Night Rounds
Page 29
“Just keep in contact with him by phone for a few days. We have the feeling that we’re going to solve this case and put the killer behind bars fairly soon.”
Irene’s voice sounded more certain than she felt, but Anna-Karin seemed to gather courage from her words.
Anna-Karin was given the opportunity to call her mother and make arrangements. As she told her mother about the fire, the flood of tears returned, and the officers could hear that her mother was crying just as hard. Once she hung up, she seemed in a much better mood. Tommy arranged a police escort to Kungälv.
As soon as Anna-Karin left the room, Irene reached for the phone and called Löwander Hospital.
“YES, LINDA AND I have—had a relationship.”
If Sverker Löwander had seemed hassled and worn out before, he was a total mess now. His eyes were sunken into their sockets. His hair was unwashed, and it appeared he’d lost twenty pounds during the past two weeks. His hands shook noticeably. He looks like he isn’t eating or sleeping much at all, Irene thought.
“How long did your relationship go on?” Tommy asked.
“Right before Christmas. That’s when we.…”
Sverker’s voice trailed off and he stared dully at Tommy and Irene’s messy bookshelf. Irene had placed herself on a chair by the door. Without discussing it beforehand, they had agreed that Tommy would lead the interrogation.
“Where did you usually meet?”
“The on-call apartment.”
“Can you tell me what happened the night she disappeared?”
Löwander kept staring at the bookshelf, but he began to talk hesitantly. “We didn’t see each other during the weekend.”
He fell silent again. Patiently, Tommy asked, “Why not?”
“My daughter Emma left to go on a skiing vacation with friends. Carina and I were invited to an important party on Saturday. On Sunday, Linda was busy. She was helping Pontus pack up the last of his things.”
“So you decided to meet at the hospital.”
“Yes.”
“Why did she come so late at night?”
Sverker held his head in his hands. “The ghost hour. No one on the night shift ventures out then. So there’s little risk we’d be seen. We’d have a whole hour.…”
“Did she arrive on time?”
With his face still hidden in his hands, Sverker mumbled, “No. She never came. I never saw her alive again.”
“Did you love her?” Tommy asked.
At first it seemed that Sverker didn’t hear the question, but after a few moments he took his hands from his face and nodded slowly. “Yes, I did. Very much.”
“So much that you were already discussing marriage?”
The doctor startled at this. For the first time, he looked directly at Tommy. “Discussing marriage? Who told you that?”
“So you weren’t?”
Sverker seemed troubled and kept running his trembling hands through his dirty hair. Finally he replied, “Well … I did tell Linda that my marriage to Carina was in bad shape and that I was considering asking her for a divorce.”
“Did you?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“I didn’t have time before … it … happened.”
“But Linda seemed to be very clear that you promised to marry her.”
“She did? Well, we probably would have … eventually.”
“Let’s go back to the night of the murder. Tell us what happened while you were waiting for Linda.”
“I was up in the apartment at eleven-thirty. I got undressed and got into bed. I tried to read for a while. Midnight came, and then it was a few minutes past.”
“Were you worried?”
“Not really. I thought she might have been held up and was running late. The minutes kept ticking away, and she didn’t come.” He looked at his shaking hands and took a deep breath. “At exactly twelve-fifteen, the power went out. I had just looked at the clock. At first I was irritated, but then I heard the respirator alarm go off. I leaped out of bed, threw on some clothes, and you know the rest. During everything that happened, I kept wondering where Linda was. It was as if I had a premonition.”
“Nurse Siv said that you took her flashlight and went to the operating rooms through the ICU’s back door. You saw no trace of Linda or Marianne?”
“No. Of course I was looking for both of them. I didn’t see anything. But I did feel as if I were being watched. Down in the entrance foyer … while I was waiting for the police. I know it sounds crazy, but I had the strong feeling of being observed. And I’m not superstitious.”
“You don’t believe it was the hospital ghost?”
