Authors: Stefan Spjut
âHer story began in the summer of 1904, when John was working on illustrations for a book called
Laplandâthe Great Swedish Land of the Future
. He was living with the Sami people and was allowed to travel with them as if he were one of their own. One day, when they were on their way to a fell lake to fish, they saw a group of timber huts in the distance which attracted John's interest. He wanted to take a closer look, but the Laps refused, so John had to go alone. The people living there were walking around in strange fur clothesâwolf pelts and bear skins with the animals' heads still attached. Some of them were enormous and others were more like dwarves, you could say. They had a tame bear which walked among the huts like a dog. John had never seen anything like it and was absolutely mesmerised.'
Susso, who had been leafing through the newspaper cuttings on the table, looked up and caught her mother's eye, and she heard the sofa creak as Torbjörn shifted position and leaned forwards.
âThere was a squirrel,' Barbro continued. âThey kept it as a pet and John took a liking to it because it was unusually sociable, and when one of the giants said he could have it, he took it gladly. When he returned to the Sami the first thing he did was show them the squirrel, but they did not share his delight and one of them, an old woman, even tried to beat it to death. They told John he had been among the stallo people and that the little animal was one of them and not to be trusted. They said that if John wanted to stay with them, he would have to get rid of the squirrel, but he was not prepared to do that so he left for home the following day.'
âAre you saying there were stallo around as late as the beginning of the twentieth century?' Susso said. âIt must have just been something they said, something the Sami people told him to scare him. Or maybe they were joking.'
âYes,' said Barbro, âthat could have been the case. But he could find no other name for them. And fourteen years later, in the autumn of 1918, they came to his home on Björkudden.'
âWho did?' Susso asked. âThe stallo?'
Barbro nodded slowly.
âThey turned up late one evening,' she said. âAnd they were really very strange. One of them was gigantic. His head hit the ceiling, so he had to stoop, and the ceiling of the ground floor was two metres and seventy-five centimetres high. The second was a dwarf, hardly a metre tall. The third man was normal height, which, under the circumstances, looked quite amusing. He did all the talking while the other two, who were wearing floor-length capes with hoods to hide their hideous faces, stood quietly in the background. Esther assumed they belonged to a theatre where John had worked as a set designer, but when she asked if they
were actors, they did not answer. They just stared at her in silence. John told her to take Bengt up to the studio, which she did, and when she came back down a moment later, John was sitting on a chair, his face completely ashen, with Humpe the squirrel on his lap. That was the name he had given it. He wouldn't say anything at first, but eventually he told her that the men had come to settle a debt. Esther and John had been in financial difficulty for some time, so she received that news with a sigh and asked how much money they wanted. And then John said it wasn't money they were interested in, but the boy. He told her about his meeting with the stallo and how they had given him the squirrel. In exchange they now demanded to adopt John's child. Naturally Esther was beside herself and asked John if they couldn't just give back the squirrel, but John only shook his head and said that was completely out of the question as far as the stallo were concerned. They wanted the boy, and if he was not given to them, they would take him.'
Barbro sighed deeply before she went on:
âJohn contacted the police but they practically laughed in his face, and so Esther had come to Sven, hoping he would be able to help them by writing something in the newspaper. She thought if it was brought into the open, if everyone knew that there was an isolated group of people in the Lapland wilderness who were about to kidnap the son of the famous artist John Bauer, then the police would take the family seriously and the stallo would not dare to carry out their threat. But of course Sven did not write a word about it. He was convinced that John Bauer had corrupted his wife, poisoned her with his fantasies about trolls, and that she, a woman of taste and considerable artistic talent herself, had more or less lost her mind in that isolated house on Björkudden.'
âYes,' Gudrun said. âIt sounds like it. Stallo . . .'
