Read Punishment Online

Authors: Anne; Holt

Punishment (34 page)

He had been to the bank. The money for the house came to about ten million kroner. Cheryl, who had grown up in Harwichport and started work at the bank a couple of months ago, had given him a big smile and whispered, You lucky son of a gun, before explaining to him that the buyer would pay the outstanding amount in instalments over the next six weeks. Aksel would have to contact a bank in Norway, open an account, and then everything should be fine and the authorities couldn't make a fuss. It'll be just fine, she assured him, and laughed again.

Ten million kroner.

To Aksel, the figure was astronomical. He tried to ground himself by remembering that it was ages since he knew what a krone was actually worth, and Norway was an expensive country, after all. At least that was what he had understood from the odd article he came across about his homeland. But over a million dollars was over a million dollars wherever you
were in the world. He could even get a place in Beacon Hill in Boston for that amount. And Oslo couldn't be more expensive than Beacon Hill.

Mrs Davis had gone to Hyannis with him to buy clothes. There was no way round it. Aksel Seier didn't quite trust her taste – the checked trousers from K-mart were particularly awful. Mrs Davis said that checked trousers and pastels made him look rich, and he was, so that was that. When he mumbled something about Cape Cod Mall, she rolled her eyes and claimed that the shops there fleeced you before you'd even set foot in the door. What you couldn't buy in K-mart wasn't worth buying. So now he had a suitcase full of new clothes he didn't like. Mrs Davis had confiscated his old flannel shirts and jeans; she was going to wash them before giving them to the Salvation Army.

He must remember to phone Patrick.

Aksel took a step back from the mirror. The way the light fell, slanting from the window, he found it difficult to recognise himself in the flecked mirror. It wasn't just his hair that was different. He tried to straighten his back. Something in his neck and shoulders stopped him. He had looked at the ground for too many years. Aksel's back was bent from thousands of days toiling over heavy work, turning away from other people, and long evenings crouched over fine handiwork and his own thoughts.

He lifted his head again. There was a pain between his shoulder blades. He looked thinner now. He forced himself to stand like that. Then he stroked his hand over the brown jacket and wondered whether he should put a tie on before he left. Ties were respectable. Mrs Davis was certainly right there.

If he had enough money when he'd done everything he needed to do, he would pay for Patrick to come over. Even though his friend earned well in the summer season, he used most of his earnings on maintaining the carousel and living
through the long winter months when he had no real income. Patrick had never been back to Ireland. He could come to Oslo for a week or two and then stop over in Dublin on the way back, if he wanted to.

Aksel suddenly realised that he was frightened. There was still a lot to do before he left. He had to get a move on.

He'd never been on a plane, but it wasn't that that frightened him.

Maybe Eva didn't want him to come. She hadn't actually asked him to. Aksel Seier pulled off his new jacket and started to pack the glass soldiers in the tissue paper that Mrs Davis had got.

He cut his finger on a small blue splinter. It was the remains of the general that Johanne Vik had broken. Aksel sucked his finger. Maybe the young lady had lost interest in him when he just disappeared.

He hadn't been so frightened since 1993, when the nightmares about the wet-eyed policeman with the keys had finally stopped plaguing him.

LV

‘H
e was completely mad,' she said. ‘Quite simply mad.' Lena Baardsen seemed anxious when Adam rang the bell, even though it was not particularly late. Her eyes were red and the bags underneath looked almost purple in her pale face. The flat was stuffy and claustrophobic, though she obviously tried to keep it tidy. She offered him nothing, but sat herself with a kitchen glass of what Adam thought was red wine. She raised her glass, as if she knew what he was thinking, and said:

‘Doctor recommended it. Two glasses before bedtime. Better than sleeping pills he said. To be honest, neither helps. But at least this tastes nicer.'

She drank the remainder in one go.

‘Karsten is charming. Was, at least. Good at looking after you. I was very young then. Not used to so much attention. I just . . .'

Her eyelids sank.

‘. . . fell in love,' she said slowly.

The smile was presumably meant to be ironic. But in fact it was just sad, especially when she opened her eyes again.

