“So where are you going now? Not on your bike, I hope.”
“London.”
“It’s a dreary city. But I’m proud of you anyway.”
“That’s what you always say.”
Beneath the static on the phone line, Winter thought he heard fragments of words that clung to each other like the language of another planet. “What were you calling about?” he asked.
“Do I need a reason to call my son?”
“We’re at the exit ramp now,” he lied.
“Since you wanted to know, I called Karin Malmström yesterday. She said you had been very kind to them.”
Winter looked out the window.
“She also told me that Lasse has taken it extremely hard. She was surprised to find out that she could handle it better than him.”
The taxi slowed down and weaved its way over to the right lane toward the exit. Winter heard a rumble behind them and turned around. The airport bus had caught up, apparently poised to zip into the priority lane a hundred yards ahead.
“It’s a tough time for them,” Winter said.
“What did you say?”
“They’ve got a lot to work through before they can come to terms with Per’s death.”
“Fucking idiot!” the taxi driver screamed. His eyes, which had suddenly turned wild, snapped to the rearview mirror. The bus had screeched to a halt a few inches behind them. “Those assholes are out of their minds,” he said to Winter’s reflection. “They drive like there’s no tomorrow.”
Winter put his hand over the phone. “They’ve got a schedule to keep.”
The driver snorted.
“What did you say?” his mother asked.
“Nothing.”
“What’s going on?”
“We’re at the airport now.”
“Don’t forget to call your sister.”
“I promise. Bye, Mom.”
“Watch out in Lond . . .”
But he had already lowered the phone and hung up.
At check-in, a murmur of expectancy ran through the long line to Winter’s right; the Canary Islands were a popular destination. Handing his ticket and passport to the attendant, he requested an aisle seat, in an exit row if possible to leave more room for his long legs.
While the attendant prepared his boarding pass, he thought about all the passenger lists his team had received. It was a thankless task, trying to keep track of everybody who had flown from Gothenburg to London the past two months, mainly for the purpose of having something to shove in the face of the reporters and police honchos demanding signs of progress. When we’ve got three thousand more officers and two extra years to work on the case, he thought, we’ll go through all the lists and hope that nobody was traveling under a false name.
Was Macdonald’s group in the same predicament—staring at a pile of passenger lists, never knowing what they might show? After receiving his boarding pass, Winter watched his suitcase bounce away on the conveyor belt. He smiled at the attendant, then walked upstairs to security.
Djanali could see her breath. The cold shadows under the apartment building smarted after the sunshine at the end of the street.
“You’re not so used to this kind of thing, are you?” Halders asked.
“What do you mean?”
“All this cold. It must come as quite a shock to you.”
“What are you talking about?”
“They call it snow.” He snatched imaginary flakes out of the air.
“You don’t say.”
“They’ve never seen it back where you come from, right?”
“And where is that, exactly?”
“You don’t need me to tell you that.”
“But I want to hear you say it.”
Halders watched his breath drift away, turned his head and looked down at Djanali’s face. “Ouagadougou.”
“Excuse me?”
“Ouagadougou, the place you come from.”
“Okay.”
“The capital of Burkina Faso.”
“Uh-huh?”
“Formerly known as Upper Volta.”
“Never heard of it.”
“Burkina Faso,” he repeated.
“Is it anywhere near East Hospital in Gothenburg, where I was born?”
“The Ouagadougou branch.”
They both burst out laughing.
They opened a gate just down the street from the scene of the murder. It was their second round of the neighborhood, and they were looking for people who hadn’t been home before or had failed to return their calls. A little walkway ran from the entrance to the stairs that led up to Jamie’s apartment.
The late-morning sun was like a forty-watt bulb, startling by its very existence after the long winter.
Ringing the bell on the second floor, Djanali heard a hissing sound from somewhere else in the building, a voice in the apartment above and finally someone approaching the door. A man opened it all the way. He was somewhere between thirty-five and forty, with bushy hair, wide suspenders over a white shirt and unbuttoned cuffs as if he were in the middle of dressing, maybe for a party. An unknotted tie was draped around his neck. Must be a party, Djanali thought, a midweek bash for the fast crowd. He looks rather elegant in a degenerate kind of way, his hands trembling slightly, his eyes watery. A drinker.
“Can I help you?”
“Mr. Beckman?” Halders asked.
“Yes?”
“We’re from the police.” Halders employed his usual bumbling swagger.
He’s in his element here, Djanali thought, invading somebody’s privacy like this. That’s why he does the same thing year after year and never gets promoted. He doesn’t understand his own mind, or else he understands it all too well and there’s no longer anything he can do about it.
“And?” Beckman said, fiddling with his tie.
Italian, Djanali thought. Silk, could be expensive. Winter would know. “Do you mind if we come in for a second?” she asked.
“What for?”
“We’d like to ask you a few questions.”
“About what?”
