"Have you ever regretted becoming a policeman?"
"Many times. I think everyone does."
"Why?"
"Because you have to see so much suffering. You feel helpless, and you wonder how you're going to hold out until your retirement."
"Don't you ever feel that you're helping people?"
"Sometimes, but not always."
"Do you think I should become a policeman?"
"I think you should take your time to make a decision. I think you have to be 17 or 18 years old before you really know what you want to do."
"I'm going to be either a policeman or a road construction worker."
"Road construction?"
"Helping people get around is also good."
Wallander nodded. This was a thoughtful child.
"I only have one question left," David said. "Are you ever scared?"
"Yes."
"What do you do then?"
"I don't know. I end up sleeping badly. I try to think of other things, if I can."
The boy put the piece of paper back in his pocket and looked at the cap. Wallander pushed it towards him and he tried it on. Wallander gave him a mirror. The cap was so large it fell down over his ears.
Wallander accompanied him out to the reception area. "Feel free to come back and see me again if you have more questions."
He watched the boy walk out into the blustery cold. Then he returned to his office in order to finish cleaning it out, although his desire to leave the station was growing. Höglund appeared in the doorway.
"I thought you were on sick leave."
"I am."
"How was your meeting? Martinsson told me about it."
"David is a smart boy. I tried to answer his questions as honestly as possible, but I think his dad could have done as well."
"Do you have time to talk?"
"A little. I'm about to leave town for a couple of days."
She closed the door and sat down in the chair across from his desk.
"I don't know why I'm telling you this," she said. "I want you to keep it to yourself for the time being."
She's quitting, Wallander thought. She can't take it any more.
"Promise?"
"I promise."
"Sometimes it's such a relief just to tell one other person."
"I'm the same."
"I'm getting a divorce," she said. "We've finally agreed on it, if you can call it that when there are two young children involved."
Wallander wasn't surprised. She had indicated that they were having serious problems early in the summer.
"I don't know what to say."
"You don't have to say anything. I just wanted you to know."
"I've gone through a divorce myself," he said. "Or was divorced. I know what hell it can be."
"But you've done so well."
"Have I? I would tend to say the opposite."
"In that case you hide it well."
The rain outside was falling harder.
"There was one other thing I wanted to tell you," she said. "Larstam is writing a book."
"A book?"
"About the murders. About what it felt like to do it."
"How do you know that?"
"I saw it in the papers."
Wallander was upset. "Who's paying him?"
"Some publishers. They're keeping the advance a secret, but I think we can safely assume it's quite large. I'm sure a mass murderer's memoirs will be a bestseller."
Wallander shook his head angrily. "It makes me sick."
She got to her feet. "I just wanted you to know."
She turned when she reached the doorway. "Have a nice trip," she said. "Wherever you're going."
She disappeared. Wallander thought about what she had told him, about her divorce and the book. They had caught Larstam before he had managed to kill his ninth victim. Afterwards everyone who came into contact with him was struck by his gentle and reserved manner. They were expecting a monster, but this wasn't someone Sture Björklund would have been able to copy for a horror film. Wallander sometimes thought Larstam seemed like the most normal person he had ever met.
He had spent many days interrogating him. It struck him repeatedly that Åke Larstam wasn't just an enigma to the world around him but also to himself. He seemed to answer Wallander's questions honestly, but his answers shed no light.
"Why did you kill the young people celebrating Midsummer in the nature reserve?" Wallander had asked him. "You opened their letters, you followed their preparations for the party, and you shot them. Why?"
"Is there a better way for life to end?"
"Was that why you killed them? Because you thought you were doing them a favour?"
"I think so."
"Think? You must know why you did it."
"It's possible to plan things and still not be sure why you do them."
"You travelled all around Europe and sent postcards in their names. You hid their cars and buried their bodies. Why?"
"I didn't want them to be found."
"But you buried them in a way that gave you the option of disinterring them again."
"I wanted to have that option, yes."
"Why?"
"I don't know, to make my presence known perhaps. I don't know."
