Part 3 (1/2)
She sent a text message and quickly got a reply that that plan was okay, and Tobias would come pick Markus up Thursday afternoon. So that was covered. Camilla pondered briefly calling Storm and asking if he had any more information besides what she already knew, but she decided to give him a couple more hours. She still had plenty of time until her deadline. Instead, she printed out the missing-person report to have it ready, and then she went down to grab a bite to eat.
Louise carried her weekend bag in to reception, and the woman at the counter handed her the room key along with a message that the others were already at the restaurant. She rushed up to her room with her bag, quickly scanning the large, airy room with yellow walls and gaudy curtains around the large windows. The decor included light-colored birch furniture, a large framed America's Cup poster from 1987, and a painting of the crowns of some trees densely packed together under a blue sky. Next to the bathroom there was a small vanity.
She went into the bathroom and washed her hands, splas.h.i.+ng a little cold water onto her face. Then she removed her hair band and shook out her long, dark curls before gathering them back into a ponytail again. That would have to suffice. Before heading to the restaurant, she sat down on the bed and dialed the two numbers that Dicta Moller had given her, but no one answered at either. Dicta's friend's cell phone went to voicemail, and her parents' landline rang and rang until Louise hung up.
”Hi,” everyone said as she came in.
”I ordered something for you,” Soren said, ”but you should tell them what you want to drink.”
There was no one in the restaurant besides them, and the waiter was busy talking through the swinging door that led off to the bar. She walked over to him and ordered a c.o.ke before taking the empty seat her former partner had saved her.
”So you think it may be the girl's cla.s.smate?” Storm asked as she sat down.
”Can't rule it out. There are several similarities,” Louise replied, looking at him.
He was speaking from across the table four seats away from her, so she had to raise her voice.
”She said her friend is from Jordan, she has a beige jacket, and she wears white Kawasaki shoes. I think we have to take her information seriously and follow up on it.”
Storm nodded.
”How long has it been since she was heard from?” he asked.
”She wasn't at school, and she missed a date with her friend this afternoon, so it's only really been today,” Louise replied.
”None of those things are uncommon,” said Mik, who was sitting across from Storm. ”What was her name-the girl you talked to?”
Louise hesitated until she realized he was asking because he thought he might know her. That's how it was with small-town life, she reminded herself. People knew each other.
”Dicta Moller,” she answered, adding that the girl and her missing friend were in ninth grade at Hojmark School.
Mik shook his head; apparently the name didn't ring a bell. Holbaek wasn't quite that small.
”Shouldn't we focus on our food now? That way, we can throw ourselves back into our work afterward,” Storm suggested, apparently forgetting entirely that he had started the whole conversation.
The waitstaff started bringing in huge plates of Wiener schnitzel, with slices of veal as thick as phone books. The meat was served with pan-fried potatoes, peas, anchovies with lemon, and horseradish on the side. Gravy was set out in a little boat next to each place setting. Normally Louise would have lost all appet.i.te when confronted with an enormous portion like this, but the last thing she had eaten was some oatmeal she'd dished up at seven that morning. So she tried to ignore the oversize portion, reminding herself there was no shame in not cleaning her plate.... She could just hear her grandmother: No shame in not cleaning your plate.... Nowadays, if anything, there was more shame a.s.sociated with overeating. After dinner, several of the others ordered apple cake with whipped cream, while she made do with coffee.
She could already tell what direction things would go if she was to be living and eating with a pack of hungry men like this for any period of time. Not that she was some kind of delicate lettuce eater, but she was going to have to keep an eye out. Otherwise she'd just end up having to run off the weight during her morning jogs.
”Let's meet again in the command center for our briefing,” Storm said once everyone was almost done with their coffee. They split up and left the restaurant in small groups, chatting away.
Bengtsen was waiting for them by the time they got back. He had made a fresh pot of coffee, and had a baking sheet of chocolate cake on the table in front of him.
”It's from Else,” he said, pa.s.sing it around.
Louise tried to call the two numbers for the girl and her parents again, but since there was still no answer, she sat next to Bengtsen and was happy to take a piece of cake. She had regretted not ordering the apple cake almost immediately, even though she felt as if she were bursting at the seams.
