Jar City (20 page)

Read Jar City Online

Authors: Arnaldur Indridason

BOOK: Jar City
6.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
39

A deep silence fell across the house.

Katrín was sitting with her head bowed. Elínborg looked first at her and then at Erlendur, thunderstruck. Erlendur stared into space and thought about Eva Lind. What was she doing now? Was she at his flat? He felt the urge to talk to his daughter. Felt the urge to hug her, snuggle up to her and not let go until he'd told her how much she meant to him.

“I can't believe it,” Elínborg said.

“Your son's a genetic carrier, isn't he?” Erlendur said.

“That was the phrase he used,” Katrín said. “A genetic carrier. They both are. He and Holberg. He said he inherited it from the man who raped me.”

“But neither of them got ill,” Erlendur said.

“It seems to be the females who become ill,” Katrín said. “The males carry the disease, but don't necessarily show any symptoms. But it comes in all kinds of forms, I can't explain it. My son understands it. He tried to explain it to me, but I didn't really know what he was talking about. He was heartbroken. And so was I of course.”

“And he found all this out from that database they're making,” Erlendur said.

Katrín nodded.

“He couldn't understand why his little girl got the disease so he started looking for it in my family and Albert's. He talked to relatives and just wouldn't give up. We thought it was his way of dealing with the shock. All that endless searching for the cause. Searching for answers where we didn't think there were any answers to be found. They split up some time ago, Lára and him. They couldn't live together any longer and decided on a temporary separation, but I can't see things ever improving.”

Katrín stopped talking.

“And then he found the answer,” Erlendur said.

“He became convinced that Albert wasn't his father. He said it couldn't be right according to the information he had from the database. That's why he came to me. He thought I'd been unfaithful and that was where he came from. Or that he was adopted.”

“Did he find Holberg in the database?”

“I don't think so. Not until later. After I told him about Holberg. It was so absurd. So ridiculous! My son had made a list of his possible fathers and Holberg was on it. He could trace the disease back through certain families using the genetics and genealogy databases and he found out he couldn't be his father's son. He was a deviation. A different strain.”

“How old was his daughter?”

“She was seven.”

“It was a brain tumour that caused her death, wasn't it?” Erlendur said.

“Yes.”

“She died of the same disease as Audur. Neurofibromatosis.”

“Yes. Audur's mother must have felt terrible; first Holberg, and then her daughter dying.”

Erlendur hesitated for a moment.

“Kolbrún, her mother, committed suicide three years after Audur died.”

“My God,” Katrín sighed.

“Where's your son now?” Erlendur asked.

“I don't know,” Katrín replied. “I'm worried sick he'll do something terrible to himself. He feels so depressed, the boy. So terrible.”

“Do you think he's been in contact with Holberg?”

“I don't know. I just know he's no murderer. That I know for certain.”

“Did you think he looked like his father?” Erlendur asked and looked at the confirmation photographs.

Katrín didn't answer.

“Could you see a resemblance between them?” Erlendur asked.

“Come on, Erlendur,” Elínborg snapped, unable to take any more of this. “Don't you think you've gone far enough, seriously?”

“Sorry,” Erlendur said to Katrín. “I'm just being nosy. You've been extremely helpful to us and if it's any consolation I doubt that we'll ever find a more steadfast or stronger character than you, being able to suffer in silence for all those years.”

“It's all right,” Katrín said to Elínborg. “Children can take after anyone in the family. I could never see Holberg in my boy. He said it wasn't my fault. Einar told me that. I wasn't to blame for the way his daughter died.”

Katrín paused.

“What will happen to Einar?” she asked. She wasn't putting up any resistance now. No lies. Only resignation.

“We have to find him,” Erlendur said, “talk to him and hear what he has to say.”

He and Elínborg stood up. Erlendur put on his hat. Katrín remained on the sofa.

“If you want I can talk to Albert,” Erlendur said. “He stayed at Hotel Esja last night. We've been watching your house since yesterday in case your son happend to turn up. I can explain to Albert what's going on. He'll come to his senses.”

“Thank you,” Katrín said. “I'll phone him. I know he'll come back. We need to stand together for the sake of our boy.”

She stared Erlendur in the eye.

“He is our boy,” she said. “He always will be our boy.”

