“That little shit,” the major said amiably. “Why in the name of heaven should the secret police be concerned about him? You weren’t interested in him when he was still alive.”
“As you’ll understand, Major, I am prevented from going into any details,” said Johansson, looking sternly at the person he was speaking with. “But my colleague Wiklander here and I are following up a tip that we got from our colleagues in the military intelligence service,” Johansson concluded, nodding in the direction of Wiklander and the fish spear on his jacket. In a way that is what we’re doing, thought Johansson, even if this was the last thing the mysterious informant had had in mind when he brought new life to the Eriksson case.
“Coast commandos,” said the major, nodding with approval toward the lapel of Wiklander’s jacket.
“I am of course well acquainted with your military experience, Major,” said Johansson, who had decided in advance to pour it on thick. “By the way, I had a close relative myself who fought on the Finnish side—”
“So what was his name?” the major interrupted, looking guardedly at Johansson.
“His name was Johansson, Petrus Johansson. He was a commando with the rank of corporal when he fell at Tolvajärvi.”
“Was that your father?” asked the major.
“My uncle,” Johansson lied. It was bad enough that it had been his father’s crazy cousin about whom the older generations in the Johansson family still talked an unbelievable lot of shit whenever they got the chance.
“I know who he was,” said the major, nodding. “I never met him but
I know who he was. Corporal Petrus Johansson died a hero’s death and you have my sincere sympathy.”
“Thank you,” said Johansson, who was shaken to his core because an eighty-year-old major had just got the idea that Johansson had been born no later than 1940. I’ll have to start dieting, he thought.
“He did not fall in vain,” said the major, “as the developments of recent years have no doubt illustrated clearly.”
“I would understand completely, Major, if you had seen anything, yet you might nonetheless have chosen to let the whole thing be, considering the victim’s past, and considering that the police officers who spoke with you came from the uniformed police with its unfortunately limited insights into security issues. I can reveal this much,” said Johansson, who had decided to fire up the boilers as he was picking up speed anyway, “that the individuals we are searching for are cut from the same cloth as Eriksson himself.”
“What is it you want to know?” asked the major, who looked as if he had just made a decision.
“I am wondering if you saw the man when he left Eriksson’s apartment,” said Johansson.
“What makes you think it was a man?” asked the major, and in that moment Johansson knew he had succeeded, because every word he had said had been chosen with care.
“What do you mean, Major Carlgren?” said Johansson, acting surprised.
“It wasn’t a man,” said the major, shaking his head. “It was a young woman—twenty-five years old perhaps, thirty at most, well-dressed. She was holding a briefcase or something like that pressed against her chest. She seemed rather upset, slammed the door behind her, ran down the stairs, which wasn’t so strange in the circumstances.”
“Do you recall anything more about her appearance?” asked Johansson.
“She was nice looking,” said the major. “Well dressed, neat, I remember I noticed she had a lot of hair—red or maybe more brownish red—not at all that miserable character Eriksson’s type. He was much older. When I heard what had happened I got the idea that he had tried to rape her and that she was only defending herself. If that was the case
I hadn’t the slightest intention of helping the police lock her up,” the major concluded, nodding firmly at Johansson. “Not the slightest,” he repeated.
Then they showed pictures to the major. Pictures of twelve different women, of which one was Helena Stein at the age of thirty and another three depicted women of the same age with approximately the same appearance and hair color.
“I recognize that one,” the major snorted, setting a skinny, clawlike index finger on Eriksson’s cleaning woman, Jolanta. “That’s the Polish whore who cleaned under the table for Eriksson.”
“Is there anyone else who seems familiar?” Johansson asked. The old man isn’t completely gone, he thought hopefully.
The major took his sweet time, spreading out all eleven pictures that remained on his desk. He picked up each and every one of them and inspected it carefully. Then he shook his head.
“No,” he said. “I’m sorry. I remember that she had red or in any case reddish-brown hair, so if she’s here it must be one of them, but unfortunately I can’t say more than that.”
