The Andalucian Friend (35 page)

Read The Andalucian Friend Online

Authors: Alexander Söderberg

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Crime, #Fiction, #Thrillers, #General

BOOK: The Andalucian Friend
12.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Then I’m sure we’ll find time to have dinner.”

“More than likely. And I’m sure we can reach agreement on the purpose of my visit.”

Their eyes lingered on each other’s. Alfonse’s tone changed.

“Don Ignacio is worried,” he said in a low voice. “He’s wondering why you’ve stopped placing orders. We understand that your supplies in Paraguay must be exhausted by now, but he hasn’t heard from you or your father for a long time. We want to know that everything’s under control … we want to know what’s happening, and naturally to reassure ourselves that you are all well and not suffering any anxieties.”

Hector took out a cigarillo.

“We’ve had some problems with our supply line.”

Alfonse waited while Hector inhaled the tobacco smoke.

“It was hijacked.”

“By whom?”

“Germans …”

Alfonse looked at Hector.

“Really?”

Hector blew the smoke out.

“It’s a complicated story, we’ve just regained control but we’re going to let the route lie low for a while until things have been sorted out.”

“How long?”

“Don’t know.”

Alfonse nodded.

“Don Ignacio will be happy to hear that all is well with you … but, now that I have reassured myself that you are all well … well, let me put it like this: Don Ignacio believes that there is an agreement. Under the terms of this agreement, we supply you with vitamins and the transport of these to Ciudad del Este. It’s a rolling process. Now for some reason it has stopped. Don Ignacio doesn’t want to go so far as to describe it as breach of contract, but … Well, you understand.”

Hector stretched.

“I don’t see it as a firm agreement. We didn’t agree on any specific time scale … We agreed on a price. Don Ignacio has always received his money from us, hasn’t he?”

“And he is grateful for that, very grateful.”

“And we are grateful that it is so straightforward doing business with you,” Hector said.

Alfonse was well dressed and polite. He was good-looking, he had the South American thick dark hair and sharp features, and his prominent chin and cheekbones lent him an appealing air of toughness. In all likelihood, women found him attractive. He made a laid-back impression in spite of his almost permanent smile. But behind that Hector could see madness. He could see madness in someone from a mile away. He had seen it the moment Alfonse walked through the door. He had seen it in Don Ignacio Ramirez the first time he met him a decade before. He liked that quality in others; it made him feel a sort of empathy for them, a kinship. Hector decided he liked Alfonse.

“Then we have a problem,” Alfonse said.

Hector shrugged his shoulders.

“I don’t know that it’s a problem, see it as a pause.”

“That word doesn’t exist in our vocabulary. Don Ignacio is counting on your money, in return for his services. If you want to take a pause, as you put it, that doesn’t affect the terms of our agreement.”

“But we have no such agreement, my dear Alfonse.”

“Don Ignacio considers that we do, and when he considers something to be the case, it usually is. …”

Hector thought for a moment.

“Can I offer you anything?”

Alfonse shook his head.

“What problems do you have, are they anything we can help you with? These Germans, perhaps we could help, if they are causing problems?”

Hector considered the offer, knowing that the Colombians’ help would be costly in the long run.

“No, we can manage, it’s a small problem.”

“Tell me …”

Hector smoked his cigarillo.

“For reasons that we don’t know they stepped in and took over the whole operation, bribing and presumably threatening our associates. Then we went in and took everything back, but things got a little heated. The captain of the ship we have been using wants to lie low for a while.”

Alfonse weighed this up for a moment.

“In that case there are two options,” he said.

Hector waited.

“Either you pay — we replenish your stores in Paraguay and you move it onto the market before the next delivery from us.”

“Or?”

“Or else we contact your German friends. They seem to be more interested in doing business than you.”

Hector and Alfonse sized each other up. Hector sighed, smiling at the fact that he had fallen into the trap so easily.

“Let’s carry on as usual,” Hector said. “You send new supplies, I’ll send the money, just give me a bit of time.”

Alfonse made a gesture of gratitude.

“So, how are you going to spend your time with your fellow countrymen in Stockholm? Do you need any tips?” Hector asked.

“No, they’ve already booked a table, we’re going out to eat somewhere.”

He looked at his watch.

“Then we’re going dancing at a club, the name of which I can’t remember. Would you care to join us?”

“Thanks, but I shall be detained elsewhere.”

“So we’ll be able to conclude our business before I fly home?”

“Whenever suits you.”

Alfonse stared at Hector for a moment.

“You seem to be a good man, Hector Guzman.”

“As do you, Alfonse Ramirez.”

Alfonse left Hector’s
office, stepped out onto the street, and turned right. Hasse Berglund let the stylish Colombian get a little way ahead before standing up, folding the newspaper he had just been looking through, and following him.

 

Gunilla’s cell phone buzzed in her pocket.
She didn’t recognize the number on the screen.

“Yes?”

“Is that Gunilla Strandberg?”

“Who’s this?”

“My name’s Sara Jonsson. I’d like to meet you.”

“Do we know each other?”

“Not really. My ex-boyfriend works for you.”

“Oh?”

“Lars Vinge.”

