Authors: Kerstin Ekman
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective, #Crime
‘Oh, so you brought the car right up,’ said Birger. Johan had no need to answer. Of course they didn’t want to lug the garbage sacks all the way down to the road. But Annie hadn’t liked people driving up to the house, though Johan couldn’t have known that. Cars made ugly tracks in the grass when the ground was damp. Over all those years, she had carried her shopping and parcels of books up the slope, referring to Aagot and to Jonetta before her.
‘Edit, up above Westlund’s, do you remember her?’ said Birger. Johan nodded.
‘She broke her leg in March last year and had to go to hospital, then to a long-stay ward. In the summer her family came up to sort everything out, for Edit wouldn’t be coming home again. A large heap of rubbish lay just where we usually park when we go up on the shoot. Old cake tins and stacks of magazines, tattered galoshes and preserving jars. They had even thrown away Edit’s cloth strips she had cut up to make rag rugs.’
He fell silent and thought there had been at least twenty skeins of strips of cloth on that rubbish heap. It wouldn’t have been possible to rescue them because it had rained a lot and by the autumn they were half-rotten. Anna Starr had been there and felt them. ‘You wonder what kind of people do things like that, throwing away ready-cut rags,’ she had said, although she had known perfectly well it was the sons and daughters-in-law.
‘Anyhow, there was Edit’s hat on the very top of the rubbish mound. The one she used to wear when she was out chopping wood or taking up potatoes. It was a brown felt hat that looked like a pot and had two flowers made of the same felt material on the front. Do you remember it?’
Johan looked at him sideways but said nothing.
‘I was up with a beagle I had borrowed. It was November and I thought I’d see if there were any hares up there. On my way down the path, I heard someone chopping wood. It was dusk. I walked past Edit’s woodshed, the one that has
hut
3 on it, because she got it from the company. That’s when I saw her. She was inside and the flowers on that old hat bobbed every time she split the logs.’
He fell silent.
‘She was back then,’ said Johan.
Why did I tell him that? Birger thought. It had just come out. Almost as if it had to. He had at least stopped himself before finishing the story as he usually did: that when he had seen the greyish-brown figure in the autumn twilight he had thought it a premonition of Edit’s death. The point was that she was alive. She had come back from the long-stay ward, found her felt hat and presumably quite a lot of other things on the rubbish heap, then had set about chopping wood for the winter. The way he had told the story to Johan, it was pointless.
He did talk away like that sometimes, without really knowing where it would lead. Then he saw that grin. With no face. In recent weeks he had mostly been silent. That was better.
Annie had left him alone with a cold scornful smile. It wasn’t hers. It was a cold smile with no face.
Mia came out carrying a dirty coat of black cloth and opened it. It was lined with stoat pelts, the thick summer pelt in shifting brown colours. White streaks from the belly and neck patches. The seams joining them together had begun to give way. It looked as if the pelts were about to crawl out of the coat.
‘Do you think it was Aagot’s?’
‘No, when Aagot came back after the war, she was dressed like an American,’ said Birger. ‘That’s Jonetta’s coat. Her sister’s. She got it from Antaris. She was married to him. He was a Lapp.’
Antaris must have caught the stoats in traps over many years. She had probably been given the coat because he never bothered to fill in the cracks in the chimney breast or tried to insulate the walls. The cold swirled in and she was freezing cold. Antaris had been labourer to the reindeer herdsmen when they married, but then they meant to keep cows and goats. Jonetta came from a peasant farming family across the border, but Antaris never liked farm-work. Annie had shown Birger the stonecrop growing between the stones on the slope. There was also angelica from up on the mountain. That’s the kind of thing Antaris brought home to Jonetta. And he had the coat made. But she must have been cold. When Antaris and Jonetta had gone and Aagot moved in, she had put in electric radiators.
