The Purity of Vengeance

Home > Mystery > The Purity of Vengeance > Page 38
The Purity of Vengeance Page 38

by Jussi Adler-Olsen


  “Thank you for being so kind,” she said by way of conclusion, and closed the door behind her.

  She stood for thirty seconds or more, waiting until satisfied her neighbor had returned to her own apartment.

  What would she do if the woman turned up again while Curt Wad or Gitte Charles was there? Would she have to do away with her, too?

  Nete shook her head at the thought of police milling about the place and all the questions they would ask. It was too close to home.

  Please God, don’t let her come back, she prayed silently.

  Not that she believed He would come to her aid. Her prayers would never be enough.

  She knew that from experience.

  • • •

  The fourth day of rye bread and water was a trial. Nete’s world had diminished, with no room anymore for tears or the prayers she had offered to the Lord day and night. Night, especially.

  Instead, she screamed for air and liberty. And most of all for her mother.

  “Come and help me, Mother! Hug me, and stay with me forever,” she wailed incessantly. Oh, if only she could sit with her mother now in the little garden of their smallholding, shelling peas. If only she could . . .

  She stopped when they began to pound their fists against the door, shouting at her to shut up. It wasn’t the wardens, but some of the girls from down the corridor. And the bell in the hall rang because they had left their rooms, and screams and shouts and general tumult made way for the matron’s stern warnings and a rattling of the bolt in the door of her cell.

  Seconds later, Nete was forced backward through the cramped space. She threw back her head and howled as the long needle was jabbed into her flesh, and then the room began to spin before her eyes.

  When she came round with her arms fastened by a strap, she no longer had the strength to cry out.

  And thus she lay all through the day without uttering a word. When they tried to feed her she turned away and thought of her sanctuary outside, beyond the hillock with the plum trees, sparkling beams of sunlight filtering through the leaves. And she thought back on the impression left in the hay by her lovemaking wth Tage in the barn.

  Her thoughts were concentrated and intense, for if she wasn’t careful Curt Wad’s smug face would appear in her mind’s eye instead. It was the last thing she wanted.

  She did not wish to think about Curt Wad. That detestable man had destroyed her life and she would never leave the island as the person she had once been. She knew that now. Life had passed her by, and every time her lungs filled with air she wished her breathing would stop.

  Her last meal was already digested, she told herself. Curt Wad, the Devil, and all his dark deeds made it impossible for her to imagine a life after this.

  When several days went by without her eating and there was nothing left inside her bowels to be emptied, they called for a doctor from the mainland.

  He was meant to be her savior, calling himself her friend in need, but his aid was a hypodermic in her arm and a trip across the strait to the hospital in Korsør.

  Here they kept her under observation and turned away when she began to plead with them to show her the mercy of believing that she was a girl like any other, stricken by terrible misfortune.

  Only once did anyone come who might have listened to her, but Nete was so sedated she dozed nearly all day long.

  The person was a man in his mid-twenties visiting a little girl with hearing difficulties who had been brought in that morning and who now lay behind curtains in a bed opposite Nete’s. Nete overheard that she was suffering from leukemia, and though she was unaware of what it was, she realized the girl was dying. In her hazy state she saw it in the eyes of the parents when they came away. Nete was in so many ways envious of that little girl. Liberated from the miseries of the world and yet surrounded by people who loved her. How benevolent a fate. And this man, who came to ease her final time by reading for her, or allowing her to read for him.

  And Nete closed her eyes and listened to how his soothing voice helped the child shape the syllables, words, and sentences until they made sense, and slowly enough for Nete in her languid state to follow along.

  He smiled warmly to her as he passed by her bed.

  It was a smile that gripped her heart and prompted her to swallow just a tiny morsel of food that same evening.

  Two days later the child was dead and Nete was on her way back to Sprogø, more silent and introverted than before. Even Rita left her alone in the night, but she had trouble of her own to contend with now. They all had.

  For the same boat that took Nete back to the island brought with it Gitte Charles.

  37

  November 2010

  As Curt lay on his side in the double bed, gazing at his beloved’s almost transparent eyelids, which had not opened on life for three days and nights, he had all the time in the world to curse the events of the past couple of days.

  Everything was falling apart. His security apparatus, set up specifically to remove all obstacles, had made fatal errors, and people who once were silent were now sounding off.

  It was as though, amid all the recent triumphs of his Purity Party, disasters were now queuing up to happen, snapping at him and his life’s foundation like rabid dogs.

  Why had they been unable to stop those two policemen? It was imperative it be done. Mikael, Lønberg, and Caspersen had all promised to do their utmost, and yet they had failed.

  Beate’s face twitched almost imperceptibly yet sufficiently to make him jump.

  He looked at his bony hand as he stroked her cheek and felt strangely at odds with himself. It seemed almost to merge with her skin, so slight was the difference between her aging and his. But in a few hours she would be dead and he still alive. That was the issue he had to address, if indeed he wanted to live at all. And at this moment he did not. But he had to. There were jobs to be taken care of, but when they were done he would find a headstone, and the mason would carve not one name, but two.

