too.
SALANDER’S GIRLFRIEND WROTE ABOUT LESBIAN S&M SEX
The 31-year-old woman is well known in Stockholm’s trendy nightspots. She makes no secret that she picks up women and likes to dominate her partner.
The reporter had even found a girl he called Sara who, according to her own testimony, had been the object of the woman’s pickup attempts. Her boyfriend had been “disturbed” by the incident. The article went on to say that the band was an obscure and elitist feminist variant on the fringes of the gay movement, and that it had acquired a certain fame for hosting a “bondage workshop” at the Gay Pride Festival. The rest of the article was based on a deliberately provocative piece Wu had written six years earlier for a feminist fanzine. Bublanski scanned the text and then tossed the paper into a trash can.
He brooded over Faste and Modig, both competent detectives. But Faste was a problem; he got on people’s nerves. He would have to have a talk with the man, but he didn’t think he was the source of the leaks.
When Bublanski got his bearings again he was standing on Lundagatan staring at the front door of Salander’s building. It had not been a conscious decision to walk there.
He walked up the steps to upper Lundagatan, where he stood for a long time thinking about Blomkvist’s story of Salander’s attack. That didn’t lead anywhere either. There was no police report, no names of persons involved, and not even an adequate description of the attacker. Blomkvist had claimed that he could not read the licence plate of the van that drove away from the scene.
Assuming any of it had happened at all.
Another dead end.
Bublanski looked down Lundagatan at the burgundy Honda that was still parked in the street, and at that moment Blomkvist walked up to the front door.
Miriam Wu awoke late in the day, tangled in the sheets. She sat up and looked around at the unfamiliar room.
She had used the torrent of media attention as an excuse to call a girlfriend. But she had also left the apartment, she realized, because she was afraid that Salander might knock on her door. Her interview with the police and the newspaper coverage had affected her profoundly, and even though she had resolved not to make up her mind one way or the other until Salander had a chance to explain what had happened, she had started to suspect that her friend might actually be guilty.
She glanced down at Viktoria Viktorsson – known as Double-V and 100 percent dyke. She was lying on her stomach and mumbling in her sleep. Miriam slipped out of bed and took a shower. Then she went out to buy rolls for breakfast. It was not until she was standing at the cash register of the shop next to Cafe Cinnamon on Verkstadsgatan that she saw the headlines. She fled back to Double-V’s apartment.
Blomkvist punched in the entry code and went inside. He was gone for two minutes before he reappeared. Nobody home. He looked up and down the street, apparently undecided. Bublanski watched him intently.
What bothered Bublanski was that if Blomkvist had lied about the attack on Lundagatan then he was playing some kind of game, which in the worst case could mean that he was involved in the murders. But if he was telling the truth there was still a hidden element in the drama; there were more players than those who were visible, and the murders could be considerably more complex than an attack of insanity in a pathologically disturbed girl.
As Blomkvist moved towards Zinkensdamm, Bublanski called after him. Blomkvist stopped, saw the detective, and walked over to him. They met at the foot of the steps.
“Hello, Blomkvist. Looking for Lisbeth Salander?”
“As a matter of fact, no. I’m looking for Miriam Wu.”
“She isn’t home. Somebody leaked the news to the press that she had resurfaced.”
“What did she have to say?”
Bublanski gave Blomkvist a searching look.
“Walk with me,” Bublanski said. “I need a cup of coffee.”
They passed Hogalid Church in silence. Bublanski took him to Cafe Lillasyster, near to where Liljeholmsbron crosses the Norrstrom to the southern suburb of Liljeholmen. Bublanski ordered a double espresso with a teaspoonful of cold milk and Blomkvist a caffe latte. They sat in the smoking section.
“It’s been a long time since I’ve had such a frustrating case,” Bublanski said. “How much can I discuss with you without having to read it in
“I don’t work for
“You know what I mean.”
“Bublanski – I don’t believe Lisbeth is guilty.”
“And now you’re doing your own private investigation? Is that why they call you Kalle Blomkvist?”
Blomkvist smiled. “They tell me you’re called Officer Bubble.”
Bublanski gave him a stiff smile. “Why do you think Salander is innocent?”
“I don’t know a thing about her guardian, but she had no reason whatsoever to murder Dag and Mia. Especially not Mia. Lisbeth loathes men who hate women, and Mia was in the process of putting the screws to a whole bunch of prostitutes’ clients. What Mia was doing was completely in line with what Lisbeth herself would have done. She is a very moral creature.”
“I can’t seem to piece together a coherent picture of her. A retarded psycho case or a skilled researcher?”
“Lisbeth is just different. She’s abnormally antisocial, but there is definitely nothing wrong with her intelligence. On the contrary, she’s probably smarter than you or me.”
Bublanski sighed. Blomkvist was giving him the same story that Miriam Wu had.
“She has to be caught, come what may. I can’t go into the details, but she was at the murder scene, and she has been linked to the murder weapon.”
“I suppose that means you found her fingerprints on it. That doesn’t prove she fired the shots.”
Bublanski nodded. “Dragan Armansky doesn’t believe it either. He’s too cautious to say it straight out, but he’s also looking for proof that she’s innocent.”
“And you? What do you think?”
“I’m a detective. I arrest people and question them. Right now things look dismal for Froken Salander. We’ve put away murderers on considerably weaker circumstantial evidence.”
“You didn’t answer my question.”
“I don’t know. If she did turn out to be innocent… Who do you think would have a motive for killing both her guardian and your two friends?”
Blomkvist took out a pack of cigarettes and offered it to Bublanski, who shook his head. He did not want to lie to the police. He ought to say something about the man known as Zala. He should also tell Bublanski about Superintendent Gunnar Bjorck of the Security Police.
But Bublanski and his colleagues had access to Svensson’s material, which contained the same folder. All they had to do was read it. Instead they were charging along like a steamroller and feeding salacious details about Salander to the press.
He had an idea, but didn’t know where it would lead. He didn’t want to name Bjorck before he was sure.
“Let me dig a little deeper, then I’ll give you an alternative theory.”
“No police traces, I hope.”
“Not yet. What did Miriam Wu say?”
“Just about the same as you. They had a relationship.”
“None of my business,” Blomkvist said.