Read The Girl Who Saved the King of Sweden Page 37


  The prime minister nodded. He thought he knew what the minister of foreign affairs might be getting at.

  ‘The question I’m about to ask might seem odd. In fact, it’s almost certain that it will, but after much deliberation Prime Minister Olmert and I have decided to ask it anyway.’

  ‘Please say hello to the prime minister for me. And ask away,’ said Prime Minister Reinfeldt. ‘I’ll answer to the best of my abilities.’

  Minister of Foreign Affairs Livni hesitated for a few more seconds, and then she said, ‘Is it possible that the prime minister is aware of twenty pounds of antelope meat that is of interest to the nation of Israel? Once again, I apologize if you find this question odd.’

  Prime Minister Reinfeldt gave a forced smile. And then he said that he was well aware of the antelope meat, that it had not tasted good – antelope meat wasn’t one of the prime minister’s favourites – and that it had been dealt with in such a way that no one else would be able to have a taste of it henceforth.

  ‘If you have any further questions, Mrs Minister, I’m afraid I’ll have to owe you the answers,’ Prime Minister Reinfeldt concluded.

  No, Minister of Foreign Affairs Livni didn’t need to ask any more questions. She didn’t share the prime minister’s aversion to antelope meat (vegetarian though she might be) but, then, the important thing for Israel was knowing that the meat hadn’t ended up with the sort of people who lacked respect for international rules pertaining to the import and export of animal products.

  ‘It’s nice to hear that the good relationship between our nations seems to endure,’ said Prime Minister Reinfeldt.

  ‘It does,’ said Minister of Foreign Affairs Livni.

  * * *

  If God does exist, he must have a good sense of humour.

  Nombeko had longed to have a baby with Holger Two for twenty years; she had given up hope five years earlier, and she had made it to forty-seven years of age when she realized in July 2008 that she really was pregnant (on the same day that George W. Bush in Washington decided that Nobel Peace Prize winner and ex-president Nelson Mandela could probably be taken off the US list of terrorists).

  But the comedy doesn’t end there. Because it soon came to light that the same went for the somewhat younger Celestine.

  Holger Two said to Nombeko that the world had done nothing to deserve offspring from Celestine and his brother, no matter what one thought of the world. Nombeko agreed on principle, but she insisted that they continue to focus on themselves and their own happiness as they had been doing, and let the idiots and the one idiot’s grandmother worry about themselves.

  And so they did.

  Holger Two and Nombeko’s baby came first: they had a daughter in April 2009; she weighed six pounds and five ounces and was utterly beautiful. Nombeko insisted on naming her Henrietta after her paternal grandmother.

  Two days later, Celestine gave birth to twins via a planned Caesarean section at a private clinic in Lausanne.

  Two nearly identical little babies.

  Two boys: Carl and Gustaf.

  * * *

  After Henrietta was born, Nombeko left her job as an expert on China. She had liked her job, but she felt that there was nothing more to do in that area. The president of the People’s Republic of China could not, for example, be any more satisfied with the Kingdom of Sweden than he already was. He didn’t regret having given Nombeko the lovely Volvo for a second, but because he had liked the car so much, he called his good friend Li Shufu at Zhejiang Geely Holding Group and suggested that Geely buy the whole company. It had actually been Nombeko’s idea from the beginning, when the president thought about it.

  ‘I’ll see what I can do, Mr President,’ said Li Shufu.

  ‘And then if you could get a good price on an armoured car for your president, I would be more than grateful,’ said Hu Jintao.

  ‘I’ll see what I can do, Mr President,’ said Li Shufu.

  * * *

  The prime minister was up in the maternity ward to congratulate Nombeko and Holger with a bouquet of flowers. And to thank the former for her extraordinary efforts in her role as expert on China. Just think: she had got President Hu to allow Sweden to finance a professorship in human rights at Beijing University. How she had managed that was beyond the prime minister. And for that matter, the chairman of the EU Commission, José Manuel Barroso, had called Reinfeldt to ask, ‘How the hell did you do that?’

  ‘Good luck with little Henrietta,’ said the prime minister. ‘And give me a call when you want to start working again. I’m certain we’ll find something for you. Absolutely certain.’

  ‘I promise I will,’ said Nombeko. ‘I’ll probably be calling soon, because I have the world’s best economist, political scientist and stay-at-home dad by my side. But now it’s time for you to toddle along, Prime Minister. It’s time for Henrietta to eat.’

  * * *

  On 6 February 2010, Hu Jintao, the president of the People’s Republic of China, landed at Oliver Tambo International outside Johannesburg for a state visit.