  A sudden, urgent noise came from his bedside table. It was his iPhone, not the secure connection he mostly used now. He turned over, picked it up, and opened the text message that had come in.

  It was a link from Herbert Sønderskov.

  So he had done as he was told, Curt thought to himself, pleased by the prospect. One person less to go shooting their mouth off.

  He tapped the link and waited a moment until an image appeared. When it did, he sat up abruptly in a state of alarm.

  The photo showed a beaming Herbert and Mie, waving to him amid lush, luxuriant surroundings. Above the image was a brief caption: You’ll never find us.

  • • •

  Once he’d transferred the file to his laptop he opened it again and enlarged the photo until it filled the screen. It had been taken only ten minutes before, and the sky above the smiling couple was burning red in the last throes of sunset. Behind them were palm trees and, farther back, dark faces and an expanse of blue ocean.

  He opened the “Planets” app on his iPhone and tapped “Globe” for an exact specification of the sun’s present position. He studied the data and saw that the only tropical location where the sun had set ten minutes ago was the southern tip of Madagascar. The other areas within its axis were open sea, Middle Eastern desert, and temperate regions of the former USSR.

  Since they were standing with their backs to the sunset, they had to be on the western side of the island. Madagascar was large, certainly, but not big enough to conceal them forever. If he sent Mikael down there to ask around for two elderly, gray-haired Scandinavians, he would find them in no time. A bribe here and there always worked wonders, and there would be plenty of sharks in those waters to erase all traces.

  It was the first good news of the day.

  He smiled and felt his strength return. “Nothing wears a man down like faintheartedness,” his father always sa
id. A wise man indeed.

  He leaned his stiff frame backward and peered out at the police cadets engaged in their role-playing beneath the trees of the academy grounds on the opposite side of the road. To his disgust he noted that several of the young people in uniform were dark-skinned, and then the Nokia rang on the table.

  “It’s Mikael. I’m with one of our people. No need for you to know the name. Seven minutes ago we observed Hafez el-Assad leaving Police HQ. He’s now on his way down the stairs from Tietgens Bridge to the platforms at Central Station. What do you want us to do?”

  What should they do? Surely it was obvious.

  “Follow him. If you get the chance to do so unseen, grab him and take him away. Keep the line open so I can listen in. And make sure he doesn’t see you.”

  “Like I said, there’s two of us. We’re keeping our distance, no need to worry.”

  Curt smiled. Second piece of good news. Maybe this was a turnaround.

  He lay down again next to his dying spouse, his ear pressed to the Nokia on the pillow. Life and death, juxtaposed.

  When he had lain there listening for some minutes and sensed that Beate’s breathing had all but ceased, a whisper sounded in the receiver at his ear.

  “We’re on the S-train now, heading for Tåstrup. He might be leading us to his proper address. We’re at each end of the carriage by the doors, so he’s not going to give us the slip, you can be sure of it.”

  Curt commended him and turned to Beate. He placed his fingertips against her neck. There was still a pulse, but it was weak and unpredictable as death itself.

  He closed his eyes for a moment and his mind filled with memories of rosy cheeks and laughter that chased away all concerns. How could we ever have been so young? he wondered.

  “RIGHT!” Curt awoke with a start at the sudden exclamation from the mobile. “He’s off the train at Brøndbyøster. I reckon he’s on his way to your place, Curt.”

  Had he nodded off? He shook away his bewilderment and sat up in bed with the mobile to his ear. “Keep your distance. I’ll be ready when he gets here. But be discreet. The cadets from the police academy over the road are running around like cowboys and Indians.”

  Curt smiled. He would give this Assad a warm welcome.

  He would have to leave Beate for just a few minutes. He turned to ask her for her patience, only to see that her eyes were wide open, her head thrust back.

  He held his breath for a few seconds, then gasped as he looked into her glazed, lifeless gaze. She seemed to be staring at where he had lain, as though in her final moment she had sought contact. And he had been asleep. He was mortified. He had not been there for her when she needed him the most.

  He felt his abdomen tighten into a knot, then a pounding sensation delivered into his chest, causing him to convulse, a guttural sound rattling in his throat. His face contorted, and then a long, almost inaudible howl penetrated his sobbing.

  Thus he remained for some minutes, holding her hand in his, until finally he closed her eyes and got to his feet without looking back.

  In the room next to the dining room he found the bat with which his sons had hammered the daylights out of countless tennis balls. He weighed it in his hand, finding it suitably heavy, and then went out into the yard to lie in wait behind the gable end of the outbuilding.

  He listened to the boisterous sound of voices from over the road, where the police cadets were acting out their youthful ideals, separating good from bad. It was exactly what Curt was about to do now. He would deliver a crippling blow to the nape of Hafez el-Assad’s neck, then drag him quickly away to the safety of the outbuilding. When the others arrived they would help him get the body into the strong room.

  His mobile thrummed in his pocket.

  “Yes?” he whispered. “Where are you now?”

  “We’re standing at the junction of Vestre Gade and Brøndbyøstervej. He’s given us the slip.”

  Curt frowned. “What?”

