‘Does it happen very often?’
‘Not on modern fishing boats. They have refrigeration equipment and ice to keep the fish fresh. But it used to happen sometimes in the past, in the summer. And on an old ship with fish in the hold, the kind of ship Jonas might have been on last night … it could happen. He said the deck stank of fish, so the men he saw could have been poisoned by hydrogen sulphide.’
Tilda thought about what he had said. ‘So we’re talking about a fatal accident?’ she said.
‘It could have been an accident,’ Gerlof conceded. ‘But I wonder … You have to be in an enclosed space in order to suffocate. And why would they all be below at the same time, on a ship so near to the coast? It’s as if someone forced the crew below deck, then locked them in.’
Tilda didn’t say anything for a moment, then she took out her mobile and moved a short distance away. Gerlof heard her speaking quietly to someone. After a few minutes she was back.
‘I’ve spoken to the coastguard; they had no reports of ships off Öland last night.’
‘What did you say to them?’
‘I just said that a member of the public had seen a ship that appeared to be adrift off the coast near Stenvik. They’re not going to launch a major search, but they did promise to keep an eye open.’
Gerlof picked up his stick and accompanied Tilda to her car.
‘Is this important to you?’ she asked.
‘Not really,’ Gerlof said, then he thought for a second and went on, ‘But someone has to listen to young people. When I was a boy I heard the sound of knocking from inside a coffin up in the churchyard, but my father just laughed when I came home and told him about it. And that’s why I never laugh, whatever strange tales I might hear.’ He looked at Tilda. ‘How are you getting on with your ghosts up at the lighthouses, by the way?’
‘They’re on holiday,’ she said tersely. ‘Just like I shall be, very soon.’
She got in the car and drove off.
There’s nothing more I can do, Gerlof thought as he went back to sit in the garden. The birds were singing, the sun was blazing down. But he couldn’t stop going over what Jonas had told him.
A ghost ship in the Sound, with an elderly American on board.
And a younger man from Africa?
The Homecomer
On sunny summer days Öland’s beaches were crowded; there were more tourists than the Homecomer had ever seen, which was a good thing. He could simply walk around like one of them, an old man in shorts and a red T-shirt and sunglasses.
He could also visit the burial cairn in Stenvik without anyone asking what he was doing there. It was an ancient monument, after all, open to everyone. So he parked the Ford he had bought in Stockholm among all the other cars down by the mailboxes in Stenvik, then headed south.
When he looked out over the Sound he could see a number of vessels: small motorboats close to the shore, and a few larger yachts further out, but not one single ship.
In the warm sunshine, with a good night’s sleep behind him, it was difficult to recall exactly what had happened yesterday: boarding the ship, forcing the crew below, blowing a hole in the hull. There was no sign of the ship today.
The Homecomer passed the small campsite down by the water, then headed up towards the ridge. He could stay out of sight of the summer cottages along the coast road, because there was a narrow dip above the shore. It was man-made; it had been hacked out by stonemasons in days gone by as they worked their way down the rock. They had left behind a V-shaped cleft with gravel and broken stones at the bottom. The Homecomer moved cautiously so that he wouldn’t trip.
After a while, he saw the cairn above him; it looked like a large pile of stones up on the ridge. It was closer to the edge than he remembered; the cliff face must have suffered from erosion over the past seventy years.
Time smashed everything to pieces.
A few metres below the cairn there was a metal door set in a concrete frame; it seemed to lead right into the rock almost directly below the cairn. It looked like the entrance to a bunker – perhaps it was a defence post left over from the war?
The Homecomer glanced around, but he was still alone.
The metal door was secured with a heavy padlock and chain. He tugged at it, but to no avail. He would need a pair of bolt cutters.
After a minute or so, he walked away from the bunker and found a narrow flight of stone steps that took him up the hill and on to the ridge. He stood by the cairn for a while, silent and still, thinking of Sven.
