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“Have you been to Hassel’s home at all?”

“I swung by. No obvious KGB signs fluttering around like vampires. A tasteful, large Kungsholm apartment with a few bachelor touches. And exercise equipment. Do you want to take a peek?”

She shook her head. “There’s something I have to check on. Try to get Jorge out into the sunlight.”

He nodded, hesitated at the door for a second, and cast a quick glance at the tape player. Then he left it with her.

She regarded it for a while. She looked at the closed door, then back at the tape player.

She fast-forwarded to a point in between the passages that Hjelm had so frantically toggled. Paul had asked the ex-wife:

“Who is your new husband?”

“Surely that has nothing to do with this.”

“I just want to know what you’ve got instead of Hassel. What you looked for instead. The differences. It might tell me a few things about him.”

“I live with a man who works in the travel industry. We do well together. He works hard but leaves work at work and devotes his time to me when we’re home. We have a normal life together. Was that the answer you were looking for?”

“I think so.”

Kerstin Holm looked at the closed door.

For a long time.

Hjelm did get Chavez out into the sunlight. At a moment when his desk mate complained about increasing bum sweat, he jumped at the opportunity, and the two former Power Murder heroes left police headquarters to the hands of more permanently accomplished medalists like Waldemar Mörner. They hadn’t been able to find out exactly what had happened with the complaint from the news reporter, who had received, quote, “massive lip injuries” when Mörner shoved the microphone into his mouth. Presumably the complaint had been considerably easier to digest.

Out on the street, yet another sparklingly clear late-summer afternoon offered up its free services. Autumn had arrived in Arlanda, but it was delaying its appearance in Stockholm. The somewhat tired symbolism could hardly escape anyone.

Chavez could still comfortably wear his old linen jacket, which needed washing more than its camouflaging gray color cared to admit. He stretched his compact Latin body intensely as they walked along Kungsholmsgatan and crossed Scheelegatan.

“The Internet,” he said dreamily. “Endless possibilities. And endless amounts of shit.”

“Like life,” Hjelm said philosophically.

They turned onto Pipersgatan, trudged up the hill, and started up the steep steps toward Kungsklippan, where the rows of houses tried to eclipse one another’s views of Stockholm. Some stared out over City Hall and police headquarters-they were hardly the most attractive ones-while others cast covetous glances past Kungholms Church to Norr Mälarstrand and Riddarfjärden; still others peered a bit disdainfully out over the muddle of the city and beyond, to upper Östermalm. Lars-Erik Hassel’s son from his first marriage lived in one of these last.

They rang the doorbell. After a while a young man with a thin goatee, a sleeveless T-shirt, and baggy pants appeared.

“The cops,” he said expressionlessly.

“Yes indeed,” said the cops in unison, above their IDs. “May we come in?”

“I guess it would be shooting myself in the foot to say no,” said Hassel Junior, admitting the two ex-heroes.

It was a little studio with a kitchen nook. A frayed navy blue window shade kept the late-summer sun at bay. A computer spread a bluish flicker across the walls closest to the desk; otherwise the apartment was coal black.

Chavez pulled the cord, and the window shade flew up with a squeak that was strongly reminiscent of the one Mörner had produced when Robert E. Norton kicked him in the rear. “This isn’t opened very often,” Chavez observed. “With a view like this, maybe you should look outside once in a while.” Beyond the window, Kungsklippan plunged down toward the junction between island and mainland.

“Were you working?” Hjelm asked. “Your mom said you study literature.”

Laban Jeremias Hassel squinted at the apparently violently attacking sun and smiled with indoor pallor. “The irony of fate…”

“In what way?” Hjelm lifted an upside-down coffee mug from the tiny counter. He shouldn’t have done it-a whiff of the moldy fumes nearly flung him across the apartment.

“My father was one of Sweden’s leading literary critics,” said Laban Jeremias, observing Hjelm’s actions indifferently. “The irony is that I was born with a literary silver spoon in my mouth. But really, my interest in literature is a rebellion against my father. I don’t know if it’s possible to understand,” he added quietly, lowering himself onto a thready, 1960s-style lavender sofa.

The furniture in the little apartment was both sparse and slovenly. Here lived a person without much interest in the outside world-that much was clear.

“I think I understand,” said Hjelm, even if he couldn’t really reconcile Laban’s trendy appearance with the inner chaos that seemed to rule him. “Your view of literature is the exact opposite of your father’s.”

“He never understood the importance of improving oneself,” Laban Hassel mumbled, contemplating a birch table that actually seemed to have rotted through. “Literature was and remained a decadent bourgeois phenomenon for my father. So he felt no need to learn about it. Just tear it apart. And that continued long after he himself had become the most bourgeois of the bourgeois.”

“He didn’t like literature.” Hjelm nodded.

Laban lifted his eyes to him for a moment with surprise. “I do,” he whispered. “Without it, I’d be dead.”

“Your childhood wasn’t happy,” Hjelm continued in the same balanced, calm, certain tone. A father’s tone, he thought.

Or a mediocre psychologist’s.

“He disappeared so soon,” Laban said, indicating that the situation wasn’t new for him. Many hours of therapy, it seemed, were behind him. He started over. “He disappeared so soon. Left us. And so he became a hero to me, a personal myth of this great, well-known, unapproachable thinker. And as I began to read books, he became more and more interesting, with absolutely no participation on his part. I decided to wait to read his works until I felt ready. Then I would read them, and everything would be revealed.”

“And was it?”

“Yes. But in the exact opposite way from what I had imagined. His whole cultural veneer was exposed.”

“And yet you kept in touch up until the end?”

Laban shrugged and seemed to fall into a trance. Then it came out. “I waited and waited for him to reveal something important, something crucial from the past. But it never came. He always managed to keep up a raw-but-warm tone between us. It felt like stepping right into the AIK locker room. Disgusting guy talk. No chinks in the armor. I waited for them in vain. Maybe they were there at the moment of his death.”

“If I understand you correctly, your contact was extremely superficial.”

“To say the least.”

“And still he confided in you that he had received threatening e-mails.”

Laban Hassel kept his eyes on the rotting table. He seemed broken. He said, short and to the point: “Yes.”

“Tell us everything you know.”

“I know just what he said-that there was someone terrorizing him.”

“Why?”

“I don’t know. That was all. He just tossed it out in passing.”

“And yet you found it worth telling your mom?”

Laban looked at him in earnest for the first time. It wasn’t a look to mess with. It held a bottomless intensity that was rare among twenty-three-year-olds. That look set the unemployed but ready-for-action detective inside Hjelm into motion.

“My mother and I have a very good relationship,” Laban Hassel said.

Hjelm didn’t push him any further; he would need a new angle of attack before he returned. Because he would return. He and Chavez thanked the young man and left.