2

MARCUS

Monday, November 30, 2020

Not a pretty sight, thought Chief of Homicide Marcus Jacobsen when he discovered his chief inspector slouched behind his desk with his eyes closed and mouth open.

He gently nudged the feet behind the table.

“I hope I’m not interrupting anything important, Carl,” he said with a wry smile.

Carl seemed to be too drowsy to react to irony.

“Well, that’s a question of definition, Marcus.” He yawned. “I was just testing whether the distance from the edge of the desk to my feet was perfect.”

Marcus nodded. The renovation of the basement under police headquarters had forced out his colleagues in Department Q, the cold cases division, and it was no exaggeration to say that he was not pleased to have the country’s most anarchistic department moved so close to him out here in the new facility on Teglholmen in Sydhavnen where the Copenhagen Police investigation unit was now located. The combination of Carl Mørck’s grumpy face and Rose Knudsen’s incessant ranting could drive anyone crazy. He wished that Carl and Co. could be sent back to the dungeon at police HQ, especially during this horrible year of the coronavirus, but Marcus knew that was not going to happen.

“Take a look at this, Carl.” He opened a case file and pointed at an obituary ripped from the newspaper. “What do you make of this?”

Carl rubbed his eyes and read.

Maja Petersen,

November 11, 1960–November 11, 2020.

Sadly missed.

The Family

He looked up. “Well, the woman died on her sixtieth birthday but, apart from that, it doesn’t mean anything to me. What’s the deal?”

Marcus gave him a serious look. “I’ll tell you what. It reminds me more than a little of the first time you and I saw each other.”

“Really? That’s an unfortunate association. The first time, you say? When was that?”

“January 1988. You were a sergeant at Store Kongensgade police station. I was an inspector in homicide.”

Carl straightened up a little. “How the hell can you remember that? You didn’t even know me in 1988.”

“I remember because you and your colleague were the first to arrive at a burning auto-repair shop that had just been blown up, and I remember how you took care of a half-conscious woman whose child had been killed in the explosion.”

Marcus’s best investigator sat for a moment staring blankly. Then he picked up the newspaper ad and looked it over. Were his eyes welling up? It was hard to believe.

“Maja Petersen,” he said slowly. “Is this the Maja Petersen?”

Marcus nodded. “Yes, it is. Two weeks ago, Terje Ploug and I were called out to her flat, where she had already been hanging in the hallway for a few days. We didn’t have to investigate much to establish that she’d taken her own life. There was a photo of a small boy on the floor underneath her, which she’d probably held in her hand until the moment she died.” He shook his head. “In the sitting room, there was a moldy layer cake on the table, completely untouched. Neatly written on top of it with light blue icing was ‘Maja 60 Max 3.’ And, slightly oddly, the cake was decorated with two crosses instead of flags and candles. One after each name.”

“Okay.” Carl put down the obituary and leaned back heavily. “Sounds depressing. Suicide, you say. And you’re sure about that?”

“Yes, I am. Her funeral was yesterday, and I attended. And apart from the vicar, myself, and an elderly lady, the chapel was completely empty. It doesn’t get much more depressing than that. I spoke with the lady afterward, and she was a cousin of the deceased. She turned out to be the one who had ended the obituary with ‘The Family.’ ”

Carl looked at him pensively. “And back then you were also present at the explosion site, you say? That’s one detail I can’t remember. I remember the snow and the biting cold and many other things, but not you.”

Marcus shrugged. It was more than thirty years ago, so why should he remember?

“The fire was extremely violent and the fire brigade couldn’t establish unequivocally how the explosions had happened,” said Marcus. “However, it turned out that the repair shop also had a completely unauthorized body-finish shop, so there had been plenty of combustibles in the building, certainly more than enough for things to go wrong. And, yes, I also arrived on the scene shortly after the accident, which was more of a coincidence because I was on an assignment in the neighborhood.”

Carl nodded to himself. “I remember that the little boy was dead—I could see that straightaway. His tiny body lay over the curb with his head thrust into the snow. That isn’t a sight you forget in a hurry. I had to hold his mother tightly to stop her from getting too close to him and seeing the terrible state he was in.”

He looked up. “Why did you go to Maja Petersen’s funeral, Marcus?”

“Why?” He sighed. “I’ve just never been able to let that case go. Even then, I got the sense that something wasn’t right about it.” He tapped the case file on the desk. “Now I’ve had a few days to reread and consider it.”

“And what’s your conclusion? That the explosion wasn’t an accident?”

“I guess I never really believed that, but here on page two in the technical summary, I stumbled across a sentence that I didn’t notice back then. And maybe there wasn’t much reason to notice it more than thirty years ago.”

