The Return (23 page)

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Authors: Hakan Nesser

BOOK: The Return
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“How your daughter reacts to all this?”

“What the hell do you mean?”

Van Veeteren pulled the little pin out of his lapel and held it up between his thumb and index finger.

“Do you know what this is?”

Jahrens shook his head.

“A transmitter. Just as you guessed at the start.”

“So what, damn it?” said Jahrens, interrupting him. “You know very well that I haven’t confirmed the tiniest detail of all this crap you’ve been coming out with.”

“That’s what you think,” said Van Veeteren. “Perhaps you’ll change your mind when you hear the tape. That’s what usually happens.”

“Crap,” said Jahrens, fumbling for another cigarette. “What’s this got to do with my daughter? Are you going to play it for her, or what the hell do you mean?”

“That won’t be necessary,” said Van Veeteren, carefully replacing the pin in his lapel.

“Won’t be necessary? And what’s that supposed to mean?”

“She’s already heard it all.”

Jahrens dropped his cigarette and gaped. Van Veeteren stood up.

“These two rooms,” he said, pointing with both hands. “Number 52 and number 54…”

Jahrens took hold of the chair arms and started to rise to his feet.

“What the devil…?”

“Three police officers are sitting in room 52 with a tape recorder. They have noted every single word of our conversation. Haven’t missed a detail, I can assure you. In the other room…”

He pointed.

“…in the other room are your daughter, Andrea, and her husband.”

“What the hell…?”

Van Veeteren went over to the railing and pointed again.

“If you come here you can catch a glimpse of them, if you lean out a little bit….”

Arnold Jahrens needed no second invitation, and it was soon all over. Even so, Van Veeteren knew that those brief seconds would haunt him through all the dark nights of the rest of his life.

Perhaps even longer.

         

When he came out to the car, he could feel that he was much more drunk than he had thought, and there was obviously no question of him sitting behind the wheel. He took off the false beard and wig, put them in a plastic carrier bag and pushed it under the driver’s seat for the time being. Then he nestled down under the blanket on the backseat and wished himself a good and dreamless night.

Five minutes later he was sleeping like a log, and by the time the ambulance and the police cars started arriving, he was beyond reach of the sirens and the raised voices.

Nobody paid any attention to the slightly battered Opel, somewhat carelessly parked in the darkness two blocks north of Florian’s Guesthouse. Why should they?

43

“Have you seen this?” asked Jung, handing over the newspaper. “Wasn’t it you who interviewed him?”

Rooth looked at the photograph.

“Yes, it was. What the hell’s happened to him?”

“Fell from the fifth floor. Or maybe jumped. Accident or suicide, that’s the question. What was he like?”

Rooth shrugged.

“Much like everybody else. Quite pleasant, I seem to recall. Served up coffee, in any case.”

         

Reinhart sat down opposite Münster in the canteen.

“Good morning,” he said. “How are you?”

“Now what are you after?” said Münster.

Reinhart tipped the contents of his pipe into the ashtray and started filling it.

“Can I ask you a simple question?” he said.

Münster put the
Neuwe Blatt
to the side.

“You can always try.”

“Hmm,” said Reinhart, leaning forward over the table. “I don’t suppose you happened to be in Behrensee the evening before last?”

“Certainly not,” said Münster.

“What about the chief inspector?”

“I can’t imagine he would have been. He’s still on sick leave.”

“Ah yes, so he is,” said Reinhart. “I just thought I’d ask. An idea had occurred to me.”

“Really?” said Münster.

He went back to his newspaper, and Reinhart lit his pipe.

         

Hiller knocked and came straight in. DeBries and Rooth looked up from the reports they were writing.

“That was a nasty accident out at Behrensee,” said the chief of police, rubbing his chin. “Is it something we ought to look into?”

“Surely not,” said deBries. “The local boys can look after it.”

“OK. I just thought I’d ask. You can go back to whatever it was you were doing.”

And the same to you, deBries thought, exchanging glances with Rooth.

“You know that we’ve had two phone calls, I suppose?” said Rooth when the chief of police had closed the door.

“No,” said deBries. “What kind of phone calls?”

“Anonymous. From Kaustin. They don’t seem to be from the same person, either. One was a man, the other a woman, according to Krause.”

DeBries looked up and bit his pen.

“What do they say?”

“The same thing, more or less. That this Jahrens had something to do with the murders. The Verhaven murders. They’ve always suspected it, but didn’t want to say anything, it seems. That’s what they say, at least.”

