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Cold Trail hh-4 Page 7
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“This last one is probably the one you’ll find the most interesting.”
In the fourth shot, Jonas and the bike are on the asphalt, and the car had continued about five yards from the place of impact.
The brake lights weren’t on.
“I focused on the license plate,” Aho said, showing the fifth photo to Takamäki. The letters and numbers were clearly visible, and Takamäki wrote them down in his notebook.
Aho copied the photos onto the flash drive and ejected it from the computer. “Good thing you came to get these today. They wouldn’t have been here anymore tomorrow. These external camera shots are recorded over every twenty-four hours.”
“You don’t save them even if they capture incidents like this?”
“Of course we do, if we see something. I don’t know why the guy on duty yesterday didn’t notice the sequence on his cameras. The ambulance showed up pretty quick, too.” Aho handed the flash drive to Takamäki. “Here you go.”
“Thanks for your help,” the lieutenant said, adding that he’d show himself out.
* * *
Ainola and Suhonen entered the third floor of the east cell block, where most of the murderers were housed. The latest cycle of remodels at Helsinki Prison, which was originally built in 1881, had lasted for years. With the shrubs and other improvements, the block was almost pleasant now.
The corridors were quiet, because the majority of prisoners were elsewhere. That suited Suhonen, because he had no interest in showing his face to criminals in a context where he could be directly connected to the authorities.
Ainola greeted the guard and said they’d be entering Repo’s cell. Ainola fit his own key into the lock. As always in prisons, the iron door opened inwards. That way the prisoner couldn’t use the door to blindside a guard.
“Be my guest,” Ainola said, letting Suhonen enter first.
Suhonen immediately caught the distinct scent of old prison cell. It was impossible to eradicate, even if you washed and painted the walls and floors. The little cell reeked of sweat, shit, and suffering. Over the past century and a quarter they had been hopelessly ingrained.
The cell was six feet wide and ten feet long. High up on the back wall there was a tiny window. The bed was on the right and the desk to the left. A TV, an electric water kettle, and a few books were on the table. Suhonen’s eye immediately registered one detail-not a single girlie pic. As a matter of fact, the walls were spotless-not a single stroke of graffiti, either.
Behind the table a shelf held more books and some papers. The bed was made.
“A life of modesty,” Suhonen remarked, pulling on his latex gloves. This time it was more a matter of habit than need.
“Dream prisoner. These past few years, I mean.”
“A loner?”
“For that reason, too.”
Suhonen started from the table. The books were nonfiction. Two were about the history of the Roman Empire, both borrowed from the prison library. Suhonen shook the books so that anything inside would have fallen out onto the table. But there was nothing.
Suhonen wasn’t about to start looking inside the TV. This wasn’t a narcotics raid. He was seeking information on addresses or acquaintances: scraps of paper, letters, a calendar.
He stepped over to the shelf and scanned it rapidly. A slim stack of papers caught his attention, and Suhonen picked it up. It was the Court of Appeals verdict in Repo’s case. The pages were worn at the corners, and the paper felt greasy. The interior pages were heavily underlined, and comments had been written in the margins in tiny letters. Suhonen thought for a moment and decided to bring the stack to Joutsamo. His colleague had the best sense of the case and might be able to glean hints from the scribblings.
Suhonen set the stack of documents on the table. He scanned down the shelves but didn’t find anything of interest, only a can of Nescafé, a mug, a folded sweater, and a couple of DVDs. Pulp Fiction? Okay, not a bad choice for a prisoner. Suhonen opened the cases, but all they contained were the disks.
“Why are there DVDs here, if he doesn’t have a player?”
“Are there?” Ainola said, stepping a little closer. Suhonen handed the cases to the warden. “Oh, these are from the prison library. The prisoners can also borrow a DVD player there, but it’s probably already been loaned on to someone else. I’d better return these, too. Otherwise he’ll lose his DVD privileges once you bring him back here to his cell.”
“Su-ure.”
