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Authors: Hakan Nesser

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Jung handed over another sheet of paper.

“Yes,” said Münster.

“Have you checked which of them have an alibi for the first murder?”

“Yes,” said Münster. “Six of them have watertight alibis for the Ringmar murder.”

“How can there be so many in that category?” interrupted deBries. “We’re talking about half an hour, or forty-five minutes at most, in the middle of the night….”

“Conferences,” said Reinhart. “Four of them were at the same conference three hundred miles away from here.”

“And the other two were in Rome and London,” explained Münster.

“Eight left,” said Van Veeteren. “How many of them are women?”

“Five,” said Münster.

“Three left. Is that right?”

“Yes,” said Münster. “At Bunge High School, there are only three men who don’t have an alibi for both murders.”

Rooth took a handkerchief out of his pocket, and sat with it in his hand.

“Good,” said Van Veeteren. “How many of those have been appointed within the last few years?”

Münster paused for three seconds.

“None,” he said. “The youngest has been working there for fourteen years.”

“Shit,” said Van Veeteren.

34

“There’s something that doesn’t add up.”

“Quite a few things, I’d have thought,” said Münster.

Coming from Münster, that was definitely cheek, but Van Veeteren let it pass. He suddenly felt weary…. An exhausted ox sinking into a swamp. Where the devil did all these images come from? Something he’d read in a book, presumably. He stared listlessly at his notes. What the hell was it that was wrong?

Perhaps everything, as Münster had implied?

Or was it just a detail?

Münster sighed and looked at the clock.

“What shall we do now?” he asked. “Check the alibis more carefully?”

“No,” said Van Veeteren. “It’s obvious that we could smash one or two of them, but we’re not allowed to keep pestering the Bunge crowd: specific orders from above. The parents’ association have threatened to keep the children at home if we turn up anymore. Suurna has phoned Hiller seventeen times.”

“Hmm,” said Münster. “In that case, I don’t see what…”

“Go and fetch Rooth again,” said Van Veeteren.

Münster stood up.

“But leave me alone for half an hour before the pair of you turn up.”

Münster opened his mouth and intended to say something, but the chief inspector swiveled around on his chair and turned his back on him.

         

In nineteen cases he was sure. In the twentieth…

Underneath all the broken and chewed-up toothpicks was his diary, and it was not long before that had engaged his attention.

Twenty-eight days to Christmas Eve, he worked out.

Nineteen sweet young ladies

Aspired to be his wife…

How much overtime could he turn into vacation time?

Number twenty killed him…
no, spurned him…

Presumably enough for him to take the rest of the year off?

The next one took his life.

What the hell was he doing? What was it, whizzing around so helplessly in his ancient, sluggish brain? Was he thinking of giving up? Was he thinking…

There was no point. The thought had struck home right away, he wasn’t going to be able to banish it…. He might as well admit it. An easy chair on a terrace in…Casablanca. He’d be able to sit back there in just a few days from now! A warm breeze, a book, and a glass of white wine. Why continue to kid himself that this pretentious guessing game served any purpose at all?

But there again, should he not…? Didn’t he owe it to Mitter, at least, to crack this case? Incidentally, what was the average temperature in North Africa in December? Not much to shout about, presumably. Cold winds from the Sahara, and all the rest of it…

The next one he got wrong!

Wouldn’t the chances of success be better if somebody else took over completely?

Australia! That was it! What was it Caen had said?

Seventy-five degrees…Lemon blossoms? Australia…

         

He dialed Hiller’s number.

“I’m thinking of handing this case over to Münster. I’ve got stuck.”

“The hell you will,” said Hiller.

“I’m old and tired,” said Van Veeteren.

“Crap!”

“I’ve got back pain.”

“You’re supposed to work with your head, not your back. For Christ’s sake, you have six men under you!”

“I was thinking of going to Australia.”

There was silence for a while.

“All right,” said Hiller. “Why not? Put this bastard behind bars, and you can have a month’s vacation. Shall we say you have six days in which to crack it? I’ve promised on television that we’ll clear up this case within two weeks. There’s a direct flight to Sydney every Thursday.”

