"I was just wondering," he said, lowering his voice so that the others would not hear him. "I need a sick note. I have to take a few days off to get through this. Is there someone here who can help or should I go somewhere else?"
"I'll have a word with the doctor. You can go back to your sister, I won't be long."
He thanked her and went back again. The respirator was working steadily and it soothed him that all she had to do was rest while the machine kept her alive. The machine never tired. It did its job with a perseverance human beings simply did not have. Later the doctor came to see him and filled in the forms for him. He had brought a plastic bag with him. It contained Marie's belongings. Her handbag and a bouquet of flowers. He unwrapped it. Red roses. With a card. "Dear Poona. Welcome to Elvestad."
If Poona had gone into Einar's Café, someone must have seen her. And subsequently worked out who she was. The owner of the café, at the least. But he had not called. Why not? Skarre noticed two cars parked outside the café, a green estate car and a red Toyota. Burgundy, Skarre thought auto- matically, not red like a fire engine. As he pushed open the door he spotted a jukebox. He stopped for a moment to admire it, wondering what sort of music it played. To his surprise he saw that practically everything was old. Nearly twice as old as he was. Then he tore himself away and went to the counter. Two women sat at separate tables by the window, drinking coffee. A red-haired, lanky man sat behind the counter with a newspaper on his lap.
"Are you doing the door-to-door interviews?" Einar said quickly.
"I am," Skarre said, smiling. Because he always smiled, he seemed perfectly harmless and quite free of suspicion.
"Is there somewhere private we can talk?"
"That bad, eh?"
Einar opened the flap so that Skarre could come through. They went into Einar's office. It was messy and there was hardly any floor space, but Einar pulled out a chair for Skarre. He himself sat on a beer crate.
"I had a call from a minicab firm," Skarre said. "And it led to me coming here."
Einar was at once on his guard.
"A cabbie drove a woman here on August 20th from Gardermoen. He dropped her at this café. The last thing he saw was the woman lugging a suitcase up your steps."
Einar sat still, listening.
"The woman was from India. She was dressed in a blue top with matching trousers. She had a long plait all the way down her back."
Einar nodded once more. It looked as though he was thinking hard.
"So now I want to ask you," Skarre said, "if such a woman came in here on the evening of the 20th?"
"Yes, she did," Einar said, reluctantly. "I remember her."
"Then perhaps you can tell me what happened?" Skarre said, still smiling.
"There's not much to tell. She dumped the suitcase by the jukebox and ordered a cup of tea," he said. "Took a seat in the far corner. I only had Lipton tea. But it seemed to be OK."
"Did you talk to her?"
"No," he said firmly.
"Did you see the suitcase?" Skarre said.
"The suitcase? Well, I guess I saw a brown suitcase. She put it down by the jukebox. Then she came over to the counter and asked for tea. She looked stressed, as a matter of fact. As though she was waiting for someone."
Skarre tried to build an idea of the sort of person Einar was. Introverted. A stickler. And guarded.
"How long was she here?"
"A quarter of an hour maybe."
"I see. And then?"
"The door slammed and she was gone."
Silence followed, while they both thought.
"Did she pay with Norwegian money?"
"Yes."
"And now, afterwards, what thoughts do you have about this woman?"
Einar shrugged, unconcernedly. "That it was probably her. The woman they found at Hvitemoen."
"Precisely," Skarre said. "It's that simple. And you never thought of calling us?"
"I didn't know it was her. A good many people come here."
"Not a great number of Indian women, I imagine."
"We've some immigrants here, or refugees or whatever they call themselves. It's not easy for me to tell the difference. But, yes, I should have considered the possibility. So all I can do is apologise," he said sullenly. "However, now it appears you've worked it out all by yourselves."
"We usually do," Skarre said. "So. Which way did she go?"
"No idea," he said. "I wasn't looking out of the window and I wasn't interested anyway."
"Anyone else at the café at that time?"
"No-one," he said. "Too late for the coffee crowd and too early for the beer drinkers."
"Did she speak English?"
"Yes."
"But she didn't ask you any questions? Nothing at all?"
"No."
"She didn't ask to borrow the telephone, or something like that?"
"No."
"What was your opinion about who she was or where she was going? A foreign woman, alone, with a huge suitcase, out in the countryside, in the evening."
"Nothing. I'm not very interested in people. I serve them, that's all."
"Was she pretty?" Skarre said. He looked directly at Einar Sunde.
Einar gave him a baffled look. "That's a strange question."
"I'm just curious," Skarre said. "I've never seen her."
"You've never seen her?"
"Not until it was too late."
Einar blinked.
"Pretty and pretty," he looked down at his hands. "I'm not sure. Yes, in a way. Very exotic. Slender, neat. And they dress like women, if you know what I mean. No jeans or track suits, those awful clothes we wear. Her teeth stuck out a great deal."
"But apart from that. How did she act? Confidently? Anxious?"
"I've told you. She looked stressed," he said. "Lost."
"And the time? What time was it when she left?"
He frowned. "Might have been 8.30 or thereabouts."
"Thank you," Skarre said.
He got up and left the office. Opened the flap and went out into the café. Stayed there for a moment looking around. Einar followed him. Grabbed a cloth and started wiping tabletops here and there.
"You can't see the table by the jukebox when you're standing behind the counter," Skarre said slowly.
"No, I told you. I didn't see her leave. I heard the door slam."
"But the suitcase. You said it was brown. How did you see that?"
Einar bit his lip. "Well, perhaps I did go out into the room after all. I really don't remember."
"No," Skarre said. "Thank you very much."
"Don't mention it."
Skarre took four steps and stopped once more.
"Just one small thing." He raised his index finger to his mouth. "I mean, frankly… Countless requests for help in the papers and on TV, requests for absolutely anything that might be relevant to a foreign woman being in Elvestad on the 20th. Why on earth didn't you call?"
Einar dropped the cloth. Fear showed momentarily in his face.
"I don't know," he said. His eyes flickered.
Linda was duly described in the paper as a key witness. Unnamed, of course. But all the same. She cycled around at random, just to be seen. No-one knew, only Karen. And her mother. She kept on asking.
"But for God's sake, what did you see?"
"Hardly anything," Linda said. "But maybe I'll begin to remember more in time." She had called Jacob with the latest news. The blond hair. The sticker in the car window. Sensed this particular value she had finally acquired. She cycled towards the centre of the village and Gunwald's shop was on her right. An old moped was on its stand outside. Even though she never shopped at Gunwald's she could wander inside and let on a little bit. A single word would flutter like a butterfly from ear to ear that she was the one, Linda Carling, the witness on the bike. People would look at her, come over to her, and talk about her.
Linda saw the killer.