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Authors: Jo Nesbo

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BOOK: Blood on Snow
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CHAPTER
15

T
he day before Christmas Eve.

It had got colder again. That was the end of the mild weather for the time being.

I called the travel agent's from the phone box on the corner. They told me what plane tickets to Paris would cost. I said I'd call back. Then I phoned the Fisherman.

I said without any preamble that I wanted money for fixing Hoffmann.

“We're on an open line, Olav.”

“You're not being bugged,” I said.

“How do you know?”

“Hoffmann pays a guy at the phone company
who knows what phones are being bugged. Neither of you is on the list.”

“I'm helping you sort out your problem, Olav. Why should I pay you for that?”

“Because you'll earn so much from Hoffmann being out of the way that this will be small change.”

A pause. But not a long one.

“How much?”

“Forty thousand.”

“Okay.”

“In cash, to be picked up from the shop first thing tomorrow.”

“Okay.”

“One more thing. I'm not going to risk coming to the shop this evening—Hoffmann's people are getting a bit too close. Get the van to pick me up round the back of Bislett Stadium at seven o'clock.”

“Okay.”

“You got hold of the coffins and van?”

The Fisherman didn't answer.

“Sorry,” I said. “I'm used to organising everything myself.”

“Unless there was anything else?”

We hung up. I stood there looking at the phone. The Fisherman had agreed to forty thousand without a word of complaint. I'd have been happy with fifteen. Didn't the old shyster know that? It didn't make any sense. Okay, so it didn't make sense. I'd undersold myself. I should have asked for sixty. Eighty, maybe. But it was too late now; I'd just have to be happy with the fact that I'd actually managed to renegotiate the terms once.

—

As a rule I get nervous more than twenty-four hours before a job. And then I get less and less nervous as I start to count down the hours.

It was the same this time.

I stopped by the travel agent's and booked the Paris tickets. They recommended a small hotel in Montmartre. Reasonably priced, but cosy and romantic, the woman behind the counter said.

“Great,” I said.

“A Christmas present?” The woman smiled as she typed in the booking under a name that was
close to mine, but not quite the same. Not yet. I'd correct it just before we set off. She had her own name on a badge on the front of the pear-green jacket that was evidently the agency's uniform. Heavy make-up. Nicotine stains on her teeth. Suntan. Maybe subsidised trips to the sun were part of the job. I said I'd be back the following morning to pay in full.

I went out onto the street. Looked left and right. Longing for darkness.

On my way home I realised I was mimicking her. Maria.

Was. That. It.

—

“We can buy what you need in Paris,” I said to Corina, who seemed considerably more nervous than I was.

By six o'clock I had dismantled, cleaned and oiled my pistol and put it back together. Filled the magazine. I showered and changed in the bathroom. Thought through what was about to happen. Thought that I'd have to make sure
Klein was never behind me. I put my black suit on. Then sat down in the armchair. I was sweating. Corina was freezing.

“Good luck,” she said.

“Thanks,” I said, then got up and left.

CHAPTER
16

I
stamped my feet on the slope in the darkness behind the old skating and football stadium.

It had said in the
Evening Post
that it was going to be really cold that night and over the next few days, and that the record was bound to be broken now.

The black van pulled up at the edge of the pavement at exactly seven o'clock. Not a minute before, and not a minute after. I took that as a good sign.

I opened the back door and jumped in. Klein and the Dane were each sitting on a white coffin. They were both wearing black suits, white shirts and ties, as I had requested. The Dane welcomed me with some funny remark in his guttural grunt
of a language, but Klein just glared. I sat down on the third coffin and banged on the window of the driver's cab. This evening's chauffeur was the young guy who had noticed me when I first went into the fishmonger's.

The road up to Ris Church wound through quiet residential streets. I couldn't see them, but I knew what they were like.

I sniffed. Had the Fisherman used one of his own delivery vans? If he had, I hoped for his sake that he had put a fake number plate on it.

“Where's the van from?” I asked.

“It was parked in Ekeberg,” the Dane said. “The Fisherman asked us to find something suitable for a funeral.” He laughed out loud. “ ‘Suitable for a funeral.' ”

I dropped my follow-up question about why it stank of fish. I'd just realised that it was them. I remembered that I too had smelled of fish after my visit to the back room.

“How does it feel?” Klein suddenly asked. “Getting ready to fix your own boss?”

