Don't Look Back

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Authors: Karin Fossum
a packet of Fisherman's Friends.
    They drove back. There was more traffic on Krystallen now. It was teeming with children, on various vehicles: tricycles, tractors, some with doll carriages, and one homemade go-cart with a seedy flag flapping in the wind. When the police car pulled up next to the mailboxes, the colorful tableau froze like ice. Skarre couldn't resist checking the brakes on one of the toy vehicles, and he was positive that the owner of a blue and pink Massey Ferguson wet his pants from sheer fright when he told him that the rear light was out.
    Almost everyone realized that something had happened, but they didn't know what. No one had dared to call the Hollands to inquire.

    They presented their questions at every house, one on each side of the street. Time after time they had to watch disbelief and shock flood the frightened faces. Many of the women started to cry, the men turned pale and fell silent. They would wait a proper amount of time and then ask their questions. Everyone knew Annie well. Some of the women had seen her leave. The Hollands lived at the end of the cul-de-sac; she had to pass all the houses on her way out. For years she had babysat their children, up until last year, when she started getting too old for it. Almost everyone mentioned her handball career and their surprise when she had left the team. Annie had been such a good player that her name was often in the local paper. One elderly couple remembered that she had been livelier and much more outgoing in the past, but they ascribed the change to her getting older. She had changed tremendously, they said. She'd been quite short and thin; then all of a sudden she'd shot up so tall.
    Skarre didn't take the houses in order; he went first to the orange one. It belonged to a bachelor named Fritzner, who was in his late forties. In the middle of the living room was a little boat with full sails. In the bottom of the boat lay a mattress and lots of cushions, and a bottle holder was fastened to the gunwale. Skarre stared at it, intrigued. The boat was bright red, its sails were white. An image of his own apartment and its lack of any unorthodox furnishings flitted through his mind.
    Fritzner didn't know Annie well, but occasionally he had offered her a lift into town. If the weather was bad, she accepted, but if it was fine, she would wave him on. He liked Annie. A damn good team handball goalie, he said.
    Sejer moved on down the street, coming to a Turkish family at number 6. The Irmak family were just about to eat
when he rang the bell. They were sitting at the table, and steam was rising from a large pot in the middle. The man of the house, a stately figure wearing an embroidered shirt, stretched out a brown hand. Sejer told them that Annie Holland was dead, and that it seemed that someone had murdered her.

    "No!" they said, horrified. "It can't be true. Not that pretty girl in number 20, not Eddie's daughter!" The Hollands were the only family that had welcomed them warmly when they moved in. They had lived other places, and they hadn't been equally welcome everywhere. It couldn't be true! The man grabbed Sejer's arm and pulled him toward the sofa.
    Sejer sat down. Irmak did not have the meek, submissive air that he had so often seen in immigrants; instead, he was bursting with dignity and self-confidence. It was refreshing.
    His wife had seen Annie leave. She thought it must have been around 12:30 P.M. She was walking calmly past the houses with a bag. They hadn't known Annie when she was younger; they had lived there only four months.
    "Nice girl," she said, straightening the shawl draped over her head. "Big! Lots of muscles." She lowered her eyes.
    "Did she ever baby-sit for your daughter?"
    Sejer nodded toward the table where a young girl was waiting patiently. A silent, unusually pretty girl with thick lashes. Her gaze was as deep and penetrating as a mine shaft.
    "We were going to ask her," the husband said swiftly, "but the neighbors

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