Read Midwinter Sacrifice Online
Authors: Mons Kallentoft
Then Malin drives home. Gets into bed after checking on Tove. And before she falls asleep the image of Valkyria Karlsson comes back to her, naked in the field, like an angel, perhaps one of the devil’s angels.
47
When does a case turn into a black waking dream?
When does the search for truth start to go in circles? When does the first doubt appear among the police officers working on the investigation, the feeling that we may not manage to solve this one, maybe this time the truth will elude us?
Malin knows.
It can happen early or late in a case, it can be there as a suspicion after a first phone-call. It can happen suddenly or build gradually, little by little. It can happen on a tired, early Saturday morning in a meeting room where five overworked officers who ought to be at home sleeping instead of drinking disgusting black coffee get to start the day with bad news.
‘We’ve just received the final report from forensics about the raid at the Murvalls’. They’ve been working round the clock on this one and what good has it done?’
Sven Sjöman looks miserable, standing at the end of the table.
‘Nothing,’ he says. ‘Nothing but animal blood, elk, deer, wild boar, hares. Animal hair in the workshop. Nothing else.’
Shit, Malin thinks, even if she has known deep down all along.
‘So we’re stuck,’ Johan Jakobsson says.
Zeke nods. ‘Stuck in solid concrete, I’d say.’
‘We’ve got other lines of inquiry. The Æsir lead. Börje?’ Sven asks. ‘Anything new? Did you talk to Valkyria Karlsson after Malin found her out at the oak?’
‘We’ve tried to get her on the phone, and we’re aiming to catch up with her today,’ Börje Svärd replies. ‘We’ve also spoken to twenty other people with links to Rickard Skoglöf, but none of them seems to have the slightest connection to Bengt Andersson. But we still have one big question to answer: what was she doing out at the crime-scene? Like that? And why?’
‘Disorderly conduct,’ Johan says. ‘Isn’t that what meditating naked comes under?’
‘She wasn’t harming anyone,’ Malin says. ‘I called Göran Kalmvik’s woman in Oslo and she confirmed his story. And I’m hoping to talk to Niklas Nyrén today. It feels like he’s the only unturned stone left in this line of inquiry.’
‘Well, we’ll simply have to keep going,’ Börje says, and these words are no sooner out of his mouth than there’s a knock at the door, and before anyone has time to shout ‘come in’, police constable Marika Gruvberg opens the doors and looks in.
‘Sorry to interrupt. But a farmer’s found some animal carcasses hanging in a tree in a field. We’ve only just taken the call.’
Circles, Malin thinks.
Seven circles.
Everything points downwards.
Shades of greyish white keep changing and blurring, impossible to detect with the naked eye, and it’s hard to tell the difference between land and sky.
The animals are hanging in one of three pines in a small clump in the middle of a field between the Göta Canal and Ljung Church. Over by the canal the leafless trees are lined up in silent tribute, and some eight hundred metres to the east the white, coffin-like church building seems to be dispersing into the atmosphere, only held back by the dubious colours of the surrounding buildings, the ochre-coloured school, the buttercup-yellow head-teacher’s house.
The bodies seem drained of blood, hanging by their necks from the lowest branches of the smallest pine. The snow is flecked red with frozen blood that must have poured from the wounds in the animals’ bodies and throats. A Dobermann, a pig and a year-old lamb. The dog’s mouth has been held closed with black and yellow hazard-warning tape.
Under the tree, in the blood and snow, there are cigarette butts and other rubbish, and in the snow Malin can see marks left by a ladder.
The farmer, a Mats Knutsson, is standing beside her in padded green overalls.
‘I was taking a drive round my land in the car. I usually do at this time of year, just to keep an eye on things, and then I saw this in the tree; it looked odd from a distance.’
‘You haven’t touched anything, have you?’
‘I haven’t been anywhere near them.’
Zeke, increasingly suspicious of all life out on the plain.
‘The whole lot of them seem inbred,’ he snarled in the car on the way out to the crime-scene. ‘What the fuck does this mean?’
‘Well, it can’t be the Murvall brothers.’
‘No, they’re in custody.’
‘Could it be Jimmy Kalmvik and Joakim Svensson?’
‘It’s possible. According to Fredrik Unning, they’ve tortured cats before.’
‘We’ll have to talk to them again.’
