the door when she sees the silhouette through the frosted glass.
She stops abruptly and observes the shadowy form in the windowpane. Her hand no longer reaches out to open the door. She knows that stance; that head and shoulders. That’s the man in black.
All the air rushes from her lungs. She backs toward the kitchen slowly, her body tense and ready to run. Staring at the glass pane, she can see the blurred outline of a face-a face with a small chin. She feels dizzy, stumbles backward over bags and boots, and reaches to steady herself against the wall.
She finds Bjorn next to her, holding a carving knife with a wide blade. His cheeks are pale and his mouth is half open. He’s staring at the pane of glass, too. Penelope backs into a table as the door handle slowly turns down. Suddenly she races into the bathroom, blasts on the water, and yells loudly, “Come in! Door’s open!”
Bjorn jumps and his pulse pounds in his head. He holds the knife out in front, ready to attack, when he sees the door handle ease back up. Their pursuer has let go. The silhouette disappears. A few seconds later, they hear footsteps crunching on the gravel path around the house. Bjorn looks stiffly to the right. Penelope emerges from the bathroom and Bjorn points to the window in the TV room. They move away into the kitchen as the man crosses the wooden deck. The footsteps reach the veranda door. Penelope tries to put herself in the killer’s head. Are the angle and the light enough to show the shoes tossed out of the closet and Bjorn’s bloody footprints? The wooden deck creaks again near the back stairs. Bjorn and Penelope creep along the floor and then roll right next to the wall underneath the window. They try to lie still and breathe silently. They can hear that the man has reached the kitchen window, can hear his hands touch the windowsill. They realize he’s peering inside.
In the reflection of the window in the oven door, Penelope can see him look from side to side. If he stares at the oven, she thinks, he’ll see them too.
The face in the window disappears and they hear steps on the wooden deck yet again. This time, the steps are continuing along the paved path toward the front of the house. As the front door is opened, Bjorn dashes to the kitchen. He quietly sets the knife on the counter as he turns the key in the lock, pushes the door open, and rushes out.
Penelope follows at his heels. They’re running through the garden in the cool morning air, across the lawn, past the compost pile and into the forest. Fear forces Penelope to keep up her stride as it lashes the panic in her chest. She ducks underneath thick branches and leaps over low bushes and rocks. Soon she hears Bjorn’s panting beside her. And behind them, she senses their pursuer: a man attached to them like a dark shadow.
He’s following them to kill them.
She remembers a book she read. A woman from Rwanda was telling how she’d managed to survive the genocide by hiding in the woods and running every day. She ran the entire time the killings were going on. Her former friends and neighbors were hunting her with machetes. We imitated the antelopes, she’d written. We who survived in the jungle lived by imitating the flight of the antelopes from their hunters. We ran in unexpected ways, split apart and kept changing directions to confuse our pursuers.
Penelope knows that she and Bjorn should be smarter. They’re running without a plan, which will help their pursuer but not them. She and Bjorn are not clever. They want to go home, they want to find help, they want to contact the police. Their pursuer knows all this. He understands them and knows they want to find safety in the company of other humans or find a way to reach the mainland.
Penelope snags her shorts on a branch and rips a hole in them. She staggers a few steps but keeps going. She feels the pain as a burning loop around her leg.
They must not stop. She tastes blood in her mouth. Bjorn stumbles through a thicket. They have to circle a muddy, water-filled gap left by an uprooted tree.
In her flight next to Bjorn, a memory springs up unbidden. She had been as frightened then as she is now. It was in Darfur. She remembers the look in people’s eyes. Some eyes showed people so traumatized they could not go on. Others refused to give up the fight and kept going. What should have been children came to Kubbum one night. They held loaded guns. She would never forget the fear she felt that night.
21
The main office of Sweden’s Security Service, Sapo, is on the fourth floor of the National Police Board headquarters. Its main entrance is on Polhemsgatan. The room smells of dust and warm lightbulbs, and pale light falls into the room from a small window facing the courtyard. A whistle can be heard from the exercise yard of the jail, located on the roof of the building. The head of the department of security is Verner Zanden. He’s a tall man with a pointed nose, coal-black eyes, and a deep bass voice. He sits now on a chair behind his desk with his legs wide apart, and he’s holding up a calming hand. Standing in this unusually depressing room is a young woman named Saga Bauer. She’s an investigator and her group’s antiterrorism expert. Saga Bauer is just twenty-five years old. Stripes of green, yellow, and red cloth are braided into her long blond hair. She looks like a wood sprite standing in the stream of light in a dark forest. She carries a large-caliber pistol in a shoulder holster under her unzipped exercise hoodie. NARVA BOXING CLUB has been printed on it.
“I’ve led this entire effort for more than a year,” she’s pleading. “I’ve been on stakeout for twenty-four hours at a time-”
“This is something entirely different,” her boss says with a smile.
“Please, please… You can’t just bypass me again!”
“Who says I’m doing that? A technician from CID is seriously wounded and an investigator has been attacked. That apartment could have exploded and-”
“I know. I need to get over there now-”
“I’ve already sent Goran Stone.”
“Goran Stone? I’ve been here for three years and I haven’t closed a case yet! This is my field of expertise! Goran knows nothing at all about-”
“He did a good job with the underground tunnel case.”
Saga swallows hard and then she replies, “That was also my case. I found the link to-”
“But it got dangerous and I still believe I made the right call.”
Saga’s cheeks turn red. She struggles to collect herself. “I can do this. This is what I’ve been trained for-”
“Yes, but I’ve made a different call.”
Verner sighs and props his feet up on the wastebasket next to his desk.
“You know my record. Affirmative action had nothing to do with my being accepted here,” Saga says, as calmly as she’s able. “I wasn’t part of a quota. I was top of my class in all the tests. I was best at sharpshooting. I have investigated two hundred and ten different-”
“I just don’t want anything to happen to you,” Verner says softly, and his coal-black eyes meet hers.
“But I’m not a doll, I’m not a princess, or some elf!”
“But you are so… so…”
Verner lifts his hands helplessly.
“All right, what the hell, let’s do it. You be the lead preliminary investigator. But Goran Stone is part of it and I want him to keep an eye on you.”
“Thanks,” she says, relieved.
“But this is a big deal. Remember that,” he warns. “Penelope Fernandez’s sister has been killed execution- style and Penelope is missing-”
“And we’ve noted increased activity among the left-wing extremist groups,” Saga says. “We want to know if the Revolutionary Front is behind the theft of explosives in Vaxholm.”
“The most important thing is if there is an immediate threat,” Verner emphasizes.
“Right now the radicals are sounding more threatening,” Saga continues, a little too eagerly. “I’ve just been in contact with Dante Larsson at Military Intelligence and Security, and he says there will probably be acts of sabotage this summer.”
“Right now just concentrate on Penelope Fernandez,” Verner demands.