Read The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo Trilogy Bundle Online
Authors: Stieg Larsson
“There's nothing whatsoever to suggest a crime, or that Björck was not alone at the time,” Holmberg said.
“The lamp?”
“The ceiling lamp has fingerprints from the owner of the cabinâwho put it up two years agoâand Björck himself. Which indicates that he took the lamp down.”
“Where did the rope come from?”
“From the flagpole in the garden. Someone cut off about six feet of rope. There was a Mora sheath knife on the windowsill outside the back door. According to the owner of the house, it's his knife. He normally keeps it in a tool drawer under the kitchen counter. Björck's prints were on the handle and the blade, as well as on the tool drawer.”
“Hmm,” Modig said.
“What sort of knots?” Andersson said.
“Granny knots. Even the noose was just a loop. It's probably the only thing that's a bit odd. Björck was a sailor; he would have known how to tie proper knots. But who knows how much attention a person contemplating suicide would pay to the knots on his own noose?”
“What about drugs?”
“According to the toxicology report, Björck had traces of a strong painkiller in his blood. That medication had been prescribed for him. He also had traces of alcohol, but the percentage was negligible. In other words, he was more or less sober.”
“The pathologist wrote that there were graze wounds.”
“A graze over an inch long on the outside of his left knee. A scratch, really. I've thought about it, but it could have come about in a dozen different ways â¦Â for instance, if he walked into the corner of a table or a bench.”
Modig held up a photograph of Björck's distorted face. The noose had cut so deeply into his flesh that the rope itself was hidden in the skin of his neck. The face was grotesquely swollen.
“He hung there for something like twenty-four hours before the hook gave way. All the blood was either in his headâthe noose having prevented it from running into his bodyâor in the lower extremities. When the hook came out and his body fell, his chest hit the coffee table, causing deep bruising there. But this injury happened long after the time of death.”
“Hell of a way to die,” said Andersson.
“I don't know. The noose was so thin that it pinched deep and stopped the blood flow. He was probably unconscious within a few seconds, and dead in one or two minutes.”
Bublanski closed the preliminary report with distaste. He did not like this. He absolutely did not like the fact that Zalachenko and Björck had, so far as they could tell, both died on the same day. But no amount of speculating could change the fact that the crime scene investigation offered no grain of support to the theory that a third party had helped Björck on his way.
“He was under a lot of pressure,” Bublanski said. “He knew that the
whole Zalachenko affair was in danger of being exposed and that he risked a prison sentence for sex-trade crimes, plus being hung out to dry in the media. I wonder which scared him more. He was sick, had been suffering chronic pain for a long time. â¦Â I don't know. I wish he had left a letter.”
“Many suicides don't.”
“I know. OK. We'll put Björck to one side for now. We have no choice.”
Berger could not bring herself to sit at Morander's desk right away, or to move his belongings aside. She arranged for Magnusson to talk to Morander's family so that the widow could come herself when it was convenient, or send someone to sort out his things.
Instead she had an area cleared off the central desk in the heart of the newsroom, and there she set up her laptop and took command. It was chaotic. But three hours after she had taken the helm of
SMP
in such appalling circumstances, the front page went to press. Magnusson had put together a four-column article about Morander's life and career. The page was designed around a black-bordered portrait, almost all of it above the fold, with his unfinished editorial to the left and a frieze of photographs along the bottom edge. The layout was not perfect, but it had a strong emotional impact.
Just before 6:00, as Berger was going through the headlines on page two and discussing the text with the head of copyediting, Borgsjö approached and touched her shoulder. She looked up.
“Could I have a word?”
They went together to the coffee machine in the cafeteria.
“I just wanted to say that I'm really very pleased with the way you took control today. I think you surprised us all.”
“I didn't have much choice. But I may stumble a bit before I really get going.”
“We understand that.”
“We?”
“I mean the staff and the board. The board especially. But after what happened today, I'm more than ever persuaded that you were the ideal choice. You came here in the nick of time, and you took charge in a very difficult situation.”
Berger almost blushed. But she had not done that since she was fourteen.
“Could I give you a piece of advice?”
“Of course.”
“I heard that you had a disagreement about a headline with Anders Holm.”
“We didn't agree on the angle in the article about the government's tax proposal. He inserted an opinion into the headline in the news section, which is supposed to be neutral. Opinions should be reserved for the editorial page. And while I'm on this topic â¦Â I'll be writing editorials from time to time, but as I told you, I'm not active in any political party, so we have to solve the problem of who's going to be in charge of the editorial section.”
“Magnusson can take over for the time being,” said Borgsjö.
Erika shrugged. “It makes no difference to me whom you appoint. But it should be somebody who clearly stands for the newspaper's views. That's where they should be aired, not in the news section.”
“Quite right. What I wanted to say was that you'll probably have to give Holm some concessions. He's worked at
SMP
a long time, and he's been news chief for fifteen years. He knows what he's doing. He can be surly sometimes, but he's irreplaceable.”
“I know. Morander told me. But when it comes to policy he's going to have to toe the line. I'm the one you hired to run the paper.”
Borgsjö thought for a moment and said: “We're going to have to solve these problems as they come up.”
Giannini was both tired and irritated on Wednesday evening as she boarded the X2000 at Göteborg Central Station. She felt as if she had been living on the X2000 for a month. She bought a coffee in the restaurant car, went to her seat, and opened the folder of notes from her last conversation with Salander. Who was also the reason why she was feeling tired and irritated.
She's hiding something. That little fool is not telling me the truth. And Micke is hiding something too. God knows what they're playing at
.
She also decided that since her brother and her client had not so far communicated with each other, the conspiracyâif it was oneâhad to be a tacit agreement that had developed naturally. She did not understand what it was about, but it had to be something that her brother considered important enough to conceal.
