The first fire was put down to accident. A faulty heater in the converted fritidshus of the Dutch couple who’d moved to Småland for the silence. The second, a week later, was harder to dismiss, a Molotov cocktail through the kitchen window of a Brighton-born dentist’s newly painted villa. By the time the third blaze lit up the pine-dark night, charring the porch of a Syrian architect’s modern timber dream-home, the word was whispered in the konditori and the Systembolaget queue: Välkommnad. Welcome. It was Inspector Mats Lundström, staring at the soot-streaked face of a weeping German web designer, who knew this was no spontaneous combustion. This was malice, methodically applied.
* * * * * * * * * * *
The rain in Växjö was a fine, persistent mist, the kind that soaked a man to the bones without the dignity of a proper downpour. Inspector Mats Lundström shrugged his worn tweed coat a little higher on his shoulders as he crunched across the gravel drive of ‘Lindenrotd’, a name he considered overly optimistic for a boxy yellow house currently missing half its thatched roof. The air stank of wet charcoal and regret.
“Inspector.” A young uniformed officer, looking chilled and miserable, nodded towards a huddle of figures.
A man and a woman, wrapped in identical foil survival blankets, stood like gleaming ghosts under a dripping birch. The man, Lars, was Danish, a freelance sommelier. The woman, Anya, was a potter. They’d moved six months ago.
“We were at a lecture in town,” Lars said, his voice flat. “On local fungi. The neighbour called.”
“Nothing valuable inside?” Lundström asked, his notebook a damp curl in his hand.
“Everything valuable,” Anya whispered, her eyes fixed on the wreckage. “My kiln. Our books. The peace. That was valuable.”
Lundström made a non-committal sound, a low hum in his throat. He’d seen this hollow look three times now. It wasn’t just the loss of objects; it was the violation of an idea. The idea of safety, of a fresh start in the postcard-perfect Småland woods.
At the station, the case wall was a depressing collage. Three fires. Three professional couples, none native Swedish, all having moved within the last eighteen months. No discernible connection between them—different nationalities, professions, social circles. The only common thread was their status as newcomers.
“It’s a pattern, Mats,” said Constable Erika Andersson, tapping the photos. “But a pattern of what? Random xenophobia?”
“Too organised,” Lundström grunted, sipping bitter station coffee. “The first looked like an accident. The second and third were blatant attacks. The perpetrator is learning, gaining confidence. Or getting angrier.”
His phone buzzed, a text from his son, David, in Cambridge. Saw this weird story about Swedish arsonists online. That’s your patch, isn’t it? Don’t work too hard. Love, D. A familiar ache, part pride, part loneliness, settled in his chest. He replied with a simple All under control. Stay focused on your essays.
The breakthrough, of a sort, came from an unexpected quarter. The local historical society’s secretary, a formidable woman named Mrs. Pettersson with a steel-grey bun, called. She’d heard about the fires. She wondered if the inspector knew about the ‘Hävd’.
“Hävd?” Lundström asked, seated in her overheated parlour amidst porcelain shepherds.
“Customary right. Prescriptive right,” she enunciated, as if to a child. “For centuries, certain families here had rights to forage, to cut timber, to hunt on specific lands. Not allmänsrätt, everyman’s right but private rights. Many of those rights were technically extinguished with modern laws, but… memories are long in the forest, Inspector.”
“And the new residents,” Lundström ventured, “they bought these lands?”
“Some. The Danish couple’s plot, for instance, was part of the old Nygård estate. The Nygård family died out, the land was sold to a developer… and then to your Danes.” She handed him a brittle, hand-drawn map. “The right to collect fallen timber and mushrooms on that land belonged to the crofters in Lilla By. Perhaps someone misses their mushrooms.”
It was a thread, gossamer-thin. Lundström and Andersson began cross-referencing property deeds with old records. The second victim’s land, they discovered, had once been part of a commons where villagers from Gränshult had the right to pick cloudberries. The third had ancient fishing rights attached to a stream now piped under a patio.
“It’s not about nationalism,” Lundström said, standing before the case wall, a red marker in his hand. He drew lines connecting the fires to small, nearby villages, Lilla By, Gränshult, Sjöglänta. “It’s about… a perceived theft. Someone who believes these newcomers aren’t just occupying houses, but are erasing old, cherished privileges.”
