Thursday, 27 November 2025

The Växjö vortex

The silence in the lab was not one of peace, but of interrupted chaos. Beakers sat with half-evaporated, iridescent liquids. A schematic on a large lightboard showed a device of terrifying complexity, parts of it angrily scratched out. On the main workbench, a polished metal sphere, humming at a frequency just at the edge of human hearing, pulsed with a soft, malevolent blue light. It was the heart of the room, and it was waiting. Its creator, Alvar Engberg, was gone. Not on a trip, not at the pub. Vanished. The only clues were a single, shattered vial that smelled of ozone and burnt almonds, and a single drop of a strange, mercury-like substance that refused to be wiped away. The local police took one look, knew it was beyond them, and made the call. It was a job for Inspector Mats Lundström.

* * * * * * * * * * *

The Volvo crunched to a halt on the gravel path, its solid Swedish engineering a stark contrast to the spindly, modern architecture of Alvar Engberg’s lakeside home and laboratory. Inspector Mats Lundström heaved himself out of the driver’ seat, his knees protesting with a familiar ache. He was a man in his mid-fifties, built like a worn-out oak tree, solid, but showing the weather of a long life. His face was a roadmap of lines earned from squinting at too many crime scenes and too few happy memories.

His partner, young Constable Eva Thörnblad, was already out, buzzing with an energy that made Lundström feel tired.

“Quite the place,” she said, nodding at the angular building of glass and steel. “Must have cost a fortune.”

“Engberg held over two dozen patents,” Lundström grunted, pulling his worn tweed coat tighter against the chill. “Mostly for things no one knew they needed. Self-heating shoelaces, a fridge that told you when you were out of milk… eccentric, they called him. A polite word for ‘difficult’.” He missed his son, David. A text about some obscure point of English history he was studying at Cambridge had been the only bright spot in his morning.

They were met at the door by Engberg’s assistant, a pale, nervous man in his thirties named Filip. “He’s never missed a day,” Filip stammered, wringing his hands. “Not once. He was working on the project… the big one. He was so close.”

“The big one?” Lundström asked, his tone deliberately flat.

“The Vortex. That’s what he called it. A… a localised atmospheric condenser. He said it could end droughts.” Filip led them into the lab. The air was thick with the smell of chemicals and something else, something electric.

Lundström’s eyes swept the room, taking in the controlled pandemonium. They settled on the humming sphere. “And that?”

“The core,” Filip whispered, as if afraid it might hear. “It’s active. I don’t know how to turn it off.”

As Thörnblad began taking pictures, Lundström’s gaze fell to the floor near the main workbench. A small, dark puddle gleamed, not like water, but like liquid metal. He crouched, his joints cracking a protest. He prodded it with a pen. It was dense, viscous. He tried to smear it, but it simply recoiled, reforming into its perfect droplet shape.

“Don’t touch that,” a sharp voice said from the doorway. A woman stood there, her face a mask of aristocratic annoyance. Lena Björkman, Engberg’s neighbour and, by her own account, his most beleaguered one. “That man’s experiments are a menace. Last month, it was a sonic bird-deterrent that shattered my greenhouse windows. The month before, a cloud of pink, sticky foam descended on my garden party.”

“You had a disagreement with Mr. Engberg?” Lundström asked, rising slowly.

“Constantly. I was suing him. This,” she waved a hand around the lab, “is an environmental hazard. I told him I’d have this place shut down.”

Lundström made a non-committal sound. A motive, clear and simple. Almost too simple.

The investigation plodded on. Engberg’s bank records showed no unusual activity. His computer was a maze of encrypted files. There were no signs of a struggle, no forced entry. It was as if the man had simply dissolved into the air.

Later that afternoon, Lundström stood by the lake, staring at the dark, placid water. Thörnblad joined him. “Filip’s alibi checks out. He was at a supplier in Kalmar all day. Lena Björkman was at a council meeting, confirmed by a dozen witnesses.”

“So, our two most likely suspects are in the clear,” Lundström mused. “Convenient.” He looked back at the lab. “He’s here. I can feel it. Either he’s in there, or the answer is.”

The break came from an unexpected source. The drop. The strange, mercury-like substance had been bagged and tagged, but the lab techs were baffled. “It’s not any known elemental metal,” one of them told Lundström over the phone. “It’s… complex. Organic, almost, but with a metallic structure. And it’s emitting a low-level radio frequency.”

