The Inspector Sejer series
Don’t Look Back
He Who Fears the Wolf
When the Devil Holds the Candle
Calling Out For You
Black Seconds
The Water’s Edge
Bad Intentions
The Caller
In the Darkness
Standalone crime fiction
Broken
NO ONE SAW him walk through the woods; no one saw what he was carrying. A modest burden for a grown man, yet it caused him difficulty, his steps were faltering and he stumbled. From time to time he would stop, gasp for air and make noises which sounded like whimpering. Then he would stagger on as quickly as he could. He walked underneath the trees like an old man, weighed down by it all, weighed down by horror and tears. It was so overwhelming that his knees threatened to buckle; he kept looking over his shoulder, his head twitching nervously. He increased his speed as he approached a cluster of trees. He did not wish to discard his burden casually on the ground; he wanted this precise cluster of trees, which would serve as a kind of monument. This last scrap of decency comforted him, he was still a human being, he had feelings, many of them good ones. Again he looked over his shoulder: there was not a soul around. He remained standing, sensing every sound as his heart pounded. The forest was like a huge organism, it breathed, it watched him, it condemned him with its deep, ominous rustling. How could you stoop so low? the forest intoned, no human being will ever smile at you with warmth or love, not after this.
He had reached the cluster of trees.
He squatted down.
He placed his burden on a bed of soft moss. He got up and wiped the sweat from his brow; it felt hot. This does not look good, he thought, not in any way. Emotions surged inside him, a mixture of panic and rage, nothing ever worked out for him, it was a mistake, the whole thing. How could it have happened? Horrified, he buried his face in his hands, they smelled like hot iron. He tasted fear in his mouth and felt it in his blood and in his lungs. Fate had played a mean trick on him and dealt him a rotten hand; now he was being hurled down towards condemnation and denunciation. Hanging’s too good for him, people would say, lock him up and throw away the key; a man like him should never be allowed out again. He lurched a little to the side, he felt weak at the knees. I have to go now, he thought, I need to get out of here, I must get back to my car, drive home to my house, lock the door and draw the curtains. Huddle in a corner and listen out in case anyone should come. But I won’t answer the door, he decided, I’ll lock myself in, I won’t be able to cope with this! He raised a clenched fist towards the sky, towards God, who had created him with such strong urges, but who would not allow him to satisfy them the way he wanted to.
His car was parked close to a road barrier a little way off. He walked briskly without looking back and moved as quickly as he could through the forest. It was not long before he saw the barrier and his car. And something else: something was moving, something red and white against the green. He stopped abruptly. A man and a woman were out walking. His first thought was to hide between the spruces, but at the last second he thought better of it and continued, averting his eyes, along the short distance he had left. The storm raged inside him with renewed force. This is fatal, he thought, this will be my undoing, those two people walking towards me, they will remember me and tell the whole world. We saw him and we can describe him clearly, they would say, he was wearing a blue anorak. And the hunt would begin. He did not look up until he reached his car and he met the woman’s eyes for a fleeting moment. It surprised him that she smiled at him, a broad and friendly smile. When he failed to return her smile and stared at her in horror, she looked puzzled. The couple continued past the barrier and into the forest. The woman, however, turned one last time and looked after him.
THEY WERE A couple, but they had been married for many years and they no longer held hands. The woman was wearing a raspberry red coat, the man a white windbreaker. He was constantly one step ahead of her, tall, self-assured and fit. The woman watched him furtively while she contemplated her own thoughts. Her husband was a man who owned his space; now he owned this forest and he helped himself to it. The vegetation was compressed beneath his feet as he walked, dry twigs snapped and the woman struggled to keep up with him. They were out of step. They had thoughts they didn’t want to share or admit. But they had gone out for a walk together, it was their habit and they needed habits, habits held them together and made the world predictable.
It was a surprisingly warm September day. The man unbuttoned his jacket and a gust of wind made it flap like a sail. He rummaged around in his pockets, looking for a cigarette.
‘Reinhardt,’ the woman said. ‘It’s ever so dry around here.’
Her voice was devoid of authority, it was more like a pitiful plea. He snarled in irritation; he was not one of those men who allowed themselves to be reprimanded. He closed his lips around the filter of the cigarette and lit it with a Zippo lighter. His irises were blue like the ocean with golden flecks, his nose was sharp and looked good in profile.
