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Snow angels ikv-1

Page 15

by James Thompson


  “Where is Pirkko?” I ask.

  “When I left, she was sitting in her chair like always, except she had a butcher knife in her lap. She didn’t say anything. As far as I know, she hasn’t spoken in a long time.”

  “What are all those people doing outside?”

  “A couple people came over because of the screaming and I told them what I saw. I guess they spread the word. I shouldn’t have said anything, but I was shaken up. Sorry.”

  “It’s okay,” I say. “Both of you come with me and keep everyone outside while I check things out.”

  We walk over. They stand guard and I open the door. Pirkko is in her armchair. She doesn’t look up. Her dress and face are spattered with blood. Urpo is on the floor beside an overturned coffee table, still clutching his neck. She missed his windpipe but hit the artery. Blood spray is all over the floor and walls.

  I kneel down beside Pirkko, take the knife out of her hand and set it on the floor beside me. “Can you talk to me?” I ask.

  She offers no sign of recognition.

  “It’s going to be okay. Nothing bad is going to happen to you.”

  She doesn’t move, but tears run down her cheeks.

  I open the front door and hand Dad my car keys. “Would you bring the tackle boxes out of the trunk for me?”

  When he comes back, I bag the knife and take a few pictures of Pirkko, but not many, because I don’t want to embarrass her more than I have to. I call emergency services and request two vehicles. While I wait, I sit beside Pirkko and hold her hand to comfort her.

  I’ve seen a lot of these situations, deal with them at least a couple times a year. I have a good idea of what happened. She was in her chair, he stood over her, screaming in her face. I’m not sure how she came to have the knife. Maybe she went to the kitchen, got it and sat back down, maybe she already had it hidden under the seat cushion. I’m sure she was afraid of him. I would have been. Who knows, she might have had the knife hidden there for years, just in case.

  He screams at her until she can’t take it anymore, then she holds up the knife. He might have been so drunk that he didn’t even notice. She has so little strength, she couldn’t have done more than poke it up at him, but it was sharp and went through his neck, severed the left carotid artery.

  From the blood spray pattern, I can see that he spun in a circle, fell across the coffee table onto the floor, bled out and died. It couldn’t have taken long.

  The EMTs arrive. I tell them to sedate her and take her to the hospital. She’s fat. With effort, they lift her up and put her in a wheelchair. Her empty chair is wet and the smell makes me gag. Pirkko had been pissing in it for a long time. She couldn’t take care of herself, but nobody cared.

  After she’s gone, I walk around and take more photos. The whole house smells like a mass grave. Bootleg Russian medical alcohol bottles stand empty on the kitchen counter. His brand of choice was Royal American Spirit. A bootlegger brought thousands of liters of the stuff into the country and was bold enough to make his own label. I take some close-ups of Urpo. He’s malnourished, has been living on booze and not eating much all winter. His corpse reminds me of a plucked dead chicken.

  When I’m done, emergency workers take his body away on a gurney. I walk out with them. Mikko’s work lamps give us enough light to see by. The crowd is still out in the yard, milling around in the snow, stamping their feet and rubbing their hands together to stay warm.

  Raila, alcohol psychosis in full sway, sees the body and begins shrieking. She points at the Virtanens’ front window and screams over and over, “They couldn’t even iron the curtains! They couldn’t even iron the curtains!” She starts clapping her gloved hands in time.

  Tiina has a droopy mouth and eyes, an upper lip thin as a razor, and no groove between her nose and lips: typical characteristics of fetal alcohol syndrome. She takes her doll out of its carriage and coos at it. “Be quiet Mom, you’ll wake the baby,” she says.

  Raila keeps shouting about curtains. Tiina keeps telling her to shut up. Tiina walks over to Big Paavo’s shed, comes back with a plastic bicycle pump and hits Raila on the head with it.

  Blood runs down Raila’s face, she starts to cry. She has thin gray hair. Tiina reaches over and pulls out a clump of it, throws a bloody wad of hair and scalp onto the hard-packed snow.

