Read The Man Who Watched Women Online
Authors: Michael Hjorth
Veronika Fors tore up the contract in front of him and gave him the finger.
The situation probably was that bad.
Unfortunately.
âGuess who's the new governor of Lövhaga?'
Vanja settled comfortably in her chair and allowed her gaze to sweep over her three colleagues around the table in the Room. Billy smiled to himself. She really couldn't let it go. In the car on the way back to Stockholm she had made several references to the fact that they had come across Thomas Haraldsson again. As a prison governor. How was that possible? What were they thinking of? Bribes, total brain freeze or someone who was determined to finish off Lövhaga were the only explanations she could come up with to explain his appointment.
Billy had listened quietly. Haraldsson didn't particularly bother him, and he had been quite pleased to see him again. He might not be the sharpest knife in the drawer, but there was something appealing and slightly pitiful about the man from Västerås who struggled so hard. There was nothing wrong with his ambition, and with the right support he might make a good job of his new post. Billy hoped so. Quietly, to himself. He was fairly sure he was the only person in the room who felt that way. He looked at Ursula and Torkel, who were both shaking their heads in response to Vanja's question.
âI didn't even know they had someone new,' said Torkel, taking a sip of his fourth cup of coffee from the machine.
âThomas Haraldsson.' Vanja looked expectantly at her colleagues as she waited for the reaction. It came.
âThomas Haraldsson from VästerÃ¥s?' Ursula's expression was quizzical, as if she thought she must have misunderstood. Vanja nodded. âHow the hell did he end up there?' Ursula went on.
âI have no idea â it's a mystery.'
âHow is he?' Torkel asked quietly. He looked neither surprised nor annoyed, Vanja noticed. More concerned, in fact.
âHe looked very much at home.'
âI meant his shoulder.'
âHe said he could still feel it a little bit, but otherwise everything seemed fine,' said Billy.
âGood.' After all, Thomas Haraldsson had been shot while he was under Torkel's command, and Torkel felt slightly guilty because he hadn't been in touch with Kerstin Hanser and the VästerÃ¥s police to find out how he was. He had intended to follow up several times, but had never quite got around to it.
âSo what did he say about Hinde?' Torkel went on, reminding the team of the real reason for their meeting.
âHe's where he's supposed to be and he's behaving just as he always does, if we're to believe the staff at Lövhaga.'
âDid you see him?'
âWe put in an application for a visiting order. Apparently nobody is allowed to see him without first being approved.'
âAnd how long does that take?'
âThree to five days.'
âI'll see if I can speed things up.'
Vanja nodded her thanks. Someone was copying Edward Hinde, which meant he became a part of their investigation. She wanted to see him, if only so that she could eliminate him. Until then he was a loose end, and Vanja hated loose ends. Dismissing something because a connection seemed improbable â she just couldn't do it. It would have made her feel as if she wasn't doing her job, as if she wasn't doing her best. And that was something she had learned at home, from when she was a child. Something her father had said to her when she was worried about how she would cope with her first day at school. You didn't have to be the best, but you should always do your best. You couldn't do any more than that, but it would be foolish to do less. Twenty-five years later, those were still words she lived by.
âAnything else from Lövhaga?' Torkel wanted to know. Vanja turned to Billy, who produced four sets of stapled A4 sheets from the folder in front of him and handed them out.
âI've gone through the websites Hinde has visited over the last three months. Nothing worth mentioning. Lots of newspapers, both Swedish and foreign, and he follows a number of blogs; you can see them listed there. And he quite often joins various forums, mostly those discussing philosophy, psychology, other humanities.'
Ursula looked up from her print-out. âCan he join in the discussions?'
âNo, he's only allowed to read. His sole communication with the outside world is through letters. He has received three in the past six months. Two were from women who want to meet him, asking how they could visit him and inviting him to come and see them when, or if, he gets out.'
âSick,' Vanja interjected. Both Torkel and Ursula nodded in agreement.
âThe third letter might possibly be of some interest.' Billy turned to a new page in the print-out, and the others did the same. âIt's from a Carl Wahlström here in Stockholm. He writes that he has followed Hinde's activities with great interest, and would very much like to meet him personally in order to, and I quote, “gain a deeper insight into the decision process which led to four women losing their lives”. He's writing a dissertation on practical philosophy, but he seems pretty impressed by Hinde, if you ask me.'
âHave they met?' Ursula asked.
âNo. According to Lövhaga, Hinde didn't even reply to the letter.'
âCheck him out after the meeting anyway,' Torkel said. âAt least it's something.' He put down the papers and pushed his glasses up onto his forehead. âThe door-to-door enquiries in Tumba didn't turn up a thing. The Granlunds' friends and parents knew nothing about the couple feeling as if they were being watched, or threatened. The husband is completely out of the picture. He was in Germany, or in the air on his way home.'
A heavy silence descended on the group. With a few minor variations, this was the third time they had heard Torkel report that no one had seen anything at the scene of the crime, and that no one close to the victim was able to come up with even the slightest hint of a motive.
âSo that leaves forensics.' Torkel turned to Ursula.
âSperm and pubic hair. Again. I've sent samples to Linköping for analysis, but I think we can assume it's the same perpetrator. The preliminary autopsy report states that the carotid artery and the trachea were severed, which means that she choked before she could bleed to death. Again.' Ursula fell silent and spread her hands. There wasn't any more.
Torkel took over: âAs you are all aware, we haven't managed to find a link between the three women, so we have no idea who his next victim will be.'
