Authors: Alexander Soderberg
And when the new Tommy was born, the old one died. It happened fast. And the new Tommy started to think. It had been unavoidable; they would never have been able to share the spoils. He knew her, he knew his new self. The appeal of a new arrangement seldom lasted very long.
It wasn't about the money, more about fear, his own warped fear. He had realized it with the passage of time. His fear of Monica disappearing. What the hell was he going to do without her? Who would look after him when he got old? Who would make sure the girls didn't marry idiots? Who the hell was going to do the cooking? And buy his clothes? Who was going to be sociable when people came over? Who was he going to talk to after work so he didn't find himself in an eternity of silence? Monica was his lifeline, in every conceivable sense.
So when he found out about the money, he saw his chance. The pair of them, Gunilla and Lars Vinge, died in Lars's apartment, and Tommy made it look like a personal dispute: Vinge shot Gunilla, then himself. He took the money she had accumulated over the years, and set about his mission at once. Tommy contacted researchers and specialist doctors in the USA, France, Japanâ¦everywhere people were conducting research into ALS. They all said the same thing: no medication, no cure. But financial help would at least speed up the eventual discovery of drugs that could delay the illness, and at best find an actual cure. Tommy took this on board and began the laborious task of withdrawing all the millions from the bank accounts and sending them anonymously to organizations all over the world. His working life was now constructed around his frantic efforts to plug any holes that might end up linking him to the murders of Gunilla Strandberg and Lars Vinge.
Tommy leaned forward and stared at the amounts on the bank statements. There wasn't much left now. Half a million kronor in cash buried out in the garden behind the shed. One and a half million in Africa, just over a million in the Middle East. And those banks had negative interest rates. They charged for hiding the money. The rate was based upon an index of dictatorships. The fewer dictatorships there were in the world, the higher the negative interest was, more or less. And the interest was mounting. Soon the money would all be goneâ¦.
Tommy could feel a slight pressure on his chest and took shallow breaths, rubbing his face with his hands, letting his palms cover his eyes like blinkers. Darkness. He breathed slowly and the darkness was dark, fucking dark. Was this where Monica was heading?
There was a knocking sound on the ceiling. Monica's crutch on the floor up above. She needed help to get to the bathroom.
The woman's backside was at eye level. The G-string was barely visible. She was holding the pole with her right hand and leaning forward. Their eyes met, upside down. Miles Ingmarsson looked away.
There were only three other men there, spread out around the room with as much distance between them as possible. He recognized a couple of them, but recognition wasn't encouraged. Total anonymity was the aim.
The girl on the shiny pole was named Sanna. She was new, thirtysomething, older than the other girls, different. He wasn't sure in what wayâthe way she moved, perhaps, or her manner? Her long legs, maybe? No, it was something else, something he couldn't put his finger on. She wasn't the type, she shouldn't be there.
The woman unsettled him, and strippers didn't usually have that effect on him. But this one was different.
Miles looked at Sanna, her cropped blond hair, red lips, milk-white skinâ¦.There was an underlying sense of joy in her, the world was evidently a decent placeâ¦.
His phone vibrated in his jacket, and Miles swallowed and answered.
“Yep.”
“
Hi, Ingmarsson
.”
It was Tommy again. He knew exactly when to call.
“Hi, Tommy.”
“
How's it going?
”
“Oh, OK.”
“
What does that mean?
”
“No idea.”
Tommy coughed into Miles's ear.
“
What are you doing?
” he asked.
“Having lunch,” Miles replied.
“
Where?
”
The signal kept coming and going, Miles guessed Tommy was in his car, on a hands-free device.
“City center.”
“
Is it good?
”
“What?”
“
Your lunch. Is it good?
”
“Yes, I suppose so.”
A loud car horn. Presumably from the traffic around him.
“
What are you having?
”
“What am I having?”
“
Yes, what are you having?
”
Miles laughed. “You ask some odd questions, Tommy.”
“
There's nothing odd about asking what you're eating, is there? What's so odd about that?
”
Sanna was squatting down, legs wide apart, and was sucking on her thumb for far too long, in and out, in and out.
“No, I suppose it isn't.”
“
So?
”
“Pasta,” Miles lied.
“
Pasta. That's good, Ingmarsson.
”
“Yes.”
“
Is it à la striptease?
”
“Sorry?”
“
No, no sorrys. Is pasta à la striptease on the menu?
”
It was as humiliating as being kicked between the legs. Ingmarsson wiped under his nose.
“You could say that,” he mumbled.
“
Do you think I care?
”
“No, I don't.”
“
That's right. But others might
.”
Sanna was on her back, thrusting her crotch toward the ceiling, her black thigh-high boots reflecting the lights.
“
So lie low, Ingmarsson
.”
“That's what I'm doing,” Miles said.
“
No, you're not
.”
He didn't quite follow.
“
You've asked for things
â¦.You've requested material from the archive.
”
“Doesn't anyone working on an investigation do that? I need to gather all the available material before I can get to workâ¦.”
Sanna raised her backside and her underwear came off.
“
Forget it.
”
“Forget what?”
“
Everything. Forget about the investigation
.”
