Read Closed for Winter Online

Authors: Jorn Lier Horst

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Police Procedural, #Crime

Closed for Winter (6 page)

BOOK: Closed for Winter
10.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

‘Agreed,’ Wisting said. ‘Prioritise that task.’

Every single electronic trace contained potential evidence in such a case. Wisting considered all the kinds of stored data that were the silent witnesses of the modern age, all to be selected and analysed.

Espen Mortensen entered the room, crossing to the coffee machine to help himself before sitting in a vacant seat.

‘Any news?’ Wisting asked.

‘Not really. The body’s en route to Forensics. You’ve heard about the gun cartridges?’ The others nodded.

‘Thirty-eight calibre. Our man has lost a lot of blood, so we’re searching the area for blood, but it’s difficult because of the rain. There are several footprints on the ground close to where the cartridges were discovered, but they’ve been ruined by the rain as well.’

‘Do you think he was shot out there and then managed to make his way to the cottage?’ Christine Thiis enquired.

‘Yes. His bullet wounds are in the stomach region, but the blows to his head are probably what killed him. I estimate three blows. From the blood spatter on the walls in the hallway, it looks as though he was first struck twice while he was standing upright, and then a last, more violent blow after he had fallen to his knees.’

The crime scene technician was drinking his coffee. ‘Have you managed to get hold of Thomas Rønningen?’ he asked.

William Wisting shook his head. ‘I tried him again just before this meeting, but I’ll get a patrol car to drive out to his home.’

‘I think he’s staying at his cottage, writing a book.’

‘A book?’

‘Yes, there are papers all over the living room floor. They look like the manuscript for a book.’

‘What’s it about?’ Christine Thiis asked.

Espen Mortensen shrugged his shoulders. ‘You can read it once we’ve gathered up the pages,’ he suggested. ‘There aren’t very many, but it looks like some kind of documentary novel. There were quite a few famous names mentioned.’

Wisting moved the meeting on, ending after barely an hour. The detectives rushed out, eager to work on their allocated tasks. He detained Espen Mortensen.

‘This manuscript,’ he said, recollecting that he too had seen some typewritten pages in Thomas Rønningen’s cottage. ‘What names does it mention?’

Espen Mortensen resumed his seat. ‘Celebrities,’ he replied. ‘It looked as though it had to do with people who have been guests on his show: actors, musicians and politicians. Why?’

Instead of responding, Wisting let his gaze drift thoughtfully towards the window. Outside, the darkness was lifting.

10

Wisting instructed his police colleagues in Bærum to drive out to Thomas Rønningen’s house in an attempt to make contact with him.

There was something unsettling about this case. He was not certain what it was, but it was something more than the usual gnawing perplexity typical of the initial stage of an investigation. There was something cool and calculated about the entire business, but simultaneously something that indicated a kind of desperation, or failure of organisation.

Wisting forced himself to be optimistic. Despite everything, the case had picked up momentum. There were a number of loose ends that needed to be tied up, but they were making their way towards something specific. Investigating a murder case with an unknown perpetrator was like picking the label off a beer bottle. It was never possible to remove it in one piece. Instead it had to be torn off one ragged little section at a time. Nevertheless, a case like the one facing them now was among the simplest to solve. The distinguishing factor was that nothing was planned. One act had led to another, and everything that happened subsequently was part of a sort of domino effect. The investigation followed the same pattern. If they could discover the original act the rest would fall into place. He had no idea what it was, and this was what he was searching for as he read through the bundle of reports.

An hour later he walked into the conference room, where he filled a cup with coffee and crossed to the window. The press had already arrived and stood in groups on the hard area fronting the police station, waiting to be allowed inside.

Wisting glanced at the clock. He and the Chief Superintendent had been asked to a meeting in Christine Thiis’ office half an hour in advance for a final review. Having five minutes left, he sauntered back to his office to gather his notes. The telephone on the desk was ringing when he entered. Wisting remained on his feet to take the call.

‘This is Anders Hoff-Hansen at Forensics,’ a shrill voice barked into his ear. ‘We’re waiting for the body.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘I’m working overtime here. Asbjørn Olsen from the
Kripos
ID group is too. I received a fax requesting a post mortem, but I don’t have a body.’

‘Are you sure?’ Wisting enquired, picturing the television images of the hearse leaving the crime scene. ‘It should have been with you several hours ago.’

‘I’m quite sure.’

Wisting performed a quick mental calculation. The body had been collected just before five o’clock that morning. Mortensen had been in the police station preparing folders of illustrations and writing a preliminary report to accompany its transfer to Forensics. The plan had been to begin the post mortem at nine o’clock. ‘Let me check this out,’ he said, sitting down at his desk.

‘Okay. We’ll have a cup of coffee while we’re waiting.’

Wisting put his own cup aside as he replaced the receiver, and then dialled Espen Mortensen’s number. He replied abruptly at the other end, as though concentrating deeply on something or other. ‘Forensics is waiting for the body,’ Wisting explained.

