The Game Trilogy (57 page)

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Authors: Anders de la Motte

BOOK: The Game Trilogy
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He had a fleeting sense that someone was watching him.

He looked anxiously around the carriage, but apart from the man with headphones in front of him, the train was empty.

Nothing to worry about.

He shut his eyes, took a deep breath through his nose, then let the air out slowly through his mouth. The whirlwind of thoughts in his head was gradually slowing down.

Anna, Vincent, Philip, Monika, Rilke and all the others. And, finally, him. What a fucking story …

The train stopped at AGA, but no passengers got on as far as he could tell.

His cover had held up to the evening after Anna’s funeral, so everything he had found out up to that point had to be true. Then something had happened. Some external event which had changed the game. Stoffe. It couldn’t really be anyone else. Now that he’d had time to calm down a bit, the idea that Rilke had blown his cover, or that he’d slipped up somehow, no longer seemed terribly likely.

No, Stoffe was the only new factor that had been added
to the equation, the only difference from the earlier scenario. With the possible exception of his sister … But that thought worried him more than he was prepared to admit.

‘Good evening, Henrik!’ a soft voice suddenly said behind his shoulder, and HP froze to ice.

Philip Argos.

‘Peter, a phantom blogger? You’re joking …’

Pierre burst into chuckling laughter which under normal circumstances was probably very contagious. But she definitely wasn’t in the mood for laughing. And Gladh didn’t seem as amused as his partner.

‘That’s actually true, at most I can send emails and check the news websites.’

‘But …’ she said. ‘Tobbe said that …’

She paused, trying to think of a way in.

‘Okay, I think I’m starting to get it now. So, Tobbe Lundh put you onto me …?’

He looked at Pierre, who stopped laughing at once.

‘Okay, it’s like this, Normén,’ Gladh sighed. ‘I’ve always kept quiet about my sexuality. The force might have got a lot better officially, but if you’re in the rapid response unit and compete in the TCA, it doesn’t really fit the image if you also happen to be …’

‘A poof!’ Pierre said, quick as a flash. ‘Peter and I don’t entirely agree on this, but even if I think he’s wrong, I respect his decision …’

Gladh gave Pierre a grateful look.

‘Up until a couple of months ago everything worked pretty well,’ he continued. ‘A number of other officers must have known, or at least suspected, but no-one really seemed bothered.’

‘But then something happened …?’ Rebecca was still
trying to sort out her thoughts, and added, ‘Something to do with Tobbe Lundh?’

Gladh nodded.

‘He bumped into me and Pierre at a private party. His daughter was working as a waitress, and, being a bit of an overprotective dad, he picked her up just before the end …’

‘A gay party,’ Pierre said. ‘A perfectly ordinary party, no drag or feather boas, no Eurovision theme, but it was still pretty obvious. You can imagine the rest …’

She could. Tobbe was rabidly homophobic, which was just one of the many characteristics which had really started to annoy her once the physical attraction had begun to wear off.

‘So he started spreading shit about you …?’

‘Well,’ Gladh muttered, ‘he’s probably a bit too smart for that, I mean, he is in charge, and we did used to be mates. Some of the shit would have landed on him if he’d started spreading it, so he steered clear of that … But he treated me differently at work, which pretty much amounted to the same thing. In a close-knit group like ours, everyone notices at once if there’s something wrong, and all of a sudden he was taking any chance he could to get me out of the van. Keeping me at arm’s length, sending me on secondment to other units that were short-staffed. It didn’t take long for the rest of them to join in. I got the hint and immediately applied for a transfer, before the gossip had time to really build up. For the past three weeks I’ve been working with the Youth Unit out in Roslagen.’

‘And your uncle, Sixten …?’

She had pretty much worked out the answer for herself. Those comments about the lack of morals in the force had suddenly taken on a whole new meaning.

‘Uncle Sixten? He’s as homophobic as Tobbe Lundh, if not worse. We haven’t spoken for years … What’s he got to do with anything?’

His first instinct was to run, run for his life. But as he attempted to stand up he felt a heavy arm on his shoulders.

