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    Lars Kepler 2-book Bundle

    Page 49
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      Only now did something inside her begin to relax. It was over. They had got Benjamin back.

      Now they are standing uncertainly outside the Birger Jarl Hotel in Stockholm. Benjamin is wearing a tracksuit from the police Lost and Found that is far too big for him, a woolly hat—of the Sami tourist variety—that Simone bought for him at the airport, and a pair of mittens that are slightly too small. The city is deserted, with not a soul in sight. The underground station is closed, there are no buses, the restaurants are dark and silent.

      Erik looks at his watch, perplexed. It’s four o’clock in the afternoon. A woman hurries along, carrying a large bag.

      “It’s Christmas Eve,” Simone says suddenly. “Today is Christmas Eve.”

      Benjamin looks at her in surprise.

      “That would explain why people keep wishing us a Merry Christmas,” says Erik with a smile.

      “What shall we do?” Benjamin asks.

      “McDonald’s is open,” Erik says.

      “Are you suggesting we have Christmas dinner at McDonald’s?” asks Simone.

      A thin freezing rain begins to fall on them as they hurry towards the restaurant. It’s an ugly, squat building, pressing itself to the ground beneath the ochre-coloured rotunda of the library. A woman in her sixties is standing behind the counter. There are no other customers to be seen.

      “I’d like a glass of wine,” says Simone. “But I guess that’s out of the question.”

      “How about a milkshake?” says Erik.

      “Vanilla, strawberry, or chocolate?” the woman asks sourly.

      Simone looks as if she’s about to burst out laughing, but she pulls herself together. “Strawberry, of course.”

      “Me too,” Benjamin chips in.

      The woman taps in their order with small, angry movements. “Will that be all?” she asks.

      “Get a selection,” Simone says to Erik. “We’ll go and sit down.” She and Benjamin thread their way among the empty tables. “A table by the window,” she whispers, smiling at Benjamin.

      She sits down next to her son, puts her arm around him, and feels the tears running down her cheeks. Outside, a lone skateboarder whizzes along between the patches of ice with harsh scraping, rattling noises. A woman is sitting on her own on a bench on the edge of the playground behind the School of Economics, an empty shopping trolley beside her. The tyre seats on the children’s swings are blowing back and forth in the wind.

      “Are you cold?” she asks.

      Benjamin doesn’t reply; he just rests his face against her chest, allowing her to kiss his head over and over again.

      Erik puts a tray down on the table and returns to the counter to fetch another before sitting down and beginning to distribute cartons, paper bags, and drinks around the table. “When you eat at McDonald’s, you need to go all the way.”

      “Nice,” says Benjamin, sitting up.

      “Wait,” Erik says. He holds out a Happy Meal toy. “Merry Christmas,” he says.

      “Thanks, Dad.” Benjamin grins, looking at the plastic packaging.

      Simone looks at her child. He’s lost so much weight. But there’s something else, she thinks. It’s as if he still has a weight within him, something that is pulling at his thoughts, worrying him and dragging him down. He’s not really with them; his gaze is turned inwards.

      When she sees Erik reach out and pat his son on the cheek, she begins to cry again. She turns away with a whispered apology and sees a plastic bag whisked out of a rubbish bin by the wind and pressed against the window.

      “Come on, dig in,” Erik says.

      Benjamin is unwrapping a Big Mac when Erik’s phone rings. It’s Joona.

      “Merry Christmas, Joona,” he says.

      “Same to you, Erik,” says Joona. “Are you back in Stockholm?”

      “We’re actually having Christmas dinner right now.”

      “Do you remember I said we would find your son?”

      “Yes, I remember.”

      “You had your doubts from time to time.”

      “Yes,” says Erik. “I admit it.”

      “But I knew it would all work out,” Joona goes on.

      “I didn’t.”

      “I know, I noticed,” says Joona. “That’s why there’s something I need to say to you.”

      “Yes?”

      “What did I tell you?” asks Joona.

      “What?”

      “I was right, wasn’t I?”

      “Yes, you were right,” Erik replies.

      “Merry Christmas,” says Joona, ending the call.

      Erik stares at the phone with a surprised expression, then turns to Simone. He looks at her transparent skin and wide mouth. Webs of worry lines have appeared around her eyes lately. She smiles at him, and he follows her gaze as she looks at Benjamin.

