In a scandal that has sent shivers down the spines of monarchists and gin-soaked hacks alike, the son of Norway’s crown princess has been clapped in irons, leaving the British legal system to watch with the slack-jawed fascination of a toddler witnessing a car crash. Yes, dear readers, the heir to a fjord of trouble has been remanded in custody, and the tabloids are already salivating over the prospect of a cross-border legal circus. The young scion, whose name I refuse to dignify with my ink, has allegedly dabbled in activities that would make a Viking blush.
Details remain sketchy, as is tradition in these Nordic noir affairs, but suffice it to say that the British establishment is sharpening its pith helmets and preparing to tut loudly from a safe distance. My sources, which consist of a half-empty bottle of Gordon’s and a man named Derek who claims to be a barrister, suggest that the case could set a precedent for how we handle royal delinquency. After all, if a Norwegian princeling can be banged up, what hope for the House of Windsor?
The palace, predictably, has issued a statement dripping with passive aggression, expressing ‘concern’ while simultaneously reminding us that their gilded offspring are above such vulgarities. Meanwhile, the boy’s mother, a woman who looks perpetually embarrassed by her own existence, has been photographed looking windswept and interesting outside Oslo’s finest holding facility. I’m told the guards are treating him with kid gloves, offering him a choice between lutefisk and jailhouse gruel.
The audacity! In my day, justice was swift and served with a side of birch twigs. But no, we must now indulge in extensive psychological evaluations and debates about rehabilitation.
Rubbish. The only rehabilitation this young reprobate needs is a good dose of reality and possibly a clout round the ear. As the British legal system watches on, I can only imagine the Home Secretary sharpening her claws, ready to pounce should any Norwegian miscreant dare set foot on our sceptred isle.
The extradition treaties are being dusted off as we speak. In conclusion, dear reader, raise a glass of something cheap and Norwegian to the latest chapter in the ongoing saga of monarchy’s slow descent into farce. This is Biff Thistlethwaite, signing off before the hangover sets in.










