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Linda - As In The Linda Murder

Page 49

by Leif Persson


  Obviously, there had been certain tensions between these two groups. This was perfectly natural, and nobody’s fault, according to Olsson, because they lived in different worlds and had been raised in different cultural traditions and beliefs. They had certainly been able to learn a great deal from each other, and he personally would like to point out the valuable contribution made to the work of the Växjö Police by the CP group, as well as National Crime’s remarkable achievement when it came to registering the vast amount of paperwork generated by the case.

  But in the end, Olsson remained firmly convinced that it was local knowledge that had been the decisive factor in the apprehension of the perpetrator. This needed to be taken into account in future, when consideration was given to how best to reinforce the resources of local and regional police authorities in connection with investigations into very serious violent crimes, and ought thus to form the basis for a new way of organizing things.

  After the lecture Lars Martin Johansson had gone up and thanked Olsson. Not just on his own behalf, but on behalf of many other officers. Seldom had so many police officers had reason to thank one single fellow officer for talking so much shit in so short a space of time, Johansson declared in his very politest manner. And if Olsson ever needed help solving any more blindingly obvious crimes in future, he needn’t bother to consider troubling Johansson and his colleagues.

  ON FRIDAY 28 May, Lisa Mattei submitted her doctoral thesis at the Institute of Applied Philosophy at Stockholm University. Her dissertation was entitled In Memory of the Victim?, and that final question mark was what it was really about. The hidden messages concealed in the media’s coverage of so-called sex killings of women, which the author had chosen to analyse from a gender perspective.

  The classic semiotic connection between content and expression, and the remarkable fact that the first names of almost two hundred women had contributed the prefix to the sexual crimes that had ended their lives during the previous fifty years. From the Birgitta murder, the Gerd murder, the Kerstin murder and the Ulla murder, to mention just four nationally notorious and fifty-year-old examples, to the most recent cases of the new millennium: the Kajsa murder, the Petra murder, the Jenny murder . . . and the Linda murder.

  That they had been quite simply transformed from women of flesh and blood into media messages. To symbols, according to conventional semiotic vocabulary. That the very best of the prefixes, from the media’s point of view, could even be reused one last time if the police managed to catch the perpetrator.

  From trainee police officer Linda Wallin, 20. To the Linda murder. To the Linda Man, at the end of the judicial sequence of events.

  Symbols of what? What was there that united them, other than the manner in which they had been murdered, described in the media and finally dispatched to the relative amnesia of Swedish criminal history? Obviously, it couldn’t be a simple question regardless of gender. After all, men’s names were never used as prefixes to the word ‘murder’, and it made no difference whether the motives were sexual or merely unknown. Being a human being evidently wasn’t enough. You had to be a woman, but simultaneously you couldn’t be just any woman.

  You had to be a woman of a certain age. The youngest of them might have been just five years old when she was raped and strangled, but with the exception of a dozen women working as prostitutes none of the others had been older than forty. The perpetrators’ motives and methods provided no exhaustive explanation either. The number of women murdered during the same period because the perpetrators had a sexual motive, or where various things they had done to their victims suggested that was their motivation, was close to five hundred.

  Lisa Mattei had asked the obvious follow-up question that would occur to every intelligent human being and female police officer. What was it that led the media to reject sixty per cent of the women who had been murdered for sexual reasons?

  Many of them had been far too old. The eldest was actually over ninety when she was raped and beaten to death with the flat side of an ordinary axe. Many of them had lived in social circumstances that had been far too wretched. Had been with men who were far too socially excluded. Many of them had been murdered by perpetrators who had been arrested immediately or shortly after the murder, and their story wasn’t good enough from a purely dramaturgical perspective.

  In short, and in summary, they had lacked media value in the simple economic sense of selling more papers. The pictures weren’t attractive enough. The text wasn’t exciting enough. Their stories were too banal. They simply weren’t good enough.

  For some reason Lisa Mattei had chosen to dedicate her dissertation to almost two hundred women who were listed in Swedish alphabetical order, from A to Å, by their first name. The first was called Anna, the same Anna as in the Anna murder, and the last was called Åsa, the same Åsa as in the Åsa murder.

  But my name is Lisa, Lisa as in Lisa Mattei, Lisa Mattei thought as she typed the last letter on her computer. I am thirty-two years old, I am a woman, a detective inspector, and soon a PhD.

  About the Author

  Leif G.W. Persson is Scandinavia’s most renowned criminologist and a leading psychological profiler. He has also served as an adviser to the Swedish Ministry of Justice. Since 1991, he has been Professor at the National Swedish Police Board and is regularly consulted by media as the country’s foremost expert on crime. He is the author of nine bestselling novels including most recently The Dying Detective, which won both the Swedish Academy of Crime Writers’ Award for Best Crime Novel of 2010 and The Glass Key for Best Scandinavian Crime Novel of 2010.

  Also by Leif G.W. Persson

  Between Summer’s Longing and Winter’s End

  Another Time, Another Life

  TRANSWORLD PUBLISHERS

  61–63 Uxbridge Road, London W5 5SA

  A Random House Group Company

  www.transworldbooks.co.uk

  First published in Great Britain

  in 2013 by Doubleday

  an imprint of Transworld Publishers

  Originally published in Sweden

  as Linda – som i Lindamordet

  in 2005 by Piratförlaget

  Copyright © Leif G.W. Persson 2005

  Translation copyright © Neil Smith 2013

  Leif G.W. Persson has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.

  This book is a work of fiction and, except in the case of historical fact, any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

  Version 1.0 Epub ISBN 9781448126040

  ISBN 9780857520869 (cased)

  9780857520876 (tpb)

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

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