The woman chose to say nothing; experience had taught her this was her best option. She focused on the forest floor, there were tufts of grass and the odd dip; every now and again roots would crisscross the path. She glanced quickly at her husband: he was much taller than her, broader, stronger, he always led the way. She had suppressed her own views for years because he was so argumentative and opinionated. Now she worried about the dry ground and the burning cigarette.
The light that once existed between us has been extinguished, she thought sadly, nothing shines any more, we should have had a child. A child would have brought us closer, it would have united us and made us good people. This is what she believed. But the years had passed and no child had come; her husband had said no and she hadn’t dared cross him. Whenever she raised the subject, he became sullen and would jut out his chin while she lowered her eyes and grew silent. We’re all right as we are, aren’t we, he would say, we both work full-time, there’s the house and the garden, we’re mortgaged to the hilt. How do people find the time, he pushed on, how do they find the money? She offered him no reply, but she noticed that people did find the time. She also noticed that they looked exhausted, torn between the demands of their children, their careers and their personal needs. But the moment their child crawled up on their lap, they became radiant, and she longed with all of her heart for this glow. That unique glow she had seen in her friends’ eyes.
Her husband had finished smoking, the tobacco still glowed red. Suddenly he flicked the stub away, it leapt into the air and sparks flew in an arc. The woman followed it with her eyes: it landed in the heather, still smoking.
‘Reinhardt,’ she begged. ‘Stamp it out!’
Reinhardt took a few steps to the side and ground the butt with exaggerated force using the sole of his shoe.
‘You worry too much, Kristine.’
She shrugged defensively, she dared not show any greater rebellion than that. The sun, which would soon set, let its last rays spill out between the trees. And Kristine, too, unbuttoned her jacket. She brushed her long hair away from her cheeks and her forehead. It was thick and brown with auburn streaks. She was petite, her face was small with a high domed forehead and round cheeks. She had tiny hands and feet, and indeed her husband would in more affectionate moments call her his ‘doll’. Reinhardt, too, ran his fingers through his hair. A short, sandy-coloured tuft stuck up at the front, it looked like a shark’s fin. They were heading towards Lake Linde; this was their usual destination, every Sunday after lunch. Kristine was struck by their routine life, the habits that trapped them, the old grooves which held them in place. No one ever broke the rhythm. They left their house together every morning and said goodbye outside the Central Hospital, where she worked as a receptionist. Reinhardt drove on to the offices of Hafslund where he worked with security systems. They ate dinner together and watched television, side by side in front of the blue glare. Afterwards Reinhardt would sit in front of his computer and play games while Kristine did the housework. It really bothered her that he spent so much time on the computer, she did not think a grown man of thirty-six should be playing at wizards and dragons. Not only did his eyes shine with excitement but he often indulged in childish outbursts, which embarrassed her. He would curse and swear appallingly or he would shout out in triumph when he managed to slay an enemy. In addition he talked incessantly, he had an opinion about everything and he had a solution to every problem. They never talked about themselves or how they felt. Most of it had already been said and, in her darker moments, Kristine felt that they had become strangers. At night she would lie awake for long periods breathing against the wall, while Reinhardt snored violently. At times he would take her with an intensity that came close to scaring her. This is my life, she thought, I won’t get any more than this. I could leave him, but where would I go, what would I say? He is reliable and faithful, he never hits me and every month he receives a pay cheque which is considerably bigger than mine. She was weighed down by these thoughts as they walked through the forest. Are other people happy, she wondered, is there something wrong with us, is there something that we’ve failed to grasp?
Reinhardt was way ahead of her. Out of the corner of her eye, she could see his moving shadow. She felt permanently guilty. No matter how hard she looked, she could discover no positive feelings towards him and she felt like a traitor. Her betrayal brought her to her knees. She did not dare confront him, cause him to doubt her or make demands, because then he might expose her: you don’t love me, did you honestly think I didn’t know? Do you really think I don’t know that you’re faking? She plodded after him on the path, her thoughts making her cheeks burn. They were aiming for Lake Linde where they would stand on the shore for a few minutes as usual; the water always made her feel better. The water would extinguish the fire in her cheeks and cool her down. She would ponder the ruins of the old settlement by the shore, small, modest circles of stone. Once they had contained families with children, living and working, falling ill and dying, brief moments of happiness and despair. It was hard to imagine how people used to manage with so little. Between them, Reinhardt and she had two hundred and fifty square metres they hardly ever used, they sat next to each other on the sofa in front of the television while the bedrooms waited for children who never came, for friends who never stayed over.
