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The Cottage
The Cottage
The Cottage
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The Cottage

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Filmmaker Jack Duncan knows almost nothing about Terri Osborne, but is so entranced by her that he proposes, and, to his surprise, she accepts. Celebrating in an Omaha restaurant known as a hangout for actors, Duncan is distracted by a stranger who tries to interest him in filming a story about a mystery hundreds of years old. While his back is turned, Terri vanishesfrom both the present and, it seems, from the past, as though she had existed for only a few months.

Duncan eventually summons police for help in finding Terri, but then realizes that he is their main suspect in her disappearance. As his arrest seems imminent he is sent to England to oversee a filmed quest for the real Shakespeare. But Duncans escape to England is not so lucky after all. The Keepers of the Shakespeare Myth have some nasty surprises waiting for him. And the pleasant old literary mystery leads him straight into a timeless nightmare in which no one can be trusted and he himself may be the villain.

The investigation in Nebraska becomes inexplicably intertwined with the mysteries in England and a race ensues to determine who will be lucky enough to destroy Jack Duncan and bury the truth about Shakespeare for good.

LanguageEnglish
PublisheriUniverse
Release dateJan 3, 2012
ISBN9781462068715
The Cottage
Author

Alan K. Austin

Alan Austin’s investigative film documentaries have won many major national awards, including two Emmys and three Peabodies. His documentaries include Frontline’s “The Shakespeare Mystery.” He discovered something rotten during that investigation which led to this book.

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    How do I classify The Cottage? Is it historical fiction? No. It is about history though and is fiction, maybe. Is it a romance? No, but there is some in it. Is it a mystery? So far, that’s the closest. This book is so unique, it is hard to classify. Basically, I found pleasure in a fiction book by Alan K. Austin, The Cottage.The Cottage is the story of a journalist who finds his typically chaotic life turned upside down when his fiancé disappears. He is questioned and his past resurrects to haunt him. Thinking it could not get worse, he then finds himself months later forced to work on a documentary with a man he despises. The subject? Who was really Shakespeare? What starts off as a boring assignment for Jack Duncan becomes a mystery waiting to be solved. Too bad his past won’t leave him alone. Someone is trying to frame him. Or are they? The truth of Shakespeare concealed? Jack is determined to find out.I got through the first chapter and was a little apprehensive about how good this book was going to be. I was confused. By the end of chapter two I was really getting into the story. The pace picked up. It’s not the kind of story with intense action on every page. It’s more of an intellectual action with some physical thrown in.The entire plot centers around the idea that William Shakespeare might not have been the one to pen the famous plays and sonnets. This is not a new idea. As I read the book, Mr. Austin describes the various camps that argue for the Earl of Oxford, Marlowe, and others as the real Shakespeare. Before picking up this book, I had no interest in digging further into this debate. Now…Mr. Austin writes using the English language better than most writers I have come across. He uses words that will cause most people to use a dictionary while not writing so far above one’s head that you feel like the village idiot. He doesn’t dumb down his book. He brings in humor and other aspects of writing in such a way that you can’t help but be drawn in deeper.I couldn’t help but wonder what was going to happen next. I felt the curiosity Jack did as he examined old cottages and castles. The book subtly drew me in and had me cheering for Jack all the way despite incriminating evidence that said otherwise.There are some F-bombs in this book. They are not heavy, but they are present and scattered throughout the book. There are also minor intimate scenes, but nothing too graphic and nothing more than a few paragraphs. A few editing issues also were found, but nothing that would detract from the reading.What was so great about this book? Mr. Austin sucks you into the plot. Before you know it, you want to know more. Even when the book is over, you want to know more. In addition to using English so well, he wrote a very well developed and intricate plot that continues long past the last lines.Mr. Austin is well-known for his documentaries which gives him the perfect background to write about a journalist creating a documentary on Shakespeare. This book is near to being a non-fiction book as it stemmed from a discovery made by Mr. Austin during a filming of a documentary he was working on.If you are one of those that always questioned Shakespeare’s true identity, you have to read this book. If you like a mystery that prompts you to investigate further on your own, this is the book. It is only 214 pages and sixteen chapters. It read quicker than I had anticipated. This is one I highly recommend.Note: This book was provided to me by the author with no expectation of a positive review.

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The Cottage - Alan K. Austin

Chapter One

Jack Duncan ran afoul of a lie. Well, a lot of lies, but one old, rancid whopper in particular. One protected as if it were something sacred. His first whiff of it came late on a Friday night at Caniglia’s restaurant.

