Chereads / Conan: I'm Really a Good Person / Chapter 110 - Emergency Hotline

Chapter 110 - Emergency Hotline

Tokyo is a wonderful place, where every citizen is willing to help others generously and without hesitation, often with an optimistic smile on their face, nodding their heads profusely no matter what rude and outrageous requests Ichijō Mirai may make, and speaking more nicely than anyone else.

Ichijō Mirai was satisfied.

He took a short break and politely poured two cups of bitter coffee for the victims, who were hard at work on the phone, and leaned back against the kitchen sink to gather his thoughts, weighing and judging his own contingencies and methods of coping with them, checking for gaps.

Incident 1: Becoming friends with the owner of the house, Inuo's excellent gaming skills helped them to get acquainted with each other and quickly gained their first acquaintance.

Mr. Inuo is kind and full of goodwill, and when she hears about the police academy's training program, she volunteers to help him contact his fellow officers. Ichijō Mirai refuses, but he can't overcome her enthusiasm and has to ask Mr. Inuo to help him with the code words.

The code word is divided into two parts.

One part is an introduction: 'I am Messiah with High Moral Sense'.

One part is the response from others: 'I thank you from the bottom of my heart'.

The cadets who were helped didn't fully understand, but it didn't matter, Ichijō Mirai had already received their heartfelt thanks.

Incident 2: While out exploring the area, checking out the police's movements, and paying close attention to his classmates who are having a great time, he receives a lot of help from the warm-hearted citizens of Tokyo.

These citizens live in a residential area, which is characterized by the fact that even if the police locate the cadet's cell phone, they have to send out a lot of police officers to conduct door-to-door searches, and they can't search deeper than a cursory questioning.

The cadets can stay in the house.

With a little help from the owner of the house, when the police come to their door, they can hide the cadets as much as possible or say that they are friends, and they can get away with it.

Normally, it would be difficult for a guy being chased by the police to get help from the public, but Ichijō Mirai patiently explains the cadet's ineptitude, and when they hear the first pronunciation, the enthusiastic citizens tearfully believe it, scolding the shameless cadet, angry at the police's inaction, and swearing deep down that they will definitely help.

They took out their old cell phones and pointed out the location of a second-hand cell phone store.

Some of them even gave the address of their superiors, who were very kind to them and had to be asked to help the cadets because they might need to take time off from work.

A small wish on the guillotine.

Ichijō Mirai fulfills them.

Incident 3: Television.

With most of the cadets on the run, and the one cadet who was having a good time on the run, there were very few cadets who cared about the program.

Luckily, they're not completely out of their element as college students, and when they hear the code word, they all use their cadet cell phones to make calls without thinking about the trap.

The only cadet who notices the code, has fun, and thinks about the trap is the one who is so prepared that he uses a phone booth and doesn't even have to ask Inuo to warn him.

That's good, but it's not enough.

There were more than a hundred cadets in the academy's market, and less than one in ten contacted Ichijō Mirai, which was still too few, and the regular programs didn't have enough of an impact, and something specific was needed.

Like the morning news.

Ichijō Mirai asked a newscaster for help.

The newscaster, who was the head of the station's news department, was very kind and enthusiastic, and when he heard about the police cadets' plight, he burst into tears and promised to help without hesitation, but with a small caveat: the newscasters were only responsible for telling the news.

The Ministry of Information has its own staff, including those who write, those who read, and those who are in charge of the program and are ready to save the lives of those who are involved in accidents. 

The hosts are only responsible for reading and improvising, and they have to convince the director and the minister to read out the whole long string of coded messages on the morning news.

It makes sense.

Ichijō Mirai went to the director and the minister for help, so the Inuo hosts, the Inuo director, and the Inuo minister got together in a room to think, talk, and plan.

As always, the three Inuo's, as well as the many kind and enthusiastic citizens of Tokyo, were determined to help the cadets.

Ichijō Mirai has never met such a warm and kind city, and as I watched the three Inuo's tears well up in my eyes, I couldn't help but sigh deeply, "Tokyo is so kind."

Tokyo is so kind.

The people of Tokyo are so smart.

The Tokyo police are so friendly.

Tokyo at the end of the twentieth century is like home.

There are good things, good things and bad things, like "24 police cadets have been caught."

Ichijō Mirai leaned against the edge of the sink, checking the police blotter, "That's not good news."

As with bad news, there was good news: those who had been caught would remain criminals and would be taken into custody by the police in accordance with normal procedures, and the prosecutor would submit a detention request to the court to transfer those who had been caught to a detention center, but there would be no actual trial and no sentencing.

It is not until the end of the training that the police academy will communicate with the police and restore the cadet status of the arrested person.

This is briefly mentioned in the rules at the beginning, and is also a reminder statement that is added to the text message whenever a cadet is reported to be in custody.

It's probably not a friendly rule for cadets who fall through the net and need to be detained, but it's a very friendly policy for Ichijō Mirai, who intends to go all the way through, representing.

[Jailbreaks are allowed...]

He rubbed the glowing screen of his cell phone with a bit of the anguish that belongs to normal people facing police officers: "To find out in advance where their cell phones were received, their precise location and room number, to act a day in advance so as not to be late for an accident, and to rob a detention center, it's really..."

"I'm so scared."

I'm afraid I'll accidentally kill a police officer.

Ichijō Mirai thought seriously for a few seconds: "We're going to break into the detention center and rob them anyway, so if we rob 20 or so, we're robbing them, and if we rob a hundred or so, we might as well leave them alone and wait for the last three days to enter and get ready?"

This was a good way to save energy, but there was a problem: those who were not arrested within fifteen days would not receive help from Ichijō Mirai.

It doesn't work, they have to get help.

The player has a spirit of camaraderie that says, "No one is spared".

Ichijō Mirai's cell phone vibrated on his person, and he turned the police cell phone around, looking for the cell phone on his person that was specifically for contacting the Inuo's. The cell phone showed a message of a letter.

The cell phone displayed a message from a letter: [My lord, the police have a new development and are urgently apprehending a young criminal...]

[Address: xxxxxxx]

Related Books

Popular novel hashtag