âOnly a few days later they were dead,' Barbro said. âSwallowed up by the waters of Vättern. Esther, John and the little boy Bengt, who they called Putte. Along with twenty-two other people. It was a horrible business at a horrible time. The war was over and the old world lay in ruins. Spanish flu was raging, following invisibly in the footsteps of the war, and would not be stopped by peace treaties or boundaries. Sweden had kept out of the battles, but the country had not avoided emotional scars. They were like a rot, hidden and inaccessible. By the time the war ended no one knew how many people had lost their lives, but it was thought to be a considerable number. And the shortage of breadâthat was certainly not unknown in this country. Not to mention the lack of coffee!'
âSpeaking of coffee,' Gudrun said, stretching, âshall we make some?'
âShortly,' Barbro said, nodding. âOn the first of October, in the final stages of the war, a train came off the track in Geta. It was caused by a landslip and there were forty-two casualties. And only a couple of months later there was the terrible accident on Lake Vättern. Bauer, the guardian of everything the war would not be allowed to destroy. How could he, the man with the enchanted pen who had revealed the hidden recesses of the Swedish forests and fulfilled the longing for myths that was beating in the heart of the populationâhow could he, of all people, have drowned
by pure chance?
At that very time. And on Vättern, of all places, the country's oldest and most impenetrable lake? How could that have happened?'
âYes. Good Lord,' Gudrun said.
âGustaf Cederström,' Barbro said. âHave you heard of him? He is best known for his painting of the funeral procession of Karl
XII, and he was Bauer's tutor at the Konstakademi. He came up with an answer to that question. Let me see if I can find it here.'
She moved her spectacles to the tip of her nose and searched among the articles.
âHere,' she said, holding up a cutting. âIt's an obituary, published in
Gammalt och Nytt
, and this is what he writes: “Bauer's life was full and spent alongside the enchanted lake which became the grave of his happiness. The many legends that surround Vättern, and its ever-changing mystical nature, left a profound impression. Perhaps in some way his rich imagination is a gift to the lake, and indeed we see in the legends how trolls reclaim their gifts. This dreadful year, has not the lake taken back what it once gave?”'
Barbro put down the obituary, straightened her glasses and carried on with her story:
âAfter the ship sank, Sven felt terrible and blamed himself to an extent that those around him thought was unreasonable. Everyone was talking about the
Per Brahe
, so he was given countless opportunities to pass on the strange tale told to him by Esther Bauer, but he never made it public. It was all behind closed doors, so to speak, and he did eventually manage to put the dreadful story behind him, exactly as he had done with Petrograd. He left the newspaper and went back to his studies in Uppsala. But everything surfaced again. Literally. In 1922 the
Per Brahe
was successfully salvaged. By then Sven was employed by the newspaper
Ãstgöta-Bladet
, and it was his job to cover the story. He was stationed in Hästholmen and sent daily reports, and when the steamer's bilges were pumped he was one of the first to go aboard. In the hold, directly below the ladder, he found a body undiscovered by the divers, understandably so because the corpse did not resemble a body. It looked more like a heap of mud, which
is what it was, chemically speaking. It brought back memories of Petrograd and he felt faint and unsteady and left the ship. They were difficult days for him.
âBy the end of August the salvage operation was completed and the deceased were laid to rest in Västra Tollstad's cemetery. Now there was talk of a shipwreck auction: sewing machines, cast-iron stoves, irons, bicycles, gold rings, clocks and brooches. Knickknacks. The whole lot was going to be put up for sale. According to unconfirmed sources they had even found brand-new motorcycles from the Huskvarna munitions factory among the wreckage. But of course they had not. It was a dream. A dream of treasure on the lake bed! Sven was part of the newspaper's editorial team and he refused to write about it. He had had enough.
âBut then something happened. An unusual find was made on the shore at Medhamra, just north of Vadstena: John Bauer's tailcoat had washed ashore. They knew it was his tail coat because his savings book was in one of the pockets. Naturally the name Bauer came up for discussion again and so Sven told the editor about his remarkable meeting with Esther Bauer four years earlier. The following day, when he walked into the office, his editor came up to him with a copy of the magazine
Idun
. I've got that copy here somewhere . . .'