He pulled the paper out of the file and pushed it over to Carl.

“I’ve highlighted the sentence.”

Carl Mørck leaned forward in his office chair. He read the sentence marked with yellow a few times before looking up at Marcus with an expression that made his eyes appear darker.

“Salt?” was all he said, repeating it a few times.

Marcus nodded. “You have the same suspicion as me, I can tell.”

“The thing about the salt, yes. But when was that? Give me a hint.”

“I don’t know exactly which case you had, but there was another one involving salt. You’re with me, right?”

“Yes, I think there was.”

Carl appeared to be racking his brain, but in vain.

“Maybe Rose or Assad remembers,” said Carl finally.

Marcus shook his head. “I don’t think so because it must have been before their time. But what about Hardy?”

“Hardy is having treatment again in Switzerland just now, Marcus.”

“I know, but you’ve heard about a smart invention called the phone, right, Carl?”

“Sure, okay, I’ll call him.” He frowned. “You’ve had some time to think about it, Marcus. How about letting me in on what happened back then in Sydhavnen?”

He nodded. It would almost be a relief.


Marcus told him that when the second blast sounded, all the windows in the apartment they were searching close to the repair shop imploded so violently that the pieces of glass penetrated deeply into the woodwork and furniture. Thankfully, Marcus and his colleagues were in the bedroom facing the backyard, so nothing happened to them. However, the inhabitant, a miserable junkie who was hiding weapons for some of the hard-core criminals in Vesterbro, broke down completely and started rambling on about back when he was a boy and the gasworks in Valby had exploded.

Marcus tiptoed to the kitchen, out to the Siberian cold coming in from the smashed window, and immediately saw the jet-black clouds of smoke and the flames rising at least twenty-five meters up in the air above the roofs a few streets away.

Two minutes later, Marcus and his sergeant entered the street where a patrol car with flashing lights was already parked, blocking the entrance. Just inside the courtyard sat a young colleague with his arms tightly wrapped around a woman. Everything was utter chaos, and burning wreckage and the asphalt emitted yet more black plumes of smoke. A child on Marcus’s left had undoubtedly died on the scene, given that the small body was lying lifeless with his face pressed down into the snow.

Now the flames rose at least forty meters in the air from the middle of the building, and the heat almost knocked them over. A Citroën Dyane had been thrown upside down, wreckage and car parts were scattered in the meltwater that was fast covering most of the area, and a few cars that had been displayed for sale on the left side had been compressed like discarded vehicles in a junkyard.

A van lay crushed underneath the rubble a bit farther along, and from behind it protruded a pair of naked charred legs—the only indication that there had been any life in the building.

It was a few hours before the fire brigade brought the flames under control, but Marcus stayed on-site and followed the discoveries of his colleagues and the fire brigade.

Before midnight, they had found another four bodies farther inside the building, which were so charred that it was almost impossible to determine their sex. And even though all four heads had very similar lesions, they could not immediately establish if they were caused by the violent explosion and subsequent tumult of projectiles from the shelves of metal objects in the shop.

While it was highly probable that they were dealing with an accident, Marcus spent the next few days routinely investigating a number of possible motives someone might have had. They had to reject all suspicions of insurance fraud because the repair shop, in spite of all regulations, had no insurance policies, and on top of that, the owner died in the explosion, so what could he have gained by starting a fire? Any connection to gangs was also unlikely because none of the deceased, who were subsequently identified as mechanics, had criminal records.

With support from the owner’s distressed widow, Marcus went over the few available records on the repair shop.

“Did your husband or family have unsettled business with anyone?” he asked. “What about any outstanding debts? Enemies? Had they been threatened by competitors?”

The wife just shook her head every time. She was at a loss. Her husband was a skilled mechanic, she said. He might not have been much for paperwork, but then who was, in that line of employment?

Marcus had to face the fact that this small business certainly lived up to that reputation, having neither an accountant nor a bookkeeper. And everything that resembled correspondence, client records, or financial statements had gone up in smoke—if they had ever existed in the first place.

The woman knew that there would be plenty to do when the tax returns were due, but the repair shop had only existed for a few months, so no doubt it would be fine.

When the site was cleared a few weeks later, they were still clueless. Only one apparently insignificant fact, which an alert technician had nevertheless noted in the report, stuck out from the rest, and Marcus had only just noticed it now, many years after his latest scrutiny of it.

It read:

A few meters outside the entrance gate, right up against the metal railings, there was a nine-centimeter-tall pile of salt.

And then a brief added note that should probably have raised alarm bells:

And it was kitchen salt, not road salt.