Sail of Stone (11 page)

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Authors: Åke Edwardson

Tags: #Police Procedural, #Mystery & Detective, #Erik Winter, #Fiction, #Suspense, #General

BOOK: Sail of Stone
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“It was taken a few summers ago,” said Sigge Lindsten.

Aneta nodded.

“And now it’s probably time to go to Kortedala and see the damage,” said Lindsten.

“I’ll drive you,” said Aneta.

In the car, she thought of Anette.

Had he already beaten her then? The man sitting next to her in the photograph, with his big smile?

Was she still hoping?

I’ll have to ask her. If I ever meet her.

The Winter-Hoffman family was on the way home over one of the bridges when Winter’s phone rang.

“Yes?”

“Hi, Erik, Möllerström here.”

“Yes?”

Winter heard Möllerström give a cough. Janne Möllerström was a detective and the department records clerk. Everything went through Möllerström just like it went through Winter. But Möllerström kept everything in his advanced data files. Winter had his thoughts, his theories
and hypotheses, in his PowerBook. Möllerström had several computers. And telephones.

“A woman has tried to reach you a few times. Sounded a little desperate.”

“What’s her name?”

“Osvald. Johanna Osvald.”

“Did she leave a phone number?”

Möllerström recited the number. Winter recognized it. She had given it to him.

“What else did she say?”

“Just that you should call when you can.”

“Tonight?”

He watched Angela and Elsa, who were five yards ahead of him. Elsa’s hand stuck out from the stroller. Angela was walking briskly.

He quickly dialed the number he’d gotten from Janne. He released his breath when he heard the busy signal. The phone rang as soon as he hung up. He recognized the number on the screen.

“She called here again,” said Möllerström. “Just now.”

“It’s after working hours,” said Winter.

“That’s something new to be coming from you,” said Möllerström.

“What is it that’s so urgent?” said Winter.

“She just said that she wanted to talk to you.”

“Mmhmm.”

“I assume the best way to find out is to call.”

“Thanks for the advice, Janne, and have a good rest of the night at the department.”

“Thank you,” Möllerström snickered, and hung up.

Angela was waiting at a red light at Allén.

“The mobile office,” she said.

“Well …”

“There is an off button.”

He didn’t answer. He thought she was being unfair. She didn’t know that he was trying to
avoid
a conversation. There was still a first time for everything.

“For everyone but you,” she said.

“What?”

“A button for everyone but you.”

“Please, Angela …”

Red turned to green. They walked across the street. He saw that Elsa’s head was hanging. He would have had trouble staying awake himself if he was being pushed around in a stroller just after twilight.

“They can send a car for you if it’s really important, can’t they?”

“As long as I haven’t left town,” he said.

“Left town! Surely you don’t have permission to leave town!”

“By written request three months ahead of time.”

“In which case you can be wanted if you’re away from the house,” she said.

“Like now,” he said.

“You know what I mean.”

He looked at his watch.

“Officially, I’m still on duty,” he said.

“Did that also apply to the hour at the new bar?”

“It’s my new office.”

His phone rang again.

“You have to answer,” said Angela. “You’re still on duty.”

It was Möllerström again.

“For God’s sake, Janne!”

“Sorry, sorry, boss, but she called again and said it’s about her father.”

“I
know
that it’s about her father.”

He hung up and looked at Angela. They were standing outside their own door.

“I really did try,” he said.

“What is it about?” she said, and opened the door with one hand. Winter was steering the stroller. Elsa was sleeping and snoring quietly. The polyps. She would have to have an operation later, Angela had said. Are you serious? he had said. Unfortunately, she said. It happened to me too, she had said.

“Johanna Osvald’s father,” he said now. “She’s tried to reach me several times; apparently she’s shaken up.”

“Well, call her, darn it,” said Angela, and her face was open, and there was no sarcasm in her voice.

He called from the hall. Angela was fixing supper for Elsa, who had woken up in the elevator. It was impossible to sleep in that elevator. It was antique and dragged itself up with tortured protests, loud sighs.

He heard the rings, two, three, four, five, six. He called again. He didn’t get an answer.

