had been close by. He had been in Copenhagen a week ago, on her previous visit. Was he still here? Irene felt convinced that he wasn’t. It was high time for her to return to Göteborg.
She longed intensely for Krister and the girls. She went to get her cell phone and called home.
Just before six thirty, Irene went downstairs to the lobby. They had put up the “Jell-O shot evening” sign in the bar again. She saw Jonny at a table in the bar together with two men and a woman. He lifted a small glass filled with pink Jell-O.
She didn’t bother going into the bar. She was content. There would be no discussion about who was going to drive tomorrow. She exited through the revolving door and waved at Peter, who was walking toward her.
They went back to Restaurant Vesuvius. The head waiter was a gray-haired older man who showed them to a table for two in the smaller room with the movie-star photos on the walls. Two younger women sitting at a table by the window looked at Irene with undisguised jealousy and Irene became keenly aware of the fact that she was in the company of a very attractive man. When Peter stood near her in order to pull out her chair, she caught a whiff of his good aftershave. Light, masculine, and sensual. Could be Armani.
He pushed her chair in and when he leaned forward she could feel the warmth of his breath on her neck.
“It’s been a busy day for you. Now you have to relax,” he said. He smiled encouragingly at her when he seated himself across from her. “Do you want wine?”
She hesitated for half a second and then common sense took over.
“No, thanks. I have to drive tomorrow. Jonny is already in fine form in the bar. He’s drinking Jell-O shots with a group of people. Something tells me it will be a quiet trip home.”
Peter laughed. His eyes were as blue as the short-sleeved Sand shirt he was wearing. The top two buttons were open, revealing blond hair. A thin gold chain glimmered against his golden brown skin. He had hung his light-colored linen jacket on the back of his chair.
She still had on her dark blue linen pants, which at this point were wrinkled. She had managed to press them a bit with the iron in the hotel room, but they weren’t pristine. Her linen jacket was still in good shape. She wore a new silver-gray satin top under the jacket. Her feet in blue suede sandals were bare.
“Beer then. What would you like to eat?”
“Something spicy that will make my spirits soar.”
“How does gamberoni sole mio sound? Giant shrimp in a lobster sauce with cayenne pepper.”
“That sounds perfect.”
“Good. I’ll have that as well. A drink before dinner?”
She hesitated. “OK, one. A dry martini, please.”
The drinks came to the table very quickly. Peter and Irene raised their wide glasses in order to toast. Their eyes met and Irene felt her cheeks become hot. Damn the man for being so handsome!
A chill suddenly ran down her spine. Her brain became crystal clear. The police officer.
Mechanically, she took a sip of her drink as she thought feverishly. She put down her glass and said in as natural a tone of voice as she could muster, “You never had a chance to tell me where you got your tan.” She smiled encouragingly but didn’t get a response.
He looked into his glass. Finally he said, “I wasn’t planning on telling you. I was in South Africa.”
“How exciting! How long were you there?”
“Three weeks. A tour and safari.”
“How wonderful, to get away in March when the weather is so bad. . . .”
“It wasn’t in March. We . . . I left on April 1.”
A month after Marcus’s supposed trip to Thailand; Marcus had been dead for almost a month already. Peter’s sunburn also seemed to match better with three weeks in April than with a few weeks the month before.
But there were tanning salons. You could maintain a tan. She had to confirm the date Peter had taken his vacation.
He seemed unwilling to talk about his trip. The conversation became strained. Irene decided to start a new topic: Copenhagen as a tourist city. Peter thawed out a bit but the intimate feeling was completely gone. Irene felt that something had come between them despite the wonderful food and drink.
What had happened on the trip to South Africa? Had he really been in South Africa?
They