'Harry.'
'Hello, my name is Constance Hochner?’
‘How do you do, Ms Hochner.’
‘I'm Andreas Hochner's sister.’
‘I see.'
Even on the bad line he could hear she was nervous. Nevertheless, she went straight to the point.
'You had an agreement with my brother, Mr Hole. And you haven't kept your part of the deal.'
She spoke with a strange accent, the same as Andreas Hochner's. Automatically, Harry tried to visualise her, a habit he had adopted early on as a detective.
'Well, Ms Hochner, I can't do anything for your brother before I have verified the information he gave us. For the time being, we have not found anything to corroborate what he said.'
'But why should he lie, Mr Hole? A man in his predicament?'
'That is precisely why, Ms Hochner. If he doesn't know anything he could be desperate enough to pretend that he does.'
There was a pause on the crackly line from… where? Johannesburg?
Constance Hochner was speaking again.
Andreas warned me that you might say something like that. That's why I'm calling you, to tell you I have more information from my brother that you may be interested in.'
'Oh, yes?'
'But you cannot have the information unless your government does something about my brother's case first.’
‘We'll do what we can.'
'I'll contact you again when there is evidence that you're helping us.'
As you know, Ms Hochner, it doesn't work like that. First of all, we have to see the results of the information we receive. Then we can help him.'
'My brother must have guarantees. The legal proceedings against him start in two weeks.'
Her voice failed her somewhere in the middle, and Harry knew she was close to tears.
'The only thing I can give you is my word that I'll do as much as I can.'
'I don't know you. You don't understand. They intend to sentence Andreas to death. They -'
'Nevertheless, that is all I can offer you.'
She began to cry. Harry waited. After a while she was quiet.
'Do you have children, Ms Hochner?'
'Yes,' she sniffled.
'And you know what your brother has been accused of?’
‘Obviously.'
'Then you'll also know that he will need all the absolution he can get. As he can help us, via you, to stop a killer, he will have done some good. And you will have too, Ms Hochner.'
She was breathing heavily over the telephone. Harry thought she was going to cry again.
'Do you promise to do as much as you can, Mr Hole? My brother hasn't done all the things they are accusing him of.'
I promise.'
Harry heard his own voice. Calm and steady. While crushing the receiver.
'OK,' Constance Hochner said softly. 'Andreas says that the person who took delivery of the weapon and paid for it at the harbour that night is not the same as the person who ordered it. The man who ordered it was a fairly regular customer, a youngish man. He spoke good English with a Scandinavian accent. And he insisted that Andreas used the code name 'the Prince' with him. Andreas said you should start by focusing on groups of guys fixated with guns.'
'Is that everything?'
'Andreas has never seen him, but he says that he would recognise his voice immediately if you sent him a tape.'
'Excellent,' Harry said, hoping she wouldn't hear how disappointed he was. He instinctively straightened his shoulders as if to steel himself before serving up the lie.
'If I discover anything, I'll start pulling the strings here.'
The words smarted like caustic soda in his mouth.
'Thank you, Mr Hole.'
'Nothing to thank me for, Ms Hochner.'
He repeated the last phrase a couple of times to himself after putting down the receiver.
'That's too much,' Ellen said on hearing the story about the Hochner family.
'See if your brain can forget it's in love for a while and let it perform some of its tricks,' Harry said. 'Now at least you've got your cues.'
'Illegal importation of arms, regular customer, the Prince, arms freaks. That's only four.'
'That's all I have.'
'Why do I agree to this?'
'Because you love me. Now I have to be off.'
'Wait. Tell me about the woman you -'
'Hope your intuition is better with solving crime, Ellen. Take care.'
Harry rang the Drammen number directory enquiries had given him.
'Mosken speaking.' A self-assured voice.
'Edvard Mosken?'
'Yes. To whom am I speaking?'
'Inspector Hole, POT. I have a couple of questions.'
It struck Harry that this was the first time he had introduced himself as an inspector. For some reason it felt like a lie.
'Has something happened to my son?'
'No. Would it be convenient to visit you at midday tomorrow, herr Mosken?'
'I'm a pensioner. And single. There's hardly a moment when it wouldn't be convenient, Inspector.'
Harry called Even Juul and brought him up to date on what had happened.
Harry was considering what Ellen had said about the murder of Hallgrim Dale as he walked to the canteen to buy a yoghurt. He would ring Kripos to find out more about the case, although he had a strong feeling that Ellen had already told him everything worth knowing. Nevertheless. The statistical probability of being murdered in Norway was about one in ten thousand. When a person you're looking for turns up dead in a four-month-old murder case, it is difficult to believe that it is a coincidence. Could the murder be linked in any way with the purchase of the Marklin rifle? It was barely 9 a.m. and Harry already had a headache. He hoped Ellen would be able to come up with something on the Prince. Anything at all. If nothing else, it would be a place to begin.
45
Sogn. 6 March 2000.
After work Harry drove up to the sheltered housing in Sogn. Sis was waiting for him. She had put on a bit of weight in the last year, but her boyfriend Henrik, who lived further down the corridor, liked her like that, she claimed. 'But then Henrik is a mongo.'
She usually said that when she had to explain Henrik's minor idiosyncrasies. She, for her part, was not a mongo. There was obviously an almost invisible though sharp distinction somewhere. And Sis liked to explain to Harry which of the residents were mongos, and those who were only almost.
She told Harry about the usual things: what Henrik had said last week (which could on occasion be quite remarkable), what they had seen on TV, what they had eaten and where they planned to go on holiday. They were