40

Erlendur didn't expect Einar to be at home. They went to his flat on Stóragerdi straight from Katrín's house. It was noon and the traffic was heavy. On the way, Erlendur phoned Sigurdur Óli to describe the developments. They needed to ask the public about Einar's whereabouts. Find a photograph of him to put in the papers and on television along with a short announcement. They arranged to meet on Stóragerdi. When Erlendur arrived there he got out of the car and Elínborg drove off. Erlendur waited a while for Sigurdur Óli. The flat was in the basement of a three-storey house with the front door at street level. They rang the bell and hammered on the door but there was no answer. They tried the floors above and it turned out that Einar rented from the owner of one of the other flats, who had come home for lunch but was willing to go down with them and open his tenant's flat. He said he hadn't seen Einar for several days, possibly even a week; said he was a quiet man, had no complaints about him. He always paid the rent promptly. Couldn't imagine what the police wanted him for in the first place. In order to avoid speculation, Sigurdur Óli said his family hadn't heard from him and they were trying to find out where he might be. The owner of the flat asked whether they had a warrant to search the house. They didn't, but would get one later that day. They asked him to excuse them when he had opened the door and they went inside. All the curtains were closed so it was dark inside. It was a very small flat. A sitting room, bedroom, kitchen and bathroom. Carpets everywhere except in the bathroom and the kitchen, which had linoleum. A television in the sitting room. A sofa in front of the television. The air in the flat was muggy. Instead of opening the curtains Erlendur switched on the sitting-room light so that they could see better.

They stared at the walls in the flat and looked at each other. The walls were covered with words they knew so well from Holberg's flat, written with ballpoint pen, felt-tip and spray paint. Three words that had once been indecipherable to Erlendur but now became clear.

I am
HIM

There were newspapers and magazines spread all around, Icelandic and foreign ones, and scientific textbooks were stacked here and there on the floor of the sitting room and the bedroom. Large photo albums were included in the stacks. In the kitchen were wrappers from takeaway food.

“Paternity,” Sigurdur Óli said, putting on his rubber gloves. “Can we ever be sure about that in Iceland?”

Erlendur started thinking again about genetic research. The Genetic Research Centre had recently begun collecting medical data about all the Icelanders, past and present, to process into a database containing health information about the whole nation. It was linked up to a genealogy database in which the family of every single Icelander was traced back to the Middle Ages; they called it establishing the Icelandic genetic pool. The main aim was to discover how hereditary illnesses were transmitted, study them genetically and find ways to cure them, and other diseases if possible. It was said that the homogenous nation and lack of miscegenation made Iceland a living laboratory for genetic research.

The Genetic Research Centre and the Ministry of Health, which issued the licence for the database, guaranteed that no outsider could break into the database and announced a complex encryption system for the data which was impossible to crack.

“Are you worried about your paternity?” Erlendur asked. He'd also put on rubber gloves and stepped carefully further into the sitting room. He picked up one of the photo albums and leafed through it. It was old.

“Everyone always said I never resembled my father or mother or anyone else in my family.”

“I've always had that feeling too,” Erlendur said.

“What do you mean?”

“That you were a bastard.”

“Glad you've got your sense of humour back,” Sigurdur Óli said. “You've been a little distant recently.”

“What sense of humour?” Erlendur said.

He flicked through another of the albums. These were old black-and-white photographs. He thought he recognised Einar's mother in some of them. So the man would be Albert and the boys, their three sons. Einar was the youngest. There were photographs taken at Christmas and on summer holidays, many of them ordinary snapshots taken of the boys in the street or at the kitchen table, wearing patterned, knitted sweaters, which Erlendur remembered from the late '60s. The elder brothers had let their hair grow long.

Further on in the album the boys were older and with longer hair and they were wearing suits with wide lapels and black shoes with stacked heels. Katrín with her hair waved. The photos were in colour now. Albert beginning to turn grey. Erlendur looked for Einar and when he compared his features with those of his brothers and his parents he could see how different he looked. The other two boys had strong features from their parents, especially their father. Einar was the ugly duckling.

He put the old album down and picked a more recent one. The photographs seemed to have be taken by Einar himself, showing his own family. They didn't tell such a long story. It was as if Erlendur had dipped into the course of Einar's life when he was getting to know his wife. He wondered if they were honeymoon photos. They had travelled around Iceland, been to Hornstrandir, he thought. Thórsmörk. Herdubreidarlindir. Sometimes they were on bicycles. Sometimes driving a battered old car. Camping photos. Erlendur presumed they had been taken in the mid-'80s.

He flicked quickly through the album, put it down and picked up what looked to him like the most recent one. In it he saw a little girl in a hospital bed with tubes in her arms and an oxygen mask over her face. Her eyes were closed and she was surrounded by instruments. She seemed to be in intensive care. He hesitated for a moment before going on.

Erlendur was surprised by the sudden ringing of his mobile phone. He put the album down without closing it. It was Elín from Keflavík and she was very agitated.

“He was with me this morning,” she said at once.

