“We’ll have to see what happens,” he said, looking at the pile of packages.
It would be wonderful to see Katrine one last time. To be able to talk to her and say goodbye properly.
The TV weather forecasters had warned of storms and snowfall over Öland and Gotland during Christmas, but two days before the festivities began Joakim looked out of the
window and saw only fine wisps of cloud in the sky. The sun was shining, it was minus six degrees, and there was hardly any wind.
Then he looked at the bird table outside the kitchen window, and had the feeling that a storm was on the way after all.
The table was empty. The fat balls and piles of seed were still there, but there were no birds pecking at them.
Rasputin jumped up onto the counter next to Joakim and confirmed for himself that the table was empty.
The meadow leading down to the shore was equally deserted, and there were no mute swans or long-tailed ducks out at sea. Perhaps they had all sought shelter over in the forest. Birds don’t need to look at a weather chart to know when a storm is on the way, they can feel it in the air.
That same morning Joakim let Livia and Gabriel sleep in until eight-thirty. He would have liked to take them off to nursery school so that he could be alone, but they would be at home with him for the next two weeks, however he felt about that.
“Is Mommy coming home today?” asked Livia as she got out of bed.
“I don’t know,” said Joakim.
But the atmosphere in the house was different now, he could feel it, and the children seemed to sense it too. There was an air of tense expectancy in all the white-painted rooms.
He got the candles out straight after breakfast. He had bought them in a store in Borgholm, despite the fact that you really ought to make your own Christmas candles as people had done in the kitchen at the manor house in days gone by, after the children had plaited the wicks; that made the candles personal. But these factory-made candles were all the same length and burned with an even glow in the windows,
on the tables, and in the circular holders suspended from the light fittings.
Living flames for the dead.
The family ate a light lunch in the kitchen in the middle of the day, when the sun was just above the roof of the outbuilding. It would soon begin to go down again.
After lunch Joakim dressed the children in thick jackets and took them for a walk down to the sea. He glanced at the closed door of the barn as they walked past, but didn’t say anything to the children.
They continued on down to the shore in silence. The fine, feathery cirrus clouds were still hovering above the point, but away on the horizon a storm front had begun to loom like a dark gray curtain.
The ice was thin and frosty white by the shore, but firm and dark blue further out. The children threw pebbles and bits of ice that bounced and slid across the shining surface, meeting no resistance, out toward the black cracks.
“Are you cold?” asked Joakim after a while.
Gabriel’s nose was red, and he nodded gloomily.
“We’d better go home, then,” said Joakim.
It was just past the shortest day of the year-it was only half past two, but the sky was dark blue, like twilight on a late summer evening, as they walked back up to the house. Joakim thought he could feel the breath of the approaching snowfall on the back of his neck.
When they got inside in the warmth, he lit the candles again. In the evening the glow from the house would be seen all the way up to the road, perhaps even as far away as Offermossen, the sacrificial peat bog.
When Livia and Gabriel had fallen asleep that evening and everything was quiet in the house, Joakim put on his padded jacket and left the house with a flashlight in his hand.
He was going to visit the barn. These last few weeks he had rarely managed to stay away for more than a few days at a time.
It was a clear, starry night, and the thin covering of snow in the courtyard had become hard and dry in the cold. The ice crystals crunched beneath his boots.
He stopped by the door of the barn and looked around. Dark shadows surrounded the outbuilding, and it was easy to imagine that somebody was standing over there. A thin woman with a ravaged face, gazing at him with a dark expression…
“Stay away, Ethel,” Joakim muttered to himself as he dragged open the heavy door.
He walked in and listened for the sound of yowling from Rasputin the mouser, but heard nothing.
Tonight Joakim didn’t go over to the steps leading up to the hayloft. He took a walk around the ground floor first, past the empty feeding troughs and stalls where the cows had once stood in a line in the winter, chewing away.
A rusty horseshoe had been nailed to the gable-end wall at the far side of the barn.
Joakim went over to look at it. The ends were pointing upward, presumably so that the luck wouldn’t run out.
The light from the bulbs on the ceiling didn’t quite reach this far, so he switched on his flashlight. When it illuminated the roof beams up above, it occurred to Joakim that he must be directly underneath the hidden room in the loft. Then he lowered the flashlight.
Someone had swept the stone floor. Not everywhere, but in a strip along the walls. There was no dried dung or piles of old hay there.
It could hardly be anyone other than Katrine who had swept in here.
In the right-hand corner on the gable wall, old fishing nets and thick ropes hung from a row of nails. Several of them reached right down to the floor, like a curtain. But behind the curtain, the wall appeared to sink inward.
Joakim took a step forward and shone the flashlight, and the shadow by the wall moved silently away, revealing a low opening down by the floor. Part of the wooden wall was missing, and when Joakim pushed the curtain of ropes and nets smelling of tar to one side, he could see that the stone slabs continued beyond it.
There was some kind of opening by the floor in the gable wall. It only reached up to Joakim’s knees, but was at least six feet wide.
He was driven on by his curiosity, and bent down to try and see what was on the other side of the opening. All he could see was more closely packed earth, and dancing balls of fluff.
In the end he lay down on his belly and started to crawl. He took the flashlight with him, and wriggled under the wooden planks.
He just managed to get under the wall before it came to a stop; there was another wall, made of limestone this time. It was ice cold-it must be the outside wall. The space between was only about three feet wide. When Joakim had brushed aside some curtains of freshly spun cobwebs, he could actually stand up.
In the beam of the flashlight he could see that he was in a narrow space between two walls: the inner wall made of wood that he had crawled under, and the western outer wall of the barn. A couple of yards away an old wooden ladder led straight up into the darkness.
Someone had been here before him. It looked as if someone had been moving around in here, creating walkways in the hundred-year-old dust.
Was it Katrine? After all, Mirja had said she didn’t know anything about a hidden room anywhere at the manor.
The ladder in front of him rose almost vertically into the darkness. Joakim shone his flashlight upward and saw that it led to a square hole. It was pitch black up there, but he didn’t hesitate for a second. He started to climb.
Eventually he perched on the edge of the opening and heaved himself up from the ladder.
He was on a wooden floor. To his left was an unpainted wooden wall. He recognized the wide planks, and knew that he had found the hidden room behind the hayloft.
He stood up and swept the flashlight around in front of him.
In its yellow glow he saw benches-rows of benches.