“Don’t encourage the boy, Helgi,” Gunna murmured to him. “Gossip is one thing, but it’s different when it’s in here. I know Kaya lives with a woman, but she doesn’t need her personal life raked over by everyone in the building.”

“Sorry, chief.”

“Will you get on to Steingrímur and find out how far his team extended their hot search around Bjartmar’s house? All right?”

“Already on to it. What about you?”

Gunna sighed. “Sævaldur’s holding another briefing at five. You know, I have a nasty feeling he’s angling to take over Örlygur Sveinsson’s duties, assuming Örlygur’s back finally gets him retired. Now, that would be fun and games, wouldn’t it?”

Helgi looked blank.

“But right now, I’m going to have a little drive in the country while you gentlemen get some real work done,” she said cheerfully. “See you at Super-Sævaldur’s briefing.”

The door clanged behind them and the warder took his place next to it as Ommi lounged behind the table. Gunna eyed him curiously. She suspected that his tough veneer was thinner than before.

“You know who I am, Ommi, so let’s go straight to it, shall we?”

“You know my mum, don’t you?” Ommi asked. “How is the old bag these days? Haven’t seen her for years.”

“She’s fine, as far as I know. It’s not as if I see her very often.”

“And how are the rest of the idiots in that dump?”

“You tell me, Ommi. You were there not long ago.”

“Haven’t been there for years,” he said sharply. “You’d have to pay me to go near that hole.”

Gunna looked him squarely in the eyes. “Ommi, let’s leave out the crap, just for once. I know that you and another man, probably that deadbeat Addi the Pill, went out to Hvalvík looking for your old friend Óskar. I have enough witnesses and evidence to place you there on that day and I’m not interested in listening to you arguing about it. Understand?”

“Evidence, yeah. You can fix up a few witnesses easily enough to lie for you in court.”

Gunna declined to rise to the bait. “It’s your pension scheme I’m interested in, Ommi. Tell me what the arrangement was.”

Looking him in the face, Gunna was silently pleased to see a moment’s panic behind the façade before Ommi’s sharp-cut features returned to their normal sneer.

“What the fuck are you talking about?”

“Who really killed Steindór Hjálmarsson? Ommi, I know it wasn’t you, so who have you been doing the time for?”

“You’re talking shit now.”

“Am I? You’ve been inside for the best part of nine years and would have been out next year. In those nine years there have been some fantastic advances in forensic science. There’s all kinds of evidence from the crime scene that’s been carefully preserved that we can take a much better look at these days. A victim’s clothes, that sort of thing. We don’t throw anything away and you’d be amazed what we can come up with now.”

“Don’t be stupid. The guy got in my way, so I smacked him. That’s what happened. He saw me outside afterwards and wanted another go, so I gave it to him.”

“No, Ommi. You were inside the whole time. I have witnesses who state that you didn’t leave the building.”

“What witnesses?”

“Never you mind. They’re there,” Gunna said. “You know, it’s very strange, this is. Normally it’s the other way round: crims trying to tell me they didn’t do things. Why are you so keen to be guilty, Ommi? Normally you’d have been screaming blue murder about police brutality, fabricated evidence and miscarriages of justice.”

“Show me these witnesses.”

“All in good time. This isn’t a formal interview. You’re not going anywhere and we’ve plenty of time to go through it all with you in every painful detail.”

This time Ommi looked genuinely uncomfortable. “What have you been told?”

“All kinds of interesting stuff. You’d be surprised what clear memories people have, even after all these years.”

“Was it Selma?”

“I can’t tell you now, Ommi.”

“Skari?”

“So you have seen Skari?” Gunna asked quickly.

“I didn’t say that.”

“But I’ve spoken to him, and very interesting it was. He’s not the brightest, is he?”

This time Ommi glared sullenly, but Gunna could sense that there were a dozen questions eating away at him.

“I’m interested in what happened that night when Steindór Hjálmarsson was murdered, but you know what, Ommi? It’s ancient history now, water under the bridge. It doesn’t look good for us to be reopening a case after almost ten years, admitting that we got it wrong.”

“So what the hell are you here for?” Ommi demanded, angrily enough for the warden standing by the door to stiffen and frown.

“It’s all right,” Gunna assured him and turned back to Ommi. “What I’m really here about is Svana Geirs. I can place you at the scene. Your dabs are right there in her kitchen, where she was killed.”

“That’s stupid,” Ommi protested. “I’d never have hurt Svana.”

“Come on, be serious. Skari testified against you and was beaten to within an inch of his life. Svana testified against you and gets killed. I can place you at both locations.”

“But I didn’t hurt Svana. I’d never hurt her.”

“So why did you go and see her?”

Ommi glared back sullenly.

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