Another Time, Another Life (19 page)

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Authors: Leif G. W. Persson

Tags: #Suspense

BOOK: Another Time, Another Life
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Alm excused himself and asked to call back within five minutes, after which he went into Bäckström’s office and gave him the available alternatives. Bäckström was naturally sour as vinegar, but as he did not have anything else to propose, he gave in after some grousing. A pleased Alm returned to the phone, called Welander, and said that he and a colleague by the name of Bäckström would be at Welander’s office within half an hour.

• • •

Welander met them down in the reception area and led them to a small conference room he had reserved for their meeting. He was a lean, sinewy fellow in his forties with a well-groomed, full beard and dark, intelligent eyes, and his first action when they sat down was to pull out a small tape recorder from his pocket and place it in front of him on the table. After that he leaned back, clasped his hands over his flat stomach, and nodded to them that he was ready to start.

It was Bäckström who had planned their tactics. He would run the questioning while Alm kept in the background and stepped in as needed. Alm had no objections whatsoever. He remembered Welander’s TV program about the police department and was really looking forward to seeing how Bäckström’s “interrogation victim” would massacre his fat little colleague.

Bäckström took his sweet time before he started. Arranged his own tape recorder, notebook, and pen, tested the recorder, asked Welander to say something, rewound it, and played it to check that everything was working.

“I’m going to talk roughly like this,” said Welander, leaning back comfortably and speaking in a normal, quiet conversational tone.

“Okay then,” said Bäckström, nodding curtly. “Interview for informational purposes with Sten Welander with regard to the murder of Kjell Eriksson. Welander will be questioned about—”

“Excuse me,” Welander interrupted, smiling courteously at Bäckström. “I forgot to ask whether you gentlemen would like anything to drink? Water, coffee? I don’t know if we have tea, actually …”

“What the—” said Bäckström, but before he even had time to answer, Welander had done it for them.

“If not, then I’m ready to begin,” said Welander, nodding suavely at Bäckström.

Welander versus Bäckström, 1–0. thought Alm delightedly as he noted that Bäckström’s face had already turned a shade redder.

How did Welander know the murder victim Kjell Eriksson? How long had he known him?

Welander had become acquainted with Eriksson more than twenty years ago, when he was teaching sociology at the university. Eriksson had been one of his students. A diligent one, so Welander had arranged a few side jobs for him at the department, in the mail room, as a test proctor. A little of everything.

“He was actually a few years older than me,” said Welander. “Worked part-time and studied on the side. Came from simple circumstances, so I tried to help him as best I could. He was really exerting himself; he really wanted to change his life.”

The friendship had persisted and even developed. Welander had worked less and less at the university and more and more as a researcher and reporter at the TV news department. By and by Eriksson finished his degree and got a job at the Central Bureau of Statistics.

How often did they see each other?

Not that often, according to Welander, but certainly considerably more often if viewed through Eriksson’s eyes.

“Kjell was a very solitary person,” Welander explained. “He didn’t really have too many friends. We saw each other from time to time. Went out and had a beer together, talked about old times at the university, had dinner now and then … and we’ve continued that over the years. How often we saw each other? Yes …” Welander looked as if he was thinking deeply. “Spread out over all the years then maybe it was once a month.”

“Once a month,” said Bäckström with palpable doubt in his voice.

“On one occasion I recall that he helped me by producing statistics for a series of programs on unemployment that we did. That must have been ten years ago, and then I think we saw each other considerably more often. Perhaps once or twice a week for a few months.”

“But otherwise you saw each other once a month,” Bäckström repeated. “Once a month? Always?”

“No, not really,” Welander objected, smiling and shaking his head. “There could be six months when I didn’t even talk to him. Once a month is an average. Say that I met him approximately two hundred times in twenty years. That’s two hundred and forty months. Two hundred divided by two hundred forty is approximately once a month. Less than once a month.”

“Thanks, I can count,” said Bäckström sourly.

“That’s nice to hear,” said Welander amiably.

