THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22

The aroma of freshly brewed coffee and warm cinnamon rolls swept over Knutas as he stepped into the conference room the next morning. Someone had gone to a lot of trouble. He glanced at Kihlgard. It must have been him, of course. Everyone sitting at the table was in a lively mood. Jacobsson was joking with Wittberg, who had evidently been out partying last night. Knutas surmised that he was entertaining Jacobsson with a story about one of his girlfriends. He had a bottle of Coca-Cola in front of him, which was a clear sign that he had a hangover.

Kihlgard and Smittenberg were both leaning over a newspaper. The prosecutor was holding a pen in his hand, while Kihlgard was holding a roll, naturally. Good Lord, they were working on a crossword puzzle! Norrby and Sohlman were standing at the window, looking out at the rain mixed with hail and discussing the weather.

It was a virtual cocktail party. Incredible what effect fresh-baked goods could have.

Knutas took his usual place at one end of the table and loudly cleared his throat, but no one took any notice.

“All right, everyone,” he ventured. “Shall we start?”

No reaction.

He gave Kihlgard a surly look. This was so typical of that darn fellow. To come here, all sweet and nice, bringing rolls and causing a disruption. Knutas had nothing against people enjoying themselves at work, but there was a time and a place. Besides, he was in a foul mood after having a big fight with Lina that morning.

It started with her complaining that clothes were scattered on the floor, that the cat hadn’t been fed, and that he hadn’t run the dishwasher last night, even though it was full and he was the last one to go to bed. Then she found out that, in spite of a solemn promise, he had forgotten to buy a new floorball stick for Nils, who had broken his old one, and he had a game to play tonight. That turned out to be the last straw. She blew up.

The noise in the conference room forced Knutas to get up from his chair and clap his hands.

“All right, could I have your attention?” he shouted. “Shall we get to work? Or maybe you’ve decided to devote the day to social activities?”

“An excellent idea,” exclaimed Kihlgard. “Why don’t we stay in, rent a good video, and make some popcorn? It’s such awful weather today-I’m freeeeeezing.”

His voice rose to a falsetto. He bent his forearms up and shook his palms at the same time as he wiggled his hips. Given the impressive bulk of his body, the dance was extremely funny. What a clown. Even Knutas couldn’t help smiling a bit.

He started by telling them about the work Dahlstrom had done for payment under the table.

“How did we find this out?” asked Kihlgard.

“Actually it was that TV reporter, Johan Berg, who told me. The couple that lives on Backgatan didn’t want to go to the police since it was a question of unreported payments.”

“It’s just amazing how people with money behave,” exclaimed Jacobsson, whose expression had darkened as Knutas talked. “It’s so damned wrong. People with high incomes who use illegal workers even though they could afford to pay them legitimately. And then when someone is murdered, they won’t even go to the police because they’re afraid of getting in trouble! That’s about as low as it gets.”

Her eyes were blazing as she glanced from one colleague to another.

“They can afford a lovely house and expensive vacations, but they won’t pay their cleaning woman legally so that she could get insurance and retirement points and everything else that she’s entitled to. They refuse to pay for that. They’ll do everything to avoid paying taxes, without giving a thought to whether it’s actually a crime. At the same time they expect free day-care centers to be provided for their children and a doctor to be available when they’re sick, and they want the schools to offer good food. It’s as if they can’t see the connection between one thing and the other. It’s so hopelessly stupid!”

Everyone at the table was looking at her in surprise. Even Kihlgard, who usually had some witty remark, didn’t say a word. But maybe this was because his mouth was full of cinnamon roll, probably his third one.

“Take it easy, Karin,” Knutas warned. “Spare us your diatribe.”

“What do you mean? Don’t you agree that it’s damned wrong?”

Jacobsson glanced around the room, looking for sympathy.

“Do you have to turn everything into a political issue?” asked Knutas, sounding annoyed. “We’re in the middle of a murder investigation here.”

He deliberately turned away from her and looked at his other colleagues.