Van Veeteren thought it over. Put down the receiver and studied his diary again.

“Are you still there?”

“Yes, dammit!” said Van Veeteren.

“Well?”

“Okay, let’s say that,” said Van Veeteren with a sigh. “But if I haven’t cracked it by Wednesday, you’ll receive my letter of resignation. This time it’s serious. I shall buy a ticket tomorrow.”

He hung up before Hiller had a chance to get the last word in. Looked through his notes one more time. Then he tore them out of the pad and threw them into the wastebasket.

Six days to go, he thought.

Didn’t the last one in the rhyme get away with it, by the way?

         

Rooth sat down on the chair he had vacated half an hour earlier.

“What did you do before going to Majorna?” Van Veeteren asked.

“Bendiksen.”

“A possible murderer?”

“No way.”

“Had he received a letter?”

“No.”

“What else?”

“Former wife. The children. No letters…”

“Tips?”

“No. The ex-wife seemed shocked.”

“Out of the question as the murderer, I take it. Any more?”

“Marcus Greijer and Uwe Borgmann.”

“Brother-in-law and…neighbor?”

“Correct. Nothing.”

“Alibis?”

“Watertight.”

“How long have they been living in Maardam?”

“Greijer for about ten years, Borgmann all his life.”

“Okay, anything else?”

Rooth shook his head. Van Veeteren dug a sheet of paper from out of a desk drawer.

“I have a list here of twenty-eight names. It’s Mitter’s suggestion for people who might have killed Eva Ringmar. I think we’ve investigated most of them, but not all.”

He handed the paper to Rooth.

“I want you and deBries to take a look at them.”

“What exactly are we after?”

“Alibis, of course. And their past. The interesting ones are those who’ve only moved to Maardam recently. And…well, use your imagination, for Christ’s sake!”

Rooth blew his nose loudly.

“When are we supposed to do this by?”

Van Veeteren looked at his diary.

“Let’s say Monday. But if you find the murderer before then, do feel free to let us know.”

“With the greatest of pleasure,” said Rooth. “Have a nice weekend!”

He folded the sheet of paper and put it in his inside pocket. Stood up and added:

“We’ll find him, no doubt, never fear.”

“Clear off,” said Van Veeteren.

         

“And what do we do, then?” asked Münster when they were alone again.

Van Veeteren tore up a few more notes while he thought the matter over.

“You and Reinhart can do what the devil you like,” he said eventually. “Whoever solves the case gets a bottle of cognac.”

“Five star?” asked Münster.

“Four,” said Van Veeteren. “Can I give you a few tips?”

Münster nodded.

“Concentrate on newly appointed staff at Bunge. I’ll wager that’s where we’ll find him, in any case! But for God’s sake don’t actually go there!”

“We’ve got their names,” said Münster. “All the ones appointed after Eva Ringmar.”

“How many of them are there?”

Münster took out his notebook and leafed through it.

“Men?”

“Yes, only the men, of course.”

“Eleven.”

“So many?”

“Yes, there is a certain amount of turnover, after all. That’s probably not so odd, come to that.”

“How many have an alibi for the first murder?”

“Only the first one?”

“Yes.”

Münster checked.

“One,” he said.

“Only one?”

“Yes.”

“That leaves ten. Are any of those on Mitter’s list as well?”

“You gave that to Rooth.”

Van Veeteren produced another sheet of paper from his desk drawer.

“Have you ever heard of photocopying, Inspector?”

Münster took the list and started comparing. Van Veeteren stood up and walked over to the window. Stood with his hands behind his back, staring out at the rain.

“Two,” said Münster. “Gert Weiss and Erich Volker.”

“Is Weiss as new as that?”

“Yes. He arrived at more or less the same time as Eva Ringmar.”

“I see…. I see. This Erich Volker, who the devil’s he?”

“Temporary teacher of chemistry and physics,” said Münster. “Appointed September ’91.”

“Interesting,” said Van Veeteren. “If I were you, I’d squeeze him a bit extra. Come down hard on them all, of course. And Weiss. Can I see the list of the new staff?”