DeBries thought for a while.

“Well. I’ll be damned,” he said. “So he’s got his punishment after all, has he?”

“Could be,” said Rooth. “Mind you, they are probably just a couple of Nosey Parkers who want to make themselves noticed. In any case, it’s not something we need to worry about.”

Nobody spoke for several seconds. Then deBries shrugged.

“No, the case has been dropped, if I understand matters rightly. I think so. We’ve got plenty of stuff to keep our noses to the grindstone.”

“More than enough,” said Rooth.

         

“May I join you?” asked Mahler, sitting down on the empty chair. “Why are you sitting here, by the way?”

“I sit wherever I like,” said Van Veeteren. “I’m on sick leave, and the weather’s not bad. I like watching people trudging away on the treadmill. Besides, I have a book to read.”

Mahler nodded in sympathy.

“It wouldn’t be so good for you in the sun, perhaps.”

He looked out over the square and summoned one of the waitresses.

“Two dark beers,” he said.

“Thanks,” said Van Veeteren.

They waited until the beer was served, toasted each other, then leaned back in their chairs.

“Well, how did it go?” asked Mahler.

“How did what go?”

“Don’t play games with me,” said Mahler. “I’ve just bought you a damn beer, and given you my poems.”

Van Veeteren took another drink.

“That’s true,” he said. “Anyway, it’s all over now.”

“So he succumbed to your pressure in the end?”

The chief inspector pondered on that for a while.

“Precisely,” he said. “You couldn’t put it more poetically than that.”

XIII

June 19, 1994

44

In the churchyard at Kaustin there were lime trees and elms, and a few horse chestnut trees, whose extensive root systems had many a time caused the verger, Maertens, to swear out loud when he encountered them with his spade. On this summer Sunday, however, he had every reason to think otherwise—as did the rest of the group standing around the newly opened family grave. They were grateful for the dense network of branches that provided shade and a degree of coolness during the simple burial ceremony.

If they had been forced to stand in the scorching sun, you could bet your life that some of them would have fainted.

There were only six of them, to be precise. And three of those were part of the team, you might say: Maertens himself, Wolff, the choirmaster and organist, and Pastor Kretsche, who conducted the service. The rest were Mrs. Hoegstraa, the deceased’s ancient sister who evidently didn’t have many years left herself, and two of the Maardam police force. They had been here sniffing around a month or so ago, but needless to say, they hadn’t achieved anything.

But that’s the way it goes. Leopold Verhaven had been buried. Well, most of him; needless to say, they hadn’t succeeded in finding the missing body parts. They would have to slot them in later, if they ever turned up. Sometimes you had to ask yourself what on earth the police did with their time. And what they were being paid for.

But that’s the way it goes. He had no desire to ask them about it. He was just waiting for Kretsche to finish so that he could fill in the grave and go home to watch the international soccer match on the box.

The vicar was going on about inscrutability. The all-consuming love and mercy of our Lord God. Forgiveness.

Well, what the hell could he say? Maertens sighed and leaned discreetly against the trunk of an elm tree. Closed his eyes and felt a faint breeze creeping in over the churchyard, barely discernible, and not really providing any cooling effect at all. In his mind’s eye he could see a large, misty beer glass in his own hand, in front of the television screen.

Ah well, would but that we were there, he thought, and wondered where on earth that expression came from. Something biblical, presumably; given the way he earned his daily bread, it was inevitable that he would pick up the odd phrase here and there.

He opened his eyes and looked at the group. Mrs. Hoegstraa was wearing a veil; she looked dogged, and hadn’t shed a single tear. Kretsche was going on and on as usual. Wolff was half asleep. The elder of the two police officers was sweating profusely and occasionally wiped his face with a bright-colored handkerchief. The younger one seemed to be brooding over something or other, goodness only knows what.

Were they actually getting paid for standing here?! That wouldn’t surprise him in the least.

“…on the Day of Judgment, Amen!” said the vicar, and it was all over.

Rest in peace, Leopold Verhaven, Maertens thought, and looked around for his spade.

“I’ve been thinking about a few things,” said Münster as they came to the parking lot.

“Let’s hear about them,” said Van Veeteren.

“Well,” said Münster, “in the first place, how did you come to think that he was the guilty party? Jahrens, that is.”