The penny dropped.
Sara Jonsson
 … Gunilla knew she was some sort of freelance journalist. Lars had mentioned her in his interview. Gunilla had checked her out: Sara Jonsson, freelance journalist, mainly cultural stories, seldom published anything.

“Of course, was it anything in particular?”

“Yes.”

“And what’s that, then?”

“I want to meet you for a talk.”

Gunilla considered her tone of voice. She sounded tense and nervous. And was trying to hide it behind a rather indecisive decisiveness.

“Where would you like to meet, Sara?”

“We can meet on Djurgården, by Djurgårdsbrunn.”

“OK … When?”

“In an hour.”

“So soon?”

“Yes.”

“See you then.”

Gunilla smiled as she ended the call, but the smile faded as quickly as it had come.

Erik and Gunilla
parked in front of the Värdshuset restaurant. Sara Jonsson was waiting outside. She was wearing a cheap, washed-out blouse from some mass-market clothing chain, dark sunglasses, and a skirt that stopped at her knees. She had forgotten to shave her legs and her unbrushed hair was pulled into an untidy knot on her head.

Sara’s hand was cold and clammy when they shook hands. Her anxiety was clearly visible — her sunglasses only provided partial protection.

“Well, Sara, shall we go in and sit down?” Gunilla asked.

“No. I’d rather we walked.”

“Why not, it’s lovely weather.”

They started to walk toward the little bridge over the canal.

“How long have you and Lars lived together?”

“We’re not living together anymore.”

“I’m sorry to hear that.”

Sara was off somewhere else. Gunilla and Erik could see it, and they exchanged a quick glance.

“I don’t know where to start,” she said once they had crossed the footbridge.

Gunilla waited patiently.

“Lars has changed.”

“In what way?”

“I don’t know, and it doesn’t really matter, but because of that I started looking for answers.”

Sara was still nervous.

“He still works for you, doesn’t he?”

Gunilla nodded.

“Then you know he’s been away a lot, working nights, sleeping during the day … We lost touch with each other.”

“And you’d like me to alter his roster … ?”

Sara shook her head.

“This isn’t about that, like I said, we’re not living together now. …”

There was a note of hurt in her voice.

“Why not, if you don’t mind me asking?”

Sara stopped and turned to look at Gunilla, taking off her sunglasses. Gunilla looked at her eye.

“What happened?”

“What do you think?”

Gunilla inspected her black eye.

“Lars?”

Sara didn’t answer, put the sunglasses back on, and kept on walking.

“I started looking through his things, his private things. Trying to find an explanation for why he’d changed.”

Gunilla listened.

“The more I looked, the more I realized that he was doing something outside … how can I put it? Outside his actual remit.”

“How do you mean?”

“I mean that I’ve got an idea of what’s going on.”

“Oh, so what’s going on?”

Sara was walking with her eyes on the ground, then looked up.

“I’m a journalist.”

“Yes, I know.”

“As a journalist I have a responsibility to report abuses of power.”

Gunilla raised one eyebrow.

“Goodness, that sounds very noble.”

Sara took a deep breath.

“I know what you’re doing. You’re bugging people, threatening them, stalking them.”

“Now, I’m not altogether sure I know what you mean,” Gunilla said.

“I mean Sophie, I mean Hector.”

Sara had no idea how everything fitted together. She only had the names, she only had the hazy information that she’d gotten from listening to the computer files. An awareness that some sort of bugging was going on, as well as a bit of information about Gunilla’s previous cases that she’d gotten from police records — but she knew no more than that. But she wasn’t about to let Gunilla know that. This was her scoop, this was going to lift her out of the relentless dullness of the culture pages to something better. She was going to be an investigative reporter, a person on the side of justice, exposing abuses of power to ordinary citizens. She felt more at home there, it was more
her,
it was more Sara Jonsson.

Gunilla managed to conceal her surprise.

“I can tell you that we’re investigating a number of different cases, some of which are at a highly confidential stage of investigation, and any attempt to leak information would be a criminal offense. If you want information, you’ll get it, but in the fullness of time, not when it could jeopardize our investigations and the officers working on them.”

Sara pulled out her next trump card.

“Albert. The witnesses, the police. Rape. He’s fifteen years old!”

Gunilla was staring at her. Sara examined her face for every sign of a reaction. Had she guessed right? Maybe.

“What did you say?”

“You heard what I said.”

Erik tried to rescue the situation.

“We’re in the middle of a case. We’re working under the strictest confidentiality. Certain aspects of this investigation are highly sensitive. Whatever you’ve seen or heard, you need to keep it to yourself until we give you the all-clear to publish anything,” he said.

Sara kept calm. She had a feeling that she’d hit the right spot, and looked intently into Gunilla’s eyes.

“Bugging, illegal surveillance, Sophie … Where exactly are you going with this?”

Other books

Wicked Neighbor by Sam Crescent
The Path to James by Radford, Jane
The Travelers: Book Two by Tate, Sennah
The Forgetting Machine by Pete Hautman
Marisa Chenery by Warrior's Surrender
Absent Friends by S. J. Rozan
Braving the Elements by K. F. Breene
Garden of the Moongate by Donna Vitek
Redeeming Gabriel by Elizabeth White