      Erik watches his son for a long time. His throat aches with love. Benjamin is eating French fries, his expression serious. He has disappeared into his thoughts. His eyes stare vacantly, as if he has been sucked into his memories and the spaces between them. Erik reaches out with his uninjured arm, squeezes his son’s fingers, and sees him look up.

      “Merry Christmas, Dad,” says Benjamin with a smile. “Here, have some fries.”

      “What about taking some of this food over to see Granddad?” Erik suggests.

      “Are you serious?” asks Simone.

      “How much fun is it being in the hospital at Christmas?”

      Simone smiles at him and calls for a taxi. Benjamin goes over to the counter for a bag to put the food in.

      As their taxi slowly drives past Odenplan, Erik sees his family reflected in the window, superimposed over the enormous decorated Christmas tree in the square. They slip past the branches as if they were dancing together around it. There it stands, tall and wide, hundreds of tiny glowing lights curling up towards the bright shining star.

      Copyright

      This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

      Blue Door

      An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers

      77–85 Fulham Palace Road,

      Hammersmith, London W6 8JB

      www.harpercollins.co.uk

      First published in Great Britain by Blue Door 2011

      Copyright © Lars Kepler 2009

      English translation © Ann Long 2010

      All rights reserved

      Originally published in 2009 by Albert Bonniers Förlag, Sweden, as Hypnotisören

      Lars Kepler assert the moral right to be identified as the authors of this work

      A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

      Source ISBN: 9780007359127

      Ebook Edition © June 2012 ISBN: 9780007412457

      Version 1

      All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

      HarperCollinsPublishers has made every reasonable effort to ensure that any picture content and written content in this ebook has been included or removed in accordance with the contractual and technological constraints in operation at the time of publication.

      THE

      NIGHTMARE

      LARS KEPLER

      Translated from the Swedish by Laura A. Wideburg

      International Praise for The Nightmare:

      ‘One of the most exciting Swedish crime novels of recent years … It doesn’t get better than this’

      Göteborgsposten

      ‘Joona Linna is quietly assure
    d and as smart as a bag full of Morses’

      Metro

      ‘Larsson is destined to have many heirs….Kepler is by far the best’

      Time

      ‘A high-octane, taut thriller’

      Marie Claire

      ‘Intricate detective work and heart-ticking suspense’

      Boston Globe

      ‘This sophisticated literary duo turns out novels different from anything else coming from Sweden, inventive action thrillers with an almost cinematic density’

      The Australian

      ‘Once again the authors have succeeded in making themselves stand out in the torrent of Swedish crime novels’

      Helsingborgs Dagblad

      ‘The reader is ready to sell his own soul for the opportunity to read this book without interruption, in one sitting’