‘Take it easy now, lad,’ Elroy muttered in his ear as he pushed him back down onto his seat.

‘You’ve certainly been busy tonight, Henrik.’

Philip sat down opposite him. Their knees were so close they were almost touching.

‘So, what exciting stories did my former sister-in-law have to tell you? Let me guess! I tormented her little sister, forced her out of her own company, and now I’m planning to sell the whole lot to the devil. Right so far?’

HP nodded mutely. All of a sudden he felt nauseous. He was sure he hadn’t been followed. He’d even left the house by the terrace door, cutting through the hedge into the woods.

So how the hell had they found him?

Someone must have blabbed.

But who?

He glanced quickly towards the front of the carriage. The man with the headphones was still there. As long as there was an outsider in the carriage with them, they probably wouldn’t dare to harm him.

At least he hoped not …

Philip smiled amiably.

‘Our last meeting was rather unfortunate, Henrik, and I take full responsibility for that.’

He felt in his coat pocket and HP stiffened.

‘Throat pastille?’

Philip held out a little red box and for some reason HP obediently took one.

‘Makes people talk
,’ Philip said with a chuckle, mimicking the advert. HP heard Elroy join in behind his neck. He couldn’t help grinning nervously. His stomach lurched again and he swallowed a couple of times to get it under control.

‘As you might have noticed, my sister-in-law is a rather unusual person,’ Philip went on. ‘Monika’s focus is more on the supernatural plane, which means that she sometimes has difficulty accepting reality the way that it actually is. Anna’s tragic death seems to have done nothing to help that …’

He pulled a sad face.

‘As in every broken relationship, the fault is shared by both parties … But as far as ArgosEye is concerned, everything I have done has been strictly by the book, I can assure you of that. Well, enough of that …’

He flashed a glance at Elroy, then looked over his shoulder towards the man a few seats further forward.

‘I thought we might continue our discussion in a more private setting, Henrik. We’re still very interested in who sent you to us, and what instructions you were given. Besides, we have plenty more to discuss …’ He held his hand up to stop HP from saying anything.

‘No, no. No need to say anything now. We’ll deal with all that when we can speak without fear of being disturbed … Sophie’s waiting with the car in Ropsten, so my advice to you would be to take the chance to consider which direction you would like our impending conversation to take.’

‘Easy or difficult, little Henke, you decide,’ Elroy whispered in his ear. ‘It’s all the same to me!’

The train made one last stop before the bridge, but before HP had a chance to think about trying to run, Elroy had once again laid a hand on his shoulder. The young man with the headphones stood up and walked past them. HP tried to catch his eye, but the guy wasn’t even looking in his direction. Then the train creaked into motion again and started the long sweep up towards the Lidingö bridge.

Philip took his mobile from the holster on his belt and put it to his ear.

‘Hello?’

HP hadn’t even heard it ringing.

‘Yes, hello. The situation’s under control … We go ahead as planned.’

HP looked out of the window. They were up on the bridge now, dark water far below on either side of them.

‘Good,’ Philip said into the phone. ‘You have permission to proceed. We’ll start phase three at midnight …’

Maybe he could make it. If he leaped to his feet, jumped on Philip and clambered over him …

No, even in the unlikely event of him getting his battered body away from both Philip and Elroy, he had no inclination at all to dive twenty metres into ice-cold water. It was a long way to shore, far too far, and there was no way he would survive a swim like that, certainly not in his current state …

Philip seemed to have ended the call. He sat with the phone in his hand for several seconds and then pressed a button on one side of it before raising it to his mouth.

‘Sophie?’ He released the button.

‘I’m here!’ her voice crackled over the little speaker.

‘We’re on the bridge, will be there in a couple of minutes. You can drive up now, over.’

‘Understood!’

The other end of the bridge was getting closer and closer, and HP felt the train start to slow down.

‘Well, Henrik, we seemed to have reached the end of the line …’

Her head was still spinning as she walked slowly back towards where she had left the hire-car.

