They sat in a small interrogation room in the same hall as his cell. There was a sticker on the eternal linoleum floor that pointed out the direction of the Kaaba in Mecca—someone was apparently permitted to pray in there. There was an intercom phone on the table, but outbound calls were blocked. There was a note on the wall:
Important! Contact unit personnel before the client is released into the hallway.
He couldn’t complain about security. His overall conclusion: breaking out of the jail at Kronoberg wouldn’t be easy.
Today: another interrogation, even though there was nothing to say. He didn’t have anything to do with Claes’s murder, that’s all there was to it.
His lawyer sat with him for a few minutes before the interrogation.
“Have you thought of anything since the last time we saw each other? Anything you want to bring up with the interrogator?”
Niklas said what he was thinking. “I don’t want to talk about the way Claes treated Mom and me. That’s none of the police’s business.”
“Then I suggest that you breathe through your nose and keep your mouth shut,” Burtig said. “Do you understand? Legally, you don’t have to answer any questions about that.”
Niklas understood. Burtig was good, but would that be enough?
The chief interrogator, Stig Ronander, came in. Gray hair and a spider’s web of wrinkles around his eyes. The old guy exuded experience and calm: a relaxed style, composed movements. Above all: a gleam in his eye and a sense of humor that allowed the interrogations to be punctuated by a laugh now and then. It was smart, nasty smart.
The other cop was named Ingrid Johansson. She was the same age as Ronander, but more quiet, watchful, on her guard. She brought a tray with coffee and cinnamon buns.
Niklas’d spent a few hours in his cell trying to analyze their interrogation technique. It was significantly more subtle than his and Collin’s methods in the heat, down in the sand. An interpreter, the butt
of a gun, a boot: that was usually enough to get the information you needed. Ronander/Johansson rocked the opposite style: pleasantness attack. Self-controlled and thoughtful, tried to create a connection, trust. Force more details out of him by asking the same things over and over again. Good cop/bad cop—seemed to belong to the old school. Both oozed trust, consideration. But Niklas was on to them. They were slippery.
The first real question came after ten minutes of coffee sipping and small talk. “You wouldn’t mind telling us about your childhood, would you? Your mom already has.”
“No comment.”
“Why no comment? Come on.”
“No comment.”
“But Niklas, be nice. We’re just talking here. Do you remember a lot from your childhood?”
Silence.
“Did you like sports?”
Silence.
“Did you used to play outdoors?”
Silence.
“Did you read books?”
Even more silence.
“Niklas, I understand if this is difficult to talk about. But it could be worth it, for your own sake.”
“I said, no comment.”
“Your mom worked as a cashier, right?”
Niklas drew a line through the crumbs on the table.
“That’s private.”
“But why is it private? She told us so herself. So it can’t be private.”
Silence.
“Is it true that she worked as a cashier?” Ronander’s eyes darted quickly to the right, toward Ingrid Johansson. Niklas didn’t respond.
And that’s how it went. Repetition, gentle questioning, repetition. The lawyer couldn’t do much, they had every right to ask questions. Two hours went by. More repetition. Wasted time. His childhood was an important subject, he’d give them that. But they didn’t know
how
important. They didn’t understand what ought to be done to stop people like Claes Rantzell.
He wasn’t guilty of this.
Only two days left till New Year’s Eve. Niklas thought about Mahmud and their preparations. Wondered if a haji like him would’ve gotten his shit done: the weapons, the foot soldiers, the bolt cutters. Niklas himself’d done everything before he was arrested. But now: time was running out. He hoped the Arab would sit tight on the gear for a later occasion.
He tried to work out in his cell. Push-ups, sit-ups, triceps exercises, back, legs, shoulders. He brainstormed, planned, organized. There had to be a solution. A way out. At night, other, darker thoughts visited him. The face of the prostitute. Images of how they would assault, beat, and rape her. Glimpses of her vulnerability: the girl crying in a bed, pleading for help. Where was help? Where was freedom? And other images: Nina Glavmo-Svensén in the idyllic suburb. The child on her arm. The locked doors of the house. He didn’t know if he was dreaming or imagining things.
It was almost time for another hearing. They’d already had two, without success. His lawyer, Burtig, explained, “First, they weren’t allowed to hold you for more than four days without the court making a decision about the charges brought against you. After that, they have to hold a hearing every other week in order to continue to coop you up like this. But I think we have a pretty good case. You have an alibi. There are no witnesses. No technical evidence so far; they haven’t found anything on you through the forensic lab database. The question is just what your mom is actually saying. And what they’ve found on your computer about those other guys.”
Niklas already knew what to answer: “I want a hearing. As soon as possible.”
The lawyer took notes.
Niklas had a plan.
* * *
THE NATIONAL POLICE
The National Bureau of Investigation’s Palme Group
Date: December 29 APAL—2478/07
MEMORANDUM
(Confidential according to Chapter 9 § 12 of the Secrecy Act)
Regarding the murder of Claes Rantzell (previous name: Claes Cederholm, Reg. nr 24.555)
The investigation of the murder of Claes Rantzell
The preliminary investigation of the murder of Claes Rantzell (previously named Claes Cederholm) is led by Detective Inspector Stig H. Ronander of the Southern District in Stockholm. Ronander is reporting personally to the Palme Group.
