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E-Book, Englisch, Band 6, 448 Seiten

Reihe: Hanne Wilhelmsen Series

Holt No Echo


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ISBN: 978-0-85789-237-9
Verlag: Corvus
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark

E-Book, Englisch, Band 6, 448 Seiten

Reihe: Hanne Wilhelmsen Series

ISBN: 978-0-85789-237-9
Verlag: Corvus
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 6 - ePub Watermark



'THE QUEEN OF SCANDINAVIAN CRIME THRILLERS' RED 'A THRILLER WRITER OF THE HIGHEST ORDER' LIZA MARKLUND A high-profile murder brings Hanne Wilhelmsen back to the city she fled in the wake of heartbreak, in this chilling thriller for fans of Jussi Adler-Olsen, Ragnar Jonasson and Ann Cleeves When celebrity chef Brede Ziegler is discovered stabbed to death on the steps of the Olso police headquarters it sends a shockwave through the city's in-crowd. Ziegler had lots of famous friends, is there a culprit among them - or was this a random act of violence? Police investigator Billy T. takes on the case, but is met with conflicting information about what kind of man Ziegler was. It seems nobody really knew the dead man - including his glamorous wife, the restaurant co-owner and the editor of his memoir. While Billy T. struggles to break the case, Hanne Wilhelmsen returns to Oslo after a six-month absence. Since the death of her partner Cecilie, Hanne has been in self-imposed exile. Hanne discovers that not only had Ziegler been stabbed, but he had also ingested a lethal dose of painkillers. As the plot thickens, Hanne and Billy T. are pulled deeper into the nefarious world in which Ziegler lived. Was he who he said he was? And can those who claim to have known him best be trusted? Readers love NO ECHO 'Anne Holt as great as ever' ***** 'Absolutely riveting' ***** 'Gripping' ***** 'Spine tingling' *****

ANNE HOLT is Norway's bestselling female crime writer. She spent two years working for the Oslo Police Department before founding her own law firm and serving as Norway's Minster for Justice between 1996 and 1997. She is published in 30 languages with over 6 million copies of her books sold.
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4

Billy T. was fascinated. He held the glass up to the light and studied a ruby-colored spot wedged inside pink pack-ice. Russian Slush was most certainly not the best drink he had tasted. But it looked beautiful. He twisted the glass toward the chandelier on the ceiling and had to screw up his eyes.

“Sorry—”

Billy T. held his hand out to a waiter in blue trousers and immaculate collarless white shirt.

“What is this, in actual fact?”

“Russian Slush?”

One corner of the waiter’s mouth tugged almost imperceptibly, as if he didn’t quite dare to smile.

“Crushed ice, vodka, and cranberries, sir.”

“Oh, I see. Thank you.”

Billy T. drank, though strictly speaking he might be said to be on duty. He had no intention of presenting the bill to the Finance Section; it was seven o’clock on a Monday evening, December 6 to be precise, and he could not care less. He sat on his own, fingering his glass as he scanned the room.

Entré was the city’s new, undisputed “in” place.

Billy T. had been born and raised in Grünerløkka. In a two-room apartment in Fossveien his mother had kept him and his sister, elder by three years, in line while she worked her fingers to the bone in a laundry farther up the street and spent her nights mending clothes for extra payment. Billy T. had never met his father. It was still unclear to him whether the guy had done a runner or his mother had turned him out before their son had arrived into the world. Anyway, his father was never mentioned. All Billy T. knew about the man was that he had been six foot six in his stocking soles, a womanizer of the first order, and an out-and-out alcoholic into the bargain. Which had in all likelihood led to an extremely premature death. Somewhere far back in his memory, Billy T. had gained an impression that his mother had one day come home surprisingly early from work. He could only have been about seven years old and kept off school because of a bad cold.

“He’s dead,” his mother had said. “You know who.”

Her eyes forbade him from asking. He had gone to bed and had not got up again until the following day.

There was only one picture of his father in the apartment in Fossveien, a wedding photograph of his parents that had, surprisingly enough, been allowed to remain on display. Billy T. suspected that his mother used it to prove that her children had been born in wedlock, if anyone should be impudent enough to assume any different. If a stranger were to set foot inside the front door of their overcrowded apartment, the wedding photograph was the first thing they spotted. Until the day when Billy T. had come home in his stiff uniform, having passed his exams at what was then called police college. He had sprinted all the way. Beads of sweat hung from the synthetic fibers of his clothing. His mother refused to let him go. Her skinny arms were locked around her son’s neck. His sister sat laughing in the living room as she opened a cheap bottle of sparkling wine. She had become a fully qualified nurse two years earlier. The wedding photograph had disappeared that same day.

Billy T. had not acquired a taste for alcohol until he reached the age of thirty.

Now he was over forty, and weeks could still pass between the occasions when he drank anything other than cola or milk.