Peter Gladh wasn’t MayBey, unless he and his partner were extremely good actors. But she doubted that. They had both seemed genuine, and that whole story about Tobbe seemed to come from the heart.

Tobbe …

It was quite obvious that he’d tried to mislead her.

He probably didn’t have a clue about MayBey, and had just given her Gladh’s name to get her out of the tennis hall before little Jonathan could pick up the vibes.

But she couldn’t quite shake the feeling that Tobbe was involved, one way or another.

Not just because MayBey seemed to know about them using Henke’s flat, or that several of the events that had been described matched the sort of thing Tobbe had told her. The whole situation had also escalated at about the same time that she finished with him. But Tobbe wasn’t MayBey, she’d worked that out early on. He simply wasn’t good enough at expressing himself, not by a long shot. Besides, he didn’t have the IT skills needed to keep MayBey anonymous.

But there was still something about the tone of the posts. It seemed so personal. As if MayBey knew exactly who she was, and genuinely didn’t like – hated her, even.

He was terrified.

They had been watching him somehow, letting him off the leash for a while to see what he’d do. Anyone smarter
than him would obviously have taken off. Packed his bag and got the hell out of Dodge, making them believe he was out of the Game and no longer any threat to them.

But not him. Oh, no … Instead he had merely demonstrated that he had no intention of giving up. That he was still a threat. The question he had asked himself in the flat was still waiting for an answer. Had they managed to see past Henrik Pettersson and realize that he was also Player 128? Did they even know that it was him that Vincent had framed for Anna’s death?

The train pulled into the platform with a good deal of creaking, jolted a few times and then stopped abruptly.

‘Time to get out,’ Elroy muttered in HP’s ear as he grabbed him by the arm. ‘And just so you know …’

With his free hand he nudged his jacket open to reveal a black metallic object at his hip.

‘Model 88, 9 millimetre, 19 bullets in the cartridge,’ he grinned.

HP gulped a couple of times, then nodded slowly. His pulse was pounding in his ears.

They walked along the almost empty platform towards the ticket hall. Philip walked a couple of steps ahead, followed by HP, with Elroy glued to his left arm. He already knew where they were heading.

The same steep flight of steps down to street level, the one he had tried to run up just a few hours before. They were going to drive him out to some secluded place, a gravel pit or some forest clearing. This time he was far more scared. Just like Anna, he was a threat, a risk factor that needed to be dealt with. If he got inside that car he wouldn’t return until some Thai berry-picker found his fox-gnawed skull in thirty or forty years time, he was sure of that.

He had to do something!

As she headed out across the Lidingö bridge she tried to sort out the radio. A bit of music, that was what she needed. Something to drown out the maelstrom in her head.

But instead she got the news.

‘The Security Police are still declining to comment on the failed bomb attack in the centre of Stockholm. The 28-year-old perpetrator had no previous convictions, and was not known to the police, but the message the man left on Facebook suggests that his actions are linked to international terrorism …’

She changed channel, zapped about for a bit until she found a Babyshambles song she liked.

In the morning there’s a buzz of flies
Between the pillows and the skies
That beg into your eyes
Through the looking glass
And between your thighs
And it’s written no small surprise
Let’s straight down the rabbit hole
There we go …

Only ten metres left before the ticket hall, then a few more to the flight of steps. Elroy’s hand was holding him like a vice and he could feel the man’s eyes boring into the back of his neck.

But he had had an idea. He slowed down slightly, just enough for his former boss to get another metre or so ahead of them.

The sliding doors opened to let Philip into the hall, and at that moment HP stopped.

‘Don’t stop …’ Elroy muttered.

HP obeyed and took a step forward, so that they were in the middle of the doorway. Elroy squeezed his arm tighter and muttered irritably.

‘Come on, come on, come on!!!’

The doors closed without warning.

The left-hand door hit Elroy on the arm, forcing him instinctively to take half a step back. At the same time HP took a quick step into the hall and twisted sideways. The right-hand door missed his back and a fraction of a second later crashed onto Elroy’s already caught arm.

He heard Elroy yelp, felt his grip loosen and jerked his body quickly.

He was free!

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