Chapter One
A Friday in November
It happened every year, was almost a ritual. And this was his
eighty-second birthday. When, as usual, the flower was delivered, he
took off the wrapping paper and then picked up the telephone to call
Detective Superintendent Morell who, when he retired, had moved to Lake
Siljan in Dalarna. They were not only the same age, they had been born
on the same day–which was something of an irony under the
circumstances. The old policeman was sitting with his coffee, waiting,
expecting the call.
“It arrived.”
“What is it this year?”
“I don’t know what kind it is. I’ll have to get
someone to tell me what it is. It’s white.”
“No letter, I suppose.”
“Just the flower. The frame is the same kind as last year. One of
those do-it-yourself ones.”
“Postmark?”
“Stockholm.”
“Handwriting?”
“Same as always, all in capitals. Upright, neat lettering.”
With that, the subject was exhausted, and not another word was exchanged
for almost a minute. The retired policeman leaned back in his kitchen
chair and drew on his pipe. He knew he was no longer expected to come up
with a pithy comment or any sharp question which would shed a new light
on the case. Those days had long since passed, and the exchange between
the two men seemed like a ritual attaching to a mystery which no-one
else in the whole world had the least interest in unravelling.
The Latin name was
Leptospermum (Myrtaceae) rubinette. It was a
plant about ten centimetres high with small, heather-like foliage and a
white flower with five petals about two centimetres across.
The plant was native to the Australian bush and uplands, where it was to
be found among tussocks of grass. There it was called Desert Snow.
Someone at the botanical gardens in Uppsala would later confirm that it
was a plant seldom cultivated in Sweden. The botanist wrote in her
report that it was related to the tea tree and that it was sometimes
confused with its more common cousin
Leptospermum scoparium,
which grew in abundance in New Zealand. What distinguished them, she
pointed out, was that
rubinette had a small number of microscopic
pink dots at the tips of the petals, giving the flower a faint pinkish
tinge.
Rubinette was altogether an unpretentious flower. It had no known
medicinal properties, and it could not induce hallucinatory experiences.
It was neither edible, nor had a use in the manufacture of plant dyes.
On the other hand, the aboriginal people of Australia regarded as sacred
the region and the flora around Ayers Rock.
The botanist said that she herself had never seen one before, but after
consulting her colleagues she was to report that attempts had been made
to introduce the plant at a nursery in Göteborg, and that it might,
of course, be cultivated by amateur botanists. It was difficult to grow
in Sweden because it thrived in a dry climate and had to remain indoors
half of the year. It would not thrive in calcareous soil and it had to
be watered from below. It needed pampering.
The fact of its being so rare a flower ought to have made it easier to
trace the source of this particular specimen, but in practice it was an
impossible task. There was no registry to look it up in, no licences to
explore. Anywhere from a handful to a few hundred enthusiasts could have
had access to seeds or plants. And those could have changed hands
between friends or been bought by mail order from anywhere in Europe,
anywhere in the Antipodes.
But it was only one in the series of mystifying flowers that each year
arrived by post on the first day of November. They were always beautiful
and for the most part rare flowers, always pressed, mounted on
watercolour paper in a simple frame measuring 15cm by 28cm.
The strange story of the flowers had never been reported in the press;
only a very few people knew of it. Thirty years ago the regular arrival
of the flower was the object of much scrutiny–at the National
Forensic Laboratory, among fingerprint experts, graphologists, criminal
investigators, and one or two relatives and friends of the recipient.
Now the actors in the drama were but three: the elderly birthday boy,
the retired police detective, and the person who had posted the flower.
The first two at least had reached such an age that the group of
interested parties would soon be further diminished.
The policeman was a hardened veteran. He would never forget his first
case, in which he had had to take into custody a violent and appallingly
drunk worker at an electrical substation before he caused others harm.