  He was greeted by Minister of International Relations Nkoana-Mashabane and a number of other potentates. President Hu chose to say a few official words at the airport. He spoke about the common future of China and South Africa, about his confidence in looking forward to strengthened bonds between the two countries, about peace and development in the world, and about a few other things that one could believe if one so chose.

  When this was done, an extensive two-day programme awaited the president before he would travel on to Mozambique, the next country on his tour of Africa.

  The thing that differentiated his visit to South Africa from those to Cameroon, Liberia, Sudan, Zambia and Namibia in the previous days was that the president insisted upon spending his evening in Pretoria in complete privacy.

  Clearly, the host country couldn’t say no to this. So the state visit was paused just before seven o’clock in the evening and resumed at breakfast the next day.

  At the stroke of seven, the president was picked up outside his hotel by a black limousine, which took him to Hartfield and the Swedish embassy.

  The ambassador herself greeted him at the door, along with her husband and baby.

  ‘Welcome, Mr President,’ said Nombeko.

  ‘Thank you, dear Mrs Ambassador,’ said President Hu. ‘It’s about time we got to talk safari memories together.’

  ‘And a little human rights,’ said Nombeko.

  ‘Ugh,’ said Hu Jintao, and he kissed Mrs Ambassador’s hand.

  EPILOGUE

  Things weren’t as much fun as they had once been at the sanitation department of the City of Johannesburg. For many years, there had been quotas of blacks in the organization, and everyone knows what that did to the jargon on the job. The illiterates of Soweto, for example, could no longer be called what they were, whether they were that or not.

  That terrorist Mandela had finally been released from his prison, and that was bad enough. But then the blacks elected him president, at which point Mandela set about destroying the country with his damned equality for all.

  In his thirty years with the department, Piet du Toit had managed to climb all the way up the ladder to the post of deputy director.

  But now a new life awaited him. His despotic father had died and left his life’s work to his only son (his mother had been dead for many years). His father was an art collector, and that would probably have been fine if only he hadn’t been so darned conservative. And if he hadn’t consistently refused to listen to his son. There were Renoirs, Rembrandts and the occasional Picasso. There were Monets and Manets. There were Dalís and Leonardo da Vincis.

  There were other things, too – and what it all had in common was a minimal increase in value. At least compared to what it would have been if his father hadn’t been so stubborn. Moreover, the old man had acted downright unprofessionally by keeping all that crap hanging on his walls at home instead of in an air-conditioned vault.

 
Piet du Toit had to wait for ages before he could take over and put it all right, because his father not only didn’t listen, he also refused to die. Not until his ninetieth birthday, when a slice of apple got stuck in his throat, was it finally his son’s turn.

  The heir waited until the funeral, but no longer, before he rapidly sold off all his father’s paintings. Since a few minutes ago, the capital had been reinvested in a manner that would have made his father proud if only he’d had any sense. The son was at the Julius Bär bank on Bahnhofstrasse in Zürich, and he had just received confirmation that his entire family fortune, amounting to 8,256,000 Swiss francs, had been transferred to the private account of a Mr Cheng Tao in Shanghai.

  What the son was investing in was the future. Because given the rapid development in China, the creation of a middle class and an ever-larger upper class, the value of traditional Chinese art was certain to increase many times over in just a few years.

  Via the fantastic Internet, Piet du Toit had found what he was looking for, whereupon he made his way to the Swiss city of Basel and entered into an agreement with Cheng Tao and his three nieces to buy their exclusive stock of Han dynasty pottery. They had certificates of authenticity; Piet du Toit had gone through them with a magnifying glass, and everything was in order. The stupid Chinese didn’t even realize what a goldmine they were sitting on. Why, they were all going to move home to China, along with the nieces’ mother. Move home to China? Instead of enjoying life in Switzerland? This was where Piet du Toit himself felt he belonged, where he didn’t have to be surrounded by illiterate natives day in and day out. Where he could be with like-minded people of the correct race, education and class. Not like that stooping Chink Cheng and his crew. It was a good thing they were going back to that godforsaken corner of the world where they came from. In fact, they’d already left, and that was probably for the best. That way they wouldn’t realize how they’d been fooled.

  Piet du Toit had had one of the hundreds of pieces sent to Sotheby’s in London to be valued. This was a requirement of the Swiss insurance company: they weren’t satisfied with the certificates of authenticity alone. The Swiss did sometimes show their bureaucratic side, but when in Rome . . . Anyway, Piet du Toit knew what he knew. He had used his wealth of experience to make sure of the authenticity of the pieces. And then he had made his move without letting in any competitors who would just drive up the price. That was how to do business.

