Death Angels (41 page)

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Authors: Ake Edwardson

BOOK: Death Angels
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“Bolger?”
“That’s right.”
“You knew. It was like you knew even before I called and told you the first time.”
“He said it himself.”
“Just now?”
“A long time ago.”
“I don’t understand.”
“I’ll explain. But I have to see you.”
“I don’t know if I can.”
“It’s absolutely necessary. There’s a good chance that he’ll be released otherwise.”
“But you told me . . .”
“I’ll explain everything.”
Four hours later they obtained a detention order for Bolger on suspicion of murder. He flatly denied everything, insisting that he needed to sleep. Maybe I’ll remember more when I’m rested, he repeated over and over.
Marianne had agreed to meet Winter and told him she had seen Bolger with two of the victims.
How did she know? She recognized them in the photos that were circulated afterward. Where had she seen them together? Someplace that few people went to. Why hadn’t she said anything? She couldn’t explain it. Nobody else was really in a position to see them, she had offered, and Winter didn’t press her on it right then.
There was something in her manner, a kind of hesitation, when she talked about Bolger. About the way he was. Winter kept that in the back of his mind while he moved on to other things.
“But Lars didn’t say he was going straight to Bolger’s apartment the last time you saw him?”
“He didn’t have to say it.”
Winter knew what time everything had happened. Bolger could have been Bergenhem’s assailant.
Where had Bergenhem been injured? Not among the rocks, certainly. Someone had driven across the fields and carried him down there.
They had turned Bolger’s apartment upside down.
“Can he get out?” Marianne had asked.
“No,” Winter said.
“Will he be arrested?”
“Tomorrow.”
“Who’s going to believe anything I say?”
“We’ve got other evidence too.”
“Enough to convict him?”
“Yes.”
But he didn’t know the true answer to that question. They had strong circumstantial evidence, that was all. Winter had thought Bolger would confess but there was no guarantee, and now he was worried that Bolger would maintain his innocence forever.
“We’re going to need you,” he’d said to Marianne.
“I can’t go back to the boat.”
“Is there some other reason?”
“What would that be?”
“Fear.”
“Would that be so strange?”
“Are you afraid of someone else?”

Is
there someone else?”
“I can’t honestly tell you.”
“Are there more murderers?”
“We don’t know.”
“Jesus.”
Winter could tell she had more on her mind.
“I feel like somebody’s after me,” Marianne said. “He has an accomplice or whatever you call it. But I’m not sure.”
“Do you know who it is?”
“No.”
Macdonald called, his voice equal parts agitation and relief. “Is it going to stick?” he asked.
“Sooner or later,” Winter said. “We might have a murder weapon too.”
“That will make your Viking happy.”
“He’ll have to be a witness if we don’t find anything else. Assuming that Bolger flew on Vikingsson’s plane under one of his pseudonyms.”
“Didn’t you say Vikingsson was crazy?”
“What are we going to do with him? He claims he’s never set eyes on Bolger. He’s been to Bolger’s bar, but it’s just one of many. Why would he remember that particular bartender? We got hold of Möller, his hunting companion.”
“And?”
“He says he doesn’t know a thing about it.”
“The poaching story?”
“All he has to say is that Vikingsson is nuts and he doesn’t know what the guy is talking about. How are things going there?”
“Under control.”
“Are the papers ready?”
“Almost.”
“How many people have you told?”
“We’re operating on a need-to-know basis.”
“That’s good.”
“Maybe we’re being overly cautious.”
“You’re doing the right thing.”
“God have mercy on us.”
“Have you received the photos?”
“You Swedes all look alike. How the hell can we set up a photo lineup with a bunch of fucking clones?”
The line crackled with static, as if the North Sea were eavesdropping on the conversation.
“We share the same sky and the same north wind,” Macdonald said. “But you guys look different from us. It’s hard to explain.”
“Aberdeen is at the same latitude as Gothenburg.”
“On the map?”
“Where else?”
“Talk to you soon. May God be with us.”
Cohen had asked Winter to conduct the interrogation but he’d declined. He sat in the background like a shadow from another time. He could get up and leave if he was in the way.
Bolger’s somnambulistic behavior had reversed itself. He was full of life, derisive, aggressive, and Winter recognized the tough teenager he had once known. Bolger was a perpetual-motion machine back then, constantly talking about everything he was going to do, the person he would someday become. He would succeed where nobody else could. He was going to prove he was smarter than all the rest.
Winter had sat for hours and thought about what Bolger had said so long ago, what he had done, what he himself had done, what had become of Bolger during all those years that had pursued them with growing fury and finally caught up with them here in this interrogation room.
COHEN:
You haven’t satisfactorily accounted for your comings and goings on Friday, March thirteenth.
BOLGER:
Like I said, it was an unlucky day and I didn’t want to see anyone. I never left home.
COHEN:
Is there someone who can confirm that?
BOLGER:
That’s your job to find out.
COHEN:
You’d be better off if you cooperated.
BOLGER:
Cooperated? Who with? I’m innocent.
COHEN:
You’ve said that several times now.
BOLGER:
A lot of good it does. The big boss over there in the corner doesn’t believe a word I say. With friends like him, who needs enemies?
COHEN:
We found three passports in your apartment. They’re in the following names.
 
