Part 22 (1/2)
”I didn't hurt my daughter,” he repeated after Louise was seated.
”You mean other than killing her pet rabbit and forcing her to eat it.” It slipped out before she could stop herself. She instantly regretted it, because now she was going to have to do some coaxing if she was to have any hope of getting him to talk. Idiot, she thought to herself, rubbing her face with both hands. She watched him as he sat there like a statue, then she sighed and said: ”Maybe it wasn't you who physically killed her. But I think you know what happened to her and what she was afraid of. She writes that she had lost her faith in the people who loved her. And the people she was referring to were her family. In other words, you. My colleague is sitting next door talking to your son. He's not as reluctant to tell us what he knows. For example, he was well aware that his sister hid a bag of clothes at her friend's house. Clothes she didn't dare keep at home because you wouldn't allow her to wear the same things her cla.s.smates wore. Hamid also knew about the diary, and I think he was aware that his sister confided in Dicta Moller.”
At that moment, something struck her, and she got up and left the office with a quick apology. Storm and Ruth were sitting in the command room, studying the big whiteboard where details about Samra's life and actions during the period leading to her death were written in blue ink. Next to that was a similar summary of Dicta's final days. Bengtsen and Velin had reconstructed the days up to the time when Dicta had been found in the parking lot.
Louise stood there in the doorway and talked a little too fast. ”Could Samra's family be behind both killings?”
She explained that Hamid had just admitted that he knew about the bag and the hidden clothes and the diary at Dicta's house.
”If Samra was really hiding a secret that would be so damaging to the family's honor that they felt they had to kill her, wouldn't it be possible that they went one step further if they realized that she had confided in her friend from school?”
A thoughtful silence settled over the room as they each tried to picture that scenario.
Ruth got up and walked over to the window, where she gazed out over the square in front of the old police station. Gra.s.s and big trees filled the s.p.a.ce between the building and the sidewalk on Jernbanegade.
A couple of uniforms were called in to keep an eye on Samra's family members and make sure none of them left the police station while the team was quickly gathered.
”You're on to something,” Storm said, nodding at Louise. ”That would also explain why the one murder was so carefully thought out and the other seemed very impulsive. If they felt threatened by what Dicta knew, they would have acted fast.”
”Let's arrest the father and son for killing Samra,” Velin said. ”Then we can add charges later to cover Dicta's murder.”
”Yeah, or we could charge them with both killings from the get-go,” Skipper suggested.
Louise was sitting on the edge of the table.
”We don't know what secret she was hiding,” Mik reminded them. ”Let's be cautious now not to read too much into this.”
”No, but we know there was one and we know she feared for her life. That's enough for me right now,” Skipper interjected. ”What we don't know is which of them killed her. That's why we charge them both.”
”Often the person chosen to do the killing is the person the family can most easily do without,” Dean explained and said that could either be someone who didn't have anyone else to look after or someone who wasn't able to contribute by sending money back to the remaining family members in the old country. ”Of course it also happens that that person is sometimes a minor,” he concluded.
”You're saying you think it was Hamid who killed his sister?” Bengtsen said.
”I don't know what I think. I'd really like a little more to go on before I sign on to anything. I'm just telling you what kinds of considerations I would expect people to contemplate in families living according to strict cultural traditions,” Dean hurried to add.
Storm had remained silent, but now cleared his throat to interrupt their conversation. ”I'm not sure we have enough right now to hold them on,” he said, ”but we'll do it and then gamble on more coming out during questioning. We may also get lucky and have something turn up if we do a new search, and then we have to hope it'll be enough.”
”What about Sada?” Louise asked.
”She can go home to the two little ones, and then we'll follow the audio surveillance closely and have it interpreted as we go. We can easily guess that there will be increased activity if we're holding her husband and oldest son,” Storm replied. He asked Ruth to get hold of the interpreter they'd had listening to, transcribing, and translating the tapes from the last several weeks in installments of several days' worth at a time.
