Authors: Quentin Bates
âSigurjóna doesn't like them.'
âAnd if Sigurjóna had known that Einar Eyjólfur had something to do with Clean Iceland, would that have caused a problem at work?'
âShit, yeah.'
Gunna looked at DÃsa in silence, hoping that the silence would prompt her to continue.
âActually he was more than upset. He was scared, I thought, but he didn't say anything about it. I saw him watching the street outside in the evenings and checking to see if we were being followed if we were out somewhere, and I told him not to be silly.'
âAnd he never mentioned what he might be anxious about?'
âNo, he'd just change the subject if I asked him, but I could see he was uncomfortable with it.'
âDo you think this was anything to do with his friend's accident?'
DÃsa nodded in silence and looked down at her hands.
âAnd do you believe that there might be some connection to his work?'
She nodded again.
âDo you believe that you are in any danger?'
âNo, I don't think so,' she replied in a small voice.
âAll right. Thank you for all your help, and I assure you it is a help,' Gunna said, rising to her feet. âBut I expect I will want to come and ask you a few more questions later. By the way, I know it's not pleasant, but it seems Einar Eyjólfur had no next of kin. Would you be prepared to identify him formally?'
DÃsa gulped and turned pale. âI've never seen a dead person before.'
âHe'll look as if he's asleep.'
âOK. I'll do it.'
âTomorrow?'
DÃsa looked doubtful. âI will if you'll come with me,' she finally said in a small voice.
âOf course,' Gunna said, trying to sound reassuring. âI'll pick you up as well if you like.'
âPlease. I'll take the day off. Sigurjóna won't mind if she knows why.'
âFine. I'll go over to the hospital with you. You're going to be all right tonight, aren't you?' she asked, the front door open in front of her.
The sun was low in the sky and it was still warm after a hot day, but a stiff breeze was blowing uphill from the sea, whipping dust from the street to fill the air with grit.
âDÃsa, you're not on your own here, are you?'
âIt's all right. My uncle's family is upstairs and Mum is down the street.'
Gunna pulled her cap lower and prepared to trot over the road to her car.
âThe guy's name, I remember it now.'
âAnd?'
âEgill. Egill GrÃmsson.'
***
The phone buzzed on the kitchen worktop and Gunna debated with herself whether or not to answer the âunknown number' call. After all, she was off duty. Laufey looked up from the homework she had decided to spread across the kitchen table.
âPhone, Mum.'
âI know, sweetheart.' Gunna picked it up. âGunnhildur.'
Vilhjálmur Traustason's voice was an octave above its usual pitch, and for once he didn't even bother to introduce himself.
âWhy on earth were you in ReykjavÃk?' he demanded.
âYou keep telling me what a wonderful city it is and how you can't understand me living in a backwater like HvalvÃk.'
âDon't play games, Gunnhildur. I've had a complaint from a very senior level that you have been harassing a prominent figure in the business community.
Very
prominent.'
âAnd who is that supposed to be?'
Vilhjálmur's voice rose slightly further and Gunna toyed with the idea that if it were to go up any more, then only dogs and dolphins would be able to hear the chief inspector's tantrums.
âYou know perfectly well and I'm instructing you to be careful. This is a very influential lady and I can't see how she could be connected in any way to anything suspicious.'
âLook, our dead guy worked for her. This was a perfectly ordinary interview, nothing heavy, simply to try and find out what his movements had been before we found him dead a hundred kilometres from ReykjavÃk. Is that OK?'
She could hear the chief inspector taking deep breaths to calm his nerves. She knew he found it difficult to haul her over the coals, just as she found it hard to take his rapid rise through the ranks seriously.
âWell, in that caseâ'
âAnd just so that you know, your prominent figure had just finished screaming blue murder at some unlucky dogsbody as I got there, and she reeks of vodka at two in the afternoon.'
âIn that caseâ'
âIn that case, I should have informed traffic, just in case the bloody woman decided to drive herself home.'
âGunnhildur, listen, I don't want any trouble arising from this, you understand? We don't need a repeat of, you know, what happened before.'
âJust following procedure, Vilhjálmur, going by the rule book.'
