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“Her name is Baiba,” said Wallander.
He promised he’d come by and visit.
After Ann-Britt left he worked on the file for a good hour. Twice he called the police in Goteborg, trying without success to reach a detective who was working on the same investigation. At 5.45 p.m. he decided to go out to eat. He pinched his stomach and noted that he was still losing weight. Baiba had complained that he was too fat. After that, he had no problem eating less. He had even squeezed into a tracksuit a few times and gone jogging, boring though he found it.
He put on his jacket. He would write to Baiba that evening. The telephone rang just as he was about to leave the office. For a moment he wondered whether to let it ring. But he went back to his desk and picked up the receiver.
It was Martinsson.
“Nice speech you made,” said Martinsson. “Bjork seemed genuinely moved.”
“You said that already,” said Wallander. “What is it? I’m on my way home.”
“I just got a call that was a little odd,” said Martinsson. “I thought I ought to check with you.”
Wallander waited impatiently for him to go on.
“It was a farmer calling from out near Marsvinsholm. He claimed that there was a woman acting strangely in his rape field.”
“Is that all?”
“Yes.”
“A woman acting strangely out in a rape field? What was she doing?”
“If I understood him correctly, she wasn’t doing anything. The peculiar thing was that she was out in the field.”
Wallander thought for a moment before he replied.
“Send out a squad car. It sounds like something for them.”
“The problem is that all the units seem to be busy right now. There were two car accidents almost simultaneously. One by the road into Svarte, the other outside the Hotel Continental.”
“Serious?”
“No major injuries. But there seems to be quite a mess.”
“They can drive out to Marsvinsholm when they have time, can’t they?”
“That farmer seemed pretty upset. I can’t quite explain it. If I didn’t have to pick up my children, I’d go myself.”
“All right, I can do it,” said Wallander. “I’ll meet you in the hall and get the name and directions.”
A few minutes later Wallander drove off from the station. He turned left at the roundabout and took the road towards Malmo. On the seat next to him was a note Martinsson had written. The farmer’s name was Salomonsson, and Wallander knew the road to take. When he got out onto the E65 he rolled down the window. The yellow rape fields stretched out on both sides of the road. He couldn’t remember the last time he had felt as good as he did now. He stuck in a cassette of The Marriage of Figaro with Barbara Hendricks singing Susanna, and he thought about meeting Baiba in Copenhagen. When he reached the side road to Marsvinsholm he turned left, past the castle and the castle church, and turned left again. He glanced at Martinsson’s directions and swung onto a narrow road that led across the fields. In the distance he caught a glimpse of the sea.
Salomonsson’s house was an old, well-preserved Skane farmhouse. Wallander got out of the car and looked around. Everywhere he looked were yellow rape fields. The man standing on the front steps was very old. He had a pair of binoculars in his hand. Wallander thought that he must have been imagining the whole thing. All too often, lonely old people out in the country let their imaginations run riot. He walked over to the steps and nodded.
“Kurt Wallander from the Ystad police,” he said.
The man on the steps was unshaven and his feet were stuck into a pair of worn clogs.
“Edvin Salomonsson,” said the man, stretching out a skinny hand.
“Tell me what happened,” said Wallander.
The man pointed out at the rape field that lay to the right of the house. “I discovered her this morning,” he began. “I get up early. She was already there at five. At first I thought it was a deer. Then I looked through the binoculars and saw that it was a woman.”
“What was she doing?” asked Wallander.
“She was standing there.”
“That’s all?”
“She was standing and staring.”
“Staring at what?”
“How should I know?”
Wallander sighed. Probably the old man had seen a deer. Then his imagination had taken over.
“Do you know who she is?” he asked.
“I’ve never seen her before,” replied the man. “If I knew who she was, why would I call the police?”
“You saw her the first time early this morning,” he went on, “but you didn’t call the police until late this afternoon?”
“I wouldn’t want to put you out for no reason,” the man answered simply. “I assume the police have plenty to do.”
“You saw her through your binoculars,” said Wallander. “She was out in the field and you had never seen her before. What did you do?”
“I got dressed and went out to tell her to leave. She was trampling down the rape.”
“Then what happened?”
“She ran.”
“Ran?”
“She hid in the field. Crouched down so I couldn’t see her. First I thought she was gone. Then I discovered her again through the binoculars. It happened over and over. Finally I got tired of it and called you.”
“When did you see her last?”
“Just before I called.”
“What was she doing then?”
“Standing there staring.”
Wallander glanced out at the field. All he could see was the billowing rape.
“The officer you spoke with said that you seemed uneasy,” said Wallander.
“Well, what’s somebody doing standing in a rape field? There’s got to be something odd about that.”
Wallander decided he ought to end the conversation as rapidly as possible. It was clear to him now that the old man had imagined the whole thing. He would contact social services the next day.
“There’s not really much I can do,” said Wallander. “She’s probably gone by now. And in that case, there’s nothing to worry about.”
