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Death Spiral

Page 1

by Leena Lehtolainen




  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Text copyright © 1997 by Leena Lehtolainen

  English translation copyright © 2015 Owen F. Witesman

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

  Published by AmazonCrossing

  ISBN-13: 9781503951051

  ISBN-10: 1503951057

  Cover design by Cyanotype

  For Konsta

  CONTENTS

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  PROLOGUE

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  EPILOGUE

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  ABOUT THE TRANSLATOR

  CAST OF CHARACTERS

  THE COPS

  Maria Kallio ............ Espoo Violent Crime Unit detective

  Jyrki Taskinen ............ Head of Espoo VCU

  Pekka Koivu ............ Espoo VCU detective

  Lähde ............ Espoo VCU detective

  Pihko ............ Espoo VCU detective

  Ville “Dennis the Menace” Puupponen ............ Espoo VCU detective

  Juhani Palo ............ Deceased Espoo VCU detective

  Pertti Ström ............ Espoo VCU detective

  Akkila ............ Espoo patrol officer

  Haikala ............ Espoo patrol officer

  Mononen ............ Espoo patrol officer

  Nuotio ............ Head of Helsinki VCU

  Hannu Hirvonen ............ Forensic technician

  Karttunen ............ Forensic technician

  Kervinen ............ Forensic pathologist

  THE SKATERS

  Elena Grigorieva ............ Figure-skating coach

  Irina Grigorieva ............ Elena Grigorieva’s daughter

  Rami Luoto ............ Figure-skating coach

  Janne Kivi ............ Noora Nieminen’s skating partner

  Noora Nieminen ............ Janne Kivi’s skating partner

  Silja Taskinen ............ Jyrki Taskinen’s daughter

  SUPPORTING CAST

  Antti ............ Maria’s husband

  Aliisa ............ Maria’s niece

  Eeva and Helena ............ Maria’s sisters

  Einstein ............ Antti’s cat

  Anton Grigoriev ............ Elena Grigorieva’s deceased husband

  Eva Jensen ............ Therapist, Maria’s friend

  Kati Järvenperä ............ Witness

  Jussi and Olli Järvenperä ............ Kati Järvenperä’s young sons

  Leena ............ A lawyer, Maria’s friend

  Tomi Liikanen ............ Elena Grigorieva’s husband, gym owner

  Jaana Markkanen ............ Bereaved young mother

  Minni Markkanen ............ Dead infant

  Kauko Nieminen ............ Noora Nieminen’s father

  Hanna Nieminen ............ Noora Nieminen’s mother

  Saku ............ Maria’s nephew

  Vesku Teräsvuori ............ The King of Karaoke, Nieminen family stalker

  Ulrika Weissenberg ............ Espoo Figure-Skating Association chairwoman

  PROLOGUE

  The crossbow was pointed straight at the girl’s heart. Her eyes were wide in terror, pleading with the Huntsman to spare her life. The man’s expression remained hard for only a moment before he broke down and lowered his weapon. The girl spun to flee, skates speeding to the far edge of the frozen forest as dancing animals filled the glade.

  But the girl’s suffering was not over yet. Forest beasts set upon her, and even safe in the dwarfs’ home, she met only brusqueness at first. Then the evil stepmother appeared, disguised as an old woman, and fed Snow White the poison apple.

  Who had done the performers’ makeup? It must have been a real professional. Not just anyone could have transformed the lovely Silja Taskinen into a wrinkled hag in the ten minutes she was off the ice, and Noora Nieminen’s Snow White was straight from the animated feature film. Of course it helped that both girls really threw themselves into their roles.

  I’ve always liked the way figure skating balances right on the knife edge between good melodrama and utter tastelessness. Grand emotions evoked to the accompaniment of tired musical clichés. Because of the strict rules, original moves are challenging, but even so, every so often someone develops something we’ve never seen before. And occasionally a skater comes along with a real gift for drama. That’s why I watch figure skating.

