Authors: Henning Mankell
'I've asked the Sjöbo colleagues to interview the man in more detail.
Fridell was his name.'
Wallander nodded.
'Lights and engine noise. That could confirm our hypothesis about a scheduled drop.'
Martinsson spread out a map on Wallander's desk. He pointed.
Wallander saw that it was in the area that Blomell had circled.
'Good work,' Wallander said. 'We'll have to see if it leads us anywhere.'
Martinsson folded up the map.
'It's terrible if it's true,' he said. 'If this really is the case then we're unprotected. If any old plane can come in across the border and drop off drugs without being sighted.'
'We have to get used to it,' Wallander said. 'But of course I agree with you.'
Martinsson left. Wallander left the station a little later. When he got home he cooked a real dinner for once. At half past seven he sat down with a cup of coffee to watch the news. The phone rang as the top stories were being announced. It was Emma. She was just leaving the hospital. Wallander didn't really know what he wanted. Another evening alone. Or a visit from Emma. Without being sure that he really wanted to see her, he asked if she wanted to stop by. She said yes.
Wallander knew this meant that she would stay until a little after midnight. Then she would get dressed and go home. In order to steel himself for the visit he had two glasses of whisky. He had already showered before while he was waiting for the potatoes to boil. Quickly, he changed the sheets on the bed and threw the old bed-linen into the wardrobe, which was already overflowing with dirty laundry.
Emma arrived shortly before eight. Wallander cursed himself when he heard her on the stairs. Why couldn't he put an end to it, since it had no future?
She arrived, she smiled and Wallander asked her in. She had brown hair and beautiful eyes, and was short. He put on the kind of music he knew she liked. They drank wine and shortly before eleven they went to bed. Wallander thought of Mona.
Afterwards they both fell asleep. Neither one of them had said anything. Just before he fell asleep, Wallander noticed a headache coming on. He woke up again when she was getting dressed, but he pretended to be asleep. When the front door had shut, he got out of bed and drank some water. Then he returned to bed, thought about
Mona for a bit longer, and fell back asleep.
The telephone started to ring deep inside his dreams. He woke immediately. Listened. The rings continued. He glanced at the clock on the bedside table. A quarter past two. That meant that something had happened. He lifted the receiver as he sat up in bed.
It was one of the officers who worked the night shift, Näslund.
'There's a fire on Möllegatan,' Näslund said. 'Right on the corner of
Lilla Strandgatan.'
Wallander tried to visualise that block.
'What's burning?'
'The Eberhardsson sisters' sewing shop.'
'That sounds like a case for the fire brigade and a patrol unit.'
Näslund hesitated before answering.
'They're already there. It sounds like the house may have exploded.
And the sisters live above the shop.'
'Did you get them out?'
'It doesn't look like it.'
Wallander didn't need to think any further. He knew there was only one thing to do.
'I'm coming,' he said. 'Who else have you called?'
'Rydberg.'
'You could have let him sleep. Get Svedberg and Hansson.'
Wallander hung up. Checked the time again. Seventeen minutes past two. While he put his clothes on he thought about what Näslund had said. A sewing shop had been blown up. That sounded implausible.
And it was serious if the two owners had not managed to escape.
Wallander walked out onto the street and realised he had left his car keys. He cursed, then ran back up the stairs, noticing how out of breath he became. I should start playing badminton with Svedberg again, he thought. I can't manage four flights without losing my breath.
Wallander pulled up on Hamngatan at half past two. The whole area had been blocked off. The smell of fire was perceptible before he even opened the door. Flames and smoke were rising into the sky. The fire brigade had all their engines on the scene. Wallander ran into Peter
Edler for the second time that day.
'It looks bad,' Peter Edler shouted, raising his voice to be heard above the din.
The whole house was in flames. The firefighters were spraying the surrounding buildings to restrict the damage.
'The sisters?' Wallander shouted.
Edler shook his head.
'No one has come out,' he replied. 'If they were home, they're still in there. We have a witness who says the building just blew up. It started to burn everywhere at once.'
Edler left to continue directing the operation. Hansson appeared at
Wallander's side.
'Who the hell sets fire to a sewing shop?' he asked.
