The Steel Spring Read online




  PER WAHLÖÖ

  THE STEEL SPRING

  Born in 1926, Per Wahlöö was a Swedish writer and journalist who, alongside his own novels, collaborated with his wife, Maj Sjöwall, on the bestselling Martin Beck crime series, which is credited as inspiring writers as varied as Agatha Christie, Henning Mankell, and Jonathan Franzen. In 1971 the fourth novel in the series, The Laughing Policeman, won an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America. Per Wahlöö died in 1975.

  SARAH DEATH

  Sarah Death has translated the work of many Swedish authors from the nineteenth to the twenty-first century, including Alexander Ahndoril, Steve Sem-Sandberg, and Carl-Johan Vallgren; and Norwegian Linn Ullmann, whose A Blessed Child was named Translated Novel of the Year by the London Independent. She has twice won the triennial George Bernard Shaw Prize for Kerstin Ekman’s The Angel House and Ellen Mattson’s Snow. In 2008 she was awarded the Swedish Academy’s translation prize.

  ALSO BY PER WAHLÖÖ

  Murder on the Thirty-first Floor

  A Necessary Action

  The Assignment

  The Generals

  WITH MAJ SJÖWALL

  Roseanna

  The Man Who Went Up in Smoke

  The Man on the Balcony

  The Laughing Policeman

  The Fire Engine That Disappeared

  Murder at the Savoy

  The Abominable Man

  The Locked Room

  Cop Killer

  The Terrorists

  FIRST VINTAGE CRIME/BLACK LIZARD EDITION, FEBRUARY 2013

  Copyright © 1968 by Per Wahlöö

  Translation copyright © 2012 by Sarah Death

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. Originally published in Sweden as Stålsprånget by P.A. Norstedt & Söners Förlag, Stockholm, in 1964. Copyright © 1968 by Per Wahlöö. This translation originally published in Great Britain by Vintage, an imprint of The Random House Group Limited, London, in 2012.

  Vintage is a registered trademark and Vintage Crime/Black Lizard and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Wahlöö, Per, 1926–1975.

  [Stålsprånget. English]

  The steel spring / by Per Wahlöö; translated from the Swedish by Sarah Death.

  —1st Vintage Crime/Black Lizard ed.

  p. cm.

  eISBN: 978-0-307-74448-7

  1. Police—Sweden—Fiction. 2. Mystery fiction. I. Death, Sarah. II. Title.

  PT9876.33.A35S713 2013

  839.73′74—dc23

  2012031329

  www.vintagebooks.com

  Cover design by Joan Wong

  v3.1

  For Maj

  Contents

  Cover

  About the Author

  Other Books by This Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  CHAPTER 1

  Jensen received the letter in the morning post.

  He had risen early and packed his suitcase, and when the letterbox rattled he was already in the hall with his hat and overcoat on. He bent down to pick up the letter. As he straightened his back, pain shot through the right side of his diaphragm, as if a high-speed boring tool was rotating in his guts. He was so used to the pain that he scarcely registered it.

  He put the letter in his pocket without looking at it, picked up his case, went down to the car and drove to work.

  At one minute to nine he turned in through the archway to the Sixteenth District police station and parked in the yellow-painted rectangle marked INSPECTOR. He got out, retrieved his case from the boot and scanned the yard. Outside the entrance to the arrest suite there was a white ambulance with red crosses on the doors, which were open at the back. Two young men in white boiler suits, their faces indifferent, were nonchalantly and carelessly shoving in a stretcher. A few metres from them, a police constable in a green uniform was hosing a pool of blood from the tarmac. The woman on the stretcher was young and blonde and had a bloodstained bandage round her neck. Jensen glanced at her and turned to the man with the hose.

  ‘Dead?’

  The police constable pinched the hose to cut off the flow of water and attempted to come to attention.

  ‘Yes, Inspector.’

  Jensen said no more, but turned and went into the reception area, nodded to the policeman behind the wooden counter and walked over to the spiral stairs.

  His office on the floor above was stuffy and stale smelling, and the radiator under the window was clanking and hissing. The police station was housed in one of the oldest buildings in a part of the city that otherwise consisted of nothing but steel, glass and concrete. The arrest suite had been extended and rebuilt a few years before, but the rest of the building had never been modernised, and soon the whole lot was to be pulled down to make way for a new bypass. As soon as the new central detoxification unit was ready, the district would be taken out of use. The prospect did not bother Jensen.

  He hung up his outdoor things, opened the window a little way and sat down at his desk. He read through the report from the previous night and corrected it minutely in ballpoint pen before putting his signature in the margin. He fished in his inside pocket, took out the letter and looked at it.

  Jensen was a man of normal build and ordinary appearance with short grey hair and an impassive expression. He was fifty and had served twenty-nine years in the Sixteenth District.

  He was still studying the letter when the door opened and the police doctor came in.

