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Authors: Arnaldur Indridason

BOOK: Oblivion
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‘So he didn’t snoop around at all?’

‘No … that is …’

‘What?’

‘No, I don’t suppose it’s relevant, it’s … it must have been about a year ago …’

‘What?’

‘There’s a man I used to know, a journalist,’ said Nanna, and from her expression it was clear she was reluctant to speak of him. ‘He and Kristvin were mates – at least until we split up. He was my boyfriend. A bit of a jerk, really. Rúdólf. He …’ Nanna shook her head.

‘What?’ prompted Marion.

‘It was my fault for getting into such a rubbish relationship. I didn’t see it until too late.’

‘What didn’t you see?’ asked Erlendur.

‘What a little shit he was. He made a quick exit when he heard about my cancer. I don’t know what I saw in him. We met at a disco and … anyway … His name’s Rúdólf, did I already mention that?’

Marion nodded.

‘He asked Kristvin to look into some business on the base for him. In that hangar, if I’m remembering this right. There was some airline Rúdólf wanted information about.’

‘Which airline?’

‘I’ve forgotten.’

‘Northern Cargo Transport?’ suggested Erlendur.

‘Something like that, yes, I’m not sure. Northern Cargo Transport. That sort of name. Rúdólf wanted Kristvin to take pictures for him and do a bit of digging around. But that was, you know, about a year ago, so I don’t think … Is it likely to be relevant at all?’

‘I don’t know,’ said Marion. ‘We may need to speak to this Rúdólf.’

‘Please don’t let on that I gave you his name. There’s no need, is there? I’d managed to wipe him from my memory. Completely. Oh God, he might start ringing again.’

‘We won’t say a word,’ promised Erlendur. ‘Do you know what he was after – Rúdólf, I mean?’

‘No. He was curious about this airline. I think Kristvin had mentioned it. That it was a bit fishy. Rúdólf thought there might be a story in it. Offered to get him a camera and everything.’

‘In what way fishy?’

‘I don’t know. But I don’t think Kristvin did anything about it. He was shit-scared of losing his job if he did what Rúdólf wanted, though that didn’t stop Rúdólf bugging him about it. Saw himself as some kind of … hotshot reporter – what do they call it?’

‘Investigative journalist?’

‘That’s it,’ said Nanna. ‘The pathetic little creep.’

‘Is it possible that your brother was in trouble because he owed money to someone on the base?’ asked Erlendur. ‘Did he ever drop any hints to that effect?’

‘No.’

‘There’s another matter we wanted to ask you about, regarding your brother’s activities on the base,’ said Marion.

‘Oh?’

‘I don’t know if you’re aware, at least you haven’t told us …’

‘Of what?’

‘Vernhardur reckons Kristvin had a woman there.’

‘Seriously?’

‘Do you know anything about that?’

‘A woman? No.’

‘Your brother didn’t go into any details but that was the impression he gave Vernhardur,’ said Erlendur.

‘Then it must have been very recent,’ said Nanna. ‘Or he’d have told me.’

‘Not necessarily that recent,’ said Marion. ‘Vernhardur found out, or at least your brother hinted as much, some time ago, when Kristvin accidentally mixed him up in one of his smuggling trips.’

‘Who’s the woman?’

‘She’s married, apparently,’ said Marion.

‘Married? No … no way. Really?’

‘So you didn’t know?’

‘No. Not a thing. This is the first I’ve heard of it. Married?’

‘To a member of the Defense Force,’ said Marion. ‘An American serviceman.’

‘You’ve got to be kidding.’

‘Perhaps it was over straight away,’ said Erlendur, seeing how much the news had upset Nanna. ‘Just a quick fling he didn’t think it worth telling you about.’

Erlendur seemed to be going out of his way to excuse her brother and soften the blow. Marion wondered if it was a good or bad quality in a policeman to let oneself become involved in a case like this.

‘Anyway,’ intervened Marion, ‘it’s possible that the husband, this soldier, had a bone to pick with your brother.’

‘I just had no idea.’

‘No,’ said Marion. ‘Maybe there was more to your brother than met the eye.’

21

THE FOLLOWING MORNING
Marion tried to get hold of Caroline Murphy. She had given them her phone number at military police headquarters and Marion rang it several times without success. Meanwhile Erlendur was on the trail of Rúdólf. Nanna thought he had moved recently but didn’t know where. There was no reporter with that name listed in the phone book, so the obvious course was to ring the Association of Journalists. There Erlendur learned that Rúdólf was not at present employed, either by a paper or broadcaster. He had lost his job on an evening paper some time ago. The person who answered the phone was unable to divulge the reason, stating only that it was private, but gave Erlendur Rúdólf’s address and telephone number. He rang the number, only to discover that it had been disconnected.