“So maybe we could go on now?”

Jacobsson didn’t say another word, just sighed and shook her head.

“How did this couple get in touch with Dahlstrom?” asked Wittberg.

“Through friends of theirs who belong to the local folklore society. Apparently a number of people made use of his services.”

“Maybe someone was unhappy with their garden shed,” said Kihlgard with a snicker.

Knutas ignored his attempt at a joke and turned to Norrby.

“How’s it going with the bank? Have you tracked down where the deposits came from?”

“Well, we’ve come to a dead end there. It’s impossible to trace the money. Of course every bill has a serial number, but who keeps records of that? It’s also impossible to find out who gave him the money since he made the deposit himself.”

“Okay, then right now the important thing is to find out who hired Dahlstrom illegally. He could have been doing that kind of work for years. Strange that nobody he knew has said anything about it.”

As Knutas left the meeting he had the distinct feeling that the issues associated with the murder were going to get much more complicated.

Johan’s next meeting with Emma was about to occur much sooner than he had dared hope. The very next morning she called him at the hotel.

“I’m going to Stockholm tomorrow for a one-day conference, connected with my work.”

“Are you kidding? Are we on the same flight?”

“No, I’m taking the boat. It was planned long ago.”

“Does that mean that I can see you?”

“Yes. I wasn’t thinking of staying overnight, but I can if I want to because there’s a banquet in the evening. Teachers from all over the country are invited. I was planning to skip the banquet, but I can say that I’ve changed my mind and book a hotel room. That doesn’t mean that I actually have to sleep there…”

He couldn’t believe his ears.

“Are you serious?”

She laughed.

“Would you like to have dinner together tomorrow night? Or are you busy?” she asked.

He thought for a moment.

“Let me see… Tomorrow night I was planning to stay home alone in front of the TV and eat chips, so I guess I won’t be able to meet you. Unfortunately.”

His heart was singing.

“But seriously-we could go to a fantastic new place in Soder. It’s small and noisy, but the food is superb.”

“That sounds great.”

He put down the phone and clenched his hand in a fist, in a gesture of victory. Could it be that she had finally given in?

From the beginning Grenfors had doubted that Regional News should do a story about the murder of Henry Dahlstrom. In his view, it had just been a drunken fight. He was not alone. Many of his colleagues shared this opinion, and consequently they had settled for only a brief mention of the case so far.

If the editors decided not to report a story in the beginning, it was difficult to sell the idea later on. News stories were perishable goods. A story that was super-hot one day might seem musty the next. Four days had passed since Dahlstrom’s body had been found, and that was an eternity in the news business. Grenfors didn’t sound especially interested when Johan called him after lunch.

“So what’s new about it?”

“Dahlstrom was doing odd jobs for people in their homes. Carpentry work and things like that. Getting paid under the table, of course.”

“You don’t say.” Grenfors yawned audibly.

Johan could picture the editor checking the TT wire service on his computer screen as they talked.

“Someone deposited money into his bank account. Twice. Twenty-five thousand kronor each time.”

“So they might have been payments that he was getting for work done illegally.”

“Maybe. But there’s a lot to report about the case, and we haven’t done a single story on it yet,” countered Johan. “Good Lord, a man literally had his head bashed in with a hammer in his darkroom. And this happened on little Gotland-don’t forget that. All the other stations have reported it, but we’ve hardly said a word. Now it turns out that the victim was working illegally for people, and on top of that, mysterious deposits were made to his bank account. And we’re the only ones who know about it. All indications are that this was not your ordinary drunken fight. It’s in our territory, for God’s sake, and we do such a shitty job of reporting on Gotland.”

“Have the police confirmed the information?”

“Not the bank deposits,” Johan admitted. “We found that out from a bank teller. The police refused to confirm whether it was true, but I’m convinced that it is. I know how Knutas reacts in this type of situation. But he did confirm the part about Dahlstrom working illegally.”

