Invisible Murder

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Invisible Murder Page 31

by Lene Kaaberbol Agnete Friis


  Skou-Larsen was brought out of his rightful indignation with a jerk.

  “What I was doing …?” he said hesitantly. It sounded just like something one of those godawful mystery-novel detectives would ask the murder suspect. And he didn’t see how it could be related to the fraud case. Unless the con man had met with some kind of accident? They had asked about the car, after all.

  “I should think I was watching TV,” he said hesitantly. “We usually do on Saturday. My wife likes those prime time dramas.” Then he happened to think of something. “No, wait. I think that might be the Saturday I had to go to the clinic because I fainted. Doctors hardly ever make house calls anymore, you know, not even if you’re practically dying. But once I got there, they changed their mind, and ended up admitting me to the hospital for the night.”

  “Which hospital?”

  “Bispebjerg.”

  “And what was wrong with you, if you don’t mind my asking?”

  “Blood pressure. It was too low.” At the hospital they claimed that he must have taken too many of his Fortzaar pills, but he was sure he hadn’t. “They kept me in until Sunday, so I wasn’t home that night.”

  The second policeman, Nielsen, returned from the carport with a yellow device that reminded Skou-Larsen of the blood pressure monitor the doctor used, maybe because they had just been talking about that night at Bispebjerg Hospital. Instead of the blood pressure monitor’s inflatable cuff, it had a stethoscope-like object connected to it by a spiral cord. Skou-Larsen noticed the two officers exchange a look and an infinitesimal shake of the head.

  “We also need to check the house,” the one named Nielsen said.

  “Mr. Skou-Larsen was kind enough to give us permission to check anything we needed to,” Gitte said quickly, and Skou-Larsen already regretted his rash words. Were they going to go rooting around in his closets and drawers and gape at his folded underwear now? But that wasn’t what the young man was doing. Instead, he plugged a pair of headphones into his yellow box and started walking around waving the stethoscope-like instrument.

  “I’m sorry, but what on earth is he doing?” Skou-Larsen asked. “What kind of device is that?”

  At first he wasn’t sure if Gitte was going to answer him. But after a brief pause, it came.

  “It’s a Geiger counter,” she said. “Or more accurately, a Geiger-Müller counter. Mr. Skou-Larsen, does anyone besides you ever use your car? Your wife, perhaps?”

  “Helle doesn’t drive,” he responded absentmindedly. A Geiger counter? In his house? “Does this have anything to do with that business in Valby? Why in the world would you think there’s radioactivity in our home? Do we need to be evacuated?” His muddled brain reached all the way back to the safety drills from the ’50s, and he started contemplating what he would need if he were going to spend the night in the air-raid shelter under Emdrup School. No, wait, it wasn’t called that anymore. What was it now, Lundehus School? Did they even still have the bomb shelter? He could picture the old brochure clearly. IN THE EVENT OF WAR, it was called, with a foreword by former Prime Minister Viggo Kampmann, and gave information about “the destructive range of the new weapons” and the recommendation to keep enough emergency rations on hand for eight days. But this wasn’t a nuclear war, this was … this was something else. You can’t make an atomic bomb out of cesium, he told himself. But a Geiger counter—in his house?

  “What is he looking for?” he managed to ask.

  “Try to concentrate now, Mr. Skou-Larsen. Has anyone else used your car? Has it ever been stolen?”

  “No,” he said. “Never.”

  “Do you own a computer, sir?” Gitte asked.

  “Uh, yes. Our son … he’s good at sending e-mails and that kind of thing.”

  “We would like permission to copy the contents of your hard drive.”

  “Yes. But.…” Suddenly he discovered that he had put his hand on her wrist, a move that took both of them by surprise. “Won’t you tell me what’s going on?” he asked, letting go of her again even though he actually wanted to keep holding on until she responded. It was unbearable, all of it. It was as if his home on Elmehøjvej were suddenly transformed into the setting for one of those absurdist 1960s dramas. They had been to see one, he recalled. With a title like Happy Days, he had expected it to be entertaining, but it was mostly sad, and Helle got angry and said it wasn’t right to waste people’s time with stuff like that. That was actually the last time they had been to the theater, apart from a musical or two.