Münster handed it over. Van Veeteren studied it for half a minute, rocking back and forth on his heels and muttering.

“Hmm,” he said. “Maybe…but maybe not. You never know.”

Münster waited for clarification, but it never came.

“Any other tips?” he asked after a while.

“The Thursday before Easter, 1986. If the person under consideration was in Karpatz in a car at lunchtime, then he’s the one. Together with Eva Ringmar, that is.”

Münster looked as if he’d eaten something unpleasant. Then he nodded and made a note. He’d been through this kind of thing before.

“Anything else?” he asked.

“The whole of April and May ’86,” said Van Veeteren. “In Karpatz, of course. But for Christ’s sake don’t ask him outright. If he has the slightest suspicion, he’ll wriggle out of it.”

Münster made another note.

“Is that all?”

Van Veeteren nodded. Münster put his notebook into his jacket pocket.

“Monday?”

“Monday,” said Van Veeteren.

“What are you intending to do yourself?” Münster asked as he stood in the doorway.

Van Veeteren shrugged.

“We’ll see,” he said. “Beate Lingen to begin with.”

         

Münster closed the door behind him.

Who the hell is Beate Lingen? he wondered. Ah well, no badminton for the next few days, at least. If he worked all day Friday, he might even have a weekend off.

When he got back to his office, the phone rang.

“Another thing,” said Van Veeteren, “while we’re at it. The thirty-first of May is also a good date—1986, that is. Saturday afternoon, somewhere among the lakes at Maarensjöarna. But it’s only a hunch, and you’ll need to be extremely careful. Have you understood?”

“No,” said Münster.

“Good,” said Van Veeteren, and hung up.

35

He stayed at home on Friday.

Woke up at about nine and plugged the telephone in again.

Looked up the travel agents in the yellow pages, and before getting out of bed, he had booked his ticket. An Australian Airways flight on Thursday, December 5, departure time 7:30 a.m. Open return.

Then he unplugged the telephone again and got up to have breakfast.

Sat at the kitchen table. Listened to the rain. Chewed at a justifiably thick sandwich of whole-grain bread with cheese and cucumber. The morning paper was spread out in front of him, and suddenly, he had that feeling.

A feeling of well-being. He tried to suppress it, but it was there all the time, warm and persistent and totally unambiguous. A feeling of gratitude for the infinite riches of life.

No matter what happened, seven days from now he would be having breakfast on the balcony of his hotel room in Sydney. Thumbing absentmindedly through a guide to the Great Barrier Reef. Lighting a cigarette and turning his face up to the sun.

By then he would either have captured a murderer, or resigned his job.

It was a game with only winners. A morning dripping with freedom. No dog throwing up in front of the refrigerator. No wife thinking of moving back in with him. The door locked. The telephone unplugged.

He recalled Farrati and the frilly knickers. Dammit all, life was a symphony.

Then he thought about Mitter. And Eva Ringmar, whom he had never met while she was still breathing. She was the one it was all about.

And he realized that the symphony was in a minor key.

         

He had finished reading the newspaper by eleven. He ran a bubble bath, put on a Bach cello suite at high volume, lit a candle on the lavatory seat, and slid down into the water.

After twenty minutes he hadn’t moved a fin, but a thought had floated up to the surface of his brain.

A thought had been born thanks to a mixture of the water’s warmth, the candle’s flame, and the harsh tone of the cello.

It was a terrible thought. A possibility he would prefer to dismiss. Drown. Blow out. Switch off. It was the image of a murderer.

No, he hadn’t cornered him yet. But there was a way.

An accessible path that he merely needed to follow to its end. Keep going for as long as possible, and see what lay concealed at the destination.

         

In the afternoon he lay down on the sofa and listened to more Bach. Slept for a while and woke up in darkness.

Got up, switched off the tape recorder, and plugged the telephone back in.

Two calls.

The first was to Beate Lingen. She remembered him—she said she did, and he could hear it in her voice. Nevertheless, he managed to get himself invited to tea on Saturday afternoon. She had an hour, would that be enough?