”Is Else your wife?” she asked, slicing a corner off the cake and tipping it onto a piece of paper towel. She had decided to ignore the somewhat rigidly square grid Bengtsen had begun when he took the first piece.
He nodded, drawing the ends of his narrow lips up only just enough that Louise dared interpret it as a smile. But whether the smile was an expression of a lifelong devotion to his wife or whether it was because he was a little shy about having food made for him, she couldn't say. She was quick to praise the cake as soon as she had gotten a bite into her mouth.
”How did it go out at the crime scene today?” she asked Dean, who was sitting on her other side and who had loosened his tie a bit. ”Did anything turn up?”
”The Frogman Corps has been doing dives up and down the cove, but they haven't found anything,” he replied, referring to the elite special forces unit of the Royal Danish Navy. He poured her a cup of coffee before saying that forensics had kept the girl's beige jacket out at the scene so the dogs would have something to go by.
”Various things have been collected from the scene,” he continued, but he was interrupted by Storm, who asked him to speak up so everyone could hear.
Dean Vuki looked around and reiterated that the divers hadn't found anything they could link to the girl or her murder and that the canine units weren't finished yet.
”There are some tire prints we'll research. And we have several footprints that we need to take casts of. And the CSI team has secured some evidence from the soil in the form of cigarette b.u.t.ts, chewing gum, mucus from globs of saliva that will be checked for DNA, and then we'll see what we have,” he said.
Yes, we'll see, Louise thought. But first they had to find out who the girl was.
”We haven't located a purse, bag, or cell phone,” Dean finished after a pause.
Now it was Mik's and her turn, and Mik updated everyone on the autopsy.
”We're obviously ruling out an accident, given the concrete slab she had on her abdomen,” Storm stated when they finished.
”What about suicide?” Soren asked.
”In that case she would have had to jump into the water from a boat,” Skipper said, but he added that they had not come across any unmoored boats in their survey of the area.
”If she had been attacked at that location, there would have been prints in the dirt or on the bluffs near the water,” said Dean, who had spent the whole day working with the CSI team. ”There were no signs of any struggle. And, again, some kind of boat was needed to get her so far out into the water.”
”There are some boats moored out at Honsehalsen that the fishermen use,” Bengtsen interjected, who evidently had in-depth knowledge of the area.
”All those boats are accounted for,” Skipper said. ”They're all moored, so she couldn't have used them herself, in any case. But we should take a closer look at them.”
”Most likely she was killed somewhere else and brought out to Honsehalsen,” Dean added. ”Otherwise, the dogs would have responded at the scene. We ran the dogs through the little marina with all the dinghies too, and they didn't find anything.”
Everyone nodded and seemed to agree.
Storm sat sorting some sc.r.a.ps of paper as though they were playing cards.
”These are the tips that have come in response to the missing-person report so far,” he said, dropping them nonchalantly on the table. ”Probably nothing of much interest. All of the girls are native Danes, but let me flip through them quickly,” he said, fis.h.i.+ng out his gla.s.ses. ”There's a Lisette Andersen, age seventeen, from Kalundborg. Her mother called in. Her daughter has short blonde hair.”
”Didn't it say that our girl has long dark hair and might be Arab?” Soren asked pessimistically, disqualifying Kalundborg.
”A Tove Mikkelsen called in about her daughter, age twenty, from Roskilde, but she pointed out that her daughter looks very young and could well pa.s.s for sixteen.”
”We get a couple hundred missing-person reports about teenage girls every year,” Ruth interrupted, looking at the men around the table. ”Some of them make their way to Christiania,” Ruth continued, reminding them of the appeal of Copenhagen's downtown hippie commune, ”or they get settled into a co-op building or communal house somewhere and come home again once the exoticism of their adventure has faded and they miss hot baths and decent food. But there isn't anything you can say when a mother is worried that something has happened to her daughter.”
”True enough, but there's no reason to spend more time on that now,” Storm replied, instead asking Louise to tell Bengtsen about her conversation with the teenage girl. Bengtsen had not been at the dinner at the hotel restaurant, so he didn't yet know anything about Dicta Moller's visit.
She quickly updated him on the conversation and on the similarities that were of interest.