You can’t have everything, thought Johansson philosophically, and for him personally it was all the same, because he had already figured out how the whole thing fit together.
“Then I must truly thank you for your help,” said Johansson.
“Who is it then?” asked the major, nodding toward the pictures on the desk. “Which of them is it?”
“We don’t really know yet.”
“I hope she gets off,” said the major suddenly. “Eriksson was not a good person.”
When Johansson returned to work he immediately called in Holt and told her about his conversation with the major.
“I think it’s high time you met Helena Stein,” said Johansson.
“You’ve abandoned the idea of turning it over to Stockholm?” asked Holt.
“Yes,” said Johansson, sounding more convinced than he actually felt. “There’ll just be a lot of unnecessary talk. We’ll question her for informational
purposes about her contacts with Eriksson without explaining why we’re interested in him. If she makes a fool of herself and denies having been in his apartment then we’ll call in the prosecutor so he can decide about taking her away.” It’ll be amusing to see his expression, Johansson thought.
“And otherwise we’ll have to see,” said Holt.
“Unless you have a better suggestion,” said Johansson.
“No,” said Holt.
“Okay then,” said Johansson as he got up, looking at the clock, and smiled to soften the whole thing. “Then you’ll have to excuse me. I have another meeting.”
“Helena Stein,” said Johansson’s boss, the general director, nodding contemplatively. “She’s a very interesting woman.”
“I understand you’ve met her,” said Johansson.
“Oh yes,” the GD confirmed. “She came to the ministry during my time there. True, she has never worked under me, but I’ve met her several times. For a while I saw her on a daily basis when she was working in the prime minister’s office.”
“I’ve never had the pleasure,” said Johansson. “What’s she like?”
“Intelligent, highly intelligent, and an extraordinarily knowledgeable, sharp attorney. And she looks good too, in that slightly icy way. And she neatly balances her radical opinions with a blouse, pleated skirt, and high heels in well-chosen color combinations,” the GD summarized, clearing his throat slightly for some reason as he said the last thing.
“But she’s not someone you’d marry—if you were concerned about domestic tranquility,” said Johansson, who in the company of his boss had no problem whatsoever playing the role of simple man of the people.
“You said it,” said the GD. “Personally I would describe her as very intelligent and at the same time very intellectual. And always ready to stand up for her opinions. Razor-sharp and merciless when she does so. A woman whom the majority of men, especially in our generation, seem to have an extremely difficult time managing.”
“Not an easy match for a simple lad from the country,” Johansson said with enjoyment.
“Definitely not,” said the GD, suddenly sounding rather reserved. “And now I’ve understood that she has problems.”
“Yes,” said Johansson. “Now she has problems. The whole thing is rather complicated and hard to understand, and for once we’re not the ones who’ve made it complicated.”
“It’s just complicated?” asked the GD.
“Yes,” Johansson confirmed. “It’s complicated.”
“Then I suggest you take it very slowly,” said the GD. “I have nothing against appearing ignorant in a one-on-one like this, as long as I can be spared more public shortcomings.”
“It concerns three connected problems. The first regards her involvement in the occupation of the West German embassy almost twenty-five years ago. The second concerns a number of strange turns in connection with our handling of that case, and those start when she was appointed undersecretary two years ago. The third concerns the murder of one of her acquaintances from the time before the West German embassy. And I suggest we wait with that part.”
“Why?” said the GD.
“We need to know a bit more,” said Johansson. “On the other hand we probably will fairly soon, so it won’t be a long wait.”
“The West German embassy,” said the GD drawlingly. “She can’t have been very old then?”
“Sixteen,” said Johansson. “She was young, radical, and involved, but exploited and kept in the dark by her boyfriend, who was almost twice her age.”
“In concrete terms,” said the GD, “what did she do and why did she do it?”
“She helped the Germans with somewhat simple practical matters. Nothing remarkable. Loaned out her father’s car, which her boyfriend, the now deceased Sten Welander, used for transport and reconnaissance missions. She didn’t have a driver’s license herself, and her father had moved abroad at that time and left the car behind so it was easily accessible.… Yes … Then she bought food for the terrorists at some point. In addition the Germans stayed for a few days at a summer place that her mother’s family owned.”
