Alarm bells going off? Sándor struggled to understand what kind of threat this NBH man was obviously envisioning. Jews, Gypsies, right-wing extremists, and Islamists? Only slowly did it dawn on Sándor that what Gábor really wanted to know was if Sándor was planning some kind of attack on Jobbik or Magyar Gárda, possibly as part of a Zionist conspiracy that might also hit an Islamic target. An armed defense or maybe even an armed attack.
He might as well have asked Sándor to explain his relationship with the little green men on Mars.
“It’s research,” Sándor flailed helplessly. “For a term paper.”
And so it continued. Occasionally interrupted by lavatory breaks, polite offers of sandwiches and coffee, and a so-called “rest” when he lay on a thin mattress on a concrete floor in a basement room and stared up into the ventilation duct that was humming and flapping above him. No one hit him or humiliated him; in this respect, perhaps he was lucky that this was the NBH and not some random police station in Budapest’s suburbs. But the intervals were brief, and then the questions started again.
When it became clear that they were planning on holding him overnight, he tried to tell them about his exam.
“We can legally hold you for up to seventy-two hours” was all Gábor said.
“How? Only under special circumstances. If the detainee is apprehended in the act of committing an offense.…”
“… or if the detainee’s identity cannot be determined with certainty,” Gábor said. “I used to be a law student, too, way back when.”
“Identity? But there’s no question about my identity!”
“Isn’t there? The only record of your birth we can find is as Sándor Rézmüves. As far as I can tell, you’ve been living under a false name for more than fifteen years, and the passport you were issued under the name of Horváth … you don’t even know where it is.”
“It … was stolen.”
“If your passport is stolen or lost, you’re supposed to report that to the authorities. You appear not to have done that. Believe me, it could easily take us seventy-two hours to establish who you really are.”
If you find out, please tell me.
That thought bubbled up from his subconscious along with a crystal clear memory that for some reason always came back to him in black and white. The headmaster’s office at the orphanage. White stripes of light between the blinds. The dusty, dark-brown scent of books and stacks of papers, mixed with the strongly perfumed cleaner they used to wash the linoleum floors.
“Your father has come for you, Sándor.”
But the man standing there in the stripy light wasn’t Sándor’s stepfather, Elvis. It was a man he had never seen before.
Sándor didn’t say anything. You couldn’t contradict the headmaster, he had learned that very quickly. But there must have been some mistake.
“Hi, Sándor,” the man said, holding out his hand for an oddly adult handshake. “You’re coming home with me now.”
Then Sándor finally understood who the man was. His Hungarian father, his gadjo father, the man whose fault it was that he wasn’t his stepfather Elvis’s son, but just Valeria’s-kid-from-before-we-got-married. And he also understood the rest—this man could take him, and he wouldn’t need to stay at the orphanage anymore.
“If you would just sign here, Mr. Horváth,” the headmaster said.
“What about Tamás and the girls?” Sándor blurted out. “Aren’t they coming?”
Mr. Horváth squatted down in front of Sándor, so that Sándor actually had to look down a little to look him in the eye.
“No, Sándor,” he said in the tone that Grandma Éva used whenever she had to explain that something or other wasn’t possible because his mother was sick. “They’re not my children, but you are.”
And so Sándor had gone with the man, out of the office, down the dark, wide staircase, and out into the parking lot in front of the main building where a little blue car was parked. He crawled into the back seat when he was asked to and let Mr. Horváth buckle his seatbelt with a click. Then Mr. Horváth got into the front seat, started the car, and smiled at him in the rearview mirror.
“We’ll get to know each other after a little while,” he said.
Sándor didn’t say anything. He just sat there quietly as the car rolled down the drive and turned onto the paved road, leaving Tamás, Feliszia, and Vanda behind in the cold, gray buildings on the other side of the fence.
THE NBH INTERROGATED Sándor for three to four hours at a stretch, three to four times a day, for a little over forty-eight hours. He didn’t tell them about Tamás. How could he?
Christian from IT had gone to the trouble of coming up to Søren’s second floor office from the ground floor. Usually he just telephoned. He was standing in the doorway with a piece of paper that looked very small in his large hands.
“All right,” Søren said, rolling his chair back from his desk and flipping a hand in an attempt to seem encouraging. “Tell me about it.”
He liked Christian, but he needed to read at least two hundred more pages to prepare for the training exercise evaluation later that day, and he was meeting with a couple of visiting American police officers very shortly. Why was it that IT problems never seemed to fall into the solved-in-ten-minutes category?
Christian moved a little further into the office. He was a tall man, in his mid-forties, with wrists as thick as tree trunks and a solid barrel chest. He had been in IT for as long as Søren could remember, and he had recently taken over responsibility for most of their Internet surveillance.
“We’ve started tracing the IP addresses you sent down to us yesterday,” Christian said, placing the piece of paper in front of Søren. “Three of them are familiar faces from the right-wing extremist scene, and they don’t seem to have gone in too deeply. They were probably just drooling over the specifications for an M-79 or something. I’ve done a report on it that I’ll send up later.”
Søren nodded. All of this was what he had expected.
“Two of the IP addresses that visited the alleged hospital equipment page look like normal search errors. In other words, people got there by accident and left again as soon as they saw the trashy layout. The third, the one you underlined … well, that one is a little more problematic.”
“And?” Søren glanced at his watch. He was supposed to meet the American delegation in ten minutes.
“Well,” Christian said and cleared his throat. “The IP address belongs to a technical college in northwest district and may have been used by any number of the school’s students, faculty members, and so forth. Luckily the search was in the evening and during exams week, so there weren’t that many people on campus at the time. A couple of teachers and four students, who were all identified from the school’s surveillance cameras. We asked all of them for permission to download the contents of their laptops, but one of the students is refusing to give us access to his PC.”
Søren rolled his chair back up to his desk and looked at the piece of paper in front of him. Khalid Hosseini, aged nineteen, living in Mjølnerparken. Christian had bolded the name, address, and civil registration number.
“And what’s your impression?”
Christian shrugged. “He seems pretty normal. Young, short hair, saggy pants, and T-shirt. Not your average religious fanatic, if that’s what you mean. But he was clearly shitting himself when we asked to see his computer, and he wouldn’t hand it over.”
Søren stood up and grabbed his meeting papers off the desk.
“Get a court order, then. I want a look at that computer.”