talking about.â
âI see,â I said, and realized I was blushing.
âYouâre jealous,â Elina said.
I nodded reluctantly, feeling heat in my cheeks.
âThis all happened a long time ago. Iâm sure you have a past, too.â
âOf course I do,â I said, feeling the heat spread to my neck and wanting to change the subject. âWhat were these ideas of Pasiâs?â
âHe was a hard-line conservationist. He had contacts with the kinds of groups that were starting to shoot company owners and politiciansâanyone who had caused environmental destruction or hadnât done enough to slow it down. It was the black-and-white thinking of youth: if youâre not with us, youâre against us, and you donât deserve to live. Johanna and I waved that flag, too. In secret, that is. But we believed it.â
âI didnât know you were so radical,â I said. âI mean, I knew that Johanna was an activist, but I didnât know that sheâd been living with a terrorist.â
Elina looked for a moment like she was trying to remember how things really were. The coolness was disappearing from her gaze little by little.
âPasi wasnât a terrorist. A passionate person, even an obsessive person, yes, but he wasnât a bad person. He hasnât done anything wrong, has he?â
I thought of the murdered families and the evidence that Tarkiainen was at the scenes of those crimes. I shrugged and let the question pass.
âWhy is it so hard for you to talk about?â I asked.
Elina nodded toward the bedroom.
âAhti doesnât really understand,â she said, then added faintly, almost involuntarily, âfor a lot of reasons.â
I looked at her.
âHavenât the two of you ever talked about it?â I asked.
She looked surprised and offended for a moment, then just surprised.
âWhy would we? You and Johanna didnât.â
The truth stung.
âNo, we didnât. I guess there wasnât any reason to.â
âYou were happy as long as you thought you knew everything you needed to know,â Elina said. âAnd now that you know that there were things you didnât know, you feel bad. Youâve got to make up your mind about how much you really want to know. Even about your own wife.â
There was something in her voice that Iâd never noticed before. The coolness had returned, and with it something hard, even bitter.
âTell me more about Pasi Tarkiainen,â I said.
âWhy?â
I looked her in the eye.
âYou havenât told me everything.â
She let out a puff of air and rolled her eyes. But she was a bad actor. Even she knew it.
âYouâre not going to find Johanna by digging up things that happened a hundred years ago.â
âYou havenât told me everything,â I said again. âAhtiâs asleep. You can tell me.â
She glanced toward the bedroom again. We listened to the silence for a moment. I could hear Ahti snoring.
âThis is important, Elina,â I said. âJohanna has been missing for a day and a half. I donât even want to think about any other possibility but finding her alive, unhurt. I need all the help I can get. Itâs not easy to ask, but I have to. I have to find Johanna.â
Elina pulled her legs up even closer, brushed the hair from her face with a few quick movements of her hand, and looked straight ahead for a moment. Then she looked at me again, her head bowed a little, and said, as if she were surrendering something:
âI adored Pasi Tarkiainen.â
She was still looking at me, perhaps waiting for some reaction. Then she continued: âI donât know how to explain it now, but I adored him. And, of course, I wished that he adored me in the same way. But it was Johanna he wanted. I can admit it nowânow that itâs been so many years. I was in love with Pasi, and I was dying of
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