by Maj Sjowall
“Yes?”
“But everybody knows he’s a murderer. Tried and convicted. It was apparently a pretty ugly murder, too. Some harmless foreign woman.”
“Roseanna McGraw was her name. And it really was revolting. Sick. But he was sexually provoked. The way he saw it. And we had to provoke him again in order to catch him. Myself, I can’t imagine how he ever passed the psychiatric examination.”
“Oh, come on,” said Allwright, laugh lines spreading around his eyes like a spider web. “I’ve been in Stockholm too. The cram course in legal psychiatry. In fifty percent of the cases the doctors are crazier than the patients.”
“As far as I could gather, Folke Bengtsson was definitely disturbed. A combination of sadism, puritanism, and misogyny. Does he know Sigbrit Mård?”
“Know?” said Allwright. “His house isn’t two hundred yards from hers. They’re each other’s closest neighbors. She’s one of his regular customers. But that’s not the worst of it.”
“Really?”
“The key point is that he was in the post office at the same time she was. There are witnesses who saw them talking to each other. He had his car parked in the square. He was standing behind her in line and left the place about five minutes after she did.”
There was a moment’s silence.
“You know Folke Bengtsson,” Allwright said.
“Yes.”
“And would he be capable …?”
“Yes,” said Martin Beck.
5
“To be perfectly honest, and I always am, Sigbrit’s dead, and things look pretty damned bad for Folke,” Allwright said. “I don’t believe in coincidence.”
“You said something about her husband?”
“Yes, that’s right. He’s a ship’s captain, but he drinks too much. Six years ago he got some mysterious liver disease, and they sent him home from Ecuador. They didn’t fire him, but the doctors wouldn’t give him a clean bill of health, so he couldn’t ship out again. He came out here to live, and went on drinking, and then pretty soon they separated. Now he lives in Malmö.”
“Do you have any contact with him?”
“Yes. Unfortunately. Close physical contact, you might say. If you wanted to put it nicely. The fact is, she was the one who wanted the divorce. He was against it. Dead against it. But she got her way. They’d been married for a long time, but he’d been away at sea mostly. Came home once a year or so, and apparently that worked fine. But then when they tried to live together all the time, it was a complete disaster.”
“And now?”
“Now every time he gets really liquored up he comes out here to ‘talk it over.’ But there’s nothing to talk about, and he usually winds up giving her a real alarming.”
“A what?”
Allwright laughed.
“An alarming,” he said. “Local dialect. What do you call it in Stockholm? He warms her hide for her. ‘Domestic disturbance’ in police talk. What a lousy expression—‘domestic disturbance.’ Anyway, I’ve had to go out there twice. The first time, I talked some sense into him. But the second time wasn’t so easy. I had to hit him and bring him in to our fancy jail. Sigbrit looked pretty miserable that time. Big black eyes, and some ugly marks on her throat.”
Allwright poked at his lion-hunting hat.
“I know Bertil Mård. He goes on binges, but I don’t think he’s as bad as he seems. And I think he loves Sigbrit. And so, of course, he’s jealous. Though I don’t think he has any real cause. I don’t know anything about her sex life, supposing she has one. And if she does have one I ought to know about it. Around here, everyone pretty much knows everything about everybody. But I probably know most.”
“What does Mård say himself?”
“They questioned him in Malmö. He has a sort of alibi for the seventeenth. Claims he was in Copenhagen that day. Rode over on the train ferry, the Malmöhus, but …”
“Do you know who questioned him?”
“Yes. A Chief Inspector Månsson.”
Martin Beck had known Per Månsson for years and had great confidence in him. He cleared his throat.
“In other words, things don’t look so good for Mård either.”
Allwright scratched the dog for a while before answering.
“No,” he said. “But he’s in a hell of a lot better shape than Folke Bengtsson.”
“If, in fact, anything has happened.”
“She’s disappeared. That’s enough for me. No one who knows her can think of any reasonable explanation.”
“What does she look like, by the way?”
