Once on the lower level, he pauses as he hears something strange, as if a wet blanket is being pulled across a tile floor.
“Veronique?” he asks in a strangled voice.
Pontus Salman can see light from the pool dapple against a white stone wall. With his heart racing, he slowly, silently, walks toward the pool.
98
the prosecutor
Chief Prosecutor Jens Svanehjälm greets Saga Bauer, Joona Linna, and Carlos Eliasson quietly, gestures them to a seat, and then sits down. The material Anja Larsson collected is spread over the coffee table in front of him. Svanehjälm takes a sip of his soy coffee and looks at the top picture before he turns to Carlos.
“You’ll have a hard time convincing me,” he says.
“But we will,” Joona says with a smile.
“Go ahead, make my day,” the prosecutor replies in English.
Svanehjälm looks like a little boy dressed in his father’s clothes. His neck is thin, without any apparent Adam’s apple, and his narrow shoulders slump even though he wears a well-tailored suit.
“This is complicated,” Saga says. “But we fear Axel Riessen from ISP has been kidnapped as part of this slaughter that’s been going on the past few days.”
Carlos’s phone rings so she pauses.
“I’m sorry,” he says to them, and then into the intercom he snaps, “I thought I told you that we couldn’t be disturbed!” He listens a moment to the voice there and then picks up the office phone. “Carlos Eliasson here.”
He listens and then his cheeks flame bright red. He mumbles that he understands, thanks the caller, and hangs up.
“I’m sorry,” Carlos says.
“It’s nothing,” Jens Svanehjälm says politely.
“I mean, I’m sorry that I have troubled you at all with this meeting! That was Axel Riessen’s secretary calling from ISP. I’ve been in contact with her all morning … and she’s just gotten a call from Axel Riessen.”
“So what did she say—no kidnapping?” Jens Svanehjälm smiles.
“He is on Raphael Guidi’s yacht wrapping up the final details on the export approval.”
Joona and Saga exchange glances.
“So you’re all happy now?” asks the prosecutor genially.
“Apparently Axel Riessen requested a meeting with Raphael Guidi,” Carlos tells them.
“He would have spoken to us first,” Saga says stubbornly.
“The secretary says that they’ve been on the boat the whole day to iron out any differences. He says the agreement is long overdue and he would probably fax his signature in to the ISP this evening.”
“He’s going to authorize it?” asks Saga as she stands up abruptly.
“That’s right.” Carlos smiles.
“And his plans after that? He’s made plans—” Joona inquires.
“He was—” Carlos stops and frowns at Joona.
“Why did you think he would plan something special after this meeting?” he asks. “But yes, his secretary told me he planned to borrow a Forgus sailboat from Raphael Guidi to go on a long sail down the coast to Kaliningrad.”
“Sounds wonderful,” says Jens as he gets up to leave.
“Idiots!” Saga says as she kicks the wastebasket. “You must know he was forced to make that call!”
“Let’s behave like adults here,” Carlos says.
He bends down to pick up the wastebasket and the spilled trash.
“So we’re done here now, aren’t we?” Svanehjälm says quietly.
“Axel Riessen is a prisoner on Raphael Guidi’s boat,” Joona says just as quietly, but his words are rock firm. “Give us the authority to go get him.”
“Maybe I’m really dense, but I see no cause for action at all,” Jens Svanehjälm tells them, and calmly leaves the room.
They watch him leisurely close the door behind him.
“Sorry I lost it,” Saga apologizes to Carlos. “But this makes no sense. Axel was adamant he would never sign this agreement … at least, not of his own free will.”
“Saga, I’ve put two lawyers onto this case,” Carlos explains. “All they found was a perfectly legitimate export deal that Silencia Defense had put together. I assure you they went over it with a fine-tooth comb—”
“But we have a photograph where Palmcrona and Salman meet with Raphael Guidi and Agathe al-Haji in order to—”
“I know all that,” Carlos says hastily. “But we can’t prove what we suspect. A simple photograph is not enough.”
“So we’re going to just sit on our asses and watch this ship leave Sweden with ammunition we know is bound for Sudan?” Saga exclaims indignantly.
“Get Pontus Salman in here,” Carlos answers. “Get him to testify against Raphael Guidi. Offer him whatever you can as long as he agrees to be a witness—”
“But if he refuses?” Saga asks.
“Then there’s nothing we can do.”
“Actually, we do have another witness,” Joona says softly.
“I’d like to meet him!” Carlos demands skeptically.
“We just have to bring him in before they find his drowned body in the sea outside of Kaliningrad.”
“You’re not going to get your way this time, Joona.” Carlos seems to push himself back.
“Yes, I will.”
“No, you won’t.”
“Yes, indeed I will.” Joona won’t give an inch. Carlos looks at Joona sadly.
“We’ll never convince the prosecutor about this,” he says after a while. “But since I can’t spend the rest of my life sitting here and saying no to you while you say yes, well, then …”
He sighs, thinks for a moment, and then says, “I’ll give you permission to look for Axel Riessen in your usual role as our consultant. We simply need to check on his safety.”
“Joona will need backup,” Saga says.
