Thirty-three

“What do we do with—”

Liisa was unsure how she should express herself. “The body,” “the corpse,” or simply “him”?

Birgitta had not said a word since Liisa managed to stop her violent attacks. She sat hunched over on a steamer trunk that had been plastered with stickers for various destinations.

Greta had tried to shake life into the gardener but in vain. The whole corridor to the cellar door was messy with blood.

We’ll put him in the trunk, thought Liisa, but realized that did not solve the problem. He would start stinking after only a day or two.

She had decided to get rid of the body. Nothing of what had happened could come out. The police could not be involved. The professor should not know a thing. Birgitta and Greta stared at her while she laid out the strategy.

“If this becomes known, then we can forget the Nobel Prize and everything else. Besides that, Birgitta will end up in jail. For a long time. Us too, because we were accomplices.”

She was not sure of that, an attorney could certainly argue that self-defense had been involved, but she poured it on to frighten Greta. Birgitta she could handle, but she did not know about Greta.

“But he broke in,” the old woman also objected.

“Yes, but he died of a number of deep wounds. That’s harder to explain. All in the back besides. It doesn’t look good for any of us.”

“But why? He’s a gardener.”

Liisa looked at Greta, whose eyes were still staring, scared out of her wits and not understanding.

“As if that sort can’t commit a crime? He took lots of money. You saw that yourself.”

Liisa pointed with the spear toward the entry where the dead man’s legs were visible. Birgitta mumbled something.

“We’ll bury him,” she said. “We have to bury him. He is a Christian person anyway.”

“We know nothing about that,” said Liisa. “But we have to get rid of him.”

Beneath her outward calm she was terrified. Not so much about how they would handle the situation, but more about the fury that had consumed Birgitta. The wildness of thrusting a spear into a person, again and again, frightened her terribly. She thought she knew Birgitta, they had lived together for several years, but it was clear to her that there was a side of her that had until now been concealed.

“We’ll bury him,” Birgitta repeated in a mechanical voice.

“Where?” said Liisa.

Greta stared at her. Liisa realized that she had to act quickly while the woman was still in shock. Soon Greta, or perhaps Birgitta, could break down.

“We’ll carry him out to my car,” said Liisa. “I can drive it onto the yard.”

No one reacted. It was not a good suggestion, she realized that at once. It was the middle of the night and the sound of a car engine starting might waken a neighbor. Bunde might look out. Besides, she was not sure whether the gate to the garage access could be opened. As far as she could recall it was locked with a chain and a sturdy padlock. The professor wanted it that way.

“The garden,” she threw out.

“It’s too hard to dig there,” Birgitta objected.

Liisa had a desire to run over and hug her. Birgitta’s voice still sounded ghost-like, but even so Liisa could perceive something of the usual tone of voice. She was on her way back.

“At Lundquist’s,” said Birgitta suddenly. “The ground is soft there.”

Liisa did not understand what she meant, but Birgitta continued as if it concerned something very everyday.

“He was digging for several days,” she said, getting up eagerly. “I saw him digging! There’s a spade in the shed by the old oil tank. We—”

“We can’t do it that way,” objected Greta. “We can’t just—”

Liisa looked around.

“Are there any old rugs down here?”

Birgitta pointed toward a corner of the cellar.

“There are some wrapped up over there,” she said. “In plastic.”

Liisa hurried over to the dark corner.

“Plastic is better,” she said, tearing at the bundle of rugs. “There’s less friction.”

She turned around and saw that at least Birgitta understood what she meant. Greta only looked confused. Liisa tore loose a large piece of plastic which she rolled up.

“Where’s Agnes?” Birgitta asked suddenly.

“I’m sure she’s asleep,” Greta answered. “I heard strange noises and … I didn’t want to wake her … she would never—”

“That’s good!” said Liisa. “We’ll let her sleep.”

“Mustn’t we call the police?”

“Greta! Wake up! Don’t you understand? They’ll put Birgitta in prison! Prison! Is that what you want?”

Liisa stared at the old woman, leaned over the dead man, and pulled out the bundles of bills that Karsten had taken. They were bloody. She threw them on the floor.

“Help me now,” she said, sticking her hands into Karsten’s armpits. “Take hold of the feet!”

Greta and Birgitta approached hesitantly.

“We have to get him out! Then we’ll lay him on the plastic and pull him across the lawn.”

Together they managed to lift the body and lug it out through the door and up the cellar steps.

It was drizzling. The branches of the fruit trees were moving slowly in the wind. Liisa sneaked up to the corner of the house and spied. The only worrying factor was the associate professor. The lights were on as usual in his tower, a faint bluish sheen that Birgitta had explained came from a plant-growing installation.

She returned to the two others.

“It looks fine,” she whispered. “All the windows are dark. Did you get the spade?”

Birgitta nodded. Liisa stroked her hand across her face. The rain picked up.

She spread out the black plastic on the grass. Greta sobbed. Birgitta mumbled something. Liisa leaned over and rolled the corpse onto the plastic. She knew that she could manage pulling the body, but the hard thing would be to get it through the hedge into Bunde’s lot and then across the fence to Lundquist’s. The latter step was the most critical. For a short time they would not be hidden by any bushes.

“Now let’s get going,” she said, despite her own growing hesitation, and took hold of the plastic and pulled.

Everything went easier than she had thought. The plastic and the damp grass helped make the body seem light. Birgitta was not much help, but Greta was unexpectedly strong. Together they managed to squeeze the dead man through the hedge and over the low fence. He fell with a thud over on Lundquist’s side. It sounded as if Karsten Heller sighed when the air was pressed out of the lungs.

“I’ll manage the rest myself,” Liisa whispered, waving aside Birgitta’s protests. She jumped lithely over the fence, pulled the body into the protection of some bushes, and retrieved the spade that Birgitta tossed over. She waited a minute or two. By using the breathing technique from the shooting range she recovered her equilibrium, and her pulse rate went down. The rain intensified. The body at her feet resembled a sack. The night chill and the tension made her shiver.

The block seemed to rest. All that was heard was the incessant drumming of the rain.

After having memorized how the small plants, which she thought resembled lingonberry, were planted, she pulled them out and set them to one side. She started digging and was surprised at how porous the dirt was. It did not take long for her to shovel up a grave. Half a meter down the earth became hard and she decided that it would have to be deep enough.

After shoving the body, which now felt heavier and more uncooperative, down into the pit, she spread the plastic out like a shroud, tucked in the corners around the body, and then shoveled the dirt back in. She worked quickly and single-mindedly, and when the last shrub was replanted she allowed herself to rest a minute or two. She crouched down. The rain ran over her face. She wanted to recite a prayer, or do something that might resemble a ceremony, but found that she could only remember a few lines of the Lord’s Prayer.

“Thy kingdom come, on earth as it is in heaven … Amen,” she murmured.