Well, mind you do. Do you understand? We can't have that sort of person causing a fuss because a regional officer oversteps the mark.'
He stressed âregional', and Gunna found herself resisting the temptation to snap back. She jammed her phone against one shoulder while opening the fridge and peering inside.
âWhat do you mean by overstepping the mark?' she asked angrily. âSince when has trying to find out why someone died in suspicious circumstances been overstepping the mark?'
âProgress briefing tomorrow. Don't forget.' The phone went dead in her hand.
âYou can just go to hell, chief inspector,' she muttered, tossing the phone back on to the worktop where it spun in circles before coming to rest behind the toaster. Laufey looked at her mother with wide eyes.
âAll right, Mum?'
âYes. It's just something you need to learn as you go through life, my love.'
âWhat's that?'
âThat most of the people in charge are idiots.'
âYou have to find these â these â these
bastards
!'
Sigurjóna Huldudóttir's composure had disappeared entirely. Her shoulders shook and her voice trembled in fury.
âThere's nothing more I can do, Sigurjóna,' Bjarni Jón Bjarnason said in a voice he hoped sounded soothing, while bracing himself for the storm. âThe computer crime squad have been investigating this for weeks without getting anywhere and I've badgered the Minister of Foreign Affairs to put pressure on countries that host these websites, but it's not as if Iceland has so much weight that we can bully other governments,' he added bitterly.
âBut it's just disgusting,' she spat. âAbsolutely revolting. How do they find these things out? Have you seen this?'
âNo, I haven't,' he lied.
âJust look at it. Go on, read it. Look what this scumbag is saying.' She wrenched the laptop around on the table.
âWho?'
âJust read the bloody thing!'
Bjarni Jón read. He recognized every one of the blogger's targets easily enough, and anyone with more than a passing acquaintance with any of the gossip magazines would be able to do the same.
Sigurjóna stood up and paced the living room from end to end, smoking furiously, and spun back so that the parquet floor squealed under her heel.
âHave you read it? Well, have you?'
âYes, I have now.'
âAnd?'
âAnd what?'
She gathered her breath. âAnd what the hell are you going to do about it?' she shrieked, while Bjarni Jón quailed at the onslaught.
âLook, Jóna. We've had this bloody site closed down already a couple of times, and it just pops up somewhere else. The blog's hosted in some former Soviet state where all that counts is money and they don't reply to official communications if they don't feel like it.'
Sigurjóna threw herself into a chair, looked around briefly for an ashtray and ground out her cigarette clumsily on a saucer that still had a cup in it, spilling cup and cold coffee on to the table. Anger was something she did well and she knew it.
âHow does this bastard know all these things?' she hissed.
âLike what things?' Bjarni Jón asked.
âLike how Inga KatrÃn had a nose job at the same time as she had her boobs fixed?'
âHow should I know?'
âAnd how does this shitbag know about . . . Sugarplum?'
Bjarni Jón winced. This one was painful.
âWell, how do they know?' she yelled, bringing her fury to the whirling climax that Bjarni Jón had known was coming. âThat's our name! Nobody else's! Unless you've been whispering something in your secretary's ear!'
âJóna, please. Calm down.'
âWhy the hell should I?'
Bjarni Jón summoned his scattered courage and tried to keep his head high. âLook, Jóna, I wouldn't touch Birna even if it was on offer. She's as cold as a dead fish.'
âAnd how do you know? Tried it on, have you?'
In spite of herself, Sigurjóna was starting to enjoy herself. Occasionally she revelled in letting her temper and tongue have free rein and, however much Bjarni Jón was tempted to yell back, his self-control was never allowed to slip that far.
âListen. Birna is completely frigid. I have it on good authority. She's not been involved with a man since she left university. She gets off on her career, nothing else.'
âAll right, then.'
Bjarni Jón stifled a sigh of relief as Sigurjóna's temper suddenly cooled, but he knew at the same time that his wife's icy side could be just as unpleasant.
âAre you going to do something about this Skandalblogging arsehole?' she demanded quietly.
âJóna, my love, I've already done everything I can.'