In the kitchen, Angela was making a porridge out of yesterday’s rice pudding.

“No answer,” he said.

“Well, that’s strange.”


Very
strange,” Elsa said, and giggled.

He smiled.

“Do you want porridge, Papa?”

“Not right now, sweetie.”

“Soon it will be
gone,
” she said.

“You’ll just have to try again,” said Angela, scooping porridge into Elsa’s deep dish.

He went into the living room and called from there. Three-four-five-six. He hung up and turned on the CD player, which continued where it had left off late last night, with Miles Davis’s and Freddie Hubbard’s trumpets in “The Court.” The court of law. Or a courtyard, if you looked at it that way. Miles’s solo, which was like a sharp shadow from a sharp sun. Of course. A long shadow across a courtyard.

He kept time with his foot, not something for a beginner. He had tried to show Angela once quite a while ago, teach her, but she had given up, laughing. Give me rock ’n’ roll! she had cried. Okay, he had said. Something simple and easy to digest for mademoiselle. You don’t even know what it is! she had said. Yes I do, he had answered. Say something, then! she had said. Say what? he had said. Say a band! A rock band! He had thought and answered.

Elvis Presley.

She had laughed again, a lot. You are truly up to date, she had hiccuped.

He smiled at the memory. But he was up to date. Tonight he would listen to Pharoah Sanders,
Save Our Children.
Good God, he had just bought
The Complete “In a Silent Way” Sessions.

He tried to call again an hour later. It would have to be the last time. Angela was in the bath, but that wasn’t why; it wasn’t why he was taking the opportunity right then. He didn’t get an answer this time either.

She came back to the living room as Bill Frisell’s guitar was running amok as it had so many times before.

“Heavens,” she said. It was one of her expressions, like “darn.” She sometimes spoke a sort of lively 1950s Swedish that had become the Hoffman family’s language when they came to their new country. The language had encapsulated itself in the Hoffmans, and some of it remained with Angela. He had pointed it out to her. You bet, daddy-o, she had answered.

“Is it supposed to sound like that?” she said, nodding at the CD player with a towel around her head. He could feel her warmth.

“I don’t actually know how it’s
supposed
to sound,” he answered.

“Whoever played like that should get it checked out,” she said.

“I didn’t know you were so prejudiced.”

“Prejudiced? It’s called considerate.”

Bill Frisell ladled it on, and it was worse than ever, better than ever. Viktor Krauss on bass, Jim Keltner on drums like two tiptoeing caretakers while the crazy person ran into walls with his guitar in overdrive, attack after attack. Winter turned up the volume. “Lookout for Hope.”

“Good God,” yelled Angela. “Elsa is sleeping, you know.”

Winter lowered the volume.

Angela grabbed the album sleeve and read:

Gone, Just Like a Train.

“Good title.”

“If the train leaves on time,” she said.

He lowered the volume until almost nothing was left.

“Are you naked under that robe?” he said.

She put down the album sleeve and looked at him.

“Come here and sit in my lap,” he said.

11

A
neta Djanali was back in the four seasons. Vivaldi was far away from here. These were buildings and streets built for heavy metal. One building on the left was on its way down. They had just demolished half of it. There was still concrete dust in the air. A wrecking ball swung in the air like a clock pendulum. A dull echo of an explosion remained.

This is like driving in a war. She turned left and left again. A war against the northern suburbs.

“Good that they’re tearing this shit down,” said Sigge Lindsten.

“Is it?”

“Who the hell wants to live here?”

“Your daughter, for one.”

She turned her head and looked at him. He didn’t look at her. They had to stop at a roadblock. A soldier held up his hand, waving with his Uzi. No. A concrete worker showed them the way around with a spade. There was a rumble in the near distance. There were marks on the finish of a car that was parked behind the worker. The blast mats had been made of wide mesh. Stones fell from the sky.

“It was a mistake,” said Lindsten.

“That she moved here?”

“Yes.”

“Why did they move here, anyway?”

“Back,” said Lindsten.

“Sorry?”

