“And was it just Carl from Scandie Sights, or Jan, too? Maybe the other stewards? He could have gotten to them, the way he had with Erik.”
“I would be surprised. Jan will go into his family business, the oil business. Carl used to make fun of him, but I think he was jealous of his position. I know everyone thinks we are all the same in Norway, but there are some families that are maybe a little above the rest of us—a little older, and a lot more money. Jan’s is like that. He does the tours because he enjoys them and his father thinks he should do something to practice his English. As for the stewards—Anders, I would doubt, and Sonja is too stupid to keep her mouth shut. Carl would never involve her.”
So, there was no love lost here, as well, Pix thought.
“She doesn’t seem particularly fond of you, either.”
Kari tossed her head. The car swerved.
“She was after Erik all last summer. She made a total fool of herself, and poor Erik was very embarrassed. I had to go to Bergen and put a stop to it. She has Anders now. He might be nice, but nothing like Erik. Oh Pix, I can’t believe I’ll never see him again! And what will I tell his parents? The truth might kill them, too.”
It was hard. Pix was tempted to advise a severely edited version, with the cooperation of the police, but there were too many secrets, too many lies in life—especially family life.
“You tell them what you told me. They will know that at the end Erik was doing as he had been taught, and that will be a comfort to them.”
They drove in silence for a while. It was past midnight. Pix
was dying of thirst and hunger. She had taken the sandwiches the farmer’s wife made—what was her name anyway?—from her pocket and left them at the hut. The sandwiches she had pressed on Pix along with the coffee as she rushed Pix to the fjord taxi. They couldn’t take the chance that Mrs. Sven might have added knockout drops to the
The Cote d’Or chocolate bar! She dug it out, unwrapped it, and handed half to Kari.
“I’ve never tasted anything so good in my life,” the girl said.
“I’ll tell Faith,” answered Pix, savoring each mouthful.
They finally came to a phone—and a Coke machine—outside a small gas station. Pix was charmed to note it had a sod roof. Her family, those increasingly mythical creatures, would enjoy this country. Jan had patiently explained about sod roofs the day they were on his bus. The roof framing was covered with layers of birch bark, then sod in the old days. Now people used heavy plastic sheeting under the sod and trimmed the edges with the birch to suggest authenticity. “And we don’t bring our lawn mowers up,” he’d joked. She hoped he was what she and Ursula had thought. Okay, his family was in the oil business, but that didn’t mean he was passing industrial secrets to a tour member or anybody else. Carl had always seemed a little too perfect, too polished. Jan, she reminded herself, had on unmatched socks the first day. Kari hit the brakes and they jerked to a halt outside the station. There were no signs of life, but Sven had thoughtfully left a full tank of gas and they didn’t need to fill up.
“This is a very popular place in the winter for cross-country skiing, and hiking soon of course. In between…” Kari shrugged and pointed to the dark station.
Having felt justified in taking a loan from Sven’s coins as well as using his car, they headed for the phone and machine. Kari thought it best that she be the one to call Ursula—speaking to the desk clerk in Norwegian, simply asking for “Fru Rowe.”
The clerk answered and put the call through to the room.
She had been instructed to let the
Ursula picked up the phone on the first ring.
“It’s me.” Kari was careful not to identify herself, and the gasp from Ursula told her she didn’t need to. The clerk could still be listening in, although Kari doubted it. It would have been very rude. “I’m fine. So is the other lady, who is with me. And we’ll see you soon. I don’t want to take much time, so here’s what we want to know— and maybe there’s a little something we hope you two can do.”
They couldn’t drive any longer. It wasn’t fatigue, hunger—or thirst. The Coke machine had taken care of that. It was the fjord—glistening, dead calm, straight in front of them—the end of the journey, or part of the journey.
“Now what?” Pix said, stepping out of the car. She had taken over the driving so Kari could rest.
“We find a boat.”
Of course. Pix added piracy to the growing list of crimes—breaking and entering, larceny—she found herself perpetrating in this law-abiding nation.
No one had conveniently left their keys on board any of the craft moored at the dock, so it appeared they would have to row to Balestrand. Pix spent her Maine summers either on the water or in it, so she was a strong oarswoman. Kari, too, had learned the art on the fjords of the east coast around Tonsberg, rowing to the nearby islands.
On the way, they had driven through Stalheim, and Pix shivered when she saw the hotel perched high above the valley. From Stalheim, they had followed the twisting road down to Vangnes, on the shores of the Sognefjord, coming to a stop at this deserted pier. Balestrand lay directly across the water.
For Balestrand—and Kvikne’s Hotel—was their final destination, after all. Odin and the others in the Norsk
pantheon had smiled on them. Carl Bjornson was still there. Everyone was still there, detained for their “safety” by the good
They had untied a lapstrake wooden rowboat, double-ended, with the long oars favored by Norwegian mariners. It was a beautiful boat, well maintained, and Pix made a mental apology to its owner, promising to have it back as soon as possible.
Pix had always found car travel conducive to serious conversation, intimate conversation. Something about the enforced closeness, the inability to leave. Something about talking or listening to someone with his or her eyes presumably on the road. Nothing face-to-face. This had been when her father had told her things about his childhood she’d never known, sad things. It was when Sam had proposed and they’d pulled over—to be face-to- face. She had thought this car trip would be the time when she could talk to Kari about Hanna and what Marit had revealed about Stalheim, but Kari had been asleep when they passed by. Now in the boat, in the soft darkness, Pix wanted Kari to know what Marit had told them.
“You were sleeping when we went through Stalheim. It’s such a beautiful place, such a wonderful hotel. It’s hard to think of it in any other way, hard to imagine what it was like during the war.”
“Marit told you?” Kari was rowing and she lifted the oars out of the water.
“Yes. My mother was terribly sorry that your grandparents hadn’t shared this with her years ago. She wouldn’t have thought anything other than how lucky Hans and Marit had been to find a baby to adopt.”
“I was very angry when she told me, but I didn’t let her know. Did she tell you my mother was a teenager when she found out?”
“Yes.”
“If they had spoken to her sooner, she might still be alive! Remember I said unless I cleared this up, we’d always be living with people’s suspicions? That was how Hanna must have felt. That to be a
Pix took a deep breath. The girl had started rowing again, hard. The water dripped in flashing strings of beads