The Perfect Crime (27 page)

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Authors: Les Edgerton

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BOOK: The Perfect Crime
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***

Some hours later Grady was kissing Whitney goodbye at the front door of her bungalow. He’d already made a phone call to Sally’s bar, talked for a few minutes with both the proprietors, hung up laughing. After that, he and Whitney had busied themselves for the next two hours wrapping packages in brown paper. Four of them, neatly addressed. Early Christmas presents.

Part of the time they used in making love. They made the most of it, being as it would be a week or so before they saw each other again. Whitney estimated it would take that long to tie up her affairs and join him.

“Next stop the post office,” he said in leaving. He gave Whitney one last squeeze before walking out to his car. He threw the garbage bag containing the packages in the back seat and waved as he pulled away.

He thought about Sally and his wife Veronica as he pulled out onto Veterans Highway and merged into the traffic. One package went there. He thought about the other people the packages were addressed to. A couple of anonymous policemen, one in Dayton and one in New Orleans. He imagined their kissers when they tore the wrapping off packages addressed to the Policemen’s Benevolent Fund.
Merry Christmas, folks,
he whispered softly under his breath. He smiled and inhaled deeply.

He thought of the last package, the smallest one of all. This one wasn’t addressed. There was six hundred thousand in unmarked hundred-dollar bills in that one. Enough to take care of Jack’s bill with about enough left to make a down payment on a fishing camp and a small building in which an animal clinic could be housed. Maybe there’d be enough left to pick up a couple of those ice boats.

Maybe he’d look into a glass eye. Or were they plastic these days?

He thought briefly of his father as he pointed the car due north for the bridge across Lake Pontchartrain. Of the lessons his dad had drilled into his two boys. Honor and family.

Well, Dad,
he mouthed silently as he pulled up to the toll booth.
I did what I thought was right. Whaddya think?

Somehow, considering it all, he thought his dad would approve of his choice.

The chill of the air conditioner blasting across his face gave him a good feeling. So did the thought of the woman who was going to soon be joining him in Vermont.

The End

A BACKGROUND for
THE PERFECT CRIME

THIS NOVEL HAS A history. I wrote it back in the nineties and at the time my agent, Jimmy Vines, was arguably the hottest guy in agenting. If you’ve ever seen the movie,
Jerry Maguire,
the title character played by Tom Cruise was Jimmy to a T. A slick-talking (in machine-gun bursts), expensively-dressed, stereotypical polished New Yorker smart-ass type, Jimmy could easily have been the originator of the phrase, “Show me the money.” Lots of publishers did just that for his writers.

Jimmy received so much initial excitement from publishers when he first sent out feelers on THE PERFECT CRIME that he decided that even though this was a first novel, this was a book that needed to go to auction. For those writers here who’ve had a book go to auction, you know that’s one of the biggest thrills for a writer to be had, up there almost with getting a nomination for the National Book Award, or a travel agent calling to check on your drink preferences for your flight to Stockholm, or, even getting a message on your unlisted cell phone from Kim Khardashian giving you her private number and inviting you to a “personal and up-close” slumber party and something she called a “sesh” with her and her sisters, ending her message with a cheery, “Call me, ya big lug!”

In other words, a literary auction is a big deal.

It was… what’s the word?...
exciting.
I’m sitting here in the Great Flyover in Fort Hooterville, Indiana, and every three or four minutes, Jimmy was phoning me breathlessly from the Big Apple, giving me up-dates. Between his calls, I’m screaming at my wife Mary to “Don’t go near that phone!” and ignoring the withering looks she was shooting my way. Offers were being messengered to Jimmy every couple of minutes, and he’d be calling to tell me who’d offered what, what the bidding was up to, who’d joined the fray and who’d dropped out.

Finally, everyone had dropped out except two players, Random House and St. Martin’s. Both made their final bids. Random House offered $45,000 for their advance and St. Martin’s offered $50,000.

“It’s your call,” Jimmy said. “We’ll go with whoever you want.”

We talked about it and I tried to weigh the offers. Both were big, well-known, respected presses. Both were talking about a probable three-book deal, a series based on the same characters, and depending on how the first book did, the advances for the next two would most likely go way up. Jimmy figured the final tally would be in the healthy six-figure range. Enough money that I would be able to achieve my version of true wealth—being able to fill the gas tank up completely each time on my car instead of the normal two buck purchase. He talked about the excellent chances he saw for a future movie deal.

Finally, I made my decision.

Worst decision of my life, bar none. The financial fall-out from that decision destroyed me at the time and actually, I’ve never recovered. More about that later...

