“So it’s a grave.”
“It would appear so,” Skarphedinn said pompously. “Everything points to that. Shall we say that we’ll dig down to it?”
Erlendur nodded.
Skarphedinn strode over to the ladder and climbed up out of the foundation. Erlendur followed close behind. As they stood above the skeleton the archaeologist explained the best way to organise the excavation. Erlendur was impressed by him and everything he said, and soon Skarphedinn was on his mobile phone, calling out his team. He had taken part in several of the main archaeological discoveries in recent decades and knew what he was talking about. Erlendur put his faith in him.
The head of the forensic squad disagreed. He ranted about transferring the excavation to an archaeologist who didn’t have the faintest idea about criminal investigations. The quickest way was to chip the skeleton free from the wall to give them scope to examine both its position and the clues — if there were any — about whether an act of violence had been committed. Erlendur listened to this speech for a while and then declared that Skarphedinn and his team would be allowed to dig their way down to the skeleton even if it took much longer than anticipated.
“The bones have been lying here for half a century, a couple of days either way won’t make any difference,” he said, and the matter was settled.
Erlendur looked around at the new houses under construction. He looked up at the brown geothermal water tanks and to where he knew Lake Reynisvatn lay, then turned and looked east over the grassland that took over where the new quarter ended.
Four bushes caught his attention, standing up out of the brush about 30 metres away. He walked over to them and thought he could tell that they were redcurrant bushes. They were bunched together in a straight line to the east of the foundation and he wondered, stroking his hands over the knobbly, bare branches, who would have planted them there in this no man’s land.
The archaeologists arrived in their fleece jackets and thermal suits, armed with spoons and shovels, and roped off a fairly large area around the skeleton, and by dinner time they had started cautiously digging up the grassy ground. It was still broad daylight, the sun would not set until after 9 p.m. The team comprised four men and two women who worked calmly and methodically, carefully examining each trowelful they took. There was no sign of the soil having been disturbed by the gravedigger. Time and the work on the house foundation had seen to that.
Elinborg located a geologist at the university who was more than willing to assist the police, dropped everything and turned up at the foundation just half an hour after they had spoken. He was middle-aged, black-haired and slim with an exceptionally deep voice, and had a doctorate from Paris. Elinborg led him over to the wall of earth. The police had put a tent over the wall to obscure it from passers-by, and she gestured to the geologist to go in under the flap.
The tent was illuminated by a large fluorescent light, which cast gloomy shadows over to where the skeleton lay. The geologist did not rush anything. He examined the soil, took a handful from the wall and clenched his fist to crumble it. He compared the strata beside the skeleton with those above and below it, and examined the density of the soil around the bones. Proudly he told her how he had once been called in to help with an investigation, to analyse a clump of earth found at the scene of a crime, which made a useful contribution. Then he went on to discuss academic works on criminology and the earth sciences, a kind of forensic geology, if Elinborg understood him correctly.
She listened to him rambling away until she lost her patience.
“How long has he been in there?” she asked.
“Difficult to say,” the geologist said in his deep voice, assuming an academic pose. “It needn’t be long.”
“How long is that, geologically speaking?” Elinborg asked. “A thousand years? Ten?”
The geologist looked at her.
“Difficult to say,” he repeated.
“How accurate an answer can you give?” Elinborg asked. “Measured in years.”
“Difficult to say.”
“In other words, it’s difficult to say anything?”
The geologist looked at Elinborg and smiled.
“Sorry, I was thinking. What do you want to know?”
“How long?”
“What?”
“He’s been lying here,” Elinborg groaned.
“I’d guess somewhere between 50 and 70 years. I still have to do some more detailed tests, but that’s what I’d imagine. From the density of the soil, it’s out of the question that it’s a Viking or a heathen burial mound.”
“We know that,” Elinborg said, “there are shreds of clothing…”
“This green line here,” the geologist said and pointed to a stratum in the lowest part of the wall. “This is ice-age clay. These lines at regular intervals here,” he continued, pointing further up, “these are volcanic tuff. The uppermost one is from the end of the fifteenth century. It’s the thickest layer of tuff in the Reykjavik area since the country was settled. These are older layers from eruptions in Hekla and Katla. Now we’re thousands of years back in time. It’s not far down to the bedrock as you can see here,” he pointed to a large layer in the foundation. “This is the Reykjavik dolerite that covers the whole area around the city.”
