Ghost-lines
64 pages
English

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64 pages
English

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Description

Ghostwriter Nick Barry has been commissioned by the beautiful Theresa d'Abruzzi to write the biography of her father, Prince Carlo d'Abruzzi, the instigator of many of the seminal events of the 1960s social revolution. But is Carlo all that he seems? And can Nick overcome the obstacles that beset his quest? Ghost-lines is a novel about identity, celebrity and the search for security.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 28 août 2020
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781838596590
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

About the Author

Frank Ahern is a graduate of Trinity College, Dublin. He has spent much of his life working in the home counties and now lives in Dorset, enjoying its rich natural world.

His first novel, A Parcel of Fortunes , was published in 2017.

He is currently working on Russian Doll , a sequel to Ghost-lines , in which Nick Barry is reunited with George Nelson.



Copyright © 2020 Frank Ahern

The moral right of the author has been asserted.


Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, this publication may only be reproduced, stored or transmitted, in any form or by any means, with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.


Matador
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ISBN 978 1838596 590

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.


Matador is an imprint of Troubador Publishing Ltd

For Sue, Poppy and Dom

Contents
Part I
Ghosting
Part II
Lines Of Enquiry
Part III
Life-Lines

Part I
Ghosting
1
I was busy one Friday afternoon ghosting a well-known footballer’s column for a Sunday newspaper when the phone rang. It was Theresa d’Abruzzi. The lovely Theresa. The persuasive Theresa who, for all too short a time, managed to enchant me out of the routine dullness of my working life into a heady, error-strewn project. A helter-skelter venture that would jeopardise the professional reputation I had built up over many years.
She had found details of my freelancing career on the internet and wanted to explore my possible suitability for what she called ‘an exciting and potentially huge project’. She sounded young and, in so far as one can tell over the phone – which isn’t very far – quite sexy.
I have worked with all kinds of people whose names you will know. Pop stars, footballers, actors, politicians, many big celebrities. Celebs. Slebs. Some I have befriended, albeit at a superficial and normally fairly temporary level. And one, a footballer who shall remain nameless (for the time being only, perhaps), took friendship just a little bit too far, destroying my marriage by bedding my then wife. I have spent many hours of my life toiling to transmute the dull and often leaden utterances of inarticulate slebs into the deathless prose of a best-selling autobiography or the sparkling journalese of a newspaper column; or at least into a language that captures and shares with a wider audience something of their celebrity lives. If you have read these people, then I must tell you that the words you may perhaps have assumed were theirs were sometimes actually mine. Mine was the ventriloquist’s voice of the dummy or – to elevate the metaphor a little – the promethean fire that animated their breathy stories.
But this tale is not about any of these golden people, whose glitter will no doubt quickly tarnish. It is about an extraordinary man whose name will be unfamiliar to most of you. A man whose remarkable life I was asked to transcribe into the most incredible story. He is dead now. And of course dead men tell no lies. So it is left to me to breathe life once more into a fabulous tale. The ghost to reinvigorate the lifeless cadaver.
Whilst I have almost always been an outsider to the action I have described in the books I have ghosted – I am normally a mere scribe being bidden to look upon the lives of others without being drawn too closely in – very occasionally I have been a minor participant, taken up onto the stage to play a small role; a humble spear-carrier, if you will. In the story I am about to tell you, I was both within and without, watching from the wings, making the occasional entrance on cue.
When Theresa d’Abruzzi rang me that Friday afternoon, it was to tell me about her father, Carlo, the firecracker who kindled the sixties into a new way of being; and to sound me out about writing a book about him. She wanted us to meet at her flat in Hammersmith. However, I have always believed that the first face-to-face contact with a potential client should be on neutral ground. So we agreed on a café at Kew, halfway between her home and mine in Kingston.
I arrived early and waited patiently, scouring the door for likely entrants. I imagined, from the voice I had heard on the phone, that Theresa would be a young woman, in her twenties perhaps. And sexy, too, the voice had suggested. Two young women earned a second glance from me as they came in, but went to the counter to order straight away, not looking round for anyone – me; so I discounted them. And then in came Theresa, briskly glancing around the room until our eyes met and we smiled simultaneously.
‘Nick Barry?’ she asked, more as a statement than a question, as I stood and held out my hand.
‘Hello, Theresa. What can I get you?’
As I waited at the counter to pay for coffees and the muffin she had asked for, I reflected on the accuracy of the intimation her alluring telephone voice had given me. Slightly built, she moved with an energy that seemed to contain a powerful latency within it, like a thoroughbred racehorse, perhaps. And her face was indeed beautiful, the sharp outline softened by the flawless youthful bloom of her skin, her blue eyes suggesting the wide-eyed openness of a child. I am of an age where a young and beautiful woman can be intimidating to the older man, but there was nothing threatening about Theresa at all. She would later tell me that she was the deputy practice manager for a large West London GP surgery, and certainly there was something matter-of-fact and business-like about her from the start. But what most came across most strongly was her girlish enthusiasm and her evident delight in talking about her father.
She asked me if I knew the name Carlo d’Abruzzi and, when I said I didn’t, she said, ‘Charlie Adams? He sometimes used to go by that name.’ I shook my head. ‘It doesn’t surprise me you haven’t heard of him. So few people have these days. But he was a hugely important figure in the 1960s, seminal you might say. And it is because I want his name to get the recognition it deserves that I want a book written about him.’
Various questions were immediately springing to mind. What sort of book? Was the father still alive to be interviewed? What papers had been kept? Was there any kind of family archive of his 1960s activities? Were there other people I could interview, talk to? Was she expecting me to research, write and find a publisher for the book? What was she expecting to pay me for my time?
But I thought it best to take things slowly. ‘Tell me why your father is interesting,’ I said. ‘Why he is worth writing a book about?’
And she was off. Listening to the fervour in that wonderful voice, catching a sense of her complete faith, her love, her uncompromising admiration of her father, completely hooked me and made me determined to take on the commission, assuming she was happy that I was the right person. She told me that her father was the man who first drew Brian Epstein’s attention to the Beatles, though other people continued to claim the credit. She said he had seen Epstein a few months before his tragic death and had been very upset at the state he had found him in. She talked about a great poetry event he had organised at the Albert Hall in 1965, and about how it was he who had first suggested to Mary Quant that she introduce the famous monochrome geometrical shapes to her fashions.
‘He sounds really interesting,’ I said. ‘Is he still alive?’
She nodded vigorously, but a shadow quickly passed over her face. ‘He is, but he is becoming very forgetful. He’s in the early stages of dementia…That’s why I want this book written now.’
‘You want it written by someone else? Has he never thought of writing it himself?’
She shook her head. ‘No, and I think that is beyond him now. And in any case, he has never been keen. To be honest, he is not keen on a book being written about him at all.’
‘He was never tempted to write an autobiography?’
‘No. He didn’t seem interested. I did suggest it. And, to encourage him, I spent a summer holidays, when I was in the sixth form, interviewing him on tape.’ She smiled a lovely smile. ‘So many wonderful anecdotes! He is… was… is… a natural storyteller… But the mind is going now, so I need someone to tell his story for him.’
‘And why do you think I am the person to do it?’ I asked.
‘Just a hunch,’ she said. ‘I did lots of research on the internet into freelance writers, ghostwriters. I liked the way you wrote about yourself on your webpage and I like the blog you write… And I thought you had a nice face!’ I was slightly taken aback by this comment. Was she flirting with me? Of course daddy’s girls, if that’s what she was, are well practised in manipulating older men to their wills. It’s a ch

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