“Random House,” I told Jimmy. “Why them?” he asked. “Because,” I said. “They’re
Random House.
” The House of Bennett Cerf and all those legends of literature. I didn’t care it was for less money than St. Martin’s was offering. This was
Random House.

Jimmy understood. He called St. Martin’s, told them my decision, and the editor who had been doing the bidding, Charlie Spicer, was disappointed, but before he hung up, told Jimmy, “If Edgerton ever has another book and is looking for a publisher, we want first crack at it.” Just a pure gentleman. I just wish...

Next, he contacted Scott Moyers, the senior editoo had been doing the bidding for Random House. Scott had just come over from Villard Press and been appointed a senior editor. Mine was the first book he’d signed for his new publisher.

The day I signed the contract was one of the happiest of my life.

I was at a crossroads in life. Up to that point, I had made a terrific living for thirty-plus years as a hairstylist. My wife Mary and I had our own salon, Bold Strokes Hair Design, and we were booked solid for six months in advance. But, our lease was up and we had to make a decision. To sign a new 5-year lease or close the salon. Up until then, even though I had sold several books, I had never considered quitting my day job. I’d heard and listened to all the advice about not doing so until one was absolutely certain he’d be able to make his entire living from writing.

Now seemed the time. I’ll relate the rest of what turned out to be a horror story by including the gist of an exchange of emails between myself and one of the most respected agents in the business a couple of years ago. I won’t name the agent as I don’t want to reveal his identity as he was honest with me about what had probably happened but didn’t want to be identified for clear reasons.

Here’s is the email I sent this agent:

Dear________;

I’ll try to be as concise as I can be. A few years ago, when I was a client of Jimmy Vines, I wrote a crime thriller that he was ecstatic about. So ecstatic that he took it to auction, which, as you know is a rarity for a first novel. It was an exciting time—phone calls and emails every few minutes for several days—you know the drill. The upshot was that it came down to two houses, Random House and St. Martin’s. St. Martin’s offered $50,000 and RH offered $45,000. Jimmy said we’d go with whoever I wanted. I decided on RH because... well, it was Random House. The company that Bennett Cerf built and with all that glorious history. I was going to be a Random House author!

The editor who took it was Scott Moyers who had just that week come over from Villard to become a senior editor at RH and this was the very first book he signed. They were going to bring it out simultaneously in hard and soft cover, from Ballantine and RH. Jimmy told me that Ann Godoff, who was the president at the time, personally phoned him and raved about the book, telling him how much she loved it. She said they were going to guarantee me that not only would it come out on the
NY Times
bestseller list; it would come out as #1 the first week. She said she could guarantee that because the lists weren’t derived from sales but from copies printed, etc. She and Scott then asked that I change the title as they saw a trilogy in the future and they wanted the name to be one that would lend itself to that. The original title I had was
The Perfect Crime
and they asked that it be changed to
Over Easy
, a play on the “Big Easy” since it was set in New Orleans and they wanted the other two to be as well. As soon as it came out, they wanted to create a new contract for a new two-book deal. But, my God—I couldn’t believe what she was telling me—that my book was going to be Number One. That’s a cloud I’m probably never going to reach again. From the lips of the president of Random House, that’s something you can take to the bank. Or so I thought. (I’m bad on dates, but it seems to me this was around ‘97.)

I know this is all very interesting and all, but so far everything’s going well and why am I telling you all this you’re probably thinking. Well, that’s when the bottom dropped out. The time period here is crucial as you’ll see. A week after I took RH’s offer, Bertlesmann took over Random House. Being out here in the “great flyover” I had no clue as to what was proably going on in NY and London, in the power centers of publishing, but it’s obvious to me now that the Bertlesmann takeover is what impacted my deal.

For the next several months I rewrote the book entirely for Scott four times. I’d already rewritten it twice for Jimmy before he’d sent it out and I had no problem with either guy requesting rewrites. I’m a firm believer that writing is rewriting and I do it cheerfully and professionally. At the end of the last rewrite, Scott emailed me and said he was regretfully going to have to turn it down. During the process, he had me eliminate a major character and do some other things. In his notes for the last rewrite, he said he wished I would write like Russell Banks! For the first time I got mad. I told him if he wanted Russell Banks, why didn’t he just sign him? Just weird stuff. I told him I’d done everything he’d said without question as I didn’t want to “be that guy” editors talked about—the difficult writer. To that he said, “You should have pushed back.” My bad, I guess... I talked to Jimmy and he was furious with Scott and RH and said he’d never ever do another deal with Random House the rest of his life—that he’d never heard of a major publisher treating someone this way, etc. At this remove, I confess I’m a bit skeptical now of what he was saying, considering I was this little guy out here in Indiana and he was claiming he’d never again deal with the biggest publisher in the business because of what they’d done to me. Lots of things I thought at the time have changed the more I think about it. I have a strong suspicion that he was... how do you say it? Blowing smoke up my ass? Yeah, that’s a good way to describe what I think happened.