“That might be enough. But today we’re reporting on the gang rape prosecution in Botkyrka and the trial of the cop killer in Marsta. That’s a hell of a lot of crime stories for one broadcast.”

Johan lost his temper.

“I don’t think we can wait on this. We’ve been dragging our feet on this story, and now we’re the only ones who have the new information. The newspapers might have the story by tomorrow!”

“That’s the chance we’ll have to take. It’s not really that interesting. Finish up your assignment today, and then I need you back here in the newsroom tomorrow. But we won’t run the story tonight. It fits in better with the Friday broadcast. That’s all the time I have right now. Bye.”

Johan was fuming as he put down the phone. What a fucking attitude! Every other news program had the story about the trial and the gang rape, but they were the only ones with this news about the murder. Generally he respected Grenfors as an editor, in spite of his shortcomings. But sometimes it was impossible to understand the man. If only he were consistent in his journalistic approach, at least! But one day he could be so overzealous that he would hound the reporters relentlessly to get what he wanted for the broadcast. The next day he would be like this. And they would sit in endless meetings, discussing over and over how they could do a better job on their own news program.

Johan didn’t mince words as he sat in the car on the way out to Grabo, complaining about incompetent editors. His cameraman Peter was equally indignant. He was the one who had found out about the deposits to Dahlstrom’s account. He had met a girl at a bar in Visby, and her sister was a teller in the bank where the deposits were made.

And now they ran the risk of being upstaged by the local press. Again.

Grabo seemed dead and gloomy in the biting wind. The bleak weather didn’t exactly invite outdoor activities. The cars in the parking lot bore witness to the fact that the people living there had limited incomes. Most of the Fords had at least ten years on them. An old Mazda hesitantly pulled out of its parking space and rattled off. At the recycling station, someone had toppled over a shopping cart from the ICA grocery store.

On their way to Dahlstrom’s section of the building, they passed a low wooden structure that looked like a communal laundry room. One wall was plastered with wads of snuff, and the windows were covered with graffiti. The playground in front had a sandbox, swings, and worn-looking wooden benches. Not a kid was in sight.

They walked around to the back of the building, where Dahlstrom had lived. The blinds were closed, preventing any curiosity-seekers from looking inside. The surrounding property consisted mainly of an over-grown lawn, and the patio was nothing more than a piece of wooden fencing with worn patio furniture that had seen better days. There was a stack of used disposable grills. Leaning against a cinder-block wall was a rusty bicycle and an overflowing garbage bag that seemed to contain empty cans. A rickety fence with peeling paint faced the passageway that continued on toward the woods.

They decided to try talking to the neighbors.

At the fourth apartment they tried, someone finally answered the doorbell. A young guy wearing only boxer shorts peered at them, bleary-eyed with sleep. His hair was dyed black and stood straight up like a scrub brush. An earring gleamed from one ear.

“Hi, we’re from Regional News in Stockholm. We’d like to know something about the man who lived downstairs, the one who was murdered.”

“Come on in.”

He showed them to the living room and motioned for them to have a seat on the couch, while he sat down on a Windsor chair.

“A horrible thing, that murder,” he said.

“What was your opinion of Dahlstrom?” asked Johan.

“A decent old guy. Nothing wrong with him. It didn’t bother me that he was an alcoholic, at least. Besides, he had periods when he didn’t drink as much, and then he spent a lot of time working on his photos.”

“Was that something everybody knew about? The fact that he took photographs?”

“Sure. He used that old bicycle storage room as his darkroom. He’s had it for the six years that I’ve lived here.”

The guy looked as if he had just graduated from high school. Johan asked him how old he was.

“Twenty-three,” he replied. He had moved away from home when he turned seventeen.

“What kind of contact did you have with Dahlstrom?”

“We said hello to each other if we met, of course, and sometimes he’d knock and ask if I had anything to drink. That’s about all.”

“Have you noticed anyone new visiting Dahlstrom lately? Anyone who was different in some way?”

He gave them a wry smile.