"You took the trouble of following Isa Edengren to Bärnsö and killing her there. Why not let her live?"
"You should finish what you start."
Sometimes Wallander had to leave the room, knowing he was in fact talking to a monster and not a human being, despite the smiling and gentle exterior. But he always returned, determined to cover all the aspects of the case, from the newly-weds whose joy Larstam had been unable to tolerate, to Svedberg.
Svedberg. They discussed their long and complicated love affair. Bror Sundelius hadn't known that Svedberg was betraying him with another man. Nils Stridh found out and threatened to talk. They talked about Svedberg's growing fears that the man he had loved in secret for ten years was somehow connected with the disappearance of the young people.
Wallander never felt satisfied with the answers he received. There was something absentminded about Larstam's way of speaking. He was always polite, always apologetic when he couldn't recall an event to his satisfaction. But there was a space within him that he never managed to penetrate. Wallander never fully understood the relationship between Larstam and Svedberg.
"What happened that morning?" he asked.
"Which morning?"
"When you shot Svedberg."
"I had to kill him."
"Why?"
"He accused me of being involved with the disappearance of those young people."
"They didn't just disappear, they were killed. How did Svedberg start to suspect your involvement in this?"
"I talked to him about it."
"You told him what you had done?"
"No, but I told him about my dreams."
"Which dreams?"
"That I got people to stop laughing."
"Why didn't you want people to laugh?"
"Happiness always turns into its opposite sooner or later. I wanted to spare him this fate. So I told him about my dreams."
"Your dreams of killing people who were happy?"
"Yes."
"So he started to suspect you?"
"I didn't realise it until a few days before."
"Before what?"
"Before I shot him."
"What happened?"
"He was starting to ask questions. It was almost like he was interrogating me. It made me nervous. I didn't like feeling nervous."
"So then you just went over to his place and shot him?"
"At first I was planning to ask him to stop making me so nervous, but he kept asking his questions. That's when I realised I had to do it. I went out into the hall and got my shotgun. I had brought it with me just in case. I got it out and I shot him."
Wallander didn't say anything for a long time. He tried to imagine what Svedberg'
s last moments had been like. Did he have time to see what was coming? Or did it all happen too fast?
"That must have been very hard for you," he said finally. "To be forced to kill the person you loved."
Larstam stared back at him without answering, devoid of any expression. Even when Wallander asked the question a second time, there was no answer. He finally brought up the evening when Larstam ambushed him in his flat on Mariagatan.
"Why did you choose me to be your ninth victim?"
"I didn't have anyone else."
"What do you mean?"
"I was going to wait, maybe a year, maybe longer. But then I felt the need to keep going since things had turned out so well."
"But I'm not a happy person. I don't laugh a lot."
"You had a job and a reason to get up every morning. I had seen pictures of you in the papers where you were smiling."
"But I wasn't dressed up. I wasn't even wearing my uniform that day."
Larstam's answer came as a surprise. "I was planning to give you one."
"Give me what?"
"A costume, a disguise. I was planning to put my wig on you and try to make your face look like Louise. I didn't need her any more. She could die. I had decided to make myself into another woman."
Larstam looked him right in the eye and Wallander returned his gaze. He was never sure afterwards what it was he had seen there. But he knew he would never forget it.
There came a time when he had no more questions. Wallander arrived at an understanding of a man who was crazy, who never fitted in anywhere, and who finally exploded in uncontrollable violence. The psychological examination corroborated this picture. Larstam had been constantly threatened and intimidated as a child and had concentrated on mastering the ability to hide and get away. He had lacked the resources to deal with his termination from the engineering firm and had come to believe that all smiling people were evil.
