Read Hot Ice Online

Authors: Gregg Loomis

Tags: #Thriller

Hot Ice (10 page)

BOOK: Hot Ice
12.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

He changed the subject again. “Your police commissioner …”

“Harvor, Commissioner Harvor.”

“Yeah, Harvor. All he said on the phone was that Boris Karloff had been shot and wouldn’t talk to anyone but me. What happened?”

Was that a tightening of the mouth, a slight squint of the eyes?

“You know this man, Boris Karloff?”

Why else would he ask for me?

“Yeah, although I haven’t seen him in a long time. Any idea why he would be asking for me?”

She brought the car to a stop while a flock of sheep ambled across the road. “No, you will have to ask the commissioner.”

“Do livestock always use the highway?”

She exchanged a wave with the shepherd. “They not only use it, they have the right of way.”

They sat in silence for most of the rest of the fifty-kilometer drive.

Reykjavík had no suburbs. One moment they were in open country, then they passed one of the ubiquitous speed-limit signs and buildings sprung up like wildflowers after a summer rain. One or two stories, they all had steeply sloped roofs and small, narrow windows. Some were wood, others stone. Many were painted in bright colors.

“What’s that?”Jason was pointing to a large dome structure sitting in an open space of about a block.

“Geodesic dome. Our power company builds them over the geothermal wells that supply the country’s power. We use no coal, no gas. Iceland has the cleanest power in the world.”

The last was said with a degree of smugness.

A turn brought the Toyota to a street that ran along a bay. The water was an icy blue. Mountains crouched in the mist along the far coast.

“‘Reykjavík’ means ‘smoky bay’ in Viking,” Bretta said matter-of-factly. “When they first came here, the steam from the geothermals looked like smoke.”

“You ever considered a job as a tour guide?”

She glanced at him quizzically. “Why would I want to be a guide? I am already a police person.”

Iceland might have the world’s cleanest power, the most confusing phone books, and livestock-friendliest roads; but, if Bretta was an example, it had no sense of humor. But then, there was nothing amusing about living in the dark six months out of the year.

14
734 Bústaðavegur
Reykjavík
Five Minutes Later

Landspítali Fossvogi was one of the few contemporary buildings Jason had seen in the city. Six or seven stories high, two wings were divided by a tower of an additional two levels. The car park was half full.

Bretta pulled up to what Jason guessed was the front entrance and leaned across him to open the car’s door. “I will call the commissioner to tell him you are here. Room 430.”

Jason barely had time to grab his overnight case, much less thank her for the ride, before she was driving off. He watched her pull into light traffic and disappear in the direction from which they had come.

Inside, he could have been in any hospital in the world. The smell of disinfectant was edged by the sickly sweet floral odor common to such institutions.

Flowers?

In Iceland?

A highly polished corridor led past a reception desk to a bank of elevators. Ignoring the woman behind the desk who could have been Bretta’s sister, Jason stepped inside the elevator, punched in the button for the fourth floor, and waited until the doors silently slid shut.

He had no problem finding Room 430. A policeman sat outside the door.

He stood as Jason approached, barring entry.

“I’m here to see Boris Karloff. I’m Jason Peters.”

The officer was not impressed. “My orders are no one sees the man in that room without orders from Commissioner Harvor.”

Swell. Fly to Iceland to speak to a mystery man I haven’t seen in years about something too secret to discuss over the telephone and some flatfoot blows me off.

“Just where might I reach the commissioner?”

“You already have.”

Jason turned to see a short, chubby man in police uniform extending a hand.

“Harvor.”

No other name. Of course.

“Jason Peters. What’s this all about?”

The commissioner was standing with his hands clasped behind his back, a pose Jason recognized from pictures of dozens of military men from Grant to Patton to McChrystal. Jason had a mental picture of him practicing the stance in front of a mirror.

“Wish I could tell you, but the man simply won’t speak to anyone but you. A couple of sheepherders found him at the Langjökull Glacier. Looked like he’d been robbed and shot. His wallet was missing and there was no identification. The only thing we have is the name he gave us and how to contact you through some American company.”

A mugging at a glacier? Well, this was Iceland, not New York.

