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Authors: Hakan Nesser

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BOOK: The Weeping Girl
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No reaction.

She waited for a while, then rang again. Pressed her ear cautiously against the door and listened.

Not a sound. As quiet as the grave.

Ah well, thought Detective Inspector Moreno. At least I’ve made an honest attempt.

But when she came out into the sunshine again, it felt as if she still had some way to go before she’d fulfilled her moral obligations. As if she didn’t have the right to wash her
hands of the Lijphart girl. Not really the right, and certainly not yet.

If all citizens had the same sense of responsibility as I have, she thought as she very nearly stumbled over a black cat that came scuttling out of a hole in a fence, what a marvellous world
we’d live in!

Then she burst out laughing, making the cat turn round and scamper back to where it had come from.

Sigrid Lijphart just managed to catch a train that left the station in Lejnice at 17.03. It set off as she was sitting down on a window seat in the half-empty coach, and she
was almost immediately overcome by a feeling of having abandoned her daughter.

She lit a cigarette in an attempt to counteract the attack of conscience. And looked around meticulously before drinking the last drops in the hip flask she kept in her handbag.

It didn’t help much. Neither the nicotine nor the spirits. By the time the train had reached full speed, it was obvious to her that it had been a mistake to leave. To return home like this
without Mikaela.

How could she leave her fate – and her daughter’s fate – in Chief of Police Vrommel’s hands? she asked herself. Was there anything at all to suggest that he would be able
to solve the problem? Vrommel! She recalled how even sixteen years ago she had regarded him as an utterly useless berk, and there was nothing to suggest that he had improved since then. Nothing
that she had noticed during the days she had spent in Lejnice, at least.

And now he was the one who was going to find out what had happened to Mikaela. Chief Inspector Vrommel! How could she – as a mother and a thinking woman – allow that to happen? How
could she hand over responsibility to such an arch-cretin?

She stubbed out her cigarette and looked out of the window at the sun-drenched polder-landscape. Canals. Black-and-white cattle grazing. A cluster of low stone-built houses with a church steeple
sticking up like an antenna or a tentative attempt to make contact with the endless sky.

What am I going on about? she suddenly thought. What am I sitting here gawping at? It doesn’t really matter if it’s Vrommel or somebody else. It’s all about Mikaela. Where on
earth is she? What’s happened? Arnold . . . Just think that Arnold might actually know something about it!

And once again this inexplicable feeling of guilt dug its claws into her. As inexplicable and irritating as a sore on her soul. Why? Why should she – Sigrid Lijphart, formerly Sigrid
Maager – have anything to reproach herself for? In fact she had done more than anybody could have demanded of her . . . Much more. She had told Mikaela about Arnold, despite the fact that it
would have been much easier to say nothing. She could just as well have remained silent about the whole affair. Now and for ever. That was the line Helmut would have preferred to take – he
hadn’t said that in so many words, of course: but then, Helmut was not one for saying anything in so many words.

Keep quiet and let the past be buried. That’s what she could have done. Nobody could have asked more of her than that, and nobody had done so either.

So why? Why hadn’t she taken the easy way out for once? Why always this unreasonable and inflexible demand for honesty?

But hardly had she formulated these questions than his voice rang out from the past.

Motives
, it said.
You are falsifying your motives
.

She couldn’t remember the context in which he’d said it, but that was irrelevant. She didn’t understand what he’d meant even so.

Not then, and not now, perhaps twenty years later. Odd that she should remember that. Odd that it occurred to her now. Motives?

She sighed and lit another cigarette. Scrunched the packet up and chucked it into the litter bin, despite the fact that there were four or five cigarettes left in it.

Enough of that now, she thought. I don’t want to come back home to Helmut stinking of tobacco. I must observe the proprieties.

But nothing seemed to go right. That question that she didn’t even dare to formulate in silence, not even deep, deep down at the bottom of her consciousness – it continued to float
around inside her without being expressed, forcing all other thoughts to flee.

That question.

18

16 July 1999

‘Do you think she’s dead?’

Moreno didn’t reply straight away. Got out of the car. Walked round to his side and thought of giving him a kiss on the cheek, but for some reason found that inappropriate and desisted.
Put her hand on his arm instead.

