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Óttar wasn’t sweating, but the moment for the first drops to appear on his forehead could hardly be far away. Gunna gave him a look intended to be reassuring, and he responded with a glassy smile of his own that looked to have been painted on.

‘This is a respectable agency,’ he struggled to say and looked up at the young man from the reception desk. ‘Svenni, would you leave us, please? Ask Hildur if there’s anything you can help her with, would you?’

Eiríkur looked stressed. Gunna wondered how many times his wife had called that morning before dismissing the thought as uncharitable.

‘How did it go?’ He asked, pushing a lock of fair hair back from his eyes and looking up from the screen.

‘Kópavogsbakki fifty is owned by Sólfell Property ehf, ostensibly,’ she told him.

‘So we need to look up who owns that.’

‘You can look it up if you like,’ Gunna said, dropping into Helgi’s vacant chair next to him. ‘But according to Óttar Sveinsson the smooth-talking silver fox of an estate agent, it’s a company owned by a group of people including the couple along the street at Kópavogsbakki forty-two, and I can tell you right away that Sólfell Property is owned by friends of Vilhelm Thorleifsson and Elvar Pálsson.’

‘Big shots?’ Eiríkur asked with a downward curl of one corner of his mouth. ‘More twats in suits?’

‘Eiríkur! What’s got into you?’ Gunna said in feigned shock. ‘You’re not turning into one of these dangerous radical types, are you?’

‘Ach. Five years of watching the news, prices going up and all the rest of it. Either that or I’ve been working with you and Helgi for too long.’

‘That might be it,’ Gunna admitted. ‘But this is very interesting as the directors of Sólfell Property are Jón Vilberg Voss, Sunna María Voss and Jóhann Hjálmarsson.’

‘Curiouser and curiouser,’ Eiríkur said, with lines that Gunna had never seen before appearing on his forehead as he frowned. ‘That’s too much of a coincidence, isn’t it?’

Gunna cracked her knuckles. ‘Let’s say that once I’d overcome his reservations about telling the police things his clients might not want us to know, Óttar Sveinsson became very talkative.’

‘He’s an estate agent, what do you expect?’ Eiríkur snorted. ‘They’re just snake oil salesmen under the skin.’

‘You really have developed a cynical streak while you’ve been off, haven’t you?’

Eiríkur sighed and looked around. ‘You know,’ he started and Gunna sat back and looked at him expectantly, ‘I’m wondering if I’m cut out for this, to be quite honest with you.’

‘You mean police work in general, or CID?’

‘Both, I suppose,’ he said and screwed up his face in a frown that Gunna felt didn’t suit his normally fresh, open features. ‘These last few weeks haven’t been easy, what with the baby and the missus both being sick. It’s been hard on her and it hasn’t been easy on any of us. There have been a good few sleepless nights and a lot of time to think things through.’ His voice faltered and he looked past her at the window and the shreds of ragged white cloud scudding across a blue sky behind them. ‘I mean,’ he faltered. ‘You had a hard time of your own, what with your husband and all that. How did you manage? Did you think about packing it all in?’

‘What? And go to live with my mother? Not at all. If anything it was the thought of going back to work that was one of the fixed points when everything else was going haywire,’ Gunna said, suddenly serious, and she felt a wave of recollection that brought an unbidden lump to her throat. ‘It was very difficult after Raggi was lost,’ she admitted. ‘We’d only been married a year or so and Laufey was two, something like that. I didn’t know what the hell was going on and it was a truly dreadful time, but we all have our ways of coping, I guess. So what’s really bugging you, Eiríkur? Is it the job or is it you?’

‘Me, I suppose. I just don’t feel like I’m doing the right thing.’

‘And what should you be doing?’

Eiríkur hesitated. ‘I, well. You know I did the first two years at university before I joined the force?’

‘Of course. You think I haven’t seen your CV?’

‘That’s what I’m thinking. Going back to finish university.’

‘Theology?’ Gunna stared. ‘Tell me you’re joking.’

Eiríkur shook his head. ‘I’m deadly serious.’

‘You want to be a priest? Why?’ Gunna asked. ‘I mean, it can’t be for the humungous salary or because the Church needs you more than the police force does?’

‘I believe the Church does need people like me,’ Eiríkur said in a low voice. ‘You see the priests the Church has these days? All those earnest young things with years of university behind them and precious little else. It needs people with some idea of real life. There are too many people there in jobs for life, taking part in committees and meetings.’

‘Like the public sector as a whole, you mean?’

‘I’ve given it a lot of thought these last few weeks; months, even.’

‘And your mind’s made up?’

‘No. But it’s getting closer.’

Gunna stood up and wondered what to say. Eiríkur’s confession had taken her completely by surprise. While she knew that he was the youngest child of fairly elderly parents, and that he’d been brought up in the shadow of the church in a Reykjavík suburb where the old man had been the parish priest, she hadn’t realized that he was actively religious or that his thoughts had been moving in that direction.

‘What does your wife think of all this?’ Gunna asked.

Eiríkur was about to speak when the door opened and Sævaldur Bogason, one of the senior detectives and someone neither Gunna nor Eiríkur got on well with, nodded to them as he stalked to a desk in the corner, whistling tunelessly as he logged on to a computer.

‘I’ll talk to you about it later,’ she muttered, and Eiríkur nodded in agreement. ‘Right now I need a word with the Laxdal.’

* * *

‘Something juicy, is it?’

Gunna looked sideways at Sævaldur Bogason as he put down his tray and sat down opposite her in the canteen. He was the force’s newest chief inspector while she was still a sergeant, even though they had graduated in the same year. The difference, she told herself, was that Sævaldur had spent all his career in Reykjavík, while ten of her years as a police officer had been spent on a rural beat with few prospects of promotion in the provincial backwater where she still lived, preferring to commute an hour each way every day than move to the city.

‘To be quite honest, Sæsi, I’m not sure. It looks unpleasant, but who knows? It may have been some kind of role-play, or something completely innocuous.’

He smiled glassily in a way that projected neither humour nor amiability. He and Gunna had crossed swords more than once in the past and had disagreed on practically everything on the occasions they had worked together. But their relationship had improved as they got used to each other in the detectives’ office at the Hverfisgata station, while each took care to leave the other space to manoeuvre.

‘There’s blood on the floor? Doesn’t sound playful to me.’

‘It doesn’t sound that way to me either. But with no body, no victim in casualty and nobody knocking down the door here to protest at ill-treatment, it doesn’t look like it’s going to go anywhere. How are you getting on up there in Borgarfjördur?’ Gunna asked, to steer the conversation away from her case and towards Sævaldur’s.

‘A nightmare. No dabs, no sightings, nothing at all. One drunk witness who might have seen a car that could have been relevant. That’s all.’

‘And the hammer?’

‘Nothing. We’ve been around every hardware shop in the country and haven’t found anyone we couldn’t account for who bought a sledgehammer in the last month. Have you any idea how many sledgehammers are sold in Iceland every year? Dozens of the damned things. The slugs are being analysed, but I don’t believe for a second they’ll tell us much.’