Lind looked at Korpivaara. “I…,” she began. The room was silent and everyone’s eyes were fixed on her.
“I apologize. I retract my earlier statement,” she said. “My client confessed during the interrogation.”
“Alright, that’s fine. Do you have any comments about the evidence?”
Lind shook her head.
“Okay. Wait outside for a few minutes and I will make a decision,” the judge said, even though the clerk had already typed it up before the session. A stupid rubber-stamp case for which she was dragged to court on a Saturday afternoon, she lamented.
* * *
Suhonen was driving an unmarked Volkswagen Golf north on the Tuusula Freeway as Joutsamo sat in the passenger seat next to him. Two radios were on; Suhonen was listening to the Rock Radio station and Joutsamo to the police radio.
It was dark outside and snowing; the traffic was light.
Heikela Corporation, Rock Radio’s popular morning show, was replaying the week’s top sketches. Suhonen had heard most of it live, but had missed this one. Heikela, the show’s host, had lost a game of Xbox soccer to Radio Suomipop’s host Jaajo in the fall. It was a widely-anticipated game where the loser had to take part in the Finnish Idol song contest. All week long Heikela had been practicing on air. A veteran rock star was hired to teach Heikela the secrets to voice. Heikela wasn’t hopelessly bad, but he was no pop star either. Suhonen had missed Heikela’s attempt to mimic an electric guitar, in the style of Deep Purple’s Ian Gillan. Gillan’s vocal duel with Richie Blackmore’s guitar in “Strange Kind of Woman” on their Made in Japan live album was legendary. In its dreadfulness, Heikela’s version was almost endearing.
Suhonen came to the huge intersection at the Ring III Beltway. It would be another couple of miles straight ahead to their destination on the north side of the airport. Suddenly the police radio beeped.
“Attention all units. A Siwa store was robbed in Herttoniemi a few minutes ago. The suspect was wearing a mask. Description of the suspect: about 30 years old, dark shoulder-length hair, and a finger missing on one hand.”
“That’s for us, too,” Joutsamo said, glancing at Suhonen.
“Yep,” Suhonen said and got into the right lane. He would flip a U-turn at the airport exit and head back south.
“We’ll head out to the other place tomorrow.”
“What is that place, anyway?” Joutsamo asked.
“I’ll tell you when we get there tomorrow. It has to do with the missing girl,” Suhonen said. “But about the robbery: I know who it is.”
“What?”
“Jouni Rautis. He fits the description to a tee.”
“The finger?”
“Yeah,” Suhonen said.
“How did he lose it?”
“In a bet. He used to hang around the cocaine crowd in the downtown bars. They were snorting in the backroom and placing bets.”
“On what?”
“I can’t remember exactly. It might’ve been about the year Mohammed Ali won the Heavyweight World Championship… Yeah, that was it,” Suhonen said. “I remember now. Rautis claimed Ali won his first title in 1964. In a way he was right, but Ali’s name at the time was still Cassius Clay. So technically he didn’t win his first title as Mohammed Ali until 1974 when he beat George Foreman. In any case, the pot was a thousand euros, and since Rautis didn’t have the money, he bet his index finger.”
“Holy shit.”
Suhonen turned left at the bridge, crossing over and getting back on the freeway.
“The bet was settled then and there. In 18th-century British Navy style, the winner bought Rautis a bottle of whisky, which he drank. Then the guy chopped Rautis’s finger off with a meat cleaver he had found in the kitchen.”
“And the cocaine had nothing to do with it,” Joutsamo commented, shaking her head.
“The hand bled like crazy and someone called an ambulance. Rautis told the police he had cut off his own finger.”
“And they bought it.”
“Yup. Well, as you could see, when word got around, he wasn’t welcome in the VIP lounges anymore. The rest of his life was going downhill, too. He racked up debt and was canned from his job at some bank. But he didn’t give up drugs; he just moved from coke to the cheaper varieties, like meth.”
“That would explain the robbery.”
“I’d guess he owes somebody and was behind. That’s why he couldn’t think of anything better than the grocery store gig.”
Suhonen remembered that Salmela had told him at the hospital about someone aggressively collecting debts.
The speed limit on the freeway was sixty miles per hour, and Joutsamo wondered if they should use the siren.
“No, I know where he lives in Herttoniemi. Let’s pick him up there.”
“You think he’s gone home?” Joutsamo asked.
“Wanna bet?” Suhonen said, grinning.
CHAPTER 20
SATURDAY, 4:45 P.M.
HELSINKI POLICE HEADQUARTERS, PASILA
The taxi from Turku stopped in front of Helsinki police headquarters. Römpötti had directed the driver through the Munkkivuori and South Haaga neighborhoods to Pasila. Despite the clear instructions, the driver had hesitated at a couple of intersections, and precious minutes were lost.
Had she caught the train, Römpötti would’ve made it to the police station easily by four thirty. But the taxi ride was taking longer. She tried to calm down. She handed the driver her card half a mile before the station, to speed things up, but he just set it down.
Once they stopped, he swiped the card.
“Okay, I’ll need your PIN here,” the driver said and handed her the machine that was printing the receipt.
“It’s a business credit card, there is no PIN,” Römpötti said, then tore off the receipt from the machine and signed it. She knew how to print the customer copy, and pressed the button.
“No need to write the departure and destination on the receipt, or sign it,” she said and handed the machine and the receipt back to the driver.
“Okay,” the man said.
“Thanks for the ride,” Römpötti said and got out.
“Have a good day,” the driver said before Römpötti shut the door.
The reporter scrambled up the few steps to the door and stopped at the desk.
“A court hearing is in session. Would you please let me in?”
The officer at the desk knew Römpötti was familiar with the second floor where the hearings were held.
“Yeah, go ahead to the door; I’ll buzz you in.”
Römpötti attempted a smile as she walked the twenty yards to the glass door. The electric lock buzzed, and the reporter yanked the door open, waving to the officer. Römpötti was fifteen minutes late, and the case had probably already been heard, but maybe she could at least be in time to see Jorma Korpivaara when the court’s decision was announced. Even if the case was handled behind closed doors, by law the opening and closing procedures must be open to the public.
Römpötti ran up the stairs and noticed Takamäki standing in the hallway, talking on his cell phone. Korpivaara and Lind sat on a bench next to each other by the closed door. The guard was standing a few feet away. Römpötti’s hand went into her purse.
Before Römpötti could say anything, the court clerk came out to announce that the court had reached a decision. Takamäki got off the phone and greeted Römpötti. Lind nodded, but Korpivaara just looked at her.
Römpötti pulled out her cell phone and snapped a picture, startling Korpivaara.
“Why did you do that?” Lind asked her curtly.
“It’s a reflex,” Römpötti replied and looked at the photo. Her new Nokia phone had a decent camera, and now she had a good photo of the suspect. This was why she wanted to make it to the courthouse in time.
Takamäki, Lind, and Korpivaara walked into the courtroom, and the guard and Römpötti followed them in.