“I sure as hell can!”
“On the other hand, maybe you should just forget about all that,” Joona says. “Isn’t it time for your physical therapy?”
“Are you pulling my leg?” Erixson says, hardly able to hold back his indignation. “What is physical therapy anyway but hidden unemployment?”
“But you really ought to rest,” Joona teases. “Maybe another tech guy—”
“I’m flipping out just sitting here!”
“You’ve only been on sick leave for six hours.”
“I’m climbing the walls!”
33
the search
Joona is driving east towards Gustavsberg. I ought to call Disa, he thinks. Instead, he calls Anja.
“I need Claudia Fernandez’s address.”
“Mariagatan 5,” she replies immediately. “Not far from the old porcelain factory.”
“Thanks.”
Anja stays on the line.
“I’m waiting,” she says, her voice teasing.
“What are you waiting for?” he asks softly.
“For you to tell me that we have ferry tickets to Finland. We’ll rent a cottage with a wood-fired sauna next to the water.”
“Sounds good,” Joona says hesitantly.
The weather is now grey and hazy and extremely humid as Joona parks his car in front of Claudia Fernandez’s house. Joona steps out and smells the bitter scent of currant bushes and elf-cap moss. He stands still for a moment, lost in a memory. The face he’s conjured up fades as he rings the doorbell. The nameplate looks like it came from a woodshop class. ‘Fernandez’ is in letters childishly burned into the wood.
The doorbell’s melodic ring echoes inside the house. He waits. After a few moments, he hears approaching footsteps.
Claudia has a worried expression as she opens the door. Seeing Joona, she steps back into the hallway knocking a coat loose from its hanger.
“No,” she whispers. “Not Penny—”
“Claudia, please, I don’t have bad news,” Joona says quickly.
Claudia can’t stay upright and collapses to the floor among the shoes, underneath the coats. She breathes like a frightened animal.
“What’s happened?” she asks in a fearful voice. Joona bends forward, down to her.
“We don’t know much yet, but yesterday, Penelope tried to call you.”
“She’s alive,” Claudia whispers.
“So far,” Joona answers.
“Thank you, dear Lord. Thank you, thank you!” Claudia whispers again.
“We caught a message on your answering machine.”
“On my … no, that’s not possible,” she says as she gets up with his help.
“There was a lot of static. We needed an expert to recover her voice,” Joona explains.
“The only thing I heard, there was a man who told me to get a job!”
“That’s the one,” Joona says. “Penelope is speaking first, but it’s barely audible.”
“What does she say?”
“She says she needs help. The maritime police want to organise a search-group chain.”
“But to trace the phone—”
“Claudia,” Joona says soothingly. “I must ask you a few questions.”
“What kinds of questions?”
“Why don’t we sit down?”
They walk through the hallway and into the kitchen.
“Joona Linna, may I ask you something?” she says timidly.
“You can ask, but I might not be able to answer.”
Claudia puts coffee cups on the table for them both. Her hand shakes slightly. She sits across from him and stares at him for a long time.
“You have a family, don’t you?” she asks.
It’s dead quiet in the light-filled, yellow-painted kitchen.
Joona finally fills the silence. “Do you remember the last time you were at Penelope’s apartment?”
“Last week. A Tuesday. She helped me hem a pair of trousers for Viola.”
Claudia’s mouth trembles.
“Think carefully, Claudia,” he says, leaning forward. “Did you see a photograph taped up on her glass door?”
“Yes.”
“What did the photo show?” Joona asks, trying to keep his voice calm.
“I don’t know. I didn’t pay attention.”
“But you’re sure you saw a photograph?”
“Yes.” Claudia nods.
“Perhaps there were people in the picture?”
“I don’t know. I thought it had something to do with her job.”
“Was the picture taken inside or outside?”
“No idea.”
“Try and picture it in your mind.”
Claudia shuts her eyes. She shakes her head. “Sorry, I can’t.”
She looks down, thinks, and shakes her head again. “The only thing I remember thinking is that it was odd that she’d hung that photo on her door because that’s not particularly attractive.”
“Why do you think it had something to do with her job?”
“I don’t know,” Claudia whispers.
Joona’s mobile phone rings inside his jacket. He picks it up, sees that it’s Carlos, and answers, “I’m here.”
“I just talked to Lance at the maritime police on Dalarö. He says they’ve arranged an organised search starting tomorrow. Three hundred people and almost fifty boats have agreed to join.”
“That’s good,” Joona says. He watches Claudia get up and walk into the hall.
“And then I called Erixson to see how he was doing,” Carlos says.
“He seems to be doing okay,” Joona says neutrally.
“Joona, I have no idea what you’re up to, but Erixson warned me that you’re about to be right again.”
Once the call is finished, Joona follows Claudia out into the hall.She’s put on her coat and is pulling on Wellington boots.
“I heard what that man said on the phone,” Claudia says. “I can help look. I can look all night if—”
She opens the door.
“Claudia, you must let the police handle this.”
“My daughter called me and needs my help.”