What was the kicker was that St. Martin’s had offered $5,000 more and wanted to publish it without changing as much as a comma and they wanted an additional 2- or 3-book deal after it came out. The editor who participated for them was Charlie Spicer and Jimmy told me that after they lost out in the auction, Charlie told him that “if Edgerton ever wanted to leave RH, we’d take him in a minute.” He said later, that if “Edgerton wrote another novel like that that they wanted first crack at it.”

Which made what transpired next hard for me to get the logical part of my brain around. After the RH fiasco, I asked Jimmy if he could take it to St. Martin’s as only a handful of people had even read it—RH and St. Martin’s and maybe a dozen others who had participated early in the auction. No, Jimmy said, it’s a dead issue now, but as soon as we sell your next one, then we can get it published. That never made sense to me being as no one had read the book except the ones mentioned above. It wasn’t as if the public was aware of it or had read it or anything.

Anyway, Scott was very apologetic and said he’d make sure I would never have to repay the part of the advance I’d already received ($12,500). Sometime after that, he left RH and I’ve never heard from him again. About two years later, I got a bill from RH for the 12.5 and I wrote them back, relaying what Scott had told me. Nothing happened until a couple of years after that and I got another bill and I told them the same thing and again, haven’t heard from them since.

This whole thing really impacted my life in ways that are still happening. At the time, my wife and I owned a very successful hairstyling business. At the exact time I signed with RH, our lease for our shop was up and we had to make a decision to sign a new 5-year lease or not. I’d always tried to be realistic and practical and even though I’d sold a number of books before the RH thing, never succumbed to the temptation of quitting my day job. Well, this seemed to be the perfect time to do so. I was given enough money to live on for the next year while I rewrote; Ann Godoff had guaranteed Jimmy (accding to him anyway) my book would be #1; they wanted at least two more books after this one, etc. I felt it was time to become a truly full-time writer. So we closed the business and my wife went to work at another salon and I settled down to all that I’ve related above. The upshot was that after a year of all that, our business was gone and I was jobless and went through some health problems that wiped out our savings and put us heavily into debt, etc. We’ve never caught up since. You can’t go back and regain your clients--they’re gone forever, for the most part. I feel pretty sure that Bertlesmann taking over probably put all this into action—there was probably some sort of house cleaning and lots of books like mine were probably thrown overboard, and people jettisoned, etc. I have no way of knowing this—just a strong suspicion.

I’m not a whiner and I don’t blame the world for the bad things that happen to me—it’s just part of the deal of life and usually because of bad choices I’d made on my own. The reason I wanted to share this with you is that I still have this novel and it’s a good one and I’d like your opinion as to if I should send it out.

Mr. ______, thank you for reading this and taking your valuable time to do so. If any of this intrigues you and you’d like a look at it, I’d be very happy to send it to you. Also, if you know Charlie Spicer and run into him you might ask him about the deal. We don’t get “do-overs” in live as a rule, but that’s one guy I wish I’d gone with. He really liked my work and in every dealing with him I always felt he was a true gentleman.

Thank you so much for taking time for someone who isn’t even earning any money for you.

Blue skies,

Les

The agent’s reply to this was:

Les-

You don’t owe Random House squat. Having “won” you at auction, followed up by having you rewrite the book multiple times, what they did is completely shitty behavior. And it happens every day. I’m actually surprised they bothered to send you two bills. For Das Random Haus, $12,500 is pocket change and they probably cleared it from their books as a write-off years ago.

When Rupert Murdoch’s NewsCorp Inc bought a company, (name deleted), they cancelled a lot of contracts... only they found other ways of saying it so CEO Jane Friedman could be quoted in the press saying, “
We didn’t cancel any contracts.”

I do business with Random House every day, and would sell them one of my represented books in a heartbeat. To booksellers and book reviewers that little house on the spine, or even better, that little Borzoi dog, still carries a lot of cachet and helps get reviews and in-store display space. The fact is, though, the Random House of Bennet Cerf, or even Bob Bernstein is long gone. They do some books brilliantly. Most others are little more than putting a cover on the barely edited manuscript and shipping it out the door. Sadly, that’s true most places. The hard part for old grizzlies is that they remember what Random House used to be -- before it was a division of an arm of a media conglomerate and expected to cough up 15% quarterly profits to the Mother Ship. The old souls have either fled the building (actually “the building” is gone too) or sit in their offices, bitterly waiting for the day they can full advantage of a fat 401K.

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