“No. Every decent hospital that’s been around for a while has a ghost, and ours is called Tekla. If that old nurse hadn’t hanged herself in the attic, there would have been another ghost story about someone else.”
“So if it wasn’t a ghost watching, it must have been a human being.”
“Yes.”
“But you have no idea who it might have been?”
For a moment Irene felt that Sverker was hesitating; the expression in his eyes was difficult to interpret. He looked down before he answered, “No.”
“Then … let’s move on to something else that happened here. What were you doing last night at twelve?”
“Last night? I slept. I actually slept for the first time since … it happened. Six hours in a row. I think I fell asleep at eleven-thirty. Probably had something to do with the wine.”
“Wine?”
“Carina had opened a bottle the night before last, and there was half a bottle left. She was making beef stew for dinner and put the bottle on the table. Red wine went with the food, so I had two glasses. It was just enough to knock me out.”
“Were Carina and Emma at home?”
“Emma was already asleep when I went to bed. Carina finishes work late on Tuesdays. She teaches aerobics all evening and usually isn’t home until eleven-thirty at the earliest.”
“Did you hear her when she came home?”
“Yes, she arrived around the usual time, and I heard her come in before I drifted off. Why are you asking?”
“But you didn’t see or speak with each other after that?”
“No, I was asleep by the time she came upstairs.”
Tommy told the doctor about the arson at Anna-Karin Arvidsson’s apartment. He also said that Anna-Karin would not be returning to work until the threat to her life was eliminated. In other words, when the killer was caught.
As Tommy was telling the story, Irene saw how Sverker had quietly withdrawn into his head. He had fastened his gaze back onto their bookshelf, and it was doubtful that he’d heard what Tommy was saying.
“HE SUSPECTS SOMETHING—OR knows something,” Irene said.
“Why do you think so?” Tommy asked.
“When you were telling him about the arson at Anna-Karin’s, I had the feeling he only half heard your words. He was thinking about something else.”
“Yes, but he’s at the end of his rope. Maybe he couldn’t listen to any more bad news.”
“Maybe not.” Irene wasn’t convinced, but there wasn’t any evidence to back up her feeling. For now it would just have to wait. She changed the subject. “So this story comes back to fire again.”
“Fire? Are you thinking about the garden shed and Mama Bird?”
“Yes, and also the fire ten years ago when the doctor’s mansion burned down. So there are three fires. Let’s think about the fire at the mansion. Who was involved in that story?”
“Barbro, Carina, and Sverker.”
“And which of these three would have reason to set the other two?”
Tommy thought about it. “In principle, all three.”
“That’s right. Barbro lives alone and can come and go as she pleases now that her children are living in the United States.”
“But what would be her motive?”
“Revenge. Hate.”
“Ma
ybe. As for Sverker and Carina, it would be much harder. They live together and know where each other should be.”
“Do they? I think they live fairly separate lives. As far as the garden shed goes, either one of them could have set that fire. They didn’t meet up until it was time to go to that party. Before then anyone could have arranged the candle and the rags. Neither of them has an alibi. Their daughter, Emma, was away on winter break. They didn’t have to worry about her. Sverker says he was at the hospital looking through construction bids. Notice that he was at the scene. Two hours after he leaves the building, the fire breaks out. Carina said she was exercising in her private gym and then went jogging. She came home a few minutes after Sverker. It’s strange, too, that they were able to pull themselves together for a party after everything that had been going on at the hospital.”
“Neither Linda nor Gunnela had been found yet when the garden shed burned.”
“Right. But Linda had gone missing.”
“Sverker had to keep a calm façade and not let Carina know how worried he was.”
“Exactly. And Carina hasn’t seemed all that affected by any of this. She is one cool lady.”
“Yes, goal-oriented. She’s decided to turn the hospital into a fitness center, and so it will be.”
Silence spread through the room until Irene finally asked, “So which of the three do you think is behind it?”
“Not Barbro. She has nothing to gain by killing Linda, Marianne, or Gunnela. If she were guilty, she would have aimed at hurting Carina directly. Or killed her.”
“My thoughts exactly. Barbro as a suspect is too far-fetched. It’s been too long since they divorced.”
“Either Sverker or Carina, then.”
“Yes, but I can’t see a motive for either of them.”
“What are we missing? Which questions haven’t been answered?”
Irene thought. “Why did Marianne have Linda’s day planner in her pocket? And where is Marianne’s flashlight?”
“Yep. We know that the killer needed the flashlight to light the way up the stairs to the attic. Also for hanging Linda up. Probably the killer used it to walk through the operating rooms, since there are no windows there. Going down the stairs would be easier. The street lamps and the moon would have lit the way. According to Siv Persson, it was almost as light as day.”
“So where did the murderer put the flashlight?”
“Where do people put flashlights?”
Tommy stared at Irene. “Where? Well, I have one in the garage. And one in the closet, though that one’s broken. And one in the car.”
Irene nodded. The gears in her head began to turn. “I also have one in the car. As well as a towrope and a jack. But I don’t keep a toolbox in my car. Do you?”
“Not in my car, no. I keep mine in the garage. I have a set of wrenches instead and a jack. I don’t have a towrope.”
“So you don’t have a toolbox with a hammer and a screwdriver and the like either?”
“No. What’s this toolbox idea?”
“Carina Löwander said they keep a toolbox in their car. She said she’d taken the screwdriver from the toolbox in order to break open the suitcases in the attic. I would like to take a good look at that toolbox.”
“Why?”
“Because if there isn’t one, Carina got a screwdriver from somewhere else, and I’m going to put my money on the security guard’s room. And as you well know, someone also took a large pair of wire cutters and a few yards of flag rope.”
BY PHONE IRENE was able to reach Sverker Löwander at home around six that evening.
“Why do you need to look at our garage and our cars?” Sverker asked her suspiciously.
Irene always had difficulty skirting around the truth, so she explained calmly, “We’re looking for an instrument that matches some break marks we found. Perhaps a dull knife or a screwdriver. We have not found anything that fits at the hospital or in the security guard’s room. So now we are going to go through all the homes of everyone involved. Even those of the victims.” Irene added the last sentence to make it appear more like a routine search.
“Where did you find these break marks?”
“I can’t tell you. It’s part of the investigation.”
This usually stopped further questions, and it worked on Sverker Löwander.
“I’m driving Emma to her riding lesson. We’re already late. I’m staying there until she’s done at eight-thirty. We’re seldom home before nine.”
“Is Carina at home?”
“No, she won’t be home until eleven-thirty.”
This family certainly kept late hours, and the cars wouldn’t be in the garage. Irene thought quickly. “Could you just leave your car in the garage tomorrow morning?”
Silence on the other end of the line. Finally, “Sure. Anything to get this over with. But we don’t keep a lot of tools in our cars, so I imagine your search won’t take long. There are not many tools in the garage either. I’m not fond of home improvement or woodworking or that kind of thing.”
“It’s good we can do this as efficiently as possible. It’s just routine. Everyone must be checked systematically, and we can’t leave anything to chance, as you probably know,” Irene chirped. She was surprised that he swallowed her weak story but relieved he didn’t question their right to search his cars and his garage. It would have been much more difficult if he’d asked for a search warrant and demanded to know what his legal rights were. Irene knew that her suspicions weren’t enough to authorize a search warrant, and in any event it just would take too long.
Chapter 21
COLD RAIN POURED from the black skies and trickled down Irene’s neck as she crossed the short stretch from her police car to the Löwanders’ front porch. She felt it run in little streams from her hair onto her neck as she rang the doorbell and heard it echo within the house. After the third ring, she heard footsteps on the other side. The brickred door was opened slightly, and through the gap, Irene heard an angry, snakelike hiss: “Who’s there?”
“Inspector Irene Huss. I spoke to your husband and—”
The door opened wide. Irene saw the white robe covering a disheveled figure in the dark hallway.
“Well, hello. Come on in. What time is it?”
