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X Ways to Die

Page 31

by Stefan Ahnhem


  Suddenly, she registered a movement out of the corner of her eye and whipped around. But the back of the wardrobe had already slid shut and the metal plate was pushed back into its bracket with a click.

  ‘Hello! Who’s there?’ she bellowed as she went over to the wardrobe, where she grabbed the metal plate in an attempt to open the door again. ‘Hello, I’m still in here! Let me—’

  The bang sounded like a gun firing at close range, and before she could even flinch, she saw a nail erupt through the back of her left hand. The pain didn’t register until the blood had already run all the way down her arm to her elbow.

  She only just had time to yank her hand free before another nail burst through the wood with a bang. A second later, there was a third bang and Lilja was forced to retreat and watch nail after nail penetrate the wood all around the back of the wardrobe.

  59

  ‘CAN YOU EXPLAIN something to me?’

  He could hear music. He couldn’t understand why. Loud, too. The kind of volume that usually meant Theodor. He reluctantly opened his eyes and realized he was in his own living room. Right, he’d put the music on himself. The xx, which was now running on repeat. He must have fallen asleep.

  ‘Fabian? Can you hear me?’

  It was Stubbs’s voice. He knew that much, but he couldn’t figure out where it was coming from.

  ‘Hello?’ he said eventually, and realized he was still lying on the sofa. ‘Hillevi, is that you?’

  ‘No, it’s Barbra Streisand. Would you mind explaining to me the point of keeping an extra phone if you never pick up?’

  He sat up on the sofa and looked at the Nokia in his hand. ‘I’m sorry, I must have dozed off. What time is it?’

  ‘What are you talking about, dozed off? It’s ten to nine in the morning. I’ve been up all night, staring at Elvin’s map until my eyes bled.’

  Fabian stood up and walked over to the kitchen island, where he’d left his iPhone. It was true. It was ten to nine. He must have slept all night.

  ‘Hello? Are you still there?’

  ‘You’ve been studying the map. And? Did you find something?’

  There was a loud sigh on the other end. ‘Why else would I be calling? To tell you that Mona-Jill is grumpy as an old rag just because I don’t happen to like—’

  ‘Hillevi,’ he broke in. ‘What did you find?’

  ‘I’m sorry, I’m just exhausted from pulling an all-nighter.’ Just as Stubbs heaved another sigh, Fabian spotted a handwritten note on the coffee machine. ‘Anyway, that’s my thing you’re doing now. I’m the impatient one who gets frustrated. Not you.’

  Hi Fabian,

  I know that you’re busy and in the middle of a big case. But I would never ask you if it wasn’t important, and this time it’s more important than ever. For me and for you. For us. For that reason, I want you to come and see my performance at Dunkers at seven tonight.

  Sonja

  ‘It turns out I was right about the map. I think I know where Molander’s little hideout is. Though it’s anyone’s guess if that’s where he’s stashed the forensic evidence, obviously,’ Stubbs went on while he read the note. ‘Does Rausvägen 28 ring any bells?’

  Their marriage depended on this.

  ‘Hello? Houston calling!’

  ‘I’m listening,’ he said, dashing upstairs. ‘I know where Rausvägen is. But that’s all I know. What is it? A house?’

  ‘From the satellite pictures it looks like several small houses or barracks. I honestly can’t make out what kind of place it is.’

  ‘Is Molander listed as the owner?’ Fabian said, hurtling up the second flight of stairs to the studio.

  ‘No, it’s a company called Warhammer.’

  ‘And who owns the company?’

  ‘My God, what’s with the third degree?’ Stubbs griped, but he could hear her typing in a search on her computer. ‘You’re right. Here he is, in the form of Gertrud Lisbeth Stenson. That must be her maiden name. You’re not as dumb as you look, I guess. When can you be there? I would suggest as soon as possible.’

