They had stopped in front of one of the locked security doors that divided the passage up into smaller sections and he hurried to catch up. The older one was holding a set of keys and had just unlocked the door when he came up behind them.
"Can you wait for me, please?"
They turned around, looked at him, up and down.
"I'm a bit behind."
"On your way home?"
"Yes:"
The guard didn't sound like he suspected anything when he spoke; it had been a friendly question, between colleagues.
"You new?"
"So new that I haven't got my own keys yet."
"Less than two days then?"
"Started yesterday."
"Just like these TWO. Third day for you all tomorrow. Your first key day." He followed behind them.
They had seen him. They had spoken to him.
Now he was just one of four wardens walking together down a prison passage toward central security and the big gate there.
They parted at the stairs that went up to Block A and an eleven-hour shift. He wished them a good night and they looked with envy at their colleague who was about to go home for an evening off.
He stood in the middle of the reception area. There were three doors to choose from.
The first was diagonally opposite him-a visiting room for a woman or a friend or a policeman or a lawyer. It was there that Stefan Lygis had sat when he was told that there was an informant, a snitch in the organization, someone had whispered so someone must die.
The second one was directly behind him, the door that opened on to the corridor that ended in Block G. He almost laughed-he could walk back to his own cell dressed in uniform.
He looked at the third door.
The way past central security and the ever-watchful TV monitors and numbered switches that meant that all the locked doors in the prison could be opened from the large glass box.
There were two people sitting in there. At the front a fairly plump guard with a dark unkempt beard and a tie thrown over his shoulder. Behind him another, considerably slimmer, man with his back to the exit-he couldn't see his face but guessed he was around fifty and probably had some kind of senior position. He took a deep breath, stretched and tried to walk straight: the explosion that had taken both eardrums had also played havoc with his balance.
"Going home in your uniform? Already?"
"Sorry?"
The guard with the round face and sparse beard looked at him. "You're one of the new ones, aren't you?"
"Yes."
"And you're going home in your uniform already?"
"Just the way it worked."
The guard smiled-he was in no rush, some more empty words and the evening would be shorter.
"It's warm out. Darn nice evening."
"I'm sure it is."
"Going straight home?"
The guard leaned to one side and moved a small fan that was standing on the desk, fresh air in the stuffy room. It was easier to see the other man, the one who was thin and sitting on a chair at the back.
He recognized him.
"I think so."
"Someone waiting for you?"
Lennart Oscarsson.
The chief warden he had assaulted a few days ago in a cell in the voluntary isolation unit, a fist in the middle of his face.
"Not at home. But we're meeting again tomorrow. It's been a while." Oscarsson snapped shut the file and turned around.
He looked over at him.
He looked but didn't react.
"Not at home? I had one once, a family that is, but well, I don't know, it just, you know-"
"You'll have to excuse me."
"What?"
"I haven't got time."
His tie was still flung over his shoulder, there were bits of food on it, or maybe it was just wet and lying there to dry.
"Haven't got time? Who does have time?"
The guard pulled his beard, flared his nostrils, his eyes hurt.
"But by all means. Go. I'll open for you."
Two steps up to the metal detector.
Then two steps to the door that was opened from inside the glass box.
Piet Hoffmann turned around, nodded to the guard who was waving his hands around in irritation.
Lennart Oscarsson was still there, right behind him.
Their eyes met again.
He expected someone to start shouting, to come running.
But not a word, not a movement.
The man who was clean-shaven with cropped hair and wearing a warden's uniform when he disappeared out through the gate in the prison wall may have seemed familiar but he didn't have a name-the summer temps seldom did-this one smiled when his face was brushed by the warm wind. It was going to be a lovely evening.
* * *
Yet Another Day Later
* * *
Ewert Grens was sitting at his desk in front of a bookshelf with a hole that could not be filled, no matter how hard he tried, and the dust lay in straight lines no matter how often he wiped it away. He had been sitting there for nearly three hours. And he would continue to sit there until he had worked our whether what he had just seen was something he should be concerned about or whether it was just one of those moments that seemed to be important but that lost all significance if it wasn't shared with someone else.
The day had started with a beautiful morning.
He had slept on the brown corduroy sofa with the window to the courtyard open and had been woken by the first trucks on Bergsgatan. He had stood for a while looking up at the blue sky and gentle wind and then, with a coffee cup in each hand, had gone to the elevators and the remand jail a couple of floors up.
He couldn't resist it.