“What do you mean, su-ure?”
Suhonen didn’t answer immediately. He turned toward the bed. “These convict escapes are kind of like murder investigations. If the case isn’t wrapped up right away, we work overtime until it’s solved. Murders can take months, but there are dozens of detectives working on them, at least at the beginning. Now we’re chasing down this ghost with a few guys, and we don’t really have anything to go on. Searching a cell like this is pretty pointless. The problem is that even though the guy’s a murderer, he’s a complete enigma. We don’t know anything about his friends, if he even has any. We’re not going to get anywhere with his family. So it’s a total crapshoot. Of course he might get caught at some DUI checkpoint or end up in the Töölö drunk tank, but that’s more a matter of chance.”
“Are you stressing out over this case?”
“Not especially. I’m just pissed off that in a way we’re doing pointless work . Okay, it’s not totally pointless. But if we have to start by figuring out who the guy is, it’s looking like we’re in for a long-distance relay.”
Ainola shrugged. “Welcome to the team.”
Suhonen laughed. “All we’d need is to find something good under that mattress.” Suhonen lifted it up. The bed frame was empty.
There was a knock at the door, and Ainola opened. The chunky guard from the break room was standing there. “Forsberg’s in the break room.”
“Who’s Forsberg?” Suhonen asked.
“Our lucky lottery winner,” Ainola grunted. “Last time around, he won four plus a bonus number from district court: aggravated robbery, felony narcotics, aggravated assault, felony fraud, and, for the bonus, criminal intimidation.”
“Oh, Foppa,” Suhonen growled. The jack-of-all-trades had gotten his nickname from the famous Swedish hockey player. “I remember him. He was Repo’s closest buddy?”
“They’re not actually buddies,” the fat guard said. “But he was in the next cell over. He might know something.”
The guard led the way to the break room. Suhonen could smell a fresh pot brewing. There was nothing about Forsberg particularly reminiscent of his namesake, although maybe the hockey player also liked to lounge around in sweats-presumably not brown prison-issue ones, though. Foppa the Con was sporting a white T-shirt, thick-rimmed glasses, and a growing bald spot. He was about fifty.
Suhonen extended a hand and the men shook. “Suhonen, Helsinki Police.”
The crook’s handshake wasn’t especially firm. As a matter of fact, it was limp.
“Forsberg,” he answered in a low voice. “So whaddaya want?”
“I have a couple of questions,” Suhonen said.
“What about?”
“Repo. I want to know why he took off.”
“How would I know?”
“They say you knew him best.”
“Pffft,” Forsberg said. “Nobody knows anyone in this joint. Everyone’s out for themselves. I couldn’t give a shit what some other convict is thinking. Besides, he was a pretty quiet guy.”
“Pretty quiet?”
“Yeah. Mostly hung out alone, didn’t talk to me, even though we both worked over in the sign shop. Someone said that back when he first got here he was pretty bitter, but I couldn’t tell.”
“Who said?” Suhonen asked.
“Can’t remember.”
“Who else did he talk to besides you?”
“No one, really. Okay, maybe Juha Saarnikangas. He’s one of those junkies, looks like a skeleton. You know, when he raises hi
s arms, his watch slides down to his shoulder.”
“Okay,” Suhonen nodded. “I’ve heard the name.”
“Well, he’s not big time. At least not big time enough for a cop to remember him. A real skeeze.”
Suhonen thought Forsberg didn’t exactly appear to be a rocket scientist, either. “What did Repo do at night?”
“Mostly sat or lay there in his cell alone. Spent a lot of time in the library. Seemed to like electronics. Borrowed books on the subject. Oh yeah, he’d always go read the newspapers, too. Maybe it helped him keep up with what was happening on the outside. Or at least he thought it did.”
Forsberg paused for a second and drank his coffee. Suhonen let the silence weigh and reached for his own mug.