  In the end, of course, Snow White got her prince. I tried to hide my tears because my boss, Jyrki Taskinen, and his wife, Terttu, were sitting next to me and I didn’t want them to see. Even though I could blame my blubbering on being seven months pregnant, adults aren’t supposed to cry watching fairy tales on ice. Jyrki, who was usually fairly restrained, let out a whoop when the evil stepmother, his daughter, Silja, took her bow. I clapped and stomped too, but I made even more noise for Noora Nieminen.

  Really, the roles should have been reversed. Silja Taskinen was the beauty; with her wide hips, Noora was more ordinary looking. But looks weren’t why she had landed the part of Snow White in the Espoo Figure-Skating Association’s spring show. Noora Nieminen was an international-level pairs skater, whose short program the previous season had been an homage to Disney’s Snow White. Noora’s partner, Janne Kivi, was practically made to play the prince. Tonight, as it was every time he performed, the Matinkylä Ice Arena was bursting with little girls eager to get his autograph and see him up close. Without a doubt, he was handsome as hell: thick blond hair just long enough for a ponytail, a well-proportioned body just a little too tall for a figure skater, and uncommonly bright-green feline eyes. I was right there with the little girls sighing whenever the television camera zoomed in on Janne’s high cheekbones and wide mouth. Watching beautiful men was one of my favorite hobbies.

  Noora and Janne skated out one more time, giving the screaming crowd a final triple Salchow jump and a death spiral. The baby inside me kicked—maybe the noise had woken it up.

  Suddenly I heard an intake of breath from Taskinen. A man with a black mustache and blond dyed streaks in his dark hair had appeared at the edge of the ice and tossed Noora a bouquet of crimson roses. She made no attempt to retrieve the flowers, though, and soon the petals were shredded by the skates of the forest creatures, courtiers, and dwarfs as they came out to thank the audience.

  “Is that the stalker?” I asked Taskinen. Although the case didn’t belong to our unit, I knew someone had been bothering the Nieminen family for the past couple of years. The man had made repeated threats against Noora’s mother and ultimately was fined for trespassing and disturbing the peace.

  “Yes. Vesku Teräsvuori, ‘the King of Karaoke.’” Taskinen shrugged in frustration. The police couldn’t prevent Teräsvuori from coming to a public event or throwing flowers to Noora. Legally, it was just a nice gesture.

  Once the tiny skaters who played the dwarfs and forest creatures finally glided away, the rink was traced with dotted trails of crushed rose petals—as if blood had sprayed across the ice.

  “Let’s pick up Silja from the dressing room, and you can get a ride home with us,” Terttu said.

&n
bsp; When Jyrki came around the department selling tickets to his daughter’s performance, I’d bought two without a moment’s hesitation, but my husband, Antti, wasn’t able to come. I didn’t know I would be sitting rink side with the performers’ families. Everyone else from work watched the performance from the other side of the cramped arena.

  “I’m fine taking the bus,” I said, but it was no use. Of course getting to peek into the dressing rooms was fun. Maybe I should have joined the crowd of girls waiting for Janne Kivi’s autograph. But first I had to find the women’s restroom. After arranging to meet the Taskinens outside the dressing room doors, I slipped down one of the bare concrete hallways.

  There was only one women’s restroom compared to three men’s rooms, and of course it was crammed with a dozen little girls, so I decided to use the bathroom with Staff Only stenciled on the door. I was seven months pregnant and a police officer after all.

  I was fighting with the complicated fasteners of my maternity pants when I heard the door violently flung open. Based on the footsteps, there were two people.

  “What the hell do you think you’re doing?” said a furious voice, its gender difficult to determine because it was so raspy. Based on the noises, the speaker was attacking the other person. The sounds of struggle, a bang of a leg against the sink, and the crash of the trash can tipping over drowned out the response. As soon as I could get my pants back up, I would have to intervene.

  “Get out of my sight! I never want to see you again!”

