Authors: Quentin Bates
âBára Gunnólfs said it first. Haven't you noticed he looks like a Roman emperor?'
âYou cheeky bastards,' Gunna guffawed. âI'll bet you youngsters all say rude things about me as well.'
âNo. We like you. But we do wonder about your toyboy, though.'
âWhat?'
âYou know. The one from
Dagurinn
.'
âSkúli? He's a good lad, just a bit bewildered at the real world, I reckon. He's only been out of school a few months.'
âHe seems a strange character.'
âThat's what a sheltered upbringing and years of university do for you, I suppose.'
âThe opposite of us, then?'
âYup, I'm afraid so. Anyway, say a word out of turn and I'll tell Vilhjálmur what you lot call him and you'll find yourself transferred to GrÃmsey before you know it.'
Lára looked up and frowned as she parked outside. She remembered leaving the kitchen window of her flat open so the cat could jump out on to the balcony, but she hadn't left it that wide open.
On the stairwell something whispered to her that things weren't quite right. She wrapped a hand around the rape alarm that nestled in the bottom of her bag, hoping that it would work if she needed it, wondering if any of the mostly immigrant occupants of the other flats in the block would hear it or even take any notice if it were to go off.
Her key slid into the lock and she swung open the door as quietly as she could, wincing to herself as it creaked. Stepping inside and leaving the door open, she looked carefully around the living room and bedroom, satisfied herself that there was nobody hiding behind the shower curtain in the tiny bathroom and only then noticed that the place had been ransacked.
Every drawer and cupboard was open, with contents spilled on to the floor. Her underwear was in a heap on the bed, jeans and tops piled on the floor. Books and papers had been hauled from shelves and the kitchen cupboard that contained her cameras had been rifled, but nothing appeared to be missing. Lára sighed with relief that she had taken her laptop with her that morning and finally put down her bags in the remaining clear space in the middle of the living room.
A sudden rattle in the kitchen made her nerves scream in alarm, until the black and white cat jumped from window sill to kitchen table with an inquiring look on its face.
âHi, Kisi. What happened here, then?' she asked it, but the cat only stared back at her.
Hunched under the sink, she fumbled for the panel under the sagging kitchen unit and triumphantly brought out a handful of disks that she knew contained most of her recent work.
Relieved, she unclipped the phone from the ragged patch of denim on the waistband of her jeans and dialled 112.
Gunna felt self-conscious in ReykjavÃk. The city had changed so much since she had been on the ReykjavÃk force that she even found herself taking wrong turnings along the new roads that seemed to sprout up every time she ventured into town.
Radio Taxis had a yard at the back of an industrial area not far from the main road. On an overcast morning Gunna nosed the police Volvo through grey puddles between drab workshops until she found Radio Taxis' offices, a shed that looked slightly better on the inside than the ramshackle exterior.
A couple of bare bulbs lit up the yellowing walls. A woman glanced up briefly from her desk as Gunna entered and then looked up a second time with a flash of panic as she noticed the uniform.
âGood morning,' Gunna offered cheerfully, recognizing the woman's discomfort.
âHi. Nonni's not here at the moment,' she replied.
âThat's a shame. Know where he is?'
âPlaying golf, I expect,' the woman sniffed. âHe seems to have better things to do than spend time here these days.'
âNot to worry. It's just a routine call. I'm Gunnhildur GÃsladóttir from HvalvÃk police. And you are?'
âI'm Eyrún JónÃna. Routine? What about?' the woman demanded suspiciously.
âMercedes taxi,' Gunna said, placing a slip of paper with the registration number on the counter between them.
âYeah. That's one of ours. Is there a problem?'
âNothing special. Our computer flagged up this vehicle's registration and this is just to tidy up our records,' Gunna lied. âI see this car had a collision on Snorrabraut a few months ago. Has that all been settled with the insurance company now?'
Eyrún JónÃna sat at her desk and leafed through a bulging folder. âYeah. That's all settled. Some yuppie's caravan fishtailed across two lanes and bumped the wing. His insurance paid up, no questions.'
Gunna pretended to make notes. âThat's fine. The reason the computer flagged the vehicle up is that there was a road traffic accident in my area last week.'
âThat idiot's not had another dent, has he?'
âNo, nothing like that. A witness mentioned that a Mercedes taxi had been in the vicinity at the time and there are only a few cars like this in the country registered as taxis. I'd like to identify the driver as a potential witness.'
âThat's all right. Just as long as he hasn't screwed up one more time.' Eyrún hauled another binder from the shelf above her desk. She leafed through it and pulled a sheet of paper from a plastic sleeve in the middle, placing it on the counter.
Gunna frowned in irritation and surprise as she looked down at a photocopy of the driver's licence.