“Are you kidding? Just about anyone who came to visit him was different. Recently I saw a chick peeing in the flower bed.”

“Did any of the neighbors complain?”

“I don’t think it ever got that bad. Most people probably thought he was a pretty decent guy. But in the summer some did complain when he had parties outside, in back of the building.”

“What are people around here saying about the murder?”

“Everyone’s saying that the killer must have been someone that Flash knew, someone who had a key to his apartment.”

“Why is that?”

“Well, the old lady who lives above him heard a sound at his door one night, about a week before his body was found. Someone went inside without ringing the doorbell while Flash was downstairs in the basement.”

“Couldn’t it have been Dahlstrom?” asked Peter.

“No, she could tell that it wasn’t him. She knows the sound of the slippers that Flash wore.”

“Who do you think would have a key?”

“No idea. He had one buddy that he hung out with more than others. I think his name is Bengan.”

“Do you know his last name?”

“No.”

“It must be Bengt Johnsson. He was the one the police arrested, but then they let him go. Apparently he had an alibi. Is there anything else you can tell us about Dahlstrom?”

“There was one strange thing that happened this summer. Flash was talking to a guy down by the harbor. It was fucking early in the morning, not even five o’clock. I happened to notice because they were standing in an odd place, between two containers outside a warehouse. As if they were up to something.”

“So they weren’t just hanging out and drinking?”

“The other guy wasn’t one of Dahlstrom’s usual buddies. I could see that at once. He looked much too neat to be a wino.”

“Really? In what way?”

“He was wearing clean slacks and a polo shirt, like an executive on summer vacation.”

“What else can you tell us about his appearance?”

“I don’t really remember. I think he was younger than Flash, and he was very dark.”

“Dark-skinned?”

“No, just really suntanned.”

“What were you doing there so early in the morning?”

The guy smiled, looking a bit embarrassed.

“I was with a girl. We’d been out partying at Skeppet. That’s a pub down at the harbor. Do you know it?”

Johan grimaced. He had a bad memory from the summer when he had spent the miserably wet Midsummer’s Eve at Skeppet, and he ended up bent over a toilet all night.

“She had to catch the seven o’clock boat in the morning, so I went with her down to the harbor. We were just messing around a little, as they say. Before she had to go home.”

“I suppose the police know about this?” said Johan.

“Oh no, they don’t.”

“Why not?”

“I don’t like the police. I wouldn’t tell them squat.”

“Would it be okay for us to do an on-camera interview with you?”

“Not on your life. Then the cops will show up. And you can’t say a word to them about what I’ve told you, either. I know all about protected informants, because my sister is a journalist and she told me that you’re not allowed to reveal your sources.”

Johan raised his eyebrows in surprise. This was some guy.

“That’s true. Of course we won’t say anything about the fact that you’re the one who told us this. What kind of work do you do, by the way?”

“I’m studying at the college. Archaeology.”

Even though they didn’t get to do an on-camera interview, Johan was more than satisfied with the encounter. He had to contact Knutas-of course without telling him about where he had obtained the information. Knutas was fully aware of the ethical rules under which journalists did their work, so he would understand.

They tried to talk to the rest of the neighbors, but no one answered the doorbell. Behind the building it was deserted. They took a walk along the pathway. Peter filmed the surrounding area and suddenly gave a shout.

A police car was parked on the public footpath that led to the next residential area. Three uniformed officers stood together, talking. Two others were holding on to the leashes of dogs that were tracking something with their noses to the ground. Police tape had been put up to cordon off a grove of trees and bushes.

To their surprise, they noticed Knutas a short distance away.

“Hi,” said Johan in greeting. “It’s been a while.”

“Yes, it has.”

