The Darkest Room

The Darkest Room Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: The Darkest Room Read Online Free PDF
Author: Johan Theorin
every summer to put out nets, then spend the night in the boathouse and get up at five to check them.
    Out here on the Baltic shore he missed those days, and thought it was sad that his grandfather was no longer around. Algot had carried on with his carpentry and little bits of building after his retirement, and had seemed perfectly content with his life right up until the last heart attack, despite the fact that he had left the island only a few times.
    Henrik undid the padlock and peered into the darknessinside. Everything looked more or less as it had done when his grandfather passed away six years earlier. Nets hung along the walls, the workbench was still standing on the floor, and the iron stove was rusting away in one corner. Camilla had wanted to clear everything out and paint the inside walls white, but Henrik thought it was just fine the way it was.
    He cleared away oilcans, toolboxes, and other things that were on the wooden floor and spread out a tarpaulin ready for the stolen goods. Then he went out onto the jetty on the point and breathed in the smell of seaweed and brackish salt water. To the north he could see the twin lighthouses at Eel Point rising up out at sea.
    Down below the jetty was his motorboat, an open launch, and when he looked down into it he could see that the floor was covered in rainwater. He climbed down into the boat and began baling out.
    As he was working he thought back over what had happened the previous evening, when he and the Serelius brothers had sat down in the kitchen and held a séance. Or whatever it might have been.
    The glass had moved constantly across the board, providing answers to every question—but of course it was Tommy himself who had been moving it. He had closed his eyes, but he must have been peeping to make sure the glass ended up in the right place.
    At any rate, it had turned out that the spirit of Aleister wholeheartedly supported their plans to break into summer cottages. When Tommy asked about the village of Stenvik, which Henrik had suggested, the glass had moved to YES , and when he asked if there were valuable things in the cottages up there, he had been given the same answer: YES .
    Finally Tommy had asked, “Aleister, what do you think … can the three of us trust one another?”
    The little glass had remained still for a few seconds. Then it had slowly moved to NO .
    Tommy gave a brief, hoarse laugh.
    “That’s okay,” he said, looking at Henrik. “I don’t trust anybody.”
    Four days later Henrik and the Serelius brothers had made their first trip north, to the cluster of summer cottages that Henrik had selected and Aleister had approved. There were only closed-up houses there, pitch black in the darkness.
    Henrik and the brothers weren’t looking for small, expensive objects when they broke open a window and got into a cottage—they knew no summer visitors were stupid enough to leave cash, designer watches, or gold necklaces behind in their cottages over the winter. But certain things were too difficult to transport home from the country when the holiday was over: televisions, music systems, bottles of spirits, boxes of cigarettes, and golf clubs. And in the outbuildings there could be chain saws, cans of gas, and electric drills.
    After Tommy and Freddy had smashed the ship in the bottle and Henrik had finished muttering about it, they split up and carried on searching for treasures.
    Henrik carried on into the smaller rooms. The front of the house faced the rocky coastline and the sound, and through a picture window he could see the chalk-white half-moon suspended above the water. Stenvik was one of the small empty fishing villages on the west coast of the island.
    Every room he went into met him with silence, but Henrik still had the feeling that the walls and the floor were watching him. For that reason he moved carefully, without making any mess.
    “Hello? Henke?”
    It was Tommy, and Henrik called back: “Where are you?”
    “Here,
Read Online Free Pdf

Similar Books

Suck It Up

Emma Hillman

Eye Spy

Tessa Buckley

Seduction in Mind

Susan Johnson

Shadow Hawk

Jill Shalvis

The Dutch

Richard E. Schultz

The Wellstone

Wil McCarthy

Claws for Alarm

T.C. LoTempio

Twelve Red Herrings

Jeffrey Archer