  ‘You should knock,’ said Jensen.

  ‘Sorry. I didn’t know you were coming in today.’ Jensen looked at the clock.

  ‘My replacement doesn’t take over until ten,’ he said. ‘What sort of night has it been?’

  ‘Normal. We had a sudden death this morning. A woman. The report hasn’t been written yet.’

  Jensen nodded.

  ‘Not in the cell,’ said the doctor. ‘In the yard. She cut her throat as soon as the arrest officer let her out. With a bit of mirror she had in her handbag.’

  ‘Careless,’ said Jensen.

  ‘We can’t take everything off them.’

  ‘Can’t we?’

  ‘Anyway, she’d already sobered up and had her injection. And the officers who did the body search didn’t think it was glass. Glass pocket mirrors are supposed to be banned.’

  ‘They’re not banned,’ said Jensen. ‘They don’t make them any more.’

  The police doctor was a tall, relatively young man with spiky red hair and angular features. He knew his job and was the best doctor the district had had in the last ten
years. Jensen had a lot of time for him.

  ‘I’m beginning to question the method,’ said the red-haired doctor with a shake of his head.

  ‘What method?’

  ‘Blending the alcohol with that muck. The stuff that’s meant to wean them off it. Admittedly the rate of arrests for drinking hasn’t gone up these past two years, but …’

  Jensen regarded him stonily.

  ‘But what?’

  ‘But on the other hand, the suicide rate’s on the up. The depression cases are getting worse.’

  ‘The statistics contradict what you’re saying.’

  ‘You know as well as I do how much the official statistics are worth. Take a look at your own confidential reports on accidents and cases of sudden death. Like the woman this morning. We can’t just gloss over it and pretend nothing’s happening.’

  He thrust his hands in the pockets of his white coat and looked out of the window.

  ‘Have you heard the latest? They’re thinking of putting painkillers and fluoride in the drinking water. It’s medical madness.’

  ‘You ought to watch your tongue.’

  ‘Quite possibly,’ the doctor said drily.

  There was silence in the room. Jensen scrutinised the letter he had received in the morning post. The envelope was white and it had been addressed by a machine. Inside were a white printed card and a steel-blue, gummed stamp with perforated edges and a picture of a bridge spanning a deep ravine, with a single word in the middle: YES. Jensen opened the middle drawer of his desk, took out a wooden ruler and measured the card. The doctor, watching him attentively, said:

  ‘Why are you measuring it?’

  ‘I don’t know,’ said Jensen.

  He put the ruler back and shut the drawer.

  ‘Old one, that. Wooden. Steel-edged.’

  ‘Yes,’ said Jensen. ‘I’ve had it twenty-nine years. Ever since I came here. They don’t make them any more.’

  The card measured fourteen centimetres by ten. On the front there was a printed address; on the back there was a series of dashes in a rectangle, to show where the stamp was to go. Above it was some text.

  Do you believe in the policies of the Accord? Are you ready to play an active part in the battle against the enemies of the country, inside and outside? Affix the sticker as indicated. Do not forget to add your signature. NB. This card is not to be franked.

  Below the rectangle there was a dotted line where the sender was to sign his or her name. Jensen turned the card over and looked at the address.

  Central Statistical Office, Ministry of the Interior. Box 1000.

  ‘Some kind of opinion poll,’ said the doctor with a shrug. ‘Everybody seems to have had one of those cards. Except me.’

  Jensen said nothing.

  ‘Or perhaps some kind of loyalty test. In the run-up to the election.’

  ‘The election,’ said Jensen.

  ‘Yes, in a month’s time. If that’s what it is, then it’s pretty bloody superfluous. Waste of state resources.’

  Jensen pulled the desk drawer open again and took out a sponge pad of green rubber, marked POLICE PROPERTY. He felt it with his fingertips. It was dry, and he got to his feet and left the room. Went to the toilet and moistened the sponge under the washbasin tap.

  Jensen returned to his office, sat down at his desk, ran the blue sticker over the sponge pad and placed it with pedantic care in the rectangular space. Then he put the card in the metal tray for outgoing post and replaced the sponge in his desk drawer. Closed the drawer. The doctor observed him with a faint smile and said:

  ‘Your office equipment looks as if it belongs in a museum.’

  Then he glanced from the wall clock to the packed suitcase over by the door.

  ‘Ah well, two hours from now you’ll be on the plane.’

  ‘Will I die?’ said Inspector Jensen.

  The doctor shot him an enquiring look. He paused, and then said:

  ‘Very probably.’

  CHAPTER 2

  ‘Naturally you’re in with a chance,’ said the doctor. ‘Otherwise neither I nor any other responsible person would have suggested the trip. They know their stuff over there.’

  Jensen nodded.

  ‘You ought to have had the problem seen to several years ago, of course. Are you in a lot of pain?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Now, as well?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘On the other hand, there wasn’t much they could have done for you several years ago. The operation technique is still at an experimental stage. In this country they’ve barely got round to thinking about it. And you’re in a pretty bad state.’