Welander versus Bäckström, 2–0, thought Alm, noting the change of color in his colleague’s face.

Did Eriksson have any other close friends? Anyone he saw more often than he saw Welander?

Welander looked as though he was thinking deeply.

“I’m afraid I don’t really understand the question,” Welander said.

“Why’s that?” said Bäckström. “That shouldn’t be so hard, is it?”

“You say ‘close,’ then you say ‘more often,’ ” said Welander, almost sounding as if he were savoring the words.

“Yes? What’s the problem?”

“Closeness is a question of feelings while on the other hand ‘how often’ is a question of frequency, and in these kinds of contexts that’s far from the same thing, wouldn’t you say?”

Bäckström did not reply. He was content to glare at Welander who, however, seemed quite unaware of this.

“Take your colleague Alm, for example,” said Welander pedagogically, smiling at Alm, who took the opportunity to smile back. “I am certain that you see each other several times a day … on average … but are you best friends too?”

No, God help me, thought Alm.

Fucking asshole, thought Bäckström. Fucking assholes both of them, he thought.

Welander versus Bäckström, 3–0. This is a real walk-over, I should have brought along the white gloves and ammonia bottle, thought Alm delightedly, old amateur boxer that he was.

If it was frequency of contacts that Bäckström meant, then Welander could imagine that his and Eriksson’s mutual friend Theo Tischler met Eriksson more often than he did, because Theo Tischler helped Eriksson with various private financial questions. Obviously he was taking into account the fact that all three of them sometimes met, and it was he, by the way, who had introduced Eriksson to Theo Tischler. He and Theo
had known each other since school days. They had been in the same class both in elementary school and in high school. Norra Real at Jarlaplan, if Bäckström was wondering.

On the other hand, as far as the emotional aspect was concerned he was less sure. His impression was that Eriksson did not have any really close friends whatsoever.

“I know that he was tremendously attached to his old mother,” said Welander, sounding almost mournful as he said it.

This guy is phenomenal; look at the footwork, thought Alm.

“No women?” said Bäckström slyly.

“Excuse me,” said Welander, as if he had not really understood the question.

“Eriksson,” Bäckström clarified, and suddenly his voice almost sounded friendly. “Do you know if Eriksson had any women? Did he meet any women?” Bäckström repeated.

“Socially?” Welander looked at Bäckström as if he still did not understand the question.

“Exactly,” Bäckström agreed smoothly. “Yes … sexual contacts … with women … if you understand what I mean.”

“No,” said Welander, shaking his head. “As far as I know, Kjell never met any women. Not in that way.”

“He didn’t,” said Bäckström. “Why didn’t he … do you think?”

“I guess he wasn’t interested,” said Welander.

“He wasn’t,” said Bäckström. “He wasn’t, not interested in women you say.”

“No,” repeated Welander. “To be honest I think he was completely uninterested in women … in that way.”

“Men then,” said Bäckström. “Was he interested in men?”

“Not as far as I know,” said Welander neutrally. “In any event he never expressed any such interest in either me or Theo.”

“But you must have wondered about it, didn’t you? Both you and Tischler must have talked about it,” Bäckström persisted.

“De mortuis nihil nisi bene,”
said Welander, smiling to himself.

“Huh?” said Bäckström.

“De mortuis nihil nisi bene,”
Welander repeated. “Say nothing but good about the dead,” he translated.

You don’t say, thought Bäckström contentedly, before he asked the routine last question.

Welander was obviously not a suspect in Eriksson’s sudden demise, but for the sake of formality and saving time and so forth, Bäckström was nonetheless compelled to ask what Welander had been doing on Thursday evening the thirtieth of November.

It seemed there was no problem whatsoever. Welander had had dinner at the Lidingöbro inn together with eight of his coworkers from the TV station, among them his immediate supervisor and the station manager. Dinner had begun with a welcome drink at seven o’clock and gone on until just after eleven, when they had moved on to the home of one of the participants for “a little follow-up gathering.” This had gone on until two, and then Welander had taken a taxi home to his wife and their two children in their townhouse out in Täby. If Bäckström spoke with the secretary at the TV office she would see to it that he received a list of all the dinner guests as well as their telephone numbers. Welander had already forewarned her to expect such a request.