Only the tallest trees were touched by the sun now. This, Kristine thought, is the best time of year. Not the hysteria of summer, or the storms of autumn, or the cold of winter, or even the treacherous late frost or the early spring with its sudden sleet and unpredictable gusts of wind, but September with its unique serenity. Dark cool nights, refreshing mornings. Suddenly she felt exhausted, she was weighed down by so many thoughts and though it was warm, she wrapped her coat around her body more tightly.
‘It’s Sunday,’ Reinhardt said, ‘it’s Sunday and the weather is fine. And there’s not a soul to be seen. Can you believe it?’
She looked up at him with wide green eyes.
‘We’re here,’ she said softly.
He jutted out his chin as he always did when someone corrected him and she loathed that tiny gesture, hated that he could never just nod in agreement. And she despised herself because she was afraid of him. She was constantly on the defensive, she was always on her guard, because he had this hold over her, as if something existed deep inside him that she did not dare face. An image from a childhood fairy tale of a monster slumbering at the bottom of a swamp surfaced in her mind.
‘Yes, but all the same,’ he countered, ‘look how deserted it is. There’s not a single tent or a boat here. Lake Linde is a pearl, but people can’t be bothered to come up here because they can’t drive the whole way.’
‘But that’s why we like walking here,’ she said: ‘because it’s so peaceful.’
Reinhardt felt in his pockets for another cigarette, the low sun touched his broad cheekbones and his forceful chin. And she recalled the first time she saw him and how he had seemed carved out of granite. There were many edges and protrusions in his broad face, but his eyes were deep-set. On Sundays he skipped shaving and a pale shadow was spreading across his jaw.
‘Schoolchildren go camping here,’ Kristine remembered. ‘If they choose Outdoor Studies. They go canoeing and fishing and they have to get up at three in the morning to hear the wood grouse.’
Reinhardt shrugged. ‘I’ve never really understood the attraction of camping,’ he snorted. ‘You can rent a cottage up here. With a proper bed and a toilet. When I was a boy,’ he went on, ‘my dad took me camping. He had an old-fashioned green tent that slept four people, I couldn’t bear the smell inside it, and my sleeping bag was ancient and musty. It stank of smoke and earth and paraffin, it smelled of waterproofing chemicals. I couldn’t sleep. I couldn’t breathe.’
Kristine went over to one of the mounds of grass and stepped inside a stone circle.
‘This is where their kitchen must have been,’ she called out.
Reinhardt came over to her.
‘I wouldn’t call that a kitchen,’ he smiled. ‘More like a fireplace, I’d say.’
She nodded. ‘Just think,’ she said, ‘they would catch fish in the lake and snare birds and hares. What a quiet life it must have been, here by the water.’
Reinhardt entered the circle. He stood towering over her, he was one metre ninety tall and very broad-shouldered.
‘In the evenings they would sit by the fire and talk amongst themselves,’ she said, ‘and when the fire died down they would curl up on the ground under their furs.’
Reinhardt grinned broadly. ‘Whereas I turn on my Bang & Olufsen music centre and stretch out in my recliner,’ he said. ‘Thank God, I’m alive now.’
Kristine went quiet once again. He refused to join in her thinking, he didn’t want to ponder life or humanity. He was an enterprising man, rational and self-assured, whereas she felt dizzy when she imagined herself living in another age, where people had different values, where their fears had been different from the ones she lived with. Perhaps they had feared a roaming wolf stalking the half-naked children playing on the shore of Lake Linde.
‘WE’LL GO BACK a different route,’ he called out.
He cut through the forest, holding back the branches so they would not swipe her face. Again they walked themselves warm in the low sunshine and after half an hour they stopped for a rest. In front of them lay a clearing surrounded by spruces, an open, golden area with tufts and heather. Then the brutal scene hit them.
‘No!’ Reinhardt yelled.
And again, a few seconds later. ‘No!’
Kristine gave him an uncomprehending look. He was squeezing her arm so tightly that she started to whimper, she had never seen his strong face display such terror. She followed his gaze and spotted a cluster of trees.
