"Yes?"
He had pressed the button beside the gate and was talking into the intercom.
"I'm the detective investigating all this mess. Can you let me in?" "It's three in the morning."
"Yes."
"There's no one here who-"
"Can you let me in?"
He slipped through the gate and central security, then crossed one of the prison's dry inner yards.
He had never fired death at a person before.
It had been his decision.
His responsibility.
Ewert Grens approached the building called Block B, paused a while outside the front door, and looked up at the second floor.
The acrid smell of fire had almost intensified.
First an explosion and a projectile that penetrated and shattered a window and a person's head. Then another, more powerful one, the god-awful black smoke that never seemed to stop, that concealed what they were trying to see; an explosion that could not be explained.
His decision.
He started to walk up the stairs, past all the closed doors, toward the smell of smoke.
His responsibility.
Ewen Grens had in fact never had any relationship to death. He worked with it, frequently came face to face with it, and any thoughts of his own death were irrelevant. They had stopped thirty years ago the moment that he, as the driver of a police van, had driven over a head that had then ceased to function. Anni's head. He had no desire to die, it wasn't that, nor did he desire to live. In his meeting with guilt and grief he had developed the ability to encapsulate it, and had continued to do so, and now he didn't even know where to start.
The door was open and the inside was black with soot.
Grens looked into the burned-out workshop, pulled some transparent plastic bags over his shoes and stepped over the blue and white cordon.
There was always something lonely about places that have been destroyed by fire, the all-engulfing flames that eventually turned and subsided. He was walking on the remains of shelves that had fallen, between machines that were black and had been chewed and stopped.
It was there. On the ceiling, on the walls. What he had come for.
He had seen the white ones before, the forensic team's markers for body parts. More than in Västmannagatan. But the red ones, he had never been to a crime scene with red flags.
Two bodies, hundreds… maybe thousands of pieces.
He wondered whether Errfors, the forensic pathologist, would ever be able to piece enough together for an identification. People who had been alive until recently, who no longer existed, other than in bits marked by small flags. He started to count them without knowing why, just a few square meters of wall, but tired of it when he reached three hundred seventy-four. He crossed over the window that was no longer there, a light breeze through the hole in the wall. He stood in the place where Hoffmann had stood, the church and the church rower silhouetted against the sky. The sniper had lain up there, he had aimed and fired a bullet on Ewert Grens's command.
Aspsås shrank in the rear view mirror.
He had stayed for a couple of hours in the stench of burned oil and heavy smoke. The feeling had continued to torment him, no matter how many red and white flags marking body parts he counted, he still couldn't understand it, and the unease kept him awake, a reminder of the adrenaline and irritation. He didn't like it, tried to lose it in the mess on the floor and the tools that would never be used again, but it clung to him, whispering something he couldn't understand. He was approaching Stockholm through the northern satellite towns and suburbs when his mobile phone sang out from the back seat. He slowed down, leaned back for his jacket.
"Ewert?"
"Are you awake?"
"Where are you?"
"This early, Sven? Shouldn't it be me who's calling you?"
Sven Sundkvist smiled. It was a long time since he and Anita had been bothered by the phone ringing in the bedroom between midnight and dawn. Ewert always called the minute he had something that needed an immediate answer, and that tended to be at night when everyone else was asleep. But he hadn't been able to sleep himself last night. He had lain close to Anita and listened to the ticking of the alarm clock until, after a couple of hours, he crept out of bed and went down to the kitchen on the ground floor of their terraced house, and sat there doing crosswords, as he sometimes did when the nights were long. But the unease refused to leave his house. The same unease that Ewert had talked about earlier that evening, thoughts that had nowhere to go.
"I'm on my way into the city, Ewert. I'm just by Gullmarsplan and then heading west. To Kungsangen. Sterner just called."
"Sterner?"
"The sniper."
Grens accelerated-the early morning commuters were still in their garages, so it was easy to drive.
"Then we've got about the same distance. I'm just passing Haga Park. What's it about?"
"Tell you when we get there."
Another locked gate in another uniformed world.
Grens and Sundkvist arrived at the Svea Life Guards in Kungsangen only a few minutes apart. Sterner was waiting for them by the regiment guardhouse. He looked rested, but was wearing the same clothes as the day before, white-and-gray camouflage, creased after a night on top of the bedclothes. Standing in front of the closed gate and with the barracks behind him, he looked the cliché of a model American marine, cropped hair and broad-shouldered, square face, the kind that on films always stand too near and shout too loud.
"Same clothes as yesterday?"
"Yup. When the helicopter dropped me off… I went and lay down." "And you slept?"
"Like a baby."
Grens and Sundkvist exchanged looks. The guy who had fired had slept. But the one who had made the decision to fire, and his closest colleague, had not.
