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“Not a lot,” Wallander said. “I know they happen, that they’re getting more common, and that more organs are being transplanted. For myself, I hope I never have to have one. It must be very strange to have somebody else’s heart in your body.”

“I spoke to a Dr. Strömberg in Lund,” Nyberg said. “He gave me some significant insights. He says there’s a side to transplants that’s murky, to say the least. It’s not just that poor people in the Third World sell their own organs out of desperation to survive—obviously that’s a business with lots of gray areas, from a moral point of view anyway. He also hinted at something much worse.”

Wallander looked questioningly at Nyberg.

“Go on,” he said, “I’ve got time.”

“It was beyond me,” Nyberg said, “but Strömberg persuaded me that there’s no limit to what some people are prepared to do to earn money.”

“Surely you know that already?” Wallander said.

Nyberg sat down on Wallander’s visitor’s chair.

“Like so much else, there’s no proof,” he said, “but Strömberg maintains that there are gangs in South America and Asia who take orders for particular organs, then go out and commit murder to get them.”

Wallander said nothing.

“He said this practice is more widespread than anybody suspects. There are even rumors that it goes on in Eastern Europe and in the U.S. A kidney doesn’t have a face, it doesn’t have an individual identity. Somebody kills a child in South America and extends the life of someone in the West whose parents can afford to pay and don’t want to wait in line. The murderers earn serious money.”

“It can’t be easy to extract an organ,” Wallander said. “That means there must be doctors involved.”

“Who’s to say that doctors are any different from the rest of us when it comes to morals?”

“I find it difficult to believe,” Wallander said.

“I expect everybody does,” Nyberg said. “That’s why the gangs can continue to operate in peace and quiet.”

He took a notebook out of his pocket and thumbed through the pages.

“The doctor gave me the name of a journalist who’s digging into this,” he said. “A woman. Her name’s Lisbeth Norin. She lives in Gothenburg and writes for several popular-science magazines.”

Wallander made a note. “Let’s think an outrageous thought,” he said, looking Nyberg in the eye. “Let’s suppose that Alfred Harderberg goes around killing people and selling their kidneys or whatever on the black market that apparently exists. And let’s suppose that Gustaf Torstensson somehow or other discovered that. And took the cooler with him as proof. Let’s think that outrageous thought.”

Nyberg stared at Wallander, eyebrows raised. “Are you serious?”

“Of course not,” Wallander said. “I’m just posing an outrageous thought.”

Nyberg stood up to leave. “I’ll see if I can trace that container,” he said. “I’ll make that the number-one priority.”

When he had gone Wallander went to the window and thought over what Nyberg had said. He told himself that it really was an outrageous thought. Harderberg was a man who donated money for research. Especially for illnesses affecting children. Wallander also recalled that he had given money to support health care in several African and South American countries.

The cooler in Torstensson’s car must have some other significance, he concluded. Or no significance at all.

Even so, he could not resist calling directory assistance and getting Lisbeth Norin’s number. When he called her, he found himself talking to an answering machine. He left his name and number.

Wallander spent the rest of the day waiting for things to happen. No matter what he did, what he was waiting for—reports from Höglund and Nyberg—was more important. He phoned his father and discovered that the studio had somehow survived the gales. Then he turned his wavering attention to everything he could find about Harderberg. He could not help but be fascinated by the brilliant career that had started inauspiciously in Vimmerby. Wallander appreciated that Harderberg’s commercial genius had manifested very early on. At nine he had sold Christmas cards. He had also used his savings to buy previous years’ leftovers. These he had snapped up for next to nothing. The boy had sold cards for a number of years, adjusting his prices to whatever the market would stand. Clearly, Harderberg had always been a trader. He bought and sold what other people made. He created nothing himself, but he bought cheap and sold less cheap. He discovered value where nobody else had found it. At fourteen he had recognized that there was a demand for antique cars. He got on his bike, bicycled around the Vimmerby area, poked his nose into sheds and backyards, and bought up any junked vehicle he thought he might be able to sell. Very often he got them for nothing, as people were too high-minded to think that they should exploit an inexperienced young boy who bicycled around the country districts and seemed to be interested in old wrecks. All the while he had saved the money he did not need to plow back into the business. To celebrate his seventeenth birthday, he had traveled to Stockholm. He had been accompanied by an older friend from a village near Vimmerby, an amazing ventriloquist. Harderberg paid all their expenses, and appointed himself the ventriloquist’s manager. It seemed that Harderberg had established himself early on as an efficient and unfailingly smiling aide who could further the careers of the up-and-coming. Wallander read several reports about Harderberg and the ventriloquist. They were often featured in Picture Parade, a magazine Wallander thought he could remember; and the articles kept referring to how well bred, how well dressed, and how capable of a friendly smile the young manager was. There were photographs of the ventriloquist, but not—even then—of his manager. It seemed he had shed his Småland dialect and adopted the way Stockholmers spoke. He paid for lessons from a speech therapist. After a while the ventriloquist was sent back to Vimmerby and anonymity, and Harderberg turned to new commercial projects. By the end of the 1960s his tax returns showed him to be a millionaire, but his big breakthrough came in the mid-1970s. He had spent time in Zimbabwe, or Southern Rhodesia as it was called then, and made some profitable investments in copper and gold mines together with a businessman called Tiny Rowland. Wallander assumed that this was when he had acquired the tea plantation.

At the beginning of the 1980s Harderberg was married to a Brazilian woman, Carmen Dulce da Silva, but they divorced without having any children. All the time Harderberg had remained as invisible as possible. He never put in an appearance when the hospitals he had helped finance opened, nor did he ever send anybody to represent him. But he did write letters and telex messages in which he was modesty itself, expressing his thanks for all the kindness that had been extended to him. He was never present at the ceremony when he was awarded an honorary doctorate.

His life is one long absence, Wallander thought. Until out of the blue he turned up in Skåne and installed himself behind the walls of Farnholm Castle, nobody had any idea where he was. He was constantly moving from one house to another, being driven in curtained cars, and from the early 1980s on he owned a jet.

But there were a few exceptions. One of them seemed to be more surprising and even stranger than the rest. According to something Mrs. Dunér had said in a conversation with Höglund, Harderberg and Gustaf Torstensson had met for the first time over lunch at the Continental Hotel in Ystad. Torstensson had described Harderberg afterward as likable, suntanned, and strikingly well dressed.

Why had he chosen to meet Torstensson at a restaurant so openly? Wallander wondered. Well-known journalists specializing in international commerce have to wait for years before getting a glimpse of the man. Could that be significant? Does he sometimes change tack to create even more confusion? Uncertainty can be a hiding place, Wallander thought. The world is allowed to know he exists, but never where he is.