The owner of the temp agency turned out to be a friendly woman. Poul Troulsen knew her age already, she was in her late twenties. But he was wrong in the rest of his expectations of her. His image of a polished, self-confident career woman was shattered by someone both jovial and plump who did not spend unnecessary resources on her appearance or the interiors of her establishment. She led him into a conference room that looked more like a homeless shelter, and without asking him she handed him a plastic cup of lukewarm coffee. He took it and thanked her politely. It tasted terrible.
“As you know, this is about Helene Clausen’s high-school years. I have heard that you were one of the girls who was most engaged in what was going on in class.”
“You could say that. I was a terrible bitch actually. At the class reunion there are still some girls who hate me but I can understand why. I was not particularly pleasant but you’re right when you say that I was well informed.”
“And you were in the same class as Helene Clausen for a year?”
“Yes, until she drowned, but I can’t remember her very well and I have to think hard even to remember her—you know, conjure her up in my mind’s eye. I can remember that when I first saw her I was on my guard. She was both pretty and smart so I spotted a potential rival.” She shook her head. “Unfortunately, that was how I was. Well, I didn’t need to have worried. Helene turned out not to be very social and after that I didn’t pay much attention to her. I remember her death clearly of course. We made a lot of noise but forgot her almost immediately.”
“I have a picture of her if that would help.”
“No, that’s okay. I’d rather not. But anyway, we weren’t particularly tightly knit. Helen wasn’t close to anyone in the class.”
Troulsen thought that the observation was largely corroborated by the reports that he had read.
“You aren’t the first to say that,” he told her.
“No, she kept mostly to herself. That’s why I almost called and canceled, because I didn’t think I had anything to tell.”
He pricked up his ears. “But you didn’t?”
“No, I didn’t, because maybe I can help after all. At least a little. You see, in those days I kept a diary, and after you called, I looked in my old journals. It was no pleasure and there wasn’t much about Helene. Almost nothing. But it got my thoughts going and I suddenly remembered something. There was one time when Helene and I drove together. I can’t remember what we were doing or if anyone else from the class was with us, only that she insisted that we both put our seat belts on. I must have asked about it, but in any case she told me about a girlfriend who had been in a car accident. A really bad one. It was interesting that she used the word girlfriend. But unfortunately that is all that I can contribute.”
This did not trouble Troulsen.
“Don’t be sorry,” he said. “That may turn out to be an important piece of information.”
“This is about the murders at Langebæk School?”
“I don’t know if I want you to solve them.”
“Well, you wouldn’t be the only one. You’re honest, at least.”
Troulsen stood up. She remained seated.
“I think it’s hard. On the one hand a crime has been committed, but on the other hand… it’s complicated.”
“I don’t share that opinion, but thank you for your time and thank you for your help.”
She followed him out.
Next, Troulsen drove to Helene Clausen’s old school, whistling happily. The reports did not mention a girlfriend from elementary school so he must have gotten something.
The Tranehøj School was an institution of the classical style. A four-story block of a building with two wings and a blacktop playground, bells on the walls, and dismantled water receptacles for thirsty children of the past. Signs to the school office were prominently placed, and in the front office he found a woman in her late forties. She had earphones on and was typing. Troulsen had to clear his throat a couple of times to get her attention.
“Sorry, I didn’t see you. Have you been here a long time? What can I help you with?”
“No, I’ve just turned up. Are you the school secretary?”
“The one and only.”
He took out his badge. “Poul Troulsen, from the Crime Division.”
She put the earpiece on the desk, where it kept burbling. “Well now, that sounds serious.”
“Not really. I’m here to get some information about a former pupil.”
“By the name of?”
“Well, you see, that’s the problem. How long have you worked here?”
“Longer than I care to think. I’ll be celebrating my twenty-fifth anniversary next year.”
“That sounds perfect. Ninth grade in 1992–93 and it is a girl.”
“We’ve had more than a couple of those. I hope you have a little more information.”
She had a heartwarming smile. Troulsen smiled back in return.
“Yes, I do. She was in a car accident, apparently serious.”
He was prepared to go on, to talk about the friendship with Helene Clausen, but the woman shut her eyes and held a finger up in the air. He waited.
Shortly thereafter, her face relaxed.
“Emilie. Her name was Emilie. Yes, it was a terrible accident. Both of the girls were hurt. It happened up by Helsingør, and it was Emilie’s own fault. She was speeding and had been drinking. But in the end they both recovered.”
Troulsen frowned. It didn’t add up. Students in the ninth grade did not have their licenses, but the secretary explained the discrepancy before he spoke.
“That was the older sister. She was a fair bit older than the younger one, maybe four, five years or so, and she was the one I remember. She was here at a school-anniversary celebration and we chatted a little bit. I can’t remember anything about the little sister, only that she was in the accident, and it was just after she had left the school.”
“Last name?”
The secretary shook her head. “No, but she became a doctor, in case that helps. It’s strange. I can see her so clearly but the little sister is completely gone. We should take a trip to the basement.”
“The basement?”
“Yes. If you come along I’m sure we’ll find her last name and whatever else we have on her. I keep the old yearbooks down there. I know it isn’t exactly the National Archives but it’s not uncommon that I can help track down former pupils. You know, for reunions and the like.”
A deep, powerful voice interrupted them.
“Tell me, what’s this all about?”
The principal was standing in the doorway to his office, broad-chested and imposing. Troulsen looked at him. His considerable belly stretched his red suspenders nearly to the breaking point. His face was fleshy and grim, and a pair of steel-rimmed glasses were pushed up on his bald head.
“I’m from the police and I’m trying to get some information about a—”
“I heard you,” the principal broke in. “What are you going to use the information for?”
