Authors: Henning Mankell
Wallander turned the page hesitantly. The same thing. A single snapshot glued onto the middle of the page. This time it featured one of
Sweden's former prime ministers. The same deformed, misshapen face.
A date written in ink.
Without studying each picture in detail, Wallander slowly made his way through the album. On every page a single shot. Misshapen, deformed. Men – they were exclusively men – remade into revolting monsters. Swedish as well as foreign. Mainly politicians but also some businessmen, an author and a few others that Wallander did not recognise.
He tried to understand what the images communicated. Why did
Simon Lamberg have this uncommon photo album? Why had he distorted the pictures? Was it in order to work on this album that he had spent his evenings at the studio alone? Wallander had increased his concentration. Behind Simon Lamberg's well-ordered facade there was obviously something else. At least a man who deliberately destroyed the faces of well-known people.
He turned another page. Winced. An acute discomfort radiated through his body.
He had difficulty believing it was true.
At that moment Svedberg came into the room.
'Look at this,' Wallander said slowly.
Then he pointed at the picture. Svedberg bent over his shoulder.
'That's you,' he said with amazement.
'Yes,' Wallander answered. 'It's me. Or at least maybe.'
He looked at it again. It was a photograph from a newspaper. It was him, and yet it wasn't. He looked like an unusually abominable individual.
Wallander could not think of a time when he had been so shaken.
The distorted and grotesque depiction of his face nauseated him. He had certainly been the object of verbal assaults from criminals he had arrested, but the thought that someone had spent hours producing this hate-picture of him was frightening. Svedberg registered his reaction and went to get Nyberg. Together they went through the album. The last picture was from the day before, when the Swedish prime minister had had his face destroyed. The date was written in next to it.
'The person who did this has to be sick,' Nyberg said.
'There's no doubt that it is Simon Lamberg who has spent his evenings on these photographs,' Wallander said. 'What I am naturally wondering is why I've been included in this macabre collection. The only person from Ystad, no less. Among men of state and presidents.
I won't deny that I find it very disturbing.'
'And what is the purpose?' Svedberg asked.
No one had any reasonable answer to offer.
Wallander felt he had to leave the studio. He asked Svedberg to take over an examination of the room. For his part, he would soon have to give the press the information they were waiting for. By the time he was back out on the street, his nausea was clearing up. He stepped over the police tape and went straight to the police station. It was still drizzling.
Even though the nausea had passed, he felt ill at ease.
Simon Lamberg spends his evenings in his studio, listening to music.
At the same time he distorts the faces of various prominent heads of state. And a detective inspector from Ystad. Wallander tried furiously to find an explanation, without success. That a man could lead a double life, concealing insanity under a surface appearance of complete normality, was nothing unique. You could find many examples of this in the annals of criminal history. But why was Wallander himself in the album? What did he have in common with the other individuals represented there? Why was he the exception?
He walked straight into his office and closed the door. When he sat down in his chair, he realised that he was concerned. Simon Lamberg was dead. Someone had crushed the back of his head with violent force. They did not know why. And in his desk they had found a secret photo album with grotesque contents.
He was wrenched out of his thoughts by a knock on the door. It was Hansson.
'Lamberg is dead,' he said, as if delivering a piece of news. 'He took pictures of me when I was confirmed, many years ago.'
'You've been confirmed?' Wallander asked, surprised. 'I thought you would be the person least likely to care about the higher powers.'
'And I don't,' he answered happily, while carefully picking at his ear.
'But I very much wanted to get a watch and my first real suit.'
He pointed over his shoulder back out into the corridor.
'Reporters,' he said. 'I thought I'd better tag along and listen and learn what's happened.'
'I can tell you that now,' Wallander said. 'Someone bashed in the back of Lamberg's head last night, between eight and midnight. It doesn't seem to be a case of burglary. That's about all we know.'
'Not much,' Hansson said.
'No,' Wallander answered, and stood up. 'It could hardly be any less.'
The meeting with the press was largely improvised, and short.
Wallander gave a sketch of what was known and brief answers to individual questions. The whole thing was over in half an hour. The time had become half past three. Wallander noticed that he was hungry. But the picture in Simon Lamberg's album remained on his mind the whole time, worrying him. The question gnawed at him: why had he been chosen to have his face shrunken and deformed? He sensed that this was the work of an insane person. But still, why him?
At a quarter to four he decided that it was time to go to Lavendelvägen, where the Lambergs lived. When he left the station, the rain had stopped. The wind, however, had picked up. He wondered if he should try to get hold of Svedberg and bring him along. But he let this stay as a thought. What he most of all wanted was to meet with Elisabeth
Lamberg alone. There was a great deal that he wanted to talk to her about. But one of the questions was more important than the others.
He found his way up to Lavendelvägen and got out of the car. The house lay within a garden that he could see was well tended, despite the empty flower beds. He rang the doorbell. It was opened almost immediately by a woman in her fifties. Wallander stretched out his hand and said hello. The woman seemed guarded.
'I'm not Elisabeth Lamberg,' she said. 'I'm a friend. My name is Karin
Fahlman.'
She let him into the hall.
'Elisabeth is resting in the bedroom,' she said. 'I take it this conversation can't wait?'
'No, unfortunately. When it comes to apprehending whoever committed this crime, it's important not to lose any time.'
Karin Fahlman nodded and showed him into the living room. Then she left without a sound.
Wallander looked around the room. The first thing that struck him was how quiet it was. No clocks. No sounds from the street penetrated inside. Through a window he saw some children playing, but he could not hear them even though it was obvious they were shouting and screaming. He walked over and inspected the window. It was doubleglazed and appeared to be a particular model that was extremely soundproof.