Eight people sat around the table, most of them actors who had just finished a rehearsal of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Jack barely knew them; he didn’t even know their real names, because they used the names of one another’s characters—a joke that had become habit.

Do you carry a gun? Gooper asked Jack.

Jack shook his head with a grin and Terri Osborne gave him a scolding look.

Jack had taken Terri for a look around the playhouse several months earlier, his first visit there in six years. It had been creepily nostalgic for him—a mistake, he realized, not only because it recalled past off-stage horror but also because Terri had become caught up in the atmosphere of the place and had signed on to do lights and cues and makeup, and he had been drawn back into the old nightmare.

I don’t think I’d like your job, Brick said. I don’t think I’d like making enemies of smugglers and druggies and murderers.

"Well, usually I make friends with them."

Terri had told them that Jack made film documentaries. About what? one of them asked. And so Jack had told them about Two-suiter Jimmy, the parrot smuggler who had gotten that nickname by smuggling himself out of Australia in a big suitcase checked in as luggage—Jimmy wanted to be sure his methods weren’t too cruel to the parrots—and he told them about living undercover in a crackhouse with an unsuspecting roommate who got so scrambled on the cocaine one night that he played Russian roulette with an automatic but missed his own head. Pretty soon the whole table was listening to him. Not that he cared anything about impressing anyone there—except Terri, the impressing of whom was all he did care about. She seemed to be enjoying the yarns, too, so he kept talking. Then Don piped up.

Bullshit, he said. He said it off the back of his hand, to Terri, but loud enough to let everyone hear.

No one but Terri seemed to know Don. He had come into the restaurant alone, spotted Terri, and immediately sat down next to her, to Jack’s instant annoyance. This is Don, everyone, Terri had said, seeming embarrassed.

Where you from? Brick had asked, in a friendlier voice than Jack could have mustered.

Here and there, Don answered, smirking in Terri’s direction.

So everyone had seemingly written Don off as a jerk and the conversation had gone on without him, until now.

Jack couldn’t resist: "Don wishes, respectfully, to differ with something I just said.

I said bull, uh, shit.

Terri had swung around to face Don, and something in her look at him had evidently ruined the word. What kind of look was it? Jack wondered. Don busied himself with his drink.

Jack tuned out of the conversation for a while and gave his attention to the small bandstand in the corner. Peggy Sterling was singing, I Get Along Without You Very Well, her signature number, and it was strangely soothing to him after Kathleen’s death. Peggy noticed Jack listening and nodded. Jack had known the quartet for almost ten years, following them from joint to joint. When the song ended, they took a break, and Jack had a waiter take them drinks—coffee for the aging bassist, Doc, who’d had ten thousand too many drinks and stopped cold turkey one might after he flubbed a note. Doc saluted Jack with his cup when it came.

Big Daddy piped up: Now I remember seeing you on television. You got some murderer out of prison.

Rapist, Jack corrected him. Mistakenly convicted rapist, he corrected himself.

Don spewed gin and tonic into the air. "That’s not how I heard it. I heard you got yourself out of prison."

He did what? Gooper asked, looking back and forth from Jack to Don.

"Ask him, Don said. No, on second thought, don’t bother. He’d just feed you some more … He cocked his chin defiantly at Terri. … bullshit."

Terri turned to Jack and crossed her eyes. But the lopsided grin Jack was wanting wasn’t there. Nor did she put a restraining hand on him. Can’t she tell I’m about to bury my fist in his face?

Instead, Big Daddy’s hand was on Jack’s shoulder. I wonder why Tennessee Williams never used that term. ‘Mendacity’ is okay, but so polite. ‘Bullshit’ comes more to the point.

The other actors laughed and Jack let the mood change. Yes, but it doesn’t have any class.

Cat said, I have to confess that when I was reading for the part I had to ask someone what ‘mendacity’ meant.

Yeah, that was me, Gooper said. I told you ‘lies,’ but I was guessing. I probably would have said ‘bullshit’ if you hadn’t been so gorgeous.

What the hell? Don said, at sea.

Our play is about lies, Cat explained. Jack was happy to hear a note of condescension in her voice.

Someone wrote that lies are the most powerful forces on earth, Big Daddy said to no one in particular. Do you believe that?

Oh, you’re just trying to motivate your character and getting us to do the work for you, Big Daddy, Cat said.

Jack said, Yeah, I buy that, so quietly no one heard him.