“What she looks like right now is something I’d rather not think about,” said Allwright.
“Aren’t you jumping to a conclusion?”
“Sure I am. But I’m only telling you what I think. Normally she looks like this.”
He put his hand in his back pocket and took out two photographs—a passport photo and a folded color enlargement.
He glanced at the pictures before handing them over.
“They’re both good,” he commented. “I’d say she was of normal appearance. She looks the way most people look. Pretty attractive, of course.”
Martin Beck studied them for a long time. He doubted that Allwright was capable of seeing them with his eyes, which, of course, for that matter, was a technical impossibility.
Sigbrit Mård was not pretty attractive. She was a rather homely and ungainly woman. But she undoubtedly did her best to improve her looks, which often produces unfortunate results. Her features were irregular, narrow, and sharp, and her face was hopelessly careworn. Unlike most such pictures these days, the passport photo had not been taken with a Polaroid or in an automatic booth. It was a typical studio portrait. She had taken great pains with her make-up and her hairdo, and the photographer had no doubt given her a whole page of proofs to choose among. The other one was an amateur photograph, but not a machine-made copy. It had been enlarged and retouched by hand, a full-length portrait. She was standing on a pier, and in the background was a white passenger liner with two funnels. She was gazing up at the sun unnaturally, holding a pose that she presumably thought did her justice. She was wearing a thin green sleeveless blouse and a blue pleated skirt. She was barelegged and had a large orange and yellow summer handbag over her right shoulder. On her feet she was wearing sandals with platform soles. She was holding her right foot slightly forward, the heel off the ground.
“That one’s recent,” Allwright said. “Taken last summer.”
“Who took it?”
“A girlfriend. They went on a trip together.”
“To Rügen apparently. That’s the train ferry Sassnitz in the background, isn’t it?”
Allwright seemed vastly impressed.
“Now how the hell did you know that?” he said. “I’ve even had duty in passport control when they were shorthanded, and I can’t tell those boats apart. But you’re right. That is the Sassnitz, and they made an excursion to Rügen. You can go have a look at the chalk cliffs and stare at the Communists and that sort of thing. They’re very ordinary looking. A lot of people are disappointed. The one-day cruise only costs a few crowns.”
“Where did you get this picture?”
“I took it out of her house when we went through it. She had it taped up on the wall. I guess she thought it was pretty good.”
He put his head on one side and peered at the photograph.
“By golly, it is pretty good. That’s just what she looks like. Nice gal.”
“Haven’t you ever been married?” Martin Beck asked suddenly.
Allwright was delighted.
“Are you going to start questioning me?” he said, laughing. “Now that’s what I call thorough.”
“Sorry,” said Martin Beck. “Dumb thing to say. An irrelevant question.”
This was a lie. The question was not irrelevant.
“But I don’t mind answering it. I went with a gal from down in Abbekås one time. We were engaged. But I’ll be da
mned, she was like a flesh-eating plant. After three months I’d had plenty, and after six months she still hadn’t had enough. Since then I’ve stuck to dogs. Take it from someone who knows. A man doesn’t need a wife. Once you get used to it, it’s a huge relief. I feel it every morning when I wake up. She’s made life miserable for three men. Of course, she’s a grandmother several times over by now.”
He sat silently for a moment.
“It does seem a little sad not having any children,” he said then. “At times. But other times I feel just the opposite. Even if conditions are pretty good right here, still there’s something wrong with society as a whole. I wouldn’t have wanted to try and raise kids here. The question is whether it can be done at all.”
Martin Beck was silent. His own contribution to child-rearing had consisted mostly of keeping his mouth shut and letting his children grow up more or less naturally. The result had been only a partial success. He had a daughter who had become a fine, independent human being, and who seemed to like him. On the other hand, he had a son he had never understood. To be perfectly frank, he didn’t like him much, and the boy, who was just eighteen, had never treated him with anything but mistrust, deception, and, in recent years, open contempt.
