Authors: Colin Dunne
Without glancing up, Blondie began talking.
'Correct any factual errors. Name, Samuel Craven. Age, thirty-eight. Marital status, divorced. Height, five foot ten inches. Weight, twelve stone. Black hair, brown eyes, distinguishing mark, slight scar on left temple, result of car accident.' He lifted his eyes to check that last item. He needn't have bothered. It only showed against a sun-tan.
'Father unknown, abandoned by mother, childhood in a Dr
Barnardo's home in Norfolk, England.'
'Little Orphan Sammy,' I said, as I usually did when that bloodless recitation came up. He didn't acknowledge it. Perhaps he didn't like musicals.
'Next of kin, daughter Sally, aged nine.'
He glanced up again, then added: 'No known security affiliations.'
He put the file down and folded his heavy, tanned hands on
it.
'Is that correct? No known security affiliations?'
'I'd say so.'
'What does that mean?'
'Well, if they were known you wouldn't be asking me, and if I have any unknown security affiliations I wouldn't be telling you about them, would I?'
Not traceable, Batty had said. I was beginning to see what he meant.
At the other end of the room, the older man cleared his throat. Blondie leaned forward on beefy forearms and looked at me as though he'd like to see me taken home in a bucket.
'You claim to be a journalist? Can you prove it?'
'I've got a liver and an overdraft, both enlarged.'
I don't think he picked up on all the full humorous implications of that, but he caught the tone. He gave a tough, tired smile and cracked his knuckles. He wasn't impressed with me. He wouldn't have been impressed with three of me.
'You claim in your statement that you met Solrun Jonsdottir at Thingvellir ... why?'
'Because it's romantic.'
'Romantic?' He gave a laugh that was dangerously over loaded with scorn. 'You meet this ... girl, you go to bed with her, you say this is romantic?'
'It isn't the way you tell it.'
He gave me the laugh again: three sneers for Craven. 'Well, well, that is something very new for us. We did not realise that our famous Solrun was romantic.'
'No? Well, I don't suppose you get much time for that sort of thing down at the Hitler Youth.'
The muscles moved in his neck and tightened up his face. That was all. Very softly, he said: 'You are her boyfriend?'
'I would be honoured to be called that.'
'It is not such an honour,' he said, with fastidious malice.
'The lovers of Solrun do not make such an exclusive club. They are men like you. Nobodies. Pick-ups. Drunks. Party scrapings. One night stands.' He added the last word in Icelandic - 'Utlendingar' - with more contempt than all the others.
'Foreigners,' he added, for my benefit.
He switched to a grave, impartial manner. It is a shame, of course. Sadly, she represents our country. But I think she will only bring us shame.'
Now, you don't get many puritans in Iceland. That interested me. So I asked him if having a wide and varied social life was illegal these days. 'Not illegal,' he said, in the same tone of controlled menace.
'But it is dangerous. When it is with scum.'
He picked up the documents again, pretended to look at them, and then threw them down with evident disgust. 'Your whole story is a fabrication. It is obvious.'
As he spoke, he pushed himself up on his finger-tips and walked slowly, heavily, around his desk until he was behind me.
'I can see your problem.' I stared at his empty chair, waiting for the blow.
'I don't have a problem. You have a problem. We are not the logga [even I knew the friendly slang word for police] and you should understand this. We are talking about national security. Perhaps you think it is funny that a little island like this should worry about national security? Does that amuse you?'
He didn't wait for an answer. 'It is just as important to us as your Buckingham Palace and Tower of London. Remember that. Remember that before you tell us any more stupid lies. Who are you? Why are you here? Where is Solrun?'
He fired the last three questions into my left ear, so I couldn't help but jump. His face was so close to the side of mine that I had to lean back to get him in focus.
'I've told you. And I don't know where she's gone.'
A pistol shot cracked in my ears and my heart hit the back of my throat. I hung on to the seat of the chair to prevent myself hitting the ceiling. When I opened my screwed-up eyes, he was holding a wide, black plastic ruler he'd slapped on the desk for the sound effect.