The guy is a world-class champion, thought Alm.

Wonder what that idiot is grinning about, thought Bäckström as he and Alm were driving back to the police station.

Absolute massacre, thought Alm. This I have to tell Jack Daniels.

Jarnebring and Holt had devoted the day to routine business, which unfortunately took considerably longer than they had counted on.

“We’ll have to deal with the rest of the apartment on Monday,” Jarnebring decided as the clock started dragging toward five. It was Friday and he had to have time to shower and change before he met his best friend, police superintendent Lars Martin Johansson.

13
Friday evening, December 8, 1989

If Welander had stuck to the truth when Bäckström questioned him about his acquaintance with Kjell Eriksson, there would have been at least certain similarities between the relationship he had with Eriksson and the one Jarnebring had with his best friend, Lars Martin Johansson.

Johansson and Jarnebring had also known each other for more than twenty years; in the last ten years they had socialized on average once or twice a month, and when they did so they usually met at a restaurant. During the early years it had not been that way. They had met at work at the central detective squad at the Stockholm Police Department, each one being half of a team of two, and for several years they had spent more time with each other than with their own families. But then their paths had separated. Johansson had made a career and disappeared straight up to the top of the police pyramid while Jarnebring stayed put in the detective squad and was still working with the same sort of crimes and the same sort of crooks as he had been twenty years ago.

In contrast to Welander and Eriksson, they had a relationship that was grounded in a very strong, close friendship, and if anyone had asked either of them who his best friend was, they would have had no problem at all with the answer. And as is so often the case with close friends, they were like each other in everything that really counted and unlike each other in other respects that were mostly superficial, personal characteristics that didn’t really matter much when it came time to settle accounts.

Their most important common quality was that they were both—in an environment almost exclusively made up of police officers—unanimously described as “real policemen.” They were heroes in a large number of so-called police station stories of at best varying degrees of veracity, and in contrast to their colleagues in the world of fiction—who associate with female intellectuals, listen to opera and modern jazz, and prefer nouvelle French cuisine—Johansson and Jarnebring liked regular ladies, preferably female colleagues, dance band music, and Swedish home cooking.

But of course there were also differences. If anyone had asked Jarnebring, for example, if he could imagine stopping the bullet meant for his best friend with his bare chest, he would have flashed his wolf grin and said that if it was his friend they were after the question never would have come up—he would have shot first. And if Johansson got the same question he would probably have smiled evasively, said that the question was far too sentimental for his taste, but that he might possibly imagine loaning Jarnebring the money for a new car.

Johansson lived on Wollmar Yxkullsgatan on Söder. It was close to his regular place, an excellent Italian restaurant that served simple, well-prepared food. When he and Jarnebring met, he was almost always the one who paid the bill, without even thinking about it. In contrast to his best friend he had very good finances, and, true, he did look out for himself where money was concerned, but when it came to those near and dear to him he was generous in a highly spontaneous way. Besides being enthusiastic about both food and drink, especially in the company of Jarnebring.

“Have whatever you want, Bo,” said Johansson, handing over the menu. “This evening’s on me.”

“Thanks, Boss,” said Jarnebring. “In that case you can order a beer and a whiskey for me while I’m thinking.”

• • •

When Johansson and Jarnebring met at the restaurant, their time together would follow an almost ritual pattern. First a summation of the essentials of police life since they last met: colleagues, crooks, and crime. After appetizers they would naturally move on to the topic of fools not present and surprisingly often also active within the police, the prosecutor’s office, or the judicial system in general. Only later—over dessert, coffee, and cognac—would they concentrate on those more personal, intimate questions such as old buddies, their own children, and above all, women. Both those they had already met or were just meeting now and those they still only intended or hoped to meet.

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