“I know it’s hard to sit and wait—”
“But, please, can’t I go with you? I won’t be in the way! I can make food and answer the phone so you won’t have to worry about that.”
“Is there anyone who can stay here with you? A relative or a friend?”
“I don’t want anyone else here! I just want my Penny!”
34
dreambow
Erixson holds a map on his lap as well as a large folder he acquired by getting a messenger to deliver it to his hospital room. He’s cooling himself with a whirring face fan while Joona pushes him in his wheelchair through the hospital corridors.
His Achilles tendon has been sutured, and instead of a cast, his foot is fixed inside a special boot with toes pointing down. He mutters that all he needs is a ballet shoe on the other foot and he’ll be ready to perform Swan Lake.
Joona nods in a friendly way towards two elderly ladies sitting on a sofa and holding hands. They giggle, whisper to each other, and then wave at him as if they were schoolgirls.
“On the same morning they headed out on the boat,” Erixson was saying, “Björn bought an envelope and two stamps at Central Station. He had a receipt from Pressbyrån in his wallet, which we found on the boat. I forced the security company to send along the tape from the security camera. It really does look like he’s posting a photograph, just like you’ve said all this time.”
“So who is he sending the photograph to?” asks Joona.
“We can’t read the address on the envelope.”
“Maybe to himself.”
“But his apartment is so burned out he doesn’t even have a door,” Erixson says.
“Call the post office and ask them.”
As they enter the lift, Erixson starts some strange swimming movements with his arms. Joona looks at him calmly
but doesn’t ask any questions.
“Jasmin tells me it’s good for me,” Erixson explains.
“Who’s Jasmin?”
“My physical therapist. She looks like a sweet little cupcake, but she’s hard as nails: Keep quiet, stop complaining, sit up straight. She even called me a little potbelly.” Erixson smiles shyly as they step into the hallway.
They turn into a room set aside for meditation. It has a simple altar with a smooth wooden cross hung on a metre-long stand above it. There is also a tapestry on the wall, a Christ figure surrounded by a series of light-coloured triangles.
Down the hall, Joona pulls from a store cupboard a large set of flip charts and markers that he’d stashed away earlier. Back in the meditation room, he sees Erixson has already pulled down the Christ tapestry and draped it over the cross that’s now propped up in a corner.
“All that we know is that at least one person is willing to kill for this photograph,” Joona says.
“Yes, but why?”
Erixson pulls out a glue stick from his supplies and sticks Björn Almskog’s bank-account withdrawals to the wall. He also sets up lists from each phone call, copies of bus tickets, receipts from Björn’s wallet, and notes from the voicemails they’d collected.
“This photograph must reveal something so important that someone is desperate to keep it a secret,” Joona says, as he takes out a marker and begins to write a timeline on the largest flip chart.
“Right,” Erixson answers.
“Let’s just stop him by finding this photo,” Joona says.
06:40 Penelope takes a taxi from her apartment
06:45 Björn arrives at Penelope’s apartment
06:48 Björn leaves the apartment with the photograph
07:07 Björn posts the photograph from the Pressbyrån at Central Station
Erixson rolls up to look carefully at each point while he peels the wrapper and foil from a chocolate bar.
“Penelope Fernandez leaves the television studio and calls Björn ten minutes later,” he says, pointing to the list with the phone calls. Her strip of transportation coupons is stamped ten thirty. Her little sister, Viola, calls Penelope at ten forty-five. Penelope is probably already with Björn at the marina on Långholmen.”
“But what does Björn do in the meanwhile?”
“That’s what we need to find out,” Erixson says contentedly and cleans his fingers with a white handkerchief.
Erixson rolls his wheelchair along the wall and points to another strip of transportation coupons.
“Björn leaves Penelope’s apartment with the photograph. He takes the underground and at seven minutes after seven he buys the envelope and two stamps.”
“And posts the letter,” says Joona.
Erixson clears his throat and continues. “The next piece of evidence is a transaction on his Visa card. He pays twenty crowns to Dreambow Internet Café on Vattugatan at seven thirty-five.”
“Five minutes after seven thirty,” Joona says as he writes this on the chronology.
“Where in the hell is Vattugatan?”
“It’s a fairly small street,” Joona says. “It’s in the old Klara Quarter.”
Erixson nods and continues. “I’m guessing that Björn continues on the same stamp to Fridhemsplan. After that we have a phone call from his landline in his apartment. It was an unanswered call to his father, Greger Almskog.”
“We’ll have to ask his father about it.”
“The next piece of evidence is a new stamp on the coupon strip for nine o’clock. Apparently, he took the number 4 bus from Fridhemsplan to Högalindsgatan on Södermalm. From there he went to the boat at Långholmen Harbour.”
Joona fills in the last notes on his paper and then steps back to take a good look at the timeline of that morning.
“So Björn is in a real hurry to get that photograph,” Erixson says. “But he doesn’t want to run into Penelope so he waits until she’s left, rushes inside, takes it off the glass pane, leaves the apartment, and heads to Central Station.”
“I want to look at all the security tapes,” says Joona.
