CHAPTER ONE
This was going to be the most important day of his life. He knew it. He could feel it. This would be the day when he left his mark on the world.
Constable Halldór’s fingers tightened on the wheel of his police 4x4 as it hurtled through the fog towards the farm by the river where the polar bear had been sighted. The professional hunters in their souped-up Super Jeep were at least ten kilometres away. He would get there first. He would have only a few minutes to make the shot.
The polar bear had been spotted on a beach six hours before by some fishermen, who had immediately called the coastguard. Polar bears were not native to Iceland, but once every couple of years one would pop up along the northern coastline, usually having ridden sea ice that had drifted eastwards from Greenland. Often they swam the last few miles to shore. By the time they reached Iceland, they were tired and hungry. And dangerous.
The fishermen had only caught a brief glimpse because of the poor visibility. But it had been enough for Halldór to organize a couple of parties to scout for the bear, including the two professional hunters armed with the kind of rifle that could kill a reindeer at a thousand metres. Halldór had been following on behind when he had been alerted by the call from a young girl – a farmer’s daughter – who had said she had seen the bear. Her mother was shopping in town, and her father was out with the other scouts.
The girl was alone with her little brother on the farm, and Halldór was closest to her. In the back of the police car was his .22 rifle. It was much too small a calibre to kill a big bear under normal circumstances. But many years before, Halldór had read the story of some hikers in the West Fjords in the seventies who had come upon a polar bear while carrying only a .22. One of them had waited until the bear had approached really close and then shot it through the eye. That had taken real nerve. And marksmanship.
Halldór had nerve. And he was one of the best shots in the north of Iceland. As a policeman in Reykjavík, he had applied twice for the Viking Squad – the Icelandic SWAT team – but been turned down each time. The problem wasn’t his ability to handle firearms, but his physical fitness. And now, aged forty-nine, and after seven years driving his car around and around the small town of Raufarhöfn in north-east Iceland, his girth had grown even greater. But he still knew how to shoot. And he still had nerve.
After a lull of several years, there had been a spate of polar bear invasions from the sea. Each time the bears had been shot, and there had been an outcry from urban do-gooders, people like his daughter Gudrún, for a national polar bear policy. Anaesthetic darts had been stockpiled, and experts flown in from Denmark. But even then, when the next polar bear had shown up, it too had had to be shot before it harmed any of the sightseers who had driven out to gawk at it. And so the new polar bear policy had been determined: shoot on sight. It was too expensive and too dangerous to do anything else.
The road sloped downward and the police car emerged from the fog into a shallow valley with a fast river tumbling down its middle. A cluster of prosperous farm buildings, with white concrete walls and red corrugated metal roofs, appeared. The farmer made a little money from sheep and quite a lot from leasing fishing rights on the river.
Halldór scanned the fields and pasture surrounding the farm. A flock of sheep was scattering in all directions; something had spooked them. And then he saw it. A dirty white bear loping along towards the farmhouse. And in front of it, a little girl standing still, staring at it.
Jesus!
Halldór leaned on his horn, swerved off the road and on to the grass, accelerating towards the girl. The bear stopped to look at the new arrival. The girl, too, turned towards him.
He pulled up between the girl and the bear, which was now only about a hundred metres away.
He lowered the window. ‘Jump in, Anna!’
The girl opened the passenger door and climbed in.
‘What do you think you were doing?’ Halldór said.
‘I wanted to speak to the polar bear,’ she said.
‘Those animals are dangerous!’ Halldór said. ‘He’s come a long way and he’s hungry.’
‘He’s not dangerous. Egill told me about polar bears. They are friendly. They help people.’
Egill was the old man who lived in the run-down farm barely visible at the base of the cloud on the slope on the other side of the river. He was about eighty and had long ago lost his marbles.
‘They are not friendly, Anna; they attack people, believe me. Now where is your brother?’
‘Back in the farmhouse,’ said the little girl.