Knutas was not happy, to say the least. These confounded journalists kept turning up at the most inopportune moments. So far the investigation had been mostly spared any media attention. Reporters from the local press had called him this morning to ask questions. He didn’t like it, but unfortunately it had become a natural part of his workload lately. On the other hand, he was grateful that Johan had tipped him off about Dahlstrom’s moonlighting. Journalists were good at digging up their own information, and they were also available to relay information to the public when the police occasionally needed help. An interdependent relationship existed between the police and the media. But that didn’t mean that the relationship was always easy to handle.

“What’s going on here?” asked Johan.

Peter had immediately started the camera rolling, as he always did. Knutas realized that he might as well tell them the truth.

“We’ve discovered what we think is Dahlstrom’s camera.”

“Where?”

Knutas pointed to the grove of trees.

“Someone tossed it over there, and a canine unit found it a short time ago.”

“What makes you think that it was his?”

“It’s the same type of camera that he always used.”

Just as Knutas spoke, they heard a shout from some shrubbery outside the area that had been cordoned off.

“We’ve got something,” called one of the dog handlers.

The German shepherd began barking nonstop. Peter instantly turned the camera in that direction and jogged over to the shrubbery. Johan was right behind him. On the ground lay a hammer with brown splotches on the handle, the head, and the claw. Johan held out the microphone, and Peter let the camera record the ensuing commotion. They recorded the comments of the police, the camera on the ground, the dogs, and the drama when everyone present realized that the murder weapon had probably been found.

Johan couldn’t believe his luck. It was sheer coincidence that they happened to show up at the decisive moment in a murder investigation, and then managed to get pictures of the whole thing.

They got Knutas to agree to an interview in which he confirmed that a discovery had just been made that might prove to be of interest. He refused to comment further, but that didn’t matter.

Johan did a stand-up at the site with all the activity going on around him and reported that it was most likely the murder weapon that had just been found.

Before he and Peter left, Johan told Knutas, without revealing his source, about Dahlstrom’s meeting down at the harbor.

“Why didn’t this person come to the police?” asked Knutas angrily.

“The individual doesn’t like the police. Don’t ask me why.”

Back in the car and with a gleeful smile on his face, Johan called Grenfors’s direct line at the newsroom in Stockholm.

Several Months Earlier

He had called her cell phone again and again, asking her to forgive him. He had sent sweet picture messages and even a real bouquet of flowers. Fortunately, her mother had left for work before the flowers arrived.

Fanny had decided never to meet him alone again, but now she was wavering. He called and kept saying that he needed to make amends with her. No dinner this time. Horseback riding. He knew that was something she liked. He had a friend who owned some horses in Gerum, and they could each borrow one and go riding for as long as they liked. The invitation was tempting. Her mother couldn’t afford riding lessons, and it was rare that she was allowed to ride any of the horses at the stable.

He suggested going riding on Saturday. At first she declined, but he wouldn’t take no for an answer. He said he would call again on Friday night, in case she changed her mind.

She had such mixed feelings. More than two weeks had passed since that evening, and it no longer seemed as dangerous as it had then. Deep inside he was probably a very nice man.

When she stepped through the stable door on Friday afternoon, the horses greeted her with a low whinny. She pulled on her rubber boots and started working. Got out the wheelbarrow, the shovel, and rake. She took Hector out first and fastened his halter to chains on either side of the passageway. He had to stand there while she mucked out his stall. The horses stood on a bed of sawdust and hay, so the piles of manure were easy to gather up with the rake. It was much harder to deal with the urine, which soaked into the sawdust and turned it into heavy piles. She took care of one stall after the other. Eight stalls and almost two hours later, she was completely worn out, and her back ached. Her cell phone was ringing. What if it was him? Instead she heard her mother’s twittering voice.

“Sweetheart, it’s Mamma. Something has come up. The thing is that I’ve been invited to Stockholm for the weekend. Berit was supposed to go to the theater with a girlfriend, but the friend got sick, so Berit asked me to go with her instead. She won a whole theater package tour from the Bingo Lotto, you know, and we’re going to see Chess and have dinner at the Operakallaran and stay at the Grand Hotel. Can you believe it! It’s going to be great! The plane leaves at six, so I’ve really got to start packing. Is that okay with you?”