âKnow him, do you?' Eyrún JónÃna asked with a short laugh. âMatti drives that taxi all the time.'
âI know most of the taxi drivers,' Gunna muttered, scanning through the details even though there was no need to. She wrote down the licence number and shook her head sadly as she peered again at a youthful version of Marteinn Georg Kristjánsson glaring truculently back at her.
17-09-2008, 0119
Skandalblogger writes:
So everyone knows, a memorial service for Einar Eyjólfur Einarsson will be held at the church in Mosfell at 4 on Saturday 27th, so don't be late. It's now three weeks Einar disappeared and there's three weeks' silence on what happened to him.
All right, so we know he died incapable, cold and alone. But how come he drowned a hundred kilometres from where he was last seen? It's not so much a case of did he fall or was he pushed, rather, did he walk, or was he driven? And as it would have taken him a week to walk there, who the hell was driving? Whatever the police may think, this was no accident, so just who did this terrible thing?
Come on, KeflavÃk police Führer Vilhjálmur Traustason! This is on your patch! When are you going to get to the bottom of this one and let us know what did happen to this young man, who Skandalblogger can now reveal was very much one of us?
See you all on the day . . .
âThe taxi is used on a permanent basis by a driver called Marteinn Georg Kristjánsson, born in Vestureyri on the eighteenth of September nineteen sixty-seven,' Gunna announced when Snorri asked if she had found out anything useful.
âHe's from Vestureyri? You know this guy, then?'
Gunna nodded. âFat Matti, he's called. He has a record of petty thievery, mostly cars, numerous instances of public drunkenness and the odd punch-up,' she told Snorri, wondering at the same time whether or not to tell him quite how long she had known Matti. âHe spent a long time in Canada until they picked him up a few years ago and sent him home by parcel post with a stamp on his arse. Oh, shit.' Gunna sighed and Snorri looked up from the computer at her in surprise.
âHe's something of a troublemaker?' he asked, pointing at the screen. âI've got his record here and it looks that way.'
âSnorri, my boy, you don't know the half of it. Matti's one of my many cousins from the west and he's never forgiven me for joining the force. He's always made a point of being as awkward as he possibly can without actually being arrested, and I reckon I spent my first few years in uniform hauling the silly bastard out of trouble here and there.'
She hunched her shoulders wearily. âDamn and blast. That's all we bloody needed, Fat Matti having something to do with all this.'
âRight,' Snorri said, at a loss for what to say next.
âIt's OK. It might be fun to catch up with the old fool again. He might have found God or something in the meantime.'
âNope.' Snorri shook his head, scrolling through Matti's record. âIn the last two years there's speeding, max points on his licence, public drunkenness, some minor violence and a few other odds and sods.'
âNot to mention what's not on record,' Gunna added. âThere was a narcotics case a few years ago, but he wriggled out of it and someone else did the time for it.'
She hung her head and sighed even more deeply, then swore quietly under her breath. âThe upside of it is that as Fat Matti's a relative of mine, I'd prefer not to have to arrest him. So if he shows up anywhere around HvalvÃk, you or Haddi can do the honours.'
âI'll look forward to it,' Snorri said with a smile.
âYou do that. If you see him, bang him up and call for me.'
Matti was worried. He was more than worried, he was scared. The sight of the tall man with the wispy hair and the glasses whimpering in agony over his smashed arm stayed with him in the days following the terrifying drive back to ReykjavÃk. Hardy had sat in the passenger seat enjoying the sunshine, humming to himself and cracking the occasional joke that Matti couldn't appreciate. The man seemed more relaxed than Matti had seen him before, as if his swift act of controlled violence had released a tension in him.
The big taxi's wipers swept drizzle from the windscreen as Matti dropped a customer off outside one of the big office blocks on Borgartún. It was mid-afternoon and he decided to head back to ReykjavÃk airport to see if a fare could be picked up from one of the domestic flights. Pushing through the mid-town traffic he almost crashed into the rear end of a bus halfway through Channel 2's three o'clock news bulletin.
A man had been found dead at his home just outside Borgarnes, where Mýrar County police were treating the death as suspicious and appealing for witnesses.
âShit. Shit. Shit,' he swore to himself.
He was due to collect Hardy at four thirty from a meeting in Kópavogur. Matti wondered whether or not he would have heard about the man's death.
Sitting outside the airport he watched a couple of Fokker Friendships land and the passengers start to trickle out of the terminal, suitcases and small children at their feet. Country people, he thought, not used to a big city like ReykjavÃk and looking forward to seeing the place for a few days before going back to Akureyri or HúsavÃk.
He looked at his watch as a hard-faced woman with two shell-suited children and a clutch of suitcases in tow tapped on the window.
âCan you take us to Kópavogur?' she rasped.