“What I’m going to use it for? I’m going to use it to solve a crime.”
“What kind of crime?”
Poul Troulsen answered with some irritation, “That’s not relevant.”
“I think I know what kind of a crime it is. I’ve seen you on the Internet.”
“And?”
“Do you have a warrant?”
“A warrant? Why on earth would I need a warrant?”
“There’s no public access to our archives.”
With a heavy hand he shoved the secretary, who had just stood up, back in her chair.
“I know that we disagree on this point but you will come to accept that I make the decisions around here. We don’t give out personal information about our pupils without a legitimate reason.”
The secretary’s eyes flashed and she waved his hand away while she appealed to Troulsen. Unfortunately, there wasn’t much he could do.
“Am I to understand that you’re refusing to assist me in my work?”
“You work is of no concern to me. I am refusing to give you access to our personal files unless you have a search warrant or written permission from one of my superiors in the administration. Other than this I have nothing to discuss with you.”
“Your personal files… that’s preposterous. I only need one name.”
“As I said, I have nothing more to discuss with you.”
“Then I think I’ll have to swing by the town hall and have a conversation with your boss.”
If Troulsen had been hoping that the man could be intimidated, he was wrong.
“That’s an excellent idea. The superintendent, the director of child and cultural affairs, the county director, or the mayor. Take your pick.”
He sounded unsettlingly sure of the outcome, regardless of which person would review the matter.
“Thank you very much. I hope that we’ll have a chance to speak again soon.”
“I don’t, but who knows?”
Troulsen fished out a card and held it out to the secretary without saying anything. It wasn’t necessary. She took it in front of the principal and they both saw how his fingers twitched in readiness to prevent the exchange.
“Try anything and I’ll arrest you on the spot. For obstruction of justice or for obesity, whichever suits me best.”
The threat worked. The principal kept himself in check. Frustratingly enough.
“The superintendent, the director of child and cultural affairs, the county director, or the mayor,” Troulsen said, reciting the hierarchical phrase that the school principal had given him.
The receptionist at the Gentofte city hall did not seem overwhelmed by the choices he gave her. She typed for a while, then looked at a screen. “Looks like it may have to be the director of child and cultural affairs. What should I say this is in regard to?” She emphasized the word may.
He showed her his police identification, which she examined suspiciously for an overly long period of time before she decided it was genuine. Then she gave him a little card with an office number and pointed him in the right direction with a long purple fingernail. He left without thanking her.
The director was a small man with a sleazy, indolent appearance. His handshake was limp and sticky like a ball of dough. He showed Troulsen a seat on the other side of his desk, for which the latter had to wait patiently while the man cleared his papers out of the way. Finally he sat down with his elbows on the table and his palms together with his head resting against the tips of his fingers, ready and receptive. Troulsen expressed the matter at hand in a concise way. The man across from him nodded thoughtfully during this explanation as if the connections were complicated and only the chosen could fully comprehend it. Afterward he continued nodding while he commented on the matter in a steady stream of polished nonsense.
Troulsen’s phone rang in the middle of this speech and, mostly to irritate the director, he answered it, but it was good that he did because the woman he was looking for was on the other end. The school secretary had been busy, secretly checking the archives. The woman confirmed her visit to the kiosk in Bagsværd and was ready to see him within the hour. It could hardly have been better. He wrote down her name and number and hung up.
The interruption had lasted less than a minute, but it changed everything. His errand was suddenly superfluous and he told himself that he should leave, that he was too old for this, that he didn’t need the extra grief, and nonetheless he stayed put.
The director had paused for the telephone call. His attitude remained unchanged, however, and as soon as he regained Troulsen’s attention, he went on: “As I said, I am not a lawyer, so it is possible that there are some aspects of this case that I have not taken into account—”
Troulsen jumped in: “So your conclusion is that you don’t wish to help me.” His tone was sharp, impertinent. Once again his superego admonished him and told him to keep a check on himself, preferably to leave. It helped about as much as using a Band-Aid to treat hay fever.
“That is definitely not my conclusion, Officer Troulsen. You are getting ahead of yourself. The matter will be given a thorough consideration.”
“And when do you anticipate reaching a conclusion?”
“I think we should be able to do so relatively quickly. It is of considerable importance that the Gentofte County School District be a cooperative partner to the other public entities, not least to the police.”
“And by quickly you mean… ?”
“I would rather not commit myself to a certain time frame.”
His mouth stretched upward by a couple of centimeters. It was a smile and Troulsen realized that the man was enjoying himself. He stood up.
“I would bet that when you were a child, you were one of the ones who ran straight out of the school yard as soon as there was a fight.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“I said, I guarantee that you were scared shitless by fighting. Have you ever experienced any police brutality?”
The suggestion of physical violence sucked all confidence out of the director, who crumpled like a punctured balloon. He folded his arms across his chest and his voice shot up a couple of octaves.
“Are you threatening me?”
“It makes no difference if I am or not, and if you don’t want anything to happen to your nose, you’d do best to keep still.”
The man obeyed. Small beads of sweat broke out on his forehead and along his as-yet-unharmed nose. Troulsen’s gaze fell on a pair of scissors that lay on the table and for a split second he thought about cutting off a tuft of his hair and forcing him to eat it. Then his common sense returned and he limited himself to giving the man a light slap on the back of the head.
“Before I go I can inform you of the procedure for filing a complaint with the police. You turn in your paperwork to the nearest police station and the zoom—within only a few years you will receive a rejection.”
While he spoke he moved slowly to the door. He nodded a goodbye, smiling, relieved that he had managed to control his temper to a reasonable degree.