I think it’s true, Big Daddy continued. Look at the slaughter the lie about Jesus has caused.

Now, hold on, Big Daddy, Gooper said. Some of us don’t appreciate that kind of talk.

Auggh, Terri said, not another fight! She stood and scooted her chair back as if to leave.

Someone touched Jack’s arm, gently.

Please forgive me for intruding on your conversation.

It was a little old man leaning over from the next table. His voice was barely above a whisper and seemed full of pain. I couldn’t help hearing that you are a journalist, and then I remembered seeing some of your work on television. I wonder if I might interrupt just long enough to ask you a couple of questions.

Go ahead, Jack said, not in a very friendly tone. He was embarrassed that his braggadocio had been entertaining other tables, and he wanted to keep his eye on Don and Terri.

What is the point of what you do? the old man asked.

The point? The question bordered on impertinence, but the man seemed so feeble Jack didn’t want to be rude to him. I guess it’s to find out what people know. Especially if someone doesn’t want me to find out.

And then?

And then tell it.

Ah. The man sat silently a moment and Jack turned back to Terri and the actors. Terri was still standing, one eyebrow lifted.

Suppose, the man said, touching Jack’s arm again, that you were to learn the answer to a mystery more important than smuggling or murders or even getting innocent people out of prison, a mystery so great it has gone unsolved for hundreds of years.

Jack again saw the pain in the man’s eyes. Go on.

Would you report it?

Sounds like a trick question, but yeah, sure.

Oh, I left out one thing. I forgot to say that knowing the answer and reporting it might destroy you.

Now I’m interested. Jack laughed slightly.

The man began to write in a small notebook. I am going to give you a list. It’s a list of people who have discovered the answer.

And been destroyed?

Yes. There was no mirth in his voice.

Well, we journalists are intrepid as all hell. Bring on your accursed mystery.

The man handed Jack the piece of notepaper and stood. Thank you for listening to me, Mr. Duncan. Incidentally, one of the names on the list is my own. He helped the even slighter woman beside him to her feet. She smiled at Jack, and the two walked away. Jack stuck the note in his pocket and immediately forgot about it.

A different mystery had begun. Terri Osborne had disappeared. Disappeared not just from the table, but from the restaurant. Don’s chair was empty too. Big Daddy said she might have left. Jack hurried outside, looked in all directions, checked two parking lots, went back in, waited by the women’s restroom door for a long while, and then returned to the table, getting only blank looks from the others.

Terri Osborne had disappeared. Not just for the night. Disappeared.

What do you know about Shakespeare? Morris Lamb demanded.

Jack stared at him blankly. He had just spent five hours on two planes and another hour with a taxi driver who did not understand the word Manhattan and who was so short he relied on the car’s missing shocks to toss him high enough for fleeting glimpses of the street. And, as usual, Jack had gotten about ten minutes of sleep the night before, which meant the hangover was just now beginning. So he was in no mood for a chat with Lamb about dead playwrights.

You want everything? he asked, sarcastically.

Just some headlines, Lamb said.

"Big, high, bald head. Wrote Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet, Henry the Fifth and, uh, some other stuff."

What else?

Did Popperman put you up to this? Jack asked.

Put me up to what?

This test.

What test?

Kevin Popperman gave Jack paranoia; whenever Jack opened his mouth in this place, Popperman seemed to materialize, mustache and eyebrows identically steepled, brandishing his English accent, ready to point out the idiocy of Jack’s ideas, whatever they might be. Lamb had hired Popperman away from the BBC for no good reason that Jack could divine, and he had wormed his way up to staff producer by turning the whole system of doing documentaries on its head. Don’t go off on an expensive search for some elusive truth, he told them. Let someone else find an answer, then shoot whatever illustrates that answer in the most entertaining—and cheapest—way. Two years earlier, Jack had sat in this same office trying to sell Lamb on a documentary about the recruiting and training of cops, thinking he could expose how the system encourages brutality and increases crime. It would have been a risky documentary, might have taken years and might have proved the opposite, or proved nothing at all. Lamb had been interested. But Popperman had stuck his head in the room and called the whole concept specious reasoning certain to produce impalpable results. Amazingly, Popperman had managed to include a yawn in the word impalpable without smearing any of the syllables. He was Moses from the mountaintop scolding his misbehaving flock, and Jack’s poor little documentary had lain there dying. Jack had had no comeback, because he didn’t know what impalpable meant.

