The Girl in the Spider's Web

Home > Other > The Girl in the Spider's Web > Page 39
The Girl in the Spider's Web Page 39

by David Lagercrantz


  “Can you get something noisy on the radio?” Needham said.

  Blomkvist tuned into 107.1 and got James Brown belting out what a sex machine he was.

  “Give me your phones,” Needham said.

  He stacked them next to the speakers at the back of the car. He clearly meant to talk about something sensitive, and Blomkvist had nothing against that—he had to write his story and needed all the facts he could get. But he also knew better than most that there’s no such thing as a leak without an agenda. Although Blomkvist felt a certain affinity with Needham and even appreciated his grumpy charm, he did not trust him for one second.

  “Let’s hear it,” he said.

  “You could put it this way,” Needham began. “We know that in business and industry there’s always someone taking advantage of inside information.”

  “Agreed.”

  “For a while we were pretty much spared that in the world of intelligence, for the simple reason that we guarded different kinds of secrets. The dynamite was elsewhere. But since the end of the Cold War, that’s changed. Surveillance in general has become more widespread. These days we control huge amounts of valuable material.”

  “And there are people taking advantage of this, you say.”

  “Well, that’s basically the whole point. Corporate espionage helps keep companies informed about the strengths and weaknesses of the competition. It’s a grey area. Something that was seen as criminal or unethical decades ago is now standard operating procedure. We’re not much better than the NSA, in fact maybe we’re even…”

  “The worst?”

  “Just take it easy, let me finish,” Needham said. “I’d say we have a certain moral code. But we’re a large organization with tens of thousands of employees and inevitably there are rotten apples—one or two very highly placed rotten apples I was thinking of handing you.”

  “Out of the kindness of your heart, of course,” said Blomkvist with a touch of sarcasm.

  “OK, maybe not entirely. But listen. When senior management at our place crosses the line and gets into criminal activities, what do you think happens?”

  “Nothing very nice.”

  “As you know, there’s a corrupt unit at Solifon, headed up by a man called Zigmund Eckerwald, whose job it is to find out what the competing tech companies are up to. They not only steal the technology but also sell what they steal. That’s bad for Solifon and maybe even for the whole Nasdaq.”

  “And for you too.”

  “That’s right. It turns out that our two most senior executives in industrial espionage—their names are Jacob Barclay and Brian Abbot—get help from Eckerwald and his gang. In exchange the NSA helps Eckerwald with large-scale communications monitoring. Solifon identifies where the big innovations are happening, and our idiots pluck out the drawings and the technical details.”

  “I assume the money this brings in doesn’t always end up in the state coffers.”

  “It’s worse than that, buddy. If you do this sort of thing as a state employee, you make yourself very vulnerable, especially because Eckerwald and his gang are also helping major criminals. To be fair, at first they probably didn’t know their clients were major criminals.”

  “But that’s what they were?”

  “Damn right. And they took advantage too. I could only dream of recruiting hackers at their level of expertise. The essence of this illegal business is to exploit information, so you can imagine: once they realized what our guys at the NSA were up to, these criminals knew they were sitting on a goldmine.”

  “So they were in a position to blackmail.”

  “Talk about having the upper hand. Our guys haven’t just been stealing from large corporations. They’ve also plundered small family businesses and solo entrepreneurs who are struggling to survive. It wouldn’t look too good if everything came out. So as a result the NSA is forced to help not just Eckerwald and Solifon, but also the criminals.”

  “You mean the Spiders?”

  “You got it. Maybe for a while everyone stays happy. It’s big business and the money’s rolling in. But then a little genius pops up in the middle of the action, a certain Professor Balder, and he’s just as good at ferreting around as he is at doing everything else. So he finds out about this scheme, or at least part of it. Then of course everyone’s scared shitless and decides that something has to be done. I’m not entirely clear on how these decisions got made. I’m guessing our guys hoped legal threats would be enough. But when you’re in bed with a bunch of criminals…The Spiders prefer violence. They probably drew our guys into the plan at a late stage, just to bind them in even more tightly.”

  “Jesus.”

  “I would never have gotten to know any of this if we hadn’t been hacked,” said Needham.

  “Another reason to leave the hacker in peace.”

  “Which is exactly what I’m going to do, so long as she tells me how she did it.”

  “I don’t know how much your promises are worth. But there’s another thing I’ve been wondering about,” Blomkvist went on.

  “Shoot.”

  “You mentioned two guys, Barclay and Abbot. Are you sure it stops with them? Who’s their boss?”

  “I can’t give you his name, unfortunately. It’s classified.”

  “I suppose I’ll have to live with that.”

  “You will,” Needham said inflexibly. At that moment Blomkvist noticed that traffic was starting to flow again.

  CHAPTER 28

  NOVEMBER 24—AFTERNOON

  Professor Edelman was standing in the parking lot at the Karolinska Institute wondering what in heaven’s name he had let himself in for. He was embarking on an arrangement which would mean his having to cancel a whole series of meetings, lectures, and conferences.

