33
ODESSA WAS A former beauty. That sounded like a quote from a tourist brochure.
Arto Söderstedt was slightly disappointed that all of his expectations had been confirmed. Each worn-out, vodka-soaked alcoholic he passed – and they weren’t few and far between – was a potential robber, and he was constantly being accosted by beggars, primarily children, asking him to buy dog-eared postcards for astronomical prices. The city also had a very particular scent. Like a past-it whore, he thought brutally to himself. Cheap perfume to disguise the decay.
He still hadn’t been given the opportunity to cajole the reluctant Eastern European policemen and women without computers into cooperating with him; he was walking around, waiting for them to start work. ‘A bit later, maybe,’ a neighbour to the police station had reeled off in muddled German.
He had no real reason to go back to the hotel either. With its combination of extravagance and decay, it stood like a symbol of Odessa. And so he was wandering. He made his way to the water’s edge – which wasn’t there. Odessa was a port city with a slight quirk: it sat a few hundred metres above the water. The only thing linking the city to the water were those world-famous steps down which the pushchair had bounced in Eisenstein’s revolutionary Battleship Potemkin. Before those stairs were built in the nineteenth century, there had been no direct link between city and water, between Odessa and the Black Sea.
The city had been powerful once, and it probably still did make a striking impression from down on the water. But walking through it, Söderstedt thought it felt shabby above all else. A relic of a bygone era. Transport to Ukraine’s most important port was carried out along other routes these days, of course, but back then, the liveliness of the steps had been clear. It was no coincidence that it had been used as a symbol of capitalist economics in Eisenstein’s film.
At least that was how Arto Söderstedt interpreted it.
But now, the steps seemed to be nothing more than a refuge for all kinds of riff-raff, beggars and junkies, and walking down them presented visitors with an immediate health risk. Before Söderstedt ventured down, he nipped over to some shrubbery and broke off a branch. It looked like a walking stick, but in reality it was a weapon. He was ready to defend himself. Not that it could look that way.
He walked down and he walked back up. He counted seventeen more potential attackers, beggars dressed as postcard sellers. In addition to that – despite all attempts to defend himself with the branch – he made it back up with three splashes of vodka on his clothes. Fortunately no vomit.
He paused at the top of the steps with the branch in his hand. In the nearest shop window, Uncle Pertti was standing with his hand on his sabre. Arto stared at him, bewitched. Uncle Pertti stared back. Arto dropped the branch. Uncle Pertti dropped the sabre. Arto stuck out his tongue. Uncle Pertti did the same.
The spell was broken.
What did the old devil want? Söderstedt wondered, leaving him behind among the boots in the shop window. Why this obstinacy?
He wandered along the grand old promenade and looked out over the cold, dark surface of the Black Sea, glittering beautifully in the morning sun. He noticed that with each moment that passed, he was becoming more favourably inclined to the city. It had a beauty which wasn’t ingratiating, the way the beauty of Italian cities often could be. It was a beauty which didn’t try to hide its faults. Instead, it seemed to be saying: here I am, take it or leave it. More or less like Uncle Pertti.
He walked past the famous opera house and university. The buildings really were beautiful. He wasn’t even sure that the decay was tragic any more. Perhaps the march of time should be preserved in works of art. Perhaps it shouldn’t be restored and adorned and tarted up and masqueraded as something it wasn’t. Corroded by time – like everything else on earth. Should art really be lifted up and furnished with an eternal value that was, in its very foundation, false? Even if the alternative was obliteration? If time was nothing but a saboteur, a destroyer of eternal values? If that was the case, shouldn’t it be withstood?
It was the classic argument of the plastic surgeon…
Just as he was starting to feel as though something truly substantial was on the way, he arrived – without really having planned it – back at the police station. This time, the door was open.
He ambled about its decayed old corridors and remarked to himself that he was using the word ‘decay’ a little too often. If this exact corridor had been in Sweden or Finland, would he still have thought of it as decayed? Or was it simply the case that the word was inseparably associated with this particular city? Irrevocably linked to Odessa?
That was when it struck him that Odessa wasn’t just a city. It was also an organisation. A particularly unpleasant organisation. Organisation der Ehemaligen SS-Angehörigen. The Organisation of Former SS Members. Founded in 1947 with the sole intention of helping high-ranking Nazis gain new identities in South America and the Middle East. Replaced by the Kameradenwerke in 1952.
He couldn’t quite get the context straight, but it was there. He felt it a little more keenly as he knocked on a door bearing Cyrillic letters reading something along the lines of ‘Commissioner Alexej Svitlytjnyj’. The name of the man he was looking for, at least.
Alexej Svitlytjnyj was sitting at his desk and had been forewarned. Just as Söderstedt had suspected, there was no computer on his superbly crafted desk. There was, however, an oddly shaped cigarette hanging from the mouth of the big, composed man in the impeccable Eastern European suit. It looked like one of the suits Soviet leaders used to wear when they stood on a platform above Red Square, waving stiffly to the military parades passing by below. Arto Söderstedt had always suspected that those men had been stuffed and remote-controlled.
Svitlytjnyj was neither, but he was, however, rather apathetic. His English was also surprisingly eloquent.
‘I checked with the Ministry of Justice,’ he said once their introductions were over and done with. ‘As a representative of Europol, it’s perfectly OK for you to access our investigatory materials. But sending it halfway across the world to the Swedish police was a different matter.’
‘So have you managed to identify the noseless man?’ asked Söderstedt.
Svitlytjnyj nodded gravely like an old brown bear.
He looks like a Nevalyashka doll, Söderstedt thought, happy to make use of a long-neglected word from his childhood. Like one of those little plastic dolls with big round heads which teetered back and forth for all eternity when you set them in motion.
‘That’s correct,’ Svitlytjnyj eventually said, sluggishly holding out a dog-eared brown folder with a hammer and sickle on the cover. ‘From the Soviet days,’ he added with a gesture to the Communist hammer and sickle symbol. ‘That was another part of the problem when it came to sharing the material.’
Söderstedt opened the file and stared down into a forest of Cyrillic letters.
‘It’s in Russian,’ he said thoughtlessly.
‘No it isn’t,’ said Svitlytjnyj. ‘It’s Ukrainian. A language spoken by seven times more people than Swedish.’
‘Sorry,’ Söderstedt replied courteously.
‘Turn the page,’ said Svitlytjnyj. ‘There’s a photograph.’
Söderstedt did as he was told. Staring at him was an utterly strange figure with a dark gaze.
The figure had no nose.
‘His name was Kouzmin,’ the commissioner said, taking a deep drag from his cigarette. By this point, there were only about four millimetres of it left. Söderstedt wondered how it would all pan out – would it last another drag?
‘Koutjschmin?’ he tried.
Svitlytjnyj nodded sideways and made a bobbing motion with his hand.
‘Something like that,’ he said. ‘Franz Kouzmin. His criminal record isn’t particularly extensive. Mostly linked to a long-standing, intense vodka habit. Petty crimes. Break-ins, receiving stolen goods, drunkenness. Hardly a major criminal. He was reported missing by his daughter at the end of September 1981. Apparently he was a widower.’