Shortly before lunchtime Erlendur and Marion knocked on the door of a small basement flat. It was on Öldugata, in the west of town, in a rather dilapidated corrugated-iron-clad house that had once in its heyday been painted red. Little remained but flaking patches of colour, and the frames of the single-glazed windows were rotten from battling the elements without any help from the owners. A chimney poked up from the roof with a television aerial attached. The wire ran down to the first floor. From there another ran down to Rúdólf’s flat.

Erlendur rapped a second and a third time before finally he heard a noise and a man appeared in the doorway, still bleary-eyed with sleep. He looked as if he had stepped straight out of bed, standing there in nothing but his underpants and a duvet wrapped round his shoulders, below which protruded spindly legs and bare feet, with an ugly case of athlete’s foot on both big toes, Erlendur noticed.

‘What … what’s all this noise in aid of?’

‘Are you Rúdólf?’ asked Erlendur.

‘Yes, my name’s Rúdólf. Who are you?’

‘We’re from the police,’ said Erlendur. ‘We’d like a word, if we can come in.’

‘In here?’ said Rúdólf, as if he had never heard such a preposterous idea.

‘Or you could come with us, if you’d rather,’ said Erlendur. ‘Makes no odds.’

‘You what … am I under arrest?’

‘No, of course not,’ said Erlendur. ‘We just need to ask you a few questions about a story you were interested in a while back, to do with the NATO base at Keflavík.’

‘Hang on, I’ll pull on some clothes,’ said Rúdólf and moved out of sight. Before long he appeared in the doorway again, this time wearing a pair of tight green trousers and dragging a T-shirt over his head. He hadn’t bothered with socks. ‘Maybe you should come in,’ he said. ‘Sorry about the mess, I …’

His words trailed off. Erlendur told him not to worry and entered his lair. Marion followed, closing the door behind them. The flat was nothing but a bedsit with a tiny kitchenette and a desk with an old typewriter on it. The bathroom was out in the entrance hall. The mess Rúdólf had apologised for was unbelievable: a chaos of old newspapers and documents, interspersed with milk cartons and leftovers. A fetid odour of rotting food hung over the place, from rancid meat or sour milk. Rúdólf was apparently conscious of the smell since he hastily opened a couple of windows.

‘I’d make coffee but, you know, the machine’s kaput,’ he said, sitting down on the edge of his bed. There was a chair at the desk which Marion drew out. Erlendur, finding nowhere to sit, took up position by one of the windows in the hope of snatching a breath of fresh air. ‘So what’s this story you were talking about?’

‘We believe you knew Kristvin who was found –’

‘Krissi? Yeah. Are you here because of him?’

‘We hear you asked him to do you a favour since he worked on the base –’

‘Who told you that?’ asked Rúdólf. ‘Was it his sister? Did Nanna tell you that? Was she talking about me?’

‘We found a note among Kristvin’s belongings,’ improvised Erlendur, honouring his promise not to mention Nanna in her ex-boyfriend’s hearing. ‘What exactly did you ask him to do for you?’

‘A note? What kind of note?’

‘About a foreign airline that used the airport and –’

‘Is that why he was killed?’ asked Rúdólf, waking up slightly. He had obviously been drinking the night before and was struggling not only with the unexpected visit but a crippling hangover as well.

‘Just to be clear, Rúdólf,’ said Marion, ‘anything we discuss here is strictly confidential. We understand you’re a journalist, though you’re not employed at present, but you can’t use any of the information revealed in our conversation. I hope you appreciate that. If you do, it could compromise our investigation.’

‘Of course,’ said Rúdólf. ‘Hey, I used to handle the police news. I’m a pro,’ he added airily.

‘Good.’

‘I’ve got quite a lot on actually,’ Rúdólf continued, as if he felt compelled to justify himself. ‘I’m a freelance hack and write for various rags. The fishermen’s paper and so on. Besides, I heard they’re going to offer me my old job back; it’s only a question of time –’

‘A hack?’ queried Erlendur.

‘Yeah, hack.’

‘Is that …?’

‘Hack, man, don’t tell me you’ve never heard of that?’ said Rúdólf, waking up properly now.

‘You mean you’re some kind of pen for hire?’