“The Tischler family chateau out on Värmdö,” said the GD, who apparently was not completely ignorant.
“Yes,” said Johansson. “But the one who actually took care of that was probably her older cousin Theo.”
“And that was all,” asked the GD.
“Yes,” said Johansson. “That was the whole thing.”
“So why did she do it?” the GD asked curiously. “Did she know what kind of plans the Germans had?”
“No,” said Johansson. “She had no idea about that. She thought it was about helping some radical German students who were wanted at home in Germany to hide from the police. She hadn’t heard a word about any terrorists or any violent actions. It was her boyfriend Welander who got her to believe that.”
“Helped by a combination of youthful ignorance and radical involvement,” the GD added dryly.
“More or less,” said Johansson.
“And we are quite sure about this?” asked the GD. “Both what she did in purely practical terms and why she did it?”
“Yes,” said Johansson. “There’s not the slightest doubt on any of those points.”
“If that’s so,” said the GD while he nodded in the direction of his own ceiling light, “then in Stein’s case this concerns the protection of a criminal. Making a rough estimate, without having checked on this, it must be at least fifteen years since the statute of limitations ran out. Probably twenty years.”
“Something like that,” said Johansson. “Law is not my strong suit.”
“But it is mine,” said the GD, smiling. “Why did we pull the case out of our files two years ago?”
“For several reasons, according to my predecessor, Berg,” said Johansson. “The two who were actively involved, Welander and Eriksson, were both long dead. The statute of limitations had run its course in terms of Stein’s involvement and Tischler’s probably too. Then the truth commission was going to come in, and considering that the West German embassy was a very conspicuous event that is still interesting in terms of politics and the media—I can imagine for example that the German media would have a few ideas about the Swedish part of the drama—among other things there are relatives of the German victims who are still alive—I guess there was simply a desire for peace and quiet.”
“You don’t think there were any reasons other than the ones Berg mentioned?” asked the GD.
“Well,” said Johansson, “I can think of one.”
“Which is what?” asked the GD curiously.
“Eriksson worked for several years as a so-called external collaborator at what was then the security department at the National Police Board. Among other things he was collaborating at the time of the embassy occupation.”
“Oh dear,” said the GD. “That isn’t good.”
“Concern for one’s own ass is seldom particularly rational,” said Johansson, who knew what he was talking about from his own experience.
“Stein then,” asked the GD. “The background check on her when she was going to be made undersecretary dates from around the time when the case was cleaned out of the files. What is the connection there?”
“According to my predecessor, the fact that Stein was approved was primarily the result of a strictly legal assessment.”
“Of course,” said the GD, pursing his narrow lips slightly. “That sounds reasonable, but I have a very hard time believing that Berg would be unaware of the political risk in the event of a leak.”
“I think he judged the risk of a leak from his own department to be basically nonexistent, and besides he solved the problem by informing our common acquaintance the undersecretary—the prime minister’s own security adviser—about Stein’s involvement in the West German embassy.”
“So how did Berg describe it?” asked the GD.
“In factually correct and very conciliatory terms,” said Johansson.
“And considering that she was appointed, the government seems to have taken the same position,” the GD observed.
“Because the information about Stein’s involvement in the West German embassy was given orally by Berg to the undersecretary, I get the impression it also may have stayed with him,” Johansson clarified.
“Is this something you believe or something you know?” asked the GD.
“It’s something that occurred to me,” said Johansson.
“Interesting,” said the GD. “I was struck by the same thought myself.”
“As I’ve gathered from your description and that of others, Stein’s appointment as undersecretary can scarcely have been uncontroversial,” said Johansson.
“No,” said the GD. “Definitely not, and the general perception among those who consider themselves well informed about such issues was that the government wanted to give the military and defense establishment a tweak on the nose. Considering Helena Stein’s personal qualities it was not a bad tweak. She is a creditable opponent, to say the least, and her basic view of defense policy is simple enough to summarize.”