Then he turned and looked inland, towards the houses on the other side of the coast road. Two rectangular bungalows with enormous windows and an expanse of wooden decking. Between them he could see a huge blue swimming pool.
He was close to the Kloss family now, just a few hundred metres away, but he could move around out of sight in the dip. And they didn’t know him. No one knew who he was.
Which made everything so much easier.
The New Country, July 1931
Aron and Sven are standing on deck with their luggage. They have arrived. The steamer SS Kastelholm is sliding into a large, unfamiliar harbour full of other ships; she slowly heaves to beside a broad stone quay. Aron watches as the city with its tall buildings and wide streets grows before his very eyes. Vast buildings with long rows of narrow windows.
Stockholm was nothing compared to this. Aron doesn’t recognize the name of the city; he just knows they have arrived in America.
The United States. The new country.
Sven carries their bags and tools down the gangplank; they are led through a dark stone doorway where everyone has to stand in line. Eventually, two broad-shouldered men in uniform arrive to interview them, with the help of an interpreter. Aron says nothing; Sven does all the talking. He shows their passports, holds up the spade, smiles at the interpreter and the grim-faced officials.
‘We’ve come here voluntarily.’
‘Of course,’ says the interpreter. ‘But what is it you intend to do here?’
‘We want to work, both of us. We want to build the new country.’
The interpreter confers with the guards, then he says, ‘What is your profession?’
‘We’re agricultural workers. I’ve worked in flour mills, but I’ve spent most of my time growing crops and tending cattle. And my stepson has attended school and helped me in his spare time.’
The interpreter checks Aron’s passport. ‘He’s only thirteen years old …’
‘Yes, but he’s big and strong and hardworking.’
One of the guards shows Sven a picture, a portrait of a man with sharp eyes, his chin raised. ‘Do you know who this is?’
‘Your leader,’ Sven replies.
‘What’s his name?’
Aron hears Sven say an unfamiliar name without the slightest hesitation, and the guards nod with satisfaction.
Finally, Sven gives the men some of their dollar bills. That does the trick. Their passports are stamped, travel documents are issued and they are allowed into the new country.
Sven and Aron remain in the city for three days; they stay in a small hotel near a big railway station and wander the wide, crowded streets. Aron hears lots of foreign languages but doesn’t understand a single word. Everyone around them appears to know where they are going, but Sven seems somehow lost. In the cramped room, his mood deteriorates, and he hits Aron several times.
In the evenings he goes out, and is gone for hours. Aron can only wait by the window.
On the second evening, Sven is much more cheerful when he returns. Everything is arranged; he has met someone who speaks Swedish.
‘We’re moving on,’ he tells Aron. ‘There are lots of Scandinavians in the forests in the north. They’ve got work for us up there.’
Aron would like to spend longer in the city, but he has no say in the matter.
They leave by train the following day. The concrete buildings disappear, the countryside takes over and they travel north through a gree
n and brown landscape of vast plains, virgin coniferous forests, wide rivers and immense lakes.
The train is packed with optimistic workers, all equipped with their own tools – saws, pickaxes and spades.
Sven and Aron are with them in the third-class carriage. The dollar bills are almost gone. They have hardly any food, but at one end of the carriage you can buy steaming-hot tea. Everything else on the train is freezing cold.
But Sven keeps his eyes firmly fixed on the route ahead, one hand resting on his spade.
Jonas
It was almost twelve o’clock by the time Jonas got back to Villa Kloss. He had only pretended to call home from the Davidssons’ house, just to appease Gerlof. No one in his family knew where he had spent the night. If he gave the game away, Mats and their cousins would probably chuck him off the rocks.
On the way home he had gazed out across the bay, but there was no sign of any ships and no dead seamen had floated ashore. The sun was shining and the breeze was warm. People were swimming and sunbathing by the jetty as if it were an ordinary summer’s day, but Jonas’s heart was pounding.
He had reached Villa Kloss. Might as well go straight in.