‘The same with Skoglöf and Valkyria Karlsson.’
A few metres beyond the branch where the animals are hanging, someone has written MIDWINTER SACRIFICE in the snow in uneven letters. Not using blood from the animals, but red spray-paint; Malin can see that much with her naked eye. Karin Johannison, who has just arrived, is crouched down, combing the ground with the help of a colleague Malin has never seen before, a young girl with freckles and tousled red hair under a turquoise hat.
Beyond the red lettering someone has urinated in the snow, spelling out the letters VAL, but then their bladder must have run dry.
Zeke, beside the tree, points up at the animals. ‘Their throats have been cut. Drained of blood.’
‘Do you think they were still alive?’
‘Not the dog. They can kick up a real fuss when their instincts kick in.’
‘The marks from the ladder,’ Malin says. ‘Between the bodies. These cleared patches in the snow must be from a metal ladder, and these holes in the crust of the snow where the feet went in.’
Börje Svärd is walking up and down as he talks into his mobile.
He ends the call.
‘You see that dog up there in the tree. He must have been completely bloody helpless towards the end. The bastards couldn’t even leave his mouth alone. As far as I can tell, he’s an excellent example of the breed, which means he was bought from a kennel, probably tagged. So we’ll be able to track down his owner from the tax register. So get him down. Now!’
‘I just need to finish off here first,’ Karin calls, looking up at them with a smile.
‘Well, hurry up,’ Börje says. ‘He shouldn’t be left hanging there.’
‘Will we need the heater again this time?’ Karin asks.
‘No fucking heater,’ Börje yells.
‘Not for the animals,’ Zeke says. ‘What do you think, Malin?’
Malin shakes her head. ‘It looks like we can get what we need here without it.’
They hear a vehicle approaching. They all recognise the sound of a police van and turn round. The van drives up as close as it can get on the road, and they see Karim Akbar get out and call in their direction.
‘I knew it, I knew it. That there was something in the Æsir angle. In what that professor said. In those believers.’
Someone taps on Malin’s shoulder and she turns round.
Farmer Knutsson is standing behind her, apparently unconcerned by the fuss. ‘Do you need me here, or can I go? The cows . . .’
‘Go on,’ Malin says. ‘We’ll call you if there’s anything else.’
‘And the animals?’ The farmer gestures towards the tree.
‘We’ll get them down.’
Just as she finishes the sentence she sees the car from the
Correspondent
in the distance.
Daniel, she thinks, where have you been?
But it isn’t Daniel who gets out of the car. Instead it’s the photographer with the nose-ring and a nicotine-wrinkled, grey-haired journalist whom Malin recognises: Bengtsson, an old hand, complete with a pipe and a genuine loathing of computers and word-processors.
Well, Malin thinks, Karim can take care of him, seeing as he’s here.
Shall I ask about Daniel? Malin thinks. But once more she brushes the thought aside. How would that look? And how much do I care?
‘Get the dog down at once,’ Börje says.
Malin can see the frustration and anger in his body, all the emotion he’s focusing on the dead dog in the tree.
She wants to say, Calm down, Börje, he can’t feel anything hanging up there, but she keeps quiet, thinks, Anything he felt is long gone now.
‘We’re done here,’ Karin says, and behind her Malin hears the click of the photographer’s camera, and how Bengtsson is interviewing Karim in his hoarse voice.
‘What conclusions do you . . .’
‘Groups of . . . connection . . . teenage boys . . .’
Then Börje rushes towards the animals in the tree, leaps up and tries to grab the dog, but he can’t reach his limp legs, flecked with small clumps of congealed blood.
‘Börje, for fuck’s sake,’ Malin says, but he jumps again and again and again, trying to break the law of gravity in his attempts to save the dog from his helpless hanging.
‘Börje,’ Zeke shouts. ‘Have you gone mad? They’ll be here with a ladder soon, then we can get the dog down.’
‘Shut up.’
And Börje catches hold of the dog’s back legs, his hands seem to stick to them and reluctantly the dog follows the weight of Börje’s body and the branch bends in an arching bow and the knot that held the dog in the tree gives way. Börje shouts, groans as he falls back into the red snow.
The dog lands beside him, his lifeless eyes wide open.
‘This winter’s sending everyone mad,’ Zeke whispers. ‘Completely fucking crazy.’
