Chilled to the Bone

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Chilled to the Bone Page 1

by Quentin Bates




  Quentin Bates escaped suburbia as a teenager and spent a decade in Iceland, before returning to his English roots with an Icelandic family and turning to writing for a living.

  Chilled to the Bone is his third novel featuring Sergeant Gunnhildur, who emerged from an intimate knowledge of Iceland, as well as a deep affection for and fascination with the country and its people.

  Also by Quentin Bates

  Frozen Out

  Cold Comfort

  CHILLED

  TO THE BONE

  Quentin Bates

  Constable & Robinson Ltd.

  55–56 Russell Square

  London WC1B 4HP

  www.constablerobinson.com

  First published in the UK by C&R Crime,

  an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd., 2013

  Copyright © Quentin Bates, 2013

  The right of Quentin Bates to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

  All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or to actual events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in

  Publication Data is available from the British Library

  ISBN: 978-1-47210-084-9 (paperback)

  ISBN: 978-1-47210-468-7 (ebook)

  Typeset by TW Typesetting, Plymouth, Devon

  Printed and bound in the UK

  1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

  Cover image by David Woodroffe;

  Cover by JoeRoberts.co.uk

  1

  Thursday

  Gunna stamped the snow from her boots and flinched as the overpowering heat of the hotel’s lobby hit her like a slap in the face. The door whispered shut behind her as she looked around, spying a man wearing a grey suit and a worried expression by the reception desk. He immediately hurried over to her.

  ‘You’re from the police?’ He asked in a voice laden with drama but kept so low as to be almost a murmur.

  ‘That’s me. Look like a copper, do I?’ Gunna replied brightly, shooting out a hand for the man to grasp and shake limply. ‘Gunnhildur Gísladóttir. And you are?’

  ‘Yngvi Jónsson, I’m the duty manager. Where are the rest of you?’

  ‘Only me to start with. Can you show me what’s happened?’

  Yngvi wrung his hands as he scuttled towards the lift, which opened in front of them.

  ‘Of course, we’ve had guests who’ve had problems before, and even people who have . . .’ he gulped, ‘passed away on the premises. But never anything like this.’

  ‘You know who the man is, I take it?’

  ‘Of course. He’s stayed here a good many times in the past and has always been a real gentleman. It’s been such a shock . . .’

  ‘And his family? He has a family I presume?’

  ‘I haven’t contacted anyone except the police. The staff are in the canteen, waiting for you.’

  Gunna nodded. Yngvi continued to wring his hands and the lift played muzak until a soft voice warned them the third floor was approaching.

  ‘This way, please,’ he said needlessly, stepping out of the lift and hurrying along the corridor, with Gunna striding at his heels. He swiped a card through the electronic lock of a door, looked left and right along the corridor and pushed the door open.

  ‘There,’ he said, and Gunna stepped inside, pulling on a pair of surgical gloves as she did so.

  The room was silent and dark. She carefully used the butt of a ballpoint pen to turn on the lights at the switch by the door and surveyed the room in front of her and the naked man stretched across the king-sized bed.

  ‘Who’s been in here?’ Gunna asked, calling over her shoulder and sensing Yngvi standing in the doorway.

  ‘The cleaner who found him, the supervisor, me and the doctor.’

  ‘Which doctor was that?’

  ‘Sveinn Ófeigsson. He’s retired, but he’s staying here at the moment, and as he was in the bar, I asked him to come up with me. I don’t know if that was right or not, but it seemed quicker than calling out an ambulance.’

  Gunna went along the side of the bed and crouched by the man’s head, lolling at an unnatural angle, his mouth blocked by a bright red ball held in place by straps around the back of his neck. The face looked vaguely familiar, a man in late middle age, with eyes half-closed and strands of thin hair in disarray, revealing a gleaming scalp. The pale arm that reached up behind him was tied securely at the wrist to the top of the bed frame. Standing up and retracing her steps, she saw that the man’s other hand and both ankles were tied in the same way with dark red scarves that almost matched the burgundy of the rich bedspread.

  ‘Don’t touch anything, please,’ Gunna told Yngvi, who had advanced a few steps into the room.

  Gunna looked around, taking in as many details of the room as she could, but nothing appeared to be out of place. A suitcase lay open on a frame in the corner of the room, with rows of shirts and underwear neatly laid out and ready to be plucked for use.

  The bathroom light shimmered into life automatically just as she was looking for the switch, to reveal sparkling marble tiles and a vast basin. A small sponge bag sat next to the sink, along with an electric razor. Gunna peered into the sink and spied a long black hair in sharp relief against the pale marble.

  She nodded to herself and backed out to where Yngvi was waiting for her.

  ‘That’ll do for the moment, thanks. I’ll get a forensic team to come and examine the room as soon as possible. Until then, it needs to be sealed.’

  ‘But what about . . . ?’ Yngvi asked, gesturing towards the corpse on the bed.

  ‘Don’t worry. He’s not going to run away. We’d best go back downstairs and I’ll start asking questions. You said the girl who found him is still here?’

  Yngvi nodded miserably.

  ‘In that case, I’m going to have to borrow your office, probably for the rest of the day,’ she said.