  Following these words came the sound of the door opening, as if the one with the raspy voice had shoved the other one out into the hall. By the time I finally succeeded in getting the clasp on my pants fastened, the restroom was empty. The pile of trash on the floor and the crooked mirror on the wall proved I hadn’t just been hearing things.

  I decided to forget the whole incident and set off weaving through the crowd to the performers’ dressing rooms. Inside was total chaos, with dozens of little skaters looking for their parents and wiping off their fox whiskers, squirrel noses, and rabbit teeth. The twelve-year-old girl who played Sneezy the Dwarf was trying to wash her red-painted nose, and the prince’s men-at-arms were fighting with their toy swords. A woman with heavy makeup dressed in an ankle-length fur coat tried without success to get the children to listen to her.

  “Quiet, everyone!” a deep female voice suddenly bellowed with so much authority the speaker didn’t really even need to raise it. In an instant the entire raucous mob fell silent and the trainer, Elena Grigorieva, thanked her skaters for a successful performance and a good season.

  I listened too, but more to Grigorieva’s voice than her words. Was this the same voice I had just heard issuing threats in the restroom? Just then Taskinen tugged me by the sleeve.

  “This is still going to take a little while. Rami and Elena ordered juice and cookies to celebrate the end of the season.”

  “At least we could have champagne,” another male voice said behind me. Turning my head, I met Janne Kivi’s green, bored-looking eyes.

  “You drank quite enough champagne in Edmonton,” Silja Taskinen, who was standing next to him, said with a laugh.

  “But it’s been two months since then!” Janne said.

  Finland’s young figure-skating team had done quite well in competition in Edmonton, Canada. After Mila Kajas fell ill, the Figure-Skating Federation sent Silja Taskinen in her place, and she had surprised everyone by placing twelfth overall. Our men’s and ice-dancing showings had been weaker, but Noora Nieminen and Janne Kivi’s ninth-place result in the pairs had been a real sensation. Finland hadn’t been able to field an internationally competitive pair in decades. The Eurosport announcers had even gone so far as to float the possibility of a world championship for Noora and Janne within the next few years.

  “Let’s go, Dad,” Silja said to Taskinen. “We don’t have any reason to celebrate. Our next season has already started.”

  After the World Championships, Silja, Janne, and Noora had given themselves a couple of weeks of vacation before beginning rehearsals for the ice show. When Silja and Noora’s high school semester ended, the team and their coaches, Elena Grigorieva and Rami Luoto, would travel to Canada for two months of training camp.

  “Janne, you probably haven’t met Maria yet,” Terttu Taskinen said kindly. “Maria Kallio is one of Jyrki’s best friends from work.”

  “Hi,” Janne said politely, although he clearly wasn’t the slightest bit interested in who I was. Suddenly I felt someone pushing between Janne and me, and then I saw Noora Nieminen.

  I’m barely five foot three, but Noora was at least two inches shorter than me, and at sixteen years old, she was a funny mixture of little girl and mature woman. Her gray eyes were those of an adult, as if she had already seen too much for her age.

  “Hi, Noora. Good job out there tonight. I hope Teräsvuori’s flowers didn’t bother you,” Taskinen said protectively.

  “I wish that jerk would leave us alone already!” Noora said with a dramatic sigh. “He should know I would never touch anything from him! Mom probably went hysterical when she saw him. Speaking of, have you seen my parents?”

  Noora tried to see over the crowd.

  “Your dad is over there by the front door,” Janne said from his vantage point of six feet one inches. On the ice Noora and Janne looked like a well-proportioned pair, but off the ice their difference in height and age was stark, although Janne was only twenty-one.

  “Well, I’m leaving,” Janne announced and started pushing his way toward the door.

  “See you tomorrow, Silja,” Noora whispered and set off in the other direction, toward the front door where a balding, red-faced man, obviously her father, was waving. Not bothering to offer to carry Noora’s enormous bag, he barged out the door as if he were angry. The door almost crushed Noora.

  That was the only time I ever met Noora Nieminen alive.