Wallander shook his head.
He had no answer.
He thought about the two sisters who had worked in their sewing shop for as long as he had lived in Ystad. Once, he and Mona had bought a zip there for one of his suits.
Now the sisters were gone.
And if Peter Edler was not completely mistaken, this fire had been started in order to kill them.
Wallander rang in this St Lucia's Day, 1989, with lights other than those of a children's Lucia procession. He stayed at the scene of the blaze until dawn. By then he had sent home both Svedberg and Hansson.
When Rydberg turned up, Wallander also told him to go home. The night cold and the heat of the flames would do nothing good for his rheumatism. Rydberg listened to a short report about the two sisters' likely death, and then he left. Peter Edler gave Wallander a cup of coffee.
Wallander sat in the driver's cab in one of the fire engines and wondered why he didn't simply go home and sleep instead of staying here, waiting for the fire to be put out. He didn't manage to come up with a good answer. He thought back to the evening before, with discomfort. The erotic dimension between him and Emma Lundin was completely devoid of passion. Hardly more than an extension of their earlier inane conversations.
I can't go on like this, he thought suddenly. Something has to happen in my life. Soon, very soon. The two months that had gone by since
Mona had left him felt like two years.
The fire was out at dawn. The building had burned to the ground.
Nyberg arrived. They waited for Peter Edler to give the go-ahead
erg to enter the smouldering remains with the fire brigade's own forensic technicians.
Then Björk turned up, impeccably dressed as usual, accompanied by a scent of aftershave that managed to overpower even the smoke.
'Fires are tragic,' he said. 'I hear the owners have died.'
'We don't know that yet,' Wallander said. 'But there are no indications to the contrary, unfortunately.'
Björk looked at his watch.
'I have to push on,' he said. 'I have a breakfast meeting with Rotary.'
He left.
'He's going to lecture himself to death,' Wallander said.
Nyberg followed him with his eyes.
'I wonder what he says about the police and our work,' Nyberg said.
'Have you ever heard him speak?'
'Never. But I suspect he doesn't tell them about his accomplishments at the desk.'
They stood quietly, waiting. Wallander felt cold and tired. The whole block was still closed to traffic, but a reporter from
Arbetet
had managed to duck his way past the blockades. Wallander recognised him. He was one of the reporters who usually wrote what Wallander actually said, so he was given the little information they had. They still could not confirm that anyone had died. The reporter let himself be satisfied with this.
Another hour went by before Peter Edler could give them the green light. When Wallander had left home the night before, he had been smart enough to put on rubber boots, and now he stepped carefully into the scorched rubble where beams and the remains of walls lay jumbled in a mess of water. Nyberg and some of the firefighters carefully made their way through the ruins. After less than five minutes, they stopped. Nyberg nodded for Wallander to come.
The bodies of two people lay a few metres away from each other.
They were charred beyond the point of recognition. It occurred to
Wallander that he had now experienced this sight for the second time in forty-eight hours. He shook his head.
'The Eberhardsson sisters,' he said. 'What were their first names?'
'Anna and Emilia,' Nyberg answered. 'But we don't yet know if it is actually them.'
'Who else would it be?' Wallander said. 'They lived alone in this house.'
'We'll find out,' Nyberg said. 'But it will take a couple of days.'
Wallander turned and went back out onto the street. Peter Edler was smoking.
'You smoke?' Wallander said. 'I didn't know that.'
'Not very often,' Edler replied. 'Only when I'm very tired.'
'There must be a thorough examination of this fire,' Wallander said.
'I shouldn't jump to any conclusions, of course, but this looks like nothing less than deliberate arson. Though one may wonder why anyone wanted to take the lives of two old spinsters.'
Wallander nodded. He knew that Peter Edler was an extremely competent fire chief.
'Two old ladies,' Wallander remarked. 'Who sold buttons and zips.'
There was no longer any reason for Wallander to stay. He left the scene, got in his car and went home. He ate breakfast and conferred with the thermometer about which sweater to wear. He decided on the same one as yesterday. At twenty minutes past nine he parked in front of the station. Martinsson arrived at the same time. This is unusually late for him, Wallander thought. Martinsson offered up the explanation without being asked.