  Even so he felt strangely elated. He had been entranced not just by the boy but also by the young woman, who looked as if she had come straight from a street brawl but who drove a brand-new BMW and spoke with chilling authority. He had barely been aware of what he was doing when he said, “Yes, sure, why not,” to her questions, although it was obviously rash.

  The only grain of independence he had shown was to have declined all offers of compensation. He was going to pay his own travel and hotel expenses, he said. He must have felt guilty. But he was moved to take the boy under his wing, and his scientific curiosity was piqued. A savant who both drew with photographic exactitude and could perform prime number factorization—how absolutely riveting. To his own surprise he even decided to skip the Nobel Prize dinner. The young woman had made him take leave of his senses.

  —

  Hanna Balder was sitting in the kitchen on Torsgatan, smoking. It felt as if she had done little else aside from sit there and puff away with a pit in her stomach. She had been given an unusual amount of support, but she had also been getting an unusual amount of physical abuse.

  Lasse Westman could not handle her anxiety. It detracted from his own martyrdom. He was always flying into a rage and yelling, “Can’t you even keep track of your own brat?” Often he lashed out with his fists or threw her across the apartment like a rag doll. Now he would probably go crazy. She had spilled coffee all over the Dagens Nyheter culture section, and Lasse was already worked up because of a theatre review he found too sympathetic to actors he did not like.

  “What the hell have you done?”

  “I’m sorry,” she said quickly. “I’ll wipe it up.”

  She could tell from the set of his mouth even before he even knew it himself that he would hit her, and she was so well prepared for his slap that she did not say one word or even move her head. She could feel the tears welling up and her heart pounding. But actually that had nothing to do with the blow.

  That morning she had received a call which was so perplexing that she hardly understood it: August had been found, had disappeared again, and was “probably” unharmed—“probably.” It was impossible for Hanna to know if she should be more worried, or less. Hours had gone by wit
hout further news.

  Suddenly she got to her feet, no longer caring whether she would get another beating or not. She went into the living room and heard Lasse panting behind her. August’s drawing paper was still lying on the floor and an ambulance was wailing outside. She heard footsteps in the stairwell. Was someone on their way here? The doorbell rang.

  “Don’t open. It’ll be some bloody journalist,” Lasse snapped.

  Hanna did not want to open either. Still, she could not very well ignore it, could she? Perhaps the police wanted to interview her again, or maybe, maybe they had more information now, good news or bad news.

  As she went to the door she thought of Frans. She remembered how he had stood there saying that he had come for August. She remembered his eyes and the fact that he had shaved off his beard, and her own longing for her old life, before Lasse Westman—a time when the telephone rang and the job offers came flooding in, and fear had not yet set its claws into her. She opened the door with the safety chain on and at first she saw nothing; just the lift door, and the reddish-brown walls. Then a shock ran through her, and for a moment she could not believe it. But it really was August! His hair was a tangled mess and his clothes were filthy. He was wearing a pair of sneakers much too big for him, and yet: he looked at her with the same serious, impenetrable expression as ever. She would not have expected him to turn up on his own. But when she undid the safety chain she gave a start. Next to August stood a cool young woman in a leather jacket, with scratch marks on her face and earth in her hair, glaring down at the floor. She had a large suitcase in her hand.

  “I’ve come to give you back your son,” she said without looking up.

  “Oh my God,” Hanna said. “My God!”

  That was all she managed to say. For a few seconds she was completely at a loss as she stood there in the doorway. Then her shoulders began to shake. She sank to her knees and, forgetting that August hated to be hugged, she threw her arms around him, murmuring, “My boy, my boy,” until the tears came. The odd thing was: August not only let her do it, he also seemed on the verge of saying something, as if he had learned to talk on top of everything. But before he had the chance, Lasse was standing behind her.

  “What the hell…well, look who’s here!” he growled, as if he wanted to carry on with their fight.

  But then he got a grip on himself. It was an impressive piece of acting, in a way. In the space of a second he began to radiate the presence which used to make women swoon.

  “We get the kid delivered to our front doorstep,” he said to the woman on the landing. “How convenient. Is he OK?”

  “He’s OK,” the woman said in a strange monotone, and she walked into the apartment with her suitcase and her muddy boots.

  “Just come right on in,” Lasse said in an acid tone.

  “I’m here to help you pack, Lasse.”

  This was such a strange reply that Hanna was convinced she had misheard. Lasse did not seem to understand either. He just stood there looking stupid, his mouth wide open.

  “What did you say?”

  “You’re moving out.”

  “Is this some kind of joke?”

  “Not at all. You’re leaving this house, right now, and you’re not coming anywhere near August ever again. You’ve seen him for the last time.”

  “You must be insane!”

  “Actually I’m being unusually generous. I was planning on throwing you down the stairs, but instead I brought a suitcase, thought I’d let you pack some shirts and pants.”

  “What kind of a freak are you?” Lasse shouted, both bewildered and beside himself with rage. He bore down on the woman with the full weight of his hostility, and Hanna wondered if he was going to take a swipe at her as well.

  But something stopped him. Maybe it was the woman’s eyes, or possibly the fact that she did not react like anyone else would have done. Instead of backing off or looking frightened she only smiled at him, and handed him a few crumpled pieces of paper from an inside pocket.