He walked around the room. It was tastefully furnished, neither tacky nor overdone. A mixture of old and new. Copies of old woodcuts.
A whole wall covered with books.
He did not hear her enter the room. But suddenly she was there, right behind him. He gave an involuntary start. She was very pale, almost as if her face bore a thin layer of white make-up. She had dark and straight short hair. Wallander thought she had probably been very beautiful at one time.
'I'm sorry to have to disturb you,' he said and stretched out his hand.
'I know who you are,' she said. 'And I do understand that you have to come here.'
'I can start by expressing my condolences.'
'Thank you.'
Wallander could see that she was doing her utmost to remain collected. He wondered how long she would be able to do this before she lost control.
They sat down. Wallander caught sight of Karin Fahlman in a nearby room. He assumed she was sitting there in order to listen to their conversation. For a moment he thought about how to begin. But he was interrupted in his thinking by Elisabeth Lamberg posing the first question.
'Do you know anything about who killed my husband?'
'We have no direct leads to follow. But there isn't much to support it being a burglary. This means either your husband must have let the person in or the person had keys.'
She shook her head energetically, as if she violently opposed what
Wallander had just said.
'Simon was always very careful. He would not have let in an unknown person, least of all at night.'
'But for someone he knew?'
'Who would that have been?'
'I don't know. Everyone has friends.'
'Simon went to Lund once a month. There was an association for amateur astronomers there. He was on the board. That was the only social outlet he had, as far as I know.'
Wallander realised that Svedberg had missed a very important question.
'Do you have any children?'
'A daughter. Matilda.'
Something in the way she answered put Wallander on his guard.
The faint change in tone had not escaped him. As if the question bothered her. He went on hesitantly.
'How old is she?'
'Twenty-four.'
'She no longer lives at home?'
Elisabeth Lamberg looked him straight in the eye as she answered.
'When Matilda was born she was seriously handicapped. We had her home for four years. Then it didn't work any more. Now she lives in an institution. She needs help with absolutely everything.'
Wallander was taken aback. Exactly what he had been expecting, he couldn't say, but it was hardly the answer he had received.
She continued to look him right in the eye.
'It was not my decision. It was Simon who wanted it. Not me. He made the decision.'
For one moment Wallander felt as if he were staring straight down into a bottomless pit. Her pain was that strong.
Wallander sat quietly for a long time before he went on.
'Can you think of anyone who would have had any reason to kill your husband?'
Her answers continued to astonish him.
'After that happened, I didn't know him any more.'
'Even though it was twenty years ago?'
'Some things never heal.'
'But you were still married?'
'We lived under the same roof. That was all.'
Wallander thought about it before continuing.
'So you have no idea who the murderer could be?'
'No.'
'Nor can you think of a motive?'
'No.'
Wallander now tackled the most important question head-on.
'When I arrived you said you knew me. Can you remember if your husband ever talked about me?'
She raised her eyebrows.
'Why would he have done that?'
'I don't know. But that's the question.'
'We never talked much to each other. But I cannot think of an occasion when we talked about you.'
Wallander proceeded to his next point.
'We found an album in the studio. There were a great number of photographs of heads of state and other well-known people in it. For some reason my picture appeared among them. Do you know of this album?'
'No.'
'Are you sure?'
'Yes.'
'The photographs were distorted. All of these people, including me, were made to look like monsters. Your husband must have spent many hours achieving these effects. But you claim to know nothing about this?'
'No. It sounds very strange. Incredible.'
Wallander saw that she was telling the truth. She really did not know much about her husband, since for twenty years she had not wished to know anything.
Wallander got up out of his chair. He knew he would be back with more questions. But right now he had nothing more to say.
She followed him to the front door.
'My husband probably had many secrets,' she said out of the blue.
'But I didn't share them.'
'If you didn't, then who would have?'
'I don't know,' she said, almost pleading. 'But someone must have.'
'What kind of secrets?'
'I've already said that I don't know. But Simon was full of secret rooms. I neither wanted nor was able to look into them.'
Wallander nodded.
He ended up sitting in the car. It had started raining again.
What had she meant by that? Simon was a man 'full of secret rooms'.
As if the inner office in the shop was only one? As if there were more?
That they had not yet found?
He drove slowly back to the station. The anxiety that he had felt earlier became stronger.
The rest of the afternoon and evening they continued to spend working on what little material they had. Wallander went home at around ten o'clock. The squad would be meeting up the following morning at eight.
Back in his apartment, he heated up a can of beans, which was the only thing he could find in the way of food. He fell asleep a little after eleven.
The telephone call came at four minutes to midnight. Wallander lifted the receiver while still half asleep. It was a man who claimed to be out for a late-night walk. He introduced himself as the man who had taken care of Hilda Waldén that morning.
'I just saw someone slip into Lamberg's studio,' he whispered.
Wallander sat up in bed.
'Are you sure of that? And it was not a police officer?'
'A shadow slipped in through the door,' he said. 'My heart is bad.
But there is nothing wrong with my eyes.'
The connection broke off, most likely due to a problem with the line.
Wallander sat with the receiver in his hand. It was unusual for him to be called by someone other than the police, especially at night. His name was of course not printed in the telephone directory. But someone must have given the man Wallander's number during the morning chaos.
Then he got out of bed and quickly put on his clothes.
It was just past midnight.
Wallander arrived at the square where the studio was located a few minutes later. He had walked, or half run, since it was only a short distance from Mariagatan, where he lived. Nonetheless he was out of breath. When he arrived, he spotted a man standing a little way off in the distance. He hurried over to him, greeted him and took him to a place where they still had a view of the entrance but would not be as visible. The man was in his seventies and introduced himself as Lars
Backman. He was a retired director of Handels Bank. He still referred to it by its former name, Svenska Handelsbanken.