‘I don’t know,’ she said. ‘Let’s hope to God that she isn’t, but I really have no idea. I have to keep following this up for a bit longer, though. I’m
sorry, but I need to know a few more answers before I can let go of it.’

Mikael nodded.

‘Take it easy with the headmaster,’ he urged her. ‘Don’t forget that he’s over eighty. Shall we say an hour?’

‘Plus or minus a half,’ said Moreno. ‘Find yourself a table in the harbour cafe, so that you don’t get irritated unnecessarily.’

She waited until he’d driven off before opening the white-painted gate and walking along the stone-paved path to the house. It looked large and well cared-for. A substantial two-storey
house in yellowish-white pommer stone; balconies on the upper floor and terraces on the ground floor, and generous picture windows facing the sea. It must be worth a million, Moreno thought.
Especially when you think of the position and the garden. The large lawn was newly mown, the flower beds, bushes and fruit trees well tended, and the large array of garden furniture under an orange
parasol looked as if it could have been delivered by the carpenter only a couple of hours ago.

Former headmaster Salnecki was lounging back in one of the comfortable armchairs, and seemed to be about as old as Adam.

White trousers, white shirt, white cotton cardigan. A sporty-looking yellow cap and blue leisure shoes. But none of that helped. He looked older than the gnarled apple trees. He can’t have
much longer left, Moreno thought. This is probably his last summer. I hope he’s clear in the head.

He was.

Unusually clear, that was obvious after only a few seconds. And a couple of comments. A rather younger, light-haired and suntanned woman came out carrying a tray with a carafe and glasses. And a
dish of bread sticks.

‘A mixture of red and white,’ explained herr Salnecki, filling her glass. ‘Life and death, in the form of blackcurrants and Riesling. I don’t suppose I need to point out
that white is the colour of death in quite a lot of cultures. Welcome, and your very good health.’

‘Cheers,’ said Moreno. ‘Thank you for agreeing to see me.’

‘My niece’s daughter . . .’ He nodded in the direction of the woman who had just disappeared round the corner. ‘She looks after me. She’s writing a dissertation on
the Klimke group, and is making use of my library. Sylvia. A nice girl, as good as gold. My wife passed away a few years ago, I need somebody to look after me . . . But I think there was something
you wanted to see me about?’

Moreno put her glass down on the table and leaned back in her chair.

‘Maager,’ she said. ‘Arnold Maager. You were still the headmaster at Voellerskolan when it happened, weren’t you?’

‘I suspected as much,’ said Salnecki.

‘Suspected? What do you mean?’

‘That that was what you wanted to talk about. You see, I’ve worked in schools all my life, and I’ve no doubt there have been a few irregularities during that time – but
if a detective inspector on holiday comes and asks to talk to me, there’s only one conclusion I can draw. It’s not a pretty tale, that Maager business.’

‘So I’ve gathered,’ said Moreno.

‘Why do you want to drag it up again? Isn’t it better to let things lie in peace?’

‘Perhaps,’ said Moreno. ‘But now there are certain circumstances that have come to light.’

Salnecki burst out laughing.

‘Come to light? I like it! You’re speaking more like a lawyer, Inspector, if I might be allowed to say so. But in any case, I understand that discretion can be a virtue, and my
natural curiosity has waned as the years have gone by . . . I’m not sure if one should be pleased about that, or sorry . . . But what’s not in doubt is that I talk too much. What do you
want to know?’

Moreno held back a smile.

‘What happened,’ she said. ‘What you thought about Maager, and so on.’

‘You don’t know the details already?’

‘Very few,’ said Moreno.

Salnecki emptied his glass and put it down firmly on the table.

‘A tragedy,’ he said. ‘There’s no other word for it. And yet at the same time such a banal business. Maager was a good teacher. Liked by both his pupils and his
colleagues. Young and ambitious . . . And then he goes and jumps into bed with that young chit of a girl. Beyond belief. You have to be able to handle young teenaged girls with hormones,
that’s among the first things a male teacher has to get to grips with.’

‘He didn’t just jump into bed with her,’ said Moreno, ‘if I’ve understood the situation rightly.’

