it was lifted enough so that the fine blood vessels were visible, pulsing in his temples. He lay there with eyes closed, and he seemed more peaceful than he had in a long time. For a moment Carl thought maybe he should leave. Some of the equipment had been removed from the room, even though the respirator was of course still pumping. All in all, it seemed a good sign.
He turned carefully on his heel and was just taking a step toward the door when Hardy’s voice stopped him.
“Where are you going? Can’t you stand to see a man flat on his back?”
Carl turned around and saw Hardy lying exactly as when he’d entered the room.
“If you want people to stay, you ought to make some sort of sign that you’re awake, Hardy. You could open your eyes, for example.”
“No. Not today. I don’t feel like opening my eyes today.” Carl needed to hear that one again. “If there’s going to be any difference in my days, then I should be allowed to decide whether or not to open my eyes, OK?”
“Yeah. OK.”
“Tomorrow I’m planning on looking only to the right.”
“OK,” said Carl, even though Hardy’s words hurt deep in his soul. “You’ve talked to Assad a couple of times now, Hardy. Was it all right with you that I sent him over here?”
“It sure as hell wasn’t,” he said, hardly moving his lips.
“Yeah, well, I did. And I’ve been thinking of sending him over here as often as I need to. Do you have any objections?”
“Only if he brings those spicy, grilled things again.”
“I’ll let him know.”
Something that might be interpreted as laughter slipped out of Hardy’s body. “They made me shit like I’ve never shit before. The nurses were really upset.”
Carl tried not to picture the scene. It didn’t sound pleasant.
“I’ll tell Assad, Hardy. No spicy, grilled things next time.”
“Is there anything new in the Lynggaard case?” asked Hardy. This was the first time since he was paralyzed that he’d expressed curiosity about anything. Carl could feel the heat rising to his cheeks. In a moment he’d probably have a lump in his throat too.
“Yeah, you bet.” And then he told Hardy about the latest development with Daniel Hale.
“You know what I think, Carl?” Hardy said afterward.
“You think the case has got a new lease of life.”
“Exactly. The whole thing stinks to high heaven.” He opened his eyes for a moment and looked up at the ceiling before he closed them again. “Do you have any political leads to investigate?”
“Not in the slightest.”
“Have you talked to the press?”
“What do you mean?”
“One of the political commentators at Christiansborg. They’ve always got their noses in everything. Or what about the tabloids? Pelle Hyttested at
I’ll tell him now, thought Carl, and then he spoke very slowly so that it would sink in properly, right from the start. “There’s been a murder down in Soro, Hardy. I think it’s the same guys who were out in Amager.”
Hardy’s expression didn’t change. “And?” he said.
“Yeah, well, the same circumstances, the same weapon, the same red-checked shirt presumably, the same group of people, the same—”
“I said, ‘And?’”
“Well, that’s why I’m telling you all this.”
“I said, ‘And?’ Meaning, ‘And what the hell do I care?’”
He found Pelle Hyttested preening his well-trimmed but skimpy red beard over in a corner where an eternal lethargy had descended upon the senior journalists. Carl was well acquainted with Hyttested’s reputation as a scumbag and an asshole that only money could stop. It was incomprehensible why so many Danes loved to read the overwrought trash that he wrote, but his victims didn’t share their enthusiasm. There was a long queue of lawsuits waiting outside Hyttested’s door, but the editor-in-chief held a protective hand over his favorite little demon. To hell with it if the editor-in-chief had to pay a few fines along the way.
The man cast a brief glance at Carl’s police badge and turned back to his colleagues.
Carl placed a hand on his shoulder. “I’ve got a couple of questions for you, I said.”
Hyttested looked right through him when he turned to face Carl again. “Can’t you see I’m working? Or maybe you’d like to take me down to the station. ”
It was at this point that Carl pulled from his wallet the thousand-kroner note that he’d been saving for months and stuck it in front of the journalist’s nose.
“What was it you wanted to see me about?” asked the man, trying to suck up the bill with his eyes. Maybe he was working out in his mind how many late-night hours the money could keep him going at Andy’s Bar.
“I’m investigating the disappearance of Merete Lynggaard. My colleague Hardy Henningsen thinks you might be able to tell me whether Merete had any reason to fear somebody in political circles.”
“Fear somebody? That’s an odd way to put it,” he said, stroking the almost invisible tufts of hair on his face. “Why are you asking me about this? Has something new turned up in that case?”
Now the cross-examination was moving in the wrong direction.
“Something new? No, nothing like that. But the case has reached the point where certain questions need to be resolved once and for all.”
Hyttested nodded, obviously unimpressed. “Five years after she disappeared? Come on, you’ve got to be kidding. Why don’t you tell me what you know instead, and then I’ll tell you what I know.”
Carl waved the banknote again so the man’s attention would be drawn to what was essential.
“So you have no knowledge of anyone who might have been especially angry with Merete Lynggaard at the time? Is that what you’re telling me?”
“Everybody hated the bitch. If it hadn’t been for her fucking beautiful tits, she would have been tossed out long ago.”
Not a supporter of the Democrats, Carl gathered. It could hardly come as a surprise. “OK, so you don’t know anything.” He turned to the others in the room. “Do any of you know anything? Anything at all. It doesn’t have to be related to Christiansborg. Maybe some wild rumors. Or people who were seen around her while your paparazzi were on the prowl. Vague impressions. Ring any bells?” He looked at Hyttested’s colleagues. It would be easy to diagnose at least half of them as brain-dead. They looked at him with blank eyes that said they didn’t give a shit.
He turned around to look at the rest of the office. Maybe one of the younger journalists who still had some life in his skull would have something to say. If not from first-hand experience, then maybe third- or fourth-hand. This was gossip central, after all.
“Did you say that Hardy Henningsen sent you here?” asked Hyttested as he crept closer to the thousand- kroner note. “Maybe it was you who fucked things up for him. I remember very clearly reading something about a Carl Morck. Isn’t that your name? You’re the one who took cover under one of your colleagues. The guy who lay underneath Hardy Henningsen and played dead. That’s you, right?”
Carl felt the Greenland ice cap creeping up his spine. How in the world had the guy come to that conclusion? All of the internal hearings had been closed to the public. No one had ever even hinted at what this shithead was now insinuating.
“Are you saying that because you want me to grab you by the collar, crush you flat, and then shove you