She went to the telephone on the nightstand and looked for a notepad. She found it on the floor. It was blank, but she could see impressions on the top page-something for the crime-scene techs to sink their teeth into, she thought, feeling as if she were quoting someone. She lifted the receiver and pressed redial. The speaking clock rattled off numbers in her ear. She was disappointed. The only thing she found out from this was that Lundberg had had an appointment that he didn’t want to miss for any reason.
She dialed a number.
“Teleservice? This is Kerstin Holm, National Criminal Police. Do you see the number I’m calling from on the screen? Good. Can you run a quick check on outgoing and incoming calls for the past twenty-four hours and e-mail it to chief inspector Jan-Olov Hultin, NCP? Top priority. Thanks.”
She did a quick check of the cluttered desk. Comic books, porno magazines out in the open-what would Mom say? Company pens, military magazines, trash. In the top drawer were two items of interest: a small bag of pills, doubtless good old pinkies, anabolic steroids; and a small jar of keys, probably spares: house key, car key, bike key, bike lock key, suitcase key, and then a key that seemed vaguely familiar. Was it to a safe-deposit box? What could Benny Lundberg have in a safe-deposit box? A weapon? Surely there was a whole arsenal under the floorboards. No, a safe-deposit box didn’t really fit the profile. She lifted the receiver of the phone again and dialed.
“Is this customer service at Sparbanken? Hi, my name is Kerstin Holm, National Criminal Police. Do you have a central register of your safe-deposit box customers? Or do I have to… okay, I’ll hold… Hi, the police here, Kerstin Holm, National Criminal Police. Do you have a central register of your safe-deposit box customers? Or do I have to go to each individual branch?… Okay, excellent… It’s Lundberg, Benny. Spelled like it sounds… No, okay. Thanks for your help.”
She called a few more banks with the help of directory assistance. Finally she got a nibble. Handelsbanken on Götgatan, near Slussen. Thank goodness. She took the notepad and the safe-deposit box key with her; that would have to do.
She yanked the door open without warning. Not unexpectedly, Benny’s mom was standing right outside, polishing a spot on the doorjamb.
“Do you have a recent picture of Benny?” Holm asked briskly.
The mom looked for a while and found one of the whole family. Benny was standing in the middle with his arms around his parents, who looked undeniably small. His smile was wide and a bit fake. Okay, that would have to do.
When she left the parents with their crippling grief-and what grief isn’t crippling?-the father was still installed on the sofa, as if he were petrified.
She took the subway to Slussen, a brief trip, then battled her way up Peter Myndes Hill in the pouring rain. She turned onto Götgatan, walked a few feet further, passed the ATMs, and reached Handelsbanken. She ignored the queue ticket machine, resulting in audible protests from the lunchtime patrons, and held up her police ID.
“I’m here about a safe-deposit box,” she said to a teller.
“That will be over there.” The teller pointed to a man in a tie who was cleaning his nails in the middle of the lunchtime rush. He stood up automatically when he saw her police ID.
“Safe-deposit box. Benny Lundberg,” she said briskly.
“Again?” said the man.
She gave a start. “What do you mean, again?”
“His father was just here, right after we opened, visiting the box. He had a signed power of attorney in good order and both his own and his son’s IDs.”
“Shit,” she said. “What did he look like? Like this?” She held up the photo of the Lundberg family.
The bank employee took it but handed it back immediately. “Absolutely not. This is a work… a completely different type of person.”
“This is Benny Lundberg’s father,” she said. The man’s face fell. “What did he look like?”
“An older, distinguished man with a beard.”
“There you have it,” she said. “A beard and everything. Come along to police headquarters and help us with a composite sketch.”
“But I’m working.”
“Not anymore. First I’ll take a quick look at the safe-deposit box, which will probably be empty. Number?”
“Two fifty-four,” said the man, showing her the way.
Benny Lundberg’s safe-deposit box was indeed empty. Absolutely.
She brought the bank employee outside and got in a taxi. Time for another composite sketch. She was starting to get tired of sketchy types.
Viggo Norlander had a headache. Gunnar Nyberg had a headache. Norlander had gathered up his things, moved into Nyberg’s office, and quickly taken over Kerstin Holm’s spot. They were both there now, avoiding putting their clever heads together.
A thick list of data lay between them: the immigrants of 1983, gathered in one place, like an extremely compressed and thorough ghetto. The names were arranged in chronological order. Chavez, who had produced the printout, had made sure that the names of American immigrants had a star next to them.
There were thousands of names, but only about a hundred Americans. It still took time. A lot of information had to be sorted through, checking sex against age and this and that.
Norlander felt ill. He had left the hospital way too soon. The microscopic lines of text were dancing before him. That damn overzealous Chavez creep must have deliberately picked out a font that would sustain headaches and promote nausea. He ran out and threw up.
Nyberg heard him through the open door. It was a splendid cascade, the sound waves echoing through police headquarters.
“That did the trick,” Norlander said when he came back.
“Go home and sleep,” said Nyberg, fingering the bandage on his nose.
“I will if you do.”
“Okay, let’s get to it. No more breaks.”
Norlander gave him a murderous look and kept working.
In the end, a list of twenty-eight people crystallized: American immigrant men who claimed to be born around 1950. Sixteen of them had been in the Stockholm area in 1983. Then they checked those names against the national registry to see which of them were currently still in Sweden and in the Stockholm region. There were fourteen.
“Are diplomats included on this list?” said Nyberg.
“Don’t know. I don’t think so. They aren’t immigrants, after all.”
“Could he have ended up with the American embassy?”
“The Kentucky Killer? Surely that’s taking it a bit too far?”
“Yes. It was just a thought.”
“Forget it.”
“Guest researchers, then? This list isn’t complete.”
“I have to get out.” Norlander, like a chameleon, had begun to take on the color of his bandage. “I’ll take the top half, up to-what does it say?-Harold Mallory in Vasastan. A to Ma. You take the bottom half.”
Norlander rushed off before Nyberg had time to warn him against taking the car. He didn’t want to find him, quote, “exceptionally under the influence of drugs” in Dalshammar.
Gunnar Nyberg studied Norlander’s chicken scratches, a transcribed list of seven American immigrants from 1983. Morcher, Orton-Brown, Rochinsky, Stevens, Trast, Wilkinson, and Williams. Trast was Swedish for thrush, like the bird. Could Trast be a name? Daddy blackbird. Did it even mean the same thing in English?
Nyberg didn’t really feel relieved, although he should have. To him the grunt work felt hopeless, routine. He wanted to go out and punch the killer in the face. He had worked past the shock of encountering Benny Lundberg, but he still could not digest the fact that Wayne Jennings had been allowed to knock him down.