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“Six years,” said Van Veeteren.

“What was that, then?” asked the photographer, curious.

“The G-file…” Van Veeteren stopped chewing and stared out of the window.

“Oh, yes, I remember,” said Cruickshank. “I wrote about that one-”

Two young ladies came in and were about to sit at the next table, but Muller drove them away.

“Sit in the corner instead,” he urged them. “There’s a terrible stink here!”

“Well,” began Cruickshank, “are we dealing with a mad man, or is it planned?”

“Who says that madmen don’t plan?” said Van Veeteren.

“Is there a link between the victims?”

“Yes.”

“What is it?”

“…”

“How do you know?”

“Give me a Danish pastry!”

“Will there be any more top brass coming?”

“If necessary.”

“Have you any previous experience with ax murderers?” wondered the photographer.

“I know a fair amount about murderers,” said Van Veeteren.

“And everybody knows how an ax works. How long can your esteemed journals afford to do without your services and leave you here in Kaalbringen? Six months?”

“Ha ha,” said Muller. “A few days, I should think. Unless it happens again, that is.”

“It’ll be some time before that, no doubt.”

“How do you know that?”

“Thank you for the coffee,” said Van Veeteren, standing up.

“I’ll have to leave you now, I’m afraid. Don’t stay up too late, and don’t write any rubbish!”

“Have we ever written rubbish?” asked Cruickshank.

“What the hell are we doing here?” wondered the photog rapher when Van Veeteren had left them on their own.

What the hell am I doing here? thought Van Veeteren, and clambered into the passenger seat next to Bausen.

“It’s not a pretty sight,” said Bausen. “I think I’ll stay out here and do a bit of planning.”

Van Veeteren followed the limping pathologist.

“Meuritz,” he said when they had entered the room. “My name’s Meuritz. Actually based in Oostwerdingen, but I gener ally do one day a week here as well. It’s been a bit more than that lately.”

He pulled the trolley out of the deep freeze, and removed the sheet with an extravagant gesture. Van Veeteren was re minded of something Reinhart had said once: There’s only one profession. Matador. All the rest are substitutes and shadows.

Bausen was right, no doubt about it. Even if Ernst Simmel hadn’t exactly been a handsome specimen of a man while on this earth, neither the Axman nor Meuritz had done anything to improve the situation. He was lying on his stomach, and for reasons that Van Veeteren didn’t fully understand but which were no doubt pedagogical, Meuritz had placed the head at ninety degrees to the neck in an upward direction, so that the incision was clearly visible.

“A pretty skillful blow, you have to give him that,” he said, poking into the wound with a ballpoint pen.

“Skillful?” wondered Van Veeteren.

“Look at this!”

Meuritz held out an X-ray film.

“This is Eggers. Note the angle of entry! Only a couple of degrees difference. They were exactly the same depth, inciden tally…”

Van Veeteren scrutinized the picture of the maltreated white bones against a black background.

“… lands from above, diagonally from the right.”

“Right-handed?” asked Van Veeteren.

“Presumably. Or a left-handed badminton player. Who’s used to playing forehands way out on the backhand side, if you follow me.”

“I play three times a week,” said Van Veeteren.

Who was it who had said something about tennis balls not so long ago?

Meuritz nodded and pushed his glasses up onto his forehead.

“Is it the same weapon?” asked Van Veeteren. “Take that ballpoint out of his throat, if you don’t mind.”

Meuritz wiped his pen clean on his white coat and put it in his breast pocket.

“Definitely,” he said. “I can even claim to be able to describe it-an ax with a very sharp blade, sharpened by an expert no doubt. Five inches deep and quite wide. Maybe six inches, pos sibly more.”

“How do you know that?”

“It penetrated exactly the same distance in both cases, and then it was stopped by the handle. If the blade had been deeper, the skull would certainly have been severed. Have you seen the things butchers use to cut up bones with?”

Van Veeteren nodded. Began to regret the fact that he’d eaten three Danish pastries at Sylvie’s luxury cafe.

“Time of death?”

“Between half past eleven and half past twelve, roughly speaking.”

“Can you be more precise?”

“Closer to half past eleven-twenty to twelve, if you were to really press me.”

“Have you come across anything like this before?” Van

Veeteren indicated the pale blue corpse.

“No. You never stop learning in this business.”

Although it was three and a half days since Ernst Simmel’s body had been found, and almost four days since he’d been murdered, the scene of the crime had not lost its attraction.

The police had sealed it off with red-and-white tape and warn ing notices, but a trickle of people was still flowing past this woodland corral, a narrow stream of Kaalbringen citizens who didn’t want to miss the opportunity of seeing the white mark ers in among the bushes and the increasingly dark-colored patch of human blood on the path.

Constable Erwin Bang had been given the task of maintain ing order and keeping the most curious at bay, and he carried out this mission with all the dignity and attention to detail that his 160-pound frame allowed. The moment there were more than two visitors at a time, he would get them moving.

“Come on! Move it! Keep going!”

It seemed to Van Veeteren that Bang was handling the situ ation as a spot of traffic policing more than anything else. But that was of minor significance, of course.

“Can you keep the spectators at bay so that the chief inspec tor and I can take a look in peace and quiet?” asked Bausen.

“Right, that’s it. Move along!” bellowed Bang, and flocks of jackdaws and wood pigeons panicked and took to the air.

“Quickly now! This is a crime scene investigation!”

You can go and have a cup of coffee,” said Bausen when they were on their own. “We’ll be here for about half an hour.

I think we can remove the tape and stuff then. You can take it all back to the station.”

“Will do!” said Bang, giving a smart salute. He embarked on his amended duties, and strode off in the direction of the Esplanade and the harbor cafe.

“Well,” said Bausen, plunging his hands into his pockets.

“That was Constable Bang.”

Van Veeteren looked around.

“Hmm,” he said.

Bausen produced a pack of cigarettes from his pocket.

“Would you like one?”

“No,” said Van Veeteren, “ but I’ll have one even so. Can we try a little experiment?”

“Your word is my command,” said Bausen, lighting two cig arettes and handing one of them to Van Veeteren. “What do you want to do?”

“Let’s walk along the path for twenty or thirty yards. Then I’ll come back with you following me, and I’ll see if I can hear you.”

“OK,” said Bausen. “But I’ve tested that already. The path has been trampled down by so many feet, it’s damn hard. You won’t hear a thing.”

They carried out the experiment, and Bausen’s prediction proved to be absolutely correct. The distant murmur of the sea and the rustling of the wind in the trees was sufficient to mask any other noise. Bausen had more or less been able to put his hand on Van Veeteren’s shoulder before he’d noticed he was even there.

“And that’s how it happened,” said Bausen.

Van Veeteren nodded.

“I take it you’ve made a thorough search?” he said.

“Of the crime scene? We most certainly have! We’ve vacu umed every single blade of grass. Not a thing! Just blood, and more blood. It’s dry, you see. Hasn’t rained for three weeks. No soft ground anywhere, no footprints. No, I don’t think we’re going to get any leads of that sort. It looks as if he wiped his weapon clean at one spot, but that’s all.”