peeling paint. Driving quite slowly.'

'Who was driving it?'

'A man,' he said hesitantly. 'One man.'

'My name is Raymond.' He smiled.

Ragnhild looked up, saw the smiling face in the mirror, and Kollen Mountain bathed in the morning light.

'Would you like to go for a drive?'

'Mama's waiting for me.'

She said it in a stuck-up sort of voice.

'Have you ever been to the top of Kollen?'

'One time, with Papa. We had a picnic.'

'It's possible to drive up there,' he explained. 'From the back side, that is. Shall we drive up to the top?'

'I want to go home,' she said, a bit uncertain now.

He shifted down and stopped.

'Just a short ride?' he asked.

His voice was thin. Ragnhild thought he sounded so sad. And she wasn't used to disappointing the wishes of grown-ups. She got up, walked forward to the front seat and leaned over.

'Just a short ride,' she repeated. 'Up to the top and then back home right away.'

He backed into Feldspatveien and drove back downhill.

'What's your name?' he asked.

'Ragnhild Elise.'

He rocked a little from side to side and cleared his throat, as if to admonish her.

'Ragnhild Elise. You can't go out shopping so early in the morning. It's only 8.15 a.m. The shops are closed.'

She didn't answer. Instead she lifted Elise out of the pram, put her on her lap and straightened her dress. Then she pulled the dummy out of the doll's mouth. Instantly the doll began to scream, a thin, metallic baby cry.

'What's that?'

He braked hard and looked in the mirror.

'That's just Elise. She cries when I take out her dummy.'

'I don't like that noise! Put it back in!'

He was restless at the wheel now, and the van weaved back and forth.

'Papa is a better driver than you are,' she said.

'I had to teach myself,' he said sulkily. 'Nobody wanted to teach me.'

'Why not?'

He didn't reply, just tossed his head. The van was out on the main highway now; he drove in second gear down to the roundabout and passed through the intersection with a hoarse roar.

'Now we're coming to Horgen,' she said, delighted.

He didn't reply. Ten minutes later he turned left, up into the wooded mountainside. On the way they passed a couple of farms with red barns and tractors parked here and there. They saw no one. The road grew narrower and peppered with holes. Ragnhild's arms were starting to grow tired from holding on to the pram, so she laid the doll on the floor and put her foot between the wheels as a brake.

'This is where I live,' he said suddenly and stopped.

'With your wife?'

'No, with my father. But he's in bed.'

'Hasn't he got up?'

'He's always in bed.'

She peered curiously out of the window and saw a peculiar house. It had been a hut once, and someone had added on to it, first once, then again. The separate parts were all different colours. Next to it stood a garage of corrugated iron. The courtyard was overgrown. A rusty old trowel was being slowly strangled by stinging nettles and dandelions. But Ragnhild wasn't interested in the house; she had her eye on something else.

'Bunnies!' she said faintly.

'Yes,' he said, pleased. 'Do you want to look at them?'

He hopped out, opened the back, and lifted her down. He had a peculiar way of walking; his legs were almost unnaturally short and he was severely bowlegged. His feet were small. His wide nose nearly touched his lower lip, which stuck out a bit. Under his nose hung a big, clear drop. Ragnhild thought he wasn't that old, although when he walked he swayed like an old man. But it was funny too. A boy's face on an old body. He wobbled over to the rabbit hutches and opened them. Ragnhild stood spellbound.

'Can I hold one?'

'Yes. Take your pick.'

'The little brown one,' she said, entranced.

'That's Pasan. He's the nicest.'

He opened the hutch and lifted out the rabbit. A chubby, lop-eared rabbit, the colour of coffee with a lot of cream. It kicked its legs vigorously but calmed down as soon as Ragnhild took it in her arms. For a moment she was utterly still. She could feel its heart pounding against her hand, as she stroked one of its ears cautiously. It was like a piece of velvet between her fingers. Its nose shone black and moist like a liquorice drop. Raymond stood next to her and watched. He had a little girl all to himself, and no one had seen them.

'The picture,' Sejer said, 'along with the description, will be sent to the newspapers. Unless they hear otherwise, they'll print it tonight.'

Irene Album fell across the table sobbing. The others stared wordlessly at their hands, and at her shaking back. The woman officer sat ready with a handkerchief. Karlsen scraped his chair a bit and glanced at his watch.

'Is Ragnhild afraid of dogs?' Sejer said.

'Why do you ask?' she said with surprise.

'Sometimes when we're searching for children with the dog patrol, they hide when they hear our German shepherds.'

'No, she's not afraid of dogs.'

The words reverberated in his head. She's not afraid of dogs.

'Have you had any luck getting hold of your husband?'

'He's in Narvik on manoeuvres,' she whispered. 'On the plateau somewhere.'

'Don't they use mobile phones?'

'They're out of range.'

'The people who are looking for her now, who are they?'

'Boys from the neighbourhood who are home in the daytime. One of them has a phone with him.'

'How long have they been gone?'

She looked up at the clock on the wall. 'More than two hours.'

Her voice was no longer quavering. Now she sounded doped, almost lethargic, as if she were half asleep. Sejer leaned forward again and spoke to her as softly and clearly as he could.

'What you fear the most has probably not happened. Do you realise that? Usually, children disappear for all sorts of trivial reasons. And it's a fact that children get lost all the time, just because they're children. They have no sense of time or responsibility, and they're so maddeningly curious that they follow any impulse that comes into their head. That's what it's like to be a child, and that's why they get lost. But as a rule they turn up just as suddenly as they disappeared. Often they don't have a good explanation for where they've been or what they were doing. But generally' – he took a breath – 'they're quite all right.'

'I know!' she said, staring at him. 'But she's never gone off like this before!'

'She's growing up and getting bigger,' he said persuasively. 'She's becoming more adventurous.'

God help me, he thought, I've got an answer for everything. He got up and dialled another number, repressing an urge to look at his watch again – it would be a reminder that time was passing, and they didn't need that. He reached the Duty Officer, gave him a brief summary of the situation and asked him to contact a volunteer rescue group. He gave him the address in Granittveien and gave a quick description of the girl: dressed in red, almost white hair, pink doll's pram. Asked whether any messages had come in, and was told none had been received. He sat down again.

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