“Don’t say that.”
“Why not?”
“ ’Cause it isn’t true. Do you really think Gat Garson would want this mystery left unsolved?”
I smiled uneasily. “I guess not. Or Roscoe either.”
“Right. I’ll see you a little later.”
And she was gone.
I tried to go back to sleep, without much luck. I checked the TV, and there was an old Bowery Boys movie on-Dig That Uranium-and I watched it and, God bless Huntz Hall and Leo Gorcey, I forgot my problems (except during the interminable commercials, during one spate of which I slipped some trousers on and went out and got a couple of cans of 7-Up from the machine down the hall).
I was still watching when the door opened and Kathy came back in. She had something under her arm.
“What you got there?” I asked, sitting in my shorts, Leo Gorcey beating Huntz Hall over the head with his hat, on the glowing tube behind me.
“You said you thought you’d read too many mystery novels,” she said, tossing something at me. “Think you got it in you to read one more?”
It was a manuscript, in a brown folder. A photocopy of a manuscript, that is; running over two hundred pages.
“Be done with that by morning, will you?” she said, getting ready for bed by climbing out of her clothes and crawling in.
On the title page of the manuscript, it said, “The Secret Emperor by Dashiell Hammett.”
She snored.
I read.
PART THREE
15
The Bouchercon folks had switched me from one panel (“The State of the Mystery”) at nine o’clock to another panel (“Whither the Private Eye”) at eleven. So, because I’d been up most of the night reading, I slept in till ten. Kathy was up and gone when I awoke; so was the Hammett manuscript. But she’d left a note saying she’d gone back to her room to make herself presentable for the day.
I called her.
“I’d just about given up on you,” she said.
“I was up all night with a good book.”
“So it is good?”
“Very. But that’s all I’d care to say about it for the moment.”
“Be that way. I, uh, returned it to Gregg.”
“How did he happen to have a copy of it along, anyway?”
“He didn’t, exactly. It was a copy that G. Roger Donaldson returned to Gregg.”
“Oh, yeah? Why did Donaldson have a copy?”
“He and Gregg are thick, I understand. I never met Donaldson-he was supposed to be at the party last night, but he didn’t show. Anyway, Donaldson is one of the ‘experts’ who verified the work as legitimate Hammett for Gregg. Gregg had some heavy people in the field put their opinions in writing, so he could attach copies when he sent the manuscript around to the various major publishers last month, for auction.”
“What’s Donaldson’s connection to Gorman?”
“Gregg’s publishing a book by Donaldson.”
That didn’t sound right. “What’s a big name like Donaldson doing with a small publisher like Mystery House?”
“It’s a collection of short stories; Donaldson’s regular publisher declined it-you know how that goes, short-story collections being notoriously poor sellers.”
“So you sneaked the manuscript out of Gorman’s room last night, huh? Nice work.”
“Nothing so subversive as that. Gregg gave it to me so I could do an advance write-up for Noir. I told him last night I was hyper-anxious to see The Secret Emperor and asked him to let me read it overnight.”
“I appreciate this, Kathy.”
“Then buy me breakfast. Meet you outside the coffee shop?”
I beat her down there. Sardini, looking pale and bleary-eyed, approached me; his shirt was tucked in, which was quite an accomplishment for a guy who’d obviously had even less sleep than I had.
“Where’d you disappear to last night?” he asked.
“Us country folk know how to have us a good time in the big city.”
“You couldn’t’ve had a good time last night without us knowing about it. Ed and I must’ve hit every bar in the Loop.”
Ed Charterman, eyes behind his wire-frame glasses looking almost as bleary as Tom’s, wandered up to us; he was a New York editor who’d been at several publishing houses, and was one of the better editors in the business-an opinion I held despite his never having bought anything of mine.
He dug some cigarettes out from the pocket of his plaid shirt, smirked and nodded at us (which meant hello) and had a cigarette for breakfast.
“You gonna join us?” Charterman asked me, motioning toward the Gazebo.
“I would,” I said, “but I only eat with editors who buy my stories.”
He shrugged, gave me a pleasantly cynical smile. “You must pay for most of your own meals.”
Kathy exited the elevators and waved at me and headed our way; under his breath, Sardini said, “You country boys do know how to have a good time in the big city.”
“Easy,” I said. “That’s the woman I love you’re talking about.” Funny thing was, I think I meant it.
Kathy was wearing another Noir shirt, a red polo shirt with the deco lettering in white, and white jeans.
I introduced everybody (both Tom and Ed knew Kathy by name and rep but never met her before) and we went in for breakfast, taking one of the covered booths at the far side of the place.
Breakfast conversation was pleasant, but superficial; Tom didn’t mention Roscoe Kane’s death, but he did tell me that my two run-ins with Gorman were the talk of the convention. Kathy shot me a furtive look, wondering if I’d tell about our angelic visitation last night outside of Gino’s. I didn’t.
“Do me a favor,” Tom said, “and check with Mae Kane for me. She isn’t answering her phone, and I don’t want to go knocking on her door at a time like this. But I need to make sure she’s at the PWA awards this afternoon, to accept that Life Achievement Award for her husband.”
“She’ll be there,” I said.
“And I’d like you to present the award. Sorry for the short notice-”
“I’d be upset if I didn’t get to present this award. I won’t pretend otherwise.”
Across the coffee shop, a short, broad-shouldered man in a lime-colored blazer and black slacks, a dark green handkerchief in the blazer pocket, sauntered toward us. He had thinning reddish blond hair, and a round face and a full beard; he looked like a cross between Ernest Hemingway and one of the Beach Boys.
I’d never met this man but I recognized him, from his bookjackets and TV appearances.
“G. Roger Donaldson,” I said.
He came up to us and smiled tightly, meaninglessly, at Tom, Ed and me, then focused on Kathy.
“You’d be Ms. Wickman,” he said. He had a clipped voice, like every word was the last squeeze out of a toothpaste tube.
“That’s right,” Kathy said, smiling, impressed. “And you’d be G. Roger Donaldson.”
He nodded; no “Call me Roger.” Not even call me “G.”
But Kathy was awestruck; she tried to stand up in the booth, which wasn’t easy, but she was short enough to sort of accomplish it. Reaching across our breakfasts, they shook hands.
In his measured way, Donaldson delivered the following speech: “I just wanted to say how perceptive I thought your comments were on my current novel. It amazes me how my simple imaginative constructs can so mystify some critics. Your critique, on the other hand, was right on target.”
And with a courtly little bow, he moved off to a side table, and sat and waved a waiter over for coffee.
Kathy was beaming. “What a nice thing to say. Elegant man.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Real elegant of him to agree with your rave of his new book.” Despite many accolades for all of his books, Donaldson was beginning to slip in the estimation of some critics.