“Hmm,” said Van Veeteren. “The wheelchair ramp at the Czermaks’ house, of course. And that woman at the prison with the walking stick. Maybe I didn’t catch on right away, but there was a link, in any case. A little bell ringing somewhere in the background…”

“But Mrs. Jahrens was an invalid. She couldn’t walk, not even with walking sticks.”

Van Veeteren fanned himself with a newspaper.

“Not everything is as it seems, Münster. I thought we’d agreed on that?”

“And what might that mean?” asked Münster.

“Oh, various things,” said the chief inspector, gazing out over the churchyard. “That the root, or source, of evil isn’t always where we expect to find it, for instance. Leopold Verhaven’s fate—and I really do hope we shall be able to restore his reputation one of these days—has hardly anything to do with him. Like it or not, he becomes the unwilling main character in a silent and bitter and pointless drama fought between Mr. and Mrs. Jahrens. He’s totally innocent, but he is cast as the scapegoat and gets to spend a quarter of a century in jail. No wonder he becomes a bit odd! When Mrs. Jahrens eventually decides to go to confession, all it leads to is the death of Verhaven. That is the biggest barrow-load of garbage you can ever imagine, Münster; but there again, maybe there is some kind of inverted logic behind it all. You can almost hear them roaring with laughter down there in the underworld, if you get my meaning.”

He looked up at the bright, cloud-spattered summer sky.

“Even on a day like this,” he added.

They stood in silence for a while.

“And Marlene Nietsch?” Münster asked.

“A coincidence, I reckon,” said Van Veeteren. “He’d probably come across her in the village and recognized her, and that morning he just happened to be driving past Zwille when Verhaven left her. He most likely saw an opportunity and picked her up, no more than that, and we know what happened next. She didn’t want to, and so he turned violent. That’s what I think happened, but there are lots of other possibilities, of course.”

“And the missing bits? Of Verhaven, I mean.”

The chief inspector shrugged.

“No idea. I expect they’re buried somewhere—I’m inclined to hope they stay wherever they are. Just think if they find them a hundred years from now and start a new investigation! I sometimes get the feeling that this is a case that could go on forever.”

Münster nodded and opened his car door.

“Anyway, that’ll have to be it for now,” he said. “I’d better get home and pack. We’re off tomorrow.”

“Italy?” asked Van Veeteren.

“Yes. Two weeks in Calabria and one in Tuscany. When are you going on holiday?”

“August,” said Van Veeteren. “I haven’t really started to think about it yet, but I suppose that’s not necessary. July is usually rather a good month to spend in Maardam. Calm and peaceful. All the idiots are away on holiday. Don’t take that personally, by the way.”

“That would never occur to me,” said Münster. “All the best!”

“Have a good holiday,” said Van Veeteren. “Take good care of your lovely wife. And the kids, of course. It’ll be badminton time again, come September.”

“It certainly will,” said Münster.

Once again he drove up to The Big Shadow. Never got out of the car. Merely sat there, contemplating the overgrown house and garden while smoking a cigarette and drumming his fingers on the steering wheel.

What a goddamn awful business, he thought.

And now all those involved were dead. Just as in a Shakespearean tragedy. Beatrice Holden and Marlene Nietsch. Arnold and Anna Jahrens. And Verhaven himself, of course.

But justice had been done after all. Insofar as that was possible, that is. Nemesis had claimed her due. That was the only way of looking at it.

And who were left?

Verhaven’s ancient sister, who had played no part at all in the events.

Andrea Jahrens, or Välgre, as she was called nowadays. The daughter, with two children of her own.

You could say they were the only survivors, in fact; Mrs. Hoegstraa would soon join the others six feet down.

Survivors, and completely ignorant of the whole business. Needless to say, there was no reason why they should be informed.

He would never dream of doing so.

Never.

And as he drove slowly back down the hill for the last time to the village, which was wallowing sleepily if misleadingly in the summer sunshine, he thought about what he had said to Münster.

Not everything is what it seems.

Kaustin—the village of murders.

Then it struck him that he hadn’t really told Münster the whole truth. The real reason why he’d stopped by at the Czermaks that afternoon was, of course, not because he had noticed the wheelchair ramp—that was something he’d picked up in passing. No, the real reason was more prosaic than that, and just now he was beginning to feel the same symptom.

He’d been thirsty.

Ah well, he thought, possessed by a sudden if brief attack of cheerfulness, and an obvious risk of repeating himself: Not everything is what it seems.

He sped up and started thinking instead about that borderline that he’d at long last overstepped.

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