If you were there early enough and it was clear enough, at this time of day, for a few hours, you could walk along the obvious line cast by the sun in the corridor of the remand jail. This morning he had walked where the floor shone most, making sure to pass the cells where he knew they were in custody for the third day with full restrictions. Ågestam had been careful to ensure that they would wait for most of the statutory seventy-two hours and later that day Grens would attend the court proceedings for the issue of arrest warrants for a chief superintendent, a national police commissioner, and a state secretary from the Ministry of Justice.
The hole on the bookshelf It was as if it was growing.
It would continue to do so until he had made up his mind.
He had spent two days fast forwarding and rewinding tapes from the security cameras at Aspsås prison, frame by frame through locked doors and long passages and gray walls and barbed wire barriers back to those seconds that exploded with thick smoke and dead people. He had studied
Krantz's forensic reports and Errfors' autopsy report and all Sven's and Hermansson's interviews.
He had spent considerable time on two things in particular.
A transcript of the dialogue between the sniper and the observer just before the shot was fired.
Where they talked about a rug that Hoffmann had put over the hostage and tied with something that later in the investigation proved to be a pentyl fuse.
A rug that encapsulates and directs the blast pressure downward, protecting anyone standing nearby.
An interview with a principal prison officer called Jacobson.
Where Jacobson described how Hoffmann covered the hostage's skin with small plastic bags filled with some sort of fluid, which later in the investigation proved to be nitroglycerine.
Nitroglycerine in such large amounts that every part of the body is shattered and can never be identified.
Ewert Grens had laughed out loud in the office.
He had stood in the middle of the floor and looked at the video recorder and the transcripts on the desk and had continued to laugh as he left the police headquarters and drove out to Aspsås and the wall that dominated the small town. He had gone to central security and requested to see all footage from the prison securit
y cameras from twenty-six minutes past two in the afternoon of the twenty-seventh of May and thereafter. He had driven back, got himself some fresh coffee from the machine and sat down to watch every moment that had passed since a lethal shot was fired from a church tower.
Grens had already known what he was looking for.
He had selected the camera that was called number fourteen and was installed about a meter above the glass front of central security. He had then fast forwarded and stopped to study every person who went out. Wardens, visitors, prisoners, suppliers, one head at a time as they passed, their hairline close to the lens; some showed their ID, some signed the register, most were waved through by a guard who recognized them.
He got as far as a tape that was recorded four days after the shot was fired.
Ewert Grens had known instantly that he'd found it.
A man with cropped hair in a Prison and Probation Service uniform had looked up at the camera as he left at six minutes past eight in the evening, looked up for just too long, and then gone on.
Grens had felt the pressure in his stomach and chest that was normally anger, but this time was something else.
He had stopped the tape and rewound, studied the man who chatted with the guard for a while and then looked up at the camera in the same way that he had done three weeks earlier with another guard in another glass-fronted security office, the one in the Government Offices. Grens had followed the uniformed person through the metal detector and the gate and the wall via cameras number fifteen and sixteen and had observed that the person had problems with his balance: it had been an almighty blast, the sort that could burst your eardrums.
You're alive.
That was why he had been sitting at his desk for three hours looking at a hole growing on the bookshelf.
I didn't make a decision about death.
That was why he had to determine if what he had just seen was something he should be concerned about or whether it was of no significance if no one else knew.
Hoffmann is alive. You didn't make a decision about death either.
He laughed again while he took a document out of the desk drawer-summons to the court proceedings for the issue of arrest warrants that he was about to attend and that would lead all the way to a conviction and long sentences for three high-ranking officers who had abused their power.
He laughed even louder, danced across the floor of the silent office, after a while quietly humming something that anyone passing just then might have recognized as a melody that perhaps sounded like a song from the sixties, like "Somebody's Fool" and Siw Malmkvist.
* * *
And Yet Another Day Later
* * *
It was as if the sky were slowly closing in.
Erik Wilson stood in the asphalt yard, his thin clothes itching as nervous flies searched among the pearls of sweat. Ninety-nine degrees Fahrenheit, just above body temperature and it would be even hotter in a couple of hours, in the early afternoon-the heat seemed to settle around that time of day.
He wiped his forehead with an already moist handkerchief and wasn't sure whether his skin or the material benefited most. It had been hard to concentrate in the lecture hall, the air conditioning in the building had broken down in the morning and the discussion about the follow-up course advanced infiltration had petered out. Even the heads of police from the western United States who normally liked to listen to their own voices were listless.
He watched, as he usually did, through the fence and barbed wire that overlooked the large practice ground-six black figures trying to protect a seventh, shots fired from two low buildings and two of them threw themselves over the protected object and the car raced forward and then off. Erik Wilson smiled. He knew how it would end: this president would also survive and the baddies who fired from the buildings would be unsuccessful. The Secret Service won every time, the same exercise as three weeks ago, different police officers, but the same exercise.
