Whether to take the risk or not . . . the eternal
dilemma.
He thought about the low neck on the vest,
lowered the revolver half an inch. The roar of the
motorcycles was deafening.
2
Oslo. 5 October 1999.
‘THAT’S THE GREAT BETRAYAL,’ THE SHAVEN-
HEADED MAN said, looking down at his manuscript.
The head, the eyebrows, the bulging forearms,
even the huge hands gripping the lectern,
everything was clean-shaven and neat. He leaned
over to the microphone.
‘Since 1945, National Socialism’s enemies have
been masters of the land; they have developed and
put into practice their democratic and economic
principles. Consequently, not on one single day has
the sun gone down on a world without war. Even
here in Europe we have experienced war and
genocide. In the Third World millions starve to
death – and Europe is threatened by mass
immigration and the resultant chaos, deprivation
and struggle for survival.’
He paused to gaze around him. There was a stony
silence in the room; only one person in the
audience, on the benches behind him, clapped
tentatively. When he continued, fired up now, the
red light under the microphone lit up ominously,
indicating that the recording signal was distorted.
‘There is little to separate even us from oblivious
affluence and the day we have to rely on ourselves
and the community around us. A war, an economic
or ecological disaster, and the entire network of
laws and rules which turns us all too quickly into
passive social clients is suddenly no longer there.
The previous great betrayal took place on 9 April
1940, when our so-called national leaders fled
from the enemy to save their own skins, and took
the gold reserves with them to finance a life of
luxury in London. Now the enemy is here again.
And those who are supposed to protect our
interests have let us down once more. They let the
enemy build mosques in our midst, let them rob our
old folk and mingle blood with our women. It is no
more than our duty as Norwegians to protect our
race and to eliminate those who fail us.’
He turned the page, but a cough from the podium
in front of him made him stop and look up.
‘Thank you, I think we’ve heard enough,’ the
judge said, peering over his glasses. ‘Has the
prosecution counsel any more questions for the
accused?’
The sun shone across courtroom 17 in Oslo
Crown Court, giving the hairless man an illusory
halo. He was wearing a white shirt and a slim tie,
presumably on advice from his defending counsel,
Johan Krohn Jr., who right now was leaning
backwards in his chair, flicking a pen between
middle and forefinger. Krohn disliked most things
about this situation. He disliked the direction the
prosecutor’s questions had taken, the way his
client, Sverre Olsen, had openly declared his
programme, and the fact that Olsen had deemed it
appropriate to roll up his shirt-sleeves to display
to the judge and colleagues on the panel the spider-
web tattoos on both elbows and the row of
swastikas on his left forearm. On his right forearm
was tattooed a chain of Norse symbols and
VALKYRIA, a neo-Nazi gang, in black gothic letters.
But there was something else about the whole
procedure that rankled with him. He just couldn’t
put his finger on what.
The Public Prosecutor, a little man by the name of
Herman Groth, pushed the microphone away with
his little finger, which was decorated with a ring
bearing the symbol of the lawyers’ union .
‘Just a couple of questions to finish, Your
Honour.’ The voice was gentle and subdued. The
light under the microphone showed green.
‘So when, at nine o’ clock on 3 January, you went
into Dennis Kebab in Dronningens gate, it was
with the clear intention of performing the duty of
protecting our race which you were just talking
about?’
Johan Krohn launched himself at the microphone.
‘My client has already answered that a row
developed between himself and the Vietnamese
owner.’ Red light. ‘He was provoked,’ Krohn
said. ‘There’s absolutely no reason to suggest
premeditation.’
Groth closed his eyes.
‘If what your defending counsel says is correct,
herr Olsen, it was therefore quite by chance that
you were carrying a baseball bat at the time?’
‘For self-defence,’ Krohn interrupted and threw
his arms up in despair. ‘Your Honour, my client
has already answered these questions.’
The judge rubbed his chin as he surveyed the
counsel for the defence. Everyone knew that Johan
Krohn Jr. was a defence constellation in the
ascendancy – particularly Johan Krohn himself –
and that was presumably what finally made the