Sigurjóna sniffed and tapped another cigarette from its packet. âIf you don't, I will.'
âWhat?'
âYou heard me.'
âHow?'
âMaybe I'll ask Mr Hardy to keep his eyes open for me.'
Bjarni Jón caught his breath. âJóna, I'm warning you. These aren't nice people and they aren't the sort you want to owe too many favours.'
âI don't care. I have to stop this. I can't stand it any more. And if you don't do something, I'll find someone who will.'
Haddi and Snorri were already at the station when Gunna arrived, out of breath, irritable and late.
âAfternoon,' Haddi said.
âHell. Sorry, Haddi. Laufey desperately needed a lift to the stables this morning and she didn't bother to tell me until two minutes before I was ready to leave. Children, nothing but trouble from day one,' she grumbled.
âNever had a moment's trouble with mine,' Haddi said with the satisfied look of a proud parent on his face.
âHaddi, my dear friend. That's entirely due to the fact that you had the sense to stay at sea until your lads had grown up a bit.'
âWell, there is that,' he agreed and bustled to the spitting percolator. âNot putting you off, are we, Snorri?'
Haddi put three steaming mugs on the table and sat back down again. âSo, what's on the agenda for HvalvÃk's guardians of law and order, chief?'
Gunna came back to the front office from her own room holding a batch of papers which she slapped on the table.
âSimple. Haddi, I need you to mind the shop. Snorri, you can take the smart Volvo and go up to the InterAlu compound. Introduce yourself to the manager there. He's called Sveinn, nice enough bloke, but don't make any promises. Most of what we have to deal with here at the moment is traffic to and from the InterAlu site, which is the smelter they're building on the far side of the harbour. There are dozens of trucks every day and every now and again there are low-loaders with the heavy equipment.'
âThey go right through the town?'
âNot now. The back road was built up in the spring, so most of it can bypass the town itself, and sometime in the autumn they're due to start dredging the harbour to deepen it, after which they'll start bringing in the very heavy stuff by sea. All right?'
âYup. I'll go and see Sveinn. What's happening with the other construction â the hydroelectric one?'
Gunna sighed. âThat's going to be a nightmare when it really gets into gear. There's going to be a huge volume of traffic going both ways when they start clearing the site. Haven't you been up there?'
âNot since the project started,' Snorri said.
âIt's a bloody awful road up there past Stjáni at Læk's place. But it's their problem, so they can sort it out when the time comes. All right? You'd better be back from the InterAlu place before eleven so Haddi can do his usual tour of the docks.'
Haddi smiled to himself.
âDon't get the car dirty, or Haddi'll be furious.'
âAnd what might you be up to today, Gunna?' Haddi asked.
âI have a meeting with Vilhjálmur Traustason to brief him on our dead guy's case in half an hour. And considering it's a good forty minutes' drive to KeflavÃk from here, I reckon I'm going to find the old fool in a bad mood when I get there.'
She planted her cap squarely on her head and made for the door.
âSo I'll see you boys later. Look after the place for me.'
Gunna didn't break any speed limits getting to KeflavÃk, although by the time the HvalvÃk station's second-best Volvo pulled up outside the KeflavÃk police station she was running almost an hour late.
âWhat brings you over here, darling?'
Bjössi's question was her first greeting inside the door, where Bjössi was standing with a mug in one hand and a pack of filterless Camels in the other on his way to the back door for a quiet smoke in the bright morning sunshine.
âCan't keep away. Nothing like a visit to the big city to remind a girl of what she's missing out in the country.'
âThat's what I keep telling you,' Bjössi agreed, pushing backwards through the doors with his hands full. âSee you in a minute . . .'
âAh, Gunnhildur, I'm terribly sorry to have to keep you waiting,' a breathless Vilhjálmur Traustason apologized, bustling past in the opposite direction. âA meeting with the Sheriff took a little longer than anticipated,' he explained as if to a wayward child, while Gunna strode along in his wake.
In his small office Vilhjálmur waved Gunna to a chair and carefully placed his cap on the top of his filing cabinet on his way to his own chair. He leaned on his desk and placed his palms together in a steeple in front of his face.