      Arbetarbladet

      ‘The pace of this crime thriller leaves the reader short of breath’ Buch-magazin

      Table of Contents

      Title Page

      International Praise for The Nightmare

      1. foreboding

      2. the pursuer

      3. a boat adrift in jungfrufjärden bay

      4. the swaying man

      5. the national homicide squad

      6. how death came

      7. helpful people

      8. the needle

      9. all about hand-to-hand combat

      10. the woman who drowned

      11. in the cabin

      12. an unusual death

      13. the reconstruction

      14. a party in the night

      15. the identification

      16. the mistake

      17. an extremely dangerous man

      18. the fire

      19. a wavy landscape of ashes

      20. the house

      21. the security service

      22. the incomprehensible

      23. the forensic technicians

      24. the object

      25. the child on the staircase

      26. a palm

      27. the extremists

      28. the brigade

      29. waiting for the swat team

      30. the pain

      31. the message

      32. real police work

      33. the search

      34. dreambow

      35. deleted data

      36. the connection

      37. collaborating units

      38. saga bauer

      39. farther away

      40. the replacement

      41. sleepless

      42. national inspectorate of strategic products

      43. a cloned computer

      44. the e-mails

      45. riding down the motorway

      46. the photograph

      47. the fourth person

      48. the bridal crown

      49. the blurred face

      50. the hiding place

      51. the winner

      52. the messenger

      53. the signature

      54. the competition

      55. the maritime police

      56. the helicopter

      57. thunderstorm

      58. the heir

      59. when life gains meaning

      60. a little more time

      61. always on his mind

      62. sweet sleep

      63. the johan fredrik berwald competition

      64. the lift down

      65. what eyes have seen

      66. without penelope

      67. follow the money

      68. something to celebrate

      69. the string quartet

      70. a feeling

      71. seven million alternatives

      72. the riddle

      73. one last question

      74. a perfect plan

      75. the bait

      76. the safe apartment

      77. the stakeout

      78. östermalms saluhall

      79. when it all goes down

      80. the shock wave

      81. the german embassy

      82. the face

      83. the suspect

      84. the fire

      85. hunting the hunter

      86. the white trunk of the birch tree

      87. the red herring

      88. the visitor

      89. the meeting

      90. the photograph, again

      91. one last escape

      92. discovered

      93. greta’s death

      94. white rustling plastic

      95. disappeared

      96. raphael guidi

      97. flight

      98. the prosecutor

      99. the payment

      100. pontus salman

      101. the girl who picks dandelions

      102. turning over the picture

      103. closer

      104. the nightmare

      105. the witness

      106. the pappa

      107. the empty room

      108. loyalty

      109. the contract

      110. on board

      111. traitors

      112. automatic fire

      113. the blade of the knife

      114. the final fight

      115. the conclusion

      axel riessen

      beverly andersson

      penelope fernandez

      saga bauer and anja larsson

      disa helenius

      joona linna

      Epilogue

      Copyright

      The word ‘music’ comes from the ‘art of the muses’ and reflects the Greek myth of the Nine Muses. All nine were daughters of the powerful god Zeus and the titan Mnemosyne, goddess of memory. Euterpe, the muse of music, is often portrayed holding a double flute to her lips. Her name means ‘Giver of Joy.’

      The gift of musicality does not have a generally agreed-upon definition. There are people who lack the ability to hear differing frequencies in music while, on the other hand, there are people born with an exact memory for music and perfect pitch so they can reproduce a specific tone without any external reference.

      Throughout the ages, a number of exceptional musical geniuses have emerged, some of whom have achieved lasting fame—Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who began to tour the courts of Europe at the age of six; Ludwig van Beethoven, who wrote many of his masterpieces after becoming totally deaf.

      The legendary Niccolò Paganini was born in 1782 in the Italian city of Genoa. He was a self-taught violinist and composer. To this day, very few violinists have been able to perform Paganini’s swift, complicated works. Until his death, Paganini was plagued by rumours that to gain his musical virtuosity he’d signed a contract with the Devil.

      In the light of the long June night, on becalmed waters, a large pleasure craft is discovered adrift on Jungfrufjärden Bay in the southern Stockholm archipelago. The water, a sleepy blue-grey in colour, moves as softly as the fog. The old man rowing in his wooden skiff calls out a few times, even though he’s starting to suspect no one is going to answer. He’s been watching the yacht from shore for almost an hour as it’s been drifting backwards, pushed by the lazy current away from land.

      The man guides his boat until it bumps against the larger craft. Pulling in his oars and tying up to the swimming platform, he climbs the metal ladder and over the railing. There’s nothing to see on the afterdeck except for a pink recliner. The old man stands still and listens. Hearing nothing, he opens the glass door and steps down into the salon. A grey light shines through the large windows over the varnished teak brightwork and a deep blue cloth canvas sofa. He continues down the steep stairs, which are panelled in more shining wood. Past a dark galley, past a bathroom, into the large cabin. Tiny windows near the ceiling offer barely enough light to reveal an arrow-shaped double berth. Near the headboard a young woman in a jean jacket sits slumped at the edge of the bed. Her thighs are spread; one hand rests on a pink pillow. She looks right into the old man’s eyes with a puzzled, frightened expression.

      The old man needs a moment to realise the woman is dead.

      Fastened to her long black hair is a clip shaped in the form of a white dove: the dove
    of peace.

      As the old man moves towards her and touches her cheek, her head falls forwards and a thin stream of water dribbles from her lips and on down to her chin.

      1

      foreboding

      A cold shiver runs down Penelope Fernandez’s spine. Her heart beats faster and she darts a look over her shoulder. Perhaps she feels a sense of foreboding of what’s to come as her day progresses.

      In spite of the television studio’s heat, Penelope’s face feels chilled. Maybe the sensation is left over from her time in makeup when the cold powder puff was pressed to her skin and the peace-dove hair clip was taken out so they could rub in the mousse that would make her hair fall in serpentine locks.

     


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