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The Postcard Killers - James Patterson [67]

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father go back to the mother. He said something and nodded in her direction. The woman snickered, and they both laughed.

She looked down at the table again and pretended she hadn’t seen them.

The fact was, she had a lot in common with Nils Thorsen. They had the same profession, the same interests, and even the same moral principles. He wasn’t bad-looking either. A bit thin on top, maybe…

Why couldn’t she feel the same way about him as she did about Jacob Kanon? God, she was starting to get loony, wasn’t she? It was pretty pathetic, but it was out of her control now.

Slowly she wound her hair up, fastening it with a ballpoint pen, and went back to looking at the postcard in front of her.

Tivoli. The amusement park in the middle of Copenhagen. Posted while the Rudolphs were being held in Stockholm.

She had to face facts here.

However much she wanted to believe Jacob, his theory just didn’t make sense.

Sylvia and Malcolm Rudolph weren’t guilty.

Not of sending this card, and not of sending the letter that Nils and the police here in Copenhagen had presumably opened by now.

Why had she let herself believe it?

People will let themselves be convinced of anything, she supposed. Anything was better than a life without meaning. That was why religion existed, and football team fan clubs, and volunteer torturers in the service of dictators.

As both a researcher and a journalist, she had regarded questioning everything as her guiding principle. Investigating. Thinking critically. Not taking anything for granted.

All at once a longing burned her like a hot iron.

Oh, Jacob, why aren’t you here? How did you get into my head this way? How did you get into my heart?

Chapter 100


“SORRY, DESSIE, SO SORRY,” Nils Thorsen said, shaking the rain from his oilskin coat and sitting down opposite her. “That took ages, didn’t it. I apologize.”

He ordered a fresh beer at once, sneaking a look to see how she was taking his absence.

“Was it a Polaroid picture?” Dessie asked.

The reporter wiped his glasses on his sweater and put a copy of a blurry photograph in front of her.

The setting was unclear, and the focus all wrong. It was difficult to see what the picture was of, actually.

Dessie squinted and looked closely at the shot.

It had been taken from a very low angle. She could make out the foot of a bed, but whatever was on top of it was unclear to her.

“Have they found the location where this was taken?” she asked.

“It’s only a matter of time,” Nils said. “It has to be a hotel room. Look at the painting in the background. No one would have anything that ugly in their own home.”

“Are there… people on the bed?” Dessie asked.

Nils Thorsen put his glasses back on. His hands were trembling. The man was clearly frightened, and she understood that better than anyone.

“I don’t know,” he said.

She held the picture up to her face, shifted it around in the light. Bedding, some items of clothing, a handbag, and —

Suddenly a foot came into focus. Then another. And another.

Instinctively she thrust the picture away from her eyes.

There were people there, two of them.

The evidence seemed to suggest that they were no longer alive.

“Do you really think that’s an imitation of a work of art?” the Dane asked.

“Impossible to say,” Dessie muttered.

She pushed the terrible picture away and began to run through Denmark’s most famous works of art in her mind.

The Little Mermaid, the statue in Copenhagen’s harbor, was obviously the best known. But there were the artists of the Skagen School, the cubist Vilhelm Lundstrøm, and plenty more.

She pushed the stray hairs away from her brow. A lot of the other photographs had been very easy to trace back to various artworks, usually well-known ones.

This wasn’t one of them, was it? Something had changed.

“I don’t think it was the same photographer,” she said to Nils Thorsen. “So who took this picture?”

Chapter 101


Los Angeles, USA


“HEY, SLEEPYHEAD, YOU STILL alive?”

Jacob slowly opened his eyes without the faintest idea of where he was. He examined the clues.

A ceiling with a

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