  ‘I can’t. I can’t go out there.’ He pressed his ear against the closed studio door. He just wanted to hold Sonja and assure her he would do everything in his power to be there to support her. ‘Molander will know what’s going on immediately and we have no idea what the consequences might be.’ When he didn’t hear anything, he opened the door and peeked into the studio. ‘You should head out there by yourself, and I’ll do what I can to keep him busy.’ Only to discover that both Sonja and the wooden box were gone.

  60

  BANG! THE SOUND of one tin of ravioli hitting another rang in Lilja’s ears, even though she’d used the stuffing from the pillow to make earplugs.

  Bang! At first, she’d missed her target several times, hitting either the hand holding the screwdriver she’d found in a drawer or nothing at all. Bang! But she wasn’t missing now. She was like a machine running on autopilot.

  She closed her eyes – it made no difference anyway – and raised the tin behind her like a javelin before thrusting it with all her might against the other tin, which she had emptied and placed over the handle of the screwdriver. Bang!

  Several hours had passed since the world went dark. Time was racing by as if it couldn’t get to the point where Milwokh would start his diabolical game soon enough. Bang!

  And then there was the darkness. The claustrophobically suffocating darkness that kept pressing in closer. It was even darker than a winter night with a sleep mask and blackout curtains, and she honestly didn’t know how much longer she was going to be able to hold on to her sanity.

  That frightened her more than anything. The prospect of eventually collapsing in a sobbing heap on the floor, unable to do anything but curl up in the foetal position and shake uncontrollably. If it came to that, it would all be over. With her down for the count, Milwokh would be free to act, and long before the others would figure out what he was planning, it would be too late. Bang!

  She still hadn’t got over the murder of Ester Landgren, the innocent little girl who at six had already survived more than anyone should have to go through in a lifetime. She hadn’t discussed it with anyone else in the team and, in a way, it was only now she realized it fully herself. But the anger she felt at Ester Landgren’s fate made her willing to go to any lengths to stop him.

  Pontus Milwokh. It had to be him. And yet she couldn’t quite believe it. That he had returned to his flat was one of the most unexpected developments in this case where everything was unexpected. For a perpetrator to return to the scene of a crime was a relatively common occurrence, but going back to his own home, his hideout, after it had been discovered by police, was completely bizarre.

  She’d screamed at him to stop, but the thick nails had kept punching through the back of the wardrobe in a never-ending stream, and once the nail gun fell silent, the electric screwdriver had taken over, then a circular saw had revved up, cutting through one plank of wood after another.

  Two hours it had taken him to turn his hideout into a prison cell with no way in or out. Then silence had fallen and a minute later he’d turned off the main circuit breaker and everything had gone black. The computer, the harsh overhead light. Everything. Bang!

  Once it had sunk in that she couldn’t get out, panic had made her scream at the top of her lungs, and, hoping that a neighbour might hear her, she hadn’t stopped until her vocal cords gave up.

  It was only then that she’d managed to get a grip on herself and once her breathing had returned to normal, she’d been able to formulate a plan of action. Bang!

  This was the third tin of ravioli she’d gone through. She’d broken the other two hitting the handle of the screwdriver directly, and each time, tomato sauce had exploded all over her. At least she didn’t have to look at herself in the dark. Bang!

  The first thing she’d done was rip a strip of fabric from the sheet on the bed and wrap it around her left hand to stop the bleeding from the nail.
It was only at that point, after she’d finally managed to calm down, that the pain had begun to make itself known in earnest. A sharp, burning pain that radiated through her hand and up her forearm.

  Then she’d fumbled around in the dark and concluded that both the wardrobe and the wall facing the bedroom were perforated with so many nails and screws it would take her weeks, if not a month, to open up a hole big enough to squeeze out. A smaller hole to try to reach an outlet would be pointless since the power was off in the entire flat. That was why she’d turned instead to the wall Milwokh’s secret room shared with her own flat.