That would be fine, he said. She was only an intermediate stop, after all.

The other was to Andreas Berger. Once again, he was in luck. Berger answered the call. Leila was out with the children. He could speak uninhibitedly, and that was a requirement.

“I have a question that is very personal. I have a question that I think could be the key to this whole tragedy. You don’t need to answer if you don’t want to.”

“I understand.”

Van Veeteren paused. Searched for the right words.

“Was Eva…a good lover?”

Silence. But the answer was audible in the silence.

“Will you…will you use whatever I say in some way or other? I mean…”

“No,” said Van Veeteren. “You have my word.”

Berger cleared his throat.

“She was…” he began hesitantly. “Eva made love like no other woman in existence. I haven’t had many, but I think I can say that even so. She was…I don’t know, words seem so inadequate…. She was angel and whore…woman and mother…and friend. She satisfied everything. Yes, everything.”

“Thank you. That explains a lot. I shall not use what you have said in any improper way.”

         

Saturday brought with it a pale blue sky and thin, scudding clouds. A sun that seemed cold and distant, and a wind from the sea. He spent the morning walking by the canals, and noticed to his surprise that he could breathe. The air weighed little; there was a whiff of winter in it.

At about two he took the tram to Leimaar. Beate Lingen lived in one of the newly built apartment houses on top of the ridge. High up, on the sixth floor, with a view over the whole town. Over the plain, and the river as it meandered its way to the coast.

She had a glazed balcony with infrared heating and tomato plants, and they sat out there all the time, drinking her Russian tea and eating thin Kremmen biscuits with jam.

“I spend most of my time out here when I’m at home,” she said. “If there was room, I think I’d move my bed out here as well.”

Van Veeteren nodded. It was a remarkable place. Like sitting in a warm glass cage, hovering untrammeled above the world. With a view of everything, yet completely divorced from everything.

I’d like to write my memoirs in a place like this, he thought.

“What do you want to know, Chief Inspector?”

He reluctantly allowed himself to be returned to reality.

“Miss Lingen, if I remember rightly, you knew Eva Ringmar at school. This time, that’s the period I’m most interested in. Let me see, it was…”

“Mühlboden. The local high school.”

“And you were in the same class?”

“Yes. Between 1970 and 1973. We took the school-leaving exam in May.”

“Were you born in Mühlboden?”

“In a little village just outside. I was bused in.”

“And Eva Ringmar?”

“The same. She lived out at Leuwen, I don’t know if you are familiar with the place?”

“I’ve been there.”

“Yes, quite a lot of us lived outside the town: it’s a big school. Serves a very large district, I believe.”

“How well did you know her?”

“Not at all, really. We didn’t go around together. We were never in the same gang—you know how it is. You’re all in the same class, sit in the same room every day, but you know nothing at all about most of your classmates.”

“Do you know if she…if Eva had a boyfriend around that time, somebody she was pretty steady with?”

What an awful expression, he thought.

“I’ve been thinking about that,” said Beate Lingen. “I remember there was an incident in class three—the final year, that is, in the fall—when a boy had an accident. It wasn’t a lad from our class, I think he was a year older, in fact; but I have the impression that Eva was mixed up with it somehow or other.”

“How?”

“I don’t really know. I think it was something to do with a party of some kind. Some of the girls from our class were there, in any case, and there was an accident.”

“What sort of an accident?”

“This boy died. He fell over a cliff. They were in a holiday cottage at Kerran—there are quite a few escarpments out there, a geological fault, I think they say—I seem to remember they found his body the next morning. I assume strong drink played a part as well….”

“But are you quite sure that Eva was present?”

“Yes, she must have been there. They tried to hush it all up, I seem to recall. Nobody wanted to talk about what had happened. It was as if…as if there was something shameful, in fact.”

“And it was an accident?”

“Excuse me? Er, yes…. Of course.”

“There were never any, er, suspicions?”

“Suspicions? No. What kind of suspicions?”

“Never mind,” said Van Veeteren. “Miss Lingen, did you ever speak to Eva Ringmar about what happened? Later, I mean. In Karpatz, or when you used to see each other here in Maardam?”