He slid open the glass door of Uncle Kent’s house, expecting to see everyone gathered around the long dining table: Uncle Kent, Dad, Mats and the cousins, all worried and with lots of questions, but no one seemed to have noticed his absence. They weren’t even there.
Only Paulina was around, standing in the kitchen, stacking dishes after the party. Everyone else was probably still in bed, or else they’d gone off to the Ölandic. Jonas had a drink of water and went over to his chalet. On the way he met Mats and Urban, both wearing green shorts and sunglasses. They were carrying two racing bikes.
‘Hi, bro.’
‘How’s things?’ Urban said.
‘Fine,’ Jonas replied.
Mats stopped and spoke quietly. ‘We told Dad you stayed over with a friend last night. That’s what you did, isn’t it?’
‘Well, yes, kind of … I slept in a boathouse.’
‘Good … I should think that was a lot more fun than Kalmar. The film was crap.’
Jonas nodded and thought about dead men on the deck of a ship. And then about Africa. He could hear jungle drums pounding in his head, and he just wanted to ring his mum in Huskvarna. Ask her to come and pick him up, take him home.
But he didn’t. He had to stay here; he had work to do.
So when Mats and Urban had cycled off down the coast, he went out on to Uncle Kent’s warm, sunlit decking. The planks were waiting. First of all he had to sand them down, then he would apply Chinese wood oil, which had been ordered specially.
Suddenly, he heard the sound of an engine behind him. Uncle Kent drove in and parked over by the garage. He was holding his mobile phone and seemed to be doing a lot of listening, with occasional monosyllabic responses. He was red-faced and sweaty, and when the call was over he sat in the car, looking out towards the Sound.
Then he shook his head and made another call.
Something seemed to have upset Uncle Kent, but Jonas didn’t want to know what it was. Kent didn’t appear to have noticed him, anyway, he was too stressed – after only a minute or so, he reversed on to the coast road and drove off again.
Jonas looked down at the decking. He was no longer on holiday. The previous evening, his father had shown him what to do. ‘Steady, even strokes, Jonas, and make them as long as possible. Keep your hand moving all the time so that you don’t chip the wood.’
Jonas picked up the sander, switched it on and ran it over each plank. It was hard work. The dirt was ingrained in every piece of wood, and he had to go over each one several times in order to bring it back to its original pale colour.
But it was good to be working; it stopped him thinking. About the man with the axe, and the dying seamen.
After perhaps twenty minutes the glass door slid open.
‘Afternoon, Jonas!’
His father emerged, wearing sandals, shorts and a shirt. He blinked up at the sun and waved to Jonas. ‘Everything OK?’
Jonas nodded. His father went and sat on a sun lounger by the pool and closed his eyes.
Did he have a hangover from the party? Jonas couldn’t tell.
He carried on working, but when he had sanded down two more planks and the sweat was pouring down his back, he took a break. He went over to join his father and sat down on the edge of the pool, dangling his feet in the cool water. Niklas smiled at him, and Jonas asked, ‘Did you see the ship?’
Niklas stared at him, then looked out across the Sound. ‘What ship?’
‘A big ship. Last night.’
‘Not last night,’ his father said. ‘But I have seen a few cargo ships passing through the Sound since we arrived.’
Jonas didn’t say any more about the ship. He sat there for a few minutes longer with his feet in the water, until he had stopped sweating, then he stood up. ‘I’d better get on.’
It was easier now; he had learned how to hold the sander.
After a while he got up and stretched, and saw that he was being watched from the other side of the coast road. A grey-haired man with a white beard and sunglasses was standing on the ridge above the shore, staring at Villa Kloss. He was wearing a red T-shirt, but Jonas couldn’t make out his face. Too far away.
He was standing in the middle of the rocks that had rolled down from the cairn, and when Jonas realized that he went cold all over.
He turned to see whether his father had noticed the man as well, but Niklas was lying back on the sun lounger with his mouth open. He had fallen asleep.