He turned his face up to the cloudless sky, as if to torment himself; the sun would wake him up.
At first he had blamed the heat. But it wasn't that.
He just wasn't there.
He hadn't been present at all in the last few days-he had taken part in the discussions and exercises, but he wasn't in the room, his thoughts and energy drained from his body.
Four days had passed since Sven Sundkvist had asked him to drive seventy kilometers to the state line and Jacksonville for lunch in a restaurant that had room for laptops with security camera images on its white tablecloths. He had seen Paula's face in a prison window and then an explosion and black smoke when the shot fired by a sniper had ripped apart a human being.
They had worked together for nearly nine years.
Paula had been his responsibility. And his friend.
He was nearly at the hotel, fleeing the heat on his cheeks and forehead. The spacious lobby was cool, jostling with people who were delaying going out. He headed for the elevator and the eleventh floor, the same room as before.
He got undressed and had a cold shower and lay down on top of the bed in his robe.
They burned you.
They whispered and then looked the other way.
He got up, the restlessness had returned, the lack of focus. He flicked through the day's edition of USA Today, yesterday's New York Times, drowned himself in TV ads for detergent and local lawyers. He wasn't there, no matter how hard he tried. He wandered around the room, stopping after a while in front of the mobile telephones he had already checked in the morning, his link to all the informants: five handsets side by side on the desk since the evening he arrived. It was usually enough to check once a day, but the restlessness and the feeling of being absent… he checked again.
Lifted them up, studied them, one by one.
Until he held the fifth phone in his hand. He sat down on the edge of the bed, shaking.
One missed call.
On a mobile phone that he should have disposed of as the informant was dead.
You don't exist anymore.
But someone is using your phone.
He was sweating again, but it wasn't the heat; this came from inside, a feeling that burned and cut, like nothing he had known before.
Someone has control of your phone. Someone has found it and has dialed the only number that is stored there.
Who?
Someone investigating? Someone in pursuit?
The room was cool, he was freezing so he pulled back the bedclothes and crept down under the duvet that smelled of scented conditioner and lay still until he started to sweat again.
Someone who doesn't know who has this phone. Someone who is calling a number that isn't registered anywhere.
He was shivering again, more than before; the thick duvet was chafing his head.
He could phone. He could listen to the voice with no risk of being identified.
He dialed the number.
A sound wave looking for a harbor in the weightless air, a few seconds stretched to hours and years, then the ringing tone, a long shrill peep.
He listened to the tone that rasped in his ear three times.
And a voice he could recognize.
"Mission completed."
Careful breathing on the other end, at least that's what it sounded like-perhaps it was just the signal that was weak and atmospheric interference was trying to muscle in.
"Wojtek eliminated in Aspsås."
He lay on the bed, didn't move, scared that the person talking to him would vanish from his hand.
"See you in an hour at number three."
Erik Wilson smiled to the voice that blended with another, a repeated call over the loudspeakers, probably in an airport.
He had perhaps known, somewhere deep, deep down, or at least hoped. Now he knew.
He answered.
"Or another time, another place."
* * *
From the Authors
* * *
Three Seconds is a novel about
today's criminals and the two authorities-the police and the Prison and Probation Service-who meet and are responsible for them.
And a novel allows the authors liberties.
Fact and fiction.
Together.
The Swedish Police Service
FACT The Police Service has for many years used criminals as covert human intelligence sources. A cooperation that is denied and concealed. In order to investigate serious crime, other crimes have been marginalized and a number of preliminary investigations and trials have therefore been carried out without the correct information.
FICTION Ewert Grens does not exist.
FACT Only criminals can play criminals and have, if so required, been recruited when on remand or later. The police criminal intelligence database and reports have been used as tools to develop suitable and credible personal backgrounds. Extensive doctoring of information has become standard working practice in a society based on the rule of law.
FICTION Sven Sundkvist does not exist.
FACT Criminal informants are, in our time, outlaws. When a criminal informant is exposed, the authorities deny having used their services, and look the other way while the organization that has been infiltrated tries to resolve the problem. The police supervisory authority is convinced that conventional intelligence methods are not sufficient to combat organized crime and will continue to develop their work with covert human intelligence in the future.
FICTION Mariana Hermansson does not exist.
The Swedish Prison and Probation Service
FACT Most prison inmates are drug users. Anyone serving a prison sentence can continue to use drugs inside. A drug user who is released from prison having served their sentence often returns to crime in order to continue to feed their habit and to pay back drug-related debts incurred in prison.
Three Seconds Page 45