The voice was now warm and inviting, not at all snakelike, as Carina Löwander let Irene inside.
“It’s almost eight.”
“Good grief! I’ve overslept! Excuse me for a minute. I have to check and make sure that Emma has gotten off to school.”
“This won’t take long. I talked to Sverker yesterday. Didn’t he mention it?”
Carina stopped in the middle of her run up the stairs to the second floor. “No, he was already sleeping when I came home last night, and I was asleep when he left. We haven’t talked since yesterday morning.”
Irene wasn’t surprised. She said easily, “It’s about a routine check, you see. Every vehicle that was near Löwander Hospital needs to be checked both inside and out.”
“Inside and out? Why?”
“So they can be eliminated from the investigation. There are marks from a tool we’re trying to track down. I can’t say anything else about it. For investigative reasons.”
Carina appeared doubtful. On the other hand, to Irene’s great relief, she didn’t demand to see a search warrant either.
“I see. Well.…”
Irene said quickly, “You don’t have to accompany me. If you could just give me the garage and car keys for a moment, I’ll take care of it myself.”
Still obviously doubtful, Carina walked over to a tall, narrow dresser near the hat rack. The white-lacquered front seemed covered with tiny drawers. Carina pulled open one of the top ones and took out two key rings. She cast a brief, suspicious glance into the narrow pewter-framed mirror over the dresser. Their eyes met in the mirror. Irene had been prepared for this and gave the appearance of calm friendliness. Carina pressed her lips together and turned back to Irene as she said, �
�Here. The garage key is on both these key chains. You can tell which one belongs to the BMW and which one belongs to the Mazda.”
“Thanks. This will just take a few minutes. I’ll be right back with the keys.”
Irene went out into the downpour again. As she passed the police car, she motioned to Tommy to stay there. It would be just as well that someone kept an eye on the house and its mistress.
Irene lifted the heavy garage door and pulled it shut behind her. After a few seconds of searching, she found the light switch. The two-car garage was lit by a single weak bulb attached to the ceiling. The blue Mazda and the silver BMW stood next to each other. Irene decided to look through the BMW first.
The car’s inside was meticulously clean. It was almost new, certainly not more than a few months old. The glove compartment held a pair of sunglasses and a package of gum. The trunk was just as empty. A spare tire, a jack, and a first-aid kit from the Red Cross were the only items in it.
The Mazda seemed more promising. It was a few years old and was not nearly as clean. There was an empty pop can and piles of candy wrappers on the floor by the backseats. The glove compartment was filled, but nothing in it interested Irene.
The trunk contained the usual mess of stuff found in old cars. There really was a bag of tools, but it had no screwdriver. It did have various wrenches, an oilcan, a small jack, and a lug wrench in the shape of a cross. She lifted the bag of tools out of the way so that she could look behind it.
The weak light suddenly flashed on a reflection—something made of steel—deep inside the truck. Irene reached forward to fish it out. When her hand, enclosed in its glove, cautiously wrapped itself around the cold metal, her heart skipped a beat.
She lifted her discovery in pinched fingers and stretched to hold it closer to the dim light to see it better.
A very familiar scent slammed open a subconscious alarm, and she reacted with lightning speed. Instantly, she threw the object back into the trunk, grasped the molded edge of the car, and leaped up to kick back as hard as she could with both feet. A thud told her she’d hit the person coming up behind her. A loud “Ooofff” and another thud against the garage door confirmed that her kick had been hard and well placed. Unfortunately, the attacker had also managed a hard hit. But instead of landing on Irene’s head, where the blow had been aimed, it hit her high on her calf. She felt how the blow connected and heard a dry crack on her right leg. A second later her lower leg went numb and no longer supported her weight. Irene swung around, using her left leg, and saw Carina pulling herself up, using the garage door as support, her left hand pressed against her chest. Not for nothing did Irene think of a ninja warrior as she saw Carina dressed in black leggings and a tight-fitting black T-shirt, her well-trained muscles rippling under the thin fabric of the shirt.