Stallo (46 page)

Read Stallo Online

Authors: Stefan Spjut

After Barbro said this she fell silent.
‘What happened?’ Susso asked impatiently.
‘As Sven was standing under a fir tree something hit the brim of his hat and he saw a pine cone fall to the path beside his feet. He stood still and a second cone landed beside the first. Baffled, he turned his gaze upwards. Thick, heavy branches hung down, and he could not see anything. He turned round and looked along the path because he thought he had heard footsteps behind him, but there was no one there, so he looked up into the branches again and there was the squirrel, sitting on a spruce twig. Its coat was grey and its black eyes looked at him searchingly. Sven was paralysed. All he could do was stare at the bedraggled animal. It was sitting so close he would have been able to touch it if he’d had the courage to reach out his hand. But he didn’t. It was immediately apparent that this squirrel was no ordinary squirrel. Sven bolted and without looking back leapt onto his bicycle,
and it would be almost sixty years before he summoned up the courage to return.’
‘So he didn’t write anything about it?’ Gudrun asked.
‘Not a word,’ answered Barbro. ‘He buried it under a layer of concrete inside him. But that summer, when he heard a little boy had been abducted in Dalarna, a crack appeared in the concrete, and the crack widened when he spoke about it to someone he worked with at the radio station. Earlier that day the colleague had discovered that the missing boy’s mother had said that a giant had taken her child. Her account of what had happened was dismissed out of hand as a fantasy brought about by shock and triggered by medication abuse, but the circumstances were made more complicated by the fact that the police found huge footprints in the vicinity. There was no doubt that a larger than average man had been outside the cabin, but they could not establish the extent of his involvement in the kidnapping.
‘Sven phoned Magnus’s mother, Mona Brodin. She reluctantly agreed to talk about the giant. It had happened in the evening, so she had not been able to see him clearly. She estimated the giant to be between two and a half to three metres tall. He had not spoken. All he did was pick up the boy and disappear into the darkness of the forest. She had followed, but of course she had not been able to catch up with him.
‘Between two and a half to three metres! That was the exact height of the kitchen ceiling in John Bauer’s house in Småland. This indicated to Sven that there could be a connection between the mysterious disappearance of Magnus Brodin and Esther Bauer’s harrowing story. After he had spoken with Mona Brodin and thought about everything she had said, he realised that he had the chance to do something about his betrayal of the Bauer family
– because to him it did feel like a betrayal. Bengt Bauer was gone for ever but he might be able to help Magnus Brodin –
save him
, in fact. Except he did not know how.
‘If Magnus Brodin had been carried off by the stallo people, then Sven was obliged to discreetly point the police in the right direction. But Lapland is a vast region and Esther had never told him precisely where John had been when he found the stallo. And even if she had, it was doubtful it would have been of any help after so much time had passed. He made a few tentative phone calls to a couple of police officers he knew personally but they led nowhere, and eventually he began to doubt that there was anything he could do, and perhaps because it was a way of helping him endure this feeling of powerlessness he started questioning the truth of Esther Bauer’s story again, and whether it was so far removed from reality that any further investigation was futile.
‘But then there was the squirrel. The squirrel’s eyes had begun to shine inside him. Two small black lamps that came on when he lay in bed at night. They would not leave him in peace. That is why we travelled down to Gränna.
‘Of course, it was difficult for me to believe what he told me in the car that day, but I knew we did not have much time left together. I could hardly turn the car around and have his head examined. I didn’t have the heart for it.
‘We arrived at the place where Sven said he had seen the squirrel in 1922 and stood there for a while, but no squirrel appeared. Large areas of Björkudden were surprisingly unchanged, Sven said. The facade of the beautiful house was the same shade of red. We met the present owner of Björkudden, Fredrik Dahllöf, who you spoke to, and his daughter, a girl of about six or seven. Naturally Dahllöf was astonished when Uncle Sven stepped into
his kitchen out of the blue, and he was no less bewildered when Sven asked about a special squirrel that had belonged to John Bauer. He thought it was some kind of joke. But Sven repeated his question and emphasised how vitally important it was that he told him everything he knew. To underline the gravity Sven explained that the squirrel was connected to the kidnapping of Magnus Brodin. Dahllöf knew about Magnus Brodin, he had read about him in the papers, but he had never heard anything about a squirrel. And what a squirrel from the turn of the century had to do with the kidnapped boy he really could not fathom. That was obvious from his expression.
‘Sven started to walk around the room, scanning the walls, and it wasn’t long before Dahllöf became curious and wanted to know what he was looking for. So Sven told him everything. He pointed his stick at the ceiling, and when he asked if it was two metres and seventy-five centimetres high, Dahllöf nodded in confirmation. Sven explained his suspicion: that Magnus Brodin had been stolen by the same person who in 1918 had come to Björkudden to take the three-year-old Bengt Bauer.’
Barbro placed her hands together and studied them. The nails were cut short and coated with clear varnish.
‘We went back out to the car,’ she continued, ‘and I was about to turn the key in the ignition when we heard a small thud on the roof. I jumped and leaned forwards, wondering what could have landed so heavily. A bird? A pine cone? But then something started moving above us, tiny footsteps on the metal. I opened the door and got out. And there was the squirrel, right under my very nose. It was sitting on the roof, watching me, and I saw straight away that something was wrong with it. It looked ill. It was so thin and its fur was patchy and matted.