‘Good.’ Halldór looked at the bear, which was staring at the vehicle. ‘OK, sit tight, Anna.’
Slowly he climbed out of the car and went around to the back to take out his rifle. The bear watched, but the girl couldn’t see him. Once the gun was loaded, Halldór made his way around the car, rested his elbows on the bonnet and aimed at the bear.
It was smaller than he had imagined it would be, and thinner; he could see its ribs. But it was still a magnificent animal.
It was also a hundred metres away, and had turned its rump towards Halldór.
A .22 bullet in the arse would do nothing to a polar bear apart from make it really angry.
‘You’re not going to shoot it!’ shouted the girl.
‘This is a dart gun,’ said Halldór. ‘I’m going to put it to sleep.’
‘It’s not a dart gun,’ the girl said. ‘My dad has a gun like that that he uses to shoot foxes. I’m not going to let you kill the lovely bear.’
What happened next would be etched in Halldór’s brain for the little time that remained of his life.
The girl jumped out of the car and ran towards the bear, shouting: ‘Look out, polar bear!’
The bear turned and, after a second’s thought, ambled towards the girl.
Halldór’s instinct was to run after the girl and pull her back. But if he did that, the bear would escape, run off into the mist. Sure, it would be shot eventually by one of the professional hunters. But not by him.
The girl stopped, suddenly aware that a very large animal with teeth and claws was approaching her. She was only a few metres from the police car. There was still time for her to turn and run. There was even time for Halldór to drag her back. But she froze.
Halldór took careful aim. The bear was coming directly towards him, its eyes two round black holes staring straight ahead.
At last the girl screamed and turned. The bear was nearly on her, only twenty metres away.
Halldór took his time. He could make this shot ten times out of ten as long as he kept his nerve. He inhaled, then exhaled slowly and squeezed the trigger. The bear dropped to the ground as the bullet tore through its eye and into its brain.
The two young men, a German and an Icelander, breathed heavily as they climbed the hill. The sky was a pale blue, and there was no sign of the thick low cloud that had settled over the area during the previous five days.
The Icelander, a thin man with straggly long hair, wearing jeans and an ‘Extinction is Forever’ T-shirt, paused and raised the binoculars that were hanging around his neck to scan the ponds and marshes of the Melrakkaslétta – the ‘fox plain’ that stretched out to the north of the town.
‘Nothing,’ he said.
‘She must have drowned,’ said the German in English. He was a few years older than the Icelander, a few years neater.
The bear that had been shot four days before was not yet fully grown, and the theory was that its mother may have landed as well. But now that the weather had cleared up and it was possible to see more than a couple of hundred metres, that seemed increasingly unlikely.
‘I’m afraid you have wasted your trip, Martin,
’ the Icelander said, turning back up the hill.
‘Yeah,’ said Martin, following him. ‘It would have been cool to actually see a polar bear. And to stop those bastards shooting it.’
‘Here it is,’ said the Icelander, whose name was Alex. ‘The Arctic Henge.’
On the crest of the hill above them stood a half-built giant stone circle, designed in the manner of Stonehenge, with four tall stone gates at each point of the compass. The low sun painted geometric shadows down the eastern slope of the hill.
‘Cool,’ said Martin again. It was his favourite English word. ‘You say it acts like some kind of sundial?’
‘Apparently.’
They walked around the site, trying to figure out what it all meant. Alex had brought with him a drawing of what the finished henge would look like. The layout was based on an ancient Icelandic poem, but he was confused about what signified what, and Martin’s questions were just confusing him more.
‘Well, let’s ask that guy,’ Martin said.
‘What guy?’
Martin pointed to a black-clad leg sticking out from behind one of the stone pillars of a gate.
As the two men approached the gate, more of the figure came into view.
‘Mein Gott!’
It was a man. He was wearing a black police uniform. He was slumped against the pillar. And where his right eye should have been was a bloody mess.