“This is not a real police operation,” Carlos says. “It’s just a way to get Joona to shut up.”
“But Joona will be—”
“What I want,” Carlos says, “what I really want is for you, Saga, to bring Pontus Salman here from Södertälje as I’ve already requested … if he can give us a watertight case, we can go after Raphael Guidi with everything we’ve got.”
“There’s no time for all that,” Joona says as he starts walking to the door.
“I’ll go get Pontus,” Saga agrees.
“And Joona? What are you—”
“I’m going to drop in on Raphael and have a little chat,” Joona answers as he walks out of the room.
99
the payment
After lying huddled in the trunk of a car, Axel is stiff when he’s finally allowed out. He finds he’s been taken to a small private airport. The landing strip is made of concrete and surrounded by a high fence. A helicopter waits in front of a building that looks like a barracks. A tall mast sticks up from the roof.
Axel can hear the screech of seagulls as he is made to walk between the two men who have kidnapped him. He’s still wearing just trousers and a shirt. There’s nothing to say, so he climbs into the helicopter with the men. He sits down and fastens the harness. One of the two men is the pilot. He manipulates the instruments on the panel before him, then turns a tiny, shining key, hits another control, and presses a pedal.
The man next to the pilot spreads a map over his lap.
There’s peeling tape on the windshield.
The motor hums as the engine takes hold and the rotors start to slowly rotate. The narrow blades slice heavily through the air and the hazy sunshine blinks across the windshield. The rotor revs more and more quickly.
A paper cup on the ground is blown away.
The engine has warmed up. The blades clatter deafeningly. The pilot holds the joystick in his right hand, moving it with small, square movements. Suddenly they lift.
The helicopter heads slowly straight up at first, but then it tips forward and they move off.
Axel’s stomach lurches as they fly over
the fence, up over the trees, and then swing so quickly to the left that it feels as if the helicopter is tipping to the side.
Swiftly they put the rolling green ground behind them, along with a few lonely roads and a house with a shining tin-plated roof.
The helicopter engine thuds and the shadows of the rotating blades flick across the windshield.
The mainland ends and the sea opens up beneath them.
Axel tries to think through what’s happened. Raphael Guidi must have had everything in place. He’d phoned Axel from his yacht in the Finnish bay. He’d said that he was on his way to Latvia and heading for the open Baltic Sea, then Axel had cut him off. There could have been no more than a minute or two between the time he told Guidi he would not sign and the moment when the two thugs broke into his house and shocked him with the stun gun.
At least they didn’t rough him up. They made sure he was lying comfortably even if it was in the trunk of a car.
Half an hour later, they’d stopped that car and exchanged it for another.
An hour later, they let him walk on his own to the helicopter.
The ocean beneath them moves past as swiftly as a highway. The skies above seem static, cloudy, and moistly white. They’re flying at fifty meters and at great speed. The pilot talks into the radio but Axel finds it impossible to hear what he’s saying.
Axel dozes for a while and can no longer sense how long he’s been in the helicopter when he looks down to see a luxury yacht plowing through the rippling sea. It is huge, a white ship large enough to contain a light blue swimming pool and several tanning decks.
They drop steeply down.
Axel reminds himself again that Raphael Guidi is a very rich man and he leans forward to take a good look at the yacht. It’s really unbelievable. The ship is trim and arrow-sharp and so white it looks frosted. It’s at least one hundred meters long with a soaring captain’s bridge, at least two stories high, on the afterdeck.
The helicopter thrashes its way down toward the rings marked on a helicopter pad on the foredeck. The backwash from the rotor blades whips along the water curving from the sides of the boat. The helicopter hovers, sinks slowly, and then settles onto the platform, softly swaying. They land smoothly and wait until the blades stop. The helicopter pilot remains in the cockpit while the other man takes Axel’s arm to guide him across the platform. They stoop in the wind draft until they pass through a glass door.
The room they enter seems to be an elegant waiting room, with sofas and a coffee table as well as a darkened large-screen television. A man in a white uniform greets them smoothly and gestures toward a sofa for Axel to take a seat.
“Would you like something to drink?” he asks softly.
“Just water, please,” Axel replies.
“Plain or mineral water?” asks the man.
Before Axel can reply, another man walks through the door.
This one resembles the first man who’d escorted Axel from the helicopter. They are both tall and wide with well-coordinated bodies, but this new man is so blond that his eyebrows are almost colorless, and his nose looks like it had once been painfully broken. The resemblance ends there. Axel’s first captor has gray hair and horn-rim glasses. They move together as a team, silently, effectively and with no wasted movement, as they lead Axel down some steps to the suites below.
The whole ship seems strangely deserted. A beautiful little wicker suite on a platform has been neglected. The exquisite weaving has splits and jagged points that stick out from the edges of the chairs and table. Axel is surprised to see that the pool, which looked so blue from above, almost looks dusty. It clearly has not had water in it for years. It’s filled with piles of broken chairs, a sofa without cushions, and some broken desk chairs.
Inside, the farther one goes in the ship, the more empty and deserted it seems. Axel’s footsteps echo across the hallway’s scratched marble floor.
