Åke Edwardson - Never End

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Never End: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Where SUN AND SHADOW took place in the cold of winter, NEVER END takes the seasonally diametrically opposite milieu of a summer heatwave, making the book perfect beach holiday reading. The inappropriately named Chief Inspector Erik Winter is called in to investigate an attack on a teenage girl returning home after enjoying the weather at the local beauty spot. The girl seems reluctant to reveal much about her ordeal, only reporting it to the police after destroying vital evidence.
After a second, more serious attack, Winter realises the crimes are similar to an unsolved case from years ago in which a girl was killed, which has always haunted him. He has kept in touch with the parents of the girl over the years, so he enlists their support in the new cases. He remains frustrated, however, at the lack of progress and the strange reluctance of the victims, their families and friends from assisting to find the perpetrator(s).
The book also covers domestic events in the lives of the investigating police. Winter and his girlfriend Anna have had their baby, Elsa. The relationship of this trio provides part of the background to events, as Winter's devotion to his job gradually erodes the rather fragile trust between him and Anna (who has not quite forgiven him for his behaviour in the previous book) and leads him to question his commitment to his young family. This commitment is pretty serious, because Winter is about to take a year's parental leave (this being Sweden) to look after Elsa. How he will adjust to this radical change of pace will be an interesting topic for a future book.
Winter's colleague Fredrick Halders suffers a personal tragedy when his ex-wife is killed in a freak road accident. The accounts of Halders' attempts to cope with this disaster and connect with his young children are one of the best parts of this book, ably translated by the ever-dependable Laurie Thompson.
The middle part of the narrative drags somewhat, as the investigators are stuck for leads and resort to re-interviewing everyone and rehashing the events surrounding the crimes many times. Eventually, by sheer persistence, some clues are uncovered (one challenge is to identify an indoor brick wall that features in a photograph of one of the girls) and eventually Winter gets his criminal – after a rather cliched "policeman in peril" climax featuring the bereaved Halders.
Despite its longeurs and lack of real tension, I enjoyed this book and very much look forward to the next outing for Winter – will it be autumn or spring next time? – but I do hope the next episode will be slightly more tautly written.

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"He was in the same building as you, at the same time."

"That's impossible, as I was at home in bed then. How could he be?"

"One of our police officers saw you go in through the door of the house in question."

"That's a lie because I've never been there. I don't even know where it is, and I still won't know no matter how long you keep asking me about it."

"Why are you telling lies?" Winter asked.

"Why are you telling lies?" Bielke was calm, but wasn't displaying the prickly arrogance often seen in the likes of him. A polished sociopath, Winter thought.

He suddenly felt very weary, much more weary than when he'd lain down on that far too soft bed. Helander had never seen Bielke before. It could be a mistake. It happens, and it's not good, but we're all human. What's Bielke?

He thought about Molina, the prosecutor. They had to have more evidence if they wanted to keep Bielke in custody. Five hours to go. Custody or freedom, temporary freedom for the man from Längedrag. He wanted Bielke kept inside. That would give them room to maneuver until the court made a decision about detaining him. He wanted Molina to agree that they had adequate grounds for pointing the finger at Bielke. And he wanted the adequate to grow into probable. But precisely what was Bielke suspected of doing? Involvement in the abduction of Fredrik Halders? The murder of three young women? The rape of his own daughter? What Winter had seen of Bielke didn't exclude any of those possibilities. Bielke is a key to something vital. I can't make any mistakes now.

He needed a witness. A piece of evidence. A link. Bielke would deny everything. He had the strength.

Winter thought about Halders again. Halders's head that was as well trimmed and sharply outlined and hard as the rocks at Saltholmen where people were sunbathing at this very moment.

The first thing they'd done was look for Samic, and Samic wasn't there. Not at his dance restaurant, not at home, not with people they knew he was acquainted with. I'm not really surprised, Ringmar had said. He's wherever Halders is, Bergenhem had suggested. Did he mean in the realm of the dead? Winter hadn't responded, merely continued searching in the morning light, gazing out over the glittering streets of Gothenburg.

***

Bergenhem went to Bielke's house with his colleagues Johan Setter and Sara Helander. I'm everywhere, she thought. Maybe it will be better here. She didn't want to sleep, not before they'd found Fredrik.

Bielke's wife said nothing, but stayed in her room.

"We won't go in there right now," Bergenhem said.

"Where do we go, then?" asked Setter.

"Where's the girl?" Helander said.