CHAPTER TWO
It was a long journey from Reykjavík to Raufarhöfn and Detective Vigdís Audardóttir had decided to drive the whole way, taking the northern route via Akureyri and Húsavík. She had left before breakfast and it was now mid-afternoon. Raufarhöfn was in the far north-east of the country, and the last stretch of road there hugged the north coast to a point a kilometre south of the Arctic Circle. To her left the sea was a ruffled greyish blue; to her right the land was a ruffled brownish green. Farms were few and far between. It was a fine day; the sun shone down a weak yellow on the eerie remoteness of the Melrakkaslétta.
She couldn’t see any foxes, but the seashore and the lakes were teeming with bird life of all shapes and sizes. The area was an important hub in the transatlantic aerial migration network.
She felt alone. She felt good.
When Inspector Baldur, the head of the Violent Crimes Unit, had asked for volunteers to travel to Raufarhöfn to help out with a murder investigation, she had jumped at the chance to get out of Reykjavík. For once she could afford to leave her alcoholic mother for a couple of weeks. Vigdís knew she should be visiting her, but she wanted to get away from the constant reminder that she had failed in keeping her mother off the booze, and the growing realization that she would always fail: that whatever rehab programmes she went on, however much money Vigdís spent, her mother Audur would always come back to the drink.
At least her mother was somewhere safe now. Somewhere she couldn’t get hold of a drink. Somewhere where if she hit someone, it was someone else’s problem.
Vigdís’s mother was in prison.
She had struck one of her boyfriends too hard over the head with a candlestick during a drunken fight. The boyfriend had ended up unconscious and in hospital, and yes he did want to press charges. So Audur was spending two months in prison.
But Vigdís wasn’t just running away from the unsolvable problem of her mother. She was also running away from her boss, Sergeant Magnús Ragnarsson.
She turned a corner around a headland and Raufarhöfn came into sight. A classic Icelandic church with white walls and a red metal roof stood by the sheltered harbour, behind which disused fish factories and a ribbon of houses ran along the main road. Raufarhöfn had been a boom town in the 1960s when herring had been harvested from the surrounding seas, but with the disappearance of the herring the town had shrunk, leaving abandoned fish-processing plants and houses, and an oversized graveyard of white dots behind a white wooden fence on a hillside overlooking the town. The Arctic Henge guarded the town from its little citadel on another hill, oddly modern, like a screenshot from a fantasy computer game, especially when compared to the run-down twentieth-century decay of the town itself.
After the peace of the desolate drive, Vigdís steeled herself for the hurly-burly of a murder investigation. Raufarhöfn may be a sleepy little town, but Vigdís suspected that the murder of the local policeman had woken it up.
The police station was easy to find – a low white shed by the shore that looked more like a warehouse than a government building, with a number of police vehicles, marked and unmarked, outside it. Inside, half a dozen police officers from Húsavík and Akureyri milled about the two desks in the cramped quarters, as did two plain-clothes officers: Ólafur, the inspector who was head of CID in Akureyri, and Björn, one of his young detectives. Vigdís had worked with Björn on a case in Snaefellsnes. She hadn’t been impressed – his ambition exceeded his abilities. Ólafur she knew little about, having only met him a couple of times when he had visited police headquarters in Reykjavík.
They knew Vigdís. She was, after all, Iceland’s only black detective.
Ólafur had commandeered one of the two desks, so Vigdís took a collapsible chair opposite. The detective inspector was in his late thirties, lean, with buzz-cut black hair and small blue eyes under a frown that seemed to be permanent. Although Ólafur was significantly senior to Vigdís, Vigdís had more experience of murder investigations as part of the Violent Crimes Unit in the Metropolitan Police. There was just more crime in Reykjavík with its population of 180,000 people than in Akureyri, with 18,000.
‘Wasted your time, Vigdís,’ Ólafur said. ‘I called Baldur to send you back, but you were already at least halfway. Mind you, we will still need some help wrapping the case up, so you may as well stick around.’