The commissioner read his mind. “I know to an American a single shooting may not seem like much, but here in Iceland, we average less than a murder a year. You’ll notice none of our officers is armed.”

“Any idea what he was doing at the Lang, er Lang …”

“Langjökull Glacier. No, as I said, he won’t speak to anyone but you.” Harvor reached past Jason to open the door. “I suggest you ask him.”

It took a moment for Jason’s eyes to adjust to the dim light inside the room. The blur of a heart monitor danced across a screen, casting flickering shadows across a small white mound under the linen of the only bed. Tubes hung from racks or ran from under the sheets into bottles. Jason drew closer, making out a small head just above the covers.

No Spock ears.

The face was older than Jason remembered, eyelids the color of bruises against skin as white as the starched sheets surrounding it.

“Is he awake?” Harvor asked.

Eyelids fluttered open and bluish lips parted in a death’s head grimace. It took Jason a second to realize the man was speaking, whispering. He put his head next to the mouth.

“Peters? Good of you to come.”

“I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.”

The lips twitched into what might have been a smile. “Still the comedian, I see.”

It was as if the words had tired him. Karloff’s eyes shut and Jason feared he had drifted off to sleep. He stared at the pale face, unsure what to do next. The eyes flickered open and lips quivered. Jason leaned even closer.

“The glacier …”

Boris was struggling with each word. “The glacier … the southwestern …” His next words were unintelligible. Then: “a church …”

At least, that was what it sounded like he said. A church? Was the man simply mumbling or hallucinating?

Or Jason had not heard correctly. “Say again?”

“You will have to leave.”

A woman’s voice. A very annoyed woman’s voice.

Both Jason and Harvor turned to see a figure in white fill the doorway: white hair, white uniform, white shoes.

“I am Elga, the floor nurse and the doctor has not permitted visitors. The patient has been given a sedative and you are interfering with its effect.”

Harvor said something in a language Jason did not understand though there was no mistaking the tone. “I told her we are on police business,” he explained.

“I do not care if you are on a mission from heaven. The patient is very weak. The doctor has not permitted visitors.”

Jason sized up Nurse Elga. The woman was immense. If it came to physically ejecting the tubby police commissioner, Harvor was an odds-on second best.

Harvor pulled a cell phone from somewhere in his uniform. “How may I contact this doctor?”

“You may contact him from the hall.”

The policeman outside stuck his head around the doorjamb, assessed the situation, and disappeared.

Elga put hands the size of a catcher’s mitt on thighs that would have credited an NFL running back. “Do you require assistance in leaving?”

Threat, not a question.

Harvor glanced at the form under the sheets and then at Jason. “I think we better take this up with the doctor.”

No shit.

As Jason turned to go, he thought he had somehow snagged his pants on part of the hospital bed. Instead, Boris’s hand was holding on to his sweater’s sleeve as the face on the pillow looked up at him. He was whispering something.

“You are leaving.” A statement, not a question, from Elga.

Jason held up a hand: wait. He leaned over, putting his ear next to the moving lips.

“What?”

“Cravas, Nigel Cravas.” There was a pause as though Boris was summoning the strength to finish. “British Institute … Tell him, tell him …” A pause. “The … eanies …”

Jason was not sure what he was hearing. “‘Cravat’? ‘Meanie’? ‘Beanie’?” he asked.

No good. Elga pulled his shoulders up, inserting herself between Jason and the bed. “You are leaving
now
.”

15
Five Minutes Later

In the hall, Harvor tried the number the nurse had given him, fuming when he reached the doctor’s voice mail. “These doctors! They think they may come and go as they please! Ever since Iceland’s financial crisis a few years ago when the number of free hospitals was reduced, the doctors have forgotten they work for the state, that they are required to be on call twenty-four hours a day. Shameful!”

If you think Iceland’s MDs are hard to get in touch with, Jason thought, try an American doc on a weekend.

“Exactly where is this place where the man in there was found?” he asked the commissioner.

Harvor was still distracted by the independence of his country’s medical profession. “In an area of the glacier called Geitlandsjökull, the southern part of the glacier. But why? … Surely you are not planning on going there?”

“Why not? We can’t get any information from the man in there.” Jason gestured toward the hospital room.

