years from now.â
âWas he in good health?â
âSure. He was a little overweight and had high blood pressure, but otherwise he was healthy. What does this have to do with Dadâs murder?â
âDid he have life insurance?â
Now Roni was upset. âYes, and Momâs the beneficiary. You guys canât be turning this into insurance fraud.â
I tried to calm him down and explain that the police have to ask unpleasant questions. My reassurances didnât have the desired effect.
âCanât we talk about these things laterâ¦?â
âUnfortunately not. Did Oxbaum handle all the loan arrangements himself, or did you meet representatives of the lender?â
âI didnât meet anyone but Oxbaum.â
âBut I assume you looked into the finance company, to see if it was solid?â
âNo. Dad might have, through his contacts in Israel. He told me that he trusted Max⦠Besides, itâs your brotherâs company, too,â Roni gloated, as if he had found a weapon to use against me.
âDoes the name Benjamin Hararin mean anything to you?â
âNo.â
âWhat about Amos Jakov?â
âYou mean the Israeli billionaire?â
âYes.â
âWell, thatâs about the extent of my knowledge. Heâs an Israeli billionaire. What does he have to do with this? It sounds like you guys are letting this case get the better of your imaginations ââ
âHe and Hararin own the finance company Max was representing.â
âSo? Theyâre way off in Israel and weâre here. Are you finding some significant connections between the two?â Roni asked sharply.
Stenman pulled up in front of the Jacobsonsâ house.
âYou can go. Weâll be in touch.â
Once Roni had stepped through the gate, I asked Stenman, âWhat do you think?â
âI didnât like him, but thatâs not what you asked.â
âRoni has always thrown money around. When he was twenty,he drove a Porsche, and he also had a big boat. Sort of a minor-league jet-setter. I heard that a year or so ago he moved into a new place in Marjaniemi: 3,000 square feet, sea views.â
âWhat if this is about the sonâs spending, not the fatherâs, and Pops just ended up footing the bill? Maybe Roni had been given his final warning and he hightailed it off to Lapland. He asked the old man not to leave the house.â
âHe couldnât have stayed away forever.â
âMaybe he was trying to drum up money to pay off his debts in the meantime.â
âRoni said that his Dad was going to stay on as CEO until he turned sixty-four, so well over a year from now. According to Ethel, Samuel had planned on retiring earlier. Samuel had told his neighbours the end of this year. Sounds like Samuel had decided to push back his retirement. Roni probably wasnât too thrilled about that.â
âStill, itâs not likely heâd kill his Dad⦠What was all that about Hararin and Jakov?â Stenman asked.
âDonât worry about that yet.â
Stenman eyed me evaluatively. Roniâs gibe about my brother hadnât gone unnoticed. âAll right, I wonât worry about that⦠yet. Is Roni Jacobson a family man?â
âTwo children from a previous marriage, and one from the new one.â
âWouldnât it have made more sense to send muscle to threaten his family instead of his father?â
âMaybe the person making the threats figured that the old man was the one with the money. He doesnât care who pays, as long as he gets his dough.â
âShould we take a closer look at the companyâs finances, and the sonâs, too?â Stenman asked. âMaybe itâs worth having another word with CFO Pekka Hulkko.â
I couldnât have agreed more.
7
I got to my one-bedroom apartment in Punavuori around 9 p.m. and was greeted by the fug
Kate Flora
Ty Drago
Orhan Pamuk
Jasper Fforde
Patricia Scott
Jack Hayes
Kazuhiro Kiuchi
Alice Loweecey
Kem Nunn
Noel Hynd