He looks around. A solitary horse is grazing near Ekeberg Farm. A woman, with blonde hair in a ponytail, is out jogging. He sees a dog running around on the grass where the huge birches appear to have grown into one tree. The dog has a stick in its mouth.
He heads for the tent and tries to visualise what happened. Henriette Hagerup in the hole in the ground, knocked out by a stun gun. A man throwing heavy rocks at her, flogging her, chopping off her hand. Perhaps she didn’t start screaming until it was too late. No one saw or heard her.
She must have been killed in the middle of the night or very early in the morning. And she must have come here of her free will. No one could have carried an unconscious person across Ekeberg Common without being seen. Not even at night. There would still be traffic around. This makes him think she must have been meeting someone she knew. Could the filming have something to do with it?
His thoughts are interrupted by the dog jumping up at him. He just manages to raise his hands in defence as the dog tries to take a chunk out of his arm. He shakes and pushes the dog away. It doesn’t hurt him, but it growls. Its owner comes over.
‘Sit.’
The man’s voice is firm. The dog scampers around Henning’s feet before it returns to its master, reluctantly.
‘I’m sorry,’ the older man says. ‘He just wants to play. He’s very frisky, you see. Are you all right? He didn’t bite you?’
Henning doesn’t mind frisky, but he draws the line at attempted murder. He wants to shout at this bloody idiot of a dog owner who lets a lethal weapon run free in a public space. But he doesn’t. Because he remembers Assistant Commissioner Nokleby saying at the press conference that:
The body was discovered by an older man out walking his dog. He called the police at 06.09.
He checks his watch. It is almost ten past. He inhales deeply and looks at the dog owner.
‘I’m fine,’ he says, brushing off invisible dog hairs. With Henning’s usual luck, some of them will have got stuck in his nostrils and he will have a fun couple of days of sneezing and wheezing to look forward to.
‘Lively animal,’ he says, forcing a smile.
‘Yes, he’s a bundle of energy. His name is Kama Sutra.’
Henning stares at the man.
‘Kama Sutra?’
The man nods proudly. Henning decides not to ask the obvious question.
‘You’re out early?’
‘We’re out early every day. I’m an early bird, always have been. Kama Sutra loves to start his day up here. And so do I. When it’s all quiet and the air is fresh.’
‘Yes, I see what you mean,’ Henning says, and looks around again.
‘Thorbjorn Skagestad,’ the man introduces himself before Henning has time to ask. He holds out his hand. Henning shakes it.
‘Henning Juul.’
Skagestad wears a Norwegian army cap, though it is summer. The cap sits loosely on his head. His wellies are army green, too. His combat trousers have pockets on the front, on the back and on the legs, and are reinforced with leather patches on the knees. His jacket matches the trousers, both in colour and in style. Skagestad would look at home on the cover of Hunting and Fishing. His skin is lined and his teeth show his love of coffee and tobacco. Yet, he has an amiable face. It looks like it could break into a smile at any time.
‘Are you a police officer?’ he asks and throws the stick as far as he can. Kama Sutra shoots off. Henning sees its small paws dart across the soft grass.
‘I’m a reporter. I work for the on-line newspaper, 123news.’
‘123news?’
‘Yes.’
‘What kind of name is that?’
Henning holds up his hands.
‘Don’t ask me. I didn’t pick it.’
‘But what are you doing out here at this hour? There’s no one around.’
‘You’re here. It was you who found her, wasn’t it?’
Skagestad becomes defensive. Most people do, when they realise they are about to be interviewed. But Skagestad has no choice but to answer every single one of Henning’s questions. After all, his dog has just attacked him, so Henning doesn’t feel bad in the slightest for imposing on Skagestad.
‘I don’t want to get in the paper.’
‘You won’t have to.’
Kama Sutra returns with the stick in its mouth. Skagestad takes one end and pulls as hard as he can. The dog growls again, no way will it let go and it doesn’t until Skagestad overpowers it. The dog pants, its tongue dangles out of the corner of its mouth. Kama Sutra sits down, its eyes filled with anticipation. Skagestad hurls the stick again.
‘I’ve never seen anything like it.’
Henning can quite believe that.
‘What has happened to this country?’ Skagestad continues. ‘A stoning in Norway?’
He shakes his head.
‘I bet it’s those bloody immigrants.’
Henning wants to say something, but stops himself. As Jarle Hogseth used to say: When people want to get something off their chest, then you let them talk. Let them talk themselves dry. Even if you don’t like what they are saying.
‘There are far too many of them here.’
Skagestad shakes his head again.
‘I’ve got nothing against helping people who’ve had a rough time where they came from, but if they’re going to live here, they should jolly well abide by Norwegian laws, respect our culture and our way of life, do things like we’ve always done them.’
‘We can’t be sure that an immigrant did this,’ Henning says.
‘Is that right? We’ve never had a stoning in Norway before.’
It’s too early in the morning to have the immigration debate, so he says:
‘Why did you go inside the tent?’
‘That’s the thing. I’m not really sure. But the tent wasn’t there the day before, I’m here every day, you see, and I was curious.’
‘Did you see anyone?’
‘I usually do, but not near the tent. Nothing caught my eye as I walked up here. I live in Samvirkevei.’
‘Can you describe the crime scene?’
‘The crime scene?’
‘Yes. What did it look like inside the tent, did you notice anything?’
Skagestad takes a deep breath.
‘I have already done this with the police.’
‘Yes, but you may not have remembered everything. The brain is remarkable. We rarely remember every detail of a traumatic experience at the time. However, things may surface later, things you didn’t consider important, but which turn out to matter.’
I sound like a policeman, Henning thinks. But it works. He can see that Skagestad is trawling through his memories.
‘It could be anything. A sound, a smell, a colour,’ Henning continues. Something causes Skagestad’s facial expression to change. He grows more alert.
‘Actually, there is one thing I remember now,’ he says and looks at Henning. Kama Sutra returns. Skagestad ignores the dog.
‘I noticed it when I entered the tent, but then I forgot all about it.’
‘What was it?’ Henning says.
‘The smell,’ says Skagestad, remembering it. ‘It smelt stuffy, as it usually does inside a tent. But there was something else.’
Then he starts to laugh. Henning is puzzled.
‘It’s a bit embarrassing,’ he says.
Henning is sorely tempted to thump the old man.
‘What is?’ he asks, patiently.
Skagestad shakes his head, still smiling. Then he looks straight at him.
‘I could smell aftershave.’
‘Aftershave?’
‘Yes.’
‘Not perfume?’
‘No. Aftershave.’
‘Are you absolutely sure?’
He nods.
‘How can you be?’
Skagestad smiles again.
‘That’s what’s embarrassing,’ he says, but he doesn’t elaborate. Henning thinks the man would make an excellent torturer at Guantanamo.
‘Romance,’ he says. By now, Henning is completely lost.
‘From Ralph Lauren,’ Skagestad continues.
‘How — ?’
‘I use it myself, you see. It was a present from my grandchild. That’s why I recognised it.’
‘Was it very noticeable?’
‘No. Very faint. But I’ve a strong sense of smell. And like I said, I use it myself sometimes, when I’m going out to — eh — meet someone.’