'My niece, who is fifteen, came home drunk last night,' he said sombrely. 'That hasn't happened before.'
'Some time has to be the first,' Wallander said.
He did not miss his days as a patrol officer, when St Lucia's Day was always a raucous affair, and he recalled that Mona had called several years ago and complained that Linda had come home and thrown up after late-night Lucia festivities. Mona had been very upset. That time, to his surprise, Wallander was the one who had been more relaxed about the whole incident. He tried to explain this to Martinsson as they walked up towards the station. But his colleague was resistant.
Wallander gave up and stopped talking.
They halted in the reception area and Ebba came over to them.
'Is it true what I hear?' she asked. 'That poor Anna and Emilia have burned to death?'
'That's what it looks like,' Wallander said.
Ebba shook her head.
'I've bought buttons and thread from them since 1951,' she said.
'They were always so friendly. If you needed anything extra, they always took care of it with no additional charge. Who on earth would want to take the lives of two old ladies in a sewing shop?'
Ebba is the second person to ask that, Wallander thought. First Peter
Edler, now Ebba.
'Is it a pyromaniac?' Martinsson asked. 'In that case he's chosen a particularly apt evening to get started.'
'We'll have to wait and see,' Wallander replied. 'Has anything more come in about the crashed plane?'
'Not as far as I know. But Sjöbo was going to have another talk with the man who was looking for his calf.'
'Call the other districts just to be sure,' Wallander reminded him.
'It could turn out that they received calls about an engine noise too.
There can hardly be that many aeroplanes flying around at night.'
Martinsson left. Ebba gave Wallander a piece of paper.
'The travel insurance for your father,' she said. 'Lucky man, he gets to leave this weather and see the pyramids.'
Wallander took the paper and went to his office. When he had hung up his coat, he called Löderup. There was no answer, even though he let the phone ring fifteen times. His father must be out in the studio.
Wallander put down the phone. I wonder if he remembers that he's supposed to travel tomorrow, he thought. And that I'm picking him up at seven o'clock.
But Wallander was looking forward to spending a couple of hours with Linda. That always put him in a good mood.
He pulled over a pile of papers, this one about the burglary on
Pilgrimsgatan. But he ended up lost in thought about other things.
What if they had a pyromaniac on their hands? They had been spared that for the past couple of years.
He forced himself to return to the burglary, but Nyberg called at ten thirty.
'I think you should come down here,' he said. 'To the scene of the fire.'
Wallander knew Nyberg would not have called unless it was important.
It would be a waste of time to start asking questions over the phone.
'I'm on my way,' he said and hung up.
He took his coat and left the station. It took him only a couple of minutes by car to get downtown. The cordoned-off area was smaller, but some traffic was still being redirected around Hamngatan.
Nyberg was waiting next to the ruins of the house, which were still smoking. He got straight to the point.
'This was not only arson,' he said. 'It was murder.'
'Murder?'
Nyberg gestured for him to follow. The two bodies in the ruin had now been dug out. They crouched down next to one and Nyberg pointed to the cranium with a pen.
'A bullet hole,' he said. 'She's been shot, assuming it is one of the sisters. But I suppose we are assuming that.'
They stood up and walked over to the second body.
'Same thing here,' he said and pointed. 'Just above the neck.'
Wallander shook his head in disbelief.
'Someone shot them?'
'Looks like it. What's worse is that it was execution-style. Two shots to the back of the head.'
Wallander had trouble taking in what Nyberg had just said. It was too preposterous, too brutal. But he also knew that Nyberg never said anything he wasn't absolutely sure about.
They walked back out to the street. Nyberg held up a small plastic bag in front of Wallander.
'We found one of the bullets,' he said. 'It was still stuck in the cranium. The other one exited through the forehead and has melted in the heat. But the medical examiner will of course do a thorough examination.'
Wallander looked at Nyberg while he tried to think.
'So we have a double murder that someone tried to cover up with a fire?'
Nyberg shook his head.
'That doesn't make sense. A person who executes people by shooting them in the back of the head most likely knows that fires normally leave skeletons intact. After all, it's not a crematorium.'