They walk through double doors with the words SALA DE PRANZO elegantly carved into the dark wood above. The dining room is enormous. Only open sea can be seen outside the panoramic windows and a wide, red-carpeted staircase leads to the upper level. Stunning crystal chandeliers hang from the ceiling. The room has been designed to impress, but on the dining-room table there’s nothing but a copier, a fax machine, two computers, and a massive collection of folders with filed paperwork.
A short man sits at a small table in the massive room. His hair is flecked with gray and a wide bald spot shines on his crown. Axel recognizes Raphael Guidi at once. Guidi is dressed casually in light blue gym shorts with a matching jacket. The number 7 is stitched to his breast pocket with a larger image on the back. He wears white tennis shoes without socks. “Welcome,” he says in English.
A cell phone rings in his pocket, and Guidi picks it up, glances at the number, but doesn’t answer. Almost immediately afterward, another phone call comes in, and Guidi says a few words in Italian. Then he looks at Axel Riessen. He gestures proudly to the panoramic windows and the rolling ocean waves.
“I am here against my will,” Axel begins.
“I’m sorry, but there was no other way. We’ve run out of time—”
“What do you want from me?”
“I want your loyalty,” Raphael replies shortly.
The two bodyguards grin down at the floor and then immediately wipe the expression from their faces. Raphael takes a long gulp of what looks like yellow vitamin water and burps loudly.
“Loyalty. The only thing that matters,” he says softly as he looks sternly at Axel. “I know you believe I have nothing you might want in payment, but—”
“That’s true,” Axel answers sharply.
“Still, I believe we can make a deal … I believe I have something you want desperately,” Raphael continues. He smiles, but there is no pleasure in the grimace. “For your loyalty I will offer something that you really, truly want. In fact, what you want more than anything else in the world.”
Axel shakes his head in disbelief. “I couldn’t even say what that might be.”
“Oh, no,” Raphael says smoothly. “What you want more than anything else in the world seems so simple … a good night’s sleep—”
“How did you know that?” Axel gasps, then stops short as he sees Raphael’s cool, calculating look.
“So then you already know that I’ve tried every possible way,” Axel says slowly.
Raphael gestures indifferently. “You will be provided with a new liver.”
“I’ve been on the donor’s list for years,” Axel says with an involuntary smile. “I call the doctors every time they have a meeting, but my liver damage was self-inflicted and my tissue type is so unusual, no donors can be found.”
“I have located a liver for you, Axel Riessen,” Raphael says in his sharp voice.
There’s silence in the room and Axel feels his face and ears flush.
“And in return?” Axel says, swallowing hard. “You want me to sign the export authorization for Kenya.”
“More than that,” Raphael says. “I want us to sign a Paganini contract.”
“What is that?”
“There’s no hurry, there will be time to consider. It’s a major decision. But before you decide, I want you to go thoroughly through the information I’ve accumulated about this particular organ donor.”
Axel’s thoughts zip through his mind at blazing speed. Axel eagerly tells himself that he can sign the export authorization and then, once he’s gotten his liver, turn on Guidi and testify against him. He’d be protected by the authorities, he knows, and perhaps he would have to change his identity and all that. But he would be able to sleep again.
“Why don’t we have something to eat?” Raphael asks. “I’m hungry. Aren’t you?”
“Maybe …”
“But before we eat, please phone your secretary at ISP and let her know that you are here.”
100
pontus salman
Saga has her phone against her ear as she stops for a mo
ment next to the recycle bin in the hallway. She sees without noticing it the leaflike remains of a butterfly on the floor, mimicking life in the breeze from the ventilation system.
“Don’t you have anything else to do up there in Stockholm?” asks an officer with a Gotland dialect when she finally connects with Södertälje.
“About Pontus Salman,” she says irritably.
“Well, he’s gone now.” The policeman sounds contented.
“What the hell are you saying?” she yells.
“Well, I talked to Gunilla Sommer, our psychologist, who brought him into the psychiatric ward.”
“And?”
“She interviewed him and decided, without reservation, that he was no longer a candidate for suicide. She felt he should be free to go, so she released him. Hospital beds cost money, you know.”
“Send out a description and bring him in at once!” Saga demands immediately.
“For what? A halfhearted suicide attempt?”
“Just make sure you find him!” Saga snarls and hangs up.
She jogs toward the elevators when Göran Stone steps in front of her and blocks her with outspread arms.
“So you want to get Pontus Salman to talk to you—right?” he teases.
“Right,” she says, and tries to push past, but he doesn’t let her go.
“Just shake your ass a little,” he says. “Or toss your hair so that you’re—”
“Move!” Saga commands. She’s so angry, her forehead begins to flush.
“Okay, sorry, I just wanted to help.” Göran Stone laughs nastily. “But for your information, we’ve just sent four cars to Salman’s house on Lidingö.”
“What’s happened?” Saga asks quickly.
“The neighbors called the police.” Göran smiles. “They’d heard a little bang-bang and some screaming.”
Saga pushes Stone roughly away and begins to run.
“Thank you so much, Göran!” Göran calls after her. “You’re the best, Göran!”