He heard Espen Mortensen changing the phone receiver from one hand to the other. ‘What did you say?’

‘The body hasn’t arrived.’

‘Have you spoken to the undertakers? They came to collect the documents about six o’clock.’

‘Which undertaking company?’

‘Memento. The driver was a new man. They should have got there by eight. There’s hardly any traffic on a Saturday morning, of course. Do you want me to phone them?’

‘I can do that.’ Wisting was familiar with the company, as he had used them for Ingrid’s funeral. ‘Is there any news from the crime scene examination?’

‘Not really. There were good footprints in the blood in the hallway, when I managed to illuminate the floorboards properly. I’ve checked them against those of the neighbour and they aren’t his shoes. He hadn’t gone very far inside, so they must be from the killer. The pattern on the sole is so clear that the type of shoe can probably be traced. It will all eventually come to you in a folder with photographs and a written report.’

Wisting was listening with only half an ear while he tracked down the telephone number of the undertaking company. Having drawn his conversation with Mortenson to a close, he dialled the emergency number listed in Yellow Pages. The funeral director introduced himself by announcing the company name.

Wisting recognised the calm, earnest voice of Ingvar Arnesen, the third generation proprietor of the business. ‘Your car hasn’t arrived,’ he explained. He had to repeat the message so that Arnesen understood what he meant.

‘I don’t understand that.’ Some of the composure in Ingvar Arnesen’s voice had vanished. ‘Ottar left just before six o’clock. He should have arrived long ago. Have you checked whether there have been any road accidents or anything of that nature?’

‘No, I haven’t,’ Wisting admitted. ‘But maybe you could phone him?’

‘Yes, wait. I can do that from the other telephone.’ Wisting heard him keying in the number at the other end, followed by the voice on an automatic answer phone. ‘No,’ Arnesen stated. ‘Might there have been a road accident?’

‘I’ll find out. What’s his name, other than Ottar?’

‘Ottar Mold. He hasn’t worked for me for very long. To be quite honest, I’m not sure if I’ll keep him on after his probationary period.’

‘Why not?’

‘There have been a number of things. He’s newly separated, and has been off work a lot in connection with that. That’s okay in itself, but he doesn’t always give notice, and we can’t do with that in this line of business. People rely on us.’

‘Could he have done that now, do you think? Gone home to his ex-wife instead of driving to Oslo?’

‘I don’t really think so, but I can ring her and find out if she’s heard from him.’

‘Great. Do you have the vehicle registration number?’ Wisting waited while Ingvar Arnesen leafed through papers before reading out the registration number.

‘It’s a black Voyager,’ he added.

‘With a cross on the roof?’ Wisting asked.

‘A cross on the roof and the company logo on the side. It shouldn’t be too difficult to spot.’

Wisting called for Torunn Borg over the loudspeaker. He brought her up to date on the situation and asked her to investigate whether the hearse had been involved in an accident. He then glanced at the clock. There were twenty minutes to go before the press conference. He looked out of the window and saw that the fog had dispersed. The leaden sky was overlaid with scudding clouds that were perpetually, but almost imperceptibly, changing shape, dissolving and then merging once more.

The phone rang again. It was Arnesen. All the restraint had disappeared from the funeral director’s voice. ‘I’ve spoken to his wife. She hasn’t heard anything. I’ve tried to phone him several times but I don’t think his phone is switched on.’

‘Okay,’ Wisting replied. He could not think of anything more sensible to say, concluding the conversation just as Torunn Borg appeared at his office door.

‘He drove through three police districts on his way to Forensics,’ she explained. ‘Søndre Buskerud, Asker and Bærum, and then Oslo. None of them have any reports about a road traffic accident involving personal injury, or any other kind of accident.’

Wisting ran his hand over his hair. A feeling of disquiet gnawed deep inside him.

‘What should we do?’ Torunn Borg asked. ‘Search for the vehicle?’

There were only fifteen minutes until the press conference, when they would have all the attention of the media directed at them. However, he had no desire to sit facing the camera lenses, forced to announce that the body had vanished. ‘Send a car on the same route,’ he requested, rising from his chair. ‘Full emergency status. Perhaps the hearse is stopped by the roadside somewhere with a flat tyre, and that idiot behind the wheel has let his phone battery run down.’

Torunn Borg nodded her head and disappeared. Lifting his suit jacket from the chair back, Wisting headed for the preliminary meeting with Christine Thiis. Several members of the press corps were already in the building and being directed to the conference room on the second floor. A couple of them threw a few questions at him, but Wisting hurried past.

Christine Thiis’ desktop was bare, apart from a printout of the progress report Wisting had emailed her, and a ballpoint pen she had used to make corrections and additions. The report summarised the parts of the case he felt they should inform the public about, expressed in general terms, but nevertheless containing sufficient detail to satisfy the press. He sat in the vacant visitor’s chair beside the Chief Superintendent. ‘We may have a problem,’ he said, and told them that the hearse had gone missing.

