Yrsa Sigurðardóttir - The Silence of the Sea

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The most chilling novel yet from Yrsa Sigurdardóttir, an international bestseller at the height of her powers.
A luxury yacht arrives in Reykjavik harbour with nobody on board. What has happened to the crew, and to the family who were on board when it left Lisbon?
Thóra Gudmundsdóttir is hired by the young father’s parents to investigate, and is soon drawn deeper into the mystery. What should she make of the rumours saying that the vessel was cursed, especially given that when she boards the yacht she thinks she sees one of the missing twins? Where is Karitas, the glamorous young wife of the yacht’s former owner? And whose is the body that has washed up further along the shore? ‘Mummy dead.’ The child’s pure treble was uncomfortably clear. It was the last thing Brynjar – and doubtless the others – wanted to hear at that moment. ‘Daddy dead.’ It got worse. ‘Adda dead. Bygga dead.’ The child sighed and clutched her grandmother’s leg. ‘All dead.’

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That ruled out Ægir, as well as Lára and the twins, of course. Not to mention Loftur.

Which only left Thráinn and Halli.

Google Translate had its uses. Thóra had tried typing in the comments that the doctor or nurse had scribbled on what she took to be Snævar’s admission form for the casualty ward in Lisbon. One box turned out to be marked Description of Incident , and when to the best of her ability she typed the text it contained into the translation program, her curiosity was piqued. It emerged that, when being admitted, the seriously intoxicated patient had claimed that the person who pushed him had been an Icelander. He had not known who it was and when asked if it had been his companion, Halldór, he had denied it and begun to ramble incoherently. The doctor’s verdict was to postpone reporting the incident to the police until the patient was sober enough to make sense. Since there was no further mention of this in the accompanying documents, it was impossible to tell what the outcome had been. Snævar had not said a word about his assailant being an Icelander when describing the events to her.

Thóra rang when she guessed he would have reached home, to avoid catching him in a bus or taxi. People tended not to talk as freely on the phone when strangers were listening. After apologising for bothering him again so soon, she described the contents of the hospital report. ‘Do you remember it at all?’

‘Yes. Vaguely.’ Snævar sounded rather embarrassed.

‘Do they quote you correctly? That you were pushed by an Icelander?’

‘Well… That’s what I thought at the time, but I wouldn’t stake my life on it. I was pissed out of my mind. But I’m fairly sure the man who pushed me said something in Icelandic just before the blow sent me flying.’

‘Surely it must have been Halldór? You were out together that evening, weren’t you?’

‘No way. He was inside paying the bill. I’d gone outside for some fresh air – I was totally wasted, like I said. So it definitely can’t have been him.’

Thóra was silent for a moment. ‘Was it reported to the police?’

‘No. I couldn’t face getting involved with the police in a foreign country, and nothing would have come of it anyway. What were they supposed to do? Take his fingerprints from my jacket?’

‘Was the hospital satisfied with that?’

‘Yes, they were just relieved to be able to discharge me. Halldór stayed with me overnight and in the morning I got him to lie to them that I was going home that day. I couldn’t be bothered to go back for a check-up either. They’d sorted out my leg and there was nothing more to do but wait until the bones knitted. They swallowed the story and gave him the forms to hand in at home.’

‘Then why have I got the originals? Haven’t you been to see a doctor since you got back?’

‘No.’ Snævar sounded even more sheepish than he had at the beginning of the conversation. Thóra felt like his mother. ‘I keep meaning to go.’

‘You should do it. I’ll photocopy these and return the originals to you. I could have them dropped off at your GP’s surgery if you like.’ But Snævar asked her to give the papers to him and Thóra suspected he would delay the doctor’s appointment as long as possible, probably until it was time to remove the cast. Or perhaps tough guys like him removed it themselves. ‘Tell me another thing: do you have any idea when Loftur and Thráinn arrived in Lisbon?’ Given that there were no direct flights between Iceland and Portugal, it was unlikely there would have been many Icelandic tourists around at that time of year. And it was extremely implausible that Ægir and his family would have attacked a fellow countryman who they didn’t even know.

