Light in a Dark House (12 page)

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Authors: Jan Costin Wagner

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Crime

BOOK: Light in a Dark House
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Kimmo Joentaa had said no, and Nurmela had nodded in silence. Once Joentaa had plucked up courage, or simply obeyed an impulse, and asked the question that was of no significance, yet was still on his mind.

Why August?

Nurmela had stared at him, and in those seconds of silence Joentaa had wondered what devil had impelled him to ask.

But then Nurmela just uttered a brief, dry laugh and said, ‘Well, no idea.’

‘Probably a silly question,’ Joentaa had said.

‘Hmm? No, not at all. A good question. Wait a moment.’

Nurmela had gone to the drinks dispenser, fetched himself a coffee, and then sat down at the table again.

‘Although there are one or two things that would interest me,’ he said. ‘For instance, how you came to know that woman. What were you thinking of?’

‘What do you suppose I was thinking of?’ Joentaa had replied.

‘Kimmo, sometimes I seriously doubt whether—’

‘I met her at Christmas last year. She simply turned up. I like her a lot. That’s all.’

Nurmela had looked at him for some time.

‘That’s really nice, but the lady practises a profession that—’

‘And by the way, she plays ice hockey really well. She’s a goalie,’ Joentaa had said.

Nurmela had leaned back to drink his coffee, and Kimmo Joentaa had thought about that remark of his. She simply turned up. I like her a lot. That’s all. And really there wasn’t much more to say. Except that he missed her.

Investigations of the case of the unknown murder victim concentrated on information that had come in, not all of which the team had yet looked at, although the number of new calls had died down. Day after day Joentaa, Grönholm, Sundström and three more detectives who had been assigned to the core group interviewed people who claimed to have known the woman in the photograph, but it turned out that none of them did.

They also interviewed those who asked after missing persons. Several cases that had been put on ice some time ago had been solved that way in the last few months. An elderly married couple from Paimio had been reunited with their daughter after many years. She had gone abroad and entirely forgot to tell her parents about it.

On the evening of 12 December, the first snow fell. It had covered the giraffe under the tree when Joentaa came home.

33

12 December now
Dear diary,
OMX Nordic stands at 945 points, OMX Helsinki25 at 2,057 points.
Koski wished me a nice weekend and a good holiday.
I have now found them all except for one.
Kalevi Forsman, forty-three, software adviser.
Markus Happonen, forty-three, second mayor, town councillor. Or something along those lines. It makes no difference now.
Lassi Anttila, fifty-seven, cleaner and store detective in a shopping centre in Raisio near Naantali. Another interesting combination. He was hard to find . . . Nothing about him on the Internet, not listed in the phone book. Lives quietly and more or less alone.
Jarkko Miettinen, sixty-four, pensioner. Lives near Lappeenranta, in a care home specialising in the treatment of those with Parkinson’s disease. They slow down, suffer from stiff muscles, tremors. The disease develops slowly. At first its progress is hardly perceptible.
There’s one still missing. Risto.
When I got home Leea’s friend Henna and her baby were visiting. Leea had baked a cake; it was very good. The baby laughed at me, and Henna was so pleased that she gave me a hug before they left.
Olli is in a phase where he gets cross when he loses. He had terrible luck throwing the dice all evening.
It’s snowing outside, big flakes.
I bought the costume today. It looks convincing, presumably because it’s real. Or at least, so the boy behind the counter claimed. He seemed almost proud of it.
Leea stands in the doorway and says she’s going to bed.
‘The velocity of its fall is about 4 kilometres per hour,’ I say, without taking my eyes off the window.
‘Velocity of what fall?’ she asks.
‘The falling snow. A speed of about 4 kph.’
She says nothing for a few seconds, and then asks how I’m feeling.
‘I’m going away,’ I say.
She asks where to.
‘Only for a few days,’ I tell her.

34

IN THE NIGHT
he switched on his laptop, put it on the sofa and wrote to
veryhotlarissa
.

Dear Larissa
It snowed for the first time today. Did it snow with you? Where are you? You’re not getting in touch, so I can tell you what’s up here. At the moment we’re trying to explain the death of a woman who hasn’t yet been identified. Maybe you’ve heard or read about it. It’s as if she didn’t live anywhere. As if she’d fallen from the sky and straight into a coma. Sorry, what I’m writing is nonsense, but I’ll send it anyway.
See you soon.
Love from Kimmo

He sent the message, put the laptop on the table, opened the glass door and ran down the slope to the lake where Larissa had played ice hockey and Sanna used to swim.

In the last weeks of her life, before he had to take her to the hospital, she would sit on the landing stage wrapped in rugs. She had told him not to worry when he asked if she hadn’t better come into the warm house.

He remembered that. And his absurd hope that the illness would go away because he wanted it to. And the clumsy prayers he had sent up to a God in whom he couldn’t believe.

He decided to visit Sanna’s grave and call her parents. It was a long time since he had heard from them. Some while ago Merja, Sanna’s mother, had spoken to his answering machine and asked how he was. Her voice had sounded clear and calm, stronger than the last time. He had been glad of that. And maybe it was the reason that he hadn’t called back. He didn’t want to find out that he had only imagined Merja’s strength.