  Jensen nodded.

  ‘But as I say, you’re in with a chance.’

  ‘What sort of chance?’

  ‘Impossible to say. Maybe ten per cent, maybe only five. In all probability even less than that.’

  Jensen nodded.

  ‘Bear in mind that in the space of less than five seconds, all the blood in the body sluices through the liver. The liver is the great factory of the body. Can it really be transplanted? I don’t know.’

  ‘We’ll know in a few days’ time.’

  ‘Yes,’ said the doctor.

  He looked at Jensen contemplatively.

  ‘Would you like something for the pain?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘It’s a long journey.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Have you got a return ticket?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Very encouraging,’ the doctor said sarcastically.

  He lapsed into silence and appeared in doubt about something. In the end Jensen said:

  ‘What is it?’

  ‘Something I’ve been meaning to ask you for a long time.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘They say you’ve never failed to solve a case. Is that true?’

  ‘Yes, that’s right,’ said Inspector Jensen.

  The telephone rang.

  ‘Sixteenth District police. Inspector here.’

  ‘Jensen?’

  Jensen had not heard the police chief’s voice for four years, still less seen him. Was he ringing to say goodbye?

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Excellent. You’ll be receiving written orders within the next few minutes. They must be carried out with all possible speed.’

  ‘Understood.’

  ‘Good.’

  Jensen looked at the electric clock on the wall.

  ‘I go on sick leave in eighteen minutes’ time,’ he said.

  ‘Oh? Are you ill?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Sorry to hear that, Jensen. You’ll have to brief your stand-in.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘It’s a matter of extreme importance. Orders from … well, the highest authority.’

  ‘Understood.’

  The police chief paused. Finally he said:

  ‘Good luck then, Jensen.’

  ‘Thank you.’

  Inspector Jensen replaced the receiver. The police chief had sounded nervous and harassed. Perhaps he always sounded like that.

  ‘In the space of less than five seconds,’ said the doctor. ‘All the blood in your body.’

  Jensen nodded. A few moments later he said:

  ‘Where are they transferring you to when this district closes down?’

  ‘The central detoxification unit, I assume. And you?’

  The doctor suddenly stopped himself. Changed the subject slightly.

  ‘Have you seen the detoxification unit?’ he said.

  Jensen shook his head.

  ‘It’s vast. Looks like a gigantic prison. The biggest complex I’ve ever seen. And what about you?’

  Jensen said nothing.

  ‘Sorry,’ said the doctor.

  ‘Don’t worry about it,’ said Jensen.

  There was a knock at the door. A police officer in a green uniform came in, stood to attention and handed over a red file. Jensen signed for it and the constable left the room.
r />   ‘Red,’ said the doctor. ‘Everything’s top secret these days.’

  He put his head to one side so he could read the operational code name.

  ‘What does that mean? Steel Spring?’

  ‘Don’t know,’ said Jensen. ‘Steel Spring. I’ve never seen the name before.’ He broke the seal and took out the orders. They consisted of a single typewritten sheet.

  ‘What’s that?’

  ‘An arrest list.’

  ‘Really?’ the doctor said dubiously. ‘But nobody commits crimes in this country, do they?’

  Jensen read the text slowly through.

  ‘Nobody commits crimes and nobody gives birth. Everybody thinks the same. Nobody’s happy and nobody’s unhappy. Except the ones who kill themselves.’ The doctor stopped and smiled a quick, melancholy smile.

  ‘You’re right,’ he said. ‘I really ought to mind my tongue.’

  ‘You’re impulsive.’

  ‘Yes. Anything interesting in your arrest list?’

  ‘In a way,’ said Inspector Jensen. ‘Your name’s on it.’

  ‘That’s good. There’s research showing how important it is before a major operation for the patient to joke and display a sense of humour. It shows zest for life. Right, I must be off now. And so must you. You don’t want to miss the plane. Best of luck.’

  ‘Thanks,’ said Inspector Jensen.

  The instant the door closed, he picked up the telephone, dialled three digits and said:

  ‘Jensen here. The doctor is just on his way down to reception. Arrest him and put him in preventive detention.’

  ‘The police doctor?’

  ‘Yes. And be quick about it.’

  He ended the call and immediately rang another three-digit number.

  ‘Jensen here. Ask the head of the plainclothes patrol to come up. And ring for a taxi.’

  The electric wall clock was showing one minute to ten as the head of the plainclothes patrol came into the room.

  ‘I’m on sick leave from ten o’clock,’ said Jensen. ‘As you know, you’re to take over until further notice.’

  ‘Thank you, Inspector.’

  ‘Don’t thank me. As you know, I’ve never had a particularly high opinion of you, and you didn’t get the post on my recommendation.’

  The man opened his mouth to say something but apparently changed his mind.