Read The Dead of Summer Online
Authors: Mari Jungstedt
‘It’s at least worth looking into,’ said Knutas. ‘I’ll find out when the next shipment is due.’
WHEN JOHAN WOKE up, he didn’t know at first where he was. He peered at the ceiling, which had a yellowish tint he didn’t recognize. Cautiously, he turned over; the bed was much softer and wider than his own. For a split second he thought he was lying in Emma’s bedroom out in Roma. He felt a rush of euphoric joy shoot through his body until he realized that he hadn’t spent the previous evening with her and the sounds outside the window were much louder and more diverse than in the peaceful residential neighbourhood in Roma. Then images from the previous day came flooding in. Oh shit. They’d gone to Donner’s Bar and from there to the outdoor tavern Vinäger, where they’d run into a bunch of people from the local radio station. They’d partied all night and got very drunk. The night had ended outside the Saint Karin church ruins, with him and Madeleine getting together instead of going their separate ways. After that he’d accompanied her back to the hotel. No, he thought.
No, no
.
He turned on to his side and saw the cloud of brown hair sticking out of the covers.
Shit. They’d had sex
. He’d slept with his work colleague. How low could he go? He wanted to forget the whole thing. As quietly as possible, he crept out of bed and went into the bathroom. He turned on the tap, but only halfway so the splash of the water wouldn’t be audible. He looked at himself in the mirror: his face was a sallow colour, his eyes were bloodshot, with a weary and slightly melancholy expression. Who was this man he was looking at? He discovered several new wrinkles near his eyes and on his throat. A new furrow that hadn’t been there before. His face had changed, aged. He had a bad taste in his mouth. The image of Emma’s face appeared before him. How could he have been so stupid? He felt so sleazy, and the contempt he felt for himself was nauseating. He’d wait until he got home to take a shower. He had to leave, get out of here. He slipped back into the room and grabbed his clothes, terrified that Madeleine would wake up.
Without a sound he closed the door behind him.
THE NEXT COAL transport wasn’t due to arrive in Slite harbour until the following week. Knutas set the matter aside for the time being and decided instead to pay a visit to Peter Bovide’s parents, even though they’d already been interviewed. He wanted to meet them in person.
It was great to leave police headquarters and set off alone. He chose to drive his own vehicle, an old Mercedes with no air conditioning, so he was feeling sweaty by the time he made it out to Slite. Katarina and Stig Bovide lived in a ground-floor flat in the middle of town. The blinds were closed, and from the outside it looked like no one was home.
Knutas rang the bell and then had to wait for a while.
Eventually the door opened, and Knutas was taken aback when he saw the expression of the elderly woman standing there. Even though Katarina Bovide’s face was both freckled and tanned, and in her long, bright dress she actually reminded him a bit of Lina, her grief and despair were painfully evident.
She merely nodded to him and led the way to the living room, which under normal circumstances was no doubt quite pleasant, but right now it was only dimly lit. The curtains had been drawn so that very little light seeped in from the windows. It was as if Peter Bovide’s parents wanted to close out the lovely summer day. As if they couldn’t bear the beauty.
The next instant a man appeared in the doorway. He looked just as haggard and empty of all life as his wife. Stig Bovide was tall and thin with sparse light-brown hair and blue eyes. He wore a light-coloured shirt tucked into a pair of jeans. On his feet he had a pair of Birkenstock slippers. A heavy sense of grief hung in the air, and the temperature bordered on intolerably hot. Knutas was thirsty, but neither of them offered him anything to drink. He decided to try toughing it out.
‘First, please accept my condolences, of course,’ he began. ‘As you may have heard, I’m in charge of the investigation. I was out of town, but I came back yesterday and I’ve taken over from Karin Jacobsson. She’s my deputy superintendent.’
He cleared his throat, wondering why he was wasting words on such things.
‘All right then. I have a few questions that I’d like to ask you.’
‘We’ve already talked to the police,’ said Stig Bovide. ‘With somebody by the name of Kihlgård. He was here yesterday.’
‘Yes, I know that. But since I’ve now taken over responsibility, I wanted to meet you in person. I hope you don’t mind. Naturally we’re doing everything in our power to catch the person who did this, and so it’s important that I find out as much as possible about Peter. Could you start by telling me how you think he was doing?’
