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“Go on,” said deBries.

“About a week later she’s found murdered in the forest a few miles from there. The police put a lot of resources into it, of course, and before long the suspicion is that Verhaven himself might have something to do with it. There are plenty of pointers in that direction, and at the end of the month he’s arrested and charged with murder. The trial gets under way.”

“His name was in the papers right from the start, isn’t that right?”

“Yes, indeed. They’d named him in connection with the disappearance of the girl-he was a bit of a celebrity after all-and now they saw no reason to hold back. Unless I’m much mistaken it’s the first time in our country that a man who was only a suspect has been named in print. Maybe that’s what blows it up to such proportions. I think the papers published every word uttered in court. . All those reporters-

from all parts of the country-they were staying at Konger’s Palatz, the whole crowd, and they would hold court every night. . The defense counsel was there as well, incidentally.

Quenterran, he was called, an odd name. I suppose you could say it was the first mass media murder. It must have been hell-ish for any thinking person, but I didn’t understand that at the time. I was only eleven after all.”

“Hmm,” said deBries. “And he was found guilty.”

“Yes. Although he denied it. June twentieth it was. I remember it was the week before the holidays began, and we heard it on the wireless at school.”

“Incredible,” said deBries. “How long did he get?”

“Twelve years,” said Rooth.

DeBries nodded.

“Got out in 1974. And when did it start all over again?”

“Nineteen eighty-one. He’d gone back home and reopened his chicken farm.”

“Chicken farm?”

“Yes. Or egg farm, or what the devil you want to call it.

They hadn’t broken him, not in the least. He’d started his feathery farm before the Beatrice affair happened. He was a bit of a pioneer, I think, with artificial lighting in the henhouse, so that they thought it was day when it was night and all that sort of thing. That shortened the day by two hours and made them lay more quickly, or something of the sort. . ”

“Who’d have thought it?” said deBries. “Clever devil.”

“Oh yes,” said Rooth. “Used to sell his eggs in Linzhuisen and here in Maardam as well. The Covered Market mainly, if I remember rightly. He got back on his feet again; he always did.”

“Strong?” said deBries.

“Yes,” said Rooth, pausing to think for a moment. “That was just it. Superhumanly strong, in a way.”

He paused again and deBries lit another cigarette.

“What about the Marlene murder?” he asked, blowing a

thin wisp of smoke over the desk. Rooth coughed.

“Goddamn chimney,” he said. “Well, they found another woman’s body in the same bit of forest. Almost the very same place, in fact. And a few months later he was inside again. That was twenty years after the first occasion.”

“Did he confess this time?”

“Confess? Did he hell! Didn’t give an inch. He’d had it off with the girl a few times, that was all, he claimed. There was another show trial, but we’ll take that another time. He’s a one-off, in any case. . Was a one-off, I should say.”

“Meaning what?”

“Nobody else in this country has ever been found guilty of first degree twice, despite denying it. Totally unique.”

DeBries pondered.

“Psychiatric report?” he asked.

“Both times,” said Rooth. “Fit as a fiddle, they reckoned.

No doubt about it.”

“Did he rape them as well?”

Rooth shrugged.

“I don’t know. No traces of sperm at all events. But they were both naked when found. Strangled, by the way, both times. Same method, more or less.”

“Hmm,” said deBries, clasping his hands behind his head.

“And now he’s bought it as well. Something fishy there, I can’t help thinking. Where’s Munster, to jump from one thing to another?”

Rooth sighed.

“At the hospital,” he said. “Surely you don’t think our detective chief inspector can resist a goody like this.”

“A goody?” said deBries. “For fuck’s sake.”

14

Munster removed the paper from around the yellow roses and stuffed it into his jacket pocket. The nurse was waiting for him with a guarded smile, and as she opened the door for him, she whispered, “Good luck.”

I’ll no doubt need it, Munster thought as he entered the room. The bed immediately to the left was empty. Lying in the bed to the right, next to the window, was Van Veeteren, and the first thing to come into Munster’s head was an old, not very funny story about why the inhabitants of the city of Neu-badenberg were so incorrigibly stupid.

Because they do things the wrong way round in their

maternity wards.

They throw away the babies and raise the afterbirth.

Van Veeteren an afterbirth? Perhaps it wasn’t quite as bad as that, but as he tentatively approached the bed it was clear to him that he wouldn’t be called upon to play badminton in the immediate future.

“Hmm,” he said hesitantly, standing by the foot of the bed.

Van Veeteren opened his eyes, one at a time. A few seconds passed. Then he also opened his mouth.

“Shit.”

“How are you?” Munster asked.

“Pull me up,” snarled Van Veeteren.

Munster put the flowers on the bedcover and managed to raise the patient into a half-sitting position, more or less- with the aid of a few pillows and the chief inspector’s wheez-ing instructions. The color of his face reminded Munster of strawberries that have been marinating in spirits overnight, and there was nothing to suggest that that wasn’t how Van Veeteren felt as well. He repeated his welcoming speech.

“Shit.”

Munster picked up the roses again.

“These are from all of us,” he said. “The others send greetings.”

He found a vase and filled it with water from the wash-basin in the corner. Van Veeteren watched proceedings suspi-ciously.

“Huh,” he said. “Give me some as well.”

Munster poured him a glass from the jug on the bedside table, and after a second one, Van Veeteren appeared to be capable of conversation at least.

“I must have dozed off,” he said.

“You get extremely tired after an operation,” said Munster.

“It’s normal.”

“You don’t say.”

“Reinhart sends his special regards and says he’d like you to remember that pain drives out evil.”

“Thank you. Well?”

Raring to go again already? Munster thought and sat down on the visitors’ chair. He opened his briefcase. Took out the envelope and propped it up against the vase of flowers.

“I’ll put the photocopies here. They’re only from the newspapers. It will take a bit of time to dig out the records of the trial, but I’ll pop in with them tomorrow.”

“Good,” said Van Veeteren. “I’ll look through them after you’ve gone.”

“Don’t you think you ought to have a good rest first, when. .?”

“Hold your tongue,” snapped Van Veeteren. “Don’t talk such a lot of crap. I’m feeling better by the second. And there’s never been anything wrong with my head, for Christ’s sake.

Tell me what you’ve all been doing!”

Munster sighed and launched into an account of the visit to Kaustin and the search of Verhaven’s house.

“The forensic team hasn’t finished yet, of course, but everything points to him being our man. He only seems to have been at home for one day. In August last year. There was a newspaper, some food marked with a use-by date and a few other things. It appears to have been the twenty-fourth, the same day as he was released. A few witnesses saw him arriving-in the village, that is. Maybe he stayed the night; some things suggest that. He went to bed in any case. The clothes he was given on leaving prison are still there.”

“Hmm?” said Van Veeteren. “Hang on a moment. . No, carry on; it’s OK!”