During his career he had brought in poachers, wife beaters, con men, car
thieves, and drunk drivers. He had dealt with burglars, drug dealers,
rapists, and one deranged bomber. He had been involved in nine murder or
manslaughter cases. In five of these the murderer had called the police
himself and, full of remorse, confessed to having killed his wife or
brother or some other relative. Two others were solved within a few
days. Another required the assistance of the National Criminal Police
and took two years.
The ninth case was solved to the police’s satisfaction, which is
to say that they knew who the murderer was, but because the evidence was
so insubstantial the public prosecutor decided not to proceed with the
case. To the detective superintendent’s dismay, the statute of
limitations eventually put an end to the matter. But all in all he could
look back on an impressive career.
He was anything but pleased.
For the detective, the “Case of the Pressed Flowers” had
been nagging at him for years–his last, unsolved and frustrating
case. The situation was doubly absurd because after spending literally
thousands of hours brooding, on duty and off, he could not say beyond
doubt that a crime had indeed been committed.
The two men knew that whoever had mounted the flowers would have worn
gloves, that there would be no fingerprints on the frame or the glass.
The frame could have been bought in camera shops or stationery stores
the world over. There was, quite simply, no lead to follow. Most often
the parcel was posted in Stockholm, but three times from London, twice
from Paris, twice from Copenhagen, once from Madrid, once from Bonn, and
once from Pensacola, Florida. The detective superintendent had had to
look it up in an atlas.
After putting down the telephone the eighty-two-year-old birthday boy
sat for a long time looking at the pretty but meaningless flower whose
name he did not yet know. Then he looked up at the wall above his desk.
There hung forty-three pressed flowers in their frames. Four rows of
ten, and one at the bottom with four. In the top row one was missing
from the ninth slot. Desert Snow would be number forty-four.
Without warning he began to weep. He surprised himself with this sudden
burst of emotion after almost forty years.
Friday, December 20
The trial was irretrievably over; everything that could be said had been
said, but he had never doubted that he would lose. The written verdict
was handed down at 10:00 on Friday morning, and all that remained was a
summing up from the reporters waiting in the corridor outside the
district court.
Carl Mikael Blomkvist saw them through the doorway and slowed his step.
He had no wish to discuss the verdict, but questions were unavoidable,
and he—of all people—knew that they had to be asked and
answered.
This is how it is to be a criminal, he thought.
On
the other side of the microphone. He straightened up and tried to
smile. The reporters gave him friendly, almost embarrassed greetings.
"Let's see . . .
Aftonbladet, Expressen, TT wire service,
TV4, and . . . where are you from? . . . ah yes,
Dagens Nyheter.
I must be a celebrity," Blomkvist said.
"Give us a sound bite,
Kalle Blomkvist." It was a
reporter from one of the evening papers.
Blomkvist, hearing the nickname, forced himself as always not to roll
his eyes. Once, when he was twenty-three and had just started his first
summer job as a journalist, Blomkvist had chanced upon a gang which had
pulled off five bank robberies over the past two years. There was no
doubt that it was the same gang in every instance. Their trademark was
to hold up two banks at a time with military precision. They wore masks
from Disney World, so inevitably police logic dubbed them the Donald
Duck Gang. The newspapers renamed them the Bear Gang, which sounded more
sinister, more appropriate to the fact that on two occasions they had
recklessly fired warning shots and threatened curious passersby.
Their sixth outing was at a bank in Östergötland at the height
of the holiday season. A reporter from the local radio station happened
to be in the bank at the time. As soon as the robbers were gone he went
to a public telephone and dictated his story for live broadcast.
Blomkvist was spending several days with a girlfriend at her parents'
summer cabin near Katrineholm. Exactly why he made the connection he
could not explain, even to the police, but as he was listening to the
news report he remembered a group of four men in a summer cabin a few
hundred feet down the road. He had seen them playing badminton out in
the yard: four blond, athletic types in shorts with their shirts off.
They were obviously bodybuilders, and there had been something about
them that had made him look twice—maybe it was because the game
was being played in blazing sunshine with what he recognised as
intensely focused energy.