I knew that the less Klein and I said to each other, the better. “Don't know.”

“Course you do. Well?”

“Forget it.”

“No.”

I could see that Klein wasn't going to let it go.

“First, Hoffmann isn't my boss. Second, I don't feel anything.”

“Of course he's your boss!” I could hear the anger as a low rumble in his voice.

“If you say so.”

“Why would he
not
be your boss?”

“It's not important.”

“Come on, man. You want us to save your arse tonight, how about giving us”—he rubbed his thumb and forefinger together—“something in return?”

The van turned sharply and we slid around on the slippery coffin lids.

“Hoffmann paid for my services per unit,” I said. “And that makes him my customer. Apart from that—”

“Customer?”
Klein repeated. “And Mao was a
unit
?”

“If Mao was someone I fixed, then Mao was
a unit. I'm sorry if that was someone you had an emotional attachment to.”

“An emotional att—” Klein spluttered the words, then his voice cracked. He stopped and took a deep breath. “How long do you expect to live, then, fixer?”

“Tonight it's Hoffmann who's the unit,” I said. “I suggest we try to focus on that.”

“And when he's been fixed,” Klein said, “someone else will be the unit.”

He stared at me without even trying to conceal his hatred.

“Seeing as how you evidently like having a boss,” I said, “maybe I should remind you of the orders the Fisherman gave you.”

Klein was about to raise his ugly shotgun, but the Dane put a hand on his arm. “Take it easy, Klein.”

The van slowed down. The young man spoke through the glass. “Time to get in your vampire beds, boys.”

We each lifted the lid of our diamond-shaped coffin and squeezed inside. I waited until I saw
Klein lower the lid on his own coffin before lowering my own. We had two screws to fasten the lids from the inside. Just a couple of turns. Enough to hold them in place. But not so much that they couldn't be pushed off when the time came. I was no longer nervous. But my knees were trembling. Weird.

The van stopped, doors were opened and closed, and I could hear voices outside.

“Thanks for letting us use the crypt.” The driver's voice.

“Not a problem.”

“I was told I could have some help carrying them.”

“Yes, don't suppose you'll get much help from the dead 'uns.”

Gruff laughter. I reckoned we'd been met by one of the gravediggers. The back door of the van opened. I was closest to it, and felt myself being picked up. I lay as still as I could. Air holes had been drilled in the base and sides, and I could see beams of light in the darkness of the coffin as they carried me into the passageway.

“So this is the family that died on the Trondheim road?”

“Yes.”

“Read about it in the paper. Tragic. They're being buried up north, aren't they?”

“Yes.”

I could feel that we were going down, and I slid backwards, hitting my head against the end of the coffin. Shit, I thought they always carried coffins feetfirst.

“You haven't got time to drive them up before Christmas?”

“They're being buried in Narvik, that's a two-day drive.” Little shuffling steps. We were in the narrow stone staircase now. I remembered it well.

“Why not send them up by plane?”

“Those concerned thought that was too expensive,” the young man said. He was doing well. I'd told him that if there were too many questions he should say he'd only just started work at the funeral directors'.

“And they wanted them in a church in the meantime?”

“Yes. Christmas and all that.”

The coffin levelled out again.

“Well, that's understandable. And there's plenty of room here, as you can see. Just that coffin there, being buried tomorrow. Yes, it's open, the family are due soon for a viewing. We can put this one on these trestles.”

“We can put it straight on the floor.”

“You want the coffin on the concrete floor?”

“Yes.”

They'd stopped moving. It felt as if they were deliberating.

“Whatever you want.”

I was put down. I heard a scraping sound by my head, then steps fading away.

I was alone. I peered through one of the holes. Not quite alone. Alone with the corpse. A unit. My corpse. I had been alone here last time as well. My mum had looked so small lying there in the coffin. Dried up. Maybe her soul had taken more room inside her than most people's do. Her family were there. I'd never seen them before. When my mum hooked up with my father, her parents had cut her off. The idea that someone in their
family would marry a criminal wasn't something my grandparents, uncles and aunts could tolerate. That she had moved to the eastern side of the city with him was the only consolation: out of sight, out of mind. But I was in sight. In full sight of my grandparents, uncles and aunts, who up to then had only been people Mum had talked about when she was drunk or high. The first words I heard any of my relatives apart from my parents say to me were “so sorry.” About twenty people saying how sorry they were, in a church on the west side of the city, just a stone's throw from where she grew up. Then I had withdrawn to my side of the river once more, and had never seen any of them again.