Salnecki shook his head and suddenly looked sombre.

‘No. But that’s what started everything off. A cautionary tale, in a way. There’s always a price to pay.’

Moreno raised her eyebrows.

‘Are you saying it was Maager who paid the price? Surely you could say that the girl also paid a price . . .’

‘Of course,’ said Salnecki, quick to correct that impression. ‘Of course. That’s what makes it so tragic. Everybody has to pay for a moment of thoughtlessness. Some with
their life, others with their sanity. You get the impression that the gods sometimes overdo the retribution thing.’

Moreno thought for a moment. Her host took off his cap, fished a comb out of his back pocket and drew it a few times through his thin, white hair.

‘How did people react?’ asked Moreno. ‘They must have been rather shocked.’

‘Hysterical,’ said Salnecki with a sigh, replacing his cap. ‘People went mad, there were those who wanted to lynch him – I kept getting phone calls in the middle of the
night. In a way it was lucky that it happened during the summer holidays, we’d have had to shut down the school otherwise. It was my final year, incidentally. I finished in December. I wish
I’d gone in June instead . . . But there again, it wouldn’t have been much fun for a new headmaster to start his career with a scandal like that.’

‘What about their relationship?’ Moreno wondered. ‘Maager and the girl, I mean. Had it been going on for long? Did the other pupils know about it, for instance?’

‘Relationship!’ snorted Salnecki. ‘It wasn’t a relationship. The girl offered herself to him on a plate on one single occasion, and they ended up in the same bed. I would
guess they were both drunk. I mean, Maager had a family – a wife and a little daughter.’

‘I know about that,’ said Moreno. ‘How did it go for Maager afterwards? Have you had any contact with him?’

Salnecki looked sombre again. A bit of a guilty conscience, presumably, Moreno thought. Wondering if he could have intervened and prevented the disaster in some way. He leaned forward and
refilled his glass from the jug.

‘No,’ he said. ‘None at all. He went mad. He’s in a home not far away from here. A few colleagues used to go and visit him during the first few years, but they could
never get a single word out of him . . . No, it finished him off for the rest of his life.’

‘What happened when they . . . met, Maager and young Maas? It happened only once, you said.’

Salnecki shrugged.

‘As far as I know. It was after a disco at the school for the pupils. Maager and a few other teachers had acted as stewards. Afterwards the teachers went to a colleague’s house, a
handicraft teacher – a bachelor – and had a few drinks and sat and talked. There was only a week of term left. Anyway, a gang of pupils turned up in the small hours. It should never
have happened, of course, but they were invited in and things just went on from there. Maager jumped into bed with Winnie Maas, and—’

‘– she got pregnant and he killed her,’ said Moreno. ‘Six or seven weeks later, was it?’

‘More or less, yes,’ said Salnecki. ‘Not a pretty tale, as I said before. Anyway, your good health!’

They drank. Moreno decided to try another line.

‘This girl, Winnie Maas – she seems to have been a bit, er, precocious. Is that right?’

Salnecki cleared his throat and tried to find the appropriate words.


De mortuis nihil nisi bonum
,’ he said. ‘Let’s say she was precocious.’

‘Why did he kill her?’

Salnecki pulled at an ear lobe and looked thoughtful.

‘He lost control, I would guess. It really was as simple as that. The girl presumably wasn’t prepared to have an abortion. She wanted to have the child – and might well have
demanded lots of money in return for her silence. Or alternatively force him to admit that he was the father . . . I don’t know, but I guess those were the conditions. She phoned him the
night when it happened. They met on the railway viaduct, and he took leave of his senses. And went mad as well, as I’ve said before. If he went mad before or after he’d thrown her down
is a matter for discussion – and it certainly was discussed. That became a crucial point in his trial – how far he was responsible for his own actions and compos mentis: if he knew what
he was doing or not when it actually happened. Ah well, it’s a pretty vulnerable contraption, this thing that drives us . . .’

He smiled and tapped his right temple with two fingers. Moreno smiled.

‘Mind you, this one has kept going for eighty-one years,’ he added, with a modest smile.

‘What about the girl’s family?’ Moreno asked.

BOOK: The Weeping Girl
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