  Just above the skirting board, she’d found an electrical socket and with the help of the screwdriver, she’d loosened the screws and pulled the entire thing out of the wall. That had created an inch-deep recess in the wall, and by sticking her hand in, she’d been able to determine that the core of the wall consisted of bricks. She’d focused her attention on the mortar between them, and with the screwdriver it had proved relatively easy to hack deeper and deeper into the wall.

  At least at first. But what should have taken no more than an hour had turned into an interminable struggle. When her right hand started to bleed from rubbing against the edges of the tin, she’d wrapped that in fabric, too.

  But she was at the end of her tether. Despite her tireless banging and all the mortar she’d been able to remove, the brick inside the wall was refusing to budge. She was sure there was an explanation for that, but she was too tired to think. Too tired to carry on forever and strike at the screwdriver with every ounce of strength she could muster for the five hundred thousandth time.

  The tin burst in her hand. Even though she’d put one of the broken tins over the screwdriver, she was once again spattered with ravioli, and this time something snapped inside her. Something that made her throw down the tin and furiously attack the wall with nothing but the screwdriver.

  The wrappings around her hands came undone and her wounds opened as they rubbed against the ridged surface of the handle, which was becoming slick with blood. The pain was almost unbearable, but still nothing compared to the frustration of all those wasted hours. All her pain and her increasingly desperate struggle. Neither would stop Milwokh.

  It sounded like a tooth cracking. A barely perceptible little click, that was all. But to Lilja, the sound was something new. Something that could change everything.

  She put the screwdriver down and wiped her hands on her trousers. Then she stuck her hand into the hole and let her fingertips explore the edges of the immovable brick. Unfortunately, it felt much the same as before. True, quite a lot of the mortar around it was gone, but she didn’t find the explanation for the sound she’d heard until she ran her fingers over the surface of the brick.

  The crack was probably thinner than a hair, but even so, using her fingernail, she could clearly feel it zigzag down through the brick. She tried to grab the edges of the brick, but it was as stuck as it had been before she began.

  She grabbed the screwdriver again, placed the tip of it in the middle of the brick and with her free hand reached for yet another tin of ravioli from the stash under the bed and struck the handle again. This time it was a small tap rather than a great big swing. It was all that was needed to split the brick in two, and the screwdriver suddenly sank into it as though it had turned into butter.

  She stuck her hand into the hole and could feel that the brick had split open far enough for her to be able to push her fingertips into the break. And one half of the brick was finally loose and could be pulled out without much difficulty. The other half, however, was still stuck and after another thirty minutes of fruitless work, she gave up. Apparently, the weight of the entire building rested on it.

  She found the cord to the extension lead under the desk and pushed the plug into the hole she’d made. Then she tried to stick her right hand in after it, but no matter how hard she shoved, there wasn’t room.

  She slumped onto the floor and considered just closing her eyes and letting exhaustion take over. No one could say she hadn’t tried. She’d probably be asleep in seconds, and maybe she’d dream of something wonderful while the rest of the team figured out where she was.

  She might have, in her previous life. A life full of naive wishful thinking in which she had shared a bed with Hampus, unaware of who he was, and would never have considered setting fire to a neo-Nazi clubhouse. A life in which she’d long since given up and was instead focusing all her energy on licking her wounds, waiting and hoping that somehow, things would change for the better.

  But that life didn’t exist any more. That Irene didn’t exist. She realized that now. The process had begun weeks ago and her old self had slowly faded away, growing ever more diffuse and vague. It had been a painful process, and she’d felt more confused than ever before. But now she could see who she had become. Here, on the grubby floor in the pitch dark, she could finally see it, clear as day.

  She let her hands examine one another. A minute or two later, she’d settled on the left. It was already injured from the nail, and she depended on it less than her right. And so she got to her feet, found the bed and pulled it out from the wall.

  Once the bed was in position against the far wall, she lay down on her stomach, placed both feet against the edge of the bed to brace and pushed her left hand into the hole as far as it would go. She was strong, she knew that. But strong wasn’t enough. Not by a mile. She needed to go beyond that, into uncharted territory, to the kind of primal strength it took to lift up a car if her daughter were trapped under it.