  The phone rang. It was the valuer from Sotheby’s. The call had come just when he’d expected it to, down to the second. People with class kept their appointments.

  ‘Yes, this is Piet du Toit, although I prefer art dealer du Toit. What’s that? Am I sitting down? Why the hell does it matter?’

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Many, many thanks to my agent Carina, publisher Sofia, and editor Anna for being so good at your jobs.

  Just as many thanks to bonus readers Maria, Maud and Uncle Hans. And to Rixon, of course.

  Thanks, too, to Professors Lindkvist and Carlsson, as well as Police Inspector Loeffel in Växjö for giving me facts that I later misrepresented in my own way. And to my friend and Africa correspondent Selander, for the same reason.

  Hultman in Zürich can very well have thanks, too. And Brissman, even though he’s a Djurgården fan.

  Last but not least I want to thank Mum, Dad, Östers IF and Gotland, just for existing.

  Jonas Jonasson

  ALSO BY JONAS JONASSON

  The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared

  COPYRIGHT

  Fourth Estate

  An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers

  77–85 Fulham Palace Road

  London W6 8JB

  www.4thestate.co.uk

  First published in Great Britain by Fourth Estate in 2014

  First published in the United States by Ecco in 2014

  Originally published in Sweden as Analfabeten som kunde räkna by Piratforlaget in 2013

  Copyright © Jonas Jonasson 2014

  Jonas Jonasson asserts his moral right to be identified as the author of this work

  ‘Tonight I Can Write’, from Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda, translated by W. S. Merwin, translation copyright © 1969 by W. S. Merwin; used by permission of Jonathan Cape, an imprint of Random House. Pooh’s Little Instruction Book inspired by A. A. Milne © 1995 the Trustees of the Pooh Properties, original text and compilation of illustrations; used by permission of Egmont UK Ltd, and by permission of Curtis Brown Ltd. How to Cure a Fanatic by Amos Oz; used by permission of Vintage, a division of Random House.

  A catalogue record of this book is available from the British Library

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins.

  Cover by Jonathan Pelham

  Source ISBN 9780007557905

  Ebook Edition © April 2014 ISBN: 9780007557882

  Version 2014-03-18

  ABOUT THE PUBLISHER

  Australia

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  Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia

  http://www.harpercollins.com.au/ebooks

  Canada

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  United Kingdom

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  United States

  HarperCollins Publishers Inc.

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  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Epigraph

  PART ONE

  Chapter 1: On a girl in a shack and the man who posthumously helped her escape it

  Chapter 2: On how everything went topsy-turvy in another part of the world

  Chapter 3: On a strict sentence, a misunderstood country and three multifaceted girls from China

  Chapter 4: On a Good Samaritan, a bicycle thief and a wife who smoked more and more

  PART TWO

  Chapter 5: On an anonymous letter, peace on earth and a hungry scorpion

  Chapter 6: On Holger and Holger and a broken heart

  Chapter 7: On a bomb that didn’t exist and an engineer who soon didn’t, either

  Chapter 8: On a match that ended in a draw and an entrepreneur who didn’t get to live his life

  PART THREE

  Chapter 9: On a meeting, a mix-up and an unexpected reappearance

  Chapter 10: On an unbribable prime minister and a desire to kidnap one’s king

  Chapter 11: On how everything temporarily worked out for the best

  Chapter 12: On the love of an atomic bomb and differential pricing

  Chapter 13: On a happy reunion and the man who became his name

  PART FOUR

  Chapter 14: On an unwelcome visitor and a sudden de
ath

  Chapter 15: On the murder of a dead man and on two frugal people

  Chapter 16: On a surprised agent and a potato-farming countess

  PART FIVE

  Chapter 17: On the dangers of having an exact copy of oneself

  Chapter 18: On a temporarily successful newspaper and a prime minister who suddenly wanted a meeting

  Chapter 19: On a gala banquet at the palace and contact with the other side

  PART SIX

  Chapter 20: On what kings do and do not do

  Chapter 21: On a lost composure and a twin who shoots his brother

  Chapter 22: On a final clean-up and breaking camp

  Chapter 23: On an angry supreme commander and a beautifully singing woman

  PART SEVEN

  Chapter 24: On existing for real and on a twisted nose

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgements

  Also by Jonas Jonasson

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

 


 

  Jonas Jonasson, The Girl Who Saved the King of Sweden

  (Series: # )

 

 


 

 
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