The Girl Who Died Ragnar Jonasson (free ebook reader for ipad txt) đ
- Author: Ragnar Jonasson
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All of a sudden, he noticed that Helena, who was second to last in the line, had stopped just in front of him. Then DanĂel saw through the thickly falling flakes that the whole group had come to a halt. Had something happened?
Ărmann called back to them, but DanĂel couldnât catch a word through his woollen hat and the thick hood of his down jacket.
Helena turned to him and said something, but he still couldnât make out a word. He loosened the knot on his hood and pushed it back from his face.
âWhat did you say?â he shouted.
âĂrmann says itâs here, just round the corner. At least, heâs pretty sure,â she said. Pretty sure was not what DanĂel wanted to hear right now and for the first time it came home to him that they could die of exposure out here. He could quite simply die, tonight, in this snowy waste. His thoughts flew to his girlfriend in London. For all she knew he was on a harmless adventure tour with his Icelandic friends. To be fair, she had warned him against it, asking whether it wouldnât be more sensible to go on a trip like that in summer rather than in the depths of winter. Sheâd had a better instinct for the potential hazards in his native country than he had.
No, he mustnât think like that. He was with a good group of people and together theyâd find a solution. He had to keep these negative thoughts at bay. They never did any good, as he knew from bitter experience.
He had been staring into the void, into the falling snow, but now he glanced back at Helena. She smiled at him and seemed to be waiting for him to start moving again.
âReady?â she called.
He nodded and put his hood back up.
The group set off again and DanĂel waded through the drifts, thankful that he was wearing a good pair of boots.
If anything happened, if anyone got ill, they would be completely helpless. No one in the group had any medical experience.
They had each trodden their own path in life. Helena was an engineer and worked for some startup that was making wavesâaccording to her, anyway. Gunnlaugur was a lawyer and Ărmann a guide. Well, he didnât actually want to call himself a guide any more, not since heâd set up his tour company. These days he was probably richer than all of them put together. There seemed to be no letup in the growth in tourism, and, if you believed Ărmannâs tall stories, he was making money off every single visitor who came to Iceland.
DanĂel liked them all well enough, that wasnât the issue. He was even fond of them, in spite of their flaws. The problem was simply that whenever they met up it was generally to celebrate somethingâa birthday, a weddingâand on those occasions the booze always flowed freely. But he hadnât been sure heâd be able to cope with spending a whole weekend with them, especially with no alcohol to smooth things over. He was certainly stone-cold sober now. Which was just as well, of course. But he remembered that Helena had stuck a bottle of whisky in her backpack, so at least theyâd have something to warm themselves with and help calm their shattered nerves once theyâd finally made it to the hut.
If they made it âŠ
At that moment he saw a dim shape ahead.
Had they arrived?
His friends seemed to be slowing down and he felt briefly relieved.
Yes, it looked as if theyâd found some sort of hut, however inadequate, out here in the wilderness.
Ărmann had kept his word.
DanĂel felt a rush of relief, as though heâd been saved from certain death. He pushed back his hood again to try to hear what the others were saying.
They each had a torch and the beams darted here and there, competing to light up the hut through the driving snow. It looked to DanĂel as if it was painted red, but it was hard to be sure in these conditions. Anyway, it was at least shelter from the wind and weather, which was all that mattered now.
Gunnlaugur was standing by the door and appeared to be trying to open it, but it was taking its time and DanĂel could feel the cold biting harder with every second that passed.
âThe doorâuhâitâs sticking,â Gunnlaugur called in a despairing voice. He seemed completely out of place out here, battered by the savage elements.
âLet me try.â Helena pushed him aside. âItâs only locked.â Her voice was calm. It took a good deal to throw Helena off balance.
âWhat, locked?â DanĂel exclaimed. âIsnât it supposed to be an emergency refuge?â
âSome huts are kept locked,â Ărmann replied. âThere should be a key box here somewhere.â He directed his torch at the wall beside the door and, sure enough, there was the box.
âCanât we open it?â DanĂel could feel his heart pounding. He had to get inside, into shelter.
âI donât have the code,â Ărmann said. âI didnât know weâd be coming here. Let me think for a minute âŠâ
DanĂel moved closer. âShit. We must be able to break it open?â He took off one glove and attempted to tear the box off the wall. But it wouldnât budge and now he was more aware than ever of the merciless cold. Hastily he pulled his glove back on, but heâd already lost most of the feeling in his fingers. âWe need a tool of some sort.â
âCanât we just break a window?â Gunnlaugur asked, his teeth chattering.
Ărmann gave him a look. âBreak a window? And
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