‘I’m afraid I’ll have to take that with me,’ Lindell said, and fished a pair of gloves out of her coat pocket. She donned the right-hand glove and lifted the power tool down from the workbench.
‘Now I get it, you think I severed that foot.’
He stared at her with suspicion and disapproval, as if she had revealed she was the bearer of an infectious disease.
‘We have to check it out,’ she said, ‘I’m sorry. I don’t believe anything. It is simply a routine check. Where is your cordwood saw?’
She got him to remove the blade and treated it as carefully as the chainsaw, wrapping it in a rubbish bag she had in the car.
Sunesson observed the whole process in silence. There was no trace of innocence left in his face when she left the house.
The next loner on the point, Lasse Malm, was perhaps two or three years younger than his neighbour. He was already out in the garden when Lindell found her way to his place. She parked behind Malm’s ancient pickup. There was a boat engine in the back of it.
No one, not even the most enthusiastic Stockholmer, would offer one and a half million for his house. Lindell had the feeling one bad autumn storm could blow it on its side.
The panelling was faded, the window frames spotted black with mould, the roof – where the tiles were in uproar – dipped alarmingly around a badly beaten-up chimney, and the front steps had settled at least ten centimetres, more on the right side.
If the house was in terrible condition, its owner was just the opposite. Lindell estimated that he was close to six feet four inches in height, and his broad shoulders bore witness to strength. His handshake reinforced this impression of power. The almost sinister small eyes – the only thing diminutive about him – peered at her with curiosity and scrutiny. She pulled up the zipper on her jacket.
He showed no inclination to ask her inside. Instead, he stood in front of the steps with his arms folded. Lindell thought of a bouncer at a nightclub.
She plunged into her usual routine, as she had done half an hour earlier for Sunesson. He listened in silence and then gave basically the same – if not word for word – answers as his neighbour. No observations, no unfamiliar cars, nor had he seen a woman who could fit a foot with a shoe size of five.
He told her that the only red car on the point belonged to Tobias Frisk.
‘Is he under suspicion?’
‘No, not at all,’ Lindell said.
Malm replied with something that Lindell didn’t catch.
‘Do you own a chainsaw?’
In contrast to his neighbour, Malm immediately picked up on the implications of that question.
‘So that’s how it happened?’
‘We don’t know,’ Lindell said truthfully.
She was struck by the thought that they should have collected all the saws and blades in the entire neighbourhood. She would suggest as much to Marksson.
They walked together to the back of the house to a shed, which displayed the same measure of dilapidation and decay as the main house.
This time it was a Jonsered, considerably more powerful than Sunesson’s. She wrapped it in a plastic bag, returned to the car, opened the trunk, and placed it next to the Stihl.
‘You have quite a collection,’ Lasse Malm observed with surprising joviality. ‘Do I get a receipt for it?’
‘Certainly,’ Lindell said, taking out her notepad and hastily writing out a couple of lines. Then she tore off the page and handed it to him.
‘Will that do?’
He examined the paper. ‘You write better than my doctor, but only by a little.’
He had no cordwood saw.
‘I’m not supposed to use the fireplace,’ he explained. ‘The chimney sweep said so.’
Lindell understood this very well.
‘I do it anyway. There are so many regulations.’
‘One regulation is that your taxes on the car have to be paid. If you have one, paste a registration sticker on the Toyota. The one currently on it is about three years old.’
He smiled at her.
‘It must be here somewhere.’
He waved to her as she backed her car up onto the road.
Men living alone, she thought as she continued along the road the natives apparently referred to as the ‘avenue.’ They tried to maintain a life but their entire beings cried out for a bit of warmth and care. Malm, this gigantic teddy bear, who really didn’t look half bad and seemed to have some basic sense, had a steady job as far as she could tell and should have no trouble finding a partner. If he ever dared invite a woman into the house, or if someone dared to go inside.
Same thing with Sunesson, even if he on the other hand appeared overly pedantic, he should also not be an impossible card. But perhaps he was afraid that a woman would mess up his Handi Wipes.
There remained Tobias Frisk, bakery assistant, and owner of a red car. Lindell couldn’t help but feel some anticipation. She tried to imagine what he looked like but realised the futility of the exercise. He had willingly called her and confirmed that he would be home, but had sounded noticeably shaken and asked if it was really necessary since he had no information to share.
‘I just do my thing,’ he said.
As do I, she had been tempted to reply, but reassured him by saying it was only routine and that they had been speaking to hundreds of households around the bay.
‘At least I have plenty of treats on hand,’ he said, and now she was looking forward to a cup of coffee and slice of sticky Danish pastry.
The house was situated on a small rise and she thought he probably had a sea view, at least from the upper story. The house was surprisingly large for one person, at least one hundred and fifty square metres, probably built for a large family. It reminded her of a house she had seen on Gräsö Island and fallen in love with; red, with many ornately carved details and a glass veranda in which the woodwork of the windows gleamed white. Edvard and she had even stopped for a little while. Both had surely been thinking ‘That’s the kind of house we could live in.’ It was in this period when they both – at the same time for once – envisioned a future together, maybe even on the island.
Lindell parked her car in front of the veranda. There was no sign of life. No dog that barked, no smoke billowing out of the chimney or a quick movement behind a curtain.
He left, she thought, and felt a streak of the fear that came over her sometimes ever since the time she was locked in the cellar and almost lost her life due to her own stupidity. She had been out investigating on her own that time, just like now.
For a split second she considered calling in her location to headquarters, but decided to hold off.
Out of the blue, she recalled a play on words from her childhood: ‘two rights and one left,’ and couldn’t help smiling to herself.
She walked up the steps and onto the veranda. It was noticeably warmer there than outside. A row of pots had been placed along the wall. Geraniums, she guessed; one actually had a solitary flowering stalk. There was no doorbell so she knocked, but no figure appeared behind the translucent glass of the front door. She banged on it with some force. No response.
She counted to ten and then pushed the door handle down. It did not surprise her that the door wasn’t locked. This was the country. Her repeated ‘hello’ echoed with a note of desolation.
As she stepped into the hall she picked up a strange smell. The rug in the hall was dishevelled and lay like an accordion across the wooden floor. She had the impulse to straighten it, but stopped herself at the last minute. The kitchen was to the right. It was dominated by a handsome whitewashed fireplace. The kitchen was empty. But it would not have shocked her to see Tobias Frisk sitting at the kitchen table. She had seen stranger things.
A sparsely furnished room lay straight ahead. There really was only one piece of furniture, an old-fashioned sofa that at one time had probably served as a bed for two or three people. She walked on and all at once realised what the smell was. She halted in the middle of the floor and drew a deep breath. The smell of gunpowder was unmistakable.