Read Invisible Murder (Nina Borg #2) Online
Authors: Lene Kaaberbol,Agnete Friis
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths, #General
The professor made another note on his yellow pad.
“Fail,” he said, without looking up.
Someone behind Sándor dropped a pencil. He could hear the crisp little smack as it hit the table, followed by a clicking roll.
“Excuse me?” Sándor said, thinking he must have misheard.
The professor ripped the yellow page off the pad, folded it carefully, made another note on a grading sheet that was waiting next to him, and placed both sheets into a manila envelope. He pushed the envelope across the mahogany desk toward Sándor.
“If you have any questions, please direct them to the guidance counselor,” he said, his eyes already moving on to the next student. “Dora Kocsis.”
The girl stood up. She was deathly pale, and her skin looked clammy. Sándor could see the disbelief he himself was feeling reflected in her face. Maybe she was wondering what you had to do to pass if Sándor had failed.
“Please leave the premises,” the professor told Sándor. “Don’t forget
your envelope. It contains important information about your situation.”
Sándor took the manila envelope with numb fingers.
“I don’t understand.…” he began, but he could tell from the steeliness of the arrogant face that his initial impression had been right: It didn’t matter at all what he said or did today. The outcome had been determined in advance.
It wasn’t until he reached the door that he received something that resembled an explanation. “Horváth.”
Sándor turned halfway around.
“A law degree is a weapon. The
law itself
is a weapon.”
Sándor still didn’t understand, not until the professor added:
“What makes you think Hungary wants to arm someone like you?”
H
E DIALED LUJZA’S
number and then found he couldn’t force himself to speak.
“Sándor? Is that you?”
“Yes.”
“Thank God. Are you … did they release you?”
“Yes.”
“Are you okay?”
He didn’t say anything. There was so much distance between him and those words, between her and him. Someone like you.
“Where are you?”
“Home.”
“I’m coming over. Don’t go anywhere.”
“No. I mean, no, don’t come.”
“Sándor! Why not?’
“Because … I’m not going to be here by the time you get here.” Now it was her turn to be silent. He sensed her confusion, her hurt feelings.
“What’s wrong?”
“Nothing. I just have to go home for a while.”
“Now? Don’t you have your exam?”
“No.”
He hung up, because he couldn’t bear to explain. She called back again right away, but he turned off his phone.
He sat on the bed, in just his underwear again. He had hung his suit neatly on a coat hanger; even now habit took over. He unfolded the three sheets of paper that had been in the manila envelope again.
One was a copy of the official grading sheet, where after
Evaluation
it succinctly said
Fail
. The second was the sheet with the professor’s notes from the examination. It said only two things. In the name field, the professor had written
Sándor Rézmüves
, not
Sándor Horváth
. And underneath that there was just one sentence:
Has nothing relevant to say
.
The third sheet was an official letter from the university informing him that since he was no longer enrolled, they had to ask him to vacate his room at the Szigony Dormitory by May 15. The name
Horváth
was crossed out and replaced with
Rézmüves
. He wasn’t sure if the administration office had done that or the professor himself.
He stood up and went over to his desk. All of his books and notes were gone, and the police had also confiscated his computer, but Tamás’s mobile phone number was still sitting on the slip of paper he had tacked to his bulletin board. He turned his phone on again. He supposed he ought to be glad they had let him keep that.
Tamás answered after two rings.
“Yes?”
There was static and motor noise on the line, and Sándor had the impression Tamás was in a car or a bus. “What the hell are you up to?”
“Sándor? Relax,
phrala
, it’s just a bit of—”
“You little shit. I’m on my way to Galbeno. And when I find you, I’m going to wring your fucking neck.”
Tamás just laughed and hung up.
“I mean it,” Sándor said to the empty room, which was no longer his.
HE BUS HAD
to slow down to 20 kph to maneuver its way down the pot hole-riddled road. Eventually, there seemed to be more holes than asphalt, Sándor noted. He leaned his head against the dusty windowpane, feeling the vibrations through the glass.
The rage he had felt when he spoke to Tamás two days ago had long since evaporated. Maybe it would come back again when he saw him, but right now he couldn’t feel anything other than a thick, gray sense of failure. What the hell was he going to do when he arrived? Galbeno wasn’t “home,” even though that was what he had told Lujza. It hadn’t been home since … no, he couldn’t actually put a date on it, not even a year. He knew when he had been taken away, but he couldn’t nail down the moment when his inner compass had stopped pointing to the green house in Galbeno whenever someone asked him where he lived.
Grandpa Viktor had roared and raged that day, and the policemen from the white cars had needed to restrain both him and some of the uncles. One of them had his hands full just trying to manage Grandma Éva. Sándor had also scratched and kicked and struggled when they put him in the minibus with Vanda and Feliszia and little Tamás, but it was no use. The door closed, and there was no handle on the inside. Finally they drove away, up the same road where the ambulance had taken his mother, and through the rear window he could see Grandpa Viktor running after the vans, but he couldn’t run fast enough.
They had driven for a long time, without anything to eat or drink. There were two other children in the bus besides Sándor and his siblings, a boy and a girl. He had never seen them before; they must have been from another village. They held hands and didn’t speak. Neither did Sándor. The boy had peed in his pants, and it didn’t smell good.
Then the van drove through a gate in a fence and up the driveway to some tall, gray buildings. The door of the minibus was opened, and an adult stranger, an old bald
gadjo
in white clothes, pointed at Sándor and the other boy.
“Those two go to the blue wing,” he said. “The girls go over to the red wing, and the little one needs an exam at the health clinic.”
It took a second before Sándor understood that the
gadjos
wanted to split them up.
“No,” he said then. “I’m going to take care of them.”
