This torture lasted a long time, but gradually she could also distinguish other sounds: a tool that rattled when the noise stopped, occasionally the characteristic swish of a broom, and then the scraping of a shovel, besides footsteps on a hard floor. There were also occasional outbursts from a person who was working hard, and once a brief, angry sentence, the meaning of which she was unable to catch. Later the infernal noise was replaced with more digging sounds, but by that point she was well aware of what was going on. Andreas Falkenborg was preparing her final resting place, which apparently was to be below a concrete floor. Strangely enough she did not feel overwhelmingly afraid. Not even when she suddenly noticed that he had put her contact lenses in while she was anaesthetised.
Her sense of time had gone. She had difficulty determining how many hours passed before hands carefully removed the covering from her head and the gag from her mouth. The white, glaring light in the room blinded her. She blinked and little by little recovered her full vision. Her kidnapper had the mask on. Otherwise he was wearing shorts and a shirt with rolled-up sleeves. The combination was bizarre. He was sweating profusely. Immediately in front of her, only a couple of metres away, a hole in the floor had been excavated as expected, a good metre-and-a-half parallel with the wall. The room she was in was clearly a cellar with bare, greyish-white concrete walls. Opposite her a three-foot-tall wooden cross painted black was set up, and a single, bright bulb shone from the ceiling. To the left was a red-painted metal door and not much else, apart from herself and the chair she was sitting on. She looked down and saw that it was attached to the concrete floor with sturdy plates. Only then did she discover that there was another person present in the room. To her right, with her chair jammed against Pauline’s, sat Jeanette Hvidt, also tied up.
Andreas Falkenborg stood watching them for a long time through his mask. Pauline Berg heard Jeanette struggle with tears in small, smothered sobs, and thought that regardless of their hopeless situation it was crucial not to show anxiety. Even so she could not think of anything reasonable to say. Suddenly Jeanette said, “Won’t he just kill the cop? I’ll do what he says. Always. I’ll always do what he asks me to.”
The words came out surprisingly clear, and Pauline realised that they made sense. She had not thought about it herself, but Jeanette was right, the grave was hardly meant for two, it was too small for that. She also registered the girl’s form of address and naturally noticed her lack of solidarity, which under the circumstances Pauline shouldn’t blame her for, but did anyway. She said neutrally, “May I have some water?”
Falkenborg was over her like a hawk.
“She says, Will he give her some water?”
“If I’m going to be the first to die, that’s the way it is, but I’m thirsty. Can’t you give me something to drink? I really need it. Why are you letting me suffer like this? It’s just not your style.”
She was careful not to provoke him. She was convinced that he intended a gruesome death for both of them, the question was when and in what order. On the other hand he was not a sadist. He would not cause her unnecessary pain for his own enjoyment.
He answered her angrily.
“She’s talking wrong, she won’t get any water.”
A quick deliberation made her give in.
“Will he give me a drop of water? I’m very thirsty.”
Falkenborg considered while he adjusted his mask. She thought that with the material along the sides and his limited air intake it must be hot and uncomfortable. Finally he said, “She will ask for it again.”
“Will he give me some water to drink?”
“She can have water, but she has to wait.”
He left the room. The heavy iron door echoed behind him, but Pauline was able to see a corridor outside the cellar room, whatever use that would be to her. When he was gone, Jeanette said in a whisper, “You mustn’t antagonise him or we’ll get the staff. It’s terrible.”
Pauline Berg remembered the so-called staff both from the video on her computer and Falkenborg’s empty threats in her study.
“What kind of staff are you talking about?”
“He gives a shock with it, it hurts like crazy.”
“An electrical prod? Like for cattle?”
“I don’t know, I think so. It’s horrible, you can’t imagine how bad it is.”
“I don’t see any prod.”
“He doesn’t have it here, it—”
The door opened again, and Jeanette Hvidt fell silent. Falkenborg returned with a pitcher of water. He set it in front of Berg.
“She will open her ugly mouth.”
She opened her mouth and tipped her head back. Carefully he poured the water, pausing at times so she could get air. She drank greedily without thinking of leaving any for Jeanette. Only when she couldn’t drink any more, and the pitcher was almost empty, did she ask, “Will he give Jeanette the rest?”
Falkenborg poured the rest of the water into Jeanette’s mouth, then he set the pitcher on the floor and said, “He will draw lots on who will go into the bag first. That is how he wants it to be.”
She asked quickly, “Will he tell us when it will happen?”
“Tomorrow one will go into the bag. Tomorrow, when he has cement for her grave.”
“And the other, what will he do with the other?”
“He will also get her into the bag. That’s what he will do. Both of them will go into the bag, first one, then the other. Then the other will be afraid.”
Again he adjusted his mask and then started reciting a nursery rhyme as he tentatively touched the two women’s knees.
“Ohn Dohn Dehn, Mamma Futta Fehn . . . ”