The boy’s name was Rolf. Most of their attempts at conversation ended with the line, “Jesus Christ, Dad, there’s just no point in talking to you, you never get what I mean anyway.” Or: “If I were fifty years older, maybe we’d have a chance, but this isn’t the nineteenth century any more, you know.” Or: “If only you weren’t a fucking cop!”
Allwright had been busy with the dog. Now he looked up.
“May I ask you a question?” he said with a little smile.
“Sure.”
“Why did you want to know if I’d ever been married?”
“It was just a stupid question.”
For the second time since they met, the other man looked completely serious. And a little hurt.
“That’s not true. I know it’s not true. And I think I know why you asked.”
“Why?”
“Because you think I don’t understand women?”
Martin Beck put down the photographs. Since meeting Rhea, he found he had much less trouble being honest.
“Okay,” he said. “You’re right.”
“Good,” said Allwright, lighting a new cigarette absent-mindedly. “Good enough. Thanks. You may very well be right. I’m a man who’s had no women in his private life. Outside of my mother, of course, and the fishergirl from Abbekås. And I’ve always regarded women as regular people, essentially no different from me and men in general. So if there are any subtle differences, then it’s possible they’ve passed me by. Since I know I’m ignorant on the subject, I’ve read a number of books and articles and things on women’s lib, but most of it is nonsense. And the part that isn’t nonsense is so obvious a Hottentot could understand it. Equal pay for equal work, for example, and sex discrimination.”
“Why a Hottentot?”
Allwright laughed so loud the dog jumped up and started licking his face.
“There was a guy on the town council who claimed the Hottentots were the only culture that in two thousand years never managed to invent the wheel. Bullshit, of course. I hardly have to tell you which party he represented.”
Martin Beck didn’t want to know. Nor did he want to know what political persuasion Allwright represented. Whenever people started talking politics he always went as silent as a clam.
And he was still sitting there in clamlike silence when, thirty seconds later, the phone rang.
Allwright picked up the receiver.
“Allwright?” he said.
Whoever it was apparently made some amusing remark.
“Yes, I am, sort of.”
And then, with a certain hesitation:
“Yes, he’s sitting right here.”
Martin Beck took the receiver.
“Beck.”
“Hi, this is Ragnarsson. We’ve made about a hundred calls trying to locate you. What’s up?”
One of the drawbacks to being chief of the National Homicide Squad was that the large newspapers had people who kept an eye on where you went and why. In order to do that, they needed paid informers inside the police department, which was irritating, but couldn’t be helped. The National Police Commissioner was especially irritated, but he was also scared to death that it would get out. Nothing was ever supposed to get out.
Ragnarsson was a newspaperman, one of the better and more decent ones, which by no means meant that his paper was one of the better and more decent papers.
“Are you still there?” Ragnarsson said.
“Someone has disappeared,” said Martin Beck.
“Disappeared? People disappear every day, and they don’t call you in. What’s more, I heard Kollberg is on his way down there. There’s something fishy about all this.”
“Maybe. Maybe not.”
“We’re sending down a couple of men. You might as well be prepared. That’s all I wanted to tell you. I didn’t want to do anything behind your back, you know that. You can trust me. So long.”
“So long.”
Martin Beck rubbed the edge of his scalp. He trusted Ragnarsson, but not his reporters, and least of all his newspaper.
Allwright was looking thoughtful.
“Newsman?”
“Yes.”
“From Stockholm?”
“Yes.”
“That busts it open then.”
“Definitely.”
“We’ve got local correspondents here too. They know all about it. But they’re obliging. A kind of loyalty. The Trelleborg Allehanda is fine. But then there are the Malmö papers. Kvällsposten, that’s the worst. And now we’ll have Aftonbladet and Expressen.”
“Yes, I’m afraid so.”
“Balls!”
Balls was a mild, everyday expression in Skåne.
Farther north, it sounded very bad.
Maybe Allwright didn’t know that. Or else maybe he didn’t care.
Martin Beck liked Allwright very much.
A sort of obvious, natural friendship. Things were going to work out fine.
