Markus stands up politely as I walk over to the table.
“Hi there,” I reply.
He gives me an awkward little hug and I notice he has started using aftershave.
We haven’t seen each other for several months and the atmosphere is tense at first, but slowly we begin to talk. I haven’t got much to tell him from Eel Point-I mean, nothing
has happened there since he went away. But I ask him about life as a soldier and whether he lives in a tent like the one we built in the loft, and he says he does when he is out on exercises. His company has been in Norrland, he tells me, and it was minus thirty degrees. To keep warm, they had to pack so much snow all over the tent that it looked like an igloo.
Silence falls between us at the table.
“I thought we could carry on until spring,” I say eventually. “If you want. I could move closer to you, to Kalmar or something, then when you come out we could live in the same town…”
These are vague plans, but Markus smiles at me.
“Until the spring,” he says, brushing my cheek with his hand. His smile broadens, and he adds quietly: “Would you like to see my parents’ apartment, Mirja? It’s just around the corner. They’re not home today, but I’ve still got my old room…”
I nod and get up from my chair.
We make love for the first and last time in the bedroom Markus had when he was a boy. His bed is too small, so we drag the mattress onto the floor and lie there. The apartment is silent around us, but we fill it with the sound of our breathing. At first I am terrified that his parents will come in, but after a while I forget about them.
Markus is eager, yet careful. I think this is the first time for him too, but I dare not ask.
Am I careful enough? Hardly. I have no protection-this was something I could never have imagined would happen. And that’s exactly why it’s so wonderful.
Half an
Markus goes back up to the apartment to pack before he catches the ferry across the sound, and I go off to the bus station to head back northward.
I am alone, but I can still feel his warmth against my body.
I would have liked to catch the train, but the trains have stopped running. All I can do is climb aboard the bus.
The atmosphere is gloomy among the small number of passengers, but it suits me. I feel like a lighthouse keeper on my way to a six-month tour of duty at the end of the world.
It is twilight when I get off to the south of Marnas, and the wind is bitterly cold. In the grocery store in Rorby I buy food for myself and Torun, then walk home along the coast road.
I can see slate-gray clouds out at sea when I drop down onto the road to Eel Point. Strong winds are on their way to the island, and I quicken my pace. When the blizzard comes, you must be indoors, otherwise things could turn out as they did for Torun on the peat bog. Or even worse.
There are no lights in most of the windows when I reach the house, but in our little room there is a warm yellow glow.
Just as I am about to go in to Torun, I see out of the corner of my eye that something is flashing down by the water.
I turn my head and see that the lighthouses have been switched on before the night comes.
The northern lighthouse is also lit, glowing with a steady white light.
I put the bag of food down on the steps and walk across the courtyard, down toward the shore. The northern lighthouse continues to shine out.
As I stare at the tower something suddenly blows past me on the ground, something pale and rectangular.
Even before I catch up with it and pick it up, I know what it is.
A canvas. One of Torun’s blizzard paintings.
“So you’re back, are you, Mirja?” says a man’s voice. “Where have you been?”
I turn around. It’s Ragnar Davidsson, the eel fisherman,
walking toward me from the house. He is wearing his shiny oilskins, and he is not empty-handed.
In his arms he is carrying a great bundle of Torun’s paintings-fifteen or twenty of them.
I remember what he said about them in the outbuilding:
“Ragnar…” I say. “What are you doing? Where are you going with my mother’s pictures?”
He walks past me, without stopping, and replies, “Down to the sea.”
“What did you say?”
“There’s no room for them,” he shouts back. “I’ve taken over the storeroom in the outbuilding. I’ll be keeping the eel nets there.”
I look at him in horror, then at the ghostly white light of the northern lighthouse. Then I turn my back on the sea and the wind and hurry back to the house and Torun.
30
The wind along the coast had increased to storm force. The gusts shook the car, and Tilda clutched the wheel tightly.
The falling snow whirled across the road like a black-and-white film, spinning in the beam of the headlights. She slowed right down and leaned closer to the windshield so that she could make out the road ahead.
The snowfall looked more and more like thick white smoke swirling in across the coast. Drifts were beginning to form everywhere that the snow was able to stick, and they quickly turned into banks.
Tilda knew how quickly it could happen. The blizzard transformed the alvar into a white, ice-cold desert and made it impossible to travel by car anywhere on the island. Even the snowmobiles would sink and get stuck in the drifts.
She was on her way north now, with Martin still following
her. He wouldn’t give up-but she had to forget him and concentrate on looking ahead.
Snowdrifts covered the road, and it was difficult for the wheels to grip the surface properly. It felt like driving through cotton wool.
Tilda was looking out for the headlights of approaching cars, but everything was gray beyond the falling snow.
When she was somewhere in the region of the peat bog, the road in front of the car disappeared completely in the driving snow, and she looked in vain for markers showing where the edge of the roadbed was. Either they had already blown away, or nobody had put them out.
She noticed in her rearview mirror that Martin’s car was getting closer-and that was partly what caused her to make a mistake. She looked into the mirror for a second too long, and didn’t notice the bend ahead in the darkness. Not until it was too late.
Tilda turned the wheel as the road curved to the right, but not enough. Suddenly the front wheels sank down into the snow.
The police car stopped with a violent bang. A second later she felt an even bigger bang and heard the sound of breaking glass. The car was pushed forward and stopped, stuck in the ditch by the peat bog.
Martin’s car had driven into hers.
Tilda slowly straightened her back behind the wheel. Her ribs and the back of her neck seemed okay.
She floored the accelerator to try and pull back up onto the road again, but the back wheel spun around in the snow, unable to find a grip.
“Shit.”
Tilda switched off the engine and tried to calm down.