“But as soon as I can reach the doctor—”

“Which may be after dark.” Jason glanced out of a window at the end of the hall. “If it gets dark.”

Apparently despairing of reaching the doctor, the commissioner returned his cell phone to wherever it had come from. “What do you expect to find there?” he asked suspiciously.

“I don’t know,” Jason replied, “but we sure aren’t finding out by standing around here.”

“How do you plan to get there? It is a two-hour drive and the rental-car agencies are closed. It is almost midnight.”

Jason grinned. “I thought you might want to take a look yourself, possibly before the shooter returns.”

Harvor looked at Jason levelly. “What makes you think he will return?”

“The man in there, Karloff, whatever his real name is, was trying to tell me something.”

“Who shot him, no doubt.”

“Maybe, but I think he was giving me directions.”

“To what?”

“We won’t know if we don’t go there. Besides, who knows how long it will be before you have a chance to investigate another shooting in Iceland?”

Jason’s stomach growled, reminding him that he’d had nothing to eat on the plane. “Is there a place I can get a quick bite around here?”

“Bite?”

“Something to eat.”

“There is a very fine restaurant down the street, serves Icelandic specialties.” Harvor looked at his watch. “May be closed by now.”

It was.

Jason tried to ignore his complaining stomach. Reading the menu posted in the window in English and a number of other languages helped assuage his hunger: fresh herring, salt herring, broiled herring, baked herring, fried herring. And, of course, herring croquettes.

He returned to the hospital, convinced that, in this case, hunger was the better alternative.

The ride in the Range Rover took closer to three hours actually. They were no more than a few kilometers out of Reykjavík when the road went from four lanes to two to gravel. It was getting dark now, a dusklike light that would be as close to night as the summer months permitted. Other than an occasional truck headed into the city, there was no other traffic.

Since Jason found it impossible to sleep on airplanes, even in the Gulfstream’s small but comfortable bedroom, he had been awake for more than twenty-four hours. But cars were not aircraft. There was no irrational fear that something might go wrong at thirty thousand feet. The steady sound of the engine, the monotonous hum of the tires on the road were a lullaby. He dozed off, coming awake with a jolt when the car stopped. At first, he was unaware of what he was seeing. The huge white mass shimmering in the twilight seemed luminescent, almost magical, as though an iceberg had floated out of the North Sea and onto land.

“This is it,” Harvor said, getting out of the car, a flashlight in his hand. “Come, I will show you where the shepherd found him.”

Jason was thankful for the heavy sweater as he pulled it tighter around him. “You know the location?”

The policeman stopped, turning. “We may not be as sophisticated as your American police but we do investigate thoroughly, Mr. Peters. The officer who first responded made a map of the location as well as photographs of the scene. Can you see your way without a light?”

“Not well, but I’d prefer not to turn on the light just yet.”

“Oh?”

“In case someone else is in the neighborhood, I’d just as soon not pinpoint our position.”

Jason could see the gray blur of Harvor’s face as the commissioner stared at him a moment. “As you wish. Mind your step.”

Jason was doing just that: watching where he placed his feet. The scree left by the retreating glacier made the path treacherous, all the more so because it was difficult to see in the half-light. He was so intent on trying to avoid tripping over the rubble that he was almost upon it before he saw it.

Something made him look up. Twilight was beginning to fade into the twenty-hour day. Limned against the dove-gray sky of early dawn towered a form vaguely familiar but just out of the reach of Jason’s memory.

He stopped and the commissioner, hearing no steps behind him, turned around. “What is it?”

“That rock formation.” Jason pointed.

Harvor’s voice bore a tinge of annoyance. “There are many rock formations here. The ice cap carves …”

Jason tuned him out. In daylight, he would have missed it, but in the half dark where sight was not three-dimensional, the silhouette had a square, Romanesque tower above … above … a church!

BOOK: Hot Ice
12.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Warsaw by Richard Foreman
Otter Under Fire by Dakota Rose Royce
Double Danger by Margaret Thomson Davis
Cursed by Wendy Owens
Harmony House by Nic Sheff
El bokor by Caesar Alazai
12 Days by Chris Frank, Skip Press
Ruthless by Cheryl Douglas