The first death was written off as a tragic, if bizarre, accident. Erik Borg, a respected retired archivist, was found crushed in his own study beneath a fallen mahogany bookcase. The volumes that killed him were all local histories of Växjö and the surrounding Småland forests. The second, a week later, was harder to dismiss.
Anette Lundgren, a vocal local councillor, drowned in her sink. A mere inch of water. Her skin was icy to the touch, and clutched in her hand was a tiny, hand-carved figurine of a raven, made of bog oak. Inspector Mats Lundström stood over her body, a cold knot tightening in his gut that had nothing to do with the damp Swedish autumn. Two unconnected citizens. Two impossible deaths. A whisper, like the rustle of dead leaves, began to circulate through the town’s cobbled streets: The curse is awake.
* * * * * * * * * * *
The call came at 3:17 a.m., slicing through the silence of Lundström’s tidy, empty apartment. The dispatcher’s voice was strained. “Another one, Inspector. Out at the old Kronberg Mill. It’s… you need to see this.”
Lundström drove through the pre-dawn murk, the headlights of his Volvo carving tunnels through the mist that snaked up from the lakes. He felt his age in the stiffness of his back, in the familiar, hollow silence of the car. His son, Tomas, was probably just finishing a tutorial in Oxford, a world of spires and logic away from the creeping, irrational dread of Småland.
The mill was a dark hulk against the grey sky. Sergeant Linnea Ek, young, sharp, and currently pale as whey, met him at the entrance. “It’s Gunnar Falk,” she said, leading him inside. “The property developer. The one trying to buy the mill and the forest for his holiday cabins.”
The scene in the main grinding room defied sense. Gunnar Falk lay spreadeagled on the ancient stone floor. The massive, moss-covered millstone, which hadn’t turned in fifty years, was resting squarely on his chest. No machinery was connected. No ropes or levers were present. The stone appeared to have simply… rolled. Yet the floor was flat.
“Witness?” Lundström’s voice was a gravelly rumble.
“None. A anonymous tip to the switchboard,” Ek said. “But look.” She pointed a gloved finger. Beside Falk’s outstretched hand was another figurine. A wolf, this time, also in dark, ancient wood.
“The curse,” a voice quavered from the doorway. It was old Mrs. Pettersson, who lived in the cottage down the lane. “He meant to tear it down. The mill, the woods. It’s the Guardian’s wrath. The Guardian of the Grove.”
Lundström sighed, the sound lost in the vast, damp room. “Thank you, Mrs. Pettersson. Ek, take her statement. And get forensics over every inch of this place. I want to know how a two-tonne stone moved ten feet uphill.”
Back at the station, over coffee that tasted of tin, Lundström spread out the files. Three victims. No obvious links, different professions, social circles, ages. Borg the historian, Lundgren the politician, Falk the developer. Yet a thread, gossamer-thin, began to emerge. All three had been involved, years before, in the “Kronberg Dispute,” a bitter, forgotten battle over the preservation of the old forest and mill. Borg had written the historical assessment, Lundgren had cast the deciding vote against preservation, and Falk had been the original, failed bidder.
“So it’s revenge,” Ek proposed. “Someone who cared about the land.”
“Revenge, yes,” Lundström muttered, lighting a pipe, a habit he’d kept from his days in Uppsala. “But revenge with a theatrical flair. They’re not just being killed. They’re being… punished. Executed according to a theme. Crushed by history, drowned in political scandal, ground down by progress.”
His next visit was to Elsa Kronberg, the last descendant of the mill-owning family, a woman in her eighties with eyes like chips of flint. She lived in a cottage filled with relics and the smell of dried herbs.
“The Guardian is not a myth, Inspector,” she said, not looking up from her knitting. “It is a promise. A promise that some places hold a memory, and those who violate it pay a price.”
“And these?” He placed photos of the figurines on her table.
Her needles stopped. For a long moment, she was silent. “The Raven. The Wolf. The Bear will be next. They are the old wardens. You will find your answer where it began, Inspector. In the grove where the elder stone sleeps.”
The following day, the fourth victim was found. Björn Håkansson, a wealthy land surveyor who had falsified the original boundary maps for the Kronberg land. He was in his greenhouse. His neck was broken. Around him, every terracotta pot was shattered. In the centre of the wreckage lay a figurine of a bear. And pressed into the soil near his body was a perfect, fresh bear print. There were no bears in Småland.
The town was now in the grip of full-blown panic. The press bayed about a serial killer; the social media channels buzzed with wild speculation and grainy photos of shadowy figures in the woods. Lundström’s Chief was demanding an arrest, any arrest. But Lundström felt the pieces swirling, beginning to align not by logic, but by a darker, more narrative logic.
He drove to the Kronberg Grove, an ancient stand of oak and ash protected by a covenant Borg had helped break, that Lundgren had voted to ignore, that Falk and Håkansson had sought to parcel up. In the centre was a large, glacial erratic stone, the Elder Stone. It was here he found the proof that untangled myth from murder.
Partially buried in the leaf mould, almost invisible, was a small, high-powered electromagnet, its battery nearly drained. Nearby, a series of subtle tracks, cleverly disguised as animal trails, led back towards Elsa Kronberg’s cottage. But it wasn’t the old woman he confronted in her garden.
It was her grandson, Johan. Quiet, unassuming Johan, a skilled carpenter and robotics enthusiast, who’d spent his life listening to his grandmother’s stories while his own future was stolen by the greed of four men. Johan, who could carve exquisite figurines and programme a remote-controlled dolly strong enough to tilt a millstone if the stone’s base was subtly prepared with metal plates.
The confrontation was not dramatic. Lundström simply held up the magnet in an evidence bag and watched the young man’s shoulders slump.
“They didn’t just take land,” Johan said, his voice thick. “They took a story. A memory. They left nothing. I just… gave them a story to be part of. One they’d understand.”
“You made them characters in a dark fairy tale,” Lundström said, not unkindly. “But you are not a guardian spirit, Johan. You’re a very clever, very angry man. And you’re under arrest.”
* * * * * * * * * * *
A week later, the mist had lifted from Växjö. The curse, explained away as ingenious murder, was now tabloid fodder. The case was closed.
Inspector Mats Lundström sat in his quiet apartment, the case files boxed and ready for storage. He had spoken to Tomas on the phone, giving him a sanitised version of events. His son had laughed, called it “very Midsomer, Pappa,” and the familiar ache of distance had twinged in Lundström’s chest.
He poured a single malt and walked to the window, looking out over the town lights shimmering in the autumn dark. He thought of old Mrs. Kronberg, now utterly alone. He thought of the deep, silent woods that had almost been lost. Johan’s methods were monstrous, his logic that of a fractured mind, yet a sliver of his motive, the defence of a sacred, silent thing against the roar of carelessness, resonated with a quiet, stubborn place in the old detective’s soul.
The Växjö Vexation was solved. Order was restored. But as Lundström took a slow sip of whisky, he knew some truths, like the oldest trees in the Kronberg Grove, stood apart from the neat geometries of law and report. They simply endured, deep-rooted and watchful, in the dark.
The end