“We’ll do that,” the bald
gadjo
said. “Now you just go over to the blue wing with Miss Erzsébet. That’s where the big boys live.”
Miss Erzsébet took his hand. She was young and pretty and also
gadji
, but he didn’t want to hold her hand.
“No,” he said. “I’m their brother.”
But they wouldn’t listen. A
gadji
lady, who was also dressed in white, had already picked Tamás up and was starting to walk away with him. Another woman had taken the girls by the hand, one on either side. Vanda’s face was swollen because she had cried the whole way, but now she was quiet. Her eyes were dark and frightened. Feliszia just looked confused. She hugged her pink stuffed rabbit, filthy as it was.
He tore himself away from the Erzsébet woman, but she grabbed him again, this time by the arm, hard. Then he bit her.
He could still remember the feeling, the tiny little hairs on her arm poking softly into his tongue, the salty taste of her skin mixed with a soapy bitterness he later learned was moisturizer. As he bit, he felt the skin break, and the saliva and blood mixed in his mouth.
So many years and he could still remember that, maybe because that was his last true act of rebellion.
You’ll take care of the girls and Tamás, right?
Mama, I was only eight.
The bus stopped at the end of the line, and he got out.
G
ALBENO WAS STILL
Galbeno. Most of the houses had electricity now, but otherwise not much had happened in the past fifteen years. A small valley with a creek at the bottom, dusty grass and prickly shrubs, the odd fir tree that survived the quest for firewood because it was so full of resin that it would be foolhardy to toss it into the fireplace. Up on the eastern
slope sat the cemetery with its crooked, white headstones, with a bigger population now than the village, which for a long time had been a dwindling cluster of houses along a road that didn’t go anywhere.
His arrival was instantly noticed by at least twenty people. An older woman who was sweeping in front of her house. Seven or eight kids in the middle of a water fight at one of the village’s three communal water pumps. Two men who were fiddling with an old, rust bucket of a car, three others who were watching and commenting. He knew they recognized him.
“
Szia
,” one of the men by the car called out, raising his hand in a casual greeting.
“
Szia
,” Sándor called back, without knowing who he was talking to. It could even be Tibor; Sándor wasn’t sure he would recognize him now. He had forgotten so much. Only a few names lingered in his mind.
He hoisted his duffel bag over his shoulder and started walking down the road toward Valeria’s green house. He hadn’t brought his suitcase or the cardboard boxes he had packed his things in because he didn’t want it to look like he was moving in. True, he had no idea where he would be living after May 15, but it wouldn’t be here; he had made his mind up about that. He might have to spend a few weeks here until he found something else, but he wasn’t moving in. Ferenc had been generous enough to store his boxes for the time being, though it meant he practically had to climb over the furniture to make it from one end of his room to the other.
Two little girls raced past him, giggling, and he knew he wouldn’t make it to the house unannounced. He could already hear their high-pitched, excited voices: “Valeria, Valeria, Sándor’s home!”
His mother appeared in the doorway. Then she came out to meet him, her arms outstretched.
“Sándorka! My darling.”
She embraced him and pulled his face down so she could kiss him warmly on both cheeks. Then she did it again, just to be sure.
“Mama.”
She was so small. It had come as a shock to him the first time he had seen her once he was a grown up—she was a tiny woman who didn’t come any higher than the middle of his chest. She was thin and more sinewy than he remembered her, her face tauter. There was something birdlike about her lightness, as if she had air in her bones where other people had marrow.
He knew women in their forties in Budapest who looked like young girls, and often behaved like that, too. That was not the case with Valeria. Her hair was still black, and she was so small that her T-shirt and jeans would fit a twelve-year-old. But no one who saw her face would mistake her for a teenager. Life had left its mark on her. There was a determination and a will to survive in her that weren’t the result of hours spent at the gym.
“Have you eaten?” she asked.
“Yes, yes.”
“When?”
He couldn’t help but smile in spite of everything that had happened.
“Mama, I
ate
.” An apple and a sandwich from the kiosk at the bus station, but that was plenty. His stomach couldn’t handle anything more.
“Well, then we’ll have some coffee. And you can tell me why you’ve come.”
Because naturally there had to be a reason for him to show up like this, in the middle of exams.
“Where’s Tamás?”
“Tamás? He’s not here.” Her eyes darted away as she said it, and he guessed it was because she wanted to hide something from him. Did she know what Tamás was up to?
“Mama, where is he? Do you know what kind of a mess he is in?”
She didn’t answer right away.
“Have a seat,” she said, pointing to the bench by the door. “I’ll make some coffee.”
“Mama!”
“He left, Sándorka. He has to earn money, too, doesn’t he?”
“Doing what?”
“The violin, of course. But there’s no one willing to pay around here anymore. Do you know how many men in the village have jobs?”
Sándor shook his head. How would he know that?
“Fourteen. And eight of those are just doing temporary work paid for by the council.”
He knew things were bad, but not that bad. From what he remembered from his childhood, nearly everyone had jobs most of the time. “People used to have jobs,” he said.
“Yes. When the Communists were in charge, the Roma had no trouble
getting work. Now it’s just the Hungarians. And hardly anyone hires musicians these days. So Tamás is abroad now.”
“Where?”
“Germany, I think. No, wait.… Somewhere up north. I think it was Denmark.”
It would be nice to think that Tamás had only nicked his passport because he didn’t have one of his own and wanted to go to Denmark to play his violin and earn some money. But Sándor remembered the interrogation room and the questions the ever-patient Gábor had asked him, over and over again.
Are you interested in weapons, Sándor? Why did you go to
hizbuttahrir.org
—you’re not a Muslim, are you? Where does your money actually come from, Sándor?
For seventy-two hours.