His mother still lived in Fossveien. His sister had moved to Asker with her husband and eventually three children, but Billy T. had remained in Løkka. He had experienced all the ups and downs of the district since the start of the sixties. He had grown up with an outside toilet, and been at home on the day when his mother, tearful and proud, had run her fingers over their newly installed WC in what had until then been a closet. He had seen the urban regeneration program break the back of one housing cooperative after another during the eighties, and had lived through trends and fashions that came and went like birds of passage in Cuba.

Billy T.’s love for Grünerløkka was anything but trendy. He was not someone who had only recently fallen in love with Thorvald Meyers gate’s tiny, jam-packed bars and cafés. Billy T. lived outside the Løkka community that had formed in the course of the past four or five years. It made him feel old. He had never been in Sult waiting an hour at the bar for a table. At Bar Boca, where he had once ventured for a glass of cola, his eyes had stung after only a few minutes of claustrophobic posturing at the bar counter. Instead, Billy T. took his youngsters to the McDonald’s across the street. The world outside his windows had become something that did not impinge on him at all.

Billy T.’s love for Grünerløkka was connected with the buildings. With the houses, purely and simply, the old workers’ apartment blocks. Below Grüners gate, they were built on clay soil and had unexpected cracks in the middle of their façades. As a little boy, he had thought that the houses had wrinkles because they were so old. He loved the streets, especially the short and narrow ones. Bergverksgata was only a few meters long and came to an end at the slope down to the Akerselva river. The current can take you away, he remembered; you mustn’t venture into the water, the current might take you away! His body turned red with eczema every summer. His mother complained and scolded and smeared liniment on his back with furious hands. The boy jumped into the polluted water just the same the very next day. Summer after summer. It was a holiday as good as any.

Entré was located on the south-west corner of the intersection between Thorvald Meyers gate and Sofienberggata. A department store full of old-fashioned women’s clothes that never sold had resisted the forcible modernization of Løkka for years. However, big business had won out in the end.

He was sitting on his own at a table just beside the door. The restaurant was crammed, despite it being a Monday. The makeshift sign on the door had been written with a marker pen that had scored through the paper. Billy T. could read the reversed lettering from where he was seated:

THE RESTAURANT’S OWNER AND CHEF, BREDE ZIEGLER, HAS PASSED AWAY. IN MEMORY OF HIS LIFE AND WORK, ENTRÉ WILL REMAIN OPEN THIS EVENING.

“Fuck!” Billy T. said, gulping down an ice cube.

He should not be sitting here. He should be at home. At the very least, Tone-Marit should have accompanied him if he was going to eat in a restaurant for once. They hadn’t been out together since Jenny was born. That was almost nine months ago now.

A molar was causing him extreme pain. Billy T. spat the ice cube out into his half-clenched fist and tried to drop it unnoticed on the floor.

“Anything wrong?”

The waiter bowed slightly as he placed a glass of Chablis on the tablecloth in front of him.

“No. Everything’s fine. You … you’re staying open today. Don’t you think many people will feel that’s … disrespectful, in a way?”

“The show must go on. It’s what Brede would have wanted.”

The plate that had just landed in front of Billy T. looked like an art installation. He stared in bewilderment at the food, lifting his knife and fork, but had no idea where to begin.

“Duck liver on a bed of forest mushrooms, with asparagus and a hint of cherry,” the waiter clarified. “Bon appetit!

The asparagus was arranged above the liver like an American Indian tepee.

“Food in a prison,” Billy T. murmured. “And where the hell is the hint?”

A solitary cherry sat in splendor at the edge of his plate. Billy T. pushed it in and sighed in relief when the asparagus tent collapsed. Hesitantly, he cut a slice of liver.

Only now did he catch sight of the table beside the massive staircase leading up to the first floor. An enormous picture of Brede Ziegler was displayed on an immaculate white tablecloth flanked by two silver candlesticks, a black silk ribbon draped across one corner. A woman with an upswept hairdo approached the table. She picked up a pen and wrote a few words in a book. Then she held her hand to her forehead, as if about to burst into tears.

“You’d think the guy was a royal,” Billy T. muttered. “He hadn’t done anything to deserve a bloody book of condolence!”

Brede Ziegler had looked anything but regal when the police had found him. Someone had phoned the switchboard and slurred that they ought to check their back steps. Two trainee police officers had gone to the bother of following that exhortation. Immediately afterwards, one of them had come running, out of breath, back to the duty officer.

“He’s dead! There is a guy there! Dead as a—”

The trainee had stopped at the sight of Billy T., who quite by chance had popped into the duty office to collect some papers, bare-legged and wearing only a singlet and shorts.

“Doornail,” he had finished the sentence for the young man in uniform. “Dead as a doornail. I’ve been exercising, you know. No need to stare like that.”

That had been eighteen hours ago. Billy T. had gone straight home without waiting to find out anything further about the dead man. He had taken a shower, slept for nine hours, and arrived at work one hour late on Monday morning in the forlorn hope that the case would end up on some other chief inspector’s desk.

“Great minds think alike.”

Billy T. looked up, at the same time struggling to swallow an asparagus...



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