'Tell ... me,' he said, spacing the words a second apart, 'tell ... me ... what ... she ... said.'
'Nothing.' By now, my nerves were hopping like fleas. 'I mean, she said all sorts of things but nothing you'd want to know.'
'Everything. I want to know everything. Did she say goodbye? Did she mention any friends? Did she say anything about an American? What were her last words? Tell me the last thing she said to you.'
'It wouldn't help.'
'Tell me! Now! Tell me the last words she said.'
'To me?'
'Of course to you. What did she say?'
Well. He had insisted. I did warn him. So I told him. And if they weren't the very last words she said, at least they were the ones I remembered best.
'She said ... "I don't think I'll ever get my toes uncurled again." I think that was it, more or less word for word.'
His face, open-mouthed, hung in front of me. Slowly, like creeping pain, I watched the understanding rise into his eyes.
'You did ask,' I said, with a winning smile.
Sometimes I do overcook things a bit. Listening to the hot breath whistle through his teeth and seeing the red rage in his face, I thought this could be one of those occasions.
With elaborate care, he raised the black plastic ruler in his bunched fist and brought it down so it tapped me on the shoulder. Once. Twice. He could've been knighting me. I didn't move. Hell, I didn't even breathe. He raised it a third time and held it there above the side of my face. It was only a ruler. In his hand it might as well have been an axe.
The click of a cigarette lighter snapped the tension.
'That will do for now, Magnus. Would you bring some coffee in for myself and Mr Craven. He must be ready for one, and I certainly am. Milk and sugar?'
It was the older man, standing out of sight, just behind me.
'No sugar,' I said. 'Got to watch the old weight. Don't want to die of a fatty heart.'
'I should be very surprised if you live to have the opportunity, Craven,' said the same man, in an even, pleasant voice.
'Two coffees, white, no sugar, please.'
My breath escaped from my body in a flood as the big blond man moved away and placed the ruler carefully on the desk.
'That's better,' I said. 'I don't like talking to the dummy when the ventriloquist is in the room.'
Quite unexpectedly, a neat smile of admiration touched his features and he bowed his head to me in some sort of salute.
10
'Smoke?'
'I gave up.'
'Ah. Iron will. Did you smoke a lot?'
'Sixty a day.'
'That's a lot. Now it doesn't bother you?'
'Only sixty times a day.'
The smoke got mixed up in his rasping laugh and he waved it away from me with his hand. The packet on his desk identified them as small cigars called London Docks: presumably because of the smell.
'Petursson,' he said, extending his hand into the smoke-free zone between us. 'I'm a government official.' As he spoke he removed his expensive continental tweed jacket and put it on a hanger which he then placed with care in a narrow teak cupboard in the corner. He also flicked at the flawless front of his cream shirt in case a speck of ash had dared to settle there. He was that odd combination of big and neat, the sort of hefty men they say make good dancers.
He must've been sixty and you might have taken him for another of those big men who got into police-type work to get shoes the right size, until you saw the intelligence in the hard slits of his eyes.
'That was very clever. The chair squealed under his weight as he sat down. 'Magnus was supposed to make you angry. You turned it around.'
He picked up the plastic ruler and wagged it. The crack had split it down the middle. It is a delicate subject here.' He gave me a sharp look. 'It is a delicate subject anywhere, wouldn't you say- outsiders who come and take the local girls?'
I knew what he was after, and I wasn't going to let him have it. Father unknown. He'd picked up on that all right. I gave him a smile and let it grow into a yawn to remind him of the time. Without speaking, Magnus delivered two coffees, and on the tray he placed in front of his boss I recognised the contents of my pockets.
