He has been on the paper, has been news editor, since Kristian first started working there as an intern.
âTalking to him about your dodgy phone data?' Kristian asks.
Jeppe shrugs. There is something monstrous about his lack of neck. His white hair is cut in a scruffy pudding-bowl.
âWhat have you got exactly?' Kristian asks him.
He knows that Jeppe keeps things from him, has a direct line to Elin and tries to go over his head whenever he can. Jeppe wanted the deputy editor position when it opened up two years ago â instead it went to Kristian, who was then editor of the showbiz and television pages, and is twenty years younger than him. There's not been much warmth between them since then.
Jeppe says, looking into his plastic cup, âI'll tell you in there. I don't want to say it all twice.'
âFair enough.' Kristian turns to David Jespersen. âMorning, David.'
âHello, mate.'
âYou joining us too?'
âThat's right.'
âVery exciting,' Kristian says.
When they are summoned in, they find Elin with Morten, the in-house lawyer. He doesn't look like a lawyer. He's wearing a tracksuit.
They all say good morning to each other and take seats at the long table. There are bottles of mineral water. There is a view of Peblinge Lake. It is a hot, still August morning.
Elin says to Jeppe, âOkay, tell us what you have.'
âDavid,' Jeppe says.
David Jespersen, with some eagerness, sits forward. He is the same age as Kristian â exactly the same age; they were at school together in Sundbyøster. David went to university, entered journalism that way. Kristian didn't, and for some time David was the senior of the two of them. He is lean, handsome, slightly yellow as if he has liver trouble. He sits forward. He says, âOkay. What have we got. We have hard evidence,' he says, speaking primarily to Elin, âthat Edvard Dahlin is having an affair with a married woman. It's been going on for a few years. We've been working on this for some time now, actually. The woman's called Natasha Ohmsen. She's married to Søren Ohmsenâ'
Elin interrupts. âDahlin's not married?'
âNo. Divorced,' David says. âOhmsen's married.'
Elin nods.
âYeah, it's been going on for a few years,' David says. âNow it seems like it might be ending. She's ending it. Dahlin's not happy about that.'
âHe's heartbroken,' Jeppe puts in.
âAnd you know all this because you have access to phone data?' Elin asks. âWhat actually do you have? Who did you get it from?'
David looks at Jeppe â nervously, Kristian thinks, watching him.
âSomeone in the phone company,' Jeppe says. âLike I told you, they have access to Dahlin's phone records, this person. Who he calls. When. His voicemails. Text messages.'
âAnd you have that information?'
âYeah.'
âHow?' Elin asks.
âWe were approached.'
âI assume some form of payment was involved.'
âYeah,' Jeppe says again, looking down at the table.
âHow much?'
Jeppe looks up. âAre you sure you want to know?'
Elin looks at Morten, who shakes his head.
âSo what do you have, exactly?' she asks.
David hands her a flash memory stick, half-standing to lean across the table. âAll the texts are on there,' he says. âAnd a summary of the main points.'
âIt's the texts are important,' Jeppe points out.
âTexts from him to her?'
âAnd from her to him,' David says. âIt's all there.'
She plugs the memory stick into a laptop and opens a file. For a minute or so she looks at it, while the others look at the wall, or at the lake out of the window, the low skyline of Copenhagen â the houses on the other side of the lake look like expensive toys.
âYou're sure,' she says suddenly, âthese are kosher? Not some kind of hoax?'
âOne hundred per cent sure,' Jeppe says.
âHow?'
âWe tested the source.'
âOh?'
âSent some texts ourselves,' Jeppe says, âto Dahlin's number. They're in there. Exact times, everything.'
Elin seems satisfied with this, even impressed, and David, in particular, looks pleased with himself.
Elin says, âOnly problem is, we can't print any of this. The messages.'
âNo,' Jeppe tells her. âThat would expose our source. And what he's done, it's not strictly speaking legal, is it. I mean, I don't know. He'd be opening himself to prosecution, possibly.'
âOkay.' Elin turns to Morten, who is looking at the messages on the laptop screen, standing at her shoulder. âSo we can't do it?' she asks, twisting in her seat to look up at him.
âNo,' Morten says. âIf Dahlin sues, and you can't use this material in court, you've got nothing else. So no.'
âSo where does that leave us? Jeppe?'
David Jespersen, looking worried, sets his jaw and directs his eyes to the windows. He models himself, to some extent, on David Beckham. The sharply tailored jacket. The 1930s haircut. The groomed blonde stubble.
Jeppe starts to talk about the national security implications of the story.
Elin interrupts him.