Something lay at the foot of the dark tree trunks.
Reinhardt was speechless. She was not used to this, he was always the one who took action, who would have something to say about every situation. She stared at the bundle at the foot of the trees, it was slim and white. She was struck by the awful thought that this might be a small person.
‘It’s a little kid,’ Reinhardt whispered. He still did not move. Nor did he let go of her arm; his grip was vice-like.
‘For Christ’s sake, it’s a little kid,’ he repeated.
‘No,’ she said. Because it could not possibly be true, not here, not in Linde Forest.
Reinhardt took a step forward. He was no longer in any doubt, he could see arms and legs. A T-shirt with some writing on it. Kristine clasped her mouth. They stood like this for what seemed an eternity. The bundle lay immobile on the green moss. Kristine looked up at Reinhardt, her green eyes desperately pleading with him to do something.
‘We must call the police!’ she whispered.
Reinhardt started walking towards the cluster of trees, his body exuding reluctance. Ten paces, fifteen, they saw a foot and a fragile neck. It was a boy. He was lying on his stomach, he was naked from the waist down, and between his legs they could see blood, which had coagulated into rust-coloured scabs.
Kristine turned away in horror. But she could only look away for a few seconds. She had to look again, those green eyes had to see everything. The boy’s short hair, his T-shirt with ‘Kiss’ written on it. The soles of his feet, pale pink against the dark moss.
‘We have to call the police,’ she whispered. ‘We have to call the police now!’
Then she lost control of her body and started to shake. First her hands, then her shoulders. She had nothing to hold on to so she stumbled.
Reinhardt reached under her armpits and helped her back to her feet.
‘Calm down now, calm down!’ But she was unable to calm down. Inside her head she was issuing commands which never reached her arms and legs.
‘112,’ she whispered. ‘You need to call 112.’
He quickly reached into his pocket for his mobile. ‘You’re sure it’s not 113?’
She protested weakly, her body was rebelling: ‘112,’ she repeated. ‘The police!’
He entered the number at breakneck speed, started walking up and down while throwing quick glances at the dead body.
‘We’re calling from Linde Forest,’ she heard him say. ‘We’re thirty minutes from the lake. We’ve found a small boy.’
Then he was silent for a few seconds, pressing the mobile against his ear.
‘Yes, my name’s Ris. Reinhardt Ris, we’ve been out for a walk. We’ve found a dead boy. You need to send someone.’
Again silence. Kristine gave in to the shaking, she sank down on to her knees and pressed her hands against the earth for support.
‘No, there’s no pulse,’ Reinhardt shouted. ‘Of course I’m sure. We can see that he’s dead, he’s gone all white!’
He came over to her, stopped, the sandy-coloured tuft stuck out.
‘Yes, we can walk back to the barrier, our car’s parked there, we’ll wait for you.’
With considerable effort Kristine managed to stand up, and she started walking towards the edge of the clearing. Someone had stacked logs in a large pile and she slumped on to a log. She sat there watching the husband she knew inside out. Because she did, didn’t she? Didn’t she know every fibre of his powerful body, all his moods and his strong, commanding nature? He stood for a long time staring helplessly in every direction, a large man between the trees. All the qualities she normally associated with him sparkled by their absence. Authority, assurance and calm. Will and determination. It seemed as though he was prevaricating. She saw him walk back to the boy, saw him kneel down, he lowered his head and raised his hands to his face. What’s he doing? she thought, baffled, is he crying, is that possible? Is he sitting there sobbing like a child? Have I misjudged him all these years, is he, in fact, a sensitive and emotional man?
Then the truth dawned on her.
He was taking pictures of the dead boy with his mobile.
‘HOW COULD YOU!’ she screamed, outraged.
Her usual subservience had evaporated, gone was the fear of antagonising him, her limit had been reached and there was no holding her back. She was crying and wiping away her tears, she half ran all the way to the barrier, but it took her a while because her legs were so short.
‘You’re insane!’ she yelled.
Reinhardt scrambled behind her on the path, muffled swearwords reached her ears. They made it to the car simultaneously; Kristine slumped across the bonnet and sobbed. It was all too much for her: the body of the boy they had found and Reinhardt taking pictures of him. Reinhardt got into the car, found a cigarette and lit it, his lips tightened. Nevertheless Kristine thought she had detected a hint of embarrassment because she had pointed out his desire for sensation, something he would never own up to. He exhaled three times, the smoke coming out as white clouds.
