'These books were in my father's bookcase,' Olav said, as excited as Oleg.
'That doesn't matter!' Oleg burst out.
Olav received the hug of thanks with a shy but warm smile.
When they had gone to bed and Rakel was asleep, Harry got up and went to the window. He thought of all the people who were no longer there: his mother, Birgitta, Rakel's father, Ellen and Anna. And those who were there. Řystein in Oppsal, to whom Harry had given a new pair of shoes for Christmas, Raskol in Botsen and the two women in Oppsal who had been so kind as to invite Halvorsen to a late Christmas dinner since he had been on duty and wasn't going home to Steinkjer this year.
Something had happened this evening, he wasn't exactly sure what, but something had changed. He stood watching the lights in the town before he realised it had stopped snowing. Tracks. Those walking along the Akerselva tonight would leave tracks.
'Was your wish granted?' Rakel whispered when he was back in bed.
'Wish?' He put his arms round her.
'It looked as if you were making a wish by the window. What was it?'
'I have everything I could wish for,' Harry said, kissing her on the forehead.
'Tell me,' she whispered, leaning back to see him properly. 'Tell me your wish, Harry.'
'Do you really want to know?'
'Yes.' She snuggled up closer to him.
He closed his eyes and the film began to roll, so slowly that he could see every image like a still. Tracks in the snow.
'Peace,' he lied.
51
Sans Souci
HARRY LOOKED AT THE PHOTOGRAPH, AT THE WARM, WHITE smile, the powerful jaws and the steel-blue eyes. Tom Waaler. Then he pushed the picture across the desk.
'Take your time,' he said. 'And look carefully.'
Roy Kvinsvik seemed nervous. Harry leaned back in his office chair and looked around him. Halvorsen had hung up an Advent calendar on the wall over the filing cabinet. Christmas Day. Harry almost had the whole floor to himself. That was the best thing about holidays. He doubted he would hear Kvinsvik speaking in tongues as he had when he found him in the front row in the Philadelphian church, but you lived in hope.
Kvinsvik cleared his throat and Harry sat up straight.
Outside the window snowflakes gently fluttered down onto the empty streets.