  ‘I was wondering how long . . . ?’

  ‘How long, what?’

  ‘How long all this will take? He was due to leave today and we’ll be needing the room for a guest tonight.’

  ‘In that case, I think someone is going to be disappointed. This is going to take a while, so you might have to send your guest to Hotel Borg instead. Come on.’

  Hekla’s new hair had a blonde sheen that gave her an allure and a confidence that she enjoyed. Everything was new, the expensively simple dress, the nails, the shoes, even her minuscule underwear was understatedly elegant and straight from the packet.

  She sat in the hotel’s lobby and did her best to stay calm, forcing herself to breathe at a measured rate in order to numb the combination of anticipation and anxiety. This wasn’t something she could see as a job and detach herself from. It still took its toll and kept her awake at nights, especially since that scare before Christmas, though less often than before. In a small country like Iceland, she reflected, there simply wasn’t enough of a clientele. Sooner or later she would run out of men, be recognized on the street or else have to leave the country and maybe take her line of work with her.

  Hekla sipped chilled water and delicately replaced the glass on the table in front of her. She could retire, she thought, and smiled at the prospect. The
bank balance was piling up nicely. Debts had been paid off. She would be able to take it easy and perhaps get a proper job once the children were at school.

  She hardly noticed the florid man in a dark business suit approach and stand looking sideways at her. Hekla looked up and reproached herself for a lack of awareness, giving the man a discreet smile and a nod.

  ‘Sonja?’ he asked.

  ‘I’m Sonja. You must be Haraldur?’

  ‘That’s me. Call me Halli. Shall we?’ he asked, the eagerness in his voice unmistakable.

  ‘Of course. But if you don’t mind, I’d like to talk here first for a little while. Think of it as an icebreaker.’ She smiled. ‘Would you like a drink?’

  Haraldur sat in the chair opposite her, at ease but still tense, although he hid it well. Hekla looked deliberately at the bar and caught the eye of the young man behind it, who quickly came across to them, his steps silent on the hotel’s lush carpet.

  ‘Can I offer you anything?’ he asked.

  ‘What would you like, Haraldur?’

  ‘Bacardi and Coke for me.’

  ‘And I’ll have some tea, please. Camomile if you have it.’

  The barman almost bowed as he backed away.

  ‘So, Haraldur. Are you in Reykjavík on business?’

  ‘Yup. Here for two days, then back home.’

  ‘You’re in the seafood business?’

  ‘Actually, no. Transport and storage equipment. There isn’t much I couldn’t tell you about forklift trucks,’ he said with a sharp bark of humourless laughter.

  Hekla could see that he was becoming increasingly nervous; perhaps he was worried that someone would see him with an unfamiliar young woman. The hand that lifted the glass the barman brought him trembled slightly.

  The barman placed a small teapot and a delicate china cup in front of her.

  ‘Thank you. Charge to room 406, please,’ Hekla said to the youth, and smiled warmly at him as he backed away again.

  ‘No offence, but I’d just like to lay down a few ground rules before we go any further,’ Hekla said, flashing a smile.

  ‘Yeah. Of course.’

  ‘I see myself as a professional and I expect to be treated as one. There has to be respect on both sides. I take pride in my work and aim to do a good job, the same as I’m sure you do in your professional life,’ she said smoothly.

  ‘Absolutely.’

  ‘Once we are alone, I’m at work. I expect you to address me as “mistress” at all times. If at any time you want to stop, all you have to do is say “terminate” and we stop immediately. You’re happy with that?’

  ‘Understood.’

  ‘What could you tell me about forklift trucks, then?’ she asked, her voice silky, and deliberately uncrossed her legs as slowly as she dared.

  ‘Well, they come in all sizes. Depends what you need to . . .’

  His voice faltered as Hekla recrossed her legs the other way, hiding the reason for Haraldur’s sudden loss of speech. She poured fragrant tea into her cup and sipped, looking over the rim at him and wanting to laugh as he quickly gulped his drink. ‘You were saying?’

  Jóel Ingi Bragason shrugged on his jacket and picked his way through the toys that his wife’s nieces and nephews had left littering the hall to the door of the flat.

  ‘See you at six,’ he called out, waiting for a second for a reply that didn’t come from his wife before closing the front door and cursing the realization that she must have gone back to sleep.

  It was cold and damp outside, as well as dark, and Jóel Ingi found it difficult to reconcile himself to Icelandic winters, even in Reykjavík where heavy snow was a rarity. The years of study in America and a delightful sojourn at the Sorbonne had spoiled him, he reflected as he took short steps along the ice-bound but gradually thawing pavement, scared that overconfidence in unsuitable shoes would send him flying. Once in the car, he felt better. It became a bubble around him, safe and warm, its airbags and discreet steel pillars protecting him from the cruel world outside.

  He could have walked to work in roughly the same time as it took to walk to the car and drive it to the underground car park beneath the ministry.

  Coffee arrived halfway through the morning and it was a relief. A couple of glasses of wine the night before had left him heavier than he should have felt and Jóel Ingi wondered if this was the onset of middle age. In spite of two strong cups of coffee, he struggled to stay awake during a meeting later in the morning, and had to force himself to pay attention to the minutiae of European Union proceedings.

