The latest case for the Police Violent Crime Unit in Hammarby, Sweden, starts with the murder of an apparently inoffensive banker and then spreads and spreads some more.
None of his neighbors has anything but praise for Sven-Gunnar Erlandsson. He was kind to everyone, generous in volunteering for local causes, and conscientious about underwriting his regular poker game’s bank without calling attention to it. So why did someone shoot Svempa execution style when he was on his way home from his most recent poker session? At first DCI Conny Sjöberg and his mates wonder if the four cards found in his pocket might indicate that he was cheating at the rounds of poker he subsidized. But there are only four cards, not the five required for a poker hand. Cracks begin to appear in Svempa’s facade when Adrianti, the wife he met and married on a trip to Singapore, admits that in addition to the son and two daughters they’ve raised together, she has a daughter of her own who left home four years ago and whom she never talks about. Gradually Sjöberg and company discover that Svempa’s stepdaughter isn’t the only young woman who’s gone missing from the community. Larissa Sotnikova, an 11-year-old summer visitor staying with Staffan and Marie Jenner, vanished eight years earlier just before she was to return home. And Rebecka Magnusson, a 15-year-old with ADHD, ran away from home five months ago. Working with a cast of characters who stubbornly refuse to develop any complexity, Gerhardsen labors to connect the disappearances at the heart of her story in ways that manage to be both obscure and obvious.
A frustrating slog for all concerned.