48
From the field Malin can see the forests where Maria Murvall was attacked and raped; the end of the trees is like a black band against the white sky. She can’t see the water, but knows that the Motala River runs over there, bubbling like an overgrown stream under its thick covering of ice.
On a map the forest doesn’t look anything much, a strip maybe thirty or forty kilometres across, stretching from Lake Roxen up towards Tjällmo and Finspång, and towards Motala in the other direction. But inside the forest it’s possible to disappear, get lost, run across things that are incomprehensible to human beings. It is possible to be wiped out among the mud and decaying leaves, the unpicked mushrooms on their way to becoming part of the undercurrent of the forest. Long ago people in these areas believed in trolls, fairies, goblins and cloven-footed monsters, all wandering among the trees and trying to lure people to their doom.
What do people believe in today? Malin wonders, looking over at the church tower instead of the forest. Ice hockey and the Eurovision Song Contest?
Then she glances at the animal bodies in the snow.
Börje Svärd with his earpiece in. He’s scribbling a number on a scrap of paper, then makes a call on his mobile.
Zeke on another phone.
Dennis Hamberg, a farmer outside Klockrike, has reported a break-in at his farm, very upset: ‘Two organically reared animals stolen, a young pig and a year-old lamb. I moved here from Stockholm to get involved with sustainable farming, and now this happens.’
The forest.
Black and full of secrets, a girl from a John Bauer painting staring into a lake at her own reflection. Is there someone creeping up behind her?
Then they are all sitting in the police van, the muffled sound of an engine idling in the background, a treacherous heat that makes them undo their padded jackets, thaw out, open up again. A quickly convened meeting out in the field: Malin, Zeke, Börje and Karim; Sven Sjöman at the station, busy with paperwork.
‘Well?’ Karim says. ‘Where do we go from here?’
‘I’ll take care of tracing the dog,’ Börje says. ‘It shouldn’t take long.’
‘The uniforms can go door-to-door,’ Zeke says. ‘And Malin and I will go and see the organic farmer and check out what Kalmvik and Svensson were up to last night. We can’t let go of anything yet.’
‘The connection looks pretty obvious, though,’ Karim says from the driver’s seat. ‘The ritual, increased clarity of purpose and carelessness.’
‘In cases like this the level of violence usually escalates,’ Malin says. ‘Experience suggests that. And to go from a human being to animals is hardly an escalation.’
‘Maybe,’ Börje says. ‘Who knows what goes on inside some people’s heads?’
‘Check out Rickard Skoglöf and Valkyria Karlsson as well,’ Karim says. ‘The Æsir stamp on this is quite clear.’
When the meeting is over Malin looks over at the forest again. She closes her eyes, sees a naked, unprotected human body on scratchy moss.
She opens her eyes, trying to force the image away.
Karin Johannison walks past, carrying a large, yellow sports bag.
Malin stops her.
‘Karin. The chances of analysing the DNA in traces of blood have got a lot better in recent years, haven’t they?’
‘You know they have, Malin. You don’t have to flatter me by pretending you don’t know. In the main British lab in Birmingham they’ve made huge progress. It’s unbelievable what they can find out from practically nothing.’
‘What about us?’
‘We haven’t got those resources yet. But we do sometimes send material over there for analysis.’
‘If I had a sample, could you sort that out?’
‘Of course. I’ve got a contact there. An Inspector John Stuart I met at a conference in Cologne.’
‘I’ll get back to you,’ Malin says.
‘Do,’ Karin says, then heads off with her bag over the rough snow, and despite the weight she still manages to look as elegant as a model on a Paris catwalk.
Malin walks away from the others along the road, pulls out her mobile and calls the exchange in the station.
‘Can you put me through to a Sven Nordström at Motala Police?’
‘Of course,’ the female receptionist says.
Three rings, then Nordström’s voice: ‘Nordström.’
‘This is Fors from Linköping.’
‘Hello, Malin. It’s been a while.’
‘Yes, but now I need your help. You know your rape case, Maria Murvall? The woman whose brothers have cropped up in our current case? Was she wearing any fragments of clothing when you found her?’
‘Yes, but the blood on them was so filthy that forensics said they couldn’t get anything out of it.’
‘According to Johannison here, they’ve come up with a lot of new techniques. And she’s got a contact in Birmingham who’s a bit of a wizard at this sort of thing.’