‘You’ve made an arrest?’
‘Two,’ said the inspector. ‘Alex Einarsson, twenty-two, from Gardabaer, and Martin Fiedler, twenty-five, a German citizen from a place called Siegen. They are both extreme animal-rights activists who rushed here when they heard about the polar bear getting shot.’
‘Have they confessed?’
‘Not yet. I’ve interviewed Alex. A nasty piece of work. He denied shooting Halldór, but he said he was glad he had been killed. Said he deserved to die for shooting the polar bear.’ Ólafur’s voice was laden with contempt, a sentiment Vigdís shared.
‘Bastard.’
Ólafur glanced at her and nodded grimly.
‘We are waiting for an interpreter to interview the German. He doesn’t speak Icelandic, of course. She’s coming from Húsavík, so should be here soon.’ Húsavík was about an hour and a half away.
Vigdís nodded. The rules were that interviews with foreign nationals had to be conducted in Icelandic through official interpreters. Which was cumbersome since most police officers under the age of forty spoke fluent English, as did most foreign suspects.
Her colleagues disliked the regulation but it suited Vigdís, whose English was poor. In fact, she refused to speak the language.
‘What evidence do you have?’ she asked.
‘No direct evidence yet,’ said the inspector. ‘But the forensic team have arrived from Reykjavík and they are at the scene now. You may have seen it when you came into town – the Arctic Henge on the brow of a hill.’
‘I saw it,’ said Vigdís.
‘I’m sure they’ll find something.’
‘If you have no evidence, why have you arrested them?’ Vigdís asked.
‘Because they are the only people in town who could have shot Halldór.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘This is a very small town. Halldór has been here for four years and he is well liked. There are a few people who thought he was a bit officious, but there was no scandal around him, no motive to kill him.’
‘How can you be sure?’ asked Vigdís.
‘He was shot through the eye. Four days ago, he shot a polar bear through the eye. You cannot tell me that is a coincidence. So we know the motiv
e. And there were two foreigners who showed up in town who were very angry about the polar bear. This isn’t Reykjavík; we don’t have a couple of hundred thousand people to choose from. It can only be them.’
Vigdís really didn’t like the complacent Icelandic assumption that it must be the foreigners who had committed the crime, but in this case she had to admit it had some logic. They would need to find some real evidence, though, if they were going to keep the two men in custody for more than twenty-four hours.
‘When the interpreter comes do you want to join me interviewing the German? Good cop, bad cop?’ Ólafur smiled. ‘I’ll be the bad cop.’
There was a small interview room in the police station. In it were crammed Ólafur, Vigdís, the interpreter – who was a middle-aged schoolteacher from Húsavík named Sonja – and the suspect, Martin Fiedler. He had curly light brown hair, a neatly trimmed reddish beard and soft brown eyes. He seemed, to Vigdís, patient rather than angry.
Bad cop went first.
‘Did you shoot Constable Halldór?’ Ólafur asked in Icelandic. He then waited while the question was translated into English – Martin Fiedler had opted for that language rather than German. The interpreter spoke both.
‘No,’ he said calmly.
‘You are aware that he shot a polar bear through the eye four days ago?’
‘I’m aware of that,’ said Martin.
‘Do you approve of that?’
‘No. Not at all. I think it was totally unnecessary. The Icelandic government should have shot the bear with a dart gun and returned it to Greenland.’
‘All right. And do you think Constable Halldór deserved to die for killing the bear?’ The detective’s eyes were burning with anger.
‘Of course not,’ said Martin. ‘I don’t believe in violence against people any more than I believe in violence against animals. He should have been arrested for a criminal act and tried. But not shot. No.’
‘Your friend Alex said that he should have been shot.’
‘Well, Alex is wrong,’ said Martin. ‘But before you ask, Alex didn’t shoot the policeman.’
The Polar Bear Killing Page 1