âNow,' he said, as if preparing himself for action. âThe drowned man, Einar Eyjólfur Einarsson.'
âYou have my interim report already, so you know everything I do for the moment.'
âI want to know what you think.'
âI think he was murdered.'
âReally?' There was a brief note of fright in his voice. âWhy? The man had a very high blood alcohol content and Sigmar at pathology says drowning was the cause of death.'
âThat's right. But we don't understand how a man on a night out in ReykjavÃk managed to drown in an obscure backwater a hundred kilometres away.'
âYou think it's suspicious, not just an unfortunate accident?'
âOf course I do! His blood alcohol content was so high that the man could probably hardly walk, let alone get from a bar on Laugarvegur to HvalvÃk without some help. I understand that Einar Eyjólfur wasn't a habitual drinker at all â quite the opposite.'
âOf course this matter warrants further investigation, but it isn't a murder inquiry until there's evidence of foul play. There'll be an inquest, but unless there's evidence to the contrary, the verdict will certainly be death by misadventure.'
âIt stinks. There's just so much that needs to be explained.'
âWell, I suppose you'd better do your best. But I'm concerned that this could be a waste of your time. Find out what you can in the next week or so, and then we'll see. Hm?'
Gunna knew that Vilhjálmur was a man who played everything by the book and would sooner cut off a hand than break a rule. She desperately wanted to ask why he was so unconcerned about Einar Eyjólfur's death, but restrained herself.
âI could do with some help on this one. CID are too busy with narcotics as it is. Can I have an officer for a week to help me out with the leg work?'
Vilhjálmur lifted his steepled hands to bring the fingertips in line with his prominent nose.
âWe are overstretched as it is and I don't have a single spare officer at my disposal, at least not now that Snorri Hilmarsson has been transferred to the HvalvÃk station,' he said pointedly. âHowever, I had in fact anticipated your request and have already discussed this. The city force will be working with you on this case and Sævaldur Bogason will be assisting you.'
Gunna groaned inwardly. âBloody hell. The man's like a bull in a china shop.'
âSævaldur is an experienced and effective officer who gets results,' Vilhjálmur said coldly.
âFair enough,' Gunna sighed. âI'll get over there and talk to him.'
âThat would be advisable,' Vilhjálmur said, picking up the old-fashioned fountain pen from his desk, his attention already on the top report in a pile, indicating that the meeting was at an end.
âDo you mind if I ask some background questions?' Skúli asked timidly.
âFire away, young man. If there's anything I don't want to tell you, you'll find out.'
Skúli sipped his Coke. They were sitting at one of the few small tables at a truckstop at the top of the heath halfway between HvalvÃk and the handful of small communities to the east. Rain from a sudden shower pelted down outside from clouds as black as inky fingerprints on the western sky and formed rivers that flowed down the truckstop's windows.
âHow does the station at HvalvÃk run?'
âIt's not a main police station, so it's staffed during the day. Normally there're three of us: me, Haddi the old guy and Snorri the new boy. We belong to KeflavÃk, so out of hours any police services have to come from there â in theory. In reality the three of us are in and around HvalvÃk most of the time. Then we have the rural areas we have to visit on occasions, like today.'
âSo you do a nine-to-five day?'
âIt doesn't work like that, I'm afraid. We run watches outside station hours so one of us is always on call all the time, so you can be at work even if you're asleep at home. I like to keep work and personal life separate as far as is possible in a little place like this, but a lot of the time it's just impossible.'
âHow do you mean?' Skúli asked.
âWell, in ReykjavÃk or even Akureyri, you can change out of uniform and not be a copper any more. You can't do that here. Everyone knows you're the police, whether you're in uniform or mowing your lawn.'
âSo it really is a full-time job?'
âAbsolutely. And that's something that people can fail to grasp. Yesterday evening some kids were out playing behind the school and they found a mobile phone somebody had lost. They could have taken it home and given it to their parents to hand in at the station, or tried to find the owner, or just kept it, I suppose. But no, they knocked on my door and gave it to me, because they all know where Gunna the Cop lives and it didn't occur to them that I might be off duty.'