âYes, okay,' she says impatiently. âIf he sues, we have no defence. That's the point. What do you think?' she asks Kristian, who has said nothing so far.
He too has left his seat and is leaning over the laptop screen, looking through the texts. There are hundreds of them. It's embarrassing, in a way, to see them. The language of them.
I want you. You're breaking my heart.
All that sort of stuff.
He straightens himself up. âIt's a major story,' he says. âHe's a senior minister. It's got to be a major story.'
âSo you think we should do it?' Elin asks him.
âI think we've got to.'
âHe'll sue and you'll probably lose,' Morten says, taking a seat again in his tracksuit, knees spread. âIt'll be very expensive if you do. I have to tell you that.'
Elin is still looking at Kristian. He has a very serene energy, Kristian. A soft, slightly pudgy face. In his narrow-lapelled suit, his thin blue tie, he might be an unusually elegant accountant, or even a young undertaker. It's easy to imagine him dealing tactfully with the family of the deceased, knowing what to say, and how to say it. âSure,' he says to Morten. âI understand. We just need something more. Another source.'
âLike who?' Elin asks.
âHow about Edvard himself? What if he admits it?'
âWhy would he do that?' Jeppe says
Kristian ignores him. âHe doesn't know this is all we've got,' he says to Elin. âHe doesn't know
what
we know, or how we know it.' Now he looks at Jeppe. âDoes he?'
Jeppe just stares at him with open hostility until he looks at Elin again.
âWe make him think we're going to do the story anyway,' Kristian says, âand say we're offering him a chance to have his say, to put his side of it â¦'
âWhat if he just denies it?' Jeppe asks.
âThen he denies it,' Kristian says. âI don't think he will.' He says, to Elin again now, âI know him quite well.'
She says quietly, âYou do, don't you.'
He shrugs modestly.
âI mean, that's the other thing,' Elin says. âWe like Dahlin, don't we?'
âWe can't ignore the story just because of that,' Jeppe says.
âWe can't ignore the story for all sorts of reasons,' Kristian says. âIt does mean we should talk to him first. He'd expect that. We want to handle it as sympathetically as possible. That's what we tell him. If he thinks we're going to do it anyway, it just wouldn't make sense for him to deny it.'
â
You
should talk to him,' Elin says to Kristian.
Jeppe sighs petulantly.
âHas anybody else got this?' Elin asks him.
Jeppe says, âNo. I don't think so.'
âYou don't think so?'
âNo,' he says. âThey don't.'
âStill, we should move quickly with it,' Kristian suggests. âWe don't want anyone else stumbling on it. And we want to do it before she dumps him, if she does. I'll talk to Edvard today?'
Elin says, âOkay, talk to him. Let's see what he has to say for himself. And well done, you two,' she says to the others. âOkay, that's it.'
As they start to leave, she asks Kristian to stay.
Hanging back, Morten says to her, âIf you want to do this, I advise you not to name the woman. She's a private citizen. She'd have some sort of case against you for invasion of privacy, even if your story is a hundred per cent true and not otherwise actionable.'
âOkay,' Elin says. âI'll think about it. Thanks, Morten.'
When they are alone, she asks Kristian to set up the meeting with Dahlin and he phones Ulrik Larssen, the defence minister's media advisor. Kristian knows Ulrik fairly well. They talk, typically, several times a week.
âUlrik,' he says. âKristian.'
A few pleasantries, then he says, âListen, Ulrik, I need a meeting with Edvard. Face to face. Oh.' He looks at Elin. âHe's in Spain, is he?' he says, for her to hear. âWell, can I meet him down there? I can fly out this morning. It
is
important,' he says. âIt's very important. He'll want to hear what I have to tell him. No, I can't tell him over the phone. Okay, let me know what he says. Thanks, Ulrik.'
He hangs up, and says, âHe's in Spain for a few days.'
âOfficially?'
âNo, he's on holiday.'
While they wait for Ulrik to call back Elin says to him, âThere's going to be a fairly major shake-up around here, Kristian. Our new proprietor â he wants to take out a lot of costs. He needs to.
We
need to. You know that.'
He nods at her, smiles.
She says, âWe're going to have to lose some people. Quite a few people.'
âI know,' he says.
They have taken adjacent seats at the long table. His phone is on the table in front of them, waiting for Ulrik.
âYou're always so smartly dressed,' she says, smiling at him admiringly.
âI try my best.'
âJeppe's a slob.'
He says nothing, just aligns his phone with the edge of the table.
âWhat do you think of him?'
âYou thinking of losing him?' he asks, his eyes still on his phone.