The Price of Fame. Rowena Cory Daniels
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Название: The Price of Fame

Автор: Rowena Cory Daniels

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Триллеры

Серия:

isbn: 9780987341921

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ rules for the Montys of this world. From the glimpse I caught, the bedroom was as cluttered and fussy as the lounge room with lots of knick-knacks and books.

      Walenski kept reading. If it was Joseph Walenski. How had Arthur found him?

      'Mr Walenski, I was-'

      'It's waited this long, you can wait another five minutes,' he told me, then went back to reading. He looked weary, but he looked like a man who had wrestled with his demons and beaten them.

      Monty winked at me and kept moving, this time over to the window that looked down into the street. He ran his finger over the sill and lifted it to show me the layer of dust. It showed up as a pale line on his dark skin. Either this was the actor's own home or this was the real Joseph Walenski's home.

      I rolled my eyes and noticed the ceiling. It was pressed metal. Everything in this flat had seen better days, including the old guy.

      Before Genevieve's murder, Walenski had lived on an invalid's pension, courtesy of a car accident that killed his parents and injured him when he was in his early teens, but after Genevieve's death his bank account had not been touched. I'd seriously considered that Walenski might be dead. Yet here he was. Supposedly.

      I studied the old guy as he read the pages. If this was him, the missing witness had not aged well. The real Joseph Walenski would have been 53, yet this guy looked nearer to 70.

      I cleared my throat. 'So how did Arthur find you?'

      'Nearly finished.' He held up his hand and shuffled about 20 pages into order. There was a much larger pile of faded typewritten pages covered in scribbled notes. A manuscript. And, from the look of it, he was giving us roughly the first chapter.

      Satisfied that the pages were straight, Walenski sat there for a couple of heartbeats staring into the blue flames of the gas heater.

      Going on gut instinct, I was inclined to believe that this was Joseph Walenski, the man who had not come forward to save his best friend. But why? I couldn't keep quiet any longer. I shifted on my seat. 'I have some questions, Mr Walenski.'

      Monty returned to stand behind my chair. I felt him as a familiar, if challenging, presence at my back.

      Walenski looked across at us, his faded blue eyes glistening with tears. He blinked and the tears rolled unchecked down his face.

      'I let him down. O'Toole didn't kill Genevieve.'

      Sympathy wrenched at my gut, but it didn't stop my questions. 'Then why didn't you confirm Pete O'Toole's alibi?'

      A grimace of pain twisted Walenski's features. 'You think you know yourself but you don't, not until you're tested. I failed. I dithered for a week. Truth is, I was a gutless coward. Maybe I would have come forward, but then O'Toole killed himself and there was no point. Guess I'll never know if I would have gone to the police.'

      Angrily, he slid a large rubber band around the pages. It snapped, spinning away. He swore softly, his fingers trembling as he shoved the manuscript into a faded manila envelope. He stood and held it out to me. 'Go on, take it. I'm not going to hide anymore. When you finish it you'll understand why I let O'Toole down, and why he killed himself.'

      I came to my feet and took the envelope, pulling the manuscript halfway out. It was called Unimportant Murders and headed Chapter One. The feel of the paper and the look of the faded typewriter print told me that this was an old manuscript.

      'You wrote this to exonerate O'Toole? You wrote a book?'

      'I'm a writer. I've been published in top-paying markets!' He bristled, then added, 'of course that was 25 years ago, but the only reason I haven't been published since is because I haven't submitted.'

      'Okay, okay.' I caught Monty's secret smile. Creative people can be so defensive. 'But why write a book? You could have done an interview to exonerate O'Toole.'

      He shook his head. 'People can twist your words. I had to tell O'Toole's story so the public got the whole picture. You don't know what it was like back then. When he killed himself everyone saw it as an admission of guilt. But I knew better. I knew the real O'Toole. He wasn't what the police made him out to be. True, he didn't have much schooling and he'd had a rough start in life, got in trouble with the law in his teens, got his first girlfriend pregnant. But he'd married her and tried to do the right thing. He wasn't stupid. He'd taught himself to paint.

      'And he cared about the kids on the Street. The injustice of it really got to him. He would talk for hours about things that had happened while he was driving the taxi. After a while I began taping him. He didn't mind. In fact, he got a real buzz when I sold a couple of stories based on stuff he'd told me. I had a ringside seat to his life.

      'More than that, in the last week before Genevieve's murder I was one of the players. After he killed himself, the book just poured out of me. I was going to send it to a publisher. I dreamed of it clearing O'Toole and being a bestseller.' He paused, then didn't go on.

      'So what happened?' I gestured to the faded pages on the coffee table. 'Why didn't you submit your book?'

      All the fight went out of him. 'I had my reasons. Good reasons. You'll see when you read it.'

      I glanced down. I was tempted to scoop up the rest of the book and run. 'Why can't I have the rest of it?'

      'It's not ready. I did the first draft, but when I went back to tidy it up I realised I couldn't send it out.'

      'Why not?'

      'You'll understand when you've read it.'

      I hated it when people did that.

      'If it wasn't O'Toole, who did kill Genevieve?' I asked, cutting to the chase.

      He cast me a dry look. Walenski was no fool. 'I can make an educated guess and I know why.'

      'Then who is your best guess? And why?'

      He shook his head. 'I want you to read it as it unfolds, see if you agree with me.' He hesitated, a self-conscious grin lighting his face and suddenly the years slipped away from him and he was charming. 'I want you to make it into a movie.'

      I bit my tongue. Spare me from writers who think their book will make a top-grossing movie.

      I must have given myself away because Walenski bristled. 'You're not the only ones who'd be interested in this book. I know if I took it to a major publisher they'd jump at it.'

      'Then why don't you?' Monty countered.

      'I want creative control,' Walenski snapped, then took a deep breath glancing at each of us. 'And, from the way Arthur talked about you, I thought you'd understand.'

      Yeah. I understood. Monty and I exchanged looks.

      Walenski stiffened. 'We'll do this my way, or not at all. It's waited 25 years. It can wait a few more days while I tidy up the book. Then I'll start calling the major publishers-'

      'Okay, okay.' If he did that my doco would be old news. They'd rush something like this into print, arrange author interviews, the works. Like I'd told Arthur, Genevieve's murder was still topical. 'Okay we'll do it your way. There's just one thing I don't get. Why come out of the closet after 25 years? Were you protecting someone who's dead now?'

      He СКАЧАТЬ