âYeah, I'll open the boot,' Matti agreed unwillingly. It was too short a fare, leaving him too much time to wait for Hardy to come out of his meeting and not enough time for another fare in between. But he lifted the woman's cases into the boot and ushered the children to the back seats and ordered them to put the seat belts on.
âDon't I know you?' she demanded suddenly as Matti swung the car out on to Hringbraut.
âDon't think so,' Matti grunted.
âI do. You're Matti Kristjáns, used to live in the flat over the bakery. You must remember me, surely? Kaja Jóakims?'
Matti's heart sank. He put his foot to the floor and breezed through a set of lights a fraction of a second after they switched to red.
âNah. Not me,' he said unconvincingly as the woman looked sideways at him through narrowed eyes.
They finished the trip in record time and an uncomfortable silence as Matti resolved never to wait outside the airport when flights from Vestureyri were landing. There was too much chance of running into someone from home, an unwelcome face from the old days. Admittedly he did now recognize the red-faced woman as the modern personification of the pudgy girl with pigtails and a shrill voice from over the road, but the last thing he wanted to do was to start comparing notes on who was living where these days.
Outside the large detached house that was Kaja Jóakims's destination, he mumbled as he fiddled with the meter.
âFour thousand,' he said.
âDiscount for old times' sake?' Kaja Jóakims asked shyly.
âAlready included,' Matti muttered.
With notes in his hand, he lumbered from the car and opened the boot to retrieve their cases, while a young woman emerged from the house and embraced his passengers in turn. He was quickly back at the wheel and ready to go when he noticed that the young woman and Kaja Jóakims bore an uncanny resemblance.
âSee you later, Matti,' she cooed and waved as he drove away, swearing out loud now that he had an empty cab and more than half an hour to kill.
âKaja Jóakims a grandmother,' he grumbled to himself. âWho'd have thought it?'
He cruised slowly into Kópavogur with the For Hire sign off and parked in the centre to get a coffee and a roll from a bakery. He ate it outside, resting his rear end on the car's bonnet and enjoying the warmth of it. He reflected that half an hour to kill was actually just long enough for a snack between fares. It was a shame that the weather was wet and there was a shortage of young women in thin summer clothes about to improve the view.
Hell, you can't have everything, he decided and his mood darkened as he remembered that Hardy needed to be collected and probably didn't know that his victim was now a dead man.
Outside modest offices sandwiched between the tiny Kópavogur harbour and a yard where bulldozers roared constantly as they filled trucks with sand and gravel, Matti pulled up a minute before he was expected, just in time to see Hardy shaking hands with a beefy man who looked as if he was still wearing the suit he had been confirmed in. He watched them exchange a few final words, smile at each other and part.
âGood afternoon, big man. Right on time, I see,' Hardy said with a shadow of a smile as he settled himself in the taxi's passenger seat.
âPart of the job, being on time,' Matti grunted. âWhere to?'
âHverfisgata, by the bus station will do.'
âThe one by the police station?'
âThat's the one.'
They drove through the city in silence, Hardy with his hands folded as he admired the view. Matti hunched over the wheel, wondering whether or not to tell him what he had heard on the news. By the time they reached the city bus station, he had decided to keep quiet for the moment.
âWhat's the matter, big man? Seen a ghost?' Hardy asked cheerfully.
âCould be,' Matti replied. âD'you need me tomorrow?'
âNot sure yet. Might need you at short notice.'
âYeah, that's OK. I'll be on the rank tomorrow. Won't be going far, so just give me a call if you need me.'
Hardy nodded and slipped silently from the car. Instead of driving away, Matti picked up a stack of receipts from the pocket in the door and pretended to look at them, watching Hardy in the mirror as he receded from view. As soon as he was far enough away, Matti dropped his paperwork and craned his neck around in time to see Hardy step quickly sideways into an alley.
Matti gunned the taxi's engine, swung it round in an illegal U-turn and bumped it down an entrance into the parking lot belonging to a block of offices. In the corner he killed the engine, jumped out and vaulted over a low fence into a yard, then along an alleyway into Lindargata. He was just in time to see Hardy disappear round another corner, doubling back on himself.
Matti retraced his steps and found himself puffing with more than exertion going uphill. He couldn't understand why Hardy had walked in a circle until he was back in the parking lot next to the taxi and caught a glimpse of his pale leather jacket as he punched a code into the lock on the back door and let himself in.
âShit. Should have bloody known better,' he cursed.
Matti wasn't sure if Hardy had seen him on his heels, but he was sure that he would have seen the taxi parked there. As he took his place behind the wheel, he wondered what Hardy was doing in a block of offices that housed a Christian radio station, several lawyers, a photographer's studio and a hypnotic healer.
But what really concerned him now was how Hardy would react if he suspected he was being tailed, however inexpertly â and whether or not Hardy had actually seen him.