“Who?”

“Audur's brother. His name's Einar. I tried to get hold of you. He was with me this morning and told me the whole story, the poor man. He lost his daughter, just like Kolbrún. He knew what Audur died of. It's a disease in Holberg's family.”

“Where is he now?” Erlendur asked.

“He was so terribly depressed,” Elín said. “He might do something stupid.”

“What do you mean, stupid?”

“He said it was over.”

“What was over?”

“He didn't say, just said it was over.”

“Do you know where he is now?”

“He said he was going back to Reykjavík.”

“To Reykjavík? Where?”

“He didn't say,” Elín answered.

“Did he give any indication of what he was going to do?”

“No,” Elín said, “none at all. You must find him before he does something stupid. He feels so terrible, the poor man. It's awful. Absolutely awful. My God, I've never known anything like it.”

“What?”

“He's so like his father. He's the spitting image of Holberg and he can't live with that. He just can't. After he heard what Holberg did to his mother. He says he's a prisoner inside his own body. He says Holberg's blood is running through his veins and he can't stand it.”

“What's he talking about?”

“It's as if he hates himself,” Elín said. “He says he isn't the person he used to be any more, but someone else, and he blames himself for what happened. No matter what I said, he wouldn't listen to me.”

Erlendur looked down at the photo album, at the girl in the hospital bed.

“Why did he want to meet you?”

“He wanted to know about Audur. All about Audur. What kind of girl she was, how she died. He said I was his new family. Have you ever heard the like?”

“Where could he have gone?” Erlendur said, looking at his watch.

“For God's sake try to find him before it's too late.”

“We'll do our best,” Erlendur said and was about to say goodbye but sensed that Elín had something else to say. “What? Was there anything else?” he asked.

“He saw when you exhumed Audur,” Elín said. “He found out where I was and followed us to the cemetery and saw you take the coffin out of the grave.”

41

Erlendur had the search for Einar stepped up. Photographs of him were sent to police stations in and around Reykjavík and the main regional towns; announcements were sent to the media. He ordered that the man was to be let alone; if anyone sighted him they were to contact Erlendur immediately and not do anything else. He had a short telephone conversation with Katrín who said she didn't know where her son was. Her two elder sons were with her. She had told them the truth. They didn't know anything about their brother's whereabouts. Albert had stayed in his room at Hotel Esja all day. He made two phone calls, both to his office.

“What a bloody tragedy,” Erlendur mumbled on his way back to his office. They hadn't found any clue in Einar's flat as to where he might be staying.

The day passed and they shared out the duties. Elínborg and Sigurdur Óli talked to Einar's ex-wife while Erlendur went to the Genetic Research Centre. The company's large new premises were on the West Country Road outside Reykjavík. It was a five-storey building with strict security at the entrance. Two security guards met Erlendur in the impressive lobby. He'd announced that he was coming and the director of the company had felt compelled to talk to him for a few minutes. The director was one of the company owners, an Icelandic molecular geneticist, educated in Britain and America, who had championed the idea of Iceland as a base for genetic research targeted at pharmaceutical production. Using the database, all the medical records in the country could be centralised and health information processed which could help to identify genetic disorders.

The director was waiting for Erlendur in her office, a woman aged about 50 by the name of Karítas, slim and delicate with short, jet-black hair and a friendly smile. She was smaller than Erlendur had imagined from seeing her on television, but cordial. She couldn't understand what the CID wanted from the company. She offered Erlendur a seat. While he looked at the walls adorned with contemporary Icelandic art he told her bluntly there were grounds for suspecting that someone had broken into the database and retrieved potentially damaging information from it. He didn't know exactly what he was talking about himself but she seemed to understand perfectly. And she didn't beat about the bush, to Erlendur's great relief. He had been expecting opposition. A conspiracy of silence.

“The matter's so sensitive because of data privacy,” she said as soon as Erlendur finished speaking, “and that's why I have to ask you to keep this completely between the two of us. We've known for some time about unauthorised accessing of the database. We've made an in-house inquiry into the matter. Our suspicions are directed at one particular biologist but we've been unable to speak to him because he seems to have disappeared off the face of the planet.”

“Einar?”

“Yes, that's him. We're still designing the database, so to speak, but naturally we don't want word to get out that the encryption can be cracked and people can waltz through it as they please. You understand that. Although in fact it's not a question of encryption.”

“Why didn't you inform the police about the matter?”

“As I say, we wanted to sort it out ourselves. It's embarrassing for us. People trust that the information in the database isn't passed around or used for dubious purposes or simply stolen. The community is extremely sensitive about this as you perhaps know and we wanted to avoid mass hysteria.”