But not straight away, he thought. He remembered one January storm, the first time he had ever been to Blackwater. In the late evening, the snow was swirling in a grey storm and the roads were slowly being snowed up. He didn’t know where he was. Then he suddenly saw a light glowing in a window high up above the road. It was an electric light, but the squalls of snow seemed to suppress it. He had realised the electricity might go off at any moment, plunging the village into darkness, so he got out of the car and trudged up to the cottage while he could still see something. He wanted to ask where he was. Snow had already drifted up in front of the steps. When he peered through the kitchen window, he saw a woman sitting on a chair, reading in front of the wood stove. She had her feet at the oven door, halfway inside the oven. She was calmly reading and he stood there for so long looking at her that he saw her turning a page of the book.
Then he had knocked on the window, but it was some time before she heard him. That must have been the storm. Through an open door into the other room, he could see the television was on, but he could hear nothing. It was a flashing black and white picture – a sandstorm or a cosmic blizzard. The woman in front of the stove went on reading without looking up.
‘What are you thinking about?’ said Mia.
He shook his head. That was nothing to talk about just then. But he had been thinking that Annie had taken over Aagot Fagerli’s life. It had been there all ready, a style to step into. Of course she had modified it. But it was a lifestyle she had taken over with the house. Though Aagot hadn’t needed to sleep with a shotgun beside her.
‘I was thinking about that snowstorm the first time I came here,’ he said. ‘It was about fifteen below zero and certainly even colder in the squalls.’
‘It was thirty-one below when I was here a few years ago,’ said Johan. ‘Black as ink, and white. Not a soul.’
‘I thought you’d not been back here since you moved to Langvasslien,’ said Birger.
‘Yes, I came and took a look one winter evening. Then I went back home across the border. That’s all. And that time recently when we went to Nirsbuan and I drove Mia here.’
‘Did you drive Mia here?’
‘Yes, we got here at about four. I slept in the car afterwards. Parked down in Tangen.’
‘But you drove her all the way up here?’
‘Yes he did,’ said Mia. ‘I’ll make some coffee. Get the gateau out of the freezer, would you, Johan?’
Saddie had displayed discreet delight when Birger had arrived and was now lying at his feet. He tried to talk to her, but when she looked up with her dim eyes and gave a subdued wag of her tail, he started to weep. Her nose was grey and white. He couldn’t remember how old she was.
Johan came up from the cellar with a Black Forest gateau and put it in the sun to thaw. When they started eating it, it occurred to Birger that it might be a gateau left over from the funeral. Just how practical was Mia really?
At the funeral gathering at the hotel, he had sat beside Annie’s mother, old Henny. He had picked her up at the airport and she had leaned very heavily on his arm, making her way with great difficulty on her bad legs. Not once had she given in to tears or any outburst over the senseless and cruel thing that had happened to her only child. She had acted a part. There had been no falseness or dissembling at all in the way she had played her role. She coped with what had happened to her in the same way as she had coped with and borne a great deal in her long life; she took it on herself as if it had been a part written for her and no one else.
She had given him strength. He remembered little of the three weeks that had passed before they were allowed to bury Annie. In the end, he had been forced to take sick leave. When he saw the tiny, compact little lady in black with swollen ankles coming down the airport stairs, he had felt compassion and tenderness. That was the first time since the event that he had felt anything but a confusion that sometimes seemed like drunkenness or numbness, released momentarily by a sharp pain localised just above his diaphragm. Between the attacks, it came again, leaving him somehow helpless. Or disabled, he now thought.
What he had felt for Henny Raft had been fierce and unexpected, and it had helped him through the funeral. Only when the thin voices of the church choir sang did the pain come back again and cause him to double up, pressing out of him a sound that was grotesque. He heard it himself and was ashamed. Then Henny put her hand with all those rings, the most prominent a huge bloodstone set in marcasites, over his hand and kept it there until he could breathe normally again.
‘Have you found a box of cartridges?’ he said to Mia. He saw her turn pale, the freckles standing out. She was dirty from clearing out the shed.
‘Why do you ask that?’
‘There must be one somewhere.’
A charge of shot had hit Annie in the lower part of her chest and her diaphragm. The shot had severely injured her, but had not killed her. According to the investigation, she had probably tripped as she had been wading across the river carrying a gun without the safety catch on. It had gone off. During the spring floods, the water level had been so high, she had ended up under the water and drowned.
