Berlin Red

Read Berlin Red for Free Online

Book: Read Berlin Red for Free Online
Authors: Sam Eastland
Danish island of Bornholm were contemplating murder.
    Per and Ole Ottesen were twins who lived together in a low-roofed house, not far from the village of Saksebro. They had spent all their lives on Bornholm, running a small dairy farm which they had inherited from their parents. Neither man had married and now they were both very old.
    Due to poor management, the Ottesen farm had shrunk until it was only a shadow of its former self. Their father, Karl Ottesen, had once owned a hundred and fifty head of cattle, exporting not only milk but butter and cheese as well to the nearby Swedish mainland. He had been one of the first people on Bornholm to own a motor car – a 1902 wood-panelled Arrol-Johnston – and even though it could not travel far or well upon the roads of that largely unpaved island, the fact of ownership had been enough to ensure his elevated standing in the community. Lacking such ambition, the Ottesen brothers were content to let the business dwindle until only a few cows remained, whose milk produced barely enough to cover the cost of their feed.
    Now they were down to one cow, an irritable Friesian named Lotti. She was blind in one eye and gave no milk and, two days before, as Ole was leading her out of the barn so that Per could clean her stall, she fastened on to the seat of Ole’s trousers and tore off a large piece of cloth, exposing the old man’s buttocks to the winter cold.
    So they decided to shoot her.
    Having settled upon this course, it soon became apparent to the twins that neither was prepared to carry out the deed. Lotti had been with them a long time. She was, to all intents and purposes, a member of their family.
    The two men sat in spindle-backed chairs beside the fireplace, while they tried to come up with a plan.
    ‘Father would have done it,’ said Per.
    ‘He would,’ agreed Ole, ‘and there would have been no discussion, before or afterwards.’
    ‘You should be the one,’ said Per.
    ‘And why is that?’ protested his brother.
    ‘I have always been a gentler soul.’
    ‘Gentler!’ laughed Ole. ‘You son of a bitch.’
    ‘And what does that make you?’ replied Per.
    They lapsed into silence for a while.
    ‘It’s got to be done,’ muttered Ole.
    This time, there was no disagreement from his twin.
    Ole leaned back in his chair and rummaged in his waistcoat pocket, emerging seconds later with a two-krone coin between his fingers. ‘I’ll flip you for it,’ he said.
    Per squinted at him. ‘This is some kind of trick.’
    ‘You can flip the coin,’ Ole tossed it into his lap.
    ‘I get to call it as well!’
    Ole shrugged. ‘You really are a son of a bitch.’
    Per settled the coin on his thumbnail, then launched it into the air.
    Both men watched it tumbling up and then down.
    Per caught the coin, slapped it on to the top of his other hand and then fixed his brother with a stare that could have passed for madness.
    ‘Crown or cross?’ demanded Ole. The cross referred to a Roman numeral, fixed inside the monogram of the Danish king, Christian X. On the other side of the coin was the king’s crown.
    Per’s hand had begun to tremble.
    ‘Go on!’ shouted Ole. ‘Choose, damn you!’
    ‘Cross!’ he blurted. ‘No! Crown! Cross!’
    Ole lunged forward. ‘You can’t have both, you simpleton!’
    ‘Crown,’ Per said softly. Then slowly, he lifted his hand.
    It was the cross.
    ‘Ha!’ crowed Ole.
    ‘I meant to say crown,’ muttered Per.
    ‘Too late now,’ answered his brother as he got up from his chair, reached above the fireplace and took down the only gun they owned, a model 1896 Krag rifle which had belonged to their father, who had served in the Bornholm Militia. ‘Make it quick,’ commanded Ole, as he handed the rifle to Per.
    Per lit a kerosene lantern. Then he put on a thick wool coat with wooden toggle buttons and stepped through the anteroom, where they put their muddy boots in summer time. He closed the door behind him and then opened the

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