Goodfellowe MP

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Book: Goodfellowe MP Read Online Free PDF
Author: Michael Dobbs
inconsolably. Instinctively Goodfellowe crossed to her and placed his arms defensively around her, trying to bury the tears in his embrace. The constable smirked.
    ‘Ah, could we be left alone to talk, Constable?’Goodfellowe enquired when at last Jya-Yu had regained her composure.
    ‘’Fraid not, sir.’
    ‘But I thought …’
    ‘Not a privileged conversation, sir, not unless you’re a solicitor.’
    The first battle lost. And so they had talked and Jya-Yu, calmer now and with better control of her English, had tried to explain, and the arresting constable, nose no longer weeping, had come in and recorded a formal interview during which he had displayed a plastic bag containing two twists of silver paper.
    ‘Are these yours, miss?’ the policeman had enquired, still slightly nasal.
    She had nodded.
    ‘For the record, the prisoner has indicated that the silver packets belong to her. And what is the off-white powder inside them?’
    She looked at Goodfellowe, her eyes flushed with confusion and torment, then sat with her head held low and would say no more.
    ‘Miss Pan Jya-Yu, it seems to me probable that this powder is a controlled substance, cocaine I would guess. Have you got anything to say?’ The constable sounded a little bored and began to make patterns on the table top with the rings left by his plastic coffee cup. ‘OK. For the benefit of the record, the prisoner refuses to answer. And you do understand, don’t you, that your refusal to say anything can be used against you in court?’
    ‘Yes. I do,’ she whispered.
    They were taken back to the Charge Room, now in a state of controlled bedlam, where an inspector appeared. They had run Jya-Yu’s name through their records but had found no sordid past, no vice conviction, she was not an illegal, her presence in the country was entirely in order.
    ‘And you have no witness for the soliciting charge,’ Goodfellowe intervened.
    ‘But we do have a suspicious substance, sir. And the constable’s bloody nose.’
    ‘That was accident,’ Jya-Yu protested, but the inspector ignored her, continuing to address Goodfellowe.
    ‘I’m not going to charge the lady at the present time but we’ll release her on bail to return at a time when our lab analysis of the substance is completed. Probably in about six weeks’ time. When we know what it is, then we’ll know what to do.’
    ‘And in the meantime?’
    ‘If you’ll let me offer you a word of advice, I should concentrate on running the country, sir. Tears and trouble. That’s all a gentleman like you will get from becoming tied up in a case like this. People have such suspicious minds.’
    Corsa was feeling out of sorts. He hated receptions, even in Downing Street. Three hundred people crushed into a couple of steaming drawing rooms where they sipped cheap wine – Spanish this month, Sainsbury’s had a special – and waited for one of the Prime Minister’s funny little speeches. Corsa was used to making dramatic entrances, demanding theattention of all present, not shuffling along in an anonymous line, like his father. In a crowd his lack of physical stature made him feel claustrophobic, insignificant. He hated cheap wine, held disdain for casual acquaintance and had no high regard even for the Prime Minister. How could one take a man seriously whose eyebrows resembled two ferrets locked in coitus?
    He turned to take out his frustrations on the Minister for Overseas Development, a man of giggles and girth who wore his suit as though beneath its immense folds it hid a chest of drawers with all the drawers open. ‘Bunny’ Burrowes was also notoriously Catholic and unmarried. And, this evening, he was a target that had moved out into the open. The Herald had recently launched a campaign exposing the high infant-mortality levels in Angola caused by an epidemic of flu believed to have been introduced by European nuns. As his features editor had pointed out to Corsa, the death rates in Angola were no
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