from each oar. A single bird flew high overhead. Of course, if Hanna had known sooner, she might not have rebelled so dramatically—and there wouldn’t be a Kari—but that wasn’t the point.
“People make mistakes. Lord knows, I’ve made plenty,
“That’s no excuse,” Kari shot back.
“Oh yes, it is. It’s a great excuse, the best. It may not always turn out right, but it’s a damned good excuse.” Pix paused. “I knew your mother, remember. Adored her. She could do anything—run faster, sing better, swim, cook, write funny poems—and she was so beautiful. But, although finding out her origins must have been a shock,
I think she was a victim of her own intense personality colliding with a very mixed-up time in both our societies. So many contradictory messages. And she got confused.”
“Still…” Kari sounded less vehement, or maybe talking and rowing at the same time was wearing her out. “I am going to try to find out who her mother was. They’ve opened the records. I don’t care so much about discovering who my Nazi grandfather might be, but my grandmother could still be alive and might tell me something about the family.”
Nazi! That reminded Pix of Oscar Melling. She’d told Kari about finding his body and who he was, but she hadn’t asked about the Stalheim connection.
“Do you think Oscar Melling—I can’t get used to calling him Eriksen—had anything to do with the
“Oh Lord, you don’t think he was my grandfather, that obnoxious old lech. He made things very difficult on the tour. I was sorry for nice people like the Felds and the Bradys. He always seemed to want to pick a fight with them in particular.”
Pix couldn’t think of anything to say to reassure her. She’d cast Oscar in the role herself, and she couldn’t say they bore no resemblance to one another, what with such a common genetic background, although she’d have to see a picture of a much younger and less dissipated Oscar to find one.
“I’m sure the odds are quite slim. Why don’t I row for a while.” They changed places and soon Pix was enjoying the exercise, the steady in-out rhythm of the oars.
She thought of another role she’d cast: Sven. Kari hadn’t seemed to know what Pix was talking about earlier when she’d asked if Sven seemed familiar to the girl.
“Do you think this Sven might be your father?” It was out.
“Oh, is that what you were getting at before!” Kari started to laugh. “My poor father is in a home for alcoholics. He came back to Norway when he was almost fifty and had
run out of money and women who would take him in, I suppose. I don’t have much feeling about him, except, of course, I wouldn’t be here otherwise. He got in touch with my grandmother and we went to see him. He cried and said I looked like my mother. I didn’t want to go back. Marit visits him. She’s a much better person than I am. He doesn’t have anybody else, she says, but I think she wants to hear about Hanna.”
There went that theory, Pix said to herself. Maybe a couple of theories. Certainly Kari had not run off in search of her identity. She seemed quite in control of who she was. It had been a kidnapping and one kidnapper was in for a big surprise.
Pix brought the boat silently along the dock at Balestrand, relieved to see the Viking fjord cruiser dwarfing the other pleasure boats. Farther back on shore, the hotel was illuminated by several outside lights and a few shone from windows scattered across the grand old lady’s facade.
They tied up and slipped aboard the bigger boat. Without skeleton keys, they had to resort to Sven’s knife, which Pix adeptly used to pop the lock and enter the main cabin. As they had assumed, Carl had cleaned out the hidden storage space in the closet in the staff room. He’d been clever enough not to sweep, leaving and, Pix was sure, adding dust and dirt particles.
Kari went to the refrigerator in the galley and took two bottles of Solo, the sweet orange soda, a national addic-tion—Solo and
They sat down at one of the tables. Carl had straightened the chairs after her attempted flight the other night. Pix took a swig of her soda. “Soo Loo”—it was fun to say.
“We have to try to think like Carl. Walk in his shoes.”
“English. Custom-made,” Kari said.
“But of course. Now if he wanted to hide something, where…”
Several hours later, Pix rolled off the bunk she’d fallen asleep on and went to rouse Kari, who was sleeping above. They had not thought it wise to sleep on board the Scandie Sights boat, and although the boat with the tarp was still docked, Pix could not recommend its accommodations. They’d slipped into a large sailboat, assuming the owners were at Kvikne’s or elsewhere in the district.
“Kari, wake up. It’s time!”
The girl swung her long legs over the side and jumped down. Then they straightened their berths and went above.
Outside, it was what Pix would have called a perfect Maine day. The sun was shining. The sky was blue, with large puffy white clouds. A slight warm breeze fanned across the water and the air was clear. A perfect Maine day, except she was in Norway.
They strolled over to the front of the dock, sat cross-legged facing the hotel, the Scandie Sights boat behind them. The Midsummer bonfire pile had grown considerably in her absence, Pix noted. There was a whole new layer of vegetable crates.
Kari leaned back on her arms and stretched her face toward the sun.
“Now we wait.”
The Scandie Sights tour was the first down to breakfast, hitting the immense bowls of muesli, chafing dishes of fish cakes, and mounds of fresh strawberries as soon as the doors opened. There was a manic feeling in the air. Cheeks were flushed, voices raised in false heartiness. Equally false promises to write and stay in touch were made. Hunched over, forking in nourishment, never had the group seemed more like a new species, Ursula Rowe thought as she sat before a single slice of bread, some jam, and a strawberry, not eating anything. Locusts, lemmings, they reminded her of something. Children. No, not
children. Teenagers. Avoidance of eye contact. Bolting of
food. Yes, definitely adolescence.
“May we join you?” It was Sophie and her cousin Valerie.
“Of course,” Ursula replied. “We need to save a place for my friend Marit, who’s not down yet.” And where was Marit? Ursula wanted to get going.
“We are very, very sorry that there has been no news of your daughter.
“Yes, it is upsetting, but the police have not given up hope.”
“
Marit arrived with a similarly skimpy repast.
Ursula ate the strawberry and raised an eyebrow at Marit. Time to go.
“I absolutely forbid it!” A chair being pushed back and the sound of broken crockery accompanied the statement, a statement that everyone in the dining room had no trouble hearing even above the concomitant noise.
“Never, never, never!” Each word increased in volume and intensity, a tour de force. The four ladies looked at one another. “Madame Peterson seems upset,” Sophie said, her eyes saying what her lips did not; that is, The woman is completely crazy—
Lynette grabbed her mother-in-law’s arm. “It’s our turn now. I’ve eaten enough fish to last me the rest of my