“But Timo’s no gangster. Corking his wife was probably an idea that just popped into his head when he was drunk, ha-ha,” Forsberg grunted, looking at the grim-faced Suhonen. “Don’t you get it? Corking, ha-ha, ’cause he shut her up and almost took her head off at the same time, ha-ha.”
“Yeah, I got it, it just wasn’t very funny.”
Forsberg stopped laughing. “Well, can’t help you any more. He’ll probably show up at some police station in a couple of days. I think his old man’s funeral just sent him off the deep end.”
* * *
Sitting at his desk, Takamäki was working on his son’s accident. He had copied the surveillance camera images from the flash drive to his computer. He had momentarily considered taking prints home, but then had rejected the idea.
He had seen so many crime scenes and images of them that the photos were nothing more than a tool for him. They didn’t convey any emotion or terror, just information from the scene. But his wife wouldn’t be capable of viewing the surveillance camera shots in the same way. That’s why it was better not to show themto her.
Takamäki had pulled up the DMV database and was hesitating as to whether or not to look up the owner of the car that had hit Jonas. Investigating the hit-and-run wasn’t his turf; it wasn’t even Helsinki Police turf. The Espoo police were supposed to take care of it. But license plate info wasn’t confidential. Anyone could call a toll-free number and request information on any vehicle.
The lieutenant entered the license plate number, and the system indicated that the owner was an Espoo leasing company. A guy named Tomi Manner was registered as the lease-holder. Takamäki looked up more info on Manner; according to his social security number, he was thirty-seven years old. His address was in Espoo, in the neighborhood of Tuomarila.
Joutsamo was a whiz with computers, but Takamäki could navigate the basics pretty well. Manner owned a small private security company. Maybe he had fled the scene because he was afraid of losing his security company license. On the other hand, it would be even worse to get caught fleeing the scene, on top of hitting a pedestrian.
Manner’s record showed a couple of old traffic citations, but he wasn’t suspected or convicted of anything more serious. Takamäki started wondering how far he should go. It wasn’t like he was conducting an investigation or anything. He was mostly just satisfying his curiosity.
So Takamäki pulled up Manner’s license photo, too. The young Tomi Manner had a crew cut and a confrontational gaze. At the time the photo was taken, his cheeks were covered in dark stubble. To Takamäki, Manner looked aggressive, exactly like the kind of person who would flee the scene of an accident. The photo was almost twenty years old, but it still communicated arrogance. Maybe that was because Manner’s jaw was tilted higher than necessary. Takamäki started getting the feeling he’d like to exchange a couple of words with the guy.
* * *
Repo was lying on Karppi’s sofa. His eyes were closed, but he was awake. Karppi was reading some biography at the dining table. Since finishing their coffees, the men had barely spoken to each other. The papers and photos Karppi had given him were in a plastic shopping bag on the floor.
Thanks to his prison time, the position was a familiar one to Repo. He could lie for hours without thinking about anything or, if he felt like it, thinking about everything, Now, all kinds of things were going through his head: his father’s death, the escape, meeting Karppi, and the things he wanted to do. Or not just wanted to do, but what he intended on doing.
The problem with thinking was that once your thoughts got out of the corral, it was tough to wrangle them back in. Arja came back into his mind. And the image wasn’t that smiling, beautiful woman from the wedding photo, but Arja’s lifeless, slightly yellowed face. It was impossible to read anything from the dead woman’s expression, not even pain, despite the fact that the deep wound in her neck reached almost from ear to ear.
Repo could still remember waking up. The memories came back, no matter how much he wished they wouldn’t. He was lying on his bed, and a man in a blue uniform was shaking him by the shoulder. He felt nauseous, and could make out the barrel of a pistol through his booze-blurred eyes. On with the cuffs and into the paddy wagon.
What happened next at the police station was like a nightmare. Repo didn’t remember anything about Arja’s death. The detective laid into him. “C’mon, admit it. Do you confess? Why don’t you remember? Goddammit, stop wasting our time! Be a man and take responsibility for your actions.”
