Nemesis

Nemesis by Jo Nesbø Page A

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Authors: Jo Nesbø
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the last one again?’
    ‘Sound.’
    ‘Sound, yeah! No, not a lot of sound, quiet as the grave it was. That is . . . ha ha . . . I didn’t mean . . .’
    ‘That’s fine, Jensen. Had you met the deceased before?’
    ‘Never seen her before she came to the shop. Seemed pretty perky then.’
    ‘What did she want you to do?’
    ‘Fix the thermostat for the underfloor heating in the bathroom.’
    ‘Could you do us a favour and check if there’s really a problem with the cables? See if she had any heater cables even.’
    ‘What for? Oh, I see, she might have set the whole thing up and we were kind of supposed to find her?’
    ‘Something like that.’
    ‘Yeah, well, the thermostat was fried.’
    ‘Fried?’
    ‘Not functional.’
    ‘How do you know?’
    Pause.
    ‘You must have been told not to touch anything, Jensen, weren’t you?’
    ‘Ye-es, but you took such a bloody long time to come, and I got a bit twitchy, so I had to find something to do.’
    ‘So, now, the deceased has a fully functional thermostat?’
    ‘Er . . . ha ha . . . yes.’
    Harry tried to move off the bed, but his feet wouldn’t obey. The doctor had closed Anna’s eyes and now she seemed to be sleeping. Tom Waaler had sent the electrician home and told him to make himself available for the next few days. He had also dismissed the uniformed patrolmen who had responded to the call. Harry would never have believed he would feel this way, but in fact he was pleased that Waaler had been there. Without his experienced colleague’s presence, not one single intelligent question would have been asked, and even fewer intelligent decisions taken.
    Waaler asked the doctor if he could give them some provisional conclusions.
    ‘The bullet has obviously passed through the skull, destroyed the brain and thus arrested all vital bodily functions. On the assumption that the room temperature has been constant, body temperature suggests that she has been dead for at least sixteen hours. No signs of violence. No injection marks or external indications of medicinal use. However . . .’ The doctor paused for effect. ‘The scars on the wrists suggest that she has tried this before. A purely speculative but educated guess is that she was manic depressive, or simply depressive, and suicidal. I wouldn’t mind betting we will find a psychologist’s case file on her.’
    Harry tried to say something, but his tongue wouldn’t obey, either.
    ‘I’ll know more when I’ve undertaken a closer examination.’
    ‘Thank you, Doctor. Anything to tell us, Weber?’
    ‘The weapon is a Beretta M92F, a highly unusual gun. We can only find one set of fingerprints on the gunstock, and they are obviously hers. The bullet was lodged in one of the bed boards and the ammo matches the weapon, so the ballistics report will show it was fired by this pistol. You’ll get a full report tomorrow.’
    ‘Good, Weber. One more thing. The door was locked when the electrician arrived. I noticed the door was fitted with a standard lock and not a latch, so no one can have been here and then left the flat, unless they took the deceased’s key and locked the door after them, of course. In other words, if we find her key, we can wrap this one up.’
    Weber nodded and lifted a yellow pencil, dangling from which was a ring and a key. ‘It was on the chest of drawers in the hall. It’s the kind of system key that opens the main door to the block and all the rooms for common use. I checked and it fits the lock on the flat door.’
    ‘Excellent. All we’re missing then is basically a signed suicide letter. Any objections to calling this one an open and shut case?’
    Waaler looked at Weber, the doctor and Harry. ‘OK. Family can be given the sad news and come to identify her.’
    He went into the hall while Harry stood by the bed. Soon after, Waaler stuck his head in again.
    ‘Isn’t it great when all the cards just fall into place, Hole?’
    Harry’s brain sent a message to the head to

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