  Checking his phone discreetly during the meeting, he saw there were no messages from Agnes, which was a relief as she had taken to shooting him sideways glances and he was beginning to get the feeling that she was checking up on him. Shrugging off his misgivings, he steered his thoughts back to the fine detail of the proposed policy, but not before noticing with pleasure that the most junior person in the room, a newly appointed secretary, had slipped off her shoes under the table opposite him and that she had delightfully shapely calves. The voice of the meeting’s chairman became little more than a distant drone as Jóel Ingi’s thoughts drifted increasingly towards how those legs might shape up above the knee.

  As his thoughts slipped in another direction, he scowled to himself, unconsciously chewing his lip as memories of that damned woman came back to him again, and he wondered if that afternoon would come back to haunt him. He started as he looked up and saw with discomfort that the girl with the delightful calves was looking right at him with concern in her eyes. Jóel Ingi smiled as broadly as he could and hoped that he hadn’t looked too bored or stupid.

  The city felt different. There was a cautious, watchful feel to Reykjavík, as if the place were waiting for another kicking. Baddó hadn’t spent many of his years away following events in Iceland, but the news of the financial crash and then the volcano erupting and stopping air traffic had been the basis of a few ribald comments from prisoners who hadn’t got to know him or his reputation, resulting in more that one sore head.

  When Baddó had left Iceland for somewhere a man could have space to flex his muscles, it still felt like a quiet backwater, a place where not much happened and, when it did, it wasn’t going to happen in too much of a hurry, regardless of how much fuss people made. The occasional visit during the good years before he had fallen foul of the wrong people and found himself behind bars, when it seemed that business had discovered some hidden philosopher’s stone had left a sour taste behind. All the same, it had been like a rest cure to come back and see the place once in a while. Although most of his family hadn’t wanted a great deal to do with him, there were a few friends who respected a man who could stand his corner and keep his mouth shut.

  Now it was different. Baddó had to admit even to himself that he was tired. He had been ready to explode with fury at any moment during the flight over the Baltic with a mustachioed policeman on either side of him, and while they sat and wolfed down pizzas and beer at Kåstrup, their eyes never strayed far from him. The two hulking giants didn’t take their eyes off him until the stewardess had closed and locked the pressure-tight door of the aircraft that would take him back to Iceland for the first time in almost a decade.

  He unfolded the newspaper he had put under his arm without thinking in the shop at the corner, and was surprised to see that it was in English. He threw it in the bin, lay down on the wine-red sofa, tucking a cushion under his head, and tried to sleep. Ten minutes later he gave up and stood to gaze out at the grey roofs opposite the little flat’s bathroom window, watching flakes of snow spiral down and settle. It was going to be a cold day, he thought, wondering when María would be home.

  ‘His name’s Jóhannes Karlsson,’ Helgi said. ‘Shipowner from Húsavík, retired. Lives in Copenhagen part of the year. Rolling in dosh, if I recall correctly. Used to be in politics years ago, MP for a term or two in the seventies, until he decided business was more important, or lucrative, than politics. Does that tell you
what you want to know?’

  Gunna and Helgi had retired to a corner of the hotel’s bar to confer while the forensic team and the police pathologist examined the room where they had left the late Jóhannes Karlsson still strapped to the bed he had died on.

  ‘Independence or Progressive?’

  ‘Independence Party, I think. I wouldn’t want to think that he was one of us,’ Helgi said in a severe tone.

  ‘One of you, you mean. I’d prefer it if you didn’t take me for a Progressive Party supporter, thank you very much.’

  ‘Sorry. I never saw you as anything but a bleeding heart liberal, Gunna.’

  ‘Cause of death?’ she asked.

  ‘You’re asking me?’

  ‘Sorry, Helgi. No, just thinking out loud. I’m wondering if this was murder or accidental? What do you reckon?’

  Helgi snorted. ‘Doesn’t look in the least bit intentional to me. I reckon there was some fun and games going on, our boy got his first stiffy for years and keeled over under the strain. The girlfriend – or boyfriend, or paid companion, or whatever – ran for it. That’s what tells me that whoever was with him probably decided he or she wasn’t being paid enough to deal with this kind of stuff.’

  ‘You know, Helgi, with brains like yours you’re wasted on the police. I reckon you’ve pretty much summed it up. But, unfortunately, that doesn’t mean I get to go home.’

  ‘And do some knitting?’ Helgi asked innocently.

  ‘Don’t push it,’ Gunna growled, signalling to Yngvi, hovering by the bar, with a cup-to-the-lips gesture. ‘How long has he been staying here? This place must cost a fortune,’ she said as a waiter approached with a tray of cups and a flask of coffee.

  ‘He’s been here for two weeks. His wife was here for the first week, apparently, and went home while Jóhannes was dealing with some business in Reykjavík. He was due to check out at twelve today. When he hadn’t showed up at one, the chambermaid knocked, as they always do, to see if he’d already gone, and found him spark out on the bed. She screamed, called the housekeeping manager, and she called us. I called the doctor who was at the bar.’

 

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