Halders pointed at the stairs to remind him that anybody could be listening. “May we come in?”
Apparently convinced, or perhaps feeling like a couple of burglars had threatened him at gunpoint, Beckman backed up. Closing the door behind them, he ushered his guests through the hallway into a room that was bigger than any they had seen in the other apartments. Djanali took note of the height of the ceiling, the stucco, the amount of space, everything that had been so hard to judge in Jamie’s apartment. “You’ve got a big room here,” she said.
“I knocked out a wall,” Beckman explained.
“All by yourself?” Halders asked.
Beckman looked at Halders as if he were a comedian whose punch line hadn’t sunk in yet. “Is it about the murder?” he asked, turning to Djanali.
Halders stared at the far wall while Djanali returned Beckman’s gaze.
“The murder of the kid next door,” Beckman clarified.
“Yes,” Djanali said. “We have a couple of questions for you.”
“Okay.”
“Were you home around the time it happened? That would be about eleven-thirty at night.”
“I think so. But I had a flight to catch early the next morning.”
“When did you find out about the murder?”
“A few hours ago, as soon as I got back. It’s all over the place. Not that I watch much television, but they talk about it constantly. I’ve seen the headlines too.” He pointed at a pile of newspapers on the table.
Djanali walked over and saw the two most recent editions spread out on the floor. “So you just returned from a trip?”
“Early this morning.”
“Where did you go?”
“What difference does that make?”
“If it doesn’t make any difference,” Halders said, “you might as well answer the question.”
“I was on vacation
in Grand Canary,” Beckman said. “Can’t you tell by my face?” All of a sudden he looked worried that he hadn’t gotten a suntan and had wasted all his money. He went out to the hallway, came back with a little tote bag and took out a ticket envelope. “Here’s the proof.”
“Do you remember ever seeing the kid?” Halders asked, not bothering to look at the envelope.
“What kind of question is that?”
“Did you ever see him go in or out of the building?”
“Sure.”
“You did?”
“We must have kept the same hours, because I caught sight of him a few times late at night. I’m a streetcar driver,” Beckman explained.
That makes a lot of sense, Djanali thought. Late hours are what I associate with streetcars—sometimes so late they don’t come at all. He looks more like a bank manager. She imagined Winter sitting calmly in a glass booth as his streetcar wound its way through the city. “Was he alone?” she asked, suppressing the image of Winter.
“What?”
“Was he by himself when you saw him?”
“Not every time.”
“No?” Halders asked.
“When was the last time you saw him with someone else?” Djanali asked.
Beckman seemed to be deep in thought. Suddenly the scene he was trying to conjure up appeared before his mind’s eye and the blood drained from his face. Taking a step to the side, he grabbed the table. “Gawd,” he said.
Halders stepped forward to support him. “What’s going on?”
He sees something very clearly, Djanali thought, and he’s wondering whether it was the devil himself. Don’t put words in his mouth. This is one of those precious moments you can’t afford to ruin. “When was the last time you saw him with someone else?” she repeated.
“It must have been that . . .” Beckman stammered.
“What did you say?”
He cleared his throat and got his voice back. “I saw him and a man together.” Then he fell to all fours. “Just a minute.” He leafed through the newspapers on the floor. “There was a date someplace.”
They could have told him the date but let him go on looking.
Beckman stood up with one of the newspapers in his hand. “Jesus Christ,” he said, examining his copy of the ticket. “It was the same night.”
“The same night as what?” Halders asked.
“The same night it happened,” Beckman said, looking from Halders to Djanali. “That must be when it was.”
“And you just figured that out?” Halders asked.
“My flight left early the next morning.”
“Grand Canary?”
“Yes, Puerto Rico.”
“Are you telling me there’s a Puerto Rico in Grand Canary?”
“Yes, that’s the name of the resort, I think.” Beckman seemed to be second-guessing himself about where he had spent the past few weeks.
“Wherever you were, they sell Swedish newspapers,” Halders said.
“I didn’t read the papers,” Beckman said. He looked like someone had knocked the wind out of him.
Djanali made a sign to Halders to ease up.
“This is the first time I suspected anything,” Beckman continued.
“I understand,” Djanali said.
“The first time,” he repeated.
“Would you recognize the man who was with Jamie Robertson if you ran into him again?” Djanali asked.
Beckman threw out his hands. “I saw him mostly from the back.”
“But you’re sure it was a man, right?”
“Yes, and quite tall. They were going up the stairs when I passed by on the walkway. Or maybe they were waiting for the elevator.”
Halders looked at Djanali, then returned his gaze to Beckman. “We’d like you to come with us so we can discuss this in a little more detail.”
“More detail? Am I a suspect or something?”
“You have some very interesting information, and we want to give you the chance to remember as much as possible.”
“I’m awfully tired right now.”
Look, pal, Halders thought, don’t make me say that we can hold you for six hours and get an extension for another six.