“Sure, that’s fine. When are you coming home?”

“Sunday evening. The whole thing works out perfect because I don’t have to go to work until Monday night. Oh, this is going to be so much fun. I’ll leave you some money. But I don’t have time to take Spot out, so you’d better come home soon. He’s getting restless.”

“I suppose I’ll have to,” Fanny said with a sigh.

She was supposed to ride Maxwell, but now she wouldn’t have time. She would have to change her plans and head home.

When she got to their apartment she found her mother on her way out, with newly applied lipstick and blow-dried hair, her suitcase and purse in her hand.

After her mother finally left, and after walking Spot, Fanny lay down on her bed and stared at the ceiling.

Alone again. No one cared about her. Why did she even exist? She had an alcoholic mother who thought only about herself. As if that weren’t enough, recently she had started giving some serious thought to her mother’s extreme mood swings. One day she was as happy as a lark and full of energy, only to change the next day into a limp dishrag. Depressed, listless, and filled with dark thoughts. Unfortunately the bad days were getting more frequent, and that was when she would turn to the bottle. Fanny didn’t dare criticize, because it always ended with her mother having a fit and threatening to kill herself.

Fanny had no one to talk to about her problems. She didn’t know where to turn.

Sometimes she dreamt about her father, imagining that one day he would suddenly appear in the door, saying that he had come to stay. In her daydream she saw him embracing her and her mother. They celebrated Christmas together and went on vacations. Her mother was rosy-cheeked and happy and no longer drank. In certain dreams they would be walking along a beach in the West Indies, where her father was born. The sand was chalk white, and the sea was turquoise, just like in the colorful travel magazines she had seen. They watched the sunset together, with her sitting between her parents. That was the sort of dream that she never wanted to end.

She gave a start when Spot jumped up on the bed and licked away her tears. She hadn’t even noticed that she was crying. Here she lay, all alone, with only a dog for company, when other families were having a cozy time at home. Maybe her classmates were visiting each other, watching a video or TV, listening to music or playing computer games. But what kind of life did she have?

Only one person had shown the slightest interest in her. She might as well see him again. To hell with everything. She would sleep with him, too, if that’s what he really wanted. There had to be a first time, after all. He had said that he would call her tonight. The invitation to go horseback riding still stood, and she decided to say yes.

She got up and dried her tears. Heated up a meat pie in the microwave and ate it without much enthusiasm. Turned on the TV. The phone was silent. Wasn’t he going to call after all? Now that she had made up her mind? The hours passed. She took a can of Coke out of the fridge, opened a bag of chips, and sat down on the sofa. It was nine o’clock, and he still hadn’t called. She felt like crying again, but couldn’t squeeze out more than a few dry sobs. He had probably given up on her, too. She started watching an old movie as she ate the whole bag of chips. Finally she fell asleep on the sofa with the dog beside her.

The sound of the phone ringing woke her. At first she thought it was the landline, but when she picked up the receiver she realized it was her cell phone ringing. She got to her feet and hurried out to the entryway to rummage through her jacket pockets. The phone stopped ringing. Then it started again. It was him.

“I have to see you… I have to. Listen here, honey. Couldn’t we meet?”

“Sure,” she said without hesitation. “You can come over here. I’m home alone.”

“I’ll be right over.”

She regretted it the moment she saw him. He reeked of liquor. Spot started barking but soon gave up. The dog wasn’t the menacing type.

She stood awkwardly in the center of the living room, unsure what to do, as he threw himself onto the sofa. Now that she had invited him over, she couldn’t very well ask him to leave, could she?

“Would you like anything?” she asked uncertainly.

“Come here and sit down,” he said, patting the sofa cushion next to him.

From the clock on the wall she saw that it was two in the morning. This whole thing was crazy, but she did as he said.

It took only a second before he was on top of her. He was rough and determined.

When he forced himself into her, she bit herself on the arm to keep from screaming.

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