Sterner signed them in and showed the way to a deserted barrack square, with solid buildings that stared down at all visitors. Sterner walked fast and Grens had difficulty keeping up when they went through the first door and carried on up the stairs, down long corridors with stone floors, conscripts still in underpants ahead of a day in uniform.
"Life Guards. First company. The ones who are going to be officers and stay longest."
He stopped in a room with simple, institutional furniture, white walls that needed painting, and plastic flooring on hard concrete.
Four work stations, one in each corner.
"My colleagues won't be coming in today. A two-day exercise in north Uppland, around Tierp. We won't be disturbed here."
He closed the door.
"I called as soon as I woke up. The thought that I had as I fell asleep came back to me and refused to leave the bed."
He leaned forward.
"I observed. With the binoculars. I watched him for a long rime. I followed his movements, his face for nearly half an hour."
"And?"
"He was standing in the window, fully exposed. You mentioned it too, I heard you. Like he knew he could be seen, that he wanted to demonstrate his power over the hostages, the whole situation, maybe even you. You said that he was doing it because he was sure he was out of range."
"Right."
"That's what you said. What you believed."
He looked at the door, as if he wanted to reassure himself that it really was shut.
"I didn't think that. Not then. And not now."
"I think you'll need to explain that."
Grens felt uneasy, the same feeling that had kept him awake, that was in some way connected to the feeling he got in the burned-out workshop. There was something that wasn't right.
"When I was watching him through the binoculars. Object in clear sight. Awaiting order. I don't know, it was like he knew. I repeat. Awaiting order. As if he knew that he was in range."
"I don't understand."
"I aborted. Abort. Object out of sight. I aborted twice."
"Yes, and?"
Well, both times… it was like he knew when I was going to
shoot. He moved so… precisely."
"He moved several times."
Sterner got up, he was restless, went over to the door, checked it, then over to the window with a view of the square.
"He did. But both times… precisely as I was about to fire."
"And the third time?"
"He stood still. Then… it was like… like he'd decided. He stood still and waited."
'And?"
"One bullet, one hit. The motto of sniper training. I only shoot if I know I'm going to hit the target."
Grens went over to the same window.
"Where?"
"Where…
"Where did you hit him?"
"The head. I shouldn't have done it. But I had no choice."
"What do you mean?"
"I mean that from a distance, we always aim at the chest. The largest target area. I should have aimed there. But he was standing in profile the whole time and so… to get as big a target area as possible… I shot at his head."
And the explosion?"
"I don't know."
"Don't know?"
"I don't know."
"But you-"
"It wasn't connected to the shot."
A group of about twenty teenagers in uniform marched across the gravel in two rows.
They tried to lift their legs and swing their arms at the same time, while someone who was a bit older walked beside them screeching something. They weren't succeeding.
"And one more thing."
"Yes?"
"Who was he?"
"Why?"
"I killed him."
The two rows were now standing at ease.
The older uniform demonstrated how their guns should lie on their shoulders while they marched.
It was important that they all held them the same way.
"I killed him. I want to know his name. I feel I have the right." Grens hesitated, looked at Sven, and then back at Sterner.
"Pier Hoffmann."
Sterner's face showed nothing. If it was a name he recognized he hid it well.
"Hoffmann. Do you have his personal details?"
"Yes."
"I want to go over to administration. And I'd like you to come with me. There's something I want to check."
Ewert and Sven followed Sterner's back across the barrack square to a building that was smaller than the others and housed the regimental commander's quarters, administration, and a slightly better officers' mess. On the second floor, Sterner rapped on the doorframe of an open door, and an older man sitting in front of a computer gave them a friendly nod.
"I need his personal ID number."
Sven had already gotten out a notebook from his inner pocket, which he flicked through until he found what he was looking for.
"721018-0010."
The older man in front of the computer typed in the ten-digit number, waited for a few seconds and then shook his head.
"Born in the early 1970s? Then he won't be here. Ten years back, that's what the law stipulates. Any documents older than that are stored in the military archives."
He smiled, looked pleased.
"But… I always make my own copies of anything we have before sending it off. Svea Life Guards' own archive. Every young man who has done his military service here in the past thirty years can be found on the shelves next door."
A room crowded with shelves on every wall, from floor to ceiling. He got down on his knees and ran his finger along the backs of the files before picking out a black one.
"Born 1972. Now, if he was here… ninety-one, ninety-two, ninety-three, maybe even ninety-four. Life Company, you said. Sniper training?" "Yes."
He leafed through the papers, put the file back, then took out the one beside it.
"Not ninety-one. So we'll try ninety-two."
He had got about halfway when he stopped and looked up.
"Hoffmann?"
"Piet Hoffmann."
"Then we've got a match."
Ewert and Sven stepped forward simultaneously to get a better look at the papers that the archivist was holding up. Hoffmann's full name, Hoffmann's personal ID number, then a long row of combined numbers and letters, some sort of record.
"What does that mean?"