  Gitte gave him a look that was not entirely devoid of compassion, or so he thought.

  “I’m sorry, Mr. Skou-Larsen. But as I said, we have to follow up on every lead. Even the more unlikely ones.” She stood up. “Mikael?”

  “Yes,” came the muffled response from upstairs.

  “Are you about done?”

  “Just about.”

  A moment later, the policeman with the Geiger counter came back down to the living room.

  “Clean,” he said. “Just background radiation.”

  She nodded as if that was just what she had been expecting.

  “There, you see now, Mr. Skou-Larsen. There’s no reason to worry. We have to take your hard drive with us, or would you rather have us wait here until someone from IT can come out and make a copy?”

  “Take it,” he said hoarsely. The sooner he got them out of the house, the better. “We almost never use the computer. Not since Helle learned how to send text messages.”

  They left, after a polite goodbye—even from the rude young male officer. But Skou-Larsen was shaken and dazed, not sure that anything made sense anymore.

  Thank God Helle hadn’t been home.…

  HODESIAVEJ. THE STREET name sounded so exotic, Søren thought, but ironically suburbian neighborhoods in Denmark didn’t come much more boring than this. Small boxy plots with slightly oversized boxy houses, most of them made of identical yellow brick.

  The carport was empty. According to the motor vehicle registry, Tommi Karvinen was supposed to be the proud owner of a four-year-old BMW M6 Coupe, and that, at any rate, was nowhere to be seen.

  Søren had managed to wangle two men from the evening shift’s overworked staffing roster. Kim Jankowski had just turned forty but was still the less experienced of the two—he hadn’t applied to the police academy until he was thirty-one, just before the age limit disqualified him, but had been extremely focused since then. Jesper Due Hansen was a couple of years younger and had just transferred to counterterrorism from the personal protection unit. He had inevitably been nicknamed “the Dove,” not due to any particulary pacifist tendencies, but because of his avian middle name.

  They drove past the address and parked farther away, where the car couldn’t be seen from the house.

  “The back garden abuts the Common,” Jesper Due said. “It would be pretty easy to go in that way.”

  Søren nodded. “He may have hostages. So … nice and easy, right? Not too much noise. We don’t want to escalate the situation.”

  He stationed Jankowski outside on Rhodesiavej, and then he and the Dove went down to the asphalt path that ran through the no man’s land between the back gardens of the houses and the wide-open green spaces of the Common.

  “We should have brought a dog,” the Dove said. “Then we would have totally fit in.”

  They could see at least four people out walking their dogs on the Common; luckily three of them were quite far away, and the fourth was preoccupied with some form of training that involved an extraordinary number of toots on a dog whistle that unfortunately wasn’t sufficiently high-pitched to be inaudible to human ears.

  “It’s that one,” Søren pointed. “The brown wooden fence.”

  The Dove leapt over it first, in one quick, athletic bound. Søren followed a second later. Luckily Karvinen wasn’t the type who went in for roses. His back garden was a big jungle of waist-high weeds, and the withered, yellow, knee-high grass from last year revealed that the lawn hadn
’t been mowed anytime recently. A thistle in the Eden of suburbia, Søren thought. How symbolic.

  They both ran, bent double, up to the house and the patio. Yellow grass seeds stuck wetly to Søren’s pants, and there was a strong stench of cat pee. The windows were bare and curtainless; the rooms inside had no lights on even though it was overcast and starting to get dark.

  There was no one in the living room or the room next to it. Then Søren noticed some light coming from a basement window at the end wall of the house. He tapped his partner gently on the shoulder, and the Dove nodded and handed him the minicam—actually a miniature video camera on a stick, with a monitor so you could see what was going on in a room without having to stick your head up.

  Søren lay down on his stomach in the dandelions and wormed his way along the foundation until he could put the minicam into position. Then he pulled back a little, sat up, and the Dove handed him the monitor. The Dove proceeded noiselessly around the house to check the windows in the other rooms.