‘How he was doing?’ repeated Katarina Bovide tonelessly.
‘I mean in general terms, both in his work and in his marriage.’
‘Hmm, I don’t really know,’ Katarina said hesitantly. ‘I suppose he was doing fine. He and Vendela had their problems, just like everybody else, but no worse than other parents of young children. What do you think?’
She turned to her husband. He didn’t answer, just nodded.
‘They had their hands full with William and Mikaela, of course, but we helped out as much as we could. Right now the children are staying with Peter’s sister in Othem. We thought it was best at the moment, since she and her family live out in the country and keep animals. And the children will be able to play with their cousins, so that will give them something else to think about. But we go out every day to help out. Until Vendela is feeling better.’
‘So you think Peter was happy?’
‘I don’t know if “happy” is the right word,’ said Stig Bovide. ‘He had his epilepsy to contend with, and that could be very difficult.’
Knutas frowned. ‘You mean he suffered from epileptic fits?’
‘Yes.’
‘How often?’
‘Not very often, maybe a few times a year. It was worse if he was under stress or feeling depressed.’
‘Depressed? Was that common for him?’
Both parents fidgeted uneasily.
‘Occasionally he felt a bit down,’ said Katarina reluctantly. ‘Whenever that happened, it was hard to talk to him. He would withdraw into himself.’
‘He felt a great need to have time alone,’ her husband added. ‘I think that’s why he loved running so much. He could be gone for hours. I know Vendela wasn’t always very happy about that.’
‘She thought he spent too much time away from her and the children,’ explained Katarina. ‘And that’s not so strange, since he worked so much,’ she said with a sigh.
‘How often did he get depressed?’
‘Maybe a couple of times a year.’
‘Was he seeing a psychologist? Or was he on any kind of medication?’
‘Yes, he took anti-depressants,’ said Katarina.
Her husband looked at her in surprise.
‘He did?’
‘Yes, dear.’ She put her hand on his arm. ‘I didn’t want to worry you. I’m sorry.’
Stig Bovide kept his eyes fixed on his wife. He pressed his lips together but didn’t say a word. Knutas changed the subject.
‘We know that recently Peter felt as if he was being watched. Do you know anything about that?’
‘No, we’ve really never heard anything about that.’ Stig Bovide’s voice had taken on a belligerent tone. ‘Why did he think he was being watched? And who actually told you that?’
‘I’m afraid I can’t discuss that at the moment. Are you sure that Peter never mentioned anything about this?’
Stig Bovide leaped from his chair. ‘Can’t discuss it?’ he shouted. ‘What on earth do you mean by that? This is our son we’re talking about. Our son who was murdered! We’re his parents. Don’t you understand that?’ He pointed first at himself and then at his wife. ‘We demand that you tell us everything about the investigation. And I mean everything!’
This sudden outburst caught Knutas off guard. Stig Bovide was now leaning over him, his face contorted with anger.
‘You come barging into our home two days after our son was found murdered, asking a lot of questions that you demand we answer. And then you refuse to tell us what our boy was mixed up in. Are you out of your mind? Get out of here! Get out!’
He grabbed hold of Knutas’s shirt collar.
‘Calm down!’ cried Katarina. ‘What do you think you’re doing?’
She managed to pull her husband away from Knutas, who quickly got to his feet.
‘I think we should continue this interview at some other time,’ muttered Knutas. ‘I’m sorry if I’ve upset you, but we’re not at liberty to discuss the investigation. Not even with family members. I’ll be in touch. Goodbye. And again, please accept my condolences.’
Katarina Bovide was still holding on to her husband’s arm as he glared fiercely at Knutas without saying another word. He was breathing hard and seemed to be having trouble regaining his composure. Knutas fled the stuffy room, grabbed his jacket and dashed out.
All the grief and despair in the flat seemed to follow him.
JOHAN WAS HAVING a hard time concentrating at work. Pia asked him what was wrong, but he didn’t feel like telling her what had happened. Not at the moment. Although she probably had her suspicions. Last night he and Madeleine had lingered on the street after the restaurant had closed, and she hadn’t gone with her colleague, Peter, back to their hotel.
Who the fuck cares
, he thought.