Wallander realised that Nyberg had said something important.
'What's the alternative?'
'The murderer may have wanted to conceal something else.'
'What can you conceal in a sewing shop?'
'That's your job to figure out,' Nyberg replied.
'I'll go and get a team together,' Wallander said. 'We'll start at one.'
He checked his watch. It was eleven. 'Can you make it?'
'I won't be done here, of course,' Nyberg said. 'But I'll come by.'
Wallander returned to his car. He was filled with a feeling of unreality. Who could have a motive for executing two old ladies who sold needles and thread and one or two zips? This was beyond anything he had been involved in before.
When he reached the station he walked straight to Rydberg's office.
It was empty. Wallander found him in the break room, where he was eating a rusk and drinking tea. Wallander sat down and told him what
Nyberg had discovered.
'That's not good,' Rydberg said when Wallander was finished. 'Not good at all.'
Wallander stood up. 'I'll see you at one,' he said. 'For now, let
Martinsson focus on the plane. But Hansson and Svedberg should be there. And try to get Åkeson. Have we ever had anything like this?'
Rydberg considered. 'Not that I can remember. There was a lunatic who planted an axe in a waiter's head about twenty years ago. The motive was an unpaid debt of thirty kronor. But I can't think of anything else.'
Wallander lingered at the table.
'Execution-style,' he said. 'Not particularly Swedish.'
'And what is Swedish, exactly?' Rydberg asked. 'There are no longer any borders. Not for aeroplanes nor serious criminals. Once Ystad lay at the outskirts of something. What happened in Stockholm did not happen here. Not even things that occurred in Malmö were typical in a small town like Ystad. But that time is over.'
'What happens now?'
'The new era will need a different kind of police, particularly out in the field,' Rydberg said. 'But there will still be a need for those like you and me, the ones who can think.'
They walked together along the corridor. Rydberg walked slowly.
They parted outside Rydberg's door.
'One o'clock,' Rydberg said. 'The double murder of two old ladies.
Is that what we should call this? The case of the little old ladies?'
'I don't like it,' Wallander said. 'I don't understand why anyone would shoot two honourable old ladies.'
'That may be where we have to begin,' Rydberg said thoughtfully.
'By examining if they were actually as honourable as everyone appears to believe.'
Wallander was taken aback.
'What are you insinuating?'
'Nothing,' Rydberg said, and smiled suddenly. 'It's possible that one sometimes draws conclusions too quickly.'
Wallander stood by the window in his office and absent-mindedly watched some pigeons flapping around the water tower. Rydberg is right, he thought. As usual. If there are no witnesses, if we don't get any observations from outside, then this is where we have to start: who were they really, Anna and Emilia?
They were all assembled in the conference room at one o'clock.
Hansson had tried to get hold of Björk, without success. But Per Åkeson was there.
Wallander gave an account of the discovery that the two women had been shot. A sombre mood spread through the room. Evidently everyone had been to the sewing shop at least once. Then Wallander turned to Nyberg.
'We're still digging around in the rubble,' Nyberg said. 'But so far we haven't found anything of interest.'
'The cause of the fire?' Wallander asked.
'It's too early to tell,' he replied. 'But according to the neighbours there was a loud blast. Someone described it as a muted explosion.
And then, within the span of a minute, the whole building was on fire.'
Wallander looked around the table.
'Since there is no immediately apparent motive, we have to begin by finding out what we can about these sisters. Is it true, as I believe, that they didn't have any relatives? Both were single. Had they ever been married? How old were they? I thought of them as old ladies already when I moved here.'
Svedberg answered that he was sure that Anna and Emilia had never been married, and that they had no children. But he would find out more in greater detail.
'Bank accounts,' said Rydberg, who had not said anything until then.
'Did they have money? Either stuffed under the mattress at home or at the bank. There are rumours about such things. Can that have been the reason for the murder?'
'That doesn't explain the execution-style method,' Wallander said.
'But we need to find out about this. We need to know.'
They divvied up the usual tasks among themselves. They were the same methodical and time-consuming tasks that had to be performed at the beginning of every investigation. When it was a quarter past two,
Wallander had only one more thing to say.