“What do we do now?”
“Up to you,” said Martin Beck. “You’re the expert.”
“Anderslöv district. Yes, I ought to be. Shall I give you an orientation? By car? But let’s not take the patrol car. Mine’s better.”
“The tomato-colored one?”
“Right. Everyone knows it, of course. But I feel more comfortable in it. Shall we go?”
“Whatever you say.”
They talked about three things in the car.
The first was something Allwright hadn’t mentioned before, for some reason.
“There’s the post office over there, and now we’re coming to the bus stop. The last time Sigbrit was seen she was standing right about here.”
He slowed down and stopped.
“We’ve got a witness who saw something else too.”
“What?”
“Folke Bengtsson. He came driving along in his station wagon, and when he passed Sigbrit he slowed down and stopped. Seems natural enough. He’d picked up his car and was headed home. They knew each other, lived next door. He knows she’s waiting for the bus, and he gives her a lift.”
“What sort of a witness?”
Allwright drummed his fingers on the wheel.
“An older woman from town here. Her name is Signe Persson. When she heard Sigbrit had disappeared, she came in and told us she’d been walking down the other side of the street and noticed Sigbrit, and just then Bengtsson drove up from the other direction. He put on his brakes and stopped. Now it happens Britta was alone at the station when she came in, so she told her she ought to come back and talk to me. And she came back the next day, and I talked to her. She told me pretty much the same story. That she’d seen Sigbrit and that Folke stopped his car. So then I asked her if she had actually seen the car stop and Sigbrit ge
t into it.”
“And what did she say?”
“She said she didn’t want to turn around and look because she didn’t want to seem nosy. Which is a silly answer, since this old lady is probably the nosiest woman in the county. But when I coaxed her a little she did say she turned her head right afterward, and neither Sigbrit nor the car were anywhere to be seen. So we chatted a little about one thing and another, and after a while she said she wasn’t sure. Said she didn’t want to talk about people behind their backs. But then the next day she ran into one of my men at the Co-op and stated definitely that she’d seen Bengtsson stop and that Sigbrit got into the car. If she sticks to that, then Folke Bengtsson is definitely linked to the disappearance.”
“What does Bengtsson say?”
“Don’t know. I haven’t talked to him. Two detectives from Trelleborg were out there, but he wasn’t home. Then they decided to call you in and more or less ordered me not to do anything. Didn’t want me to anticipate events, as it were. Bide my time and wait for the experts. I haven’t even written up a report about my talk with Signe Persson. Do you think that sounds slipshod?”
Martin Beck didn’t answer.
“I think it’s pretty slipshod,” said Allwright with a little laugh. “But I’m a little wary of Signe Persson. She was mixed up in the worst case I ever had. Must be five years ago. She claimed a neighbor lady had poisoned her cat.
Made a formal complaint, so we had to investigate. Then the other old lady made a complaint against Signe Persson, because the cat had killed her budgie. We dug up the cat and sent it to Helsingborg. They couldn’t find any poison. So then Signe claimed the other woman had bought two cigars at the cigar store and boiled them. She’d read in some magazine that if you boil cigars long enough you get nicotine crystals, which are deadly poisonous and don’t leave any trace. The neighbor lady actually had bought two cigars, but she said they were just to offer guests and her brother had smoked them. I asked her how the cat had managed to kill the budgie, since it was always in its cage. And she claimed Signe got the damned cat to scare the budgie to death, because the bird could talk and had uttered some dreadful truths. Signe said it was quite true that the budgie had called her a whore on no fewer than five occasions. There was a police cadet here at the time who was a real go-getter, and he investigated this theory about the cigars and decided it was theoretically possible, and that if the victim was an habitual smoker then poisoning couldn’t be proved. So when Signe Persson came in for the tenth or twelfth time I asked her if her cat had been a heavy smoker. After that she wouldn’t even say hello to me for several years. We closed the case, and the cadet stayed home boiling cigars until they canned him. Then he settled down in Eslöv and became an inventor.”