On several sites he’s described as the worst conman in Swedish history. It still isn’t clear how many millions he got away with when they emptied the Finera Finance company of all its assets. And by the time it was uncovered, Jochen Goldman had fled the country and his bourgeois roots on the island of Lidingö, the wealthy enclave on the edge of Stockholm.
He managed to elude the police, and Interpol.
Jochen Goldman, seen in Punta del Este in Uruguay.
In Switzerland.
In Vietnam.
Jakarta. Surabaya.
But always one step ahead of the police, as if they didn’t want to catch him, or else he had his own sources inside the force.
Jerry Petersson had been his lawyer. His intermediary in his dealings with the authorities and media at home. Goldman had written two books during his ten years on the run. One book about how he emptied the business and claimed he had every right to do so, then another about life as a fugitive, and to judge from the reviews, Jochen Goldman had tried to portray himself as a capitalist James Bond.
But he fell a long way short of that sort of style, Malin thinks.
Before Goldman carried out his heist, he spent three years in prison for fraud. At the same time he was also convicted of making unlawful threats, actual bodily harm, and extortion.
Pictures of him on the run.
A sharp nose in what was otherwise a round face, slicked back hair, playful brown eyes, and blond hair down to his shoulders. Big yachts, shiny sports cars made by Königsegg.
Then, once his alleged crimes relating to Finera Finance had passed the statute of limitations, he popped up on Tenerife. A report in the online version of the business daily,
Dagens Industri
, shows a smiling, suntanned Goldman beside a black-tiled pool with a view of the sea and the mountains. A shimmering white house in the background.
Mum’s dream.
This is what it looks like.
White-plastered concrete, glass, maybe a garden with scrupulously neat plants, and bulging armchairs to lean back in and forget all the denial and bitterness.
Finally she comes to an old report in the business weekly,
Veckans Affärer
.
The tone is vague, hinting that Jochen Goldman may have disposed of people who got in his way. That people who had done business with him had disappeared without a trace. The article concludes by pointing out that these are rumours, and that the myth of Goldman survives and grows precisely through such rumours.
Malin takes out the note with the number that might be Goldman’s.
Nods to Zeke on the other side of the desk.
‘OK, I’m going to call our shadow now.’
Waldemar Ekenberg is drumming his fingers on the desk in the cramped meeting room. He fiddles with his mobile, lights a cigarette without asking the newcomer Lovisa Segerberg if she minds, but she lets him smoke, carries on calmly reading a summary that she’s found in one of the black files.
‘Restless?’ Johan Jakobsson says from his place.
‘No problem,’ Waldemar says. ‘But I’m running out of cigs.’
‘They sell them in the canteen over in the courthouse, don’t they?’
‘That’s shut on Saturdays. I saw they had a special offer on boxes of ten packs down at Lucullus. Can I have fifteen minutes to pop down there?’
Johan smiles.
‘Is that really a good idea? We need all three of us here, Waldemar. Come on, what the hell.’
‘You know how I get if I haven’t got any cigs.’
‘You can cadge one off someone, can’t you?’
‘Fuck, the air in here is terrible.’
‘Maybe because you smoke,’ Lovisa says from her chair.
‘Go on, then,’ Johan says. ‘But watch yourself, Waldemar. Watch yourself.’
‘I’m only going to buy cigs,’ Waldemar says with a grin.
The Spanish number is engaged the first time Malin dials, but the second time the phone is picked up on the fourth ring, and a nasal, slightly hoarse voice says: ‘Jochen, who is this?’
A voice from Tenerife. Clear skies, sun, a bit of a breeze. And no fucking rain.
‘My name is Malin Fors, I’m a detective inspector with the Linköping Police. I was wondering if you had a moment to answer a few questions?’
Silence.
For a few moments Malin thinks Jochen Goldman has hung up, then he clears his throat and says with an amused chuckle: ‘All my dealings with the authorities go through my lawyer. Can he contact you?’
The cat after the mouse.
The mouse after a bit of string.
You miss the game, Malin thinks. Don’t you?
‘That’s just it, the lawyer Jerry Petersson, the man who represented . . .’
‘I know what’s happened to Jerry,’ Jochen Goldman says. ‘I manage to read the papers down here,
Malin
.’
