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Nineteen-year-old Jonas from Stange had proved to be an exceptional worker. Tom Lauritz Larsen had taken to the boy right from the start. He was not one of those of those hobby farmers who didn’t know the meaning of hard work; no, this boy had what it took. Except for this business with the Internet, with which Tom Lauritz Larsen would have no truck. But he had had it installed anyway, because of the nineteen-year-old lad in the spare bedroom. It was something about a girlfriend from Vestlandet and expensive telephone bills, and talking on the Internet was free, it would appear, they could even see each other and God knows what. What did he know? So Telenor had dispatched an engineer from Hamar, and now the Internet had been up and running on the small farm for several months.

Tom Lauritz Larsen poured himself another cup of breakfast coffee and searched the Norwegian Farmers Union’s website. There was a very interesting article which he had looked at briefly the night before, but he wanted to reread it in depth. According to Norsvin, as many as one in four pig farmers in Hedmark had quit farming since 2007, saying that pig-rearing was no longer profitable. The average amount of pigs owned by those who remained was 53.2, where, the year before, the figure had been 51.1. It didn’t take a genius to work out what was happening: the big farms grew bigger, and the small ones went out of business.

Tom Lauritz Larsen got up for a refill, but stopped at the kitchen window, still holding his cup and seeing Jonas run out of the pig barn as if the devil were at his heels. What was up with the boy this time? Larsen headed for the door and had just stepped outside when the young man reached him, sweating profusely, his face deathly pale and his eyes filled with panic, as if he had seen a ghost.

‘What on earth is the matter?’ Larsen said.

‘Youuu, itttt… Kristió… Kristió’

The lad was incapable of speech. He pointed and flapped his arms about like some lunatic. He dragged Larsen, who was still wearing his slippers, still with his coffee cup in his hand, across the yard. He did not let go of him until they were inside the barn, standing by one of the sties. The sight that met the pig farmer was so extreme that for several months afterwards he struggled to tell people what he had seen. He dropped his coffee cup and did not even feel the hot coffee scald his thigh.

One of his sows, Kristine, lay dead on the floor in the pen. Not the whole pig, though. Only her body remained. Someone had decapitated her. With a chainsaw. Severed her neck completely. The pig was headless. Only the body remained.

‘Call the police,’ Tom Lauritz Larsen managed to say to the lad, and that was the last he remembered before he fainted.

This time, it was not because of his lungs.

Chapter 16

Sarah Kiese was sitting in the reception area in her lawyer’s office in Tøyen, growing increasingly irritated. She had expressly told the lawyer that she wanted absolutely nothing to do with her late husband’s estate. What kind of inheritance was it, anyway? More kids with other women? More letters from debt collectors demanding money and threatening to seize her belongings? Sarah Kiese was not perfect, far from it, but compared to her late husband she was a saint. Having a child with that loser had been a massive mistake. She had been ashamed of it then, and she still was. Not only had she had a child with him, she had even gone and married him. Christ, how stupid could you get? He had charmed her; she remembered, the first time she saw him in a bar in Grønland she had not fancied him straightaway, but she had been weak. He had bought her beers, drinks… yes, she had been an idiot, but so what? It was over now. She would love her daughter for ever, but she wanted nothing to do with that prat. When had he ever visited her? Whenever he wanted money. A loan for one of his schemes. He had claimed to be a builder, but he never had a steady job, or started his own business. No, nothing like that: never any plans, no ambition either, just odd jobs here and there, a hand-to-mouth existence. And he would always come home smelling of other women. Didn’t even bother to shower before slipping between her freshly washed sheets. Sarah Kiese felt sick just thinking about it, but at least it was over now. He had fallen from the tenth floor of one of the new developments down by the Opera. She imagined he had got himself a job of some kind there, cash in hand, no doubt, that was how it usually was with him, casual night-time work. Sarah Kiese smirked when she thought how awful it must have been, falling ten floors on a construction site, she had chuckled with glee when she heard the news. A fifty-metre drop to his death? Served him right; surely he must have felt extreme terror while it happened. How long could that fall have lasted? Eight, ten seconds? Fantastic.

She glanced irritably at the clock in the reception, and then at the door to her lawyer’s office. ‘No, no, no,’ she had said when he had called, ‘I want nothing to do with that tosser,’ but the sleazy lawyer had insisted. Bunch of sharks, the lot of them. There would never be another man in her life unless he was the Crown Prince, perhaps not even him. No more men for her. Just her and her daughter, now in their small new flat in Carl Berner. Perfect. Just her own scent under the duvet, not fifty other cheap perfumes mixed with bad breath. Why had she even agreed to come here? She had said no, hadn’t she? Wasn’t that what they had practised on that course she had been offered through Social Services? ‘Say no, say no, build a ring around yourself, you’re your own best friend, you need no one else. No, no, no, no.’

‘Sarah? Hi? Thanks for coming.’

The dodgy lawyer with the combover stuck out his head and waved her into his office. He reminded her of a small mouse. Feeble, with tiny eyes and hunched shoulders. No, not a mouse, a rat. A disgusting, cowardly sewer rat.

‘I said no,’ Sarah said.

‘I know,’ the sewer rat fawned. ‘And I’m all the more grateful to you for making the trip. You see, it turns out…’

He cleared his throat.

‘That I had overlooked something when I settled the estate. A small detail, that’s all it is, my mistake, obviously.’

‘More debt collectors? More court summonses?’

‘He-he, no, no.’ The sewer rat coughed and pressed his fingertips together. ‘This is it.’

He opened a drawer and placed a memory stick in front of her.

‘What is it?’

‘It’s for you,’ the sewer rat said. ‘Your late husband left it with me some time ago, asked me to give it to you.’

‘Why didn’t he give it to me himself?’

The sewer rat offered her a faint smile.

‘Possibly because he got a hot iron in his face the last time he showed up at your flat?’

Sarah felt pleased with herself. Her husband had let himself into the flat. Startled her. Suddenly, he had appeared in her living room. Wanting to touch her, be all nice, like he always used to be shortly before asking her a favour. The iron had hit his gawping face with considerable force. He had not seen it coming and it had floored him on the spot. She had not seen or heard anything from him since that day.

‘I should have given it to you long ago, but we’ve been very busy,’ the rat said, sounding almost apologetic.

‘You mean he promised to pay you to do it, but you never saw the money?’ Sarah said.

The lawyer smiled at her.

‘At least that should conclude matters.’

Sarah Kiese took the memory stick, put it in her handbag and headed for the door. The rat half rose from his dusty chair and cleared his throat.