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“Yes,” Erlendur said.

“We found a note in the man’s room,” a voice said over the phone. It was the head of forensics.

“A note?”

“It says: Henry 18.30.”

“Henry? Wait a minute, when did the girl find Santa?”

“It was about seven.”

“So this Henry could have been in his room when he was killed?”

“I don’t know. And there’s another thing.”

“Go on.”

“Santa could have owned the condom himself. There was a packet of them in the pocket of his doorman’s uniform. It’s a packet of ten and three are missing.”

“Anything else?”

“No, just a wallet with a five-hundred-krona note, an old ID card and a supermarket receipt dated the day before yesterday. Oh yes, and a key ring with two keys on it.”

“What sort of keys?”

“One looks like a house key, but the other could be to a locker or something like that. It looks much smaller.”

They said goodbye and Erlendur looked around for the biotechnician, but she was gone.

Two guests at the hotel were named Henry. Henry Bartlet, American, and Henry Wapshott, British. The latter did not answer when his room was dialled, but Bartlet was in and showed surprise when it emerged that the Icelandic police wanted to talk to him. The hotel manager’s story about the old man’s heart attack had clearly got around.

Erlendur took Sigurdur Oli with him to meet Henry Bartlet; Sigurdur Oli had studied criminology in the US and was rather proud of the fact. He spoke the language like a native and although Erlendur had a particular dislike for the American drawl, he put up with it.

On the way up to Bartlet’s floor, Sigurdur Oli told Erlendur that they had talked to most of the hotel employees who were on duty when Gudlaugur was attacked. All had alibis and named people to corroborate their stories.

Bartlet was about thirty, a stockbroker from Colorado. He and his wife had seen a programme about Iceland on American breakfast television some years before and were enchanted by the dramatic scenery and the Blue Lagoon — they had since been there three times. They had decided to make a dream come true and spend Christmas and the New Year in the distant land of winter. The beautiful landscape enthralled them, but they found the prices exorbitant at the restaurants and bars in the city.

Sigurdur Oli nodded. To him, America was paradise on earth. He was impressed on meeting the couple and discussing baseball and American Christmas preparations with them, until Erlendur had had enough and gave him a prod.

Sigurdur Oli explained the death of the doorman and told them about the note in his room. Mr and Mrs Henry Bartlet stared at the detectives as if they had suddenly been transported to a different planet.

“You didn’t know the doorman, did you?” Sigurdur Oli said when he saw their expressions of astonishment.

“A murder?” Henry groaned. At this hotel?”

“Oh my God,” his wife said and sat down on the double bed.

Sigurdur Oli decided not to mention the condom. He explained how the note implied that Gudlaugur had arranged to meet a man called Henry, but they did not know what day, whether the meeting had taken place or whether it was supposed to be after two days, a week, ten days.

Henry Bartlet and his wife flatly denied all knowledge of the doorman. They hadn’t even noticed him when they arrived at the hotel four days before. Erlendur and Sigurdur Oli’s questions had clearly upset them.

“Jesus,” Henry said. “A murder!”

“You have murders in Iceland?” his wife — Cindy, she had told Sigurdur Oli her name when they greeted each other — asked, glancing over at the Icelandair brochure on the bedside table.

“Rarely? he said, trying to smile.

“This Henry character is not necessarily a guest at the hotel,” Sigurdur Oli said while they waited for the lift back down. “He doesn’t even have to be a foreigner. There are Icelanders by the name of Henry.”

6

Sigurdur Oli had located the former hotel manager, so he said goodbye to Erlendur when they got to the lobby and went off to meet him. Erlendur asked for the head of reception but he had still not turned up for work and had not phoned in. Henry Wapshott had left the key card to his room at reception early that morning without anyone noticing him. He had spent almost a week at the hotel and was expected to stay for two more days. Erlendur asked to be notified as soon as Wapshott reappeared.

The hotel manager plodded past Erlendur.

“I hope you’re not disturbing my guests,” he said.

Erlendur took him to one side.

“What are the rules about prostitution at this hotel?” Erlendur asked straight out as they stood next to the Christmas tree in the lobby.

“Prostitution? What are you talking about?” The hotel manager heaved a deep sigh and wiped his neck with a scruffy handkerchief.

Erlendur looked at him in anticipation.

“Don’t you go mixing up any bloody nonsense in all this,” the manager said.

“Was the doorman involved with tarts?”

“Come off it,” the manager said. “There are no tar-no prostitutes at this hotel.”

“There are prostitutes at all hotels.”

“Really?” the manager said. “Are you talking from experience?”

Erlendur didn’t answer him.

“Are you saying that the doorman was a pimp?” the manager said in a shocked tone. “I’ve never heard such rubbish in my life. This isn’t a strip joint. This is one of the largest hotels in Reykjavik!”

“No women in the bars or lobby who stalk the men? Go up to their rooms with them?”

The manager hesitated. He acted as though he wanted to avoid antagonising Erlendur.

“This is a big hotel,” he said eventually. “We can’t keep an eye on everything that goes on. If it’s straightforward prostitution and there’s no question about it, we try to prevent it, but it’s a difficult matter to deal with. Otherwise the guests are free to do what they like in their rooms.”

“Tourists and businessmen, regional people, isn’t that how you described the guests?”

“Yes, and much more besides, of course. But this isn’t a doss-house. It’s a quality establishment and as a rule the guests can easily afford the accommodation. Nothing smutty goes on here and for God’s sake don’t go spreading that kind of rumour around. The competition is tough enough as it is; it’s terrible to shake off a murder.”

The hotel manager paused.

“Are you going to continue sleeping at this hotel?” he asked. “Isn’t that highly irregular?”

“The only thing that’s irregular is the dead Santa Claus in your basement” Erlendur smiled.

He saw the biotechnician from the kitchen leaving the bar on the ground floor with her sampling kit in her hand. With a nod to the manager he walked over to her. She had her back to him and was walking towards the cloakroom by the side door.

“How’s it going?” Erlendur asked.

She turned and recognised him at once, but kept walking.

“Is it you who’s in charge of the investigation?” she asked, going into the cloakroom where she took a coat from a hanger. She asked Erlendur to hold her sampling kit.

“They let me tag along,” Erlendur said.

“Not everyone was pleased with the idea of saliva samples,” she said, “and I don’t just mean the chef?

“Above all we were eliminating the staff from our enquiries, I thought you were told to give that explanation.”

“Didn’t work. Got any others?”

“That’s an old Icelandic name, Valgerdur, isn’t it?” Erlendur said, without answering her question. She smiled.

“So you’re not allowed to talk about the investigation?”