The Leopard Read Online Free Page B

The Leopard
Book: The Leopard Read Online Free
Author: Jo Nesbø
Pages:
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she arrived at the cheapest rooms and dormitories where the imported labour force from Africa and Pakistan stayed, those who had no rooms, just cubicles without doors, without TVs, without air conditioning and without a private life. The black night porter who admitted Kaja looked at the photo for a long time and at the hundred-dollar bill she was holding for even longer before he took it and pointed to one of the cubicles.
    Harry Hole, she thought. Gotcha.
    He was lying supine on a mattress, breathing almost without sound. He had a deep frown on his forehead, and the prominent jawbone under his right ear was even more defined now that he was asleep. From the other cubicles she heard men coughing and snoring. Water dripped from the ceiling, hitting the brick floor with deep, disgruntled sighs. The opening to the cubicle let in a cold, blue stripe of light from the neon tubes in reception. She saw a clothes cupboard in front of the window, a chair and a plastic bottle of water beside the mattress. There was a bitter-sweet smell, like burned rubber. Smoke rose from a cigarette end in an ashtray beside the baby’s bottle on the floor. She sat down on the chair and discovered that he was holding something in his hand. A greasy, yellowish-brown clump. Kaja had seen enough hash the year she worked in a patrol car to know this was not hash.
    It was almost two o’clock when he awoke.
    She heard a tiny change in the rhythm of his breathing, and then the whites of his eyes shone in the dark.
    ‘Rakel?’ He whispered it. And went back to sleep.
    Half an hour later he opened his eyes wide, gave a start, cast around and made a grab for something under the mattress.
    ‘It’s me,’ Kaja whispered. ‘Kaja Solness.’
    The body at her feet stopped in mid-movement. Then it collapsed and fell back on the mattress.
    ‘What the hell are you doing here?’ he groaned, his voice still thick with sleep.
    ‘Fetching you,’ she said.
    He chuckled, his eyes closed. ‘Fetching me? Still?’
    She took out an envelope, leaned forward and held it up in front of him. He opened one eye.
    ‘Plane ticket,’ she said. ‘To Oslo.’
    The eye closed again. ‘Thanks, but I’m staying here.’
    ‘If I can find you, it’s only a matter of time before they do, too.’
    He didn’t answer. She waited while listening to his breathing and the water that dripped and sighed. Then he opened his eyes again, rubbed under his right ear and hoisted himself up onto his elbows.
    ‘Got a smoke?’
    She shook her head. He threw off the sheet, stood up and went over to the cupboard. He was surprisingly pale considering he had been living in a subtropical climate, and so lean that his ribs showed, even on his back. His build suggested that at one time he had been athletic, but now the wasted muscles appeared as sharp shadows under the white skin. He opened the cupboard. She was amazed to see that his clothes lay folded in neat piles. He put on a T-shirt and a pair of jeans, the ones he had been wearing the day before, and with some difficulty tugged a creased packet of cigarettes out from his pocket.
    He slipped into a pair of flip-flops and edged past her with a click of his lighter.
    ‘Come on,’ he said softly as he passed. ‘Supper.’
    It was nearly three in the morning. Grey iron shutters had been pulled down over shops and restaurants in Chungking. Apart from at Li Yuan’s.
    ‘So how did you wind up in Hong Kong?’ Kaja asked, looking at Harry, who, in an inelegant but effective way, was shovelling shiny glass noodles into his mouth from the white soup bowl.
    ‘I flew. Are you cold?’
    Kaja automatically removed her hands from under her thighs. ‘But why here?’
    ‘I was on my way to Manila. Hong Kong was only supposed to be a stopover.’
    ‘The Philippines. What were you going to do there?’
    ‘Throw myself into a volcano.’
    ‘Which one?’
    ‘Well, which ones can you name?’
    ‘None. I’ve just read that there are loads of them.

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