The Girl Who Lived Twice

The Girl Who Lived Twice by David Lagercrantz Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Girl Who Lived Twice by David Lagercrantz Read Free Book Online
Authors: David Lagercrantz
dead?”
    “The medical examiner called me yesterday.”
    “Why you, of all people?”
    “Because my mobile number was in the man’s pocket and she was probably hoping I could help identify him.”
    “But you couldn’t?”
    “Not at all.”
    “He probably thought he had some story for you.”
    “Presumably.”
    Sofie finished her tea and they sat quietly for a little while.
    “He accosted Catrin Lindås a week ago,” she said eventually.
    “He did?”
    “He went berserk when he caught sight of her. I saw it from some way off, on Swedenborgsgatan.”
    “What did he want from her?”
    “He’d probably seen her on TV.”
    Catrin Lindås did appear on television every now and then. She was a leading writer and columnist, a conservative who often took part in debates about law and order, or on school discipline and teaching standards. She was good-looking in an elegant sort of way. She wore beautifully tailored suits and silk pussy-bow blouses, and never had a hair out of place. Blomkvist thought of her as serious and unimaginative. She had been critical of him in Svenska Dagbladet.
    “What happened?”
    “He grabbed hold of her arm and was shouting.”
    “Shouting what?”
    “I’ve no idea. But he was waving some sort of stick. It left Catrin in a complete state. I tried to calm her down and helped her remove a grubby mark on her jacket.”
    “Oh dear, that must have been awful for her.”
    He had not meant to sound sarcastic, but Sofie was onto him in an instant.
    “You’ve never liked her, have you?”
    “Nothing much wrong with her, I guess,” he said defensively. “She’s just a bit too right-wing and proper for me, that’s all.”
    “Little Miss Perfect, right?”
    “I didn’t say that.”
    “No, but you meant it. Do you have any idea how much shit she gets online? She’s seen as some sort of upper-class bitch who’s been to boarding school at Lundsberg and looks down her nose at ordinary people. But have you any idea what she’s been through?”
    “No, Sofie, I don’t.”
    He could not understand why she had suddenly got so angry.
    “In that case I’ll tell you. She grew up in miserable circumstances, in a cracked-out hippie commune in Göteborg. Her parents were doing LSD and heroin, and home was a total mess, with people sitting around stoned out of their minds. Her suits and her tidiness have been her way of surviving. She’s a fighter. A rebel, in a way.”
    “Interesting,” he said.
    “Exactly so, and I know you think she’s a reactionary, but she does an enormous amount of good in her fight against the new age and spiritual crap she grew up with. She’s a lot more interesting than people realize.”
    “Are you friends?”
    “We are.”
    “Thanks, Sofie. In that case I’ll try to see her in a different light in the future.”
    “I don’t believe you,” she said, laughing apologetically, but the way she mumbled made it clear that this mattered to her.
    Then she asked him how he was getting on with his story. He told her that he wasn’t exactly progressing in leaps and bounds. He said that the Russian lead had dried up.
    “But you’ve got good sources, haven’t you?”
    “What my sources don’t know, I don’t know either.”
    “Maybe you should head off to Saint Petersburg, find out more about that troll factory. What was its name again?”
    “New Agency House?”
    “Wasn’t it some sort of hub?”
    “That looks like a dead end too.”
    “Am I listening to an unusually pessimistic Blomkvist?”
    He could hear it too, but he had no wish to go to Saint Petersburg. The place was already teeming with journalists, and no-one had been able to find out who was behind the factory, or to what extent the intelligence services and the government were involved. He was fed up with it. He was tired of the news in general, tired of all the depressing political developments around the world. He ordered another espresso and asked Sofie about her idea for an article.
    She

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