There had been no good reason to suspect them of being the bank robbers,
but nevertheless he had gone to a hill overlooking their cabin. It
seemed empty. It was about forty minutes before a Volvo drove up and
parked in the yard. The young men got out, in a hurry, and were each
carrying a sports bag, so they might have been doing nothing more than
coming back from a swim. But one of them returned to the car and took
out from the boot something which he hurriedly covered with his jacket.
Even from Blomkvist's relatively distant observation post he could tell
that it was a good old AK4, the rifle that had been his constant
companion for the year of his military service.
He called the police and that was the start of a three-day siege of the
cabin, blanket coverage by the media, with Blomkvist in a front-row seat
and collecting a gratifyingly large fee from an evening paper. The
police set up their headquarters in a caravan in the garden of the cabin
where Blomkvist was staying.
The fall of the Bear Gang gave him the star billing that launched him as
a young journalist. The downside of his celebrity was that the other
evening newspaper could not resist using the headline "
Kalle
Blomkvist solves the case." The tongue-in-cheek story was
written by an older female columnist and contained references to the
young detective in Astrid Lindgren's books for children. To make matters
worse, the paper had run the story with a grainy photograph of Blomkvist
with his mouth half open even as he raised an index finger to point.
It made no difference that Blomkvist had never in life used the name
Carl. From that moment on, to his dismay, he was nicknamed Kalle
Blomkvist by his peers—an epithet employed with taunting
provocation, not unfriendly but not really friendly either. In spite of
his respect for Astrid Lindgren—whose books he loved—he
detested the nickname. It took him several years and far weightier
journalistic successes before the nickname began to fade, but he still
cringed if ever the name was used in his hearing.
Right now he achieved a placid smile and said to the reporter from the
evening paper:
"Oh come on, think of something yourself. You usually do."
His tone was not unpleasant. They all knew each other, more or less, and
Blomkvist's most vicious critics had not come that morning. One of the
journalists there had at one time worked with him. And at a party some
years ago he had nearly succeeded in picking up one of the
reporters—the woman from
She on TV4.
"You took a real hit in there today," said the one from
Dagens Nyheter, clearly a young part-timer. "How does it
feel?"
Despite the seriousness of the situation, neither Blomkvist nor the
older journalists could help smiling. He exchanged glances with TV4.
How does it feel? The half-witted sports reporter shoves his
microphone in the face of the Breathless Athlete on the finishing line.
"I can only regret that the court did not come to a different
conclusion," he said a bit stuffily.
"Three months in gaol and 150,000 kronor damages. That's pretty
severe," said
She from TV4.
"I'll survive."
"Are you going to apologise to Wennerström? Shake his
hand?"
"I think not."
"So you still would say that he's a crook?"
Dagens
Nyheter.
The court had just ruled that Blomkvist had libelled and defamed the
financier Hans-Erik Wennerström. The trial was over and he had no
plans to appeal. So what would happen if he repeated his claim on the
courthouse steps? Blomkvist decided that he did not want to find out.
"I thought I had good reason to publish the information that was in
my possession. The court has ruled otherwise, and I must accept that the
judicial process has taken its course. Those of us on the editorial
staff will have to discuss the judgement before we decide what we're
going to do. I have no more to add."
"But how did you come to forget that journalists actually have to
back up their assertions?"
She from TV4. Her expression was
neutral, but Blomkvist thought he saw a hint of disappointed repudiation
in her eyes.
The reporters on site, apart from the boy from
Dagens Nyheter,
were all veterans in the business. For them the answer to that question
was beyond the conceivable. "I have nothing to add," he
repeated, but when the others had accepted this TV4 stood him against
the doors to the courthouse and asked her questions in front of the
camera. She was kinder than he deserved, and there were enough clear
answers to satisfy all the reporters still standing behind her. The
story would be in the headlines but he reminded himself that they were
not dealing with the media event of the year here. The reporters had
what they needed and headed back to their respective newsrooms.
From the Hardcover edition.
(Continues...)
Excerpted from "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo"
by Stieg Larsson.
Copyright (C) by Stieg Larsson.
Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.