The son of a bitch has made a career of shooting me down from the first moment he saw me, Jack said now, to Lamb. Every time I bring in a rough cut to show you, he shows up, and I have to crank the volume all the way up to compete with his condescending groans. Doesn’t he have any work of his own to do?

Jack, you’re losing it. Popperman is not out to get you. He’s an efficiency wonk and a scientist. And he’s good at …

Just what I need! Jack thought. My buddy, Lamb, defending the blusterbag Popperman in the middle of giving me some nonsensical English Lit test.

Jack rose halfway out of his chair, thinking he would walk out in a display of principle, but he sat right back down, remembering how much he needed the job. Wait! What job? As his mind wandered through this thicket, he realized that Lamb was still talking.

… looked like your sort of doc. Do you have six months to spend on it? We’ll pay sixty thousand.

Someone knocked at the door and, without waiting for an answer, pushed it open. A head protruded.

Oh, sorry, Morris, the head said. Didn’t know you had guests. Need to talk to you, Morris. Hello, Jack.

Go to hell, Jack responded. "And you knew damn well he had guests." The head, which belonged to Kevin Popperman, disappeared, and the door closed again.

That creep lies in wait for me like a buzzard, Jack said. Then it registered on him what Lamb had just said. Sixty thousand dollars?

Payable a third up front, the rest when we accept a fine cut.

There was a long pause.

Fine cut of … what?

Lamb stared at Jack as though he’d made a big mistake.

Did you hear anything I just said? Lamb said.

Oh, yeah, sure, I can spare six months for a story like that, Jack said. Sounds like a winner.

Lamb spun his chair around, stood up, grabbed his framed, autographed picture of Edward R. Murrow from the shelf behind his desk, and turned it face down.

Jack waved a hand around, absolving himself of whatever blunders he might have just made. That son of a bitch Popperman threw me off. Then it dawned on him what the story must be about.

Oh, Shakespeare! he said. "I forgot to tell you, I was in Shakespeare once. Midsummer Night’s Dream."

He shot a look at the door, afraid Popperman would reappear like Jiminy Cricket to point out this latest lie. Jack hadn’t been in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. But almost. When he was twenty, with no worries, no responsibilities (or as Lamb would call it, feckless). He was just drifting along behind an amazing looking blonde, whose hair swished to some inner music that Jack was beginning to hear himself, and almost without noticing it, he followed her into the theater and into the middle of auditions for the play. He got the part of Quince without even reading for it. The director looked at him and said, You’re Quince. The blonde with the musical hair got Puck. But just before dress rehearsals, the woman playing Titania, queen of the fairies, who was living with the guy playing Oberon, king of the fairies, found some teeth marks on Oberon where no teeth but her own were supposed to be—teeth marks from the bicuspids of Puck—Jack’s Puck. The result was a dress rehearsal with the great god-king Oberon all doubled over in pain from what had become two bites, Titania having felt the need to show him what a real bite feels like. And everybody’s lines were being drowned out by a screaming match between Titania and Puck backstage, the gist of Puck’s argument being that Oberon’s was the last cock in town that anyone would find her, Puck, biting. So they had called off the play. Which was okay with Jack, whose interest in Puck had waned during the dispute, and he had never really gotten into his character.

No need to explain all that to Lamb, Jack reasoned. None of it had been Jack’s fault.

… so that’s why I thought you might be able to do this one.

Huh? Say again? Jack said.

Ignorance is what I was saying. This piece could use your unique, uh, qualifications.

I suppose you mean that we’re to do this doc as a journey by ‘Everyman.’

Lamb nodded slowly. "A journey taken by a very ignorant man."

Jack didn’t like the slur, but the past five months without work had interfered with his indignation. And he couldn’t work out how to rebut the ignorance slur when he still wasn’t clear about what Lamb was accusing him of being ignorant of.

You might be surprised how much I know about it.

Lamb stared at him silently, until Jack finally asked him what they were talking about, which obviously gave Lamb some pleasure.

The authorship question, Lamb finally answered. Who wrote Shakespeare’s stuff? You may have noticed that Shakespeare is a hit lately. I mentioned his name this morning and my sixteen-year-old daughter actually squealed. And the old argument about who he was is making a little news again. The prime suspect is a guy named Edward DeVere, who was the seventeenth Earl of Oxford. The problem is that the mystery always degenerates into a complicated debate among a bunch of stuffy academics who spew Shakespeare quotes the way Trappist monks quote the Bible.