Fredrik Särholm, the Palme Group’s specially appointed investigator, as designated on September 12, has compiled a report regarding Rantzell (Attachment 1).
In a previous memo from October 28 (APAL—2459/07), the Palme Group described the advances in the investigation regarding the murder of Rantzell.
In this memo, certain recent developments are detailed. In summary, the following:
1. A man named Niklas Brogren has been arrested for the murder of Rantzell (further details in the Detention Hearing Memo, Attachment 2). Niklas Brogren is the son of Marie Brogren, who, during the end of the eighties and the beginning of the 1990s, periodically lived with Rantzell. She has informed the investigators that, during this time period, she was assaulted by Rantzell on a number of occasions. Several people connected with Marie Brogren have confirmed that Rantzell abused her during this time (Interrogation Notes, Attachments 3-6). Therefore, there appears to be a motive to kill Rantzell.
2. During a search of Niklas Brogren’s residence, a computer, notebooks, certain surveillance equipment, and a number of knives were found. The computer’s hard drive has been searched by the police’s IT unit. It contains information that suggests that Niklas Brogren may be involved in the murder of two men in Stockholm on the 4th and the 25th of November of this year. A preliminary investigation has been commenced. (Further details: crime reports etc., Attachment 7).
3. Within the framework of the investigation, information has been gathered from a man named John Ballénius, 521203-0135, who
was supposedly a close friend of Rantzell’s. John Ballénius is well known to the police as a front man in a number of companies suspected of white-collar crime. During the 1980s and 1990s, he frequently socialized with Claes Rantzell. According to the information that has been gathered, he apparently did not want to be interrogated in connection with the investigation. A certain level of suspicion can therefore be directed at Ballénius, either for involvement in the murder or for harboring knowledge of relevant information (Interrogation, Attachment 8).
4. Rantzell’s apartment has been searched by the police’s technicians (Lokus), and tests have been sent to SKL (the National Laboratory of Forensic Science). The following conclusions can be drawn from SKL’s DNA analysis: the apartment has been visited by persons who are not Rantzell or close relatives of Rantzell. There are traces of DNA from at least three such people. It cannot be ruled out that the persons have been present in the apartment during the time
after
the murder of Rantzell (SKL’s statement, Attachment 9).
5. The police’s technicians further suspect that an unknown person, who is not Rantzell, has seized objects from a basement storage unit that was very probably used by Rantzell. The seized objects probably consisted of plastic bags with unknown contents.
Suggested measures to be taken
Based on the above, the following measures are suggested:
1. The Palme Group is to be given permission to attend interrogations with Niklas Brogren.
2. The Palme Group orders Fredrik Särholm to investigate all the suspicions directed at Niklas Brogren parallel with the police’s regular investigation.
3. The Palme Group is to be given permission to allocate resources toward the search for John Ballénius.
We request that decisions regarding these questions be reached at a meeting on December 30 of this year.
Stockholm
Detective Inspector Lars Stenås
They were sitting at Thomas’s house, on the ground floor. If Åsa’d been there, she would’ve been watching TV upstairs. Thomas felt as though deep inside, she’d understood him. That made him feel warm. But his fear of the people he was searching for made him colder.
There was an illuminated Christmas star hanging in one of the windows. Even if Åsa’d decorated more than usual this year, they hadn’t gotten a Christmas tree or an Advent candelabra. But when Sander came they were going to decorate so damn much for the holidays that even the window displays at the NK department store would seem un-Christmassy in comparison.
Hägerström was sitting in an armchair that Thomas’d inherited from his dad. The frame was in cherrywood. Worn red seat cushion and backrest. Maybe it wasn’t the most stylish chair in the world, but it meant a lot. If you smelled closely: the old man’s cigarillo smell still clung to it. Thomas thought, I ought to reupholster it. Someday.
On the coffee table and on the floor: papers, documents, files spread out. They’d eliminated a certain amount through their point system. For an outside observer, it would’ve looked like chaos. For the cop duo, it was chronology, order, structure.
The mission: to sift through the material and find information that could lead them to Ballénius. They’d been naïve; thought if only they went to Solvalla, Ballénius would be sitting there, waiting, just like the last time. But the old fox wasn’t dumb: he understood that something was going on. He knew that Rantzell was dead.
The Wisam Jibril trail obviously pointed toward some form of crime. But they weren’t able to complete the puzzle, didn’t see how that part fit in. Jibril’d been some kind of robber king, a professional criminal, but nothing seemed to indicate that he’d had any kind of personal contact with Rantzell. When it came to Adamsson’s death, it probably meant something, but it could be a coincidence, too. Hägerström’d asked around. Thomas’d made the rounds. No one believed the man’d lost
his life through foul play. Everything pointed to the car accident being as normal as a car accident can be. What was left were a few members of the Troop, all the documents, the companies, the front men, the transactions, the more or less shady businesses. What was left was Ballénius, who knew something. And what was left was Bolinder’s party that the Yugos were arranging on New Year’s Eve. Thomas hadn’t told Hägerström about that yet.