She was afraid that it was a moral issue, because that was one of his weaknesses. He was Salander's friend. She knew her brother. She knew that he was loyal to the point of foolhardiness once he had made someone a friend, even if the friend was impossible and obviously flawed. She also knew that he could accept any number of idiocies from his friends, but that
there was a boundary and it could not be overstepped. Where exactly this boundary was seemed to vary from one person to another, but she knew he had broken completely with people who had previously been close friends because they had done something that he regarded as beyond the pale. And he was inflexible. The break was forever.
Giannini understood what went on in her brother's head. But she had no idea what Salander was up to. Sometimes she thought that there was nothing going on in there at all.
She had gathered that Salander could be moody and withdrawn. Until she met her in person, Giannini had supposed it must be some phase, and that it was a question of gaining her trust. But after a month of conversationsâignoring the fact that the first two weeks had been wasted time because Salander was hardly able to speakâtheir communication was still distinctly one-sided.
Salander seemed at times to be in a deep depression and had not the slightest interest in dealing with her situation or her future. She simply did not grasp or did not care that the only way Giannini could provide her with an effective defence would be if she had access to all the facts. There was no way she was going to be able to work in the dark.
Salander was sulky, and often just silent. When she did say something, she took a long time to think, and she chose her words carefully. Often she did not reply at all, and sometimes she would answer a question that Giannini had asked several days earlier. During the police interviews, Salander had sat in utter silence, staring straight ahead. With rare exceptions, she had refused to say a single word to the police. The exceptions were on those occasions when Inspector Erlander had asked her what she knew about Niedermann. Then she looked up at him and answered every question in a perfectly matter-of-fact way. As soon as he changed the subject, she lost interest.
On principle, she knew, Salander never talked to the authorities. In this case, that was an advantage. Despite the fact that she kept urging her client to answer questions from the police, deep inside she was pleased with Salander's silence. The reason was simple. It was a consistent silence. It contained no lies that could entangle her, no contradictory reasoning that would look bad in court.
But she was astonished at how imperturbable Salander was. When they were alone she had asked her why she so provocatively refused to talk to the police.
“They'll twist what I say and use it against me.”
“But if you don't explain yourself, you risk being convicted anyway.”
“Then that's how it'll have to be. I didn't make all this mess. And if they want to convict me, it's not my problem.”
Salander had in the end described to her lawyer almost everything that had happened at Stallarholmen. All except for one thing. She would not explain how Magge Lundin had ended up with a bullet in his foot. No matter how much she asked and nagged, Salander would just stare at her and smile her crooked smile.
She had also told Giannini what had happened in Gosseberga. But she had not said anything about why she had confronted her father. Had she gone there expressly to murder himâas the prosecutor claimedâor was it to make him listen to reason?
When Giannini raised the subject of her former guardian, Nils Bjurman, Salander said only that she was not the one who shot him. That particular murder was no longer one of the charges against her. And when Giannini reached the very crux of the whole chain of events, the role of Dr. Teleborian in the psychiatric clinic in 1991, Salander lapsed into such inexhaustible silence that it seemed she might never utter a word again.
This is getting us nowhere
, Giannini decided.
If she won't trust me
,
we're going to lose the case
.
Salander sat on the edge of her bed, looking out the window. She could see the building on the other side of the parking lot. She had sat undisturbed and motionless for an hour, ever since Giannini had stormed out and slammed the door behind her. She had a headache again, but it was mild and distant. Yet she felt uncomfortable.
She was irritated with Giannini. From a practical point of view she could see why her lawyer kept going on and on about details from her past. Rationally, she understood it. Giannini needed to have all the facts. But Salander did not have the remotest wish to talk about her feelings or her actions. Her life was her own business. It was not her fault that her father had been a pathological sadist and murderer. It was not her fault that her brother was a murderer. And thank God nobody yet knew that he was her brother, which would otherwise no doubt also be held against her in the psychiatric evaluation that sooner or later would inevitably be conducted. She was not the one who had killed Svensson and Johansson. She was not responsible for appointing a guardian who turned out to be a pig and a rapist.
And yet it was
her
life that was going to be turned inside out. She would be forced to explain herself and to beg for forgiveness because she had defended herself.
She just wanted to be left in peace. When it came down to it, she was the one who would have to live with herself. She did not expect anyone to be her friend. Annika Fucking Giannini was most likely on her side, but it was the professional friendship of a professional person who was her lawyer. Kalle Fucking Blomkvist was out there somewhereâGiannini was for some reason reluctant to talk about her brother, and Salander never asked. She did not expect that he would be quite so interested now that the Svensson murder was solved and he had his story.
She wondered what Armansky thought of her after all that had happened.
She wondered how Holger Palmgren viewed the situation.
According to Giannini, both of them said they would be in her corner, but those were words. They could not do anything to solve her private problems.
She wondered how Miriam Wu felt about her.
She wondered what she thought of herself, and came to the realization that she felt mostly indifference towards her entire life.
She was interrupted when the Securitas guard put the key in the door to let in Dr. Jonasson.
“Good evening, Fröken Salander. And how are you feeling today?”
“OK,” she said.
He checked her chart and saw that she was free of her fever. She had gotten used to his visits, which came a couple of times a week. Of all the people who touched her and poked at her, he was the only one in whom she had a measure of trust. She never felt that he was giving her strange looks. He visited her room, chatted for a while, and examined her to check on her progress. He did not ask any questions about Niedermann or Zalachenko, or whether she was off her rocker or why the police kept her locked up. He seemed to be interested only in how her muscles were working, how the healing in her brain was progressing, and how she felt in general.