  I grab Tiina, the EMTs leave Urpo on the gurney and tend to Raila. When Tiina is calm, I tell her to go home. She pushes the baby carriage in front of her and trudges back to her house. It strikes me that what I just witnessed doesn’t surprise me in the least. Psychosis has become run of the mill. Maybe the cold and dark have driven us all crazy.

  Dad and Big Paavo walk over to me. We all light cigarettes.

  “Strange day,” Dad says.

  “You have no idea.” I look up at Big Paavo. “Did you know Pirkko and Urpo were living like that?” I ask.

  “Urpo’s been drunk and Pirkko’s been miserable in that house for thirty years,” he says. “What was I supposed to do about it?”

  A lot of people drink bootleg medical alcohol because it’s cheap, but it’s nearly a hundred percent pure, makes people crazy and mean, especially during kaamos. Urpo didn’t need booze to be an asshole though, he was crazy and mean when he was sober too. I shake my head. A woman had to kill her husband to get some help.

  A car pulls up and Jaakko gets out. “I heard about it over the scanner,” he says. “What happened?”

  I don’t want to deal with Jaakko right now, but he’s a reporter and this is a crime scene, so I don’t have much choice. “Urpo Virtanen is dead. His wife killed him.”

  “What happened?”

  “I’ll file a police report in the morning.”

  “Give me something, an official statement.”

  “Honestly Jaakko, I just don’t have the strength right now.”

  “Mind if I take a few pictures?”

  “Do what you want outside, but stay out of the house.”

  He looks pissed off. “I understand your sergeant’s son committed suicide yesterday.”

  “Yes, he did. The past couple days have been sad ones for this community.”

  “Finally,” he says, “something quotable. Do you have any reason why?”

  “Do we ever really know why people kill themselves?”

  “Fair enough. Care to comment on your ex-wife’s marriage?”

  He catches me by surprise, as I’m sure he intended. “What marriage?”

  “She and Seppo Niemi were married today at the magistrate’s office. You arrested him for murder, released him and he married Heli the next day. I find that intriguing.”

  I do too. I need time to process the information and consider the motivations behind their marriage.

  “She called me this afternoon to make a statement,” he says. “She says Seppo has been asking her to marry him for many years, and that she finally did so today as a show of support in light of his wrongful arrest.”

  “That’s noble of her.”

  “She also says that when you arrested him, you pulled the car over to the side of the road and put a gun to his head. Is that true?”

  Seppo just couldn’t keep his fucking mouth shut. “You should ask Seppo.”

  “I did.”

  “What did he say?”

  He pauses, takes a minute to try to think of a way to trap me, but he can’t. “He says it never happened.”

  “Then why ask me about it?”

  He reminds me of a dog trying to dig a rabbit out of its hole. “Because I think it’s true. I think there’s a lot going on here. I think the investigation of Sufia Elmi’s murder is compromised by personal feelings and old hatreds.”

  “You’re welcome to your thoughts, but be careful what you print. A lot will become clear to you in the next day or two.”

  “You’re being circumspect. What are you hiding?”

  My cell phone rings. I turn away from Jaakko and answer it. “The DNA tests just came back from Valtteri’s
house,” Antti says. “They place Heikki at the murder scene, and also inside Seppo’s home.”

  For the second time in as many minutes, I’m caught off guard. “Inside the house.”

  “Yeah.”

  “Okay, thanks. I’ll call you later.”

  “What do you think… ”

  I cut him off. “I can’t talk right now.”

  The EMTs drive Urpo’s body away in an ambulance. Raila stands by herself, looking miserable. Maybe she’s afraid to go home.

  I turn to Dad and Big Paavo. “Thank you both.”

  Jaakko starts in again, but I cut him off too. I walk Raila home and make sure Tiina is calm, then head to my car. I’ve got to see Valtteri and tell my friend that his dead son is a murderer.

  25

  As I reach the intersection in the road leaving Marjakyla, the aurora borealis appears. Instead of turning onto the highway, I drive across the road to Aslak’s reindeer farm, park in his driveway and get out of the car.

