Three Seconds
only days ago, on a recording of a meeting in an office in the Government Offices.
Five letters.
The same name that he had just written on a note pad.
P-a-u-l-a.
He reached over for Göransson’s letter opener, broke the seal and opened the brown envelope.
__________
He knew it already.
But still the bloody thumping in his chest.
Ewert Grens pulled out the piece of paper and read the name that he knew would be there. Confirmation that the person he had ordered to be shot really had worked for the City Police.
Piet Hoffmann.
Piet.
Paula.
The Swedish code name system, first letter of a man’s name became the first letter of a woman’s name. The informant file was full of grasses called Maria, Lena, Birgitta.
‘And now I want the secret intelligence report. About what actually happened at Västmannagatan 79.’
__________
The whispering again.
Göransson looked at the colleague he had never liked.
He knows
.
‘You can’t have it.’
‘Where do you keep the secret intelligence report? What actually happened at Västmannagatan 79? That those of us investigating were not to know?’
‘It’s not here.’
‘Where?’
‘There’s only one copy.’
‘Jesus, Göransson, where?’
He knows
.
‘The county police commissioner has it. Our most senior officer.’
__________
He limped badly, it wasn’t the pain – it was years since he’d bothered about that – this was just how he walked, left foot light on the floor, right foot heavy on the floor, left leg light on the floor. But with angeras his motor, he thumped his right leg down harder on the surface and the monotonous sound was quickly carried by the walls in the unlit corridor. The lift down four floors, right towards the escalator, through the canteen, lift five floors up. Then that sound again, someone limping down the last stretch of corridor who stopped outside the door of the county police commissioner’s office.
He stood still, listened.
He pressed down the handle.
It was locked.
Ewert Grens had stopped in his travels three times: first at the data support office and one of the Coke-drinking young men to collect a CD with a surprisingly simple and accessible program that could open all code words on all computers in two minutes; then at the small kitchen opposite the vending machine for a towel; and finally the maintenance office opposite the stores for a hammer and a screwdriver.
He wound the towel round the hammer several times, positioned the screwdriver in the gap between the upper door hinge and the pin, looked around in the dark one more time and came down hard on the screwdriver with the hammer until the pin was loose. He moved the screwdriver down to the lower hinge and the next pin, until the hammer blows released it. From there it was easy to separate the two hinges, to carefully rock the screwdriver back and forth between the door and the doorframe, to push the door back until the lock barrel slid out of its fixture.
He lifted the door and put it to one side.
It was lighter than he had imagined.
He had forced other doors during raids – a heart attack on the other side, scared children on their own – in order to avoid waiting for a locksmith who might never come.
But he had never broken into a senior police officer’s room before.
The laptop was on the desk, just like his own. He started it, waited while the CD program identified and replaced the code words and then searched the documents as he had learnt to do.
A couple of minutes was all he needed.
Ewert Grens re-hung the door on its hinges, coaxed the pins back in, checked that there were no scratches or splinters on the doorframe and then walked away with the computer in a briefcase.
The alarm clock behind the telephone didn’t work. It had stopped at a quarter to four. Grens focused on the white clock while he phoned the talking clock for the second time that night.
Three forty-five and thirty seconds. Precisely. It was working.
The night was receding without him having noticed.
He was sweaty. He unwound the towel from the hammer and wiped his forehead and neck. Walking through the building, forcing open a door, more exercise than he was used to.
He sat down at the computer that had until recently been on another desk, searched for the file he had started to read earlier.
Västmannagatan 79.
The secret intelligence report. The actual events.
He reached over for a thin file at the back of the desk, leafed through it.
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