”It's Monday, October 9. The time is 4:55 P.M. You are under arrest for the murders of your daughter Samra al-Abd and her friend Dicta Moller,” Louise said when she returned to the office.
Ibrahim jumped as if he'd received an electrical shock. He stared at her with his eyes agape, after which he collapsed in his chair with his head bowed and his chin resting on his chest.
Louise thought for a minute that he'd fainted and moved over to him. For a brief instant she saw Mik standing out in the hallway with Hamid, ready to walk him down to the uniforms downstairs so the arrest could be processed.
”I have to ask you to follow me,” she said quietly, watching him as he slowly collected himself and stood up.
Neither the father nor the son said anything as their names were entered in the arrest log and they were searched, their possessions placed in clear plastic bags.
”We'll walk you over to the jail,” Louise said, holding the door for them. Ibrahim had kept his eyes on the ground, but when he was even with Louise, he raised his head and gazed right into her eyes with a profoundly unhappy, silent look, as he almost imperceptibly shook his head.
Two officers were waiting in the jail to accept the men. They said h.e.l.lo to Mik and nodded at her. Before they took Ibrahim and Hamid away, Louise stopped them and walked over to the two arrestees.
”If there's anything you want to say, just ask to come talk to Mik Rasmussen or me,” she said and then watched them as they started walking down the hallway toward the jail cells.
Louise and Mik returned to their office and started reading through all the previous transcripts of questioning sessions with the family members before they started with the father and son again.
It was only just seven when the deputy chief of police walked into the office and said he wanted to order a preliminary examination that same day so they could get it over with.
Louise was up out of her desk chair so fast that it shot backward and slammed into the wall.
”Out of the question,” she said, giving him a stern look. ”We need the full time, and we have twenty-four hours for the questioning we need to get through.”
Mik was also standing, but he said nothing.
The deputy chief paced back and forth a little bit before he leaned against the wall and looked from Mik to Louise.
”I read the whole thing and I'm not sure I have enough to keep them in custody,” he finally said.
Louise pulled her chair back to her desk and sat down.
”But this isn't a presentation of the evidence. You just need to convince the judge that there is reason to suspect that if we let them out, they could sync up their explanations and sway other people,” Louise said and referenced section 762 (1), paragraph 3. ”Now just give us a little peace to do our work.”
The deputy chief hesitated. ”Fine. We'll hold off on the preliminary examination until tomorrow afternoon,” he said. ”But by then, I will also expect you to have something more for me.”
31.
AT TEN PAST EIGHT THE FOLLOWING MORNING, THE GROUP WAS once again gathered in the command room. There was a carafe of coffee, and Velin had stopped by the bakery on his morning jog to make sure there were some Danishes too.
”We're going to search the family's home again,” Storm began, once they had all helped themselves. It was obvious that there'd been a break in the case, but at the same time the mood was tense and focused. The deputy chief of police had stopped by again to make it clear that he would appreciate it if they had a little more for him before he had to appear for the preliminary examination, but Storm had calmly said that if the man just had faith that the case would hold, then he already had enough.
Now Storm looked at Skipper and Dean. ”Go through everything, you two,” he said. ”And you should tear things apart. We need something more to connect the family to Dicta Moller's murder and we have to find the murder weapon.”
They received a brief description of the presumed weapon with the two distinctive rounded protrusions that Dicta had been hit with. According to Flemming La.r.s.en, it had to have a certain heft.
”The crime-scene technicians finished at the site yesterday, and two of them will join you out at Dysseparken,” Storm continued.
”Do we know that the murder location is the same as where the body was found?” Mik asked, looking at Skipper and Dean, who had helped process the parking lot.
”Yes, there's no doubt about that. She was bleeding so much, we would have found traces of blood other places in the parking lot if she'd been transported there,” Skipper said.
”It's sheer coincidence that no one saw the attack,” Dean said, shaking his head. ”It was so violent.”
”It may also be a coincidence that it happened right there,” Storm said, repeating that it was still his guess that there had been strong emotions a.s.sociated with it.