Let Pia think whatever she likes
. He was neither married nor engaged. Emma had broken off their engagement, and since they hadn’t been together in months, there was really no reason for him to feel guilty. She had pushed him away, yet he still felt miserable and didn’t understand how he could have behaved so despicably. He needed to talk to Maddie as soon as she arrived at the office.
Grenfors, editor-in-chief of Regional News, rang from Stockholm. During the summertime he had to step in and actually get involved in the editing, which made no one happy, least of all himself. He discussed with Johan what had to be done for the day’s report.
‘I have a feeling that the police have no idea where to look,’ said Johan. ‘The murder seems to be a total mystery. On the surface at least, Peter Bovide appears to be a completely ordinary conscientious family man who loved his wife, worked hard and never drew much attention to himself.’
‘Have you talked to his parents?’
‘No,’ said Johan sharply, annoyed by the question. ‘Do you really think that’s acceptable? It’s only been two days since their son was found murdered. They must still be in a state of shock.’
‘Give it a try, anyway,’ Grenfors insisted. ‘There’s been nothing from them in the papers or on TV. We could be the first, and the national news—’
‘Enough with the national news,’ Johan interrupted him, tired of constantly sucking up to the national news big shots. ‘If they want something from the parents, let them do the interview. Maddie can pester the parents – I won’t.’
He’d hardly finished his sentence before Madeleine came into the office. She cast an inquisitive glance at Johan.
‘I’ll ring you later,’ he snapped and put down the phone.
‘Hi,’ said Maddie. Her expression was both amused and not amused.
‘Hi.’
For several seconds Johan considered what he should do, before deciding it was best to take the bull by the horns. He got up from his chair and was just about to ask Madeleine to step outside with him to have a talk when the phone rang. Pia picked it up. Judging by her expression and tone of voice, they could tell that she was listening to something important. She motioned for Johan to toss her a pen. Quickly she wrote down what the person on the other end of the line was saying. Pia looked so tense that Johan completely forgot what he’d been planning to say to Maddie. When the conversation was over, Pia slowly put down the phone.
‘Hold on a minute. This tip might be a good one.’
Johan sat back down.
‘That was a girl I know, Anna, who works at Sofia’s Nails and Beauty here in town. A beauty salon. Anna is a manicurist, and she knows Vendela Bovide, in fact they’re best friends. Vendela works in the same place, on Saturdays.’
‘And?’
‘Anna said that the two of them went out for dinner together just a week before the murder. Sort of a little farewell dinner before the summer holiday, because Vendela was going to be gone for a month.’
‘OK,’ said Johan impatiently.
He cast a quick glance at Madeleine, who had dropped on to the chair next to him.
‘Vendela was nervous during the dinner because Peter had received some sort of threat. And now Anna doesn’t know what to do. She’s afraid Vendela might be in danger too.’
‘She should start by talking to us,’ suggested Johan.
‘That’s just what I was thinking.’
WITH VENDELA BOVIDE’S permission, the police had searched the family home and the company office, but they hadn’t found anything of interest. The company computers had been confiscated and were being examined. On Wednesday afternoon, Wittberg and Jacobsson went to see the widow and interview her more extensively. She was now home from hospital, and they’d made an appointment to see her at three o’clock.
The Bovides’ house was located north of town, on the road to Othem. A red-painted wooden house with white trim and a neatly raked gravel courtyard in front. On the lawn stood a blue trampoline; a short distance away was a playhouse, and a striped hammock hung between two apple trees. A low wooden fence surrounded the property. It looked freshly painted and the lawn had been recently mown.
They rang the bell and listened to the hollow clang.
They waited a while, then rang the bell again.
Jacobsson tried the door. It wasn’t locked. She pushed it open and cautiously called out, ‘Hello.’ No answer.
They stepped into the front hall, which was hot and stuffy.
‘I’ll check upstairs, while you have a look around down here,’ said Wittberg and then headed for the stairs.
The kitchen was off to the left; Jacobsson peeked inside. Light-coloured shutters on the windows, curtains with a floral pattern and windowsills crowded with flower pots. The flowers were wilting, as if they hadn’t been watered in a while. Everything was shiny clean, but the house felt deserted. She went into the living room. The floor creaked under her feet. The room was quite large, with a hardwood floor, leather sofa, two armchairs, a TV and a bookshelf. Photographs of the two children adorned the walls.