‘She kept two cartridges behind the clock radio,’ said Birger. ‘They were still there. The police took them. I saw them that night I was looking for the gun. But I saw no box of cartridges.’
‘We haven’t found any.’
‘You ought to have, if the police are right.’
‘Why are you talking like this?’ said Mia, and tears began to pour down her cheeks, smearing the dirt.
‘There was no box,’ said Birger. ‘She had only those two cartridges.’
Mia was crying, no longer listening to what he was saying, but Johan was attentive.
‘I don’t think she had the gun with her,’ said Birger. ‘I think someone else took it and went after her. Someone who didn’t know about the cartridges behind the clock radio. I’m sure that those were the only cartridges she had. I’ve never seen a box of them here. She never went shooting. She had learnt to load the gun. No more than that. It wasn’t even her own. Yes, she had paid for it. But it was Roland Fjellström who helped her buy it. The licence was his. He gave her two cartridges. He still remembers that.’
‘Have you told the police?’ said Johan.
‘Of course.’
‘Stop it, now,’ said Mia. ‘I don’t want to hear any more. It’s all horrible. Everyone talking a whole load of shit. Do you know what old Enoksson said in the store? That his father also did away with himself. That’s what they think!’
‘But we don’t,’ said Birger.
‘He said that Magna Wilhelmsson in Byvången had told him that people who do themselves in have to be reborn for twenty-six thousand years as poverty-stricken Indians.’
‘Magna’s crazy,’ said Birger. ‘She ought to be shut up in the Folklore Museum.’
‘But Mum had accumulated an awful lot of bad karma.’
Birger didn’t know whether she was being serious or whether that was modern jargon he didn’t understand. He saw that Johan hadn’t understood, either. He had put his arm round Mia.
‘I’ve been to see the police again,’ said Birger. ‘They know she phoned me and was frightened. They think that may explain why she had the gun with her when she went out. She really was frightened. But they think she may have imagined seeing someone. Or dreamt it. It’s not possible to confirm that she really did see anyone that night. If nothing new comes up, they say.’
‘And nothing has,’ said Johan.
‘Yes. Something did just now.’
‘What?’
‘She may have seen you,’ said Birger.
He disliked Mia’s tears. A moment ago he had wept himself when he saw that Saddie couldn’t grieve, only wait. Mia was crying loudly and rushed back into the house. She makes herself out to be more childish than she is, he thought as the door slammed shut.
‘I presume that may have occurred to her,’ he said. ‘Has she said anything about it to you?’
‘No.’
‘What about you? Have you thought about it?’
‘Yes, of course.’
Johan seemed older now. Mia’s presence made him young. Perhaps that was what he wanted. For a moment the idea of an ageing man doing press-ups and trying to keep his stomach in floated through Birger’s head. Johan was the same age as Tomas, and that must mean he was eleven or twelve years older than Mia.
Johan got up and went in to her, Birger following. They could hear thumps in the kitchen and when they went in he saw she was clearing out there as well, snivelling and taking half-full bags of flour, sugar and oat flakes out of the larder. Johan had gone over to stand by the cold stove, his hands thrust into the narrow pockets of his jeans, an unnatural or at any rate awkward posture. He was biting his top lip and looking at Birger. He seemed to be waiting for him to go on.
‘Do you think it was you she saw?’
‘She probably saw me from the kitchen window. We stood out here for a while. I think she must have heard the car.’
‘Why don’t the police know all this?’
‘There was probably some misunderstanding.’
‘Had you realised all the time that she’d seen you, and thought you looked like that boy?’
He didn’t reply, but lowered his head.
‘But you’ve said nothing about it.’
‘No. But it’s not as you think.’
‘What do you mean, as I think?’ said Birger.
Johan again said nothing.
‘We must tell the police,’ said Birger.
‘Yes, I can see that you think that.’
‘Don’t you?’
‘No.’
‘Mia?’
She was dirty and very pale, the freckles almost dark brown against the grey skin. She was looking at Johan, strange sharp lines at the corners of her mouth that did not seem to go with the smooth young face. Birger recollected that she had been a fussy little miss about food as a child, those lines appearing round her mouth whenever she saw goat’s milk or fish guts.