“A frequency? To what?”

“We don’t know. But it’s constant.”

An idea, slow and deliberate, began to form in Lundström’s mind. He drove back to the lab, Thörnblad in the passenger seat. The evening was drawing in, and the lab, with its single lit window, looked like a lantern in the gathering gloom.

Inside, Filip was nervously monitoring the humming sphere. “The power draw is increasing,” he said, his voice tight with fear. “I don’t know what will happen.”

“Inspector,” Thörnblad said, holding up her phone. “I’ve been going through Engberg’s public lectures. He gave a talk last year on… get this… quantum-locked biological preservation.”

Lundström looked from Thörnblad’s excited face, to Filip’s terrified one, to the pulsating sphere. His eyes then dropped to the floor, to the spot where the strange drop had been collected. A clean patch, except… was there a faint shimmer?

He walked over, crouching again with a grunt. He wasn’t looking at the floor, but just above it. The air seemed to waver, like heat haze off a summer road.

“Filip,” Lundström said, his voice dangerously calm. “Engberg’s Vortex. It wasn’t for water, was it? A ‘localised atmospheric condenser’… that’s a lie.”

Filip’s face went ashen.

“It’s a field generator,” Lundström continued, rising and pointing a thick finger at the shimmer in the air. “It doesn’t condense the atmosphere. It twists it. It alters states. He wasn’t trying to make it rain. He was trying to move things. Or make things… intangible.”

A deafening crackle filled the room. The sphere’s hum rose to a piercing whine. The shimmer in the air intensified, solidifying into a shimmering, vertical oval. Through it, they could see a distorted version of the lab and the faint, terrified outline of a man, his mouth open in a silent scream. Alvar Engberg.

“He’s phased!” Filip screamed over the noise. “The initial test went wrong. It trapped him between states! The sphere is the anchor, but it’s unstable. The energy feedback is building!”

“Turn it off!” Thörnblad yelled.

“I can’t! The shut-down sequence requires a biometric key! Only Alvar’s handprint can do it!”

Lundström’s mind raced. The drop. The radio frequency. It wasn’t a by-product; it was a beacon. A piece of Engberg, still anchored to our reality. He looked at the trapped, ghostly figure, then at the sphere. The solution was insane. It was brilliant.

“Thörnblad! The evidence bag! The drop!”

She understood instantly, tossing him the small, sealed plastic bag. Lundström strode towards the shimmering vortex. The air crackled around him, snatching at his coat. He could feel a terrifying coldness, a pull that threatened to unravel him.

“Inspector, no!” Filip cried.

Lundström ignored him. With a final, grunting lunge, he thrust the evidence bag, and the anomalous drop within it, into the heart of the shimmering field.

The effect was instantaneous. The drop flared with brilliant silver light. The frequency it emitted synched with the sphere. The ghostly image of Engberg snapped into sharp, solid focus. There was a sound like a universe sighing, and the physicist collapsed onto the floor, gasping and solid. The sphere’s light died. The hum ceased. The silence that followed was absolute.

* * * * * * * * * * *

A week later, Lundström sat in his office, a cup of lukewarm coffee on his desk. The case was closed. Alvar Engberg was recovering in hospital, suffering from severe dehydration and shock, but alive. His story was one of a catastrophic experiment, a trap of his own devising. Lena Björkman had dropped her lawsuit. Filip was being hailed as a hero for his attempts to stabilise the machine.

On his phone was a picture from David: a stone cross in a Cambridge churchyard. Lundström smiled faintly. Some mysteries of history were safe, comfortable. Others, like the one in Engberg’s lab, were best forgotten. He took a sip of his coffee. It was bitter, but it was real. And for now, that was enough. The Vortex was sealed, the inventor saved, and the quiet, orderly world of Växjö was, for the moment, secure. Some days, that was the only victory worth having.

END

Saturday, 8 November 2025

The digital gallows

The first sign was a flicker. A single, dismissive blink of the lights in the Växjö police station at 4:17 AM. The second was the silence. The low, perpetual hum of computers and servers vanished, leaving a void filled only by the ticking of an analogue clock. Then, the screens awoke. Every monitor, from the front desk to the Chief’s office, flashed once before displaying the same message, etched in stark, blood-red letters against a black background:

VÄXJÖ IS ASLEEP. WE ARE AWAKE. YOUR LIVES ARE OUR DATA. YOUR DATA IS OUR LEVERAGE. 50 MILLION KRONOR IN BITCOIN. YOU HAVE 12 HOURS. OR WE WILL PULL THE PLUG. FOR GOOD.