“She’s not gone at all,” said Salomonsson. “I can see her right now.”
Wallander spun around. He followed Salomonsson’s pointing finger.
The woman was about 50 metres out in the rape field. Wallander could see that her hair was very dark. It stood out sharply against the yellow crop.
“I’ll go and talk to her,” said Wallander. “Wait here.”
He took a pair of boots from his car, and put them on. Then he walked towards the field, feeling as though he were caught in something surreal. The woman was standing completely still, watching him. When he got closer he saw that not only did she have long black hair, but her skin was dark too. He stopped when he reached the edge of the crop. He raised one hand and tried to wave her over. She continued to stand motionless. Even though she was still quite far from him and the billowing rape hid her face every so often, he had the impression that she was rather beautiful. He shouted to her to come towards him. When she still didn’t move he took a step into the field. At once she vanished. It happened so fast that she seemed like a frightened animal. He could feel himself getting angry. He went on walking out into the field, looking in every direction. When he caught sight of her again she had moved to the eastern corner of the field. So that she wouldn’t get away, he started running. She moved swiftly, and Wallander was soon out of breath. When he got as close as 20 metres or so from her, they were out in the middle of the field. He shouted to her.
“Police!” he yelled. “Stop where you are!”
He started walking towards her. Then he pulled up short. Everything happened very fast. She raised a plastic container over her head and started pouring a colourless liquid over her hair, her face, and her body. He thought fleetingly that she must have been carrying it the whole time. He could see that she was terrified. Her eyes were wide open a
nd she was staring straight at him.
“Police!” he shouted again. “I just want to talk to you.”
At the same moment a smell of petrol wafted towards him. Suddenly she had a flickering cigarette lighter in one hand, which she touched to her hair. Wallander cried out as she burst into flame. Paralysed, he watched her lurch around the field as the fire sizzled and blazed over her body. Wallander could hear himself screaming. But the woman on fire was silent. Afterwards he couldn’t remember hearing her scream at all.
When he tried to run up to her the field exploded in flames. He was suddenly surrounded by smoke and fire. He held his hands in front of his face and ran, without knowing which direction he was heading. When he reached the edge of the field he tripped and tumbled into the ditch. He turned around and saw her one last time before she fell over and disappeared from his sight. She was holding her arms up as if appealing for mercy. The entire field was aflame.
Somewhere behind him he could hear Salomonsson wailing. Wallander got to his feet. His legs were shaking. Then he turned away and threw up.
CHAPTER 3
Afterwards Wallander would remember the burning girl in the rape field the way you remember, with the greatest reluctance, a distant nightmare sooner forgotten. If he appeared to maintain at least an outward sense of calm for the rest of that evening and far into the night, later he could recall nothing but trivial details. Martinsson, Hansson and especially Ann-Britt Hoglund had been astonished by his calm. But they couldn’t see through the shield he had set up to protect himself. Inside him there was devastation, like a house that had collapsed.
He got back to his flat just after 2 a.m. Only then, when he sat down on his sofa, still in his filthy clothes and muddy boots, did the shield crumble. He poured himself a glass of whisky. The doors of his balcony stood open and let in the balmy night, and he cried like a baby.
The girl had been a child. She reminded him of his own daughter Linda. During his years as a policeman he had learned to be prepared for whatever might await him when he arrived at a place where someone had met a violent or sudden death. He had seen people who had hanged themselves, stuck a shotgun in their mouth, or blown themselves to bits. Somehow he had learned to endure what he saw and push it aside. But he couldn’t when there were children or young people involved. Then he was as vulnerable as when he was first a policeman. He knew that many of his colleagues reacted the same way. When children or young people died violently, for no reason, the defences erected out of habit collapsed. And that’s how it would be for Wallander as long as he continued working as a policeman.
He had completed the initial phase of the investigation in an exemplary manner. With traces of vomit still clinging to his mouth he had run up to Salomonsson, who was watching his crop burn with astonishment, and asked where the telephone was. Since Salomonsson didn’t seem to understand the question, maybe didn’t even hear it, he dashed past him into the house. He was assailed by the acrid smell of the unwashed old man. In the hall he found the telephone. He dialled 90-000, and the operator said later that Wallander had sounded quite calm when he described what had happened and asked for a full team to be sent out.
The flames from the field were shining through the windows like floodlights lighting up the summer evening. He called Martinsson at home, talking first with his daughter and then his wife before Martinsson was called in from the back yard. As succinctly as possible he described what had happened and asked Martinsson to call Hansson and Hoglund too. Then he went out to the kitchen and washed his face under the tap. When he came back outside, Salomonsson was still rooted to the same spot, as if mesmerised. A car arrived with some of his closest neighbours in it. But Wallander shouted to them to stay back, not allowing them to approach Salomonsson. In the distance he heard sirens from the fire engines, which almost always arrived first. Soon afterwards, two squad cars of uniformed officers and an ambulance arrived. Peter Edler was directing the firefighting, a man in whom Wallander had total confidence.