‘It was just a gut reaction,’ he said, ‘or, I don’t know. It just happened.’
‘But what do you want them for?’
She straightened up and looked at him, her green eyes shining. ‘What are you going to do with those photos?’
‘Nothing,’ he replied in a sullen voice and kept smoking in defiance.
‘Think about his parents,’ she appealed to him. ‘Imagine if they knew you had those photos: you have to delete them, it’s not right!’
‘Well, they don’t know that I’ve got them,’ he argued, slowly starting to get riled. ‘And of course I’ll delete them, I’m not an idiot, Kristine, how dare you take that tone with me, I’m in charge of my own life, so don’t you start telling me what to do!’
When his outburst had finished, he carried on smoking. Kristine tried to calm herself down; she was always terrified when he raised his voice. She was still slumped over the bonnet, feeling upset and nauseous. They peered down the road for the cars, which were meant to turn up. Kristine suddenly remembered something, she looked at Reinhardt in the car.
‘That man we passed,’ she said, ‘the one we met at the barrier. In the blue anorak. What do you think he was doing up here?’
Reinhardt got out of the car and squatted down.
‘It might have been him,’ she said. ‘He could barely look me in the eye. Surely we need to report him? They’ll be asking us. If we saw anything. People or cars.’
Reinhardt coughed to clear his throat. He suddenly became very busy. He slammed the car door hard and started pacing up and down like he always did when he was in a state about something.
‘The car?’ he said. ‘You saw the car?’
‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I saw it quite clearly.’
‘It was white,’ he stated.
‘It was an older model,’ she said, ‘but the paintwork was in very good condition.’
‘We need to focus,’ Reinhardt said. ‘They’ll want details.’
Kristine thought back. She had got a good look at the man, she had looked him in the eye, and an image of his face had imprinted itself on her retina. She had flashed him a brief smile out of reflex politeness, a smile he had not returned. He had looked back at her in horror and he had certainly behaved in a suspicious manner, as if they had caught him red-handed. I didn’t like him, she thought, the one second I looked him in the eye was enough to give me a feeling about him, and it was not a good one.
‘How old was he?’ Reinhardt said. ‘What do you think, Kristine? Come on, we need to be ready.’
She thought carefully. ‘Somewhere between forty and fifty,’ she declared.
He wrinkled his nose with displeasure. ‘We need to be more specific than that,’ he stated. ‘No, not as old as fifty.’
She made no reply. She, too, started pacing up and down the road, she circled their parked car. The sun shone off the silver Rover. Reinhardt made sure it was always washed and polished.
‘I hope they get here soon,’ she said.
‘There’ll be a whole army of them, Kristine, believe you me.’
She turned away from him and kept silent. She stuck her thumb in her mouth and chewed on a nail, a bad habit she had never managed to quit. Time had never passed so slowly, waiting had never felt like this. She could no longer enjoy the serenity of the forest, the susurration of the enormous treetops, the rustling leaves. She looked at Reinhardt for a long time. He was leaning against the car, his arms folded across his chest.
‘What the hell is taking them so long?’ he snapped.
‘It’s the road,’ she replied. ‘It’s in poor condition. You can’t drive very fast on it.’
They spoke no more. In their minds they were back by the cluster of trees, with the little boy, and Kristine was suddenly glad about the way he lay. Face down in the moss. She had not seen his eyes. She stared along the road. Finally she heard a car. Reinhardt stubbed out his cigarette and straightened his back. It was as if he was getting ready for the performance of his life.
A TALL, GREY-HAIRED man led the solemn group. He walked with a characteristic spring in his step and made good use of his eyes; he watched Reinhardt and Kristine, he took in the surroundings. Behind him walked a younger man with an impressive head of blond curls.
‘That took you long enough,’ Reinhardt started off. ‘I was the one who called you, my name’s Ris, Reinhardt Ris. He’s lying right by the clearing over there, by those trees. It’s only a few minutes’ walk.’
He turned and pointed in between the trees. ‘Like I said, it’s a small boy. He’s lying face down, he’s half naked. We’re in complete shock. We come here every Sunday, we have done for many years, but little did we think that we would ever stumble across something like that and we don’t know what’s happened, but I must admit that I’m prepared for the worst, and I suppose you must be, too. He’s not all that old, either, six or seven perhaps. Or what do you think, Kristine, is he as old as seven?’