"Out for a morning swim," said Bergenhem.

"We can start with her room then," said Setter.

"We've already been through there," said Bergenhem. "Pretty thoroughly."

"That was then," said Setter.

"Does she know?" Helander asked.

"Know what?" Bergenhem turned to look at her.

"Exactly why her father was taken in at dawn?"

"Do we?"

***

The house is smaller than it looked from the outside, she thought. Several windows were partly open, letting in the smell of sea salt and stone, dust that had dried, grass that had burned in the sun. There was dust in the air inside the house, like a mist.

"I'll go out to the garage," said Bergenhem.

Everything in there was hanging in neat rows or packed in boxes. Bielke owned everything the owner of an oldish house needed.

There were two cars in the double garage.

Bielke had gone to the house on foot. Helander hadn't seen a car. It could have been in the garage all the time. They would soon know.

Bergenhem went from box to box. It had to be done. Routine work produced results. The most unlikely things, such as a suspect hiding something compromising in an… ordinary place at home, were often not only likely but true. A revolver replaced in its rack next to the elk's head. A knife hung alongside all the others on their magnetic strip. A dog leash over a chair in the hall, as usual. A lamb chop put back in the freezer. A blunt instrument.

Dog leash. The Bielkes didn't have a dog. It would be excellent if we could find a dog leash or something else that could be used for throttling a victim.

He stood next to the smaller car, a compact station wagon, and tried the front door on the driver's side. It wasn't locked. The keys were in the ignition. Locking the garage door was good enough.

He'd soon have to decide when they should call in the professional vacuum cleaners from Beier's unit.

Bergenhem opened the car door, wearing his white gloves, and quickly searched the glove compartment, the floor, and the seats. Paper, crumbs, dust, a road atlas of Europe. A piece of dried chewing gum in the ashtray. No smell of tobacco.

He took the keys and opened the trunk. A collapsible chair, a blanket that seemed to be scrunched together rather than folded, a wicker basket, a pair of working gloves stained with oil, a few old newspapers that were starting to turn yellow, a beer crate with no bottles, a single slipper split at the toe. Chewed by a dog, Bergenhem thought.

He pushed the objects carefully to one side and opened the compartment in the floor of the luggage space. He could see an unused spare tire, a case with a jack, a case containing several screwdrivers. Nothing else. He shut the lid.

He was about to close the tailgate when he noticed the faint outline of another compartment to the left, not much more than a shadow on the side of the luggage space. It had a little symbol on it. He pulled at it, but it didn't open. He pulled harder, and it came loose with a sighing noise. Inside was a place for the folded warning triangle and for a flat first-aid box. He took both objects out. Nothing else there. He put his hand inside and felt something in the back, to the right, something hard. He took it out and knew what it was even before he saw it.

The camera was dusty but quite new, small and compact and easy to use. What the experts call an idiot camera, he thought.

There was film in it, partially exposed.

A secret place for keeping a camera. Next to the warning triangle. Look out, Lars. There's a warning here.

He heard something behind him.

"What's going on?"

Bergenhem turned around and saw the girl standing there with her bicycle. Shorts, T-shirt, sandals, tanned, pretty, sunglasses pushed up onto her forehead, basket with a bath towel and a bottle of mineral water.

"Are you from the press?" she asked.

Bergenhem glanced at the camera in his hand.

"The police," he said. He'd never met her before. He went up to her and introduced himself: "Lars Bergenhem, CID."

"Why don't you guys move in?" she said.

It's better that your dad moves in with us, he thought. She seems surprisingly calm.

"What are you doing with my father?"

"We have a few questions we want to ask him," he said.

"It's always just a few questions," she said.

"Is this yours?" he asked, holding up the camera.

"No."

"Your dad's?"

"Where was it?"

"In this car. The Opel."

"That's Mom's shopping cart, you might say."

Bergenhem nodded.

"I don't recognize that camera, though," she said. "I have a similar one, but it's in my room. Or was earlier this morning, at least."

***

It was impossible to get any sense out of Bielke. Questions and counterquestions. Winter had taken a break and tried to get something more out of Andy, Anne Nöjd's friend, who came to the station when they asked him to.

He knew nothing more. Winter was as convinced of that as he could be. Andy had been totally overcome by grief and seemed catatonic.

Then Bergenhem called.

"The family here doesn't recognize it," he said. "The girl still has her own, and there's another one in the kitchen that they say belongs to the family, as it were."

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