“Mass hysteria?”

“Sometimes it's like the whole country is against us.”

“Did he crack the code? Why isn't this a question of encryption?”

“You really do make it sound like a cloak-and-dagger affair. No, he didn't crack any code. Not really. He went about it differently.”

“What did he do?”

“He set up a research project that no-one had authorised. He forged signatures, including mine. He pretended the company was researching the genetic transmission of an oncogenic disease found in several families in Iceland. He tricked the data privacy committee – a kind of monitoring agency for the database. He tricked the scientific ethics committee. He tricked us all here.”

She stopped talking for a moment and looked at her watch. She stood up and went over to her desk and called her secretary to postpone a meeting for ten minutes then sat back down with Erlendur.

“That's been the dynamics up to now,” she said.

“Dynamics?” Erlendur said.

Karítas looked at him thoughtfully. The mobile phone in Erlendur's pocket started ringing. He excused himself and answered. It was Sigurdur Óli.

“Forensics have been through Einar's flat on StÓragerdi,” he said. “I called them and they haven't really found anything except that Einar got himself a fire-arms licence two years ago or so.”

“A fire-arms licence?” Erlendur repeated.

“It's on our register. But that's not all. He owns a shotgun and we found the sawn-off barrel under his bed.”

“The barrel?”

“He'd sawn off the barrel. They do that sometimes. Makes it easier to shoot themselves.”

“Do you think he could be dangerous?”

“When we find him,” Sigurdur Óli said, “we need to approach him carefully. We can't predict what he'll do with a gun.”

“He can hardly intend to kill anyone with it,” said Erlendur, who had stood up and turned his back on Karítas for some kind of privacy.

“Why not?”

“He would have already used it,” Erlendur said in a low voice. “On Holberg. Don't you think?”

“I honestly don't know.”

“See you,” Erlendur said, switched off the phone and repeated his apologies before he sat down again.

“That's been the process up to now,” Karítas resumed where she'd left off. “We apply to these authorities for permission to conduct a research project, like in Einar's case, the study of the genetic transmission of a specific disease. We're given an encrypted list of names of people who suffer from the disease or are conceivable carriers and compare it to the encrypted genealogy database. Then we can produce a kind of encrypted family tree.”

“Like a message tree,” Erlendur said.

“What?”

“No, do go on.”

“The data privacy committee decodes the list with the names of the people we want to study, what we call a sample group, both patients and relatives, and it produces a list of participants with their ID numbers. Do you follow?”

“And that's how Einar obtained the names and ID numbers of anyone who had the disease in their family.”

She nodded.

“Does this all go through the data privacy committee?”

“I don't know how deeply you want to go into this. We're working with doctors and various establishments. They submit the names of patients to the privacy committee, which encrypts the names and ID numbers and sends them here to the Genetic Research Centre. We have a dedicated genealogical tracer program which arranges patients into cluster groups on the basis of their relationship to one another. Using this program we can select the patients who provide the best statistical information for searching for specific genetic disorders. Then we ask individuals from this group to take part in the study. Genealogy is valuable for seeing whether a genetic disease is involved, selecting a good sample, and it's a powerful tool in the search for genetic disorders.”

“All that Einar needed to do was to pretend to create a sample and have the names decoded, all with the help of the data privacy committee.”

“He lied and tricked everyone and he got away with it.”

“I can understand how this could be embarrassing for you.”

“Einar is among our top management here and one of our most capable scientists. A fine man. Why did he do it?” the director asked.

“He lost his daughter,” Erlendur said. “Didn't you know about that?”

“No,” she said, staring at him.

“How long's he been working here?”

“Two years.”

“It was some time before then.”

“How did he lose his daughter?”

“She had a genetically transmitted neural disease. He was the carrier but didn't know about the disease in his family.”

“A question of paternity?”

Erlendur didn't answer her. Felt he'd said enough.

“That's one of the problems with this kind of genealogy database. Diseases tend to jump out of the family tree at random and then pop up again where you least expected them.”

Erlendur stood up. “And you keep all these secrets. Old family secrets. Tragedies, sorrows and death, all carefully classified in computers. Family stories and stories of individuals. Stories about me and you. You keep the whole secret and can call it up whenever you want. A Jar City for the whole nation.”

“I don't know what you're talking about,” Karítas said. “A Jar City?”

“No, of course not,” Erlendur said and took his leave.

Other books

Enemy Spy by Wendelin van Draanen
House Secrets by Mike Lawson
The Ballerina's Stand by Angel Smits
Games We Play by Ruthie Robinson
The Credulity Nexus by Graham Storrs