  It’s about twenty below zero. In this kind of cold, the sense of smell is almost useless, but I smell the northern lights. I’m told it’s not possible, but I’ve always been able to. The scent is like copper and burned cinnamon. A couple times I’ve heard them. The sound was like constant humming thunder.

  I light a cigarette and watch the northern lights dim and brighten, wavy green serpents of light. Fresh snow has turned the field where Sufia’s body lay into a clean white funeral shroud. Around twenty reindeer saunter toward me, curious.

  It occurs to me that I haven’t spoken to Sufia’s father since Seppo was released. He’s going to be upset and the conversation won’t be pleasant. I take my phone out to call him and it rings in my hand. “Good evening Inspector,” Abdi says. “I have read in the newspaper that there has been an unpleasant development in the investigation of my daughter’s murder.”

  “You mean the release of Seppo Niemi.”

  “Exactly so.”

  “I apologize for not calling you about it earlier. The investigation has moved so fast that I haven’t had time. Seppo was released for political reasons. It has no bearing on his guilt or innocence.”

  “Will my daughter’s murderer go free for, as you say, political reasons?”

  I don’t mention my suspicions about Heli’s involvement. If it proves that she coerced Heikki to murder, Abdi will still be satisfied that justice was done. “I can rearrest him at any time. A new development has come to light that suggests it may be soon.”

  “What development?”

  “A teenage boy committed suicide yesterday. Forensics place him at the crime scene and also in Seppo’s house. It appears the boy was an accomplice to the crime.”

  “I remain unconvinced. When we last spoke, you had Sufia’s killer in custody and believed her case would be brought to a speedy conclusion. Now you talk of political considerations and teenage accomplices. I begin to lose my faith in you Inspector.”

  “Mr. Barre, I promise you…”

  He cuts me off. “The Koran instructs, ‘There are guardians watching over you, noble recorders who know of all your actions.’ Do not let Sufia’s murder go unavenged.”

  The line goes dead. I look up. The northern lights have disappeared, and I’m staring into a dark and lifeless Arctic night.

  I knock on Valtteri’s door and Maria answers. She looks like she’s aged ten years in a day. I step in and give her a hug, take off my boots in the foyer. Valtteri walks into the living room. He looks frightened, maybe because of what I’m going to tell him.

  “Maria, why don’t you make us some coffee,” he says.

  “He was my son too.”

  “Maria, go in the kitchen.”

  She doesn’t argue and walks away. He and I sit side by side on the sofa. “I have to tell you some difficult things,” I say.

  He folds his hands, rests his arms on his knees, stares at the floor, waits.

  “Heikki was present at the murder scene. The tears on Sufia’s face belonged to him.”

  Valtteri doesn’t look up.

  “I went through his computer today. There was no admission of guilt, but I found strange things. He wrote, ‘God hates niggers’ and ‘God hates whores,’ almost like we saw on her body.”

  Valtteri cries silent tears. They fall between his knees, splash on the rug between his feet. “Why did he do it?” he asks.

  “I don’t know.”

  “You’re telling me Heikki thought God wanted him to kill that girl. I raised my children religious. I thought God would make them good strong people. Now you’re telling me what I taught Heikki made him sick, a killer.”

  “I don’t think that. I could tell from what he wrote that Heikki was disturbed.”

  “And I made him that way.”

  “No you didn’t. You raised him right. What Heikki did had nothing to do with you. I’ve known you a long time, you’re a good man, a good parent.”

  He looks up, holds his hands out toward me. I don’t know what he wants me to do. His voice trembles. “Then why?” He yells it. “Dear God, why!”

  Maria comes in from the kitchen. She’s carrying a tray with cups of coffee and slices of cake, which she sets down on the coffee table in front of us. She’s crying. “Valtteri, I heard what was said. He killed that girl, didn’t he?”

  He wraps his arms around himself, rocks back and forth. “Maria, we raised a monster.”

  She stills her tears, kneels down on the floor and wraps her arms around Valtteri, tries to calm him. “Why?” she asks me.

  “Heikki was in love with a girl. He wrote a poem about her and I found it in his computer. Do you know who she is?”