One by one, Petursson picked up the bits of junk, and put them down again. A sleek Waterman pen I never used. A wrist-watch I got duty-free on a plane before finding they were cheaper on the ground. A red plastic rhino, cunningly concealing a pencil-sharpener, that Sally had given me for my birthday. Two chewed pencils. A parking ticket, still creased from where it had been screwed up in rage, then smoothed out again. Ford Escort keys on a Ferrari key-ring. A bill from Rugantino's commemorating dinner with a girl who'd extolled the wonders of celibacy - over the coffee and Sambucca. My passport. My press card. Come to think of it, my life.
He flicked the press card without picking it up.
'Are you really a journalist?' He had a conversational style, not nearly as pugnacious as his apprentice.
'More or less.'
'A scandal rag, I believe.'
'That sort of thing.'
Suddenly he began to pull hard on the cigar, which was threatening to die on him. When he'd kissed it back into life, he grinned up at me.
'You see, Mr Craven, we have people who come here who are not what they seem. Tourists who are not tourists. Business men who have no business. You understand?'
'I suppose so.'
'You seem a sensible young man. Why on earth do you work for a newspaper like that?'
'That's what people want to read. Who am I to deny the masses? That's democracy, isn't it? Crap for crap-lovers- I just shovel it.' I'd heard Grimm make that speech once, in El Vino's, but I must admit he did it with more conviction.
Petursson's eyes vanished in a silent smile. 'If that is what you say then I must believe you, Mr Craven. Do you- forgive me for asking - do you know a journalist who is also based in London who is called ...' he made a pretence of looking in a file, 'Ivanov. Oleg Ivanov.'
'Old Ivan? Sure.'
'Well, well. Mr Ivanov is also here in Reykjavik. I believe he works for one of the Moscow agencies.'
'That's what he says.'
'And here you are together. Is this a coincidence?'
I was wondering that myself. 'Unless we're both working on the same story.'
'Of course. Solrun. Don't worry.' He began to chuckle and held out both his hands, palm downwards, in a calm-down gesture. 'I am not so excitable as my young colleague. But she is a little wild. Even for us, Solrun is a little wild. But where has she gone? You cannot help us? You don't want to help us? I wonder.'
At that point, a cough started churning in his chest and then caught in his throat. He glared accusingly at the cigar. A few ambling strides took him to the window and he flicked it out.
'London Docks.' Back behind his desk, he looked regretfully at the packet, then sat back in his chair. 'I lived in London. Over a year.' He stifled a small yawn, then continued with his calculated rambling. 'Yes, a most pleasant time for me. I was attached to one of your government departments. I stayed with a family called Shivas. Charming people. They were very kind tome. I was young, and a little lost. We still write. Originally it was a Huguenot name. I could never understand why it was that they were more proud of that than they were of being British. That is the tragedy of your country, I think. People talk of being Welsh or even Yorkshire but they no longer talk of being British. In Scotland, at your rugby matches, they boo the national anthem. That is what happens when a country loses its identity and its pride- the people retreat into tribalism. Or am I being unfair?'
'I don't know. Does it matter?'
'Perhaps not. But don't make that mistake here. We do care.
You saw that in Magnus. We are very close to our history here, and you must remember that.'
'The only bit of history we celebrate is the anniversary of the bloke who tried to blow the whole bloody place up. I've always thought that was a sign of maturity myself. By the way, Mr Petursson, which department were you attached to in London?'
'One of those in Mayfair. I forget the exact title ...' He let the sentence die.
We both knew what he meant. Those buildings without plaques which you find dotted around Mayfair. Everyone knows what they are. The first principle of espionage is to stay near the good restaurants: they'd rather risk their lives than their lunch.
The phone rang and Petursson listened, then spoke briefly.
'A friend, Christopher Bell, is inquiring for you.'
'That's right. I thought I might need an interpreter.'
'You won't have any problems being understood, Mr Craven, providing that you speak the truth, of course.' His eyes vanished again at his own little joke, and he tipped my belongings in the tray towards me. 'You'd better take these. We do know where to find you, I believe. Ah, one moment. What is this?'