Reinhardt’s cascade of words ceased. The grey-haired man looked at him with narrow eyes, his handshake was crushing. He introduced himself as Konrad Sejer. While he shook Reinhardt’s hand, he looked at Kristine and his face softened. She was relieved that someone was taking control. A feeling of embarrassment brought colour to her cheeks, she did not understand why, but it had something to do with his eyes and his presence.
‘You both found him?’ he asked.
‘Reinhardt spotted him first,’ Kristine said.
‘Are you finding this hard?’
‘Yes,’ she admitted, ‘it’s hard.’
He nodded. ‘It’s good that there are two of you, it’s easier when you’ve got someone to share it with.’
We haven’t shared anything for ages, she thought despondently.
‘We saw a man,’ Reinhardt interjected. ‘A man leaving, he was in a hurry. We passed him at the barrier; he drove off in a white car. He drove off at speed.’
Sejer’s eyebrows lifted one millimetre; he rarely displayed stronger expressions than that. In the younger detective’s face there was a hint of a smile as he became aware of Reinhardt’s need for attention.
‘We managed to get quite a few details,’ Reinhardt said. ‘We had only just parked, we walked past him at close range.’
Sejer nodded calmly.
Kristine started walking. She felt a resistance inside her and she dreaded it. The curly-haired detective came up to her, stuck out his hand and introduced himself as Jacob Skarre. He reminded her a bit of a gangly teenager with huge, bright blue eyes and curls that any girl would envy him. Behind him followed a group of crime scene officers carrying equipment needed at the scene of the murder. Or where they had found the body, Kristine thought. Without knowing why, she was absolutely certain that the boy had been killed elsewhere and later brought here by the killer. She thought about the man at the barrier and she shuddered as she recalled his disturbed eyes.
She sat on one of the logs as the crime scene officers started their painstaking work. She watched them as they carefully took their places. She was finally overcome by a sense of calm, now that everyone had a job to do she saw no signs of horror, only gravity. But as soon as she started to think about it, she was gripped by despair because the boy had parents, and they did not know yet. They might be sharing a joke right now. She could visualise them clearly in their living room, perhaps the sun was streaming in through the window. The image took her breath away.
Her thoughts were interrupted by Reinhardt’s voice cutting through the silence, it was loud and self-assured. She was so fed up with his voice; she was mortified that he could not keep his mouth shut. The inspector and his colleague had both knelt down, shoulder by shoulder, in the heather. Now they would see what she had seen, the details which would reveal what had happened to the boy. Reinhardt suddenly came over to her. Perhaps they had told him to move back, she wondered, as she looked up.
‘Have you realised something?’ he asked, sitting down beside her.
‘No,’ she said in a drained voice.
‘Something’s missing.’
She gave him a perplexed look. ‘What’s that?’
‘The press,’ he said, as if he were an expert in these things.
Her eyes widened.
‘Thank God for that,’ she exclaimed.
‘VG magazine would pay thousands for a story like this.’
He looked at her.
‘You can’t call them,’ she said. ‘You can’t!’
‘But for God’s sake, think about it. They’re going to be all over this story anyway.’
‘Not if you keep your mouth shut.’
‘This will be on the news by the evening,’ he said, ‘and that’s only right and proper, in my opinion. People should be given the chance to protect their kids; that boy over there, he’s only six or seven.’
She made no reply. Her lips had narrowed and she looked tormented.
‘We need to go down to the station,’ she whispered. ‘We need to make a statement.’
‘I know.’
‘What if we remember it wrong? We mustn’t say something unless we’re sure.’
‘You remember a little,’ he said, ‘and so do I. He won’t get away with it.’
Kristine shook her head. ‘He might just have been out for a walk,’ she said. ‘Like we were.’
Snorrason, the pathologist, rolled the boy on to his back. Now they could see his face and his half-open eyes.
‘I’ve authorised overtime, Skarre,’ Sejer said.
Skarre nodded grimly.
‘I’ll work day and night on this,’ he said.
Snorrason worked with gentle, gloved hands.
‘He’s such a little lad,’ he said quietly, shaking his strawberry-blond head.