The next likely target was identified through agonising paperwork: a Belgian bio-chemist and his wife, who had renovated an old millhouse near Sjöglänta. The property had once come with a fiskehävd, a right to net the millpond, for the farmhands of a now-demolished manor.
“We can’t protect them all,” Andersson sighed.
“We don’t have to,” Lundström said. “We just need to be there first.”
* * * * * * * * * * *
The millhouse was a picture of rustic charm, its new wooden shingles pale against the dark water of the pond. Lundström, feeling his age in every damp joint, had positioned Andersson and another officer in a patrol car down the lane. He himself sat in his own Volvo, parked in the overgrown remains of the old mill yard, a flask of coffee and a copy of Inspector Morse omnibus for company. The night was utterly black, the silence broken only by the drip of moisture from leaves.
Just after 2 AM, a sound. Not a car, but the soft, rhythmic crunch of a bicycle on gravel. Lundström slid down in his seat. A figure, dressed in dark clothing, a backpack visible, glided past his hiding place and towards the back of the millhouse. The figure moved with a rehearsed efficiency, pulling a bottle and rag from the pack.
Lundström was out of the car, his torch beam cutting through the night. “Police! Stop right there!”
The figure froze, then spun, hurling the unlit Molotov cocktail towards the house. It shattered harmlessly against the stone foundation. In the torchlight, Lundström saw not a wild-eyed fanatic, but a man in his late sixties, with a lined, resigned face. He didn’t run.
“Arne Persson,” the man said, his voice steady. “I live in Sjöglänta.”
In the interview room, Arne Persson was calm, almost relieved.
“The millpond,” he said. “My grandfather taught me to net pike there. My father taught me. I taught my son. For a hundred years. Then the old family sold up, and the new man from Belgium… he put up a sign. ‘Private. No Fishing.’ He put koi in the pond. Ornamental fish.” He said the word with profound disdain.
“And the others?” Lundström pressed. “The Danes? The Englishman?”
“The Nygård woods,” Arne said. “We always took the first autumn mushrooms there. The new people fenced it. Posted ‘No Trespassing’. The cloudberry moor near Gränshult is now a ‘natural garden’. The Syrian’s house blocks the old path to the spring.” He looked at Lundström, his eyes clear and hard. “They buy more than land, Inspector. They buy our memories. They wall off our past. A fire… it reminds them. The land can take back what it gives. It’s a welcome they understand.”
The logic was warped, tragic, and terrifyingly clear. Arne, it turned out, was a retired surveyor. He had the skills to research the old deeds, the hävd rights. He had no hatred for the people, he claimed. Only a desperate, flaming anger at the loss of a world he knew. He acted alone.
* * * * * * * * * * *
The rain had finally stopped. Mats Lundström stood on the shores of Helgasjön, looking out at the grey water. The case was closed. Arne Persson was in custody, his quiet confession detailing his grim, destructive campaign. The newspapers would call him a nostalgic terrorist. The sociologists would have a field day.
Lundström thought of David in England, building a new life in an old place. He thought of the Syrian architect, already vowing to rebuild, to stay. He thought of Arne’s lost spring, his vanished fishing pond.
Justice, in this instance, felt like a blunt instrument. It could punish the act, but it couldn’t mend the tear in the social fabric, nor restore a lost right. It was about laws, not the deeper, quieter laws of the heart and history.
His phone rang. It was Andersson. “Another call, Inspector. A complaint from a new family in Åryd. Someone’s been stealing apples from their orchard. They say it’s from a tree that’s always been for the village…”
Lundström sighed, a long, slow exhalation that fogged in the cool air. The mysteries here were never just about murder or arson. They were about the slow, simmering collision between the old and the new, about the price of a view, and the value of a childhood memory. He turned from the lake, back towards his car.
“Alright,” he said, his voice a tired rumble. “I’m on my way.”
The mist was rising from the fields, shrouding the dark line of the forest. Somewhere in the pines, an old story was ending, and a new, uneasy one was beginning. Inspector Mats Lundström buttoned his coat, and went to work.
The end