‘What shall we do?’ Christine Thiis asked.

‘I suggest we leave this until after the press conference,’ the Chief Superintendent said. ‘Shall we go through the statement?’

Accepting this, Wisting let Christine Thiis read it out. They discussed individual points before coming to an agreement.

‘Have we made contact with Thomas Rønningen?’ she wanted to know.

‘No. He lives in Bærum. I’ve instructed the police there to drive to his house but haven’t heard back from them yet.’

‘Do you think the press know about his involvement yet?’ Christine enquired. ‘That his cottage is the crime scene?’

‘I don’t know,’ Wisting answered. ‘But if they do, none of them will ask you about it. That’s a headline each one will want to keep from the others. It’s probably only a question of time before it’s out in the open, but we can’t give out any information yet.’

They divided out roles and tasks. It was the young police lawyer’s duty to lead the press conference, and Wisting could see that she was unused to the situation. ‘It will go all right,’ he said as they stood up. ‘If there’s anything you can’t answer, you can pass the question to me.’

She gave him a swift, friendly look before crossing to the mirror beside the door. Tidying a few wisps of hair, she assumed a serious expression before nodding to her two colleagues to indicate her readiness. Wisting glanced fleetingly at his own reflection. His face was swollen on one side and the skin surrounding the sticking plaster on his chin had developed a bluish tinge. His encounter with the previous night’s assailant had produced visible results, and the bruise had started to throb.

His phone rang as they left the office, with his daughter’s name illuminated on the display, but he declined the call, wondering at the same time whether he would see her at this press conference. She had covered some of his cases, and he always felt uncomfortable about it.

Nonetheless he had to admit that she was a competent crime journalist. She understood the different phases of police work and had a particular talent for interpreting the developments in a case. Her articles had sometimes led to progress in an enquiry. He had to concede that he was proud of her.

Wisting remembered the crowded press conferences during the summer of the previous year, when four severed left feet had washed up along the coastline in his police district. That was then. Now, the room was no more than half full, and he could not spot Line among those present. There were only two camera teams and one journalist from newspapers in the capital. The other nationwide media outlets would be taking reports from the news bureaux.

The journalists turned to face them and some of the photographers captured their arrival on their cameras. His phone rang. If it was Line calling it might be something important, but it was a different number. He answered, intending to ask the caller to phone back later.

‘It’s Hoff-Hansen at Forensics,’ explained the man at the other end of the line. Wisting gesticulated to Christine Thiis to let her know he had to take the call. ‘He has been here,’ the pathologist continued, ‘but he drove off again without delivering the body.’

‘What on earth do you mean?’

‘One of the women in the lab saw the hearse from Larvik and presumed it was to do with the case they’ve been talking about on the news.’

‘So?’

‘It drove away from the car park when she arrived, at top speed.’

‘She’s sure it was from Larvik?’

‘It said so on the side. Anyway, we’re not expecting any other deliveries today. It was here, but turned around and disappeared.’

‘And you don’t have the body? Perhaps delivered and put in the wrong place or something like that?’

‘I guarantee that’s not happened.’

Wisting was unsure what this might mean, other than providing confirmation that the most essential evidence in the case, the body, had gone missing.

‘What do we do now?’ the pathologist asked.

‘I don’t know,’ Wisting replied. ‘I’ll phone you back.’

He disconnected the call and turned his phone to silent before entering the room for a second time. He took his place beside Christine Thiis, stroking his chin thoughtfully. The pain was increasing.

The Chief Superintendent welcomed the press group and introduced the platform party before handing the microphone to Christine Thiis. Point by point she reiterated the statement they had prepared, and only occasionally did she steal a glance at her notes, looking comfortable in her role.

As soon as she had finished, the journalists were ready with their questions. A female reporter from the local paper was sitting in the front row. ‘What clues do you have?’ she asked.

Christine Thiis hesitated momentarily. ‘We have secured a number of interesting pieces of evidence,’ she responded. ‘However, the crime scene work is still in progress.’

‘What was interesting about it?’ the reporter followed up.

Wisting cleared his throat. The police prosecutor had opened a door. They had decided in advance not to provide information about what evidence had been found. The public had no need to know, and it could damage the investigation if they disclosed too much. All the same, he appreciated the police lawyer’s need to show the press and the public that their work was already producing results and that they were making progress towards a resolution.

‘For one thing, footprints,’ he heard Christine Thiis announce.

Wisting regretted neglecting to brief her better. Inexperienced, she had not realised how words can catch you out.

BOOK: Closed for Winter
10.66Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Dead and Buried by Anne Cassidy
The New World by Andrew Motion
One Last Scream by Kevin O'Brien
Undead L.A. 2 by Sagliani, Devan
Lydia Bennet's Story by Odiwe, Jane
Pieces by Michelle D. Argyle
Dinosaur Lake by Kathryn Meyer Griffith