  1

  Kati Järvenperä parked her ancient, dark-blue Mercedes on the mostly deserted upper level of the Matinkylä Shopping Center parking garage. There had been space lower down, but Kati wasn’t in the mood to squeeze the boat of a car into one of the free spots. It was twenty minutes to eight, leaving her just barely enough time to buy her groceries before the supermarket closed. She had spent more than two hours with Olli at the ear doctor. She would have to take the boys with her into the store, and of course Jussi would start whining for her to buy them treats, using the excuse that Olli was sick.

  Kati opened the trunk and took out Olli’s umbrella stroller and a crate of empty bottles for recycling. Once the boys were asleep, she definitely deserved a couple of cold ciders. She didn’t bother locking the trunk. It was unlocked most of the time, and nothing had ever disappeared. The car was beat up enough that no one would think they’d find anything worth stealing. Kati sat twenty-one-month-old Olli in the stroller, ordered four-year-old Jussi to hold the other side of the crate, sighed, and dragged herself off to shop.

  They managed to get out of the store one minute before eight. Jussi had succeeded in pestering her into buying them chocolate pudding cups and a big bag of xylitol gum. Kati didn’t have the energy to argue. Work at the Helsinki Summer University had been hell that day, and then, when the day care called to say Olli was complaining about his ear again, the catastrophe was complete. Her husband had lectures from six to eight, so Kati had had to take both boys to wait in line at the health center.

  Kati planted Olli in his car seat in back and Jussi on his booster, then fastened both boys’ seat belts. She folded the stroller and opened the trunk.

  For a moment all she could do was stare. The eyes of the girl crammed in the trunk did not look back; a stream of blood veiled them. Kati felt her legs buckling under her and the world going dark. Not until Jussi yelled, “Come on, Mom!” did she snap out of it.

  Gingerly, she checked the girl’s wrist for a pulse. That was what her first-aid course had taught. The hand was still warm, and she easily f
ound the vein, but she felt no pulse.

  Kato closed and locked the trunk.

  Opening Olli’s door, she told the boys, “Climb back out. The car is broken. We have to call the police.”

  “No, we need a mechanic,” Jussi said in protest. “Police officers don’t fix cars.”

  “I’m sure the police know a good mechanic,” Kati said. It was strange how steady her voice sounded. The boys didn’t notice anything. Where was her phone? And how the hell was she going to explain the girl’s body in her trunk to the police?

  I couldn’t remember such a cold May. As I turned my bike down into the tunnel under the Turku Highway, a chill wind assailed me. The morning temperature was barely fifty degrees, and the finches trying to sing just seemed pathetic. Two weeks until June and the weather felt like October. Heavy rain had fallen all night, and clouds the color of yesterday’s bruise were rising in the eastern sky.

  My breasts felt cold, and my nose was running by the time I finally coasted into the Espoo Police Department parking lot. Being seven months pregnant made running difficult, so I was trying to keep myself in some sort of shape by biking and lifting weights. Otherwise everything was going well, and sometimes I barely remembered I was expecting. Maybe that was some kind of protective mechanism. The pregnancy hadn’t been planned; my IUD had failed.

  I worked as a detective for the Espoo Police in the Violent Crime and Repeat Offender Unit. Generally I liked my job, but I couldn’t deny occasionally relishing the thought of my upcoming maternity leave. A good break from all the murders and beatings was long overdue. Besides a few months of unemployment, I had been working like a madwoman ever since graduating from high school thirteen years earlier.

  “Taskinen wants to see you right now!” our secretary yelled as soon as I stepped into the hall where our unit was housed. I stopped by my office to take off my jacket and switch out of my running shoes.

  Detective Lieutenant Jyrki Taskinen sat behind his desk speaking urgently on the phone. When he saw me, he cut short the call. I could tell my boss had barely slept the night before: his usually pale, narrow face was gray as stone, he had bags under his eyes, and his face was covered in blond stubble. Taskinen waved for me to sit. He seemed to have a hard time finding words.

 

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