  The OLED monitor was about twice as big as a mobile phone. That was the most practical size for the field: You could operate it discreetly but still see the image clearly. What it provided Søren now was in razor-sharp high-definition; any sharper and he could have checked the girl’s thighs for cellulite.

  She was naked aside from a garter belt of the type that was never intended to hold anything other than a pair of kinky stockings. Very young, with long blonde hair that had been made even blonder with a little help from the cosmetics industry. Her eyes were pinpoint flashes of light in dark caves of mascara, and both of her nipples were pierced with wide gold rings. She was lying on a satiny black bed with her abdomen pushed up and forward as if she were writhing below an invisible lover. But there wasn’t anyone else in the room as far as Søren and the minicam could tell.

  “What the hell.…” Søren mumbled to himself as the girl buried both hands in her crotch and rocked wildly back and forth. There was something unnatural about this.… He fully appreciated that a young woman could have an intense erotic relationship with her own body, but this was more than a little teenage masturbation. Everything about the sight confronting him was purely for show. The girl’s exaggerated facial expression of pleasure, her vigorous motions, that porn bed.… The whole thing was designed to excite everyone but her.

  She abruptly stopped her rocking and sat up. Waiting. Listening? He couldn’t see whether there was a phone near her, but that would explain some of the superficiality of the performance. He could see her lips moving. She was saying something. Her face distorted for a brief instant into a grimace that had nothing to do with desire. Then she stuck her hand under one of the big, overstuffed silk pillows and brought out an object that had been stashed there.

  It was, predictably enough, a dildo. A vinyl version of the male member in a size that bore no relation to reality. She pushed herself over to the edge of the bed, with her legs spread and her heels all the way up against her buttocks. She hesitated in a revealing moment of discomfort before opening her mouth in a parody of orgasm and slowly began pushing the behemoth between her legs.

  Søren turned off the monitor. He knew that when they went in he would find a camera in the basement room with the porn bed. Probably a webcam. And somewhere out there, in Copenhagen or Amsterdam or Berlin, was a sleazebag who was paying for permission to give orders to the young girl. Orders she carried out, no matter how humiliating or uncomfortable.

  The Dove was back.

  “There’s no one in the rest of the house,” he said quietly. “How many down there?”

  “One,” said Søren, even though in a way he felt like he ought to count the sleazebag, too. “A young girl. And probably a webcam. I think she’s providing paid sexual services over the Internet.”

  The Dove raised his eyebrows.

  “Well, I guess that’s one way to work from home,” he said. “Shall we go in?”

  Søren nodded. “Yes. She’s here. She must know him. Maybe we can get her to tell us where he is.”

  THEY ENTERED QUIETLY. Jankowski dealt with the patio door without any major difficulties, and they crept down the stairs to the basement together. Now Søren could hear the sound, too.

  “Show me your arrrse,” the sleazebag commanded in strangely guttural English. “Yeah, that’s right. Come to Daddy.”

  She was at it again with the vigorous thrusting motions, now down on all fours. The dildo was sticking out between the cheeks of her butt like some grotesquely docked tail. Her eyes were closed, and now that her face was turned away from the webcam, the act was over. Apart from a pained little wrinkle between her eyes, her face was completely devoid of expression.

  The sleazebag on the Internet spotted them first.

  “What the hell.…” he swore.

  The girl opened her eyes and screamed.

  “Easy,” Søren said in English, because he was pretty sure she wasn’t Danish. “Police. We’re not going to hurt you.”

  “Fuck,” the male voice hissed, and there was a click and a brief bit of white noise from the speakers on the computer, which Søren hadn’t been able to see with his minicam because it was hidden behind the bed.

  Søren didn’t care. If the girl was under eighteen, then Christian would deliver the sick sleazebag’s IP address straight into Birgitte’s eager hands. And if she was over eighteen, then there wasn’t a damn thing they could do about it anyway. It wasn’t illegal to buy sex online. And although he was pretty damn sure that the profit from the girl’s efforts was going directly into Tommi Karvinen’s till, it would no doubt be a thankless job to try and get her to admit it. Karvinen’s girls don’t blab, Birgitte had said.

  Karvinen. Dudesons.

  Oh, fuck.