"It means that someone called Piet Hoffmann, someone with the personal ID number that you just gave me, completed his military service here in 1993. He followed an eleven-month training program, as a sniper."
Ewert Grens scanned the piece of paper once more.
It was him.
The person they had seen die sixteen hours earlier.
"Special training in weapons and shooting, all positions-prone, kneeling, standing, short range, long range… I think you get the gist?"
Sterner opened the file, took out the piece of paper and copied it on a machine that was as big as the room.
"That feeling that I had… that he knew exactly where I was, what I was doing. If he was trained here… he would have enough skills to know that Aspsås church tower was the only place that we could get him from. He knew that it was possible to kill him."
Sterner held the copy crushed in his hand and then gave it to Grens.
"He'd chosen that place with great care. It's no coincidence that he went to the workshop and that window, in particular. He provoked us to fire. He knew that a good, well-trained marksman could shoot him if he had to.
He shook his head.
"He wanted to die."
The corridor of the intensive care unit at Danderyd hospital had yellow walls and a light blue floor. The nurses sent them friendly smiles and
Ewert Grens and Sven Sundkvist gave equally friendly smiles back. It was a quiet morning-they had both been there for work on many occasions before, often in the evening or weekend, injured people waking on beds in the harsh light of the corridor, which was empty now, as it normally was when alcohol, football matches, and snowy roads were not the order of the day.
They had driven there straight from Kungsingen and the Svea Life Guards, via Norrviken and Edsberg, through small and pleasant suburbs with big detached houses, which made Sven phone home to Anita and Jonas. They had had breakfast together and were about to go to their separate schools. He missed them.
The doctor was a young man, tall and thin, on the verge of skinny, with reserved eyes. He greeted them and showed them into a dark room with drawn curtains.
"He's got a severe concussion. I'll have to ask you to keep the room dark."
One single bed in the room.
A man in his sixties, graying hair, tired eyes, scratches and wounds on both his cheeks, a cut on his forehead that looked deep, his right arm in a sling.
He was found lying under a wall.
"My name is Johan Ferm. We met last night when you came in. I've got two policemen with me who would like to ask you some questions."
The fire and rescue service had searched the burned-out workshop for a long time before they heard faint sounds from underneath one of the piles of rubble. A naked and bruised prison officer with a broken collar bone, but a person who was still breathing.
"I've given them five minutes. Then I'll ask them to leave."
The gray-haired man pulled himself up, grimaced with pain and threw up in a bowl by the side of the bed.
"He is not allowed to move. Severe concussion. Your five minutes have already started."
Ewert Grens turned toward the young doctor.
"We'd prefer it if we could be left alone."
"I'm staying here. For medical reasons."
Grens stood by the window while Sven Sundkvist moved a stool from the sink to the bedside, making sure that his face was at about the same height as the injured prison warden's.
"You know Grens?"
Martin Jacobson nodded. He knew who Ewert Grens was, they had met several times; the detective superintendent regularly visited the place where he had chosen to work all his life.
"This is not an interview, Jacobson. We'll do that later, when you're wel
l enough and we have more time. But we do need some information now." "Sorry?"
"This is not-"
"You'll have to speak louder. My eardrums burst in the explosion." Sven leaned forward and raised his voice.
"We've got a fairly good picture of what happened when you were taken hostage. Your colleagues have given us a detailed description of the shooting of a prisoner in solitary confinement."
The doctor tapped on Sven's shoulder.
`Ask short questions. That's all he can manage. Short answers. Otherwise you'll just be wasting your five minutes."
Sven considered turning around and telling the man in the white coat to shut up. But he didn't. He never snapped at people as it seldom helped the situation.
"First of all… can you remember any of what happened yesterday?" Jacobson was breathing heavily, he was in a lot of pain and struggled to find the words that disappeared in his seriously concussed brain.
"I remember everything. Until I lost consciousness. If I've understood correctly, a wall fell on me?"
"It fell down as a result of an explosion. But I want to know… what happened just before?"
"I don't know. I wasn't there."
"You weren't… there?"
"I was in another room, Hoffmann put me there, hands tied behind my back, somewhere at the back of the workshop, near the main door. He moved me there after we'd stripped. And after that I think we only had contact once. You're not going to die. That's what he said. Just before the explosion."
Sven looked at Ewert-they had both registered what the elderly guard had just said.
"Jacobson… do you think that Hoffmann moved you in order to… protect you?"
Martin Jacobson answered straight away.
"I'm sure that's why he did it. Despite everything that happened. •. I didn't feel threatened anymore."
Sven leaned even farther forward, it was important that Jacobson could hear.
"The explosion. I want to ask more about that. If you think back, can you remember anything that might explain it) And the incredible force of it?"
"No."
"Nothing at all?"
"I've thought about it. And of course, it was a workshop and there was diesel. That explains the smoke. But the actual explosion… nothing."
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