start. Something in that thought confused him. But he could not put his finger on what it was.
He took his shaving mirror from the sponge bag Kristina Tacker had embroidered with his initials and a childishly formed rose.
Each time he looked at his reflection he took a deep breath. As if he were preparing himself for descending into a chasm. He imagined being confronted by a face he did not recognise in the mirror.
CHAPTER 14
He always felt a strong sense of relief to encounter those eyes, his furrowed brow and the scar over his left eye.
He examined his face and thought about who he was. A man who had made his career in the Swedish Navy, whose ambition was one day to become chiefly responsible for mapping the secret naval channels that were a key part of the Swedish defences.
Was he anything more?
A person who constantly measured distances and depths, both in external reality and in the oceans inside him that were as yet uncharted.
CHAPTER 15
He stroked his cheeks and replaced the mirror in his sponge bag. He was also a man who had changed his surname. His father had died at the beginning of March 1912. A few weeks before the Olympic Games were due to be opened in the newly built stadium in Stockholm, he applied to the Royal Patents and Registrations Office with a request to change his name. To distance himself from his dead father, he had decided to insert his mother's maiden name between his Christian name and his surname, Svartman. His mother had always tried to protect him from his moody and perpetually irascible father. His father was dead now, but dead people can also be a threat. The protective wall his mother had thrown up would be extended into his name.
He put away his sponge bag and opened the lid of a wooden box he had placed on the low table with raised edges to stop items falling off in stormy seas. It contained four watches. Three of them showed exactly the same time. They were a check on one another. The hands on the fourth, which he had inherited from his father, were still. In that one, time had stopped.
He closed the lid again. Three of the watches told him the time, the fourth represented death.
CHAPTER 16
Three officers got to their feet and eyed him with interest as he entered the mess. He recognised one of them, the short-sighted first mate who had welcomed him by the gangplank the previous evening. Höckert introduced his two colleagues.
'May I introduce you to Lieutenant Sundfeldt and Artillery Captain von Sidenbahn?'
The latter was tall and slim, and smelled strongly of either aftershave or gin.
'No doubt you are wondering what an artillery captain is doing on board a ship,' he said. 'We are usually more at home and more effective on dry land, but sometimes an artillery captain can be of use on board a warship. Especially when guns have to be broken in and adjusted and there is a shortage of officers.'
They sat down. A waiter served coffee. Nobody asked any questions. Captain Rake had naturally informed his officers that they would be accompanied on their voyage to the outer edge of the Östergötland archipelago by an officer on a secret mission.
Sundfeldt and von Sidenbahn left the mess.
'Have you met the ship's captain yet?' said Höckert.
He spoke with a pronounced accent, possibly a Småland dialect, or perhaps he came from Halland or Bohuslän.
'No,' said Tobiasson-Svartman. 'I know Captain Rake only by reputation so far.'
'Reputations are generally misleading or exaggerated. But there is always a grain of truth in what is said. The truth about Rake is that he's very competent. Possibly a bit on the lazy side, but aren't we all?'
Höckert stood up, clicked his heels and gave an apology of a salute. Tobiasson-Svartman finished his breakfast alone. He could hear Lieutenant Sundfeldt's angry tones from the deck, but could not make out what had upset him.
It was broad daylight by now. Captain Rake would be waiting for him, preparing to produce the secret orders from the ship's safe.
The Svea was heading south. The wind was still squalling and appeared to be veering in different directions. Towards the shore it had started raining again.
CHAPTER 17
The meeting between Captain Rake and Lars Tobiasson-Svartman was interrupted by an unexpected incident. They had just shaken hands and sat down in the leather chairs fixed to the floor of Rake's suite when Lieutenant Sundfeldt marched in and announced that one