Harry gulped.
Raskol rested his forehead on his folded hands: 'The little one sleeps nearest the window.'
Harry got up, went to the door and hit it hard. He could hear the echo resounding down the corridor outside. He continued to beat the door until he heard the key in the lock.
30
Vibrate Mode
'SORRY, BUT I CAME AS QUICKLY AS I COULD,' ŘYSTEIN SAID, driving his taxi off the pavement outside Elmer's Fruit&Tobacco shop.
'Welcome back,' Harry said, wondering whether the bus coming from the right had realised that Řystein had no intention of stopping.
'We're going to Slemdal, aren't we?' Řystein ignored the furious hooting from the bus.
'Bjřrnetrĺkket. You know you have to give way here?'
'Decided not to.'
Harry looked across at his pal. He could just discern two bloodshot eyes behind the narrow slits.
'Tired?'
'Jet lag.'
'The time difference between here and Egypt is one hour, Řystein.'
'At least.'
Since neither the shock absorbers nor the springs in his seat worked any more, Harry felt every cobbled stone and change of level in the road as they careered through the bends on their way up to Albu's house, but right now nothing interested him less. He borrowed Řystein's mobile phone, rang the International Hotel and room 316. Oleg answered. Harry could hear the pleasure in his voice when Oleg asked him where he was.
'In a car. Where's your mum?'
'Out.'
'I didn't think she had to go to court until tomorrow.'
'All the solicitors are meeting in Kuznetski Most,' he said in an adult voice. 'She'll be back in an hour.'
'Listen, Oleg, can you give your mum a message. Tell her to change hotel. Immediately.'
'Why?'
'Because…I said so. Just tell her, OK? I'll ring again later.'
'Alright.'
'Good boy. I've got to go.'
'You…'
'What?'
'Nothing.'
'OK. Don't forget to tell your mum what I told you.'
Řystein braked and pulled onto the pavement.
'Wait here,' Harry said and jumped out. 'If I'm not back in twenty minutes, ring the ops room, the number I gave you. Tell them—'
'Inspector Hole from Crime Squad wants a patrol car with armed officers here right away. I got it, Harry.'
'Good. If you hear shots, ring immediately.'
'Right. Which film is this again?'
Harry looked up at the house. No barking to be heard. A dark blue BMW drove slowly past them and parked further down the street. Otherwise everything was quiet.
'Most of them,' Harry breathed.
Řystein grinned. 'Cool.' Then a wrinkle of concern appeared between his eyes. 'It is cool, isn't it? Not just insanely dangerous?'
* * *
Vigdis Albu opened the door. She was wearing a freshly ironed white blouse and a short skirt, but her blurred eyes seemed to have come straight from bed.
'I rang your husband's workplace,' Harry said. 'They told me he was at home today.'
'Could be,' she said. 'He doesn't live here any more, Inspector. You were the one who dragged up this whole business with…with…' She gesticulated as if she were looking for the right word, but with a smile of distaste she resigned herself to admitting there was no other word for it: '…the whore.'
'May I come in, fru Albu?'
She hunched her shoulders, and shuddered to register her disgust. 'Call me Vigdis or anything, but not that.'
'Vigdis.' Harry stooped. 'May I come in now?'
The thin plucked eyebrows angled. She hesitated. Then she thrust out her hand. 'Why not?'
Harry thought he could detect a faint smell of gin, but it might have been her perfume. Nothing in the house suggested anything out of the ordinary–it was clean, fragrant and tidy. There were fresh flowers in a vase on the sideboard. Harry noticed the sofa cover was a touch whiter than the off-white he had sat on last time. Low classical music was playing from speakers he couldn't see.
'Mahler?' Harry asked.
'Greatest hits,' Vigdis said. 'Arne only bought collections. He always said everything except the best was worthless.'
'Nice that he didn't take the collections with him then. Where is he, by the way?'
'First of all, he doesn't own anything you can see here. And I neither know nor wish to know where he is. Have you got a cigarette, Inspector?'
Harry passed her the packet and watched her fumbling with a large teak-and-silver table lighter. He leaned over the table with his disposable version.
'Thank you. He's abroad, I would guess. Somewhere hot. Not as hot as I would like it to be, I'm afraid.'
'Mm. What do you mean he doesn't own anything here?'