  “He ducked into a housing development and all of a sudden he was gone.”

  “Split up and get after him immediately.”

  He snapped the mobile shut and looked around. He felt quite safe here in the corner of the yard, a high wall behind him facing Tværgaden. An intruder could come from only one direction, which was up the driveway, parallel to the outbuilding at whose far end he stood concealed. He was prepared.

  Only a few minutes passed before he heard the sound of footsteps. Cautious, tentative footsteps in the driveway, moving closer, meter by meter.

  Curt tightened his grip on the bat and crept forward to the corner of the building. He took a deep breath and held it until he saw a head appear.

  In the split-second before he hammered the weapon home, the head was withdrawn.

  “It’s me, Curt!” said a voice, quite unlike the Arab’s.

  A figure came forward, one of their own. A man Mikael used once in a while at some of their larger events.

  “You blithering idiot!” Curt hissed. “Get out of here, you’ll frighten him off. Back to the road, and make sure he doesn’t see you.”

  He stood for a while, his heart thumping in his chest as he cursed the fools in his midst. Come on, you little wog, he urged as the sounds of the police training exercises dwindled. Let’s get this over with.

  Hardly had the thought of the impending encounter flashed through his mind before a dull thud came from behind him. He glanced back in time to see a pair of hands appear on top of the wall, and as he turned the man landed like a cat, crouched on all fours in front of him, glaring at him with eyes that had fixed their prey.

  “We need to talk, Curt,” the Arab uttered immediately, but Wad raised the bat and brought it down with all his might.

  In one swift movement, the short, thick-bodied man spun aside, propelling himself upright with a powerful thrust. And as the bat struck the ground with a heavy thump, he leaped forward and grabbed Curt firmly with both arms around his torso.

  “We’re going inside now, understand?” he whispered. “You have too many hyenas running loose out here.”

  He squeezed hard until Curt felt his breath fail. He wanted to scream for help but was unable to fill his lungs with air.

  The Arab hauled him quickly across the yard onto the lawn by the back door. A couple of seconds more and they would have been inside. But then came the sound of footsteps running up the driveway and the figure of Mikael appeared, stopping suddenly and staring at them in surprise. Curt’s assailant squeezed harder, until the old man almost passed out. And then he released him.

  Curt lay for a moment facedown in the grass. He heard the tumult behind him. Blows exchanged, the invective of two languages.

  He got to his feet with difficulty and staggered over to the outbuilding where the bat still lay on the ground.

  When he picked it up, the Arab was standing in front of him.

  Curt glanced instinctively toward the lawn, where Mikael lay unconscious. Who was this man?

  “Let go of that,” said Hafez el-Assad, in a tone that excluded defiance.

  The sound of the wooden bat as it fell to the flagstones was like the feeling Curt had in his stomach.

  “What do you want with me?” he asked.

  “I know people like you better than you think, and you will not go free,” the Arab replied. “I want to know all about your activities, and I’m certain everything we need to incriminate you is inside this house. You are a murderer, Curt Wad.”

  He gripped Curt’s wrist firmly and dragged him along behind him.

  They reached the back door when something flew through the air, impacting on the Arab’s skull with a sickening crack. He crumpled to the ground.

  “There!” said a voice from behind. It was Mikael’s man. “That’s as far as he gets.”

  • • •

  Not long after Curt had ca
lled his protégé in the surgery he heard the key rattle in the lock downstairs.

  “Thanks for coming so quickly, Karl-Johan,” he said, as he led him to the bedroom.

  Karl-Johan Henriksen did as required, then removed his stethoscope and looked at Curt with a grave expression. “I’m very sorry, Curt,” he said. “But she’s at peace now.”

  He filled in the death certificate with trembling hands and seemed to be even more affected by the situation than Curt himself.

  “What are you going to do now, Curt?”

  “I’ve made arrangements with one of our supporters, an excellent undertaker in Karlslunde. I’ve just been on the phone to him and I’ll be seeing him this evening. Tomorrow I’ll call the pastor. Beate will be laid to rest in the old cemetery here at Brøndbyøster church.”

  Carl took the document and accepted Karl-Johan Henriksen’s condolences. They shook hands.

  And with that, a long and seemingly everlasting chapter had come to an end.

  It had been a truly strenuous day.

  He sat for a while with his wife and noted that her body was already cold. How fleeting life was.

  Then he made her up and tidied the bedroom. He took his car keys, went over to the outbuilding, opened the strong room, and saw there was still life in the dark figure that lay on the concrete floor.

  “Sleep well, my foolish little Arab. And if you have not departed this world when I get back from the undertaker, I shall be only too happy to help you off on the final journey.”

  38

  September 1987

  The closer Gitte got to Copenhagen, the more her plan took shape.

  Ten million was a lot of money, but Nete had more, plenty more. Gitte was only fifty-three, and ten million kroner was hardly going to last a lifetime. Not the way she spent money, not with all the dreams inside her head. If she looked after herself and cut back on her drinking, she might easily have another thirty or forty years ahead of her. In that case, it didn’t take an accountant to work out that ten million was on the short side.

 

‹ Prev