He went a few steps out on the ice and thought it seemed fragile. Although the children had been playing ice hockey on it that evening; he had watched them for a while. They had been shooting at an empty goal. As if they were waiting for the woman who had parried their shots last winter, protected by a cycling helmet.

The goal was still standing on the ice, with a pair of gloves and a forgotten stick. Kimmo Joentaa sat down in the goal and thought that he was seeing what Larissa had seen. Only the pucks flying around her ears were missing.

In the distance, he saw someone slowly moving towards him, running over the snow-covered grass, the snow-covered sand and the frozen water. Joentaa felt a pang, and thought for long seconds that it was Larissa.

Then he saw the boy coming closer. Roope, from one of the neighbouring houses. Roope slowed down and suddenly looked uncertain of himself, presumably seeing a shadow in front of the goal.

‘It’s me,’ called Joentaa. ‘Kimmo.’

‘Oh,’ said Roope.

‘Sorry if I startled you,’ said Joentaa.

‘No, nonsense, not a problem. I just . . . I forgot my stick and my gloves.’

Joentaa picked up those items and handed them to Roope, who came hesitantly closer.

‘Thanks,’ he said. ‘I don’t know what I was doing, leaving all my gear here.’

Joentaa nodded.

‘That stick is brand new,’ said Roope.

‘Looks like a good one,’ said Joentaa.

‘Yes, Jokinen plays with that make,’ said Roope. ‘And the whole national team, they’re the main sponsors. I mean, they play with sticks like that and the same tape . . . and so on.’

Joentaa nodded.

‘Where’s Larissa?’ asked Roope.

Joentaa looked at Roope, the boy from a nearby house. He had shot up in height. He thought of a day some years ago when a much smaller Roope had sat at his kitchen table drinking hot cocoa.

‘I don’t know for sure,’ he said.

‘Oh,’ said Roope.

‘You missed her today playing ice hockey.’

‘Yup. It’d be . . . cool if she would play with us again.’

‘I’ll tell her that as soon as I see her,’ said Joentaa.

‘Okay,’ said Roope, and after a few seconds’ hesitation he turned away.

‘See you soon,’ said Joentaa.

‘Yes, see you. And . . . and tell her good wishes from me too, will you? From Roope.’

‘I’ll do that,’ said Joentaa.

‘Okay, goodnight, then,’ said Roope.

‘Sleep well,’ said Joentaa.

He watched the lanky figure of Roope walking away, pulling his stick along behind him, going over the ice and up the slope.

For a few minutes he tried to find the strength he needed to stand up. Then he went back the same way as he had come.

The house was empty. The laptop was purring like a cat. A robot cat, thought Joentaa vaguely, and it was time to get some sleep.

He bent down, pressed a key and then another, and for a while he looked at the screen. There was a message from Larissa flickering on it. He stayed in the same position, bending over, and stared at the words.

From:
[email protected]
To:
[email protected]
Your unidentified dead woman. It’s to do with male violence.

He sat down on the sofa, without taking his eyes off the screen.

He sat there for several minutes without moving. Then he leaned forward and began to write.

From:
[email protected]
To:
[email protected]
Dear Larissa
Lovely to hear from you. It’s good that you’re still around.
I was talking to Roope just now, he asked if you’d be back to play ice hockey with him and his friends again.
See you soon.
Kimmo

He sent the email, feeling a relief that made his throat tighten.

He switched off the computer, took the woollen rug off the old armchair and lay down on the sofa. He thought vaguely of the words in Larissa’s message. Of the unknown dead woman whose name had been replaced by a reference number.

Names don’t matter, he thought.

Then he fell asleep, and slept deeply, calmly, without dreams.

35

11 November 1985
Dear diary,
I went there today.
At last I went back there.
I was trembling all the time and I couldn’t think straight. But I simply had to go there, and all the time I had the thought of seeing her in my head.
And telling her how much I like her.
And that I’ll always be there for her and I can help her.
But it didn’t happen like that.
I got off the bike quite early, where the path narrowed and the last row of houses began. I’d never been that far before. I’d kept going as far as the narrow road and then I always turned back, because I didn’t know how I could avoid him if he came driving towards me in his great fat car. It was snowing hard.
I hid the bike in the wood, and went round the long way, along the field as far as the hill. From there you can get a good view of the house and the whole property, and you’d only have to walk through the wood for a few minutes to reach it; the garden leads straight to the little field and into the wood.
Risto’s garden. Risto’s field. Risto’s wood.
It seemed to me that it all belongs to him, although that’s not true.
Nothing belongs to him.
Nothing and everything.
I couldn’t help thinking of Anita-Liisa Koponen who looked at me in such a funny way at school today, and asked if I knew what the matter with Saara was. Because Anita-Liisa Koponen has been having piano lessons from Saara too. I only said no, I didn’t know what was wrong with Saara. And I tried to act as if everything was normal.
I lay on the hill, keeping low down among the trees so that no one could see me. I was thinking that it all belongs to Risto and here I was in the middle of it. And that Risto would kill me if he found me there.
And Saara too. He’d kill her then as well.
I couldn’t stop trembling, because I was cold too, but the cold came from inside me. I lay there feeling stupid and staring at the house, and I began crying because she wasn’t there.

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