Barbro rummaged in the briefcase and brought out a magazine that she laid on the table. It was dated 10 October 1915. The headline read: âAT HOME WITH THE STORYTELLER OF BJÃRKUDDEN,' and underneath were three pictures framed in entwined stems.
Susso, Gudrun and Torbjörn bent over the table to get a closer look. âTHE ARTIST IN HIS STUDIO' was written above the first picture of John, who was standing behind a table laden with
paper and drawing tools. He was holding a pen and smiling into the camera.
In the second photo, which had the caption âTHE ARTIST AND HIS WIFE,' John was standing next to Esther, who was wearing a white dress and a white lace hat. John was holding his pipe with the shaft pointing towards his stiff shirt collar.
In the third and largest photograph, which completely dominated the page, John was standing in profile, his head turned towards a fir tree, his pipe between his teeth and his hair combed over his forehead. His right hand was tugging gently at the foot of a small figure sitting on a branch level with the crown of the artist's head.
âWhat's that?' asked Susso, wrinkling her brow. âIs that supposed to be the squirrel?'
âThat is exactly what Sven wanted to know,' answered Barbro thoughtfully, as she tapped the flimsy paper. âHe and the editor agreed that it was probably a trick of photography, but trick or not, that little object aroused Sven's interest. Now, having seen that photograph, he was determined to write something about it. He would write with a light touch, creating an appendix to the idyllic photo reportage in
Idun
. From the right perspective it could be rewritten as a heart-warming story. The fact that Esther Bauer had believed that trolls from Lapland wanted to get their claws on her child was also a scoop, of course, but he held back from writing about that because he didn't want to bring shame on the family after they had died so tragically. But the squirrelâthat was entirely different! He could write about that unhindered. He wanted to know what had happened to it. If John had not taken it with him onto the vessel, it could still be alive, perhaps even at Björkudden. Sven asked his father, who was the district
vet, if he knew how long a Swedish squirrel could live. His guess was five or six years, up to fifteen in captivity. If Bauer had been given the squirrel in 1904, it couldn't possibly still be alive. But who knew? A couple of days later he took his bicycle and pedalled down to Gränna. It had already started to get dark when he arrived at the Bauers' old house on the promontory. There was no one home. In fact, the door was barred and the curtains closed. Sven walked around the house a few times and peered in through the windows, but he could see nothing. He caught sight of a boat on the lake and shouted from the shore to the man sitting in it, an old man, and asked if he knew the whereabouts of the house's owner and whether there had been a tame squirrel on their land. But the man knew nothing, so Sven left. And that was when it happened.'
After Barbro said this she fell silent.
âWhat happened?' Susso asked impatiently.
âAs Sven was standing under a fir tree something hit the brim of his hat and he saw a pine cone fall to the path beside his feet. He stood still and a second cone landed beside the first. Baffled, he turned his gaze upwards. Thick, heavy branches hung down, and he could not see anything. He turned round and looked along the path because he thought he had heard footsteps behind him, but there was no one there, so he looked up into the branches again and there was the squirrel, sitting on a spruce twig. Its coat was grey and its black eyes looked at him searchingly. Sven was paralysed. All he could do was stare at the bedraggled animal. It was sitting so close he would have been able to touch it if he'd had the courage to reach out his hand. But he didn't. It was immediately apparent that this squirrel was no ordinary squirrel. Sven bolted and without looking back leapt onto his bicycle,
and it would be almost sixty years before he summoned up the courage to return.'
âSo he didn't write anything about it?' Gudrun asked.
âNot a word,' answered Barbro. âHe buried it under a layer of concrete inside him. But that summer, when he heard a little boy had been abducted in Dalarna, a crack appeared in the concrete, and the crack widened when he spoke about it to someone he worked with at the radio station. Earlier that day the colleague had discovered that the missing boy's mother had said that a giant had taken her child. Her account of what had happened was dismissed out of hand as a fantasy brought about by shock and triggered by medication abuse, but the circumstances were made more complicated by the fact that the police found huge footprints in the vicinity. There was no doubt that a larger than average man had been outside the cabin, but they could not establish the extent of his involvement in the kidnapping.