  She didn’t have a daughter. But she did have Ester Landgren, and the thought of her made Lilja push so hard with her legs her hand moved a millimetre deeper. She didn’t know if she could push any harder, but she had no choice, so she kept going until she heard something break inside her hand.

  A devastating, indescribable pain shot out from her hand to the rest of her body as the knuckles of her fingers were crushed against each other. It felt like her broken hand was on fire. Even so, it wasn’t the pain she would remember, but the crunching sound of cartilage and bone.

  She took a short break and tried to gauge how her hand was doing. If she really tried, she could still wiggle her middle and forefinger as well as her thumb, but she had no contact whatsoever with her ring and little fingers, and maybe from this day forward they would simply dangle there like two dead relics, reminding her of this moment.

  She was now able to fold her hand over, knuckles and all, like a deboned chicken, and strangely, doing so didn’t increase her pain. It was probably maxed out. Or maybe the endorphins had finally begun to sand down the sharpest edges, because her hand was beginning to feel more and more like an amorphous lump, which finally broke through the hole.

  She was through. She was really through.

  She focused on breathing for a few seconds and then explored the small space between the brick wall and her own bedroom wall. She judged it to be about an inch. There was a wooden board almost immediately to her left, and the extension lead plug was waiting right next to her hand. Straight ahead, she could feel old insulation that could easily be pushed aside.

  She’d been hoping the inside of her own wall would consist of old reed-reinforced plaster. Instead, it was some kind of modern plasterboard, probably installed at some point during the nineties. Luckily, the screwdriver had perforated it enough for her to pick off pieces with her thumb and forefinger.

  Once the hole was big enough for the daylight from her own bedroom to start trickling in, she momentarily forgot about the pain and let out a shriek of joy that came out as a dry hiss.

  It wasn’t too difficult to wiggle the plug through the hole into her bedroom, and her hand after it, and once she’d pushed her whole forearm through, she was able to not only bend it but also to locate the outlet and insert the plug, which turned both the desk lamp and the computer back on.

  61

  STUBBS TURNED INTO a free parking bay outside Ica Maxi in Raus, set the parkin
g disc and placed it on the dashboard before climbing out of the Jeep, picking up her backpack and hurrying off across the car park. She had three hours before some overzealous parking attendant would give her an exorbitant fine.

  Driving all the way up to the property would have been easier, but she didn’t dare to risk it. Molander was bound to have installed cameras to watch both pedestrians and cars passing by the property.

  For that reason, she also pulled down the ski mask Mona-Jill had lent her as soon as she’d crossed the big thoroughfare called Rausvägen onto the much smaller road running parallel with it, which was inexplicably also called Rausvägen.

  She turned left and jogged down the road, which after about twenty yards narrowed considerably, making her feel like a trespasser, even though she was still in a public space. A sweaty trespasser.

  Mona-Jill had purchased the ski mask for a trip up to Lappland to go cross-country skiing in temperatures of eighteen below. A sweltering twenty-six was something else entirely.

  On her left, bushes and trees formed a green wall of leaves that blocked out the sights and sounds of the bigger road. On her right was a tall barbed-wire fence and on the other side of that, a paved area. She couldn’t see any cameras, though that did nothing to ease her mind.

  She wasn’t just dripping with sweat, she was panting like a dying centenarian, too. She could already hear Mona-Jill lecturing her with one of her I-told-you-so speeches about how she should start working out, get fit and above all lose weight.

  She stopped to catch her breath at a double gate topped with barbed wire and displaying a sign that warned against trespassing. The message was underscored by a thick chain and a sturdy padlock.

  Whether this was Rausvägen 28 or some other number altogether was impossible to say. But she could glimpse two of the ponds she’d seen in the satellite pictures up ahead, and something that looked like a derelict little fishing boat pulled up on shore.

 

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