‘When we became lovers, he changed. Obsessively jealous. Possessive. He never hit me, but towards the end I was terrified all the same. He . . .'

She pulled her legs up and shivered, as if she was cold. It must have been close to thirty degrees in the flat.

‘I realised pretty soon that he wasn't quite normal. He would wake up at night if I went to the loo. He'd come out to the
bathroom and watch me pee. As if he sort of expected me to . . . run away. We didn't live together. Not really. I had a studio flat that was too small for both of us. He lived in a flat-share, but I don't think the people he lived with could stand him. So he kind of moved in with me. Without asking. He didn't bring his things with him or anything like that, there wasn't enough room. But he just took over, somehow. Tidied and washed and fussed around. He's obsessive about cleaning. Was. I don't know him any more. He was incredibly self-centred. It was me, me, me. The whole time. I would never put up with it now. But he was good-looking. And very attentive, to begin with at least. And I was very young.'

She gave a feeble, apologetic smile.

‘Do you . . .' said Adam and then started again. ‘Did you know anything about his family background?'

‘Family?' repeated Lena Baardsen in a flat voice. ‘A mother, at least. I met her twice. Sweet, in her own way. Unbelievably meek. Karsten could be really nasty to her. Even though he seemed . . . he actually seemed to care about her a lot. Well, sometimes at least. The only person he was really scared of was his grandmother. I never met her, but Jesus, some of the things he told me . . .'

She suddenly looked surprised.

‘D'you know what, I can't actually remember anything he told me. No examples. Strange. But I do remember clearly that he hated her. It seemed that way to me anyway. Real hate.'

‘His father?'

‘Father? No . . . he never mentioned his father, I don't think. He didn't actually like talking about his past. Childhood and all that. I got the impression that he grew up with his mother and grandmother. So it must have been his maternal grandmother. But I'm not sure about that either. It's so long ago. Karsten was mad. I've done everything I can to forget the guy.'

Again she formed her lips into a shape that could resemble a smile. Adam stared at a big photograph in the middle of the coffee table, a photograph of Sarah in a silver frame. Beside it were a big pink candle and a small rose in a thin vase.

‘I can't sleep,' whispered Lena. ‘I'm so frightened the candle will go out. I want it to burn always. For ever. It's almost as if none of it is really true until the candle goes out.'

Adam nodded almost imperceptibly.

‘I know,' he said calmly. ‘I know what it's like.'

‘No,' she said with emotion. ‘You don't know what it's like!'

He saw something behind her ravaged face, something in her suddenly angry features, and he knew that Lena Baardsen would get through this. She just didn't know it herself yet. Her daughter's death was incomprehensible and would be for a long time. Lena Baardsen was clinging to a grief that was pervasive, constant. She existed outside all reality, as reality was unbearable right now.

It would get worse. Then eventually, when the time was right, it would be possible to live again. And then the real grief would come. The one that never ends and that can't be shared with anyone. The one that would allow her to live and laugh and maybe even have more children. But would never disappear.

‘Yes,' said Adam. ‘I do know how you feel.'

It was too hot. He got up and opened the door out to the small balcony.

‘Did he do it?'

Adam half turned round. Her voice was thin and tired, as if there would soon be nothing left. He should go. Lena Baardsen would pull through. He had all the answers he needed.

‘You remembered the date you last saw him,' he said.

‘I ran away,' said Lena. ‘I went to Denmark. Gave notice on my flat while he was at work, took all my things home to my mother and left indefinitely. He made my mother's life
hell for weeks. Then he gave up. I assume. Was it him . . . did he kill Sarah?'

Adam balled his fists so hard that his nails were pressing into the skin on his palms.

‘I don't know,' he said sharply.

He left the balcony door open and walked towards the hall. Halfway across the living-room floor he stopped and studied the picture of Sarah again. The rose was dying, its head was hanging and it needed more water.

When he got back to the car, he turned and counted seven storeys up. Lena Baardsen was standing on the balcony with a blanket round her shoulders. She didn't wave. He bent his head and got into the car. The radio turned on automatically when he put the key in the ignition. He was well past Høvik before he registered that the programme was about the Black Death.