“After that, Björn heads to a nearby internet café, stays there about half an hour at most, and then goes—”
“That’s it,” Joona says.
“What’s it?”
“Both Björn and Penelope already have internet access at home.”
“So why’d he go to an internet café?”
“I’ll head there now,” Joona says, already walking out of the room.
35
deleted data
Detective Inspector Joona Linna turns onto Vattugatan from Brunkeberg Square behind the City Theatre. He parks, gets out, and hurries through an anonymous metal door and down a steep cement walkway.
It’s quiet at the Dreambow Internet Café. The floor has been freshly scrubbed. The scent of lemon and plastic hangs in the air. Shiny Plexiglas chairs have been pushed below the small computer tables. Nothing moves except the patterns on the monitors. A plump man with a pointed black goatee leans against a high counter, sipping coffee from a mug with the inscription ‘Lennart means Lion.’ His jeans are baggy and a shoelace hangs untied from one of his Reeboks.
“I need a computer,” Joona says before he’s even reached the man.
“Get in line,” the man jokes as he makes a sweeping gesture towards the empty seats in the room.
“I need a specific computer,” Joona continues. “A friend of mine was here last Friday morning and I need to use the same computer he did.”
“I don’t know if I can give out—”
Joona bends over and ties the man’s loose lace. “It’s extremely important.”
“Let me take a look at Friday’s log,” the man says, an embarrassed flush coming to his cheeks. “What’s his name?”
“Björn Almskog,” Joona says.
“He used number five, the one in the corner,” the man says. “I need to see your ID.”
Joona hands over his police ID, and the man looks confused as he writes it all down in the log.
“Go ahead and start surfing.”
“Thanks,” Joona says in a friendly way as he walks over to computer number 5.
Joona takes out his mobile phone and places a call to Johan Jönson, a young man in the CID’s department for cyber crimes.
“Just a mo,” answers a ragged voice. “I’ve just swallowed a piece of paper … an old tissue … I blew my nose and at the same time breathed in to sneeze and … no, I really don’t have the energy to explain everything. Who am I talking to?”
“Joona Linna, detective inspector with the National Criminal Investigation Department.”
“Oh, damn. Hi, Joona, what a surprise.”
“You’re already sounding better.”
“Yes, I’ve swallowed it.”
“I need to see what a guy was doing on a computer last Friday.”
“Say no more!”
“I’m in a hurry. I’m sitting in an internet café.”
“Are you on the same machine he used?”
“Right in front of me.”
“Much easier. Much easier. Try to find History. It’s probably been erased. That’s what they do after each user, but there’s always something left on the hard drive. All you have to do is … or really, the best thing to do is to take the thing away and bring it along to me so I can go through the hard drive with a program I’ve designed for—”
“Meet me in a half an hour in the meditation room at Saint Göran’s Hospital,” Joona says as he unplugs the computer, takes it under his arm, and heads towards the exit.
The man with the coffee mug stares at him, astonished, and tries to block him.
“Hey, wait! The computer can’t leave the premises!”
“It’s under arrest,” Joona says in his friendliest manner.
“What’s it suspected of?”
The man’s pale face stares at Joona as Joona waves at him with his free hand and walks out into the bright s
unshine.
36
the connection
The car park in front of Saint Göran’s Hospital is hot and the air is thick and muggy.
Inside the meditation room, Erixson easily manoeuvres his wheelchair around what has truly been converted into a base of operations. Erixson has accumulated three phones, which now all ring at once.
Joona carries in the computer and puts it on a chair. Johan Jönson is already there. He looks about twenty-five years old. He wears an ill-fitting black tracksuit, has a shaved head and thick eyebrows that grow straight across his face. He comes up to Joona shyly. He shrugs off the shoulder strap of his red computer bag, and shakes Joona’s hand.
“Ei saa piettää,” he says, while he pulls out a thin laptop. Erixson pours some Fanta from his thermos into small, unbleached paper cups.
“Usually I put the hard disk in the freezer for a few hours if it’s wobbly,” Johan says. “Then I plug in an ATA/SATA contact. Everyone has a different method. I have a pal over at Ibas who uses RDR and he doesn’t even meet his clients in person—he just sends all the shit over an encrypted phone line. Usually you can save most stuff, but I don’t want to just get most of it—I want it all! That’s my way, getting each and every crumb, and then you need a program like Hanger 18 …”
Johan Jönson throws his head back and pretends to laugh like a mad scientist: “MWA-HA-HAH!”
“I’ve written it myself,” he continues. “It works like a digital vacuum cleaner. It picks up everything and arranges it according to time down to every microsecond.”
He sits down on the altar rail and connects the two computers. His own computer clicks faintly. Typing commands at a furious pace, he studies his screen, scrolls down, reads some more, and types in a new set.
“Is this going to take a while?” Joona asks after a few minutes.
“Who knows?” Johan replies. “Not more than a month.”
Johan swears to himself and writes a new command and then observes the blinking numbers.
“I’m just joking,” he says.
“I realised that.”