you again. A detective named Hans Faste from Stockholm."
"Let him interrogate me. I won't say a word."
"You have to hand in a statement."
Salander gave Giannini a sharp look. "I repeat: we won't say a word to the police. When we get to that courtroom the prosecutor won't have a single syllable from any interrogation to fall back on. All they'll have is the statement that I'm composing now, and large parts of it will seem preposterous. And they're going to get it a few days before the trial."
"So when are you actually going to sit down with a pen and paper and write this statement?"
"You'll have it in a few days. But it can't go to the prosecutor until just before the trial."
Giannini looked sceptical. Salander suddenly gave her a cautious smile. "You talk about trust. Can I trust you?"
"Of course you can."
"O.K., could you smuggle me in a hand-held computer so that I can keep in touch with people online?"
"No, of course not. If it were discovered I'd be charged with a crime and lose my licence to practise."
"But if someone else got one in... would you report it to the police?"
Giannini raised her eyebrows. "If I didn't know about it..."
"But if you did know about it, what would you do?"
"I'd shut my eyes. How about that?"
"This hypothetical computer is soon going to send you a hypothetical email. When you've read it I want you to come again."
"Lisbeth - "
"Wait. It's like this. The prosecutor is dealing with a marked deck. I'm at a disadvantage no matter what I do, and the purpose of the trial is to get me committed to a secure psychiatric ward."
"I know."
"If I'm going to survive, I have to fight dirty."
Finally Giannini nodded.
"When you came to see me the first time," Salander said, "you had a message from Blomkvist. He said that he'd told you almost everything, with a few exceptions. One of those exceptions had to do with the skills he discovered I had when we were in Hedestad."
"That's correct."
"He was referring to the fact that I'm extremely good with computers. So good that I can read and copy what's on Ekstrom's machine."
Giannini went pale.
"You can't be involved in this. And you can't use any of that material at the trial," Salander said.
"Hardly. You're right about that."
"So you know nothing about it."
"O.K."
"But someone else - your brother, let's say - could publish selected excerpts from it. You'll have to think about this possibility when you plan your strategy."
"I understand."
"Annika, this trial is going to turn on who uses the toughest methods."
"I know."
"I'm happy to have you as my lawyer. I trust you and I need your help."
"Hmm."
"But if you get difficult about the fact that I'm going to use unethical methods, then we'll lose the trial."
"Right."
"And if that were the case, I need to know now. I'd have to get myself a new lawyer."
"Lisbeth, I can't break the law."
"You don't have to break any law. But you do have to shut your eyes to the fact that I am. Can you manage that?"
Salander waited patiently for almost a minute before Annika nodded.
"Good. Let me tell you the main points that I'm going to put in my statement."
Figuerola had been right. The burek was fantastic. Blomkvist studied her carefully as she came back from the ladies'. She moved as gracefully as a ballerina, but she had a body like... hmm. Blomkvist could not help being fascinated. He repressed an impulse to reach out and feel her leg muscles.
"How long have you been working out?" he said.
"Since I was a teenager."
"And how many hours a week do you do it?"
"Two hours a day. Sometimes three."
"Why? I mean, I understand why people work out, but..."
"You think it's excessive."
"I'm not sure exactly what I think."
She smiled and did not seem at all irritated by his questions.
"Maybe you're just bothered by seeing a girl with muscles. Do you think it's a turn-off, or unfeminine?"
"No, not at all. It suits you somehow. You're very sexy."
She laughed.
"I'm cutting back on the training now. Ten years ago I was doing rock-hard bodybuilding. It was cool. But now I have to be careful that the muscles don't turn to fat. I don't want to get flabby. So I lift weights once a week and spend the rest of the time doing some cross-training, or running, playing badminton, or swimming, that sort of thing. It's exercise more than hard training."
"I see."
"The reason I work out is that it