  “No,” Maria says.

  “Some of the things he wrote give me the feeling that somehow this girl and Sufia Elmi are connected. There’s something else too. We found his DNA in Seppo Niemi’s house. Did he and Seppo know each other?”

  “Heikki did odd jobs for Seppo and Heli. Shoveled snow, carried firewood, things like that. He met Heli at church. It’s no surprise that he was in their house.”

  Maria’s comforting worked, Valtteri is calmer, but now I know that he withheld information. My doubt about whether he knew Heikki killed Sufia renews itself. “Why didn’t you tell me?” I ask him.

  “You don’t like to talk about Heli, and I didn’t see any point in telling you my son shoveled her driveway.”

  An idea hits me so hard that I curse out loud without meaning to. “Goddamn it.”

  They look stunned, must think I’m mad at them for not telling me Heikki knew Heli and Seppo. “Sorry,” I say.

  I’ve just realized the most economical solution to Sufia’s murder. Heikki and Seppo knew each other. My investigation into Seppo’s life has suggested to me that he’s morally arid enough to plant his dick in anything with a pulse. If he swung both ways, it wouldn’t surprise me. Maybe he seduced the boy who did his odd jobs.

  Heikki was young, sheltered, most likely inexperienced. He could have been exploring his sexuality. Heikki and Seppo could have had a homosexual affair. If they were lovers, it would have given Heikki access to Seppo’s car keys. Heikki might have killed Sufia out of simple jealousy.

  I put a hand on Valtteri’s shoulder to let him know I’m not angry, and feel sudden shame for thinking Valtteri and Maria could have had anything to do with Heikki’s suicide. They loved their boy so much. “Is there anything else you haven’t told me?”

  He shakes his head.

  “I guess you know I can’t keep this out of the papers.”

  Maria gulps back a cry. She must have just realized she and Valtteri are about to take on new identities as the parents of a psychotic murderer. They’ll endure humiliation that neither they nor the community will ever forget.

  Valtteri takes her hand but looks at me. “I’m sorry about all this,” he says. “I’ve embarrassed you and the police department. I’ll turn in my resignation after the funeral tomorrow.”

  I grasp at words, they’re all inadequa
te. He loves his job. “Damn it Valtteri, what Heikki did isn’t your fault, and I won’t accept your resignation.”

  He lets out a whimper. “I raised him, it’s my fault. You’ll accept it and you’ll be glad you did.”

  “You’re in a lot of pain and you’re being foolish.”

  “I don’t see that I have any choice.”

  “Resigning isn’t an option for you. You have seven other children and a wife to take care of.”

  He starts to cry again. “What do I do then?”

  “You’re going to grieve for your boy, then you’re going to go back to work and do your job while I figure out why Heikki did what he did.”

  He looks at Maria, she nods. “I’ll try,” he says.

  I get up to leave. “I’m so sorry that I had to tell you these things. I’ll see you tomorrow at the funeral.”

  “Don’t come,” he says. “We don’t want anybody there except us and his brothers and sisters.”

  “I understand,” I say, but I don’t. No one can understand their torment. They’ve suffered the emotional equivalent of what was done to Sufia, and it fell to me to deliver this burden upon them. I hope one day they can forgive me. I leave without another word.

  26

  The faces of Valtteri and Maria, their grief and horror, are frozen in my mind. I want to be alone, so I take my time driving back to the police station. I can sit in my office, write reports. The national chief of police has been like an ax hanging over my neck. Maybe letting him know the case is drawing to a close will pacify him. But first I need to read the report about Heikki’s DNA results.

  At a stop sign near the station, a car pulls up beside me in the wrong lane. Seppo’s BMW. Heli waves at me from the driver’s seat. The passenger-side window rolls down, and I roll down my window to hear her. She shouts at me to follow her.

  She guns the engine, wheels spin on the ice, the BMW shoots past me. I wonder who’s been killed this time, pull out fast and hurry to keep up with her. She blows through a red light, I do the same. After a few blocks, she turns a corner and parks. I stop behind her.

 

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