Jonas slowly bent down and resumed his sanding, but when he had finished the plank he looked over at the cairn once more.
The man had disappeared.
Gerlof
The birds were singing at the tops of their voices. Gerlof was sitting in the garden with his hearing aid turned up to full volume, and the song in the bushes rose and fell like a summer concert.
Who needed a gramophone when there were blackbirds? Not Gerlof.
It was early evening, but still warm and calm. The entire day had gone, June would soon be over, and he had done very little apart from doze in the sunshine.
He had had a headache, probably due to lack of sleep, so he turned down the opportunity to play mini-golf with his grandchildren and listened to the birds with his eyes closed instead – until he heard the gate opening.
A boy was standing there. Jonas Kloss, his overnight guest, was back.
Gerlof waved and the boy slowly came over to say hello.
‘Is Kristoffer home?’
‘Not at the moment.’
‘We were going to play FIFA on his Nintendo,’ Jonas said.
Gerlof had no idea what he was talking about, but nodded anyway.
‘The boys have gone over to the restaurant, but they’ll be back soon. How are you this evening, Jonas?’
‘Fine.’
Just one word. Then silence, until Gerlof asked, ‘Have you thought much about what happened … about the ship?’
Jonas nodded. He was rigid and tense, as if the dead had him in their clutches. And that was probably true; after seventy years, Gerlof still remembered Gilbert Kloss collapsing in the churchyard. He had been a few years older than Jonas at the time, but that day still haunted him. He didn’t want Jonas to be affected the same way, so he leaned forward. ‘Jonas,’ he said slowly. ‘I think I know what had happened to those men you saw on the ship. They weren’t monsters or zombies. They’d been poisoned by gas.’
Jonas stared at him. ‘Gas?’
‘From the fish in the hold. You said you could smell fish on board, but I think the fish had gone rotten in the heat.’
He told Jonas the same story he had told Tilda. Jonas listened in silence and seemed to relax slightly when Gerlof stopped speaking. He started to move away, but Gerlof hadn’t finished.
‘And the man with the axe, Jonas … Have you remembered where y
ou’d seen him before?’
The boy shook his head.
‘I can try to help you if you like. Would that be all right?’
‘OK.’
With some difficulty, Gerlof pulled up another garden chair. ‘Sit down.’ Now they were sitting face to face, and Gerlof picked up his notebook and a pen. He smiled at Jonas. ‘Ready?’
‘Ready.’
‘Good. In that case, let’s try to travel back in time … Can you conjure up the man from the ship so that you can see his face?’
Jonas nodded, but kept his eyes lowered.
‘Try to think back to where you’d seen him before,’ Gerlof said, speaking more slowly. ‘Imagine you’re going back in time, to the moment just before you saw him.’
‘OK,’ Jonas said again, his head drooping even more.
The garden was suddenly quiet, apart from a lone bumble bee buzzing past their chairs.
Gerlof waited for a few seconds, then asked, ‘What can you see now, Jonas?’
‘A building.’
‘And what time is it?’
‘I don’t know … but it’s summer. Evening.’
‘And you’re standing outside a building. Is it here on the island?’
‘Don’t know. I think so.’
‘What does this building look like?’
‘It’s big.’
‘Is it made of stone, like a castle? Or brick?’
‘Wood. Big planks of wood.’
Jonas was staring at the grass. He wasn’t in a hypnotic trance, he was just concentrating hard.
A wooden building. Gerlof quickly made a note of that.
‘You have to be very careful when you question minors,’ Tilda had said. Gerlof would be careful. And this wasn’t a real interview, he told himself, it was just a chat. He went on, ‘What colour is the building?’
‘Red.’
Most wooden buildings on Öland were red, of course. The whole of Sweden was full of red buildings. Gerlof tried again. ‘So he’s inside a big red building?’
The Voices Beyond: (Oland Quartet Series 4) Page 13