Torkel's closing remark was received in painful silence. Nobody could dispute what he had said. It seemed highly improbable that the perpetrator would not strike again. Another woman would lose her life, and there was nothing they could do to prevent it. Vanja pushed back her chair and stood up.
âWe'll go and see Wahlström.'
Vanja and Billy had gone to look for Carl Wahlström in the philosophy department, but had been informed that he wasn't there. The university was virtually deserted at this time of year. Had they tried calling him? No, they hadn't, nor did they have any intention of doing so. Had they been to his apartment? Carl was working on his dissertation over the summer. They were given an address which they already had. Forskarbacken. Second floor. Student accommodation.
They could hear music coming from the apartment. Vanja took out her ID as she rang the bell, keeping her finger on the button for a long time. She couldn't decide if her hearing was particularly sensitive, or if the music was really loud.
Carl Wahlström opened the door with a cup of tea in his hand and looked enquiringly at his visitors. The music was really loud, Vanja decided as she and Billy showed their police IDs.
âPolice â Vanja Lithner and Billy Rosén. Could we have a word, please?'
âWhat's this about?'
âCould we come in?'
Carl stepped aside and let them in. The apartment was warm, and there was the aroma of freshly baked bread.
âCould you please take off your shoes? I've just finished vacuuming.' Carl edged past them in the narrow hallway and went into the bedroom; he walked over to the computer, which was standing on the desk along with a printer, and turned off the music.
Vanja and Billy stepped out of their shoes and into the apartment. There was a small kitchen in one corner of the living room, which was equipped with a sofa, a wall-mounted television, and in the other corner a desk with a neat pile of textbooks, and an office chair. A perfectly ordinary student apartment, had it not been for the large pictures, almost like display cases, hanging on one wall above the sofa. Behind the glass each one contained a number of butterflies and moths; six or eight if they were large specimens, perhaps fifteen or twenty if they were smaller, their brightly coloured wings spread in a wing beat frozen for all eternity. Vanja recognised a handful, and she knew the names of two: peacock and brimstone yellow. She didn't even know if the rest were native to Sweden.
âWhat was it you wanted?'
Carl had emerged from the bedroom and closed the door behind him. He folded his arms and looked at the two police officers. Vanja glanced at Billy and noticed that he too was fascinated by the display of insects.
âWe're here as a result of a letter you sent to Edward Hinde some weeks ago,' Vanja explained, sitting down on the sofa. Billy leaned against the kitchen wall.
âOh?' Carl spun the office chair around and sat down, an enquiring expression on his face.
âWhy did you write to him?' Vanja went on.
âI wanted to get in touch with him.'
âWhy?'
âI hoped he might be willing to help me with my studies.'
âIn practical philosophy?'
âYes. Why is that of any interest to the police?'
Vanja didn't reply. The less Carl knew about the reason for the visit, the less likely he would be to adapt his answers accordingly. Billy was thinking the same way, and changed the subject completely.
âWhat does a practical philosopher do? I mean, what kind of job would you end up with?'
Carl spun around a quarter turn and looked at Billy with the hint of a smile at the corners of his mouth.
âWhy? Are you tired of being a cop?'
âIsn't philosophy purely theoretical?' Billy went on as if he hadn't heard the question. âWhat does a practical philosopher do? Go out preaching? Run evening classes?'
âJust because you don't understand it, there's no need to have a go at me.'
âSorry, I was just curious.'
The look of displeasure on Carl's face made it clear that the apology had not been accepted. Vanja broke in to get the conversation back on track before Carl decided he wasn't prepared to speak to them at all.
âWe read your letter to Hinde.'
Carl kept his gaze fixed on Billy for a second or two longer before turning to Vanja.
âI realise that.'
âIt sounds as if you look up to him.'
âNo, I wouldn't say that. He fascinates me.'
âHe murdered four women. Does that fascinate you?'
Carl leaned forward in his chair, clearly more interested in the conversation now.
âNot his actions in themselves, but I do find his journey to that point incredibly interesting. The decisions he took, the deliberations he went through. I'm trying to understand him.'
âWhy?'
Carl fell silent for a moment, obviously pondering his answer as if he were explaining to his professor rather than speaking to the police.
âThe murders he committed were deliberate acts. Planned and considered. He had a desire to kill, and he fulfilled that desire. I want to know where the desire came from.'
âI can tell you that â his sick brain.'
Carl smiled almost superciliously at Vanja. âThat's not quite enough for a dissertation. Besides which, your assertion demands an acceptance that certain desires can be classified as “sick”, while other more socially acceptable desires, such as wanting a puppy, are “healthy”.'
âAre you saying it's healthy to kill four women?'
âFor very good reasons, the act itself is not accepted in our society, but I find it very difficult to talk about the desire to carry out that act in terms such as healthy or sick. We have established rules on how to behave, and of course we do not accept the killing of another human being. But can we really not accept the desire to do so?'
Vanja sighed to herself. Was it necessary to analyse everything, to turn everything inside out, to understand and explain? To her it was perfectly simple. If you wanted to kill another person, you were sick. If you actually did it, you were even more sick. Or evil.
âDid you get a reply from him?' Billy broke in, partly because he couldn't stand listening to the philosophical lecture any longer â if it was philosophy â and partly because he could see that Vanja was running out of patience.
âNo, unfortunately.'
âDo you contribute to any of these forums?'
Billy handed over a print-out of the websites Hinde had visited over the past three months. Carl took the paper and studied it carefully. A bell pinged on the kitchen bench; Carl put down the print-out and stood up. âMy bread is ready.'