‘No?’ said Per.

Gerlof hesitated, then went on: ‘I’ve always puzzled over riddles and mysteries … tried to solve them. But it never ends well.’

‘What do you mean?’ said Per. ‘Surely solving something can’t do any harm?’

Gerlof looked down at the diary on the table. ‘There was another mysterious fire not far from here forty years ago,’ he said, ‘at a farm to the north of Stenvik. A barn with cattle inside it was burnt to the ground. I was here at the cottage when it happened, and like everybody else in the village I went up to have a look. But I got suspicious, because there was the smell of paraffin all around the barn. And when I bent down I could see strange footprints left in the mud by a boot, with a big notch in the heel from a nail that had been badly hammered in. So I realized that the boot that had left the prints must have been repaired by Shoe-Paulsson.’

‘Shoe-Paulsson?’

‘He was a particularly bad shoemaker who lived in the village,’ said Gerlof. ‘So I mentioned it to the police, who found the owner of the boot and arrested him.’

‘So who was it?’ asked Per.

‘It was the farmer who owned the place.’ Gerlof nodded over towards the quarry. ‘Henry Fors … the father of our neighbour, Vendela Larsson.’

‘Vendela’s father?’

‘Yes. He blamed it all on his son, but I think it was Henry. It’s funny, but arsonists almost always operate on their own patch. They almost always set fire to places they know.’

Per remembered Vendela’s sad expression when she was showing him around her childhood home a couple of weeks earlier. It was lonely here, she had said.

‘But why do you regret telling the police, Gerlof?’ he said. ‘I mean, pyromaniacs have to be stopped.’

‘Yes, I know … but it destroyed the family. It broke Henry completely.’

Per nodded without saying anything; he understood. But here they were talking about misery and death again; he got to his feet. ‘I’ll be off to the hospital soon.’

It was a sudden impulse, but it felt right. He would drive down and spend the whole evening and night with Nilla, even if Marika and her new husband were there. He wasn’t going to be afraid any more.

‘I’ll be thinking of you tomorrow,’ said Gerlof. ‘And your daughter, of course.’

‘Thank you.’

Per turned and left the garden.

He was intending to go home, but a few metres from the gravel track by the quarry he came across Christer Kurdin, planting a tree. He had dug a hole in the lawn, and was busy filling in around the roots.

He straightened up and took a couple of steps towards Per. ‘I heard about Gerhard, your father … that he’d died. Was it a car accident?’

Per stopped. ‘Yes, he died in Kalmar … Is that an apple tree?’

‘No, a plum.’

‘Right.’

Per was about to move on, but Kurdin held his gaze. ‘Would you like to come in for a while?’

Per thought about it, and nodded. He followed Kurdin up the path, glancing at his watch. It was five to three, and the hands kept moving on, tick tock.

‘So you’re here over the holiday weekend?’ he said as they reached the house.

‘Yes,’ said Christer Kurdin. ‘We’re going home on Sunday … this will be our last visit before the summer.’

They were in a narrow hallway leading into a large living room.

Per looked around. There wasn’t much in the way of furniture or ornaments, but there was plenty of electronic equipment, telephones and speakers. Black and grey cables snaked across the floor along the walls. On one table there were two large computer monitors. It seemed that either Kurdin or his wife was heavily involved in music as well, because under one of the windows was an oblong table with rows of dials and switches – a mixing desk.

‘Would you like a cup of coffee?’

‘No, I’m fine, thanks.’

Near the windows looking out towards the quarry was a black leather sofa behind a low coffee table made of stone. Per sat down.

‘How about a beer?’

‘That would be good.’

Per remembered he had just decided to drive to the hospital this evening, but one beer probably wouldn’t do any harm.

Christer went into the kitchen and came back with two glasses of lager.

‘Cheers.’

‘Cheers.’

Per took a couple of swigs, put down his glass and wondered what to say. ‘Have you been married long?’ he asked.

‘Marie and I? No, not very long. Two years, just about. But we’ve been together for five.’

‘So where do you actually live? Stockholm?’

‘No, Gothenburg. I went to university there, to the Chalmers Institute, and that’s where my company is. But I come from Varberg originally.’

‘And your wife?’

‘She’s from Malmo.’

They drank their lager in silence. Per took another swig; it was quite strong, and the alcohol settled like a warm blanket over his anxiety about the following day. ‘What do you think of Max Larsson?’ he asked. ‘Just between ourselves?’

Christer Kurdin pulled a face. ‘Larsson? I think he’s one of those people who has to be right all the time. He won’t give up until everybody agrees with him. Didn’t you notice how subdued his wife was?’

Per didn’t respond to that; instead he asked, ‘Have you read any of his books?’

‘No,’ said Christer, ‘but I’ve seen how many he’s churned out, so I can imagine what kind of advice you’d get from them.’

‘Bad advice, you mean?’

‘Simplistic, at any rate,’ said Christer. ‘Reading a psychology book isn’t going to make you a good person. You need life experience for that – plenty of trial and error.’

Per nodded, and at that moment the front door opened. Marie Kurdin came into the hallway with their baby in a sling across her stomach.

‘Hello?’ she called out. ‘Anyone home?’

She hadn’t noticed Per, but Christer Kurdin got up quickly and went over to her. ‘Hi darling,’ he said. ‘We’ve got a visitor.’ He seemed relieved to see her, as if he’d been waiting for an interruption to a difficult conversation. But if he didn’t like Per, why had he bothered to invite him in? ‘It’s our neighbour, Per Morner.’

‘Oh?’

Per clearly saw Marie Kurdin’s smile briefly disappear.

Christer kissed his wife, who kissed him back, but Per thought they were both moving awkwardly. He had the impression they were playing roles for his benefit.

‘Did you find everything, darling?’

‘I think so … I got candles too.’

‘Good.’

Per picked up his glass and looked at them. Marie and Christer Kurdin and their baby, the happy family in their luxury home. Was he envious of them?

Marie nodded at Per in passing as she disappeared into one of the bedrooms with the baby in her arms.

Jerry had pointed at Marie. Filmed her, he had said.

Christer Kurdin sat down again and smiled at Per across the table.

Per didn’t smile back; he was searching for the right words to say. ‘Did you know my father?’ he asked.

Kurdin shook his head. ‘Why do you ask?’

Per looked down into his glass, which was almost empty, and said, ‘He was known as Jerry Morner, but when

Вы читаете The Quarry
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату