Max Allan Collins
Nice Weekend for a Murder
For Ed Gorman
Best friend Mallory ever had
Mohonk Mountain House is, of course, a real place; the Mohonk Mystery Weekend is a real event. But the mystery weekend in this book is a fictional one, as are the characters who take part in it game-players, celebrity suspects, hotel staff, and the rest. It is my intention to summon types as opposed to doing roman clef portraits of real people.
Likewise, The Mystery Chronicler is a fictional publication and is not patterned on any real magazine in the mystery (or any other) field.
My thanks to Faire Hart at Mohonk for her help, patience, and continual graciousness; to Peter Lewis and Kathe Mull for sharing their Sky Top memories; and to Don Westlake and Abby Adams for inviting me to one of the first Mohonk Mystery Weekends, where I had the honor of being the killer.
New York is a great place to visit, but I wouldnt want to live there. And it wasnt that great a place to visit, either, this time around.
When you make your living as a writer, at least as a writer of books, whether fiction or nonfiction or both, you must be resigned to the fact that occasional trips to New York City are a necessary evil. New York remains the hub of the publishing world, and if you dont go in now and then to remind your agent that you are more than a faceless voice attached to a bad phone connection, and to have long lunches with editors who must be similarly reminded, then you might as well have stayed in Iowa.
I might as well have stayed in Iowa. The two editors of mine I lunched with for two respective houses were glad to see me and had a lot of wonderful things to say about how nicely some of their other writers were doing. My books, unfortunately, werent doing all that well. Oh, thered been a flurry of activity when one of them sold to TV and we even landed a book club sale; but a sale to paperback remained elusive and nobody was very optimistic. Including me.
And then my agent made my day... in the Clint Eastwood sense, that is. He had just read the four-hundred-page change-of-pace manuscript Id sent him a few weeks before the book that would change my career, my breakthrough book.
Mallory, in good conscience, he said, I cant even advise reworking this. Itd be a waste of bond paper. Put it in the drawer and try again.
My agent and I went way back almost ten years. One of my teachers at a summer writers conference had liked my first suspense novel well enough to write me a letter of introduction to this well-thought-of, if hard-nosed, agent, who had a stable of top-flight mystery writers. A hard, round ball of a man, Jake Kreiger was renowned for his lack of tact. As Curt Clark once said, Jake Kreiger thinks tact is something you put on the teachers chair.
Id never run into this side of Jake Kreiger, not full-blast anyway; he always treated me kindly, if patronizingly. He had taken me on as a client based upon the manuscript I submitted to him way back when, thinking I was a promising kid. Trouble was, ten years later, at thirty-five years of age, I was still a promising kid to him. If I was still a kid, why were my temples turning gray?
So I fired him. He seemed surprised. He was a guy who landed million-dollar contracts for people, after all (not for me). He sat at his big desk in his little walk-down office on West End Avenue and looked, for a moment, like someone had punched him in his considerable stomach.
But he got over it quickly, handing me my thick manuscript with one hand and extending the other, offering it in a handshake, without standing, though he seemed sincere when he wished me the best of luck.
Now I was sitting on a bus, feeling like I was on my way to my draft physical. Anyway, that was the last bus ride I could remember being this depressed on. Of course, on that trip I hadnt been sitting next to a beautiful young woman, which was certainly an improvement over the naive Iowa farm boy Id been sitting by then, a redheaded hick who was excited about getting a chance to shoot some gooks. He had pronounced it gucks, actually, but I didnt bother correcting him. Somebody else no doubt would. A gook, maybe.
But all of that was years ago. Wed both been to Vietnam, that naive farm boy and me an only slightly less naive Iowa farm boy myself, come to think of it. I, at least, had made it back. And after several years of bumming around, in this job and that one, and the requisite bout with drugs, Haight-Ashbury style, Id ended up going home again, to Iowa, Thomas Wolfes advice notwithstanding, where I took in some G.I.-Bill college and pursued my lifes dream of being a writer. Specifically, a mystery writer.
And the dream had come true. Half a dozen books later, and here I was a published, publishing writer, who had moved out of his house trailer in a questionable neighborhood into a house in an unquestionable neighborhood and even got to go to the Big Apple now and then to spruce up his career.
Which at the moment seemed to be over.
This is only a setback, the beautiful woman sitting next to me said. Her name was Jill Forrest, and she was about the only positive part of my life I could think of at the moment. Well, my health was pretty good. Jill Forrest and my health. The rest you can have.
Thats what General Custer said, I replied. Only a setback.
Jill pursed her lips in a wry little smile. She was a dark woman about my age, with short, black, spiky hair and cornflower-blue eyes and wardrobe by Kamali. Shed grown up in Port City, Iowa, like me, but had gone off to the big city, specifically NYC, and become a success. Shed landed back in Port City recently for a tour of duty at the local cable station. Thats what she was doing these days: she set up new cable TV systems in cities and towns across the Great Plains, got em rolling, then mounted up and moved on to the next gunfight, like John Wayne. Her Port City mission was nearing its end, which was a sore point between us; this New York getaway together was a truce of sorts.
She pressed her hand against my sleeve. Put those dreadful two days behind you, she said. Weve got a lovely weekend up ahead. Were just going to forget all about agents and editors and mystery writing.
Jill, I said. Were on our way to Mohonk, remember? Going to a mystery weekend to forget about agents and editors and mystery writing is like going to Disneyland to forget mice.
Were going to have a good time, Mal, dammit. You promised.
I know I did.
Besides, maybe being around some other writers will be good for you.
Ill find out Im not the only one having problems, you mean? Because its a tough business?
Yes. But more than just misery loves company you can get some advice about finding a new agent.
I was worried about that. Working out of Iowa meant I had to have an agent; without somebody looking after my interests in New York, my career would be just another Iowa crop that failed. But Id had Kreiger from the very beginning. I knew no other agents, had no idea how to go about acquiring one.
Maybe youre right, I said. I can talk to Curt, at least. He might have some ideas. And Tom.
Sure. This really is just a setback. In fact, Id say its for the better.
For the better?
Yeah. Kreiger hasnt been doing much for you lately, has he?
No. Hes been paying attention to his successful clients.
I saw how he treats you. Like a kid. You need somebody who respects what youre doing. That new book of yours needs an agent wholl get excited about it.
As opposed to one who suggests putting it in a drawer.
Right. And as for your editors, they seem to like you and your work well enough. So your last couple of books havent set the world on fire. So what? Im sure theyll be open to new things from you. In fact, if you cant find an agent right away, you could show the new book directly to your editors.