The Girl Who Kicked the
Hornet's Nest
By Stieg Larsson
The Excerpt:
Chapter 1
Friday, April 8
Dr. Jonasson was woken by a
nurse five minutes before the helicopter was expected to land. It was just
before 1:30 in the morning.
"What?" he said,
confused.
"Rescue Service
helicopter coming in. Two patients. An injured man and a younger woman. The
woman has a gunshot wound."
"All right,"
Jonasson said wearily.
Although he had slept for
only half an hour, he felt groggy. He was on the night shift in the ER at
Sahlgrenska hospital in Göteborg. It had been a strenuous evening.
By 12:30 the steady flow of
emergency cases had eased off. He had made a round to check on the state of his
patients and then gone back to the staff bedroom to try to rest for a while. He
was on duty until 6:00, and seldom got the chance to sleep even if no emergency
patients came in. But this time he had fallen asleep almost as soon as he
turned out the light.
Jonasson saw lightning out
over the sea. He knew that the helicopter was coming in the nick of time. All
of a sudden a heavy downpour lashed at the window. The storm had moved in over
Göteborg.
He heard the sound of the
chopper and watched as it banked through the storm squalls down towards the
helipad. For a second he held his breath when the pilot seemed to have
difficulty controlling the aircraft. Then it vanished from his field of vision
and he heard the engine slowing to land. He took a hasty swallow of his tea and
set down the cup.
Jonasson met the emergency
team in the admissions area. The other doctor on duty took on the first patient
who was wheeled in — an elderly man with his head bandaged, apparently with a
serious wound to the face. Jonasson was left with the second patient, the woman
who had been shot. He did a quick visual examination: it looked like she was a
teenager, very dirty and bloody, and severely wounded. He lifted the blanket
that the Rescue Service had wrapped around her body and saw that the wounds to
her hip and shoulder were bandaged with duct tape, which he considered a pretty
clever idea. The tape kept bacteria out and blood in. One bullet had entered
her hip and gone straight through the muscle tissue. He gently raised her
shoulder and located the entry wound in her back. There was no exit wound: the
round was still inside her shoulder. He hoped it had not penetrated her lung,
and since he did not see any blood in the woman's mouth he concluded that probably
it had not.
"Radiology," he
told the nurse in attendance. That was all he needed to say.
Then he cut away the
bandage that the emergency team had wrapped around her skull. He froze when he
saw another entry wound. The woman had been shot in the head, and there was no
exit wound there either.
Jonasson paused for a
second, looking down at the girl. He felt dejected. He often described his job
as being like that of a goalkeeper. Every day people came to his place of work
in varying conditions but with one objective: to get help.
Jonasson was the goalkeeper
who stood between the patient and Fonus Funeral Service. His job was to decide
what to do. If he made the wrong decision, the patient might die or perhaps
wake up disabled for life. Most often he made the right decision, because the
vast majority of injured people had an obvious and specific problem. A stab
wound to the lung or a crushing injury after a car crash were both particular
and recognizable problems that could be dealt with. The survival of the patient
depended on the extent of the damage and on Jonasson's skill.
There were two kinds of
injury that he hated. One was a serious burn case, because no matter what
measures he took the burns would almost inevitably result in a lifetime of
suffering. The second was an injury to the brain.
The girl on the gurney
could live with a piece of lead in her hip and a piece of lead in her shoulder.
But a piece of lead inside her brain was a trauma of a wholly different
magnitude. He was suddenly aware of the nurse saying something.
"Sorry. I wasn't
listening."
"It's her."
"What do you
mean?"
"It's Lisbeth
Salander. The girl they've been hunting for the past few weeks, for the triple
murder in Stockholm."
Jonasson looked again at
the unconscious patient's face. He realized at once that the nurse was right.
He and the whole of Sweden had seen Salander's passport photograph on
billboards outside every newspaper kiosk for weeks. And now the murderer
herself had been shot, which was surely poetic justice of a sort.
But that was not his
concern. His job was to save his patient's life, irrespective of whether she
was a triple murderer or a Nobel Prize winner. Or both.
Then the efficient chaos,
the same in every ER the world over, erupted. The staff on Jonasson's shift set
about their appointed tasks. Salander's clothes were cut away. A nurse reported
on her blood pressure — 100/70 — while the doctor put his stethoscope to her
chest and listened to her heartbeat. It was surprisingly regular, but her
breathing was not quite normal.