 
Bolger listened while Cohen recited the names.
 
COHEN:
What do you know about those passports?
BOLGER:
Nothing.
COHEN:
Are you sure?
BOLGER:
Somebody planted them.
COHEN:
Who would put three passports in your apartment?
BOLGER:
Chief Inspector Erik Winter, who else?
COHEN:
You’re claiming that the assistant head of the homicide division of the county criminal investigation unit put passports in your apartment. Is that right?
BOLGER:
He broke in, didn’t he? That’s against the law. Planting evidence, or whatever the hell you call it, is the logical next step.
COHEN:
We have no knowledge of someone breaking into your apartment.
BOLGER:
But I do.
COHEN:
What were the passports used for?
BOLGER:
Are you deaf or something? I have no idea.
They went on and on in the same vein. Winter studied Bolger from the side. His jowls were much heavier than when he was a kid. Something had drawn them to each other back then, and it had continued through the years. They had both remained bachelors, chosen not to have families—or families had chosen not to have them. Winter remembered Macdonald’s ponytail-clad kin. He had felt a pang of regret when he thought about the photo afterward. What did he have but the remnants of a family? If even that. When had he called his sister last?
Was Bolger plagued by the same regrets? Winter listened distractedly to the interrogation, the questions, the short answers, a couple that were a little longer. The voices came together in the middle of the room and he could no longer tell who was saying what.
Cohen ended the session, and Bolger followed the guards out without looking at Winter.
“I’d like to get a psychological profile of this guy,” Cohen said.
“I’ll arrange for one.”
43
MACDONALD CALLED AGAIN. HOUR AFTER HOUR, WINTER SAT
deep in thought with his palms pressed against his forehead. Days had come and gone, bringing light and darkness and the whisper of a new kind of wind when he crossed Heden Park.
His phone jolted him out of his reverie.
“Publicizing those photos of Bolger may have yielded us some results,” Macdonald said. “For whatever it’s worth.”
“You said yesterday you’d never manage to sift through everything.”
“That was yesterday.”
“So what happened?”
“A couple called. They live near Christian’s hotel and say that they saw him sitting with a man outside a pub on Camberwell Grove.”
“Where’s that?”
“It’s that upscale street with Georgian architecture. I pointed it out to you when you were here. Our inspectors had knocked on all the doors in the neighborhood, but this couple was away at the time and we never had a chance to go back.”
“Okay.”
“They saw a black guy around twenty years old drinking beer with a tall blond man who could have been in his midthirties.”
“And they’re sure about that?”
“They’re sure it’s your high school buddy.”
“Don’t call him that.”
“What?”
“Please don’t use that expression.”
“Sorry. Anyway, the woman is positive. She watched them out of the corner of her eye when her boyfriend was inside the pub.”
“But all they’ve seen is a photo.”
“She also said she figured the kid was a foreigner because it’s so unusual to see a black person at that pub.”

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