* * * * * * * * * *

Inspector Mats Lundström felt the headache begin behind his eyes before he’d even finished his morning coffee. He stood in the incident room, a cacophony of frantic voices and uselessly dark screens. The town was in chaos. Traffic lights were dead, creating snarls of metal at every intersection. ATMs spat out nothing but error messages. Phones, landlines and mobiles, were useless bricks. Hospitals were running on emergency generators, their digital patient records inaccessible.

“It’s a ghost town out there, Mats,” said Constable Anja Lindgren, her usual cheerful demeanour replaced by grim urgency. “It’s not just us. The bank, the power station, the water treatment plant… even the library’s public terminals. All locked out. All showing the same message.”

Mats grunted, stirring a third sugar into his coffee. At fifty-six, his face was a roadmap of past cases and late nights, his hair a thick, steely grey mane he refused to tame. He felt a profound, old-man’s irritation at the digital world. “A ghost town? No. Ghosts are memories. This is a hostage situation. The whole bloody town is tied to the railway tracks.”

Chief Inspector Bertilsson burst in, his face florid. “Lundström! The National Cyber Crime Unit is on their way, but they’re stuck in traffic outside Jönköping. We’re on our own for the first few hours. I need you to lead this. You’re… analog enough to think around this.”

Mats offered a thin smile. “You mean I’m old, sir.”

“I mean you don’t panic when your tablet won’t charge. Find me a thread, Mats. Any thread.”

His first visit was to the municipal power station. The manager, a harried man named Stig Håkansson, was pacing outside.

“It’s impossible!” Stig wailed. “The control systems are locked. We can’t reroute, we can’t monitor load, nothing! If we try to force a manual reboot, their message says it will trigger a cascade failure that will burn out the primary transformers. It could take weeks to fix.”

“Who has this kind of access, Stig?” Mats asked, his voice a low, calming rumble.

“Someone on the inside? A disgruntled employee? A contractor? We had a system upgrade six months ago… a private firm from Stockholm handled it.”

Mats made a note in his little black book, the pen feeling reassuringly solid. An inside track. It was always, on some level, an inside job.

* * * * * * * * * *

The thread, when it came, was not digital, but human. A call came through a lone, patched-in radio. A body. At the offices of ‘Nordic Digital Solutions’, the firm that had upgraded the power grid.

The scene was a stark contrast to the chaos outside. The office was modern, silent, and sterile. A man in his late thirties, sharp suit, lay sprawled on the floor of a server room, a heavy, vintage glass ashtray lying near his head, smeared with blood.

“His name is Felix Ljungberg,” Anja said, checking the man’s wallet. “Head of IT Security. Ironic.”

Mats crouched, his knees complaining. He didn’t touch the ashtray. It was an oddity in this temple of technology. He looked at the victim’s hands. No defensive wounds. Clean nails. This wasn’t a struggle. It was an execution.

“He knew his killer,” Mats murmured. “Let them in, turned his back. Felt safe enough to have a conversation.” He pointed to two coffee mugs on a nearby desk. “And he was a hospitable man.”

The company CEO, a sleek woman named Eva Thorn, arrived, her composure cracking at the edges. “Felix? But… he was our best. He was working all night on the hack!”

“Was he now?” Mats asked, his tone deceptively mild. “And what did he say?”

“He said he’d found a backdoor. A piece of code he called ‘The Latch’. He said he thought he could reverse it, or at least trace it.”

Mats looked around the pristine, lifeless room. A dead expert. A mysterious ‘Latch’. A very physical, personal murder happening concurrently with a faceless, digital siege. They were connected. They had to be.

* * * * * * * * * *

Back at the station, a semblance of order was returning via battery-powered radios and sheer bloody-mindedness. Mats spread a map of Växjö on a table.

“The hack is one thing. The murder is another. They are two hands of the same beast,” he declared to Anja and a small team. “Ljungberg found the key, so he was silenced. But why kill him with an ashtray? In a building full of blunt objects? It’s a statement. It’s personal.”