Jonasson did not hesitate
to classify Salander's condition as critical. The wounds in her shoulder and
hip could wait until later, with a compress on each, or even with the duct tape
that some inspired soul had applied. What mattered was her head. Jonasson
ordered tomography with the new and improved CT scanner that the hospital had
lately acquired.
Jonasson had a view of
medicine that was at times unorthodox. He thought doctors often drew
conclusions that they could not substantiate. This meant that they gave up far
too easily; alternatively, they spent too much time at the acute stage trying
to work out exactly what was wrong with the patient so as to decide on the
right treatment. This was correct procedure, of course. The problem was that
the patient was in danger of dying while the doctor was still doing his
thinking.
But Jonasson had never
before had a patient with a bullet in her skull. Most likely he would need a
brain surgeon. He had all the theoretical knowledge required to make an
incursion into the brain, but he did not by any means consider himself a brain
surgeon. He felt inadequate, but all of a sudden he realized that he might be
luckier than he deserved. Before he scrubbed up and put on his operating
clothes he sent for the nurse.
"There's an American
professor from Boston working at the Karolinska hospital in Stockholm. He
happens to be in Göteborg tonight, staying at the Radisson on Avenyn. He just
gave a lecture on brain research. He's a good friend of mine. Could you get the
number?"
While Jonasson was still
waiting for the X-rays, the nurse came back with the number of the Radisson.
Jonasson picked up the phone. The night porter at the Radisson was very
reluctant to wake a guest at that time of night and Jonasson had to come up
with a few choice phrases about the critical nature of the situation before his
call was put through.
"Good morning,
Frank," Jonasson said when the call was finally answered. "It's
Anders. Do you feel like coming over to Sahlgrenska to help out in a brain
op?"
"Are you bullshitting
me?" Dr. Frank Ellis had lived in Sweden for many years and was fluent in
Swedish — albeit with an American accent — but when Jonasson spoke to him in
Swedish, Ellis always replied in his mother tongue.
"The patient is in her
mid-twenties. Entry wound, no exit."
"And she's
alive?"
"Weak but regular
pulse, less regular breathing, blood pressure one hundred over seventy. She
also has a bullet wound in her shoulder and another in her hip. But I know how
to handle those two."
"Sounds promising,"
Ellis said.
"Promising?"
"If somebody has a
bullet in their head and they're still alive, that points to hopeful."
"I understand...
Frank, can you help me out?"
"I spent the evening
in the company of good friends, Anders. I got to bed at 1:00 and no doubt I
have an impressive blood alcohol content."
"I'll make the
decisions and do the surgery. But I need somebody to tell me if I'm doing
anything stupid. Even a falling-down drunk Professor Ellis is several classes
better than I could ever be when it comes to assessing brain damage."
"OK, I'll come. But
you're going to owe me one."
"I'll have a taxi
waiting outside by the time you get down to the lobby. The driver will know
where to drop you, and a nurse will be there to meet you and get you scrubbed
in."
"I had a patient a
number of years ago, in Boston — I wrote about the case in the New England
Journal of Medicine. It was a girl the same age as your patient here. She
was walking to the university when someone shot her with a crossbow. The arrow
entered at the outside edge of her left eyebrow and went straight through her
head, exiting from almost the middle of the back of her neck."
"And she
survived?"
"She looked like
nothing on earth when she came in. We cut off the arrow shaft and put her head
in a CT scanner. The arrow went straight through her brain. By all known
reckoning she should have been dead, or at least suffered such massive trauma
that she would have been in a coma."
"And what was her
condition?"
"She was conscious the
whole time. Not only that; she was terribly frightened, of course, but she was
completely rational. Her only problem was that she had an arrow through her
skull."
"What did you
do?"
"Well, I got the
forceps and pulled out the arrow and bandaged the wounds. More or less."
"And she lived to tell
the tale?"
"Obviously her
condition was critical, but the fact is we could have sent her home the same
day. I've seldom had a healthier patient."
Jonasson wondered whether
Ellis was pulling his leg.