  He ran the mental tape one more time. Show me your arrrse. With the slurred S and the rolling guttural R sounds. Exactly like in the Dudesons episode when the insane Finn plunked himself down on an anthill with his backside bared.

  It was him. The man on the other end of the Internet connection was Tommi Karvinen. And he had seen them.

  INA HAD BEEN feeling sick. She was pregnant with Ida, it was morning, and the morning sickness had overpowered her and made it hard for her to breathe. She was in bed next to Morten, trying to lie completely still in the sweat-dampened bedding as she listened to the traffic outside on the overpass. If she didn’t move, she could sometimes postpone the inevitable. The sudden rush of saliva, the sharp burning feeling of vomit in her throat, and the hurried scramble to their tiny bathroom with its cold, black-specked terrazzo floor. Sometimes thinking about lemons and ginger and cool, fresh, green grass helped, too, and she tried thinking about the baby as a good thing. Something happy.

  She rarely succeeded. She could see that her body had changed, her breasts were bigger, and just beneath the skin, there was a fine network of light-blue veins. Her flat stomach had also taken on a small, discreet bulge, and although she knew that there was a living being in there under her skin, she didn’t really feel anything. It didn’t have a face. It didn’t exist, and as Nina lay on her knees on the cold terrazzo floor, the nausea finally overtaking her body, she sometimes wished the baby wasn’t there, and that she and Morten didn’t have to do this. Together. And with that thought came the anxiety of doing the whole thing wrong, because she didn’t love the little unborn life enough. Because you were supposed to love your own baby. Weren’t you? She didn’t dare ask Morten if he loved the child, because he probably did. His feelings were always proper, healthy, and normal. Nina, on the other hand, felt panic and anxiety creeping in, from all the black crevices of her childhood. Mostly she was afraid of herself. The nausea washed over her again, and she was so terribly thirsty. But if she moved now, if she stood up now, there would be no going back.

  Bang.

  A door was yanked open in the outskirts of Nina’s consciousness, and now there was someone yelling, too. She opened her eyes. The nausea was still there, but she wasn’t lying in bed next to Morten, nor on
the bathroom floor of their first apartment. Her left shoulder was painfully stretched, her arm still bent awkwardly behind Ida’s neck and tied to the radiator. She must have dozed off, but not for very long, because there was still that same hazy, yellow half-light in the room.

  “Fuck. We have to go. Now.”

  Tommi had stumbled into the living room, swearing and trying to zip up his jeans.

  Mr. Suburbia got halfway up from the sofa and shot a questioning look at the Finn, who was now struggling to put on his worn white sneakers.

  “What’s going on? I thought we had to wait for the address.”

  “We’re out of here now,” Tommi hissed. “The police are at Rhodesiavej. They got Mini.”

  Something somewhere in the living room beeped, and the Finn looked around, searching, spotted his phone, and picked it up with a satisfied grunt. “I think we just got our address.”

  He browsed down through the menu.

  “41 Lundedalsvej. This is it, Frederik.”

  Ida squirmed anxiously. She was wearing her favorite jeans, Nina noticed, a pair of skinny black jeans with ratty holes in the thighs and knees. She pulled her legs up against her chest so her bony white knees were visible. They were trembling faintly.

  Mr. Suburbia stood there for a second staring mutely at Tommi.

  “Rhodesiavej. How the hell did they find you?”

  The Finn, who was now on his way over to Sándor in quick, decisive steps, sulkily shrugged. “No clue. It’s not my fault. But Mini has got her passport and all that shit in the house, and if they look up her name, they’ll find this place, too. So the new plan is.…” He pulled a flimsy pocketknife out of his back pocket and was now standing in front of Ida, Nina, and Sándor. “The new plan is we get the money, I take a little trip to Thailand and enjoy some Asian cunt, and you slink off back to your house in the ’burbs and keep a low profile until the police find something else to waste their time on.”

  Mr. Suburbia looked like he had just woken up. He glanced around the living room, stuffed the laptop roughly into his computer bag and started randomly dumping DVDs, ring binders, loose change, and his red ceramic mug into a plastic bag. The Finn shot him an irritated look.

 

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