And you’ve still got your contacts, Malin thinks.
‘And you know why I want to ask you a few questions?’
‘I’m all ears.’
‘Were you in Tenerife on the night between Thursday and Friday?’
Jochen Goldman laughs, and Malin knows the question is banal, but she has to ask it, and it’s just as well to get it out of the way.
‘I was here. Ten people can confirm that. You can’t think I had anything to do with the murder?’
‘We don’t think anything at this point in time.’
‘Or that we had a difference of opinion, Jerry and me, so that I sent a hit man to get my revenge? Forgive me if I can’t help laughing.’
‘We’re not insinuating anything of the sort. But it’s interesting that you should mention that.’
Another silence.
Flatter him, Malin thinks. Flatter him, then maybe he’ll drop his guard.
‘Looks like you’ve got a pretty nice house down there.’
More silence. As if Jochen Goldman is looking out over his property, the pool and the sea. She wonders if her flattery makes him feel threatened.
‘I can’t complain. Maybe you’d like to visit? Swim a few lengths in the pool. I heard you like swimming.’
‘So you know who I am?’
‘You were mentioned in
Svenska
Dagbladet
’s article about the murder. Someone googled you. Doesn’t everyone like swimming? I’m sure you look good in a bathing suit.’
His voice. Malin can feel it eating into her. Next question: ‘So there were no problems between you and Jerry Petersson?’
‘No. You need to bear in mind that for many years he was the only person who stood by me and took my side. Sure, he got paid well for it, but I felt I could trust him, that he was on my side. I regard him, or rather regarded him, as one of my best friends.’
‘When did you stop regarding him as one of your best friends? Recently, or earlier?’
‘What do you think, Malin? Recently. Very recently.’
‘In that case, I’m sorry for your loss,’ Malin says. ‘Will you be coming up for the funeral?’
‘When’s it going to be?’
‘The date hasn’t been set yet.’
‘He was my friend,’ Jochen Goldman says. ‘But I’ve got other things to do apart from grieve. I don’t believe in looking backwards.’
‘Do you know of anyone else who might have had any reason to want to harm Jerry Petersson? Anything you think we should know?’
‘I mind my own business,’ Jochen Goldman says. Then he adds: ‘Was there anything else?’
‘No,’ Malin says, and the line goes quiet, and the fluorescent light above her head starts to flicker, as though it is flashing Morse code from the past.
One of your best friends, Jochen?
What do you know about friendship and trust?
Nothing.
But what do I know?
Not much, I have to admit, but there’s one thing I do know, and I’ve known it since the very first time we met: I wouldn’t want to be standing in your way if you thought you’d been let down.
I felt drawn to you from the start. I was appointed to represent you when you were accused of beating up one of the partners in the business, when he had a heart attack. And I realised I enjoyed your company, basking in the reflected glory of your Jewish chutzpah, your cheekiness. It was like you gave the finger to everyone who got in your way, no matter who they were.
But friends, Jochen?
Come off it.
You could well be the only person I’ve met in the last few years who’s actually frightened me.
Neither of us was, or still is, in your case, the sort who paid the slightest attention to friendship. That sort of thing’s for queers and women, isn’t it?
Your ruthlessness. Your contacts.
We were both smart. But maybe you got the better of me in the end? Or did I get the better of you? Maybe we did have a sort of friendship, the sort where two people devour each other’s souls, getting close to the other and seeing themselves reflected in each other’s shortcomings and successes, making them their own. Maybe it was that rarest sort of friendship, truly equal, and therefore so fragile? Why cling to something when there’s not really anything to lose?
Two men.
Our paths crossed, we were fated to meet, and we had in common the fact that we weren’t going to let anything or anyone stand in the way of what we wanted. But you were more stupid and more courageous than me, Jochen, and I had more money than you, but what did that matter? I was envious of your ruthlessness, even if it sometimes scared me.
Jochen, I see your suntanned body on the shiny chrome sunlounger beside the black chlorinated water.
I see Malin Fors at her desk.
She has her head in her hands, wondering how she’s going to get through the day. Then she thinks about me. The way I was lying face down in the moat, dead, I’ve accepted that now, and the sight of me there, or being lifted up through the air with my body punctured by senseless brutality won’t leave her alone, but it gives her something to think about, and that makes it irresistible to her.