  “If ever you and your friend Roger should find yourselves missing August, you can always look at this and remember,” she said.

  Lasse turned over the papers, confused. Then he screwed up his face in horror and Hanna took a quick look herself. They were drawings and the top one was of…Lasse. Lasse swinging his fists and looking profoundly evil. Later she would hardly be able to explain it. It was not just that she now understood what had been going on when August had been alone at home with Lasse and Roger. She also saw her own life more clearly and soberly than she had in years.

  Lasse had looked at her with exactly that twisted, livid face hundreds of times, most recently a minute ago. She knew this was something no-one should have to endure, neither she nor August, and she shrank back. At least she thought she did, because the woman looked at her with a new focus. Hanna eyed her uneasily. They seemed on some level to understand each other.

  “Am I right, Hanna, he’s got to go?” the woman asked.

  The question was potentially lethal, and Hanna looked down at August’s oversize shoes.

  “What are those shoes he’s wearing?”

  “Mine.”

  “Why?”

  “We left in a hurry this morning.”

  “And what have you been doing?”

  “Hiding.”

  “I don’t understand—” she began, but got no further.

  Lasse grabbed hold of her violently.

  “Why don’t you tell this psychopath that the only one who’s leaving is her!” he roared.

  Hanna cowered, but then…It may have been something to do with the expression on Lasse’s face, or the sense of something implacable in the young woman’s bearing. Hanna heard herself say, “You’re leaving, Lasse! And don’t ever come back!”

  It was as if someone else were speaking in her place. After that things moved quickly. Lasse raised his hand to strike her, but no blow came, not from him. The young woman reacted with lightning speed, and hit him in the face two, three times like a trained boxer, felling him with a kick to the leg.

  “What the hell!” was all he was able to say.

  He crashed to the floor, and the young woman stood over him. Hanna realized how long and how desperately she had wished Lasse Westman out of her life.

  —

  Bublanski longed to see Rabbi Goldman.

  He also longed for some of Modig’s orange chocolate, for his new Dux bed, and for springtime. But right now it was his job to get some order into this investigation. It was true that, on one level, he was satisfied. August Balder was said to be unharmed and on his way home to his mother.

  Thanks to the boy himself and to Lisbeth Salander, his father’s killer had been arrested, even though it was far from certain that he would survive his injuries. He was in intensive care at Danderyd Hospital. He was called Boris Latvinov but had for some time been using the name Jan Holtser. He was a former elite soldier from the Soviet army, a major, and his name had cropped up in the past in several murder investigations, but he had never been convicted. He had his own business in the security industry, and was both a Finnish and Russian citizen, and a resident of Helsinki; no doubt someone had doctored his government records.

  The other two people who had been found at the summer house on Ingarö had been identified by their fingerprints: Dennis Wilton, an old gangster from Svavelsjö MC who had done time for both aggravated robbery and assault; and Vladimir Orlov, a Russian with a criminal record in Germany for procuring, whose two wives had died in unexplained circumstances. None of the men had yet said a word about what happened, or about anything at all. Nor did Bublanski hold out much hope that this would change. Men like that tend to hold their tongues in police interviews. But then those were the rules of the game.

  What Bublanski was unhappy about, though, was the feeling that these three men were no more than foot soldiers and that there was a leadership above them linked to the upper echelons of society in both Russia and in the United States. He had no prob
lem with a journalist knowing more about his investigation than he did. In that respect he was not proud. He just wanted to move ahead, and was grateful for all information, whatever its source. But Blomkvist’s discerning approach to the case had pointed up their own shortcomings and reminded Bublanski of the leak and the dangers to which the boy had been exposed because of them. On this score his anger would never subside, and perhaps that explains why he was so irritated at Helena Kraft’s eager efforts to get hold of him—and the head of Säpo was not the only one. The IT people at the National Criminal Police were also after him, as were Chief Prosecutor Richard Ekström and a Stanford professor by the name of Steven Warburton from the Machine Intelligence Research Institute, who wanted to talk about “a significant risk,” as Amanda Flod put it.

  That bothered Bublanski, along with a thousand other things. And there was someone knocking at his door. It was Modig, who looked tired and was wearing no makeup, revealing something different about her face.

  “All three prisoners are having surgery,” she said. “It’ll be a while before we can question them again.”

  “Try to question them, you mean.”

  “I did manage to have a brief word with Latvinov. He was conscious for a while before his operation.”

  “Did he say anything?”

  “Just that he wanted to talk to a priest.”

  “How come all lunatics and murderers are religious these days?”

  “While all sensible old chief inspectors doubt the existence of their God, you mean?”

  “Now, now.”

  “Latvinov also seemed dejected, and that’s a good sign, I think,” Modig said. “When I showed him the drawing he waved it away with a resigned expression.”

  “So he didn’t try to claim it was a fabrication?”

  “He just closed his eyes and started to talk about his priest.”

  “Have you discovered what this American professor wants, the one who keeps calling?”

  “What…no…he’ll only talk to you. I think it’s about Balder’s research.”

  “And Zander, the young journalist?”

 

‹ Prev