Rites of Spring, Anders Motte [reading diary .TXT] 📗
- Author: Anders Motte
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Elita Svart must have been pregnant when she was murdered.
48
Thea spends the drive home trying to get her head straight.
Elita’s pregnancy is not mentioned in any of the interviews, which means that the interviewer probably didn’t know about it. Therefore, the person who removed the page from the autopsy report must have come across the information at an early stage and taken steps to ensure that no one else found out.
The autopsy was just a formality, really. The cause of death had already been established, and there was no evidence pointing to Leo. Therefore, it’s likely that the investigating officers would have read the summary and nothing else, and the pathologist wasn’t called to give evidence at Leo’s trial.
But if Thea is right, if Elita really was pregnant, then who concealed that information – and why? The report should have been sent to the senior investigating officer.
She slows down at a junction and is so lost in thought that she barely notices that the car on the opposite side of the road is flashing its lights at her. The driver is waving as if he wants something.
She stays put as he drives towards her and stops with his side window next to hers. It’s Per Nygren.
‘Good afternoon, Doctor,’ he says with his usual smile. ‘Everything OK?’
‘Yes, thanks – I’m just trying to get into the daily routine.’
‘Excellent. It’ll be great to see Bokelund all fixed up soon. I haven’t been inside the castle for years – not since the old count’s time.’
Another smile, just on the borderline between charming and flirtatious.
‘What was he like?’ She thinks of the painting in Hubert’s library.
‘Rudolf? A hard master. I don’t think I ever saw him smile, but he and my father got along well. He was actually my godfather.’
‘Oh – so you must know Hubert?’
Per nods. ‘We used to play together when we were children. Have you met him?’
‘Yes, a couple of times.’
‘Good. Hubert needs to get out and meet people.’ Per leans out of the window a fraction. ‘As you might know, he didn’t go to the village school with the rest of us; he had a private tutor. Unfortunately, that made him a little reclusive. A bit different. But he’s well worth getting to know.’
The tenderness in Per’s voice surprises her a little.
‘Anyway, I must go – I don’t want to be late for rehearsal.’
‘Rehearsal?’
‘I’m in a band – we get together a couple of times a week. It’s mostly for fun, but we play the odd gig – weddings, fiftieth birthdays, that kind of thing. Plus I run an open mic night at Gästis in Ljungslöv. You ought to come along some time.’
Only now does Thea notice the guitar case on the passenger seat. ‘I might just do that.’
‘I’ll look forward to it. Have a nice evening, Doctor!’
He is about to close the window when she stops him. The question has been burning in her brain ever since she found the blood on Emee’s coat.
‘Any news on the deer? Was it a wolf?’
The smile fades. ‘We still don’t know. Whatever it is, it took a pregnant hind yesterday.’
‘Where?’ She wishes she hadn’t asked. Holds her breath, waiting for the answer.
‘Same place as before – over by the western meadow.’
‘That’s so sad.’ She glances in the rear-view mirror at Emee, whose head is sticking up above the back seat.
‘Yes. We’re going to have to come up with a new strategy soon; this can’t go on. But don’t worry; it’s not the first time we’ve had problems with predators in the enclosures. Hunting is all about patience. And cunning. A bit like love.’ He winks at her, closes the window and drives off.
*
David’s car is in its usual place. Just like yesterday evening, Thea is struck by a sudden desire to be close to him. It’s as if every little piece of Elita’s story makes her understand him better, helps her to know who the real David is.
She parks her car and goes into the castle, calling his name. She thinks she can hear noises from upstairs; she searches around for a while before she spots the ladder and the open loft hatch in the bridal suite. That’s where the voices are coming from.
‘Hello?’ she shouts.
David’s face appears in the gap. ‘Hi, Thea!’ He looks pleased to see her.
‘What are you doing?’
‘We’re getting ready to install a lightning rod. We can’t afford to have a power cut in the middle of the high season. Come up and see!’
Thea clambers up the steep ladder. She says hello to the workman in dungarees and small round glasses who is inspecting the inside of the roof by the light of a builder’s lamp. The loft is huge, the floor covered with sturdy planks. Removal crates and old pieces of furniture are dotted here and there. Beyond the glow of the lamp, the darkness is dense.
‘Cool, isn’t it? We could have ghost walks up here. Get a couple of the summer staff to dress up as the dead girls.’
Thea is taken aback, then realises he’s talking about the two girls Hubert mentioned, not Elita Svart.
‘The loft runs all the way through the castle, so we could finish above the old chapel,’ he goes on, pointing into the gloom. ‘There are some crosses and a pretty horrible statue of a saint over there that nearly frightened us to death. Take a look for yourself.’
‘No thanks!’ Thea says. There’s plenty of headroom up here, but the smell and the darkness somehow remind her of a cellar.
‘I’ll be another hour or so,’ David informs her. ‘Mum and Dad have invited us to dinner. Nettan will be there too, so you’ll be able to meet her at last. See you later.’
Thea hesitates. To be honest she has no desire
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