Violence offers her some resistance. She hopes it can tell her something about who she is.
She needs me. She suspects as much.
Or else she already knows all too well. Just as I know what the boy suspected when the rays of the low autumn sun hit his eyes.
The light pulsates in the eyes of the boy who owns the playground of Ånestad School.
The previous week the retirement age in Social-Democratic Sweden was lowered to sixty-five, and a few months ago the
Mariner 10
spacecraft flew past Mercury and sent pictures of the lonely planet back to earth.
Here and now, in the school playground, in the sharp rays of the sun, the verdant foliage of the birch trees rustles and the boy runs after the ball, catches it with one foot, spins around and then kicks the white leather ball with his toes and the ball shoots off towards the fence where Jesper is standing, ready to fend it off, but something goes wrong. The ball hits his nose and the blood that gushes out of his nostrils a moment later is a deeper, livelier red than the colour of the bricks in the walls of the low school building.
Eva, the teacher, saw what happened and rushes over to the boy. Yelling, she grabs his arm and shakes him before comforting the crying Jesper. She seems to want to scold rather than offer comfort, and she shouts right in the boy’s ear: ‘I saw that, Jerry, I saw that, you did that on purpose’, and he gets dragged away, he knows he didn’t hurt anyone on purpose, but maybe he ought to, he thinks as the door of the classroom closes and he is expected to wait for something, but what?
Jesper.
A doctor’s kid from the villas of Wimanshäll. His dad’s evidently the sort of doctor who cuts people up.
The boy already knows that they treat the kids from the villas differently from him and the others from the blocks of flats in Berga.
It happens in the little things they think nine-year-olds don’t notice: who gets to sing the solo at the end-of-year assembly, who is suspected of misbehaving on purpose, who gets most attention and praise in class.
So a girl sings in the gymnasium, two boys play the flute, and he doesn’t recognise any of them from the place where he lives, and all of them apart from him are dressed in white and all of them apart from him have their parents there.
But he doesn’t feel lonely, feels no shame, he’s worked out that shame, even if he doesn’t understand the word itself, is pointless. That he isn’t like Mum, or Dad.
Unless he is, really? When he stands in the second row on the penalty-line of the handball court and is expected to sing songs decided by others for people he doesn’t care about, is he not like Mum and Dad then? Doesn’t everyone want him to be like his parents then?
Maybe he did aim for the nose after all?
Enjoyed watching the blood gush out from stupid Jesper’s nose, like it had been cut by the blades of a lawnmower?
There, in the gym hall, he actually knows nothing about the world, except that he is going to make it his.
He spends all summer drifting around the backyard on his own. He spends many summers doing this.
Mum has long since given up.
She developed an allergy to the cortisone they pumped into her to help the ache in her joints, and becomes stiffer and stiffer in a whimpering, corrosive pain that is gradually wearing away the woman she once was to the sum total of mute fury. Grandma has had a stroke, the cottage has been sold, Dad took redundancy from Saab and has drunk the last of the pay-off during the autumn. They had no need for his skills when they went over to production of the Viggen. He could have got work as a cleaner, or in the canteen, but wasn’t it better that he took the money, and looked ahead, to the future?
Dad likes the company of the parks department workers. The lawnmower, with its comfortably sprung seat. The blokes in the parks team don’t judge him, they don’t judge their own.
And the boy longs for the end of the summer holidays, for football training to start again. There are no differences out on the pitch. On the pitch he decides. On the pitch he can be a bit rougher, and what does it matter if the boy from Sturefors falls badly and breaks his arm?
He has friends. Like Rasmus, who’s the son of a sales manager for Cloetta chocolate. They moved here from Stockholm, and one evening the boy is around at Rasmus’s when Rasmus’s dad has business colleagues there for dinner, and his dad asks Rasmus to show the guests that he can do forty press-ups in a row, and someone suggests a competition. And then they are lying there on the parquet floor of the living room, him and Rasmus, doing press-ups alongside each other, and he goes on and on, long after Rasmus is lying flat on the floor, and their audience are shouting: ‘Enough, enough, point taken, young man.’