I checked that the screws were still in place.

The second coffin arrived.

The footsteps died away again. I looked at the time. Half past seven.

The third coffin arrived.

The driver and the gravedigger went away, their voices disappearing up the steps as they talked about Christmas food.

So far everything had gone according to plan.

The priest obviously hadn't objected when I called on behalf of the family in Narvik to ask if the church would mind having the three coffins in the crypt over Christmas while they were en route. We were in position, and, with a bit of luck, in half an hour Hoffmann would be here. We could always hope he'd leave his bodyguards outside. Either way, it was no exaggeration to say that the element of surprise would be entirely on our side.

The luminous dial of my watch swam and smouldered in the darkness.

Ten to.

On the hour.

Five past.

A thought struck me. Those sheets of paper. The letter. It was still under the cutlery tray. Why hadn't I got rid of it? Had I just forgotten? And why was I asking myself that, rather than
what if
Corina found it? Did I want her to find it? Anyone who knew the answers to questions like that would be a rich man.

I heard vehicles outside. Doors closing.

Footsteps on the staircase.

They were here.

“He looks peaceful,” a woman's voice said quietly.

“They've made him look really nice,” an older woman's voice sniffed.

A man's voice: “I left the car key in the ignition, I think I'll just go—”

“You're not going anywhere, Erik.” The younger woman. “God, you're such a sissy.”

“But my dear, the car—”

“It's parked in a churchyard, Erik! What do you think's going to happen to it here?”

I peered out of one of the holes by my side.

I had hoped that Daniel Hoffmann would come alone. There were four of them, and they were all standing on the same side of the coffin, facing me. A balding man, similar in age to Daniel. Not much like him. Brother-in-law, maybe. That fitted with the woman beside him: she was in her thirties, and there was a girl of ten or twelve. Younger sister and niece. There was a certain family resemblance. And the older, grey-haired woman was the spitting image of Daniel. Big sister? Young mother?

But no Daniel Hoffmann.

I tried to convince myself that he'd be coming in his own car, that it would have been odd for the whole family to turn up in the same vehicle.

This was confirmed when the brother-in-law with the receding hairline glanced at his watch.

“It was always the plan that Benjamin would take over from his father,” the older woman sniffed. “What's Daniel going to do now?”

“Mother,” the younger woman said in a warning tone.

“Oh, don't pretend Erik doesn't know.”

Erik raised and lowered the shoulders of his jacket, and rocked on his heels. “Yes, I know what Daniel's business entails.”

“Then you know how ill he is as well.”

“Elise has mentioned it, yes. But we don't have much to do with Daniel. Or this…er…”

“Corina,” Elise said.

“Maybe it's time for you to see a bit more of him, then,” the older woman said.

“Mother!”

“I'm just saying, we don't know how long we're going to have Daniel.”

“We've got no intention of having anything to do with Daniel's business, Mother. Just look at what happened to Benjamin.”

“Shh!”

Steps on the stairs.

Two figures came into the room.

One of them hugged the older woman. Nodded curtly to the younger one and the brother-in-law.

Daniel Hoffmann. And with him a Pine who was keeping his mouth shut for once.

They took up a position between us and the coffin, with their backs to us. Perfect. If I think a unit that I need to fix might be armed, I'll go to almost any lengths to get myself in a position where I can shoot them in the back.

I clenched my fist round the handle of the pistol.

Waiting.

Waiting for the guy in the bearskin hat.

He didn't come.

He must have been in position outside the church.

That would make things easier to start with,
but he could be a potential problem that we'd have to deal with later.

My cue to the Dane and Klein was simple: when I yelled.

And there wasn't a single logical reason in the world why that shouldn't happen right then. But it still felt as if there was a right moment, one particular second squeezed in between all the other seconds. Like with the ski pole and my father. Like in a book, when an author decides precisely when something will happen, something you know is going to happen, because the author has already said it's going to happen, but it hasn't happened yet. Because there's a proper place in a story, so you have to wait a bit, so that things can happen in the right order. I closed my eyes and felt the clock count down, a spring tensing, a drop still clinging to the point of an icicle.

And then the moment arrived.

I yelled and pushed the lid off.

BOOK: Blood on Snow
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