“They moved back. She and … Forsblad,” said Lindsten, and she heard how much trouble he had saying the name. He spat it out quickly. He rubbed his mouth. “The fact is that we lived here before we moved down to Fredriksdal.” He looked at her now. “This is like the home district of the Lindsten family.” He let out a laugh, a metallic sort of laugh that sounded heavy and hopeless. Heavy metal, thought Aneta.
“It hasn’t always looked like this. It might never have been beautiful, but there was something else here, some vital culture around the factories.” He turned his head. “This is also some sort of native district.”

She nodded.

“Everything revolved around the factories.” He hacked out a laugh again; it scratched like iron filings. “And they revolved around us.”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, there wasn’t really anyone who thought about escaping.”

“You did.”

“Yes.”

“Is that how you look at it? As an escape?”

“No.”

“Why did you move, then?”

“Well, my wife inherited some money and she wanted to live in her own house and she’s from down by Mölndal.”

So that’s how it is, thought Aneta. The listener can fill in the rest.

“When Anette was going to move away from home—it was several years ago—at the same time, an apartment that one of my cousins had been renting became available, and, well, it could be worked out.”

“It’s quite a ways from home,” said Aneta.

“She thought it was exciting. That’s what she said, anyway.”

“Did she and Forsblad move in together right away?”

“No.”

“Were they together?”

“Yes.”

“What did you think of them moving in together?”

Lindsten turned to her again.

“Do we have to talk about that damned Forsblad the whole time?”

“Don’t you think about him? The whole time?”

Lindsten didn’t answer.

“When did you last speak to him?”

“I don’t remember.”

“Repressed?”

“What?”

“Maybe you’ve repressed it?” she said.

“Repressed … yes … repressed. Yes. I have.”

She could see that Lindsten had gotten a different expression on his
face. He seemed to relax. It was something she’d said. What had she said? That he’d repressed the memory of his daughter’s husband?

Later she would need to remember this conversation. Perhaps it would be too late then.

They sped away from the powdery construction smoke and drove up in front of the building, which was made of one enormous section.

Lindsten suddenly picked up the conversation from before. “Huge fucking monsters like this didn’t exist then. They were built later, when they thought that they could shove half a million slaves into a ghetto.” He looked up, as though he were trying to see the roof of the building. “First they built those piles of shit, and now they’re tearing them down. Ha!”

She stopped in front of the door. A marked car was parked there. A colleague stepped out; one remained inside.

“Cleaned out,” said the woman who had gotten out. Aneta didn’t recognize her.

“Cleaned out as in
cleaned out
?” said Aneta.

“Sure is.”

Aneta and Lindsten went up in the elevator, which seemed newer than the rest of the building.

“I have to ask you one more thing,” she said. “Has Anette been back here since she decided to move?”

“Now I don’t understand.”

“When she moved back home with you, did she come here any time after that? To get anything or something like that? To check on the apartment?”

“No.”

“You’re sure of that?”

“Damn it, of course I’m sure. She didn’t dare to come back here, for Christ’s sake!”

“No one was going to take over the lease?”

“No.”

“A relative or something?”

“No.”

“Really?”

“She didn’t own it, for Christ’s sake. And these days it’s even harder to work things like that out than it was before.”

During their trip to the apartment she had tried to describe the two men to Lindsten. It hadn’t been of any help to her, or him. Could be any old bastard at all, any scoundrel at all. He had made a gesture in the air, as though he were sketching a face.

They stepped out of the elevator and went to the apartment door. Aneta opened it with keys she’d gotten from her colleague. There were two locks.

The apartment was cleaned out.

“Well,” said Lindsten.

“Why didn’t you move all her things when Anette moved?” she asked.

“We were going to do it next week,” said Lindsten. He took a few steps into the hall. “Now that’s not necessary.”

Detective Lars Bergenhem chased burglars, or the shadows of them. A wave of burglaries was washing over Gothenburg. That’s how the chief inspector at CID command had put it: a wave of burglaries.

Homes were emptied, cleared out. Where did all their things go? There must have been space somewhere in the city for everything that was stolen. Not everything could join the camel caravan to the Continent.

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