Her underwear was spinning around her forefinger, slowly and beautifully. In his head he could hear the sound of rotor blades from some old Vietnam film,
whop, whop, whop
. Then she let go. They sailed off into the darkness. Miles watched them.
“What?”
“
Just sit there and pretend to work, don't make any effort
.”
“Why?”
“
Because I say so. Gunilla and Erik Strandberg were investigating Hector Guzman, as you know. Which led to the shootout at Trasten. But they buggered the whole thing up. If you make any progress, you'll be tarnishing their memory; that's pretty much it. I don't want that. They were good friends, and good police officers.
”
Sanna was squatting down in the middle of the stage, legs wide apart again, showing Ingmarsson absolutely everything.
“
Cops protect cops, don't they?
”
A pause. Tommy Jansson cleared his throat. It didn't quite work. His voice sounded gravelly when he spoke again: “
Besides, who the fuck cares, Ingmarsson? Three dead Russian gangsters⦔
A sharp cough from Tommy, this time it worked.
“
And Hector Guzman,
” he said. “
Some Spanish mafioso who's fled the country or is burning in hell. What more could we ask? In my opinion, our citizens are safe and the case was concluded a long time ago; it concluded itself. There's no point wasting resources and a load of taxpayers' money on this. If you get me?
”
No, Miles didn't get him. “What are you saying, Tommy?”
“
Go through the motions. Come up with something, I don't know what, but remember that you're a police officer, Ingmarsson. A police officer who goes to porn clubs day after day after day. How the fuck do you think that looks?
”
Miles just squeezed the bridge of his nose between his thumb and forefinger and shut his eyes.
“
Especially now all the lunatics in this country have gone and become feminists. You'd be hung out to dry. Unlessâ¦
”
Tommy left a dramatic pause.
“Unless what?” Miles asked. He still had his eyes closed.
“
We're cops, Ingmarsson. I protect you, you lie low. We help each other, old-fashioned cops' honor, OK?
”
Miles didn't answer.
“
Good, Ingmarsson, that's more like it,
” Tommy said, and ended the call.
Miles opened his eyes and sat there with his phone in his hand, feeling depressed. “
Cops' honor
”
âwhat the hell?
He put his cell back in his jacket pocket. This wasn't how he remembered Tommy Jansson. But people changed, presumably. Tommy had been friends with the Strandberg siblings, Gunilla and Erik, good friends, Miles knew that. So Tommy must have his reasonsâhe had implied as much when he gave him the job. Miles had realized at once that there was something funny about it, because why else would he have been given a murder investigation? There were a million better cops than him, eagerly sitting and waiting for an offer like that.
Wellâ¦
The choice was fairly easy. He realized he could just as easily sit on his backside at Violent Crime drinking bad coffee as sit on his backside at Eco and listen as his older colleagues falsified and exaggerated stories about some golden age of policing that had never existed.
And perhaps there was something in what Tommy said. Cops protect cops. And Ingmarsson wasn't about to stop going to strip clubs to look at Sanna, not a chanceâ¦.
Sanna?
Miles woke from his reflections to find that he was alone in the room. The old men had gone, the show was over. He looked toward the stage and was blinded by a sharp spotlight. Miles squinted and put his hand horizontally above his eyes.
Sanna
â¦
She was just standing there in the middle of the stage, her left hand on her hip, wearing those thigh-high black boots, otherwise naked in the sight of Ingmarsson and God.
“Finished for today,” she said. Her dialect was from the north of Sweden, beautiful, good, kindâ¦.
Ingmarsson stared at her, and now he saw her more clearly, the line of her jaw, her mouth, her eyesâ¦.Everything was beautiful individually, fantastic in combination, divine as a whole.
After a magical eternity she broke into a little smile, turned around, and left the small stage in a way that would make any man fall to his knees and beg for mercy.
It was past lunchtime. Antonia was standing in the elevator as it raced downward. Her cell rang.
“Yes?”
“
Antonia Miller?
” a male voice asked.
“Yes.”
“
Reuterswärd, Security Police.
”
She dug around in her pocket for a cough drop.
“Hello, Security Police,” she said.
She found one and popped it in her mouth.
“
You're investigating the Conny Blomberg murder?
”
“Yes.”
The cough drop clicked against her teeth.
“
In line with our protocols, I wanted to get in touch to say that we've been keeping an eye on him over the years
.”
The elevator doors opened and Antonia got out.
“Tell me.”
“
His case is no longer classified now that he's dead, so if you need any of our material, get in touch
.”
The sun was shining as she emerged onto the street.
“Why do you have material on him?”
“
We shouldn't have, really. But he was involved with people we were interested in, so he fell under our surveillance automatically. He was deemed to be of low-grade interest, but he's been in our system ever since. This was a long time ago.
”
“What do you know about him? Conny Blomberg?”
Antonia was walking along the pavement, the lunchtime rush going on around her.
“According to his file Conny was a promising footballer in Norrköping in the '80s. He landed himself with a knee injury and kids at the same time. He started drinking and smoking dope, then bailed out when he realized he couldn't look after his family, pretty much. He left the provincial idyll and came up to Stockholm, partied hard, and quickly ended up in the wrong company. Was put away a few times for minor offenses, then his crimes got more serious, as did the punishments
.”