“No, never. We didn’t really spend time with each other in Karpatz. We just met occasionally, as you do when you’re in the same class. It was more of an obligation, I think, almost…. She had her own circle of friends, and so did I, come to that.”

“But then in Maardam. Did you used to talk about your school days?”

“No, not really. We might have mentioned a teacher, but as I say, we moved in different circles. There wasn’t a lot to talk about.”

“Did you have the impression that Eva Ringmar was reluctant to talk about the past?”

She hesitated.

“Yes…” she said eventually. “I suppose you could say that.”

Van Veeteren said nothing for several seconds.

“Miss Lingen,” he said eventually, “I’m very keen to hear about certain matters from that period—the high school years in Mühlboden. Do you think you could give me the name of somebody who was close to Eva Ringmar at that time?…Somebody who knows more about her than you do? Preferably several.”

Beate Lingen thought about that.

“Grete Wojdat,” she said after a while. “Yes…Grete Wojdat and Ulrike deMaas. They were great pals, I know that. Ulrike was from the same place, I think: Leuwen. They came to school on the same bus, in any case.”

Van Veeteren made a note of the name.

“Have you any idea of where they are now?” he wondered. “If they’ve got married and changed their name, for instance?”

Beate Lingen thought that over again.

“I know nothing at all about Grete Wojdat,” she said. “But Ulrike…Ulrike deMaas, I met her a few years ago, in fact. She was living in Friesen…. She was then, in any case…married, but I think she kept her maiden name.”

“Ulrike deMaas,” said Van Veeteren, underscoring the name. “Friesen…. Do you think it’s worth a visit?”

“How on earth would I know, Inspector?” She looked at him in surprise. “I don’t even have the slightest idea about what you’re trying to find out!”

I think you ought to be grateful for that, Miss Lingen, Van Veeteren thought.

         

When he left it was dark, and the wind was blowing stronger. When he came to the tram stop he found that it was in possession of a gang of soccer hooligans shrieking and yelling, in their red-and-white scarves and woolly hats. Van Veeteren decided to walk instead.

As he passed through the Deijkstraat district he crossed over Pampas, the low-lying area just to the south of the municipal forest, where, once upon a time, he had set out on his checkered career as a police officer. When he came to the corner of Burgerlaan and Zwille, he paused and contemplated the dilapidated property next to the Ritmeeters brewery.

It looked exactly as he remembered it. The façade cracked and disintegrating, the plaster flaking away. Even the obscene graffiti at street level seemed to be from another age.

There was no light in either of the two windows on the third floor, just as had been the case that mild and fragrant summer evening twenty-nine years ago when Van Veeteren and Inspector Munck had broken into the flat after a hysterical telephone call. Munck had gone in first and taken the volley of shots from Mr. Ocker in his stomach. Van Veeteren had sat on the hall floor, holding Munck’s head while the man bled to death. Mr. Ocker was lying on the floor three meters farther into the apartment, shot through the throat by Van Veeteren.

Mrs. Ocker and their four-year-old daughter were found by the ambulance team: strangled and stuffed into a wardrobe in the bedroom.

He tried to recall when he had last heard anything from Elisabeth Munck. It must have been many years ago; despite the fact that he had very nearly become her lover, in a desperate attempt to make amends and build bridges and come to terms with his own distorted feelings of guilt.

He continued strolling over the Alexander Bridge, while asking himself why he had chosen this particular route. For Christ’s sake, there were plenty of memories to keep the Burgerlaan 35 story alive: it wasn’t necessary to dig up anything new.

It was several minutes after half past five when he entered his office on the fourth floor, and a mere fifteen minutes later he had established contact with Ulrike deMaas. Spoken to her on the telephone, and arranged a meeting for the following day.

Then he phoned the police garage and ordered the same car as he’d had the previous Sunday. When that was sorted out, he switched off the light and remained seated in the darkness with his hands clasped behind his head.

Strange how everything fell into place.

It’s as if somebody were pulling the strings, he thought.

It wasn’t a new thought, and as usual he cast it aside.

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