‘Sven was sure this was the same squirrel that he had seen in 1922. It hadn’t aged a day, he said. And when he reached out his hand and rested it on the car roof, his palm cupped like a bowl, the squirrel approached him. With a gentle movement he picked up the little animal in his large hand and pressed it to his chest, and after sitting down in the back seat he said it was Humpe, Bauer’s squirrel, although I thought surely he knew it couldn’t be. “What do you know about it?” he said, stroking the little animal’s coat. “Squirrels don’t live that long,” I answered. “They live for fifteen years at the most. You know that’s what your father said.” “But between you and me,” Sven said, “this is no squirrel. At least, not only a squirrel.” “If you say so,” I said. And then we drove home.’
‘So he took it home with him?’ Susso asked.
Barbro nodded.
‘He kept it in his room.’
‘Here?’ Susso asked.
‘Yes,’ Barbro replied. ‘At first I was against it, naturally, because in all honesty there is not much difference between a squirrel and a rat, but when I noticed how happy the squirrel made him, I relented. He often called me to come and look when it was doing something amusing or unexpected. It was as if it had breathed new life into Sven, and he seemed to have forgotten all about Magnus Brodin, which was just as well, I thought. But then one day Sven was suddenly taken ill. When the ambulance arrived and they put him on the stretcher, he clung onto my hand and made me promise to look after the squirrel.’
Barbro looked down at the swirling pattern on the Persian rug. It was so big that the parquet flooring was visible only as a thin frieze bordering the skirting boards.
‘He was dead by the time we reached the hospital,’ she said. ‘I had to come home, to this empty flat. Which was not entirely empty. It was several days before I gathered enough strength to open the door to his room. In some way I hoped it had all been imagination, that the animal would not be there. But there it sat, of course, right in the middle of the bed, looking at me. I closed the door but I remembered my promise, so I put a bowl of water and some seeds in the room. And I thought: it can’t be happy in there, surely it will die soon. Every time I opened the door, I hoped it would be lying dead in a corner.’
There was a creak as Barbro moved in the chair.
‘After a few months had passed and it had still not died I went into the room and opened the window. I didn’t think that was breaking my promise to Sven. If the squirrel wanted to go willingly, then I thought it should be allowed to do so. Later that day, when I looked into the room, it had gone. There are large trees outside, so I expect it jumped onto one of them.’
Quickly she stroked a curl of hair from her forehead.
‘It was an enormous relief, I can tell you.’
Barbro stood up and looked at Gudrun.
‘Shall we have that coffee now?’
*
While Barbro was in the kitchen, Susso and Gudrun sat looking through the cuttings. Torbjörn had got up from the sofa to take a closer look at the roller blind. He ran his fingers over the surface. Then he sank back down onto the sofa again, watching Susso, who had lifted the briefcase onto her lap so she could look at it more closely. She slid open the locks one at a time and lifted the lid.
She found a crumpled plastic bag with a small grey revolver
inside it. It looked like a piece of scrap metal. The handle was made of dark wood, almost black with a greasy shine. Scattered around the gun in the bag’s many creases were cartridges, ten at least. She held up the bag so that first Torbjörn and then Gudrun could see what it contained.
‘That’s Sven’s pistol,’ Barbro said, walking in carrying a silver tray that rattled with small white porcelain cups. ‘You see, when he was in Petrograd, which was practically a war zone, he asked his father to send him a gun so he would be able to protect himself. His father sent that little pistol by courier. And do you know who gave it to him? The author Verner von Heidenstam. Sven’s father looked after Heidenstam’s horses out at Naddö, so they were as good as friends.’
‘But what happened to the boat?’ asked Susso, replacing the plastic bag in the case. ‘Why did it sink?’
‘It was overloaded and Vättern was in a bad mood,’ Barbro said, placing the tray on the table.
‘So the stallo people had nothing to do with it?’
‘That we will never know,’ said Barbro, pouring the coffee.
‘But what do you think then? About what he told you? About Bauer and the stallo people?’
‘I don’t think anything,’ Barbro said, putting down the coffee pot. ‘I am
convinced
it is all true.’
They waited for her to continue.
‘You know I told you that the squirrel disappeared the day I left the window open?’
‘Yes?’
‘Well, it came back. That same evening. I had hung Sven’s bedding to air on the balcony and there it was, sitting on the railing, staring at me. My first impulse was to rush inside and close the
balcony door, but before I could reach the door, he had already slipped in.’
Barbro gestured towards the balcony door.
‘I hunted around desperately looking for him, but it was pointless. You can’t catch a squirrel with your bare hands. So there was nothing else I could do but let him into Sven’s room again, and he hopped in there. It was our deal, if you can put it like that. And he knew it. He wanted nothing more than to be allowed to live in there. And now,’ she said, staring blankly ahead, ‘now, after twenty-five years, I can say with certainty that Sven was right.’
‘Right in what way?’ Susso asked.
Barbro gave her a blank look.
‘That it was John Bauer’s squirrel he brought back from Björkudden.’
‘What do you mean?’ said Susso, and when she did not get an answer straight away she cast an enquiring look at her mother, who was bending forwards with her elbows on her knees, rubbing her forehead and making her skin wrinkle.
‘She means’, said Gudrun, ‘that the squirrel is still alive.’
‘You’re joking!’ Susso said.
Barbro nodded.
‘Not at all. He’s in Sven’s room.’
Seved was aware that the old-timers could know things, that they could infiltrate people’s heads. At least Skabram could, if you got close. Ejvor had told him once that he should watch out for Skabram especially, that he should take care not to make eye contact with him. Things Skabram picked apart with his probing old troll fingers could never be repaired, and he did not care. Quite the reverse. The destruction amused him.
Funnily enough, it did not strike him that the old-timers would know what had happened to the lemmingshifter until after he had pulled off the road to get rid of the sleeping bag and its contents. He had not wanted to look inside the bag. He had simply hurled it out among the birches. But then he had changed his mind, waded through the snow and tipped out the little body. Not to see it, but so that the ravens would get to it as quickly as possible. He could not bear the thought of it shrivelling up inside the sleeping bag. He wanted it to disappear. Totally.

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