It occurred to Wallander that there was a frightening social dimension to all of this. More and more people were being judged useless and were being flung to the margins of society, where they were destined to look back enviously at the few who still had reasons to be happy. He was reminded of a conversation he and Höglund had once begun but never had the chance to finish. They were debating whether or not the decline of Swedish society was more advanced than people generally admitted. Irrational violence was almost an accepted part of daily life these days. It gave him the feeling that they were already one step behind, and for the very first time in his life Wallander wondered if a complete collapse of the Swedish state was a real possibility. Bosnia had always seemed so far away, he thought. But maybe it was closer than they realised. Thoughts like these kept returning to him during the long sessions with Larstam, who maybe wasn't as much of a riddle as he should have been. Maybe Larstam's breakdown could be tied to the breakdown of society itself. There was nothing more to say. Wallander declared himself finished; Larstam was taken away and that was that.
A few days later, Eva Hillström committed suicide. Höglund was the one who told Wallander. He listened to the news in silence, left the station, bought a bottle of whisky, and drank himself into a stupor. He never spoke about it afterwards, but he always thought of her as Larstam's ninth victim.
He turned into the roadside restaurant outside Västervik around 2 p.m. He knew it was closed in the winter, but he still hoped she would be there. That autumn there had been many times when he wanted to call her, but he never had. He didn't know what he wanted to say to her. He got out of the car. The blustery weather seemed to have followed him from Skåne. Autumn leaves clung damply to the ground. The building looked deserted. He walked around the back to the room where he had slept on his return from Bärnsö. It had been only a few months ago but it already felt unreal.
The sight of the deserted building made him feel uneasy. He returned to his car and continued his journey. In Valdemarsvik he stopped and bought a bottle of whisky, then had a cup of coffee and some sandwiches in a cafe. He told them not to butter the bread.
It was 5 p.m. and already dark when he started down the winding road along the Valdemarsvik bay towards Gryt and Fyrudden. Lennart Westin had called him out of the blue one afternoon at the beginning of September, after the Larstam case had ended. Wallander had been interviewing a young man who had assaulted his father. It was slow going and Wallander wasn't getting anywhere with him. Finally he gave up and handed the matter over to Hansson.
When he got back to his office, the phone rang. It was Westin. He asked him when Wallander was planning to come to see him. Wallander had forgotten all about the standing invitation and an earlier phone call when he had actually agreed to visit, thinking nothing would ever come of it. They decided on a date in October, Westin had called him a few weeks later to confirm it, and now here he was on his way.
They agreed to meet in Fyrudden at 6 p.m. Westin would pick him up in his boat. Wallander was going to stay until Sunday. Wallander was grateful for the invitation, of course, but it also made him nervous. He almost never socialised with people he didn't know. The autumn had been marred by health concerns. He constantly worried about having a stroke, although Dr Göransson tried to reassure him. His blood-sugar levels had stabilised and he was losing weight and had adopted a healthy diet. But Wallander felt it was already too late. Although he hadn't even turned 50 yet, he felt like he was living on borrowed time.
When he swung down towards Fyrudden harbour it was raining harder than before. He parked the car in the same spot he had used that summer, turned off the engine and heard the waves smack against the pier. Shortly before 6 p.m. he saw the lights from an approaching boat. It was Westin.
Wallander got out of his car, grabbed his bag, and headed over. Westin popped his head out of the wheelhouse. He smiled.
"Welcome!" Westin yelled, trying to make himself heard above the wind. "I'm taking you back right away. Dinner's ready."
He took Wallander's bag while Wallander climbed aboard unsteadily. He was freezing. It was rapidly getting much colder.
"So you finally made it up here," Westin said when Wallander entered the wheelhouse.
At that moment Wallander no longer felt hesitant. He was glad to be there. Westin swung the boat around and Wallander grabbed at the side to keep his balance. When they made their way out of the harbour, he felt the hold of the waves on the boat getting stronger.
"Do you get seasick or nervous in this kind of weather?" Westin asked.
He asked the question in a light-hearted manner but there was real concern in his voice.
"Probably," Wallander said.
Westin increased his speed and they sped out onto open water. Wallander suddenly realised he was enjoying himself. No one knew where he was, no one could reach him. For the first time in a long while, he could relax.
Henning Mankell, One Step Behind
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