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All of that came back to him in the semi-dream of delirium induced by loss of blood and analgesics. His mouth felt like it had been stuffed with cotton.

There was a face swimming above him, one vaguely familiar. The kindly and understanding hospital chaplain who had tried in vain to comfort him as the trickle of those who were injured but survived the blast dried up without Laurin? No it was … He struggled to put a name with the face.

“Can you hear me, Mr. Peters?”

The revelation came as though from on high: Harvor. Harvor the Commissioner of Police. “Loud and clear. Can you get me some water?”

“The doctors have removed the bullet from your shoulder. You are quite fortunate: a few millimeters over and you could be dead.”

Jason had never considered being shot particularly fortuitous. “Lucky me.”

“We have searched for the cell phone and the other items but they were not on the dead man’s body.”

Jason suddenly became aware that, other than the standard open-backed hospital shift, he was wearing nothing. If Harvor or his minions searched his clothes …

“I’d really appreciate some water.”

Harvor reached for a table beside the bed and poured water from a carafe into a paper cup. The sound made Jason run his tongue across dry, cracked lips.

Harvor held the cup in his hand. “Perhaps you have some idea where these things might be?”

Jason’s eyes were fixed on the cup. “Have you searched that rock formation?”

“Thoroughly.”

Jason struggled against the drugs to prop himself up on his elbows. The effort made his head spin and he feared he would black out. “The water …”

“Oh, yes, the water.”

The police commissioner proffered the paper cup. Jason emptied it in two swallows. He had never enjoyed anything more, even the single-malt scotch he favored, but it was like pouring water on desert sand: it seemed to evaporate in his throat.

He handed the cup back. “Another, please.”

Harvor set it down on the bedside table. “I’m not sure how much liquid the doctors want you to have, Mr. Peters. I’ll have to check. But first, we need to talk about the missing phone, that piece of string or whatever it might be, and the scrap of metal. Then there is also the matter of the pistol you were carrying in your bag when you arrived here in Iceland in addition to the one you took from the man who died. Normally, the penalties for possession of such a weapon are quite severe, but in view of the fact you saved my life, I have simply confiscated yours to be returned when you depart Iceland.”

Jason tried not to look at his clothes hanging in an open closet by the door. Why the police had not searched the pockets was a mystery, as was the reason he desperately wanted to keep the missing objects himself, to make them give up whatever answers they might hold, rather than turn them over to the police.

He could also see the small overnight bag he had brought on the plane to Iceland. With any luck at all, once they had found the Glock, they hadn’t rummaged through the bag’s contents. The knife, his specially designed blade, should still be in there. He might be without the Glock, but he was not weaponless.

Harvor was about to say something when a uniformed officer, face flushed with excitement, burst into the room. “Commissioner?”

Harvor replied in a language Jason did not understand, the tone implying annoyance at being interrupted. Jason did catch the name Karloff.

Ignoring the wave of vertigo, Jason sat up. “Something has happened to Karloff?”

Harvor gave him a curt glare. “Something indeed, Mr. Peters. Something that is police business.”

The commissioner followed the uniformed officer out of the room.

In seconds, Jason had the IV out of his arm and was trying, despite a wave of dizziness, to step into his pants. In less than a minute, he was fully dressed. He was gratified to find his pockets still contained the objects Harvor wanted. He bent over to tie his shoes and nearly passed out. The laces would have to remain loose for the moment.

Using the corridor wall for support, he stumbled his way toward the elevator. From the room numbers on the doors, he knew Room 430 would be one floor up. After what seemed eons, the elevator doors hissed open and Jason lurched inside and pushed “4.”

The doors parted, revealing a scene that could have come from an old Keystone Kops silent film: Police uniforms dashed about without apparent purpose. People in white lab coats shouted orders no one seemed to obey. The impression was of a fire drill where no one knew the location of the exits.

Jason grabbed the lapel of one of the white coats. “What happened?”

The woman looked at him as though he might have been the only person in Reykjavík who did not know. “Happened? Happened? The patient in 430 …”

Jason didn’t wait for a full explanation. Filled with dread, he shoved his way toward the room, ignoring a swimming head and legs that felt more like spaghetti than bones. At the door of the room, he slid past a protesting uniform and stopped.

What he saw brought burning bile to his throat. For an instant, he thought whatever he had eaten in the last twelve hours would find its way to the floor. Then he remembered he hadn’t eaten at all. Three of the room’s walls were decorated with an abstract pattern of red splatter now turning a rusty brown. Even the ceiling had spots of blood. Boris was face-up, his upper torso dangling from the bed’s blood-soaked sheets toward the floor like some malignant growth. Beneath his chin, a red-encrusted slash grinned obscenely, its crimson lips still dripping blood.

Judging from the mess, he had continued to struggle even after his throat had been cut.

“Mr. Peters!” Harvor was at Jason’s side. “You should be in bed, under observation, where you can be cared for.”

“Like Boris there?”

“Boris?”

“The man with the slit throat. Last I saw of him, he had a police officer outside his door.”

“The officer assigned seems to be missing,” Harvor replied stiffly.

I’m sure he is.

“You must return to your room!”

And wind up sliced and diced?

Obediently, Jason turned and left. He took the elevator down to his assigned room, where he made sure his shoes were tied, took the sweater from its hanger, and walked out of the hospital without notice. A cab took him to the airport, where the Gulfstream and crew waited.

He entered the small general-aviation passenger area and took out his BlackBerry to call Maria. At first he feared a possible lack of network coverage as Harvor had mentioned, but she answered on the second ring.

“I’m at the airport,” Jason informed her. “I think I got all the information about Boris I’m going to.”

There was a pause. Then, “Can you stay over another couple of days? Pier and I are just getting started on planning the expedition.”

From “Dr. Sevensen” to “Pier” in less than twenty-four hours? Not a good sign.

“Something’s come up. I need to leave.”

“You need to go somewhere else or you need to get out of Iceland?”

Damn, but she knew him too well.

“I promised you to avoid any violence …”

Explaining a bullet wound wasn’t going to be easy.

Her tone was wary. “Well, if you’re keeping your promise … Where is it you are going?”

Jason was caught flatfooted. He literally had no place to go. The villa at Ischia Ponte was definitely out. He was effectively homeless.

“Washington, briefly, and I’m not sure after that.”