'Yes. Alverstrummen. That's the place.' She looked down at the message and then at the map again. 'Was the message you received from George smuggled out in a consignment of whale meat?' she asked.

'Yes,' I said. My eye was following the line of the Sognefjord up to Fjaerland.

'Whale meat for export has to be got away pretty quickly,' Jill said. 'If the consignment was dispatched to England on the 9th, it means that it was either packed that day or on the 8th. It couldn't possibly have been packed earlier.'

'Exactly,' I said. 'That doesn't leave Farnell much time to get up to the Jostedal.'

'He could do it by boat,' Dick said.

'Yes,' I agreed. 'But he'd have to be in an awful hurry to get there.' I traced the route with my finger. It would be north for twenty miles or so from Bovaagen and then east up the long cleft of Norway's largest fjord. The better part of a hundred miles to Balestrand and then another twenty up the tributary fjord to Fjaerland. 'It's a day's journey by boat,' I said. And after that he'd got to climb the 5,000 feet to the top of the Jostedal and then fall on to the Boya Glacier. He'd be running it a bit fine. I turned to Jill. 'There's a steamer service, is there?'

'Yes,' she said. 'But from Bergen. He'd have to pick the steamer up at Leirvik and then stay a night at Balestrand. He couldn't possibly reach Fjaerland till the evening of the 10th — not by the ordinary steamer service.'

'That's no good,' I said. 'He must have had a boat. If so we'll find out whose when we get to Fjaerland. The only other alternative is that he was never at Bovaagen. In which case we ought to be able to get hold of the man who sent the message for him.' I turned to Dick. 'What was the reaction from our friend Jorgensen when this message came through?' I asked.

'Can't say I noticed,' he replied. 'Afraid I wasn't thinking about Jorgensen.'

'Then I'll go up and find out,' I said.