Let the Old Dreams Die : Stories
Let the Old Dreams Die : Stories
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Author(s): Lindqvist, John Ajvide
ISBN No.: 9780312620530
Pages: 416
Year: 201310
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 48.29
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

The Border Even when the man first appeared in the doorway, Tina knew he had something to hide. With each step that he took toward the customs desk she became more sure. When he selected the green lane Nothing to Declare and walked right by her, she said, "Excuse me, would you mind stopping a moment?" and glanced at Robert to make sure he was with her. Robert nodded curtly. People who were about to be caught could take desperate measures in order to escape. Especially if they were smuggling anything that could land them in jail. And that was the case with this man. Tina was sure of it.


"Would you please put your bag here?" The man placed a small suitcase on the counter, unlocked it, and lifted the lid. He was accustomed to this, something his appearance testified to: an angular face, low forehead, small deeply set eyes under heavy brows. A beard and half-long hair. Could have played a Russian assassin in an action film. Tina leaned across the counter and at the same time pressed the concealed alarm bell. Her senses told her with 100 percent certainty that the man was carrying something illegal. Maybe he was armed. In the corner of her eye she saw Leif and Andreas go stand in the doorway to the inner room, waiting.


The suitcase did not contain much. Some clothes. A driving map and a couple of Mankell bestsellers, a telescope, and a magnifying glass. A digital camera that Tina lifted up in order to examine it more closely, but her sense told her that it wasn't anything. At the very bottom of the bag there was a large metal container with a lid. In the center of the lid there was a round counter with a needle. A cord was attached to the side of the container. "What is this?" she asked.


"Take a guess," the man said and raised his eyebrows as if he found the situation enormously funny. Tina met his gaze, which held a great calm. That could be due to two reasons: he was either crazy or he was sure she wouldn't find what he was hiding. The third alternative-that he didn't have anything to hide-she didn't even consider. She knew. The only reason that she was working in Kapellskär was that it was located so close to her home. She could have worked wherever she liked. Customs offices across the country requested her services whenever a significant drug cache was expected.


Sometimes she would go, stay for a few days in Malmö or Helsingborg until she had pointed out the smuggler. Often pointing out a cigarette or human smuggler while she was at it. Her sense was as good as 100 percent accurate. The only thing that could cause her to err was if an individual was carrying something that was not against the law but that the person in question was eager to conceal. Inevitably sex toys of various kinds came to light that way. Dolls, vibrators, movies. In Gothenburg she stopped a man on the ferry from England whose bag had turned out to contain a great deal of science fiction: Asimov, Bradbury, Clarke. The man had looked around nervously, his bag wide open on the counter and when she spotted his clerical collar she had closed it and bid him a good day.


Three years ago she had been in the United States working the border in Tijuana. She had pointed out five people who were smuggling heroin-two of them internally, packed in condoms-before the cache they had been waiting for arrived. Three eighteen-wheelers with hollow wheel drums. One thousand two hundred kilos. The largest seizure in ten years. She was rewarded with ten thousand in consultant fees and had been offered a position with a salary that was five times as high as the one she had in Sweden, but she had declined. Before she left, she had tipped them off to investigate two of their own employees. She was as good as sure that they had been bought off to secure the heroin transport.


It turned out that she was right. She could have become a multimillionaire by flitting around the globe and taking on such temporary assignments, but after the U.S. trip she had declined any further such activities. The two individuals she had identified had not only given off a strong nervousness but threat. For safety's sake she had stayed with the head customs official and driven in with him to work. It is dangerous to know too much, especially when so much money is at stake. So she had settled in Kapellskär, which lay ten minutes from her farm in Gilleberga in Rådmansö island.


The number of seizures had increased dramatically at the beginning of her tenure only to dip later, and gradually decrease. The smugglers simply knew that she worked there and that Kapellskär was to be considered a secured harbor. The past few years there had been mostly alcohol and the occasional unprofessional opportunists, their suitcase linings stuffed with anabolic steroids. Her work schedule varied week to week so that the smugglers would not be able to predict which hours would be impossible and exploit the others. Without touching the container she pointed to it and said, "This isn't a game. What is this?" "An insect incubator." "Excuse me?" The man smiled imperceptibly in his beard and picked it up. She now saw that the cord coming out of the side of it ended in a normal plug.


He removed the lid. The interior was divided into four chambers, separated by thin walls. "It's for hatching insects," he explained and held up the lid, displaying the meter in the center of it. "A thermostat. You take electricity, heat- pouff ! You have insects." Tina nodded. "Why would one have something like this?" The man replaced the container and shrugged. "Is it illegal?" "No.


I'm just wondering." The man leaned across the counter and asked in a low voice, "Do you like insects?" Something very unusual occurred. A cold shiver ran down along her spine and she assumed that she gave off the same nervousness that she was so good at detecting in others. Luckily there was no one here who could sense it. She shook her head and said, "You'll have to come step in here for a while." She showed him to the inner room. "You can leave your bag here." They inspected his clothes and they inspected his shoes.


They went through everything in his bag and then the bag itself. They found nothing. They could only do a body inspection if there was adequate motivation. Tina asked the others to leave. When they were alone, she said, "I know you're hiding something. What is it?" "How can you be so sure?" After everything he had been through, Tina felt he deserved an honest answer. "I can tell by your smell." The man chuckled.


"Of course." "You may think it is ridiculous," she said, "But I assure you-" The man interrupted. "Not at all. It sounds completely plausible." "And?" The man threw his arms out and then gestured toward his body. "You've searched me as thoroughly as possible and there's nothing else you can do. Isn't that correct?" "Yes." "Then I think I would like to move on.


" If Tina had been able to decide, she would have kept him locked up, had him under surveillance. But there was nothing in the law to allow for this. And anyway … there was only one alternative left. The inconceivable third alternative. That she had been wrong. She followed him to the door and said what she had to say. "I apologize for the inconvenience." The man stopped and turned to her.


"We may meet again," he said and then did something so unexpected that she did not have time to react. He leaned over and gave her a light kiss on the cheek. His beard was rough, sticking her like soft needles the moment before his lips met her cheek. She flinched and pushed him away. "What the hell are you doing?" The man held up his hands apologetically to show he was finished and said, " Entschuldigung . Good-bye," and left. He took his suitcase and disappeared into the arrival hall. Tina stood staring after him.


She left work early that day, went home. The dogs welcomed her with their usual furious barking. She yelled at them as they stood there inside the fence with their hair on end and teeth bared. She hated them. Had always hated dogs and of course the only man who had ever shown an interest in her was a dog breeder. So. When she had first met Roland his dog ownership had been limited to a single stud male. A pitbull by the name of Diablo who had won a number of illegal fights and who Roland took five thousand for breeding with promising, purebred females.


With the help of Tina's farm and Tina's financial assistance he had been able to increase his stable to two stud males, five bitches, and five young dogs who were waiting to be sold. One of the bitches was a magnificent specimen and Roland often traveled with her to conventions and competitions where he made new business contacts and was unfaithful. This happened on a regular basis and had become part of her routine. Tina didn't ask about it any longer. She could smell that he had been with another woman and did not blame him. He was company and she did not have the right to hope for anything better. Even though her daily life felt like a prison, there are moments in every person's life when they realize where their walls are placed, where the limits of their free.


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