Or would if they were allowed to talk, Jack added

And what comes out is indecipherable minutiae that serves only to put everyone but their fellow Shakespeare nuts to sleep. So we want you to be our questor, our seeker for the Holy Grail of truth, a search into mysterious old castles and musty halls of records and spooky tombs where we will meet a dazzling assortment of strange people.

How much truth do you suppose I’ll find?

"None, I should think. It’s a thoroughly trampled field. But there are plenty of crazy things to look at. Some guy has found Edward DeVere’s old Bible and sees Hamlet in it, another guy has inherited DeVere’s childhood castle, complete with ghosts. And if the DeVere well runs dry, there’s the hideaway on Malta where Christopher Marlowe hid out after he was murdered so that he could keep writing the works of Shakespeare, and—"

Say what?

See what I mean? Crazy stuff. Fascinating. In beautiful places. With the poetry of Shakespeare as counterpoint. Go be droll. Bring me back a masterpiece.

A bit too far on the soft side of journalism for Jack’s taste, like National Geographic. But the sixty thousand dollars stopped him from saying it.

No sweat, he said instead. Then, brightly, "And I might find something."

Lamb stared at him again, hard this time. Yes, he said, with no apparent joy. Then he seemed to cheer up. And that’s why you’ll have a co-producer who knows England, knows a little about Shakespeare, and will protect you from your own, uh, curiosity.

Who?

Kevin Popperman.

He said it very softly, stood up again, picked up his briefcase, and walked out of the office, closing the door behind him. Walked out of his own office.

"Over my dead body!" Jack shouted after him. When he opened the door and looked up and down the hallway, there was no sign of Lamb.

One of Lamb’s staff researchers, Marci Coffelt, handed Jack a shopping bag full of books when he came muttering past her desk on his way to the elevator. You might want to read these if you’re not too familiar with the authorship question, she said. Read the big brown one, especially. It’s considered the bible of the Oxfordians.

The who?

Oxfordians. Most people call Edward DeVere ‘Oxford.’ He was the Earl of Oxford and quite a fellow. The man who wrote this book makes a pretty good case for him.

Where’d Lamb go?

He said to tell you he won’t be in today. But someone will send you a contract.

"You’re a coward, Lamb!" Jack shouted to the office complex in general.

Popperman’s head poked up from his cubicle. Give me a call when you’re up to speed on this, he said, and I’ll brief you on our production plans.

Jack steamed out of the building without answering, certain that either he or Popperman would not survive this film. He was back in his hotel and had drained three inches of Scotch before he’d cooled down enough to even look at the books the researcher had handed him. He picked up the big brown one and opened it to the back. Nine hundred pages. Fat chance! he said aloud. Tucked inside were the author’s card and a tiny photo of him. It was the little man who’d buttonholed him in the restaurant six months earlier. Charlton Ogburn.

Jack was relieved to find that Marci had highlighted key passages in the book. However, by about page fifty he quit paying any attention to the markings and began reading every word. Marci had been right. This Oxford character had been quite a fellow.

Jack was not the dunce he had acted in Lamb’s office. Ignorance and confusion were devices he used to suck information out of people he interviewed and wrote about, and the habit had spilled over into the rest of his life. He had heard about the controversy over who had been the real Shakespeare and knew that someone named the Earl of Oxford was one of the suspects. But he hadn’t expected anywhere near what he found in Ogburn’s book.

Here was a man who had swashbuckled his way across England, France, and Italy, seduced the queen and various members of the court, gotten kidnapped by pirates, served a term in the Tower of London, gone from riches to rags, died of the plague, then disappeared, body, grave, and all. And practically every move he’d made could be found somewhere in the plays of Shakespeare. Hamlet, in fact, seemed to be his biography.

Lamb had been right! This documentary could be a real winner. And what if he did turn up some important new proof? Jack could not allow the spoiler, Popperman, to grab the reins of this film.

The first thing to do was call Charlton Ogburn and find out where he might look for the smoking gun, and hear more about what Ogburn had said in the restaurant—about the secret ruining the lives of those who’d found it. Ogburn’s parents, according to the book, had been obsessed with the search for proof about DeVere and may have been hounded to their deaths by ridicule from disbelieving academics. Had something like that happened to Charlton?

The gentlest female voice Jack had ever heard answered the phone, Hello.

Mrs. Ogburn?

Yes.

May I speak to Mr. Ogburn?

Oh, I’m so sorry. She paused for several seconds. Charlton passed away a month ago.

Chapter Two

One would think, Kevin

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