‘His mother might already have reported him missing,’ Sejer said. ‘Check with the station, Jacob.’
Skarre stood up and turned his back to the others.
‘No visible lesions,’ Snorrason said. ‘No cuts or needle marks. No signs of strangulation, no effusions of the eyeballs. No signs of a struggle, no defensive injuries.’
Sejer looked at the pale-faced boy.
‘He might have used a pillow,’ Snorrason said, ‘or something else he might have had to hand. A coat, or a blanket.’
‘Would you be able to tell if he had used a pillow?’ Sejer asked.
‘Not necessarily. There is no evidence of pressure to the face. Often you’ll find a linear impression from the teeth on the inside of the lips, but he doesn’t have that.’
‘What else can you tell me?’
Snorrason opened the boy’s mouth and looked inside.
‘Caucasian boy aged eight to nine. Short and very slender. I estimate he weighs between twenty-five and thirty kilos. He’s missing a tooth in his upper jaw. And,’ here he looked up at Sejer, ‘he’s bitten his tongue deeply.’
Sejer listened without displaying any sign of emotion.
‘Evidence suggests he was sexually assaulted,’ Snorrason continued, ‘but he shows no signs of other types of abuse. In other words, I don’t know why he died.’
Sejer had to stand up, his knees were about to give way; he watched Skarre, who was on his mobile. Then he watched the couple waiting on the log. The man was blatantly staring at them, the woman stabbed at the heather with a stick. Skarre put his mobile back in his pocket.
‘Anything?’ Sejer asked.
‘Duty officer received a call at two this afternoon. A mother in Huseby reported her son missing, he had slept over at a friend’s house and was meant to walk home this morning. She has called everyone she can think of, and she has given us a description of his clothes.’
‘And?’ Sejer waited.
‘It’s very likely to be him,’ Skarre said. ‘Jonas August Løwe. Turns eight next month. Small and skinny with short, blond hair. He was wearing a black T-shirt with the word ‘Kiss’ on it. Red Bermuda shorts. White, brand new trainers. Have we found his shorts or his trainers?’
‘No.’
Sejer took a few steps across the heather. He repeated the name to himself. The low sun made his grey hair glow. His face was still motionless, but it was possible for those who knew him well to detect a minute tightening of his jaw. He headed towards the waiting couple. Reinhardt Ris looked up at him in a rather direct manner.
‘As I mentioned,’ Sejer said, ‘we’ll need you to come down to the station.’
Reinhardt leapt up from the log and stood to attention before the inspector.
‘Please go to your car,’ Sejer said. ‘Skarre and I will follow. Drive to the station, go to the reception area and wait.’
They walked briskly back to the barrier. Their lives will never be the same, Sejer thought, an experience like this will knock them off their course. They both showed signs of it, the man by exaggerating his own masculinity, the woman by stumbling helplessly after him. He watched them for a while as he reflected on this. Then he quickly walked back to Jonas August Løwe.
THE POLICE STATION towered over the busy street, a colossus of glass and red-brown stone. High up on its façade hung the emblem of the police force, its metal gleaming in the sunshine. Its architecture signalled power and authority. Reinhardt opened the glass door and entered, Kristine hurrying after him. The reception was a large, open area with a circular, dark-varnished counter, behind which a woman gave them a questioning look. The blue glare from a computer monitor drained her face of colour.
‘Can I help you?’ she asked.
‘We’re waiting for Konrad Sejer,’ Reinhardt said.
They were directed to a sofa. Reinhardt started drumming his fingers on the armrest. The receptionist returned to her monitor, Kristine peeled off her red coat.
‘Looks like we could be here for some time,’ Reinhardt moaned.
‘I don’t mind staying here all night,’ Kristine said. ‘I wouldn’t be able to do anything else anyway. Washing clothes, cooking dinner, it all seems so unimportant now.’
Reinhardt got up and crossed the floor. He stared impatiently out of the windows. He pulled his mobile out of his pocket, turning his back on her as he did so.
‘What are you doing?’ she asked anxiously.
‘Sending a text message.’
She followed him nervously with her eyes. There was an air of excitement about him, she recognised it from earlier occasions. When he got a tax rebate of forty thousand kroner, when they bought the car, the silver Rover. The manner in which he had swaggered into the car showroom, like a bowlegged sailor. She