âIs this a problem for you?'
âNot at all. It's just part of being on the force in a rural area. It's part of the package. But it's the same in town to some extent. Your neighbours are always going to know you're in the force and they might treat you slightly differently, or they might not.'
Skúli wrote hasty notes on his pad.
âSo. Young man. Tell me, why HvalvÃk?'
âDon't know really. It was partly my idea, I suppose, and Reynir Ãli said it might make a good feature.'
âWho's Reynir Ãli?'
âMy editor. It was all set up through the police PR department. I asked the lady there for somewhere rural to go to, but not too far from the city, so she called back the next day and suggested HvalvÃk or somewhere up in Snæfellsnes.'
âSo you chose HvalvÃk.'
âYup. Closer to town,' Skúli said, delicately wiping the detritus of hot dog from his chin. âAnd it sounded a bit more interesting as well,' he added sheepishly.
âWhy?'
âWell, one of my colleagues said it might be a better feature because there are so few women in the police.'
âYou what?'
âHe reckoned it might make a good story because there aren't many female police officers of your experience.'
âYou mean all the policewomen you see are these young ones who've been in the job for five minutes and you might get something more out of an old bag like me?'
âUm. Yes.'
Gunna grinned. âGood answer. When being questioned by the law, just tell the truth. And who told you this?'
âJonni Kristinns, the political editor.'
âI know Jonni well enough from when I was in the city force. He's a friend of the bloke who was my partner at the time.'
âYour husband?'
Gunna looked sourly across the table at Skúli. âNo. My police partner when I was on the city force. You work together a lot of the time and I suppose in many ways your partner is someone you get to know better than a husband or a wife.'
âIs this guy still in the police?'
âBjössi? Yeah. But he moved out of the city as well, and out of uniform. He's in CID in KeflavÃk now.'
âWhat's his name?'
âBjörn Valsson, known as Bjössi. I haven't seen Jonni in years. He was on TV as well, wasn't he?'
âI think so, a while ago. He's one of those old guys who can't keep away from paper.'
Skúli was acutely aware that he had asked few of the questions he had lined up, but had again ended up doing most of the talking while Gunna asked the questions.
âHow long have you been in the police?' he asked finally.
âSixteen years, with a break in the middle.'
âWhat for?'
âYou know, children, all that stuff.'
âSo you're married?'
âNot any more.'
âIs it long since you split up?'
Gunna gave Skúli a sharp look. âIs this really necessary? The last thing I want to see is my private life splashed across
Dagurinn
on a Saturday morning.'
âNo, it's not for print. It's just, you know, for me to build up a picture of you,' Skúli gabbled. âI don't want to put in too much personal stuff, but people like to see it.'
âAll right,' Gunna said unwillingly. âI have a son from a relationship when I was in my teens. GÃsli's nineteen now. I have a thirteen-year-old daughter with my husband, who died eight years ago in an accident that I don't want to discuss. Is that enough for you?'
âPlenty, thank you,' Skúli said gratefully. He had noticed the broad gold ring on Gunna's finger and wondered why she had never mentioned a husband. âHow did you wind up in a place like this?'
âYou mean, what's a girl like you doing in a nice place like this?'
âYeah. I mean, no,' Skúli stumbled. âSorry. That's not what I meant. Are you from around here originally?'
Gunna smothered a grin. Making the lad gabble with embarrassment was becoming a source of light relief during an otherwise dull day.
âNo. I'm not from round here. I'm from Vestureyri.'
âWhat? Right up there in the western fjords? Wow. So, why HvalvÃk?'
âAll right, here we go. I was brought up in Vestureyri, worked in the fish when I was twelve, all that stuff. When I was nineteen one of my uncles suggested I could be a copper for the summer. I thought â why not? My mum was happy to babysit for me. I gave it a try as a probational constable for a few months and got a kick out of it. Less money than working in the fish, but a lot more interesting.'
âSo you stayed with it?'
âYup. Applied to the police college and was accepted straight away. There weren't many women going into the force then, so they were glad to get applications, although my family weren't too pleased when I moved south for the winter so I could go to college.'