"On the other
hand," Ellis went on, "I had a forty-two-year-old patient in
Stockholm some years ago who banged his head on a windowsill. He began to feel
sick immediately and was taken by ambulance to the ER. When I got to him he was
unconscious. He had a small bump and a very slight bruise. But he never
regained consciousness and died after nine days in intensive care. To this day
I have no idea why he died. In the autopsy report, we wrote brain haemorrhage
resulting from an accident, but not one of us was satisfied with that
assessment. The bleeding was so minor, and located in an area that shouldn't
have affected anything else at all. And yet his liver, kidneys, heart, and
lungs shut down one after the other. The older I get, the more I think it's
like a game of roulette. I don't believe we'll ever figure out precisely how
the brain works." He tapped on the X-ray with a pen. "What do you
intend to do?"
"I was hoping you
would tell me."
"Let's hear your
diagnosis."
"Well, first of all,
it seems to be a small-calibre bullet. It entered at the temple, and then
stopped about four centimetres into the brain. It's resting against the lateral
ventricle. There's bleeding there."
"How will you
proceed?"
"To use your
terminology, get some forceps and extract the bullet by the same route it went
in."
"Excellent idea. I
would use the thinnest forceps you have."
"It's that
simple?"
"What else can we do
in this case? We could leave the bullet where it is, and she might live to be a
hundred, but it's also a risk. She might develop epilepsy, migraines, all sorts
of complaints. And one thing you really don't want to do is drill into her
skull and then operate a year from now when the wound itself has healed. The
bullet is located away from the major blood vessels. So I would recommend that
you extract it, but?..."
"But what?"
"The bullet doesn't
worry me so much. She's survived this far and that's a good omen for her
getting through having the bullet removed too. The real problem is here."
He pointed at the X-ray. "Around the entry wound you have all sorts of bone
fragments. I can see at least a dozen that are a couple of millimetres long.
Some are embedded in the brain tissue. That's what could kill her if you're not
careful."
"Isn't that part of
the brain associated with numbers and mathematical capacity?" Jonasson said.
Ellis shrugged. "Mumbo
jumbo. I have no idea what these particular grey cells are for. You can only do
your best. You operate. I'll look over your shoulder."
Mikael Blomkvist looked up at the clock and saw that it was just after 3:00 in the morning. He was
handcuffed and increasingly uncomfortable. He closed his eyes for a moment. He
was dead tired but running on adrenaline. He opened them again and gave the
policeman an angry glare. Inspector Thomas Paulsson had a shocked expression on
his face. They were sitting at a kitchen table in a white farmhouse called
Gosseberga, somewhere near Nossebro. Blomkvist had heard of the place for the
first time less than twelve hours earlier.
There was no denying the
disaster that had occurred.
"Imbecile,"
Blomkvist said.
"Now, you listen here
— "
"Imbecile,"
Blomkvist said again. "I warned you he was dangerous, for Christ's sake. I
told you that you would have to handle him like a live grenade. He's murdered
at least three people with his bare hands and he's built like a tank. And you
send a couple of village policemen to arrest him as if he were some Saturday
night drunk."
Blomkvist shut his eyes
again, wondering what else could go wrong that night.
He had found Lisbeth
Salander just after midnight. She was very badly wounded. He had sent for the
police and the Rescue Service.
The only thing that had
gone right was that he had persuaded them to send a helicopter to take the girl
to Sahlgrenska hospital. He had given them a clear description of her injuries
and the bullet wound in her head, and some bright spark at the Rescue Service
got the message.
Even so, it had taken over
half an hour for the Puma from the helicopter unit in Säve to arrive at the
farmhouse. Blomkvist had gotten two cars out of the barn. He switched on their
headlights to illuminate a landing area in the field in front of the house.
The helicopter crew and two
paramedics had proceeded in a routine and professional manner. One of the
medics tended to Salander while the other took care of Alexander Zalachenko,
known locally as Karl Axel Bodin. Zalachenko was Salander's father and her
worst enemy. He had tried to kill her, but he had failed. Blomkvist had found
him in the woodshed at the farm with a nasty-looking gash — probably from an
axe — in his face and some shattering damage to one of his legs which Blomkvist
did not bother to investigate.
**
From THE GIRL WHO KICKED THE HORNET'S NEST by Stieg Larsson (Knopf).
Copyright 2010 by Stieg Larsson
http://www.esquire.com/fiction/stieg-larsson-the-girl-who-kicked-the-hornets-nest-excerpt-0610
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