‘They were supposed to arrive three or four days after us, I think.’

‘When was that?’ Thóra dug out the copy of Snævar’s flight ticket to Lisbon and compared the date with that of his hospital visit. They were three days apart. ‘The day after your accident?’

There was a pause as Snævar apparently searched his memory, then he replied: ‘Yes, I have a feeling it was the day after.’ He paused again. ‘I can’t remember the dates for the life of me. Wait a minute. Yes, they were supposed to arrive on the afternoon of 3rd March. So that was probably the day I broke my leg.’

Thóra checked the date on the hospital admission forms: 3rd March. So it was conceivable that either Thráinn or Loftur might have been involved. She decided to ask Bella to type the hospital report into Google Translate in case the nursing staff had recorded any further details about Snævar’s statement. Since his own memory of the events was hazy in the extreme, they might have more luck in finding out the story there. She thanked him and rang off.

All this was very bad news for her case; there would be no call now to refer to the hospital report or attach it to her summary as she had intended. In fact, she would be better off persuading Snævar to go to his GP and get a signed letter stating that his leg was broken and avoiding all mention of the mysterious Icelander who might have caused his fall. If the insurance company got their hands on the report, they could well use it to concoct an explanation for Ægir and Lára’s disappearance. It would be a simple matter to claim that they had planned it all in advance and that their decision to take the boat home was no coincidence: Ægir must have pushed the man deliberately in order to take his place on board. Highly improbable as it sounded, the theory couldn’t be ruled out entirely. Oh, why was nothing ever simple?

Thóra sat up and stretched. Perhaps there were jobs for lawyers on the oil rig.

Chapter 17

A twitching tail was the only sign of life from the cat on the windowsill. She glared out into the garden where the gale was flattening everything in its path. Storms and rain were beneath her dignity; she might have been lashing her tail to show her disgust at the elements for daring to behave in this way.

‘Cats are rubbish.’ Sóley watched the animal, bored. Mother and daughter were lying on the sofa together, Sóley with a library book open on her stomach. ‘They never do anything.’

‘They do lots of things.’ Thóra felt compelled to stand up for their pet. ‘But only what they want to do, not what you want.’ She gave Sóley a gentle kick. ‘Don’t be mean to the poor kitty. It’s not her fault the weather’s like this.’ Sóley was supposed to be playing in a football match later that day against a team from Egilsstadir, in the east of Iceland, but their flight had been cancelled. She and her friends had been convinced they were going to thrash the other team, so they were crushed by disappointment. ‘In fact, I’m sure she’s as disappointed as you. She wanted to go exploring but I was afraid she’d be blown out to sea.’

‘I can’t stand the wind either. Why does wind have to exist?’ Sóley seemed to be burdened by all the world’s injustices today.

‘Perhaps it was invented to drive sailing ships in the old days – or windmills,’ Thóra suggested. Sóley rolled her eyes to indicate that these were nothing compared to a match in the junior girls’ fourth division. Thóra sat up and hugged her daughter. ‘Well, it’s lovely to have you here even though you’re in a grump.’ She disengaged and stood up. ‘And don’t you dare dream of applying for a summer job in Norway.’

‘Talking about me?’ Gylfi came in yawning. Sigga had taken Orri to a birthday party at a relative’s house but the youthful father had announced that he had a cold and didn’t want to infect the horde of children. Thóra had bitten back a comment, recalling how Matthew had been driven to distraction by the children’s parties they had held for Orri. She didn’t know which annoyed him most, the noise of the kids or the chattering of the mothers. So she could well understand Gylfi. More to the point, she had recently taken the decision not to interfere in his relationship with Sigga. Although they all lived under the same roof, the young couple had to learn to sort out their own affairs without her constantly acting as referee.

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