*

More than anything, he wanted to slap her. Turid Sande Oksøy was not a good liar. Which was presumably why she took such pains to hide her face from her husband when she repeated:

‘I have never heard of Karsten Åsli. Never.'

The terraced house in Bærum was imbued with another kind of grief from that in the small flat in Torshov. There were living children here. Toys were strewn over the floor and it smelt of cooking. Both Turid and Lasse Oksøy looked like they'd slept too little and cried too much, but in this home time had moved on in a way. Turid Oksøy had put on some make-up. Adam had called on his mobile to ask if it was OK for him to drop by, even though it was getting late. Her mascara had already caked in the corner of her eyes. The lipstick made her mouth look too big for the white face. She was picking absently at a small cut at the base of her nose. It started to bleed and she started to cry.

‘I swear,' she sobbed. ‘You have to believe me. I've never known anyone called Karsten.'

Adam should have talked to her alone.

It was a huge mistake to visit her at home. Lasse, her husband, would not leave her alone, which was reasonable, he kept his arm round her shoulders even when she turned away from him. Adam should have waited until tomorrow and called her into the office. Alone, without her husband. He needed more evidence against Karsten Åsli. Something more than an instinctive certainty that the man was dangerous; something that would give grounds for a closer investigation. Because of his experience and reputation, Adam might possibly get a search warrant if he could show that Karsten Åsli was the only person who had known all the mothers involved. Particularly as he denied it himself. He could explain that to Turid Oksøy and then force her to confess.

She was very frightened. Adam couldn't understand why. Her son was dead, killed by a madman whom the woman was protecting. Adam wanted to hit her. More than anything, he wanted to lean over the table, grab her stupid pink sweater and slap her. He wanted to beat the truth out of her thin body. She was ugly. Her hair was dead, her make-up was running. Her nose was too big and her eyes were too close together. Turid Sande Oksøy looked like a vulture, and Adam wanted to tear off the bloody awful made-up face and dig out the truth from the pea brain behind.

‘And you are quite sure of that?' he said calmly, and ran his fingers through his hair.

‘Yes,' she assured him, and looked up at him as she brushed her thumb over the skin under her eyes.

‘Then I apologise for disturbing you,' he said. ‘I'll find my own way out.'

*

‘Shit, shit!'

Adam hit his fist so hard against the tree trunk that his knuckles started to bleed. The muscles in his neck were in knots. He was shaking; it was difficult to find the right numbers on his mobile. He tried to take deeper breaths, but his lungs refused. Right now he didn't know who was more frightened, himself or Turid Sande Oksøy.

He leaned against the pine tree so he would relax a bit more. The lights in the house he'd just left were being switched off one by one. Eventually only a strip of dim yellow light was visible under some blinds upstairs.

‘Hello?'

‘Hi.'

‘Did I wake you?'

‘Yes.'

He didn't apologise. Her voice helped him to breathe more freely. It took ten minutes to tell her about the day's events. He repeated himself here and there, but pulled himself together and tried to stay calm. To tell the story chronologically. To stick to the facts. Precision. At last he was quiet. Johanne said nothing.

‘Hello?'

‘Yes, I'm here.' He heard her far away.

He held the phone tighter to his ear.

‘Why?' he asked. ‘Why is she lying?'

‘Well, that's obvious,' said Johanne. ‘She must have had an affair with Karsten Åsli when she was married to Lasse. There can't be any other reason. Unless she's telling the truth, of course. That she's actually never met the man.'

‘She's lying! She lied! I know that she's lying!'

Again he thumped his fist against the coarse bark. Blood ran down the back of his hand.

‘What should I do? What the fuck should I do now?'

‘Nothing. Not tonight. Go home, Adam. You need to sleep
now. You know that. Tomorrow you can try and get Turid on her own. You can set the wheels in motion to find out all there is to know about Karsten Åsli. Maybe you'll find something. Something that with a little creativity you can use to get a search warrant. Tomorrow. Go home.'

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