The Girl in the Ice

He sat and concentrated on his food. What should he say? That Simonsen himself looked like shit? That they both did? Like a pair of fools, just waiting for something terrible to happen.

Someone had taken his car keys, and he knew why. He also knew they were keeping an eye on him. It was easy to figure out: slightly too long a look here, a glance there, and his office regularly visited by colleagues who didn’t really want anything except to see how things were going. Even when he slept, he had monitored their comings and goings. The old trick with a paper clip in the door, before he closed it completely, had exposed them. How stupid did they really think he was? He was forty-two years old and had been a police officer for almost twenty years, almost half his life. Still they treated him like a boy scout, a pure amateur. His pistol was gone, but he had no need of it, it was just a nuisance. A small penknife from his desk drawer and a police truncheon were all he needed. Idiots!

On Thursday afternoon his wife had brought him clothes. They chatted together for fifteen minutes about the twins and, when that subject was exhausted, about the good weather. And how he was to be sure and eat properly. She kissed him, both when she arrived and when she left, a routine that was always observed, just like automatically looking to the left before you turn on to a street. When she was gone it struck him more clearly than ever how far they had drifted from each other. As if they lived in two different worlds. But he was happy about the clothes. When he was arrested, he wanted to be presentable. Well dressed, showered and shaved. He had never liked shabby prisoners; had learned to live with them, sure—because they were by far the majority—but deep down he despised them, and he did not want to be that way himself.

The alarm from his cell phone woke him at two o’clock, and he took ten minutes to ease the soreness out of his body with small, improvised gymnastic exercises. The Japanese slept on the floor on rush mats, he had read. Hardy people, and it was undeniably practical to be able to put your bed away in a corner. Japan, Australia, China, Brazil—he had always dreamed about taking a long journey, but his life had gone in a different direction. There was always something that was more important. Through the window he stared out into the night and thought that his journey would have to wait a few more years. Then on stockinged feet he slipped out into the corridor and sneaked past Simonsen’s office. Light was seeping out from under the door. The heart of the Homicide Division the room had once been named, by whom he could not remember. Filled with contempt he mimed spitting against the closed door, after which he found the nearest bathroom and got ready.

Months could pass without the Countess swearing, so when it finally happened, she commanded everyone’s attention at once. In this case everyone meant Simonsen and the head of DSIS. They were in Simonsen’s office, wide awake, almost speeding, reviewing tomorrow’s theatre piece, which simply must not go wrong. The head of DSIS underscored that regularly. There is no plan B, it’s this or nothing. A few times in varied form: If it doesn’t happen tomorrow, it never will—or whatever he could think of. It was almost as if he liked saying it, but it didn’t become any less true as a result. The Countess’s cell phone hummed; she looked at it and burst out in a panic, “Damn it! Arne has taken off.”

Simonsen leaped up from his chair, which tipped over.

“No! Where is he? How do you even know?”

“His cell phone. I automatically get an SMS when it is more than a hundred metres away from HS. Don’t ask how.”

The head of DSIS was calmer.

“He’s more than a hundred metres away?”

“Two hundred or so.”

“Then relax. There’s plenty of time.”

Simonsen complied. He picked up his chair and sat down, a little embarrassed by his own reaction. He said to the Countess, “Maybe he’s just getting a little fresh air. Do we even know where he’s going?”

“Don’t be stupid.”

“Is he armed?”

“Hardly, I have his pistol.”

Simonsen looked at the head of DSIS.

“I assume that your people will stop him, before it goes haywire.”

The head of DSIS confirmed that, but did not do anything. He scratched his temple with one knuckle and said quietly, “There is also another possibility.”

The following two seconds felt very long. The Countess looked down at the floor and kept quiet. Simonsen stared at her, appalled.

“Tell me, have you gone crazy? No, under no circumstances. Absolutely not!”

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