He looked at Elinborg.
“Relative to all that history, the grave was only dug a millionth of a second ago.”
The archaeologists stopped work around 9.30 and Skarphedinn told Erlendur they would be back early the next morning. They had not found anything of note in the soil and had barely started stripping the vegetation above it. Erlendur asked whether they could not speed up the work a little, but Skarphedinn looked at him disdainfully and asked him if he wanted to destroy the evidence. They agreed that there was still no rush to dig down to the skeleton.
The fluorescent light in the tent was switched off. All the reporters had left. The discovery of the skeleton was the main story on the evening news. There were pictures of Erlendur and his team down in the foundation and one station showed its reporter trying to interview Erlendur, who waved his hands in his face and walked away.
Calm had descended upon the estate once more. The banging hammers had fallen silent. Everyone who had been working on their half-built houses had left. Those who had already moved in were going to bed. No children could be heard shouting any more. Two policeman in a patrol car were appointed to watch over the area during the night. Elinborg and Sigurdur Oli had gone home. The forensic squad, who had been helping the archaeologist, had gone home as well by now. Erlendur had spoken to Toti and his mother about the bone that the boy found. Toti was elated by all the attention he received. “What a turn up for the books,” his mother sighed. Her son finding a human skeleton just lying around. “This is the best birthday I’ve had,” Toti told Erlendur. “Ever.”
The medical student had gone back home, taking his little brother with him. Erlendur and Sigurdur Oli had spoken briefly to him. He described how he had been watching the baby without noticing at first the bone it was gnawing. When he examined it more closely it turned out to be a human rib.
“How could you tell at once that it was a human rib?” Erlendur asked. “It could have been from a sheep, for instance.”
“Yes, wasn’t it more likely to have been from a sheep?” asked Sigurdur Oli, a city boy who knew nothing about Icelandic farm animals.
“There was no mistaking it,” the student said. “I’ve done autopsy work and there was no question.”
“Can you tell us how long you’d estimate that the bones have been buried there?” Erlendur asked. He knew he would eventually be given the findings of the geologist Elinborg had called out, the archaeologist and the forensic pathologist, but he did not mind hearing the student’s opinion.
“I took a look at the soil and, based on the rate of decay, we’re maybe talking about 70 years. Not much more than that. But I’m no expert.”
“No, quite,” Erlendur said. “The archaeologist thought the same and he’s no expert either.”
He turned to Sigurdur Oli.
“We need to check out the records of people who went missing from that time, around 1930 or 1940. Maybe even earlier. See what we can find.”
Erlendur stood beside the foundation, in the evening sun, and looked north towards the town of Mosfellsbaer, to Kollafjordur and Mount Esja, and he could see the houses across the bay on Kjalarnes. He could see the cars on the West Road skirt the foot of Ulfarsfell on their way to Reykjavik. He heard a car drive up to the foundation and a man stepped out of it, about the same age as Erlendur, fat, wearing a blue windcheater and a peaked cap. He slammed the door and looked at Erlendur and the police car, the disturbed ground by the foundation and the tent covering the skeleton.
“Are you from the taxman?” he asked brashly, walking over to Erlendur.
“Taxman?” Erlendur said.
“Never a bloody moment’s peace from you,” the man said. “Have you got a writ or…?”
“Is this your land?” Erlendur asked.
“Who are you? What’s this tent? What’s going on here?”
Erlendur explained to the man, who said his name was Jon, what had happened. It turned out that he was a building contractor and owned the building plot; he was on the verge of bankruptcy and plagued by debt collectors. No work had been done on the foundation for some time, but he said he came regularly to check whether the formwork had been vandalised; those bloody kids in these new suburbs who play silly buggers in the houses. He had not heard about the discovery of the skeleton and looked down into the foundation in disbelief while Erlendur explained to him what the police and archaeologists were doing.