His phone, a relic that only made calls, buzzed. It was his son, Karl, in England. The line crackled.

“Dad? I saw the news. Are you alright? The whole town’s offline.”

“I’m fine, Karl. Just a busy day at the office.” Mats felt a familiar pang, a mix of pride and loneliness. His divorce, Karl’s move abroad… his life had become a series of long silences punctuated by brief, cherished connections.

“Be careful,” Karl said. “This sounds… big.”

“It is. Talk soon, son.”

The call grounded him. He was protecting something real, not just data.

They dug into Felix Ljungberg’s life. He was wealthy, ambitious, and had a bitter, recent falling out with his business partner, a man named David Eklund. The company, ‘Streamline Tech’, had gone under, and Eklund blamed Felix, claiming he’d stolen intellectual property—a revolutionary network integration protocol.

“A protocol that could, say, create a backdoor into every system in a town?” Mats mused.

David Eklund was a ghost. His apartment was empty, cleared out. But he had a passion: vintage smoking paraphernalia. He collected old pipes, lighters, and ashtrays.

“The ashtray,” Anja said, her eyes wide. “It’s his calling card.”

* * * * * * * * * *

With three hours left until the ransom deadline, they had a name, but no location. The National Cyber unit was still hours away. The town was growing restless, fearful.

Then, a break. An old watchman at the disused Linnaeus Pumphouse, by the lake, reported seeing lights and a generator running. A place with no digital footprint, hardwired into the town’s original, physical infrastructure.

Mats and Anja moved in quietly, with a small armed unit. The old brick building was cold and damp, but inside, a modern server farm hummed, powered by a chugging generator. And there was David Eklund, a gaunt, intense man in his forties, staring at a wall of monitors showing the countdown to doomsday.

“Eklund! It’s over,” Mats said, his voice echoing in the cavernous space.

Eklund spun around, not surprised, but triumphant. “Inspector! Is it? In ten minutes, unless I get my money, Växjö’s financial records, medical histories, and private emails will be published online. Then, the lights go out for a week.”

“You killed Ljungberg.”

“He stole my life’s work! Called it his own. ‘The Latch’. My design! He was going to be the hero who saved the town, getting rich off my genius. I just gave him the recognition he deserved. A smashing success.” He smiled, a cold, dead thing.

It was then Mats noticed it. On the control console, next to a keyboard, sat a single, heavy glass ashtray, identical to the murder weapon.

“It’s not about the money, is it?” Mats said, stepping slowly closer, his hands open. “It’s about the spectacle. The humiliation. You wanted to show them all how fragile their new world is. How the man they cast aside could hold them all to ransom.”

“You’re analog, Inspector. You understand. Everything these days is soft, virtual. I wanted to leave a mark. A real, physical mark.”

As Eklund monologued, Mats’s eyes scanned the setup. Wires. Cables. A physical connection from the servers to the pump house’s ancient mainline. It was the master switch.

With a sudden, grunting lunge, Mats didn’t go for Eklund. He went for the console, his body crashing into it, his hands scrambling for the thick, primary power cable. He yanked it with all his strength.

Sparks flew. The servers screamed a death rattle. The monitors went black.

Eklund roared in fury, grabbing the ashtray. He lunged at Mats, but Anja was faster. Her taser probes hit him in the chest, and he crumpled to the damp stone floor, twitching.

The silence that followed was broken only by the sputtering generator.

* * * * * * * * * *

Two days later, the digital world was slowly stuttering back to life. The National Cyber unit was mopping up, impressed by the old-school police work.

Mats Lundström sat in his favourite chair by the window, a glass of whisky in his hand. The headache had finally receded. On the table lay a postcard he’d bought earlier. A picture of Växjö Cathedral, serene in the sunlight. He picked up his pen.

Dear Karl, he wrote.
All is well here. We had a spot of bother with a disgruntled fellow who didn’t like the modern way of things. It reminded me of a truth we often forget: no matter how complex the machine, it’s always a human hand that throws the switch, for good or for ill. Looking forward to your visit next month.
Love, Dad.

He took a sip of whisky, the amber liquid warm and familiar. Outside, the town’s lights glittered, steady and sure. For now, the ghosts were back in their machines, and the silence was peaceful.

END


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