“Okay, sure,” Beckman said after a slight hesitation. “If you’ll just excuse me for a minute.” He made a bolt for the bathroom, and they heard him vomit.
“What time does Winter’s plane take off?” Halders asked.
“Right now, I think.” Djanali glanced at her watch. “He said a quarter to eleven, and that’s in ten minutes.”
“Call him.” Halders pointed to the right pocket of Djanali’s jacket.
She took out her phone and dialed Winter’s number. “No answer.”
“He’s already turned off his phone and started to think about ordering a drink and flirting with the flight attendants.”
More retching from the bathroom.
“Call the airport,” Halders said.
“I don’t know the num—”
“941000.”
“You’re a walking phone book.”
“Just ask me anything.”
Djanali told the agent what she needed, and two minutes before the plane was scheduled to leave the gate, the woman who had just taken Winter’s boarding pass announced his name over the loudspeaker. Half an hour later he stepped out of his car in front of police headquarters.
19
BECKMAN HAD SPENT HlS VACATlON DRINKING ON THE TERRACE of the Altamar Aparthotel, gazing out at the northern horizon. He had been sober on the plane home. End of story.
He wasn’t the first person they’d brought in for questioning. But this was something different, Winter thought as he took the elevator up, briefcase in hand. His luggage would arrive later.
Beckman was suffering minor withdrawal symptoms, far from delirious but with an unsteady gait that made him look like he was listening to funk.
Winter sat across from Beckman: what a homecoming for him, and to think I never even got off the ground.
The tape recorder hummed, registering a short, clear laugh that echoed through the corridor outside.
“I don’t remember very much,” Beckman said after they had dealt with the formalities.
“What time did you get home from work the night you saw Jamie Robertson with this man?”
“A minute or two after midnight. But that’s not what actually happened.”
“What didn’t actually happen?”
“It’s like this. I went out, and then I came back and thought I saw the man again.”
“You saw him a second time?”
“I had dropped my scarf somewhere. It might sound weird, but I couldn’t find it and I thought it must have fallen off while I was buttoning up my coat in the doorway, so I went back and saw him from behind as he walked up the stairs.”
“Was he by himself then?”
“Yes, the second time he was by himself.”
“Can you describe what he looked like?”
“That’s not so easy.”
“Try anyway.”
“But there was something else about him too.”
“Yes?”
“I don’t know how to put it.”
The laughter returned, a little softer as if it had bounced off the wall at the end of the corridor.
Maybe the laughter will calm him down, Winter thought. Or just confuse him even more. Right this minute we’re ransacking his apartment. He killed Jamie and caught the first available flight. He’s going to confess any minute, and then the other murders too. Maybe he went to London. Maybe tonight we can celebrate and hope for a decent interval before the next case. Everything depends on coincidence, a stroke of luck or a wide net that pulls in just the fish you’re looking for. As long as we stick to our routines, if we’ve got our catch, it’s just a matter of waiting until he stops flailing.
“There was something about him I recognized,” Beckman said. “Now that I’ve had the chance to think about it a little.”
> Winter nodded. The central air droned like the murmuring of a heart, suffocating the room in its own odor of perspiration mixed with stale cologne from some other era. The afternoon radiance was waning, the fluorescent lights casting deeper shadows. Winter hadn’t turned on his desk lamp yet. He nodded again to Beckman.
“It was his jacket. That must be what made me think about it now, or what I recognized then.”
“You recognized his jacket?”
“Yes, I don’t know why, but I flashed on something I’d seen on the streetcar.”
“The streetcar?”
“When you sit in a booth like that all day long, you pick up on little things about people. Not as much now as when we had the same route every day, but still.”
Beckman’s hand trembled as he raised a glass of water to his lips, but he managed not to spill it. “You begin to notice regular passengers,” he continued, putting the glass back down.
“So you remembered this guy?” Winter asked.
“I’m pretty sure I had a passenger a few times who wore a jacket like that, but nothing else comes to mind.”
“What was so special about the jacket?”
“That’s what I’m trying to figure out.”
“The color?”
“It was a black leather jacket, but that’s not it.”
“The kind of leather?”
“No,” Beckman said, drawing out the word. “I can’t put my finger on it.”
“The buttons, maybe?”
“The buttons . . . no.”
Jesus, Winter thought. “The writing on the back of the jacket?”
Beckman shook his head. “It’s completely slipped my mind.”
“Was he tall?”
“I think so . . . Yes, he was.”
“Taller than Jamie?”
“It looked like it. But it’s hard to tell when two people are walking up the stairs.”
“About my height?” Winter stood up.
“Yes, probably.”
“How would you describe the way he walked?”
“Just like anybody else.”
“He didn’t limp or anything?”
“No, but walking up a staircase is a kind of limp. He had long, dark hair by the way.”
“How long?”
“Shoulder length, I think.”
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