Every Good Boy Deserves Favor and Professional Foul (15 page)

ANDERSON:
Yes.

MCKENDRICK:
He took a big risk.

ANDERSON:
Yes.

MCKENDRICK:
I wouldn't do it. Would you?

ANDERSON:
No. He should have known he'd be searched.

MCKENDRICK:
Why did they search you?

ANDERSON:
They thought I might have something.

MCKENDRICK:
Did you have anything?

ANDERSON:
I did in a way.

MCKENDRICK:
What was it?

ANDERSON:
A thesis. Apparently rather slanderous from the State's point of view.

MCKENDRICK:
Where did you hide it?

ANDERSON:
In your briefcase.
(
Pause
.)

MCKENDRICK:
You what?

ANDERSON:
Last night. I'm afraid I reversed a principle.
(
MCKENDRICK
opens his briefcase and finds
HOLLAR
'
s envelope
.
ANDERSON
takes it from him
.
MCKENDRICK
is furious
.)

MCKENDRICK:
You utter bastard.

ANDERSON:
I thought you would approve.

MCKENDRICK:
Don't get clever with me. (
He relapses, shaking
.)
Jesus. It's not quite playing the game is it?

ANDERSON:
No, I suppose not. But they were very unlikely to search
you
.

MCKENDRICK:
That's not the bloody point.

ANDERSON:
I thought it was. But you could be right. Ethics is a very complicated business. That's why they have these congresses.
(
The plane picks up speed on the runway towards take-off
.)

*
Vol. 4, no. 2,
Index on Censorship
, published by a non-profit-making company, Writers and Scholars International, 21 Russell Street, London WC2.

Other books

Make Me Rich by Peter Corris
T*Witches: Don’t Think Twice by H.B. Gilmour, Randi Reisfeld
Dream Chaser by Angie Stanton
Fade by Morgen, A.K.
Tower of Shadows by Sara Craven
White House Autumn by Ellen Emerson White
Love In a Sunburnt Country by Jo Jackson King
William's Tale by Regina Morris