SPOILER ALERT
As Asa Embla Nystrom appears in this new series she is on vacation for the annual moose hunt. She has just won the Swedish light-welterweight championship boxing title. She is described as hyperactive, a status that gives her nightmares, one specifically that haunts her childhood memories. She and her friend Lollo, a year older than she, snuck out to first go to Copenhagen on an adventure, that despite some danger turned out all right. The next time, however, she was just fourteen and she went to a club with Lollo. They had made themselves look older, and Lollo was meeting a man of twenty. Once there Lollo leaves her standing back while she chats up the bartender, a handsome man who is one of the brothers of Milo Stavic, owners of the club. She watches as Lollo disappears behind a door marked "staff only" and follows. Knocked down and told to forget what she has seen or she will die, Lollo is spirited away to never be seen again. Embla makes up a story when she returns home. During the investigation of this case, she sees Milo again in a restaurant, though he does not appear to recognize, or even pay any attention to her group.
While on the hunt the group experiences some weird incidents: Frippe, Stig Ekstrom's (he is the estate manager for von Beehn's Dalsnas Manor.) dog is poisoned, there is a viper in the outhouse that bites Karin Bergstrom, and a animal trap is set at the base of the hunting tower assigned to Embla. The party is made up a disparate group of individuals. Several wealthy men including Anders von Beehn and Jan-Eric Cahneborg, Gregor Liljon, Beehn's nephew and considered incompetent, and Volker Heinz are staying at the Hunting Castle owned by von Beehn, joining the Embla's friends, Uncle Nisse, Karin and Bjorn Bergstrom, Sixten Svensson and newcomer Peter Hansson, who has returned to claim his family's hunting grounds and rights. It has put Sixten off as he had wanted the grounds and had offered to buy them. He also sees the table for dinner night before made of a superstitious thirteen, a bad omen. Peter is a handsome and seemingly charismatic IT executive to whom Embla is attracted. She is warned by Sixten that the house that he has remodeled contains locked rooms, and a heavy amount of security which is unusual in their part of the country. Embla does some snooping that does not sit well with Peter. She also prior to the hunt beginning sees a woman walking among the trees is a white dress with very long hair.
When after a hiatus of a couple of days the main party returns to the Hunting Castle both von Beehn and Cahneborg have disappeared. Seppo, Nisse's dog finds his body at the bottom of a cliff, and it is possibly an accident, but for the fact that there is no sign of von Beehn. Embla calls for reinforcements that are extensive and no body is found, producing much speculation as to what has happened. They are reminded that a third member of the "three Muskateers", Ola Forsnaess, was killed a year before in an auto accident on the way home from the hunt. When an odd package is found in Jan-Eric's belongings, and then hidden in von Beehn's they inquire if a similar one had been sent to Forsnaess. It had. The packages had an item in them: a bandanna for Jan-Eric, a key BMW key ring for von Beehn, and a fake gold Rolex watch in the package for Forsnaess, which had come to his home after he had left for the hunt the year before. Each also a note "I remember. M"
After Emble and her team think on who M might, they remember the disappearance of Peter Hansson's sister Camilla twenty-five years earlier. M could be for a nickname Milla or Millan.
Peter had been seven years old so there doesn't seem to be a link with him as suspect in the disappearances. They also determine that the three men were at the Hunting Castle thirty years in the past.
Peter's is a smart home. He says that because he handles highly confidential and sensitive information for his clients, the security is necessary. He has a room that is entirely white with computer equipment and a huge screen on the wall. As Peter and Embla become intimate, she is drawn to his home during the investigation to be lured into complacency, warm and cozy in the spa. She is in the bedroom later and is looking for something to put on when she finds a hidden door in one of the closets. There is a figure of a woman in a white dress along with other old family items. There are also a number of snakes. When she comes to, she is naked, hanging from a hook in the ceiling in the white room. She wonders why she is still alive, and Peter begins to talk to her. He has put a Trojan on each of their phones and on the screen he points out the location of each member of the hunt and police team. He has wiped her phone out...she no longer exists. He tells her she needs to tell him what information they team knows that he doesn't. She pretends she is more out of it than she is. As a boxer she had learned to ignore pain (her shoulders are hurting her) and she is well trained in balancing her body. When he approaches she kicks him in the face and he falls and hits his head. She gets herself down and downstairs to get some clothes on and out of the house through a window. As she runs she is aware he may have night vision and will shoot her. Indeed he shoots at her and wounds her in the arm. She gets to Sixten's house. He has a secret gun safe that has a multitude of rifles and night scopes. They arm themselves, though Sixten is immediately wounded in the arm, out. She creeps to the top of the house and watches for Peter's appearance where she can get a shot at him. She wounds him, and he lies unconscious bleeding profusely. She then prepares her story. In Sweden, the police are held to high standards when definding themselves. She must get regular scopes on the rifles, and prepare her story for what happened, including accusing Peter of rape. She cannot confess that she had an intimate relationship with him. She goes through rigorous examination, her wound dressed. Sixten recovers, though he will never use his arm properly again. Peter eventually dies of pneumonia from bleeding into his lungs. On his computer, without a password they find a story entitled: "The Boy Who Saw". It relates to his having gone out to find his sister who had not returned from a date, when he was seven years old. She had become a wild teenager, and their father was an abusive man, their mother a drunk. He takes his bike and the very expensive monovular he father had, and some food and starts out intending to go to the high hunting tower from which he can seen far. Ironically Sixten gives him a ride at the time, as the tower is a long way. His father had taken him there in te past. As he arrives, he reinforces himself with the cinnamon rolls and drink, then climbs to the top. He looks out and sees the Butcher Shed, Sixten doing some errands. Then three men arrive, one in a red car with a BMW key ring. Another puts a head band around his forehead Native American style. The third wears a gold Rolex watch. As he watches they take a large bundle into the shed. He then returns to the meeting point where Sixten picks him up and takes him home. His father is furious that he has taken the monocular and hits him, hurting his head. The police discover that there was Rohypnol in the tea Peter had served her in the spa, though he had put whiskey in it, and she did not drink it.
It is only thirty years later that he remembers what he saw, and figures out who the men were. He finds his sister's grave under the Butchering Shed. He kills Forsnaess by taking over his car and the brakes, creating his loss of control and the accident. He kills Jan-Eric. He then buries von Beehn alive next to the body of his sister under shed.
A gruesome and sad tale of horrible men. Forsnaess had gotten away with sadistic sex accusations in the past, and apparently had killed Camilla, after which his friends helped him cover it up. The community believed she left of her own accord. The story was clever and well written and I am drawn to the well-developed person of Embla. I would only say that I figured that Peter was too good to be true and that the disappearance of sister would play into the case. Her descriptions of the cold and the mud created by the rain set the atmosphere well. The author seems obsessed with cars, describing each of the vehicles the characters drive, including the old Volvo that Embla was given by Nisse and holds in great sentiment, even as the gas gauge doesn't work and she regularly runs out of gas. There are the luxurious Maseratti, a Hummer, a Jag, Range Rovers, BMWs and more pedestrian cars, most of which are not good in the mud that permeates the story. The culture of the moose hunt and the regulations to which the police are held put a new perspective on a crime investigation. I look forward to reading the continuing series.