forgotten when he woke up. He didn’t remember any beating, any killing.

“What do you say to a drink out on the town,” said Winter. “I don’t have the strength to go back to my office today.”

“I never saw you clock out,” said Ringmar.

“See you at Eckerberg’s in twenty minutes,” said Winter.

“Do they still have those shrimp sandwiches there?” said Ringmar. “I love those shrimp sandwiches.”

“If they don’t, they’ll have to make one,” said Winter.

There was only one shrimp sandwich left when Winter arrived, but they were happy to make one more. “Make it twice as big as that one right there,” he said, nodding at the refrigerated counter. “I’ll pay the difference.”

“Yours is bigger,” said Ringmar when they sat down at the table.

“I didn’t get any lunch,” said Winter.

“Fucking weird,” said Ringmar, who was still comparing sizes. “Does the deli girl have faulty perspective?” He rotated his plate, as though to see whether his sandwich was bigger on the other side. “This is ridiculous. There’s half a pound more shrimp on yours. And the diameter of yours exceeds mine by-”

“I wouldn’t accept that if I were you,” said Winter. “After all, you’re the one who paid for it.” Winter chewed on yet another shrimp. “It’s unfair.”

It had been Ringmar’s turn to pay.

Ringmar raised his hand discreetly in order to get the waitress’s attention, and then Winter had to tell him what was up.

“When is she going to call?” Ringmar asked when their plates were empty and Winter had told him what had happened that morning. “Will she make it there tonight, or is she staying overnight in London?”

“She should be there at six o’clock local time if she makes her connection at Heathrow,” Winter said, and looked at his watch. “That’s seven o’clock here.”

“Have you spoken with Macdonald?”

“No. Should I?”

“Well, before he goes to too many of his old-”

“I think that Craig guy has already informed him. He said he would give Steve a call.”

“Hmm.”

“Sorry?”

“Hmm,” Ringmar repeated.

“What is it, Bertil?”

“This is a strange tale, you know. I don’t know, I think I smell crime.” Ringmar held his glass in his hand and drank the last of his sparkling water and put down the glass. “There was actually some kind of message about the father, this John Osvald. Someone in Scotland, maybe in Inverness or somewhere around there, someone is interested in shaking up his family in Sweden.” Ringmar ran his finger around the edge of the glass and looked up. “Axel Osvald leaves immediately after he sees the message. Takes off right away. So the question is whether he saw something in it that we didn’t see. Something he recognized.”

“Or if something else arrived that we don’t know about,” said Winter. “Other messages. At the same time.”

“Yes.”

“He’d been there before,” said Winter.

“Perhaps he knew who’d written that thing about how nothing was how it appeared to be,” said Ringmar.

“Or he guessed.”

“But his earlier trips hadn’t gotten results,” said Ringmar.

“We don’t know that,” said Winter.

“And apparently no one else knows either,” said Ringmar.

“Yes they do,” said Winter.

“Who?”

“He does. Axel Osvald himself.”

“Yes. Maybe.”

Ringmar decided to have another cup of coffee and got up and went over to the lovely little wooden table where the coffeepot stood on the warmer. He had seen the newly brewed batch arrive a minute ago.

Winter followed him with his eyes. No one else drank as much coffee as Bertil, and no one else could stand all the peculiar witches’ brews that went along with the job. Coffee was offered in every context. It was worse than being a mail carrier out in the country. The contents of some cups had to be eaten with a spoon. And Ringmar would still ask for a refill.

He came back and sat down.

“It sure seems like Axel Osvald went insane,” he said.

Winter shrugged.

“Doesn’t it?” said Ringmar.

“If we assume that he was the one who took off his own clothes, item by item, as he climbed up the hills,” said Winter.

“Well, he had been acting confused in that town or city or whatever it is.”

“Who actually said that?” said Winter.

“Weren’t there several witnesses?” said Ringmar.

“When did you start trusting witnesses, Bertil?”

“Hope no one heard that,” Ringmar said, looking around.

“Maybe they thought he was confused, but that could be because of the language, couldn’t it? A person who no one understands might seem strange.”

“Yes,” said Ringmar, “now that you mention it. And especially in the case of Brits. Isn’t anyone who doesn’t speak English as their native language considered confused? Isn’t that the English point of view?”

Winter smiled.

“But these are Scots,” he said.

“So?”

“They’re probably closer to us Scandinavians.”

“That didn’t help Axel Osvald in his attempts to communicate,” said Ringmar.

“No. You’re right about that.”

“But of course, it’s possible he was trying to say something that wasn’t crazy,” said Ringmar.

“He could have been confused,” said Winter.

“By what?”

“Too much alcohol?” said Winter.

“Did you ask his granddaughter about his use of alcohol?”

“No.”

“Do you think he was drunk?” said Ringmar.

“Not according to Craig, and not according to his witnesses,” said Winter. “I asked him, actually.” Winter leaned forward. “The autopsy will show the blood alcohol content, of course.”

“Was he poisoned?” said Ringmar.

“By what?”

“Some kind of drug. Some poison.”

“By ‘poisoned,’ do you mean secretly poisoned?” said Winter.

“Yes. Someone could have snuck something into a beer or into his food or… well…”

“Should we ask the Scottish pathologist to look for something? If he hasn’t already.”

“I don’t know, Erik. Maybe we’re letting this conversation get too far off track.”

“Isn’t that our method?” said Winter.

“It is.”

“So where are we? We’ve talked about alcohol and drugs. More?”

“Fear,” said Ringmar.

“Fear of what?”

“Of something he saw.”

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