like the plague. People too, as far as he could.
Henning scrolls down to the article’s list of links and clicks the first one:
PULLI SUSPECTED OF MURDER
The celebrity Tore Pulli has been arrested on suspicion of killing a Swedish criminal.
Henning reads on:
The call came in around 23.30 Friday evening. Oslo Police were called to an old factory where the Swedish enforcer Joachim ‘Jocke’ Brolenius had been found murdered. The celebrity Tore Pulli, who has himself a past as a hard-hitting enforcer, alerted the police that he had stumbled on the body, but found himself arrested for murder.
The background or the motive for the murder is unknown. For the moment police have released very little information, but they have told TV2 that evidence was found at the crime scene. The TV channel’s expert commentator, Johnny Brenna, who previously worked as a detective for Oslo Police, says it is most likely a revenge attack. He refuses to speculate on what could lie behind it.
Henning finds a Wikipedia article about Pulli.
Tore Jørn Pulli (born 19 June 1967 in Tønsberg) is a well-known Norwegian ex-enforcer and former member of a biker gang, who in 2008 was convicted of the murder of the Swedish enforcer, Jocke Brolenius. Pulli became well known in Norwegian media when he started dating the former glamour model and now model-agency owner, Veronica Nansen. They married in 2006. Pulli took part in an episode of the topical news quiz Nytt på nytt , among others.
In a rare interview with Dagens Næringsliv in the spring of 2007, Pulli claimed to have collected approximately 75 million kroner for clients during his time as an enforcer ‘just by breaking a few jaws’. He has never referred to himself as an enforcer but sees himself as a broker. Before he was convicted of murder he bought and sold property in Østlandet, making considerable profits.
Henning looks up from the screen. ‘“Just by breaking a few jaws”,’ he repeats to himself. Why would an enforcer known for using his fists to solve problems ever kill anyone with an axe?
Henning skims several other articles about Tore Pulli. He clicks on an article headlined ‘Pulli Promises Million Kroner Reward’ and reads:
Convicted killer, Tore Pulli, has offered a reward of one million kroner to anyone who comes forward with information leading to his acquittal.
‘Wow,’ Henning exclaims. He clicks on other articles on the same subject without finding anything indicating an avalanche of tip-offs. What does that mean? , he wonders. Surely someone must know something?
I want you to find out who should be sitting in here instead of me.
Well, that’s not going to be easy , Henning thinks to himself, when not even a million kroner could entice anyone to come out of the woodwork . And the prosecution appeared to have had a strong case. It was widely known that Pulli had invited Brolenius to a meeting at a place where they wouldn’t be disturbed. Pulli’s fingerprints were found on the knuckle-duster. He had Brolenius’s blood on his clothes, and Brolenius had been beaten up in a way which had Pulli’s MO all over it. Four bullets which were hard to dodge.
So, what happened?
Henning picks up his mobile and rings Bjarne Brogeland. The inspector replies after only a few rings.
‘Hi, Bjarne, it’s Henning Juul.’
‘Heyyy!’ Brogeland replies in a voice that reminds Henning of a stag party.
‘Are you busy?’
‘Not more than usual given it’s a Saturday. We’re on our way to Paradise Bay. Have you been there?’
‘Eh, no.’
‘Lovely beach, great water. How about you? What’s new?’
Henning places his thumb and index finger on the corners of his mouth and lets them glide down towards his chin. He hasn’t spoken to Brogeland since the Henriette Hagerup case, the girl who was stoned to death in a tent on Ekeberg Common earlier that summer. Given that Henning helped them crack the case, he feels entitled to call in a