Steve Shepperd
Published: 2019-10-18
Total Pages: 268
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"A Very Important Teapot is a comedy thriller revolving around the hunt for a lost cache of Nazi diamonds in Australia.Dawson is an ordinary bloke who has been out of work for several months and who spends his time at the pub, the rugby club and the local drama group, where he is forlornly pursuing the love of Rachel Whyte. Rachel, however, is infatuated with a solicitor called Pat Bootle, who has recently appeared out of nowhere.Dawson is surprised but delighted when his best friend, Alan Flannery, offers him some unspecified work in Australia. Dawson has no idea what the work entails but the mysterious arrival of a tea service with a code hidden in the teapot lid makes him suspicious. Flannery, actually the head of a minor branch of MI6, has received a memory stick from Sean MacGuffin of Irish Intelligence. It reveals the approximate location of a cache of diamonds stolen by the Nazis. However, MacGuffin had also passed the information to the Russians.Flannery spots an opportunity to get rich and sends the unwitting Dawson to find the diamonds. Other parties join the hunt including Riley Bigg, a local mobster, Pat Bootle, who is actually working for German Intelligence, a Russian hitman and a British official being blackmailed by the Russians. Two local police officers, Iain Innes and Elaine Bates, become suspicious about Dawson and also attempt to find out what is happening.Dawson, kidnapped by Riley Bigg, is rescued by Bootle and they go on the run together. Meanwhile, Lucy Smith, a genuine MI6 employee and Martin Evans, a journalist, also fly to Australia and eventually meet up with Dawson. They too join the hunt. Flannery is also finally forced to travel there as well, following a visit from two gentlemen from Russian Intelligence.The story concludes at a disused mine in Victoria. Dawson and Lucy, helped by Innes, Bates, Bootle and Laurie McGee, a local Australian in the occasional employ of MI6, recover the diamonds, most of which end up back in Germany."