had entered her brain and almost killed her. She had a fever that would not abate, and she had severe headaches.
He had played it safe. Murder suspect or not, she was his patient, and his job was to make sure she got well. So he filled out a “no visitors” form that had no connection whatsoever to the one that was set in place by the prosecutor. He prescribed various medications and complete bedrest.
But Jonasson also realized that isolation was an inhumane way of punishing people; in fact it bordered on torture. No-one felt good when they were separated from all their friends, so he decided that Salander’s lawyer should serve as a proxy friend. He had a serious talk with Giannini and explained that she could have access to Salander for one hour a day. During this hour she could talk with her or just sit quietly and keep her company, but their conversations should not deal with Salander’s problems or impending legal battles.
“Lisbeth Salander was shot in the head and was
Giannini understood Dr Jonasson’s reasoning. She had some general conversations with Salander and hinted at the outline of the strategy that she and Blomkvist had planned, but Salander was simply so drugged and exhausted that she would fall asleep while Giannini was speaking.
Armansky studied Malm’s photographs of the men who had followed Blomkvist from the Copacabana. They were in sharp focus.
“No,” he said. “Never seen them before.”
Blomkvist nodded. They were in Armansky’s office on Monday morning. Blomkvist had come into the building via the garage.
“The older one is Goran Martensson, who owns the Volvo. He followed me like a guilty conscience for at least a week, but it could have been longer.”
“And you reckon that he’s Sapo.”
Blomkvist referred to Martensson’s C.V. Armansky hesitated.
You could take it for granted that the Security Police invariably made fools of themselves. That was the natural order of things, not for Sapo alone but probably for intelligence services all over the world. The French secret police had sent frogmen to New Zealand to blow up the Greenpeace ship
On the one hand, the media regarded Sapo as an excellent news source, and almost any political blunder gave rise to headlines: “Sapo suspects that
On the other hand, politicians of various affiliations, along with the media, were particularly diligent in condemning exposed Sapo agents if they had spied on Swedish citizens. Armansky found this entirely contradictory. He did not have anything against the existence of Sapo. Someone had to take responsibility for seeing to it that national-Bolshevist crackpots – who had read too much Bakunin or whoever the hell these neo- Nazis read – did not patch together a bomb made of fertilizer and oil and park it in a van outside Rosenbad. Sapo was necessary, and Armansky did not think a little discreet surveillance was such a bad thing, so long as its objective was to safeguard the security of the nation.
The problem, of course, was that an organization assigned to spy on citizens must remain under strict public scrutiny. There had to be a high level of constitutional oversight. But it was almost impossible for Members of Parliament to have oversight of Sapo, even when the Prime Minister appointed a special investigator who, on paper at least, was supposed to have access to everything. Armansky had Blomkvist’s copy of Lidbom’s book
The Salander case demonstrated that something was out of joint inside the organization. But when Blomkvist came over to give him a secure mobile, Armansky’s first thought was that the man was paranoid. It was only when he heard the details and studied Malm’s photographs that he reluctantly admitted that Blomkvist had good reason to be suspicious. It did not bode well, but rather indicated that the conspiracy that had tried to eliminate Salander fifteen years earlier was not a thing of the past.
There were simply too many incidents for this to be coincidence. Never mind that Zalachenko had supposedly been murdered by a nutter. It had happened at the same time that both Blomkvist and Giannini were robbed of the document that was the cornerstone in the burden of proof. That was a shattering misfortune. And then the key witness, Gunnar Bjorck, had gone and hanged himself.
“Are we agreed that I pass this on to my contact?” Armansky said, gathering up Blomkvist’s documentation.
“And this is a person that you say you can trust?”
“An individual of the highest moral standing.”
“Inside
“We have to be of one mind. Both Holger and I have accepted your plan and are co-operating with you. But we can’t clear this matter up all by ourselves. We have to find allies within the bureaucracy if this is not going to end in calamity.”
“O.K.” Blomkvist nodded reluctantly. “I’ve never had to give out information on a story before it’s published.”
“But in this case you already have. You’ve told me, your sister, and Holger.”
“True enough.”
“And you did it because even you recognize that this is far more than just a scoop in your magazine. For once you’re not an objective reporter, but a participant in unfolding events. And as such you need help. You’re not going to win on your own.”
Blomkvist gave in. He had not, in any case, told the
He shook hands with Armansky.
CHAPTER 9
Three days after Berger started as acting editor-in-chief of
When they got back to the news desk they saw Morander get up and come over to the door of the glass cage. He looked startled.
Then he leaned forward, grabbed the back of a chair and held on to it for a few seconds before he collapsed to the floor.
He was dead before the ambulance arrived.
There was a confused atmosphere in the newsroom throughout the afternoon. Chairman of the Board Borgsjo arrived at 2.00 and gathered the employees for a brief memorial to Morander. He spoke of how Morander