"But you must be able to say whether it was 9:00 p.m. or 3:00 a.m.," said Knutas impatiently.
He was starting to be genuinely annoyed, and he wondered what a married father of four was doing out on the town alone on a Saturday night. Why wasn't he home with his family if he hadn't planned to meet someone?
"I guess it was almost three."
"What's your marriage like?" asked Knutas.
Mellgren was slow to answer. His jaw visibly tightened.
"You'll have to excuse the question, but I need to ask it," Knutas went on as he stared back at the man.
"Things are fine between Susanna and me. Did she tell you otherwise?"
Knutas raised his hand in protest. "Absolutely not. I was just wondering."
The room in which the press conference was going to be held was buzzing with life. The reporters were taking seats in the rows of chairs, and microphones were being set up on the podium at the front of the room. Up until now the police had declined to issue any statement, so everyone was very curious about what they were going to hear about the murder of the young archaeology student.
The murmuring automatically stopped when Anders Knutas and Lars Norrby took their places up front.
"Welcome to the press conference," Knutas began. "The young woman who has been missing since Saturday, Martina Flochten, who was born in 1983, has been found dead outside of Vivesholm. That's just outside of Klintehamn, approximately nineteen miles south of Visby on the west coast. There is no doubt whatsoever that she was murdered."
He glanced down at his notes.
"The body was found at 5:45 a.m. by an individual who was out walking in the area. Many of you already know that Martina was born and raised in the Netherlands, but her mother was from Hemse here on Gotland. The mother died three years ago. Martina has lived in the Netherlands all her life. She came here in early June to take part in a course on archaeological excavation that is offered by the college. She had been on Gotland for a month before she disappeared on the night that a concert was held at Warfsholm. July third. We'll now take questions."
"Can you tell us anything about how she was murdered?"
"No."
"Why not?"
"Because the investigation is ongoing."
"Was some sort of weapon used?"
"Yes, but I don't intend to say anything more on the subject."
"Was she sexually assaulted?"
"We won't know until an autopsy is performed on the body."
"When will that happen?"
"The body was examined by the ME at the site this afternoon. Tonight it will be transported to the forensic medicine lab in Solna. The autopsy will be done in the next few days."
"Do you know how long she's been dead?"
"Not yet. The autopsy report will tell us that."
"Surely you must be able to say something about how long she'd been dead when she was found. Was it a matter of an hour? Or had she been dead since she disappeared?"
"This much I can tell you: It was most likely that she'd been dead at least twenty-four hours."
"Is it a question of one killer, or were there more?"
"We don't know at the present moment."
"So there could have been more than one?"
"That's possible."
"Do you have any suspects?"
"Not at the moment, no."
"Are there any witnesses?"
"We've been knocking on doors all day, and we're compiling statements from everyone in the area who might have seen something."
"Martina Flochten was half Swedish, and her mother was from Gotland. Is that significant?"
"Of course we're working on a broad front and will follow up on all possible leads."
"Does she have any relatives here on Gotland?"
"No. Her only relatives here were her maternal grandparents, and they've been dead for years."
"Has the area out there been cordoned off?"
"The wooded area where the body was found has been cordoned off."
"For how long?"
"Until the technical work is completed."
"How much contact did she have with Gotland?"
"She used to come here once a year on vacation."
"What could be a possible motive for the murder?"
"It's much too early to speculate about a motive," snapped Knutas.
"Was Martina Flochten known to the Dutch or Swedish police?"
"No, not as far as we know."
"She'd been missing for several days-why wasn't Vivesholm searched by the police earlier? It's so close to Warfsholm, after all."
"We didn't see any reason to do so. The police have to work on one area at a time, so we start with the location where the individual was last seen, and then we gradually expand our efforts from there."
"Was there any evidence left by the murderer?"
"A perpetrator always leaves evidence. I can't discuss what it might be, since the investigation is ongoing."
"What are the police going to do now?"
"As I said, we're working hard to interview people and take their statements. The police would like to appeal to the public for any tips, both from those who were at the Warfsholm hotel on the evening when the Eldkvarn concert took place, and from others who may have seen Martina with someone who could be of interest to the investigation. It's especially important at this early stage."
Knutas stood up to indicate that the press conference was over. He ignored the flood of questions directed at him. Various journalists began taking him aside for separate interviews.
An hour later the whole spectacle was finally over, and he could escape to his office. In all his years as a police officer he had always found it trying to deal with the press whenever major events occurred. It was a balancing act, trying to tell reporters enough without giving away too many details that might harm the investigation.
When Knutas was back in his office, the ME called. He had finished examining the body at the site.
"I must say that I've never seen anything like this before. We're dealing with a truly deviant killer."
"We've already realized that."
"I've done a preliminary examination, and I don't want to draw any definite conclusions, but there are a number of things that I can tell you."
"Let's hear it."
"I would say that she's been dead for at least three or four days."
"So it's possible that she was killed on the same night that she disappeared?"
"That might very well be. She was subjected to several types of violence, and I won't be completely sure of the cause of death until after the autopsy. Judging by the look of the injuries, I would guess that she was not killed by the knife wound in her abdomen."
"Sohlman suspected as much."
"On the other hand, there are signs that she may have died from drowning."
"Is that right?"
"I've found residue of a certain type of foam. When the victim drowns, foam gets whipped up in the windpipe and lungs. It gathers around the mouth and looks a bit like egg whites that have been whipped and then hardened. In addition, she has traces of seaweed and sand in her hair, as well as under her fingernails, which indicates that the killer may have pushed her head underwater somewhere along the shore. When she struggled, she buried her fingernails in the sea floor-that's where the seaweed and sand came from. She also has hand and fingernail marks on the back of her neck and on her upper arms. I've found sand and sludge from the sea floor in her mouth. And there are tiny specks of blood in her eyes, which she could have gotten from fighting back or from lack of oxygen. As I said, I don't want to be more specific about the cause of death right now, but judging by appearances, she was dead before she was hanged from that noose. The most probable scenario is that he first drowned her by holding her head underwater. In all likelihood she was drowned somewhere else. Her body was then transported out to Vivesholm."
"Why do you think she was killed somewhere else?"