“What’s going on?” he asked.
“I’ll explain later,” said Wallander. “But don’t stamp around in the field. There’s a body out there.”
“The house isn’t threatened,” said Edler. “We’ll work on containing the fire.”
Edler turned to Salomonsson and asked how wide the tractor paths and the ditches between the fields were. One of the ambulance crew came over. Wallander had met him before but couldn’t remember his name.
“Is anyone hurt?” he asked.
Wallander shook his head.
“One person dead,” he replied. “She’s lying out in the field.”
“Then we’ll need a hearse,” said the ambulance driver. “What happened?”
Wallander didn’t feel like answering. Instead he turned to Noren, who was the officer he knew best.
“There’s a dead woman in the field,” he said. “Until the fire is put out we can’t do anything but block it off.”
Noren nodded.
“Was it an accident?” he asked.
“More like a suicide,” said Wallander.
A few minutes later, as Martinsson arrived, Noren handed him a paper cup of coffee. He stared at his hand and wondered why it wasn’t shaking. Hansson and Ann-Britt Hoglund arrived in Hansson’s car, and he told his colleagues what had happened.
Again and again he used the same phrase: She burned like a flare.
“This is just terrible,” said Hoglund.
“It was worse than you can imagine,” said Wallander. “Not to be able to do anything. I hope none of you ever has to experience anything like this.”
Silently they watched the firefighters work. A large group of bystanders had gathered, but the police kept them back.
“What did she look like?” asked Martinsson. “Did you see her?”
Wallander nodded.
“Someone ought to talk to the old man,” he said. “His name is Salomonsson.”
Hansson took Salomonsson into his kitchen. Hoglund went over and talked to Peter Edler. The fire had begun to die down. When she returned she told them it would be all over shortly.
“Rape burns fast,” she said. “And the field is wet. It rained yesterday.”
“She was young,” said Wallander, “with black hair and dark skin. She was dressed in a yellow windcheater. I think she had jeans on. I don’t know about her feet. And she was frightened.”
“What of?” asked Martinsson.
Wallander thought a moment.
“She was frightened of me,” he replied. “I’m not absolutely sure, but I think she was even more terrified when I called out that I was a policeman and told her to stop. But beyond that, I have no idea.”
“She understood everything you said?”
“She understood the word ‘police’ at least. I’m certain of that.”
All that remained of the fire was a thick pall of smoke.
“There was no-one else out there in the field?” asked Hoglund. “You’re sure she was alone?”
“No,” said Wallander. “I’m not sure at all. But I didn’t see anyone but her.”
They stood in silence. Who was she? Wallander asked himself. Where did she come from? Why did she set herself on fire? If she wanted to die, why did she choose to torture herself?
Hansson came back from the house, where he had been talking with Salomonsson.
“We should do what they do in the States,” he said. “We should have menthol to smear under our noses. Damn, the smell in there. Old men shouldn’t be allowed to outlive their wives.”
“Get one of the ambulance crew to ask him how he’s feeling,” said Wallander. “He must be suffering from shock.”
Martinsson went to deliver the message. Peter Edler took off his helmet and stood next to Wallander.
“It’s nearly out,” he said. “But I’ll leave a truck here tonight.”
“When can we go out in the field?” asked Wallander.
“Within an hour. The smoke will hang around for
a while yet. But the field has already started to cool off.”
Wallander took Peter Edler aside.
“What am I going to see?” he asked. “She poured a five-litre container of petrol over herself. And the way everything exploded around her, she must have already poured more on the ground.”
“It won’t be pretty,” Edler replied candidly. “There won’t be a lot left.”
Wallander said nothing. He turned to Hansson.
“No matter how we look at it, we know that it was suicide,” said Hansson. “We have the best witness we can get: a policeman.”
“What did Salomonsson say?”
“That he’d never seen her before she appeared at 5 a.m. this morning. There’s no reason to think he’s not telling the truth.”
“So we don’t know who she is,” said Wallander, “and we don’t know what she was running from either.”
Hansson looked at him in surprise.
“Why should she be running from something?” he asked.
“She was frightened,” said Wallander. “She was hiding. And when a policeman arrived she set herself on fire.”
“We don’t know what she was thinking,” said Hansson. “You may be imagining that she was frightened.”
“No,” said Wallander. “I’ve seen enough fear in my time to know what it looks like.”
One of the ambulance crew came walking towards them.
“We’re taking the old boy with us to the hospital,” he said. “He looks in pretty bad shape.”
Wallander nodded.
Soon the forensic team arrived. Wallander tried to point out where in the smoke the body might be located.
“Maybe you should go home,” said Hoglund. “You’ve seen enough this evening.”
“No,” said Wallander. “I’ll stay.”
Eventually the smoke had cleared, and Peter Edler said they could start their examination. Even though the summer evening was still light, Wallander had ordered floodlights to be brought in.
“There might be something out there apart from a body,” said Wallander. “Watch your step, and everyone who doesn’t have work to do out there should stay back.”