The Devil May Dance Jake Tapper (the best electronic book reader txt) đ
- Author: Jake Tapper
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âSo why do you have a recording of Rosselli, Giancana, and Maheu talking about this all?â Margaret asked.
âFrank wired this whole place, ostensibly in preparation for the presidentâs visit,â Charlie recalled. âAnd got the private recordings pressed into an LP.â
âYep,â said Sinatra.
âYou know about the files Charlotte Goode gave us, right?â Margaret asked.
âIs that the stuff Manny and Les chased you down for?â Sinatra asked. âAbout those twisted parties?â
âSo you knew about that too?â Margaret asked.
âI know about Charlie taking the boys to that freak show at Disneyland,â Sinatra said. âAs for Les Wolff, itâs been said he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side. But I didnât know any more than that.â
âYounger side?â asked Margaret.
âYeah, some guys like âem young, what can I tell you,â Sinatra said. âI mean, Natalie Wood was a teenager when Bob Wagner married her. Chaplinâs wives were kids. Elvis has that young girl squirreled away for him once sheâs ripe. Itâs not my thing, as you know, but good Christ, look at Lolita!â
âItâs reprehensible,â said Margaret. âI just donât even remotely understand this. Fifteen-, sixteen-year-olds are children.â
âDonât tell me, Mags, Iâm with you,â Sinatra said. âTell society.â
âWhat did Peter and Sammy tell you about Disneyland?â Charlie asked.
âPrivate party on Tom Sawyerâs Island,â Sinatra said, âyoung girls. Rich guys. You got in a fight. Saved your niece. Thatâs about it.â
âBut you say youâve heard about Les Wolff and girls on the younger side,â Margaret noted. âWhat had you heard?â
âJustâŠyâknowâŠthat he liked some of these younger girls,â Sinatra said a bit defensively. âYou see them at parties and restaurants, they could be anywhere from fourteen to twenty-four.â
âBut you never did anything about it,â Margaret said. âA major player in your world serving up children to gluttonous robber barons and you just shake his hand when you see him?â
âLookâI didnât know any of that for a factââ Sinatra didnât know how to handle what she was throwing at him. Since Ava Gardner, no woman had challenged him. âIt was whispers. When Errol Flynn got pinched and tried for statutory rape, even goddamn William F. Buckley joined theâwhat was it called? The initials were ABCDEFââ
âAmerican Boysâ Club for the Defense of Errol Flynn,â said Charlie.
âRight. Margaret, youâre being ridiculous,â Sinatra said, clearly growing irritated. âI didnât do any of this crap.â
âBut thatâs the whole point, isnât it, Frank?â Margaret said, her voice rising as well. âYouâre sulking like a teenybopper because JFK wouldnât stay here, and meanwhile youâre surrounded by sin and corruption and you expect the world to think youâre oblivious to it all! Giancana, Rosselli, Maheuââ
âMargaret,â Charlie cautioned.
ââand now you are simultaneously asking me to believe that, one, you didnât know what Les Wolff was up to,â she continued, âand, two, that everyone knew what Les Wolff was up to and all sorts of men like girlsââ
âOkay,â Sinatra said, âwatch your mouth!â
âYou deserve your due,â Margaret said. âYouâve done a whole lot for civil rights, Francis, forcing the integration of the Strip in Vegas, the anti-discrimination movie. Youâve pushed for Black musicians to be treated equally and with respect. But you couldnât stop the Kennedys from blackballing Sammy from the inaugural gala, so I guess how effective you are is an open questionââ
âYou can fuck right off,â Sinatra said, âyou have no idea what Iâve done, the risks Iâve taken!â
âBut,â Margaret continued, âgiven that half the goddamn country is female, including Nancy and Tina, what have you done for womenânot only women, damn it; girlsâwho are human chattel in the suite next door?â
âI told you, goddamn it, itâs all been rumors! What, do you want me to chase down every bit of gossip I hear? Iâm not Jack Anderson! What do you expect me to do? This is Hollywood!â
âYou sure do a lot when you see discrimination against Sammy and Nat King Cole!â Margaret said. âAnd thatâs great! Thatâs laudable! But what about fifty percent of the population?â
âWhat the fuck are you on my dick about?â Sinatra yelled, boiling like a teakettle.
âMy goddamned niece was missing,â Margaret exploded, âsheâs a child and she had fallen into the underbelly of this city of wanton sleaze and you never did a thing to help me, you never lifted a finger or even expressed one single sentiment of concern! You just sat thereââ
âWho the holy fuck do you think told Charlotte to get you those files, you dumb cooze?â Sinatra erupted. âIt was me. I did it!â
Charlie and Margaret sat stunned, mouths agape, shocked not just that Sinatra had confessed to what theyâd theorized might have been the case but that their plan to enrage him into an admission worked. They could barely contain their smiles.
Sinatra, still worked up and in a lather, was almost panting.
He looked at Charlie and Margaret, exhaled, thought about what had just transpiredâit was rather out of character for Margaret to yell at anyoneâthen smiled.
He took a moment to collect himself. He exhaled dramatically.
âYou are the smartest fucking broad I have ever met,â Sinatra finally said.
Margaret grinned. âTo be fair, this was a team effort,â she said.
âLook, Frank,â said Charlie, âweâre just trying to figure out how all the pieces fit in the puzzle here.â
âSo you told Charlotte to give us this information,â Margaret said.
Sinatra took another moment.
âI own a piece of Hollywood Nightlife. Dino and me.â
âNothing bad appears about you or the Rat Pack in their pages,â Margaret observed. âWhich tends to set the tone for all the others.â
âBogie told me once,â Sinatra said, âhe said, âYou have to remember one thing, Frank, thereâs only one way that anyone can fight a newspaper, and thatâs with a newspaper.â I got sick of the garbage smearing me. They called me a Red. They called me a Commie. Punching Lee Mortimer didnât do anything. So I bought a paper. Secretly. We hired away the sleaziest but best slime merchant in town, Tarantula, who hired Charlotte Goodeâwho lived up to her nameâand a staff of
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