“Aksel Sandvik,” Yellow replied. He had worked with the Walker family since childhood. His mother had been the cook who was murdered. Ragnar Walker trained him as their right-hand man to solve difficult problems. He nicknamed him Yellow because, as a child, he liked to wear yellow boots. Two meters tall, strong, athletic, with a square face and clear eyes, Yellow had the intelligence and presence of a typical Norwegian Viking. He could handle any situation. He was grateful to the Walkers; for he and his mother they were like family.
“Was the cook your mother?”
“Yes.”
“Sign here,” the officer said, finishing the routine procedure.
“Please keep this private. We don’t want the details of the kidnapping on international news,” Francisca said.
“We will do our best, but your father is famous. I can’t guarantee anything. You know the press,” the officer warned.
“I understand. Goodbye,” she said and left.
Two days later, Tuesday, May 29, at noon, Francisca was at Walker Companies’ main office, 1340 Thor Olsen Gate, Oslo.
Her father’s kidnapping was already international news, but the police were holding back details until the investigation concluded.
A police car had been found with its beacon on. An officer was dead from a gunshot to the head. There was no evidence linking him to the kidnapping. The car was parked beside a container thirty meters from the road, in the middle of nowhere. The container was a simple warehouse. No other vehicles had been there. Snowfall that night had erased traces.
Francisca sat in an armchair in front of her father’s large desk, in the main office of Walker Companies. It included a meeting area, living room with sofas, pool table, bar, and gym. Three private offices lined the exit, including hers. Beyond, thirty staff worked at their desks in a big space.
All packages or correspondence addressed to Francisca or Mr. Walker were x-rayed in a special room. Strong security measures had been in place for years after a bomb attack.
That day, Yellow checked the mail. Among it was a cube-shaped package for Francisca. It was heavy, just over a foot on each side. It said FRAGILE, with red arrows pointing up.
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