In the end, Repo had taken responsibility, since there was no other alternative. Even his attorney had advised him to. The evidence was clear, but that slippery snake had promised him that he’d get convicted of manslaughter, and that he’d be out after sitting six to seven years of a ten-year sentence.
But the district court had sentenced him to life in prison. Repo remembered the verdict being read. It felt like he was a bystander-he was watching some random show on the TV bolted to the courtroom wall. He wished he could change the channel or even scream when the district judge said the words, “Sentenced to life in prison for the crime of murder.”
And the same thing in appeals court, even though by then he had denied having committed the crime. He hadn’t been able to imagine himself ever having been capable of it.
Like it did every time, Repo’s head began to ache.
“Hey, Timo,” Karppi said, shaking him by the shoulder, the same way the police officer had on that one day. “Were you sleeping?”
Repo could see the old man smiling.
“No.”
“Really, now? Well, you should probably eat something anyway. I made fish soup.”
Repo noticed the smell of the soup and figured that he had fallen asleep after all. He should have heard the sounds of cooking.
“Did you go to the store?”
“No,” Karppi smiled. “Straight from the freezer.”
The men sat down at the table. Karppi had set out bowls and spoons.
“Voilà, le potage de poisson.”
In addition to the steaming pot, two pitchers stood on the table. Karppi poured himself some cranberry juice, and Repo helped himself to water.
“You have any aspirin?”
“No,” Karppi said. “I hate pills.”
Both ladled soup into their bowls. Repo tasted it; it needed salt. There wasn’t any on the table, and he didn’t feel like asking for it.
“You really speak French?”
Karppi nodded. “I used to work there.”
“Not the Foreign Legion?”
“Oh, no. I worked for the Ministries of Defense and Foreign Affairs. Finland used to buy weapons from France.”
The topic didn’t interest Repo, but he could imagine Karppi and his old man, Erik, having talked about it frequently.
“Listen,” Karppi began. “Change of subject. How long were you planning on shacking up here? Shouldn’t you head on back to prison to sit out those couple of years you have left?”
A couple of years? Repo thought. Eight behind and maybe six before parole. But he let it pass. “Don’t worry about it. A day or two, then I’ll be gone.”
“Where?”
“Now, that’s none of your business,” Repo said coolly. “An
d I’d suggest you don’t ask.”
CHAPTER 8
TUESDAY, 2:50 P.M.
HELSINKI POLICE HEADQUARTERS, PASILA
Takamäki hesitated for a moment but then picked up the phone. He called the switchboard at Espoo Police and asked to be connected to the Traffic Crimes Unit. After three minutes and two call transfers, Takamäki discovered that Espoo didn’t have a unit that investigated traffic crimes, but a PSPCIU, or Public Safety Productivity Center Investigative Unit. Traffic accidents were its responsibility . Takamäki got the name of the officer investigating the Sello incident. The name Lauri Solberg was unfamiliar to him.
“Solberg,” answered a male voice. Judging by it, Takamäki figured the Espoo police officer was about thirty-five years old.
“Hi, Kari Takamäki here,” Takamäki replied in a friendly tone. He had gone back and forth several times as to whether he would introduce himself as a VCU lieutenant right from the start, but had decided to be plain old Mr. Takamäki, the victim’s father. At least at first.
“Good afternoon,” Solberg responded officially , inspiring formality in Takamäki’s voice, too.
“I’m calling about the hit-and-run that took place yesterday at the Sello shopping center. You’re the investigating officer, correct?”
“Correct. Are you a witness?”
“No, I’m the father of the boy who was hit. I was curious as to the status of the investigation.”
Takamäki could hear the radio playing in the background as Solberg paused. “Preliminary stages. How’s your son doing, by the way?”
Takamäki felt like swearing out loud. He understood that “preliminary” meant that nothing had happened with the case other than the patrol on the scene having had submitted its report. Solberg had doubtless received the report that morning, but hadn’t done anything about it. He hadn’t even called the hospital to check on the status of the injured victim.