Rúdólf clearly didn’t think this worthy of a reply. He retrieved a pair of socks from under the bed, sniffed them, then put them on. Marion asked if he knew anything about Kristvin’s relationships with women but Rúdólf said it was ages since he’d had any contact with him so he couldn’t help them on that score. Though did that mean Krissi had finally managed to get his leg over? Marion left this unanswered; the less information they gave this journalist the better. Exercising the same caution, Erlendur enquired about Kristvin’s purchase of cigarettes and alcohol from the base. Rúdólf admitted having enjoyed the perks while he was seeing Nanna, but said his friendship with Kristvin had ended as soon as he and Nanna split up. He seemed unaware of the drugs; at least he didn’t bring them up.

‘She has cancer,’ said Marion.

‘Yeah, I know,’ said Rúdólf. ‘Total bummer.’

‘And you split up.’

‘Not because of that – she didn’t say that, did she?’

‘No.’

‘It was just over between us, you know. Shit happens.’

‘I’m sure,’ said Marion. ‘So you don’t know if Kristvin was seeing a woman on the base?’

‘No. No idea.’

‘Did you know of any friends he had there? Icelandic or American?’

‘Nope. None.’

Marion steered the conversation back to the foreign airline. Rúdólf was looking much brighter. He had found a hip flask with some spirits left in the bottom and drained it, then tossed the flask on the bed.

‘Krissi told me about the Hercules transports the Icelandic crew serviced at NAS Kef,’ he said, wiping his mouth. ‘They land here fairly regularly, and if they require maintenance, they call on Krissi and his crew, you follow?’

‘Nass Keff?’ repeated Erlendur, puzzled.

‘Yeah, NAS Kef – Naval Air Station Keflavík. Come on, you must have heard the term? Don’t you understand anything? Are you from the countryside or –?’

‘Just keep talking,’ said Marion, signalling to Erlendur to lay off Rúdólf.

‘They claim these aircraft belong to a commercial company, so they’re treated as if they’re from an ordinary civilian operator,’ said Rúdólf, glaring at Erlendur. ‘That’s why the Yanks don’t handle the maintenance if they have to stop over here. Icelandair takes care of them just like all the other civilian aircraft that pass through Kef.’

‘And Kristvin thought there was something dubious about that?’ said Erlendur.

‘We used to debate these kinds of issues,’ said Rúdólf loftily. ‘I was with his sister at the time … You’ve talked to Nanna – did she ask after me at all?’

‘No.’

‘I don’t get it … just don’t get why she gave me the boot. I’ve never understood.’

‘It’s a mystery,’ said Erlendur, his eyes travelling round the squalid flat.

‘What did Kristvin “debate” with you?’ asked Marion.

‘This airline,’ said Rúdólf, still frowning at Erlendur, uncertain how to interpret his comment.

‘What did he say?’

‘He? It was more like what I told him. I ran a few checks, called up some of my contacts – I was still at the paper then, you know.’

‘Right.’

‘In the first place, commercial companies don’t operate Hercules,’ said Rúdólf. ‘They’re military transports built for the army and civilian airlines don’t use them. So Krissi and I were wondering what a private outfit was doing flying Hercules. Then one of them stopped in transit here and they had to do repairs on it in the big hangar –’

‘Hangar 885?’

‘Yeah, right, 885. And because it was the landing gear, they had to unload the cargo and it turned out the hold was jam-packed with weapons and among all the crates there was only a whole bloody tank that they had to roll out onto the ground. Krissi’d never seen anything like it. They covered the lot with tarpaulins. Krissi and his crew repaired the undercarriage, then they were told to beat it.’

‘Did Kristvin witness the unloading?’

‘Yeah … well, no, he saw the cargo after they’d covered it up. He took a peek under the tarpaulins and saw what they were transporting. He was curious. He knew the stuff had come out of the plane.’

‘Did anyone see him?’

‘No. He didn’t think so. After that they hastily reloaded and the plane went on its way.’

‘And what did Kristvin intend to do with this information?’

‘You mean what did
we
intend to do with it?’

‘Yes, of course, what did
you
intend to do?’ asked Marion, with a weary roll of the eyes at Erlendur.

‘I asked him to snap a few pics next time, lent him a camera and all, but the weeks went by and nothing happened. Then I lost my job.’

‘Didn’t you tell your editor about this?’

‘Sure,’ said Rúdólf. ‘I wanted to go down to the base, take photos in the hangar and talk to the guys there, but we were refused permission and there wasn’t much interest in the story at the paper. The bunch of reactionaries who own it didn’t want to piss off the Yanks or something. The big papers here are more about burying news than digging it up.’ He paused for effect.

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