W.
GLENN DUNCAN
7/13/1940—5/7/2019
Recently, I received an email from Bill Duncan
with the sad news his father, W. Glenn Duncan had passed away after a long
struggle with health issues. W. Glenn Duncan was the creator of the iconic
Rafferty series of hardboiled private eye novels. The news was particularly poignant for me as
I conducted the last published interview with W. Glenn Duncan with the aid
of his son, Bill. In the past couple of years, Bill has not only been able to
get his father’s six Rafferty books back into print, but has also taken over
the Rafferty mantel as he continues the character in books of his own. Bill has
also become a friend.
Bill recently sent out an email to the many fans old
and new of his father’s writing, stating: I'm
so grateful to each and every one of you for the joy you brought to Dad in the
last couple of years, as he got to know the true breadth of support for
Rafferty and all the other characters he created. I know I've said it before,
but I'll never forget that you did that for him. Thank you from the bottom of
my heart.
In a wonderful tribute to his father, Bill also wrote
the following scene featuring Rafferty and his cohorts as they say their own
goodbye to their creator...Personally, it gave me chills...
Sunset.
A secluded location on the shores of Lake Texoma,
Texas.
The sun wavered on the horizon across the water.
Hung there like it knew its job was to finish setting, but it wanted to give
our motley group just a little more light, more warmth, more time before the
day ended and the dark times came.
We got the flames going pretty good and pushed the
rowboat out. The breeze slapped little wavelets against the wooden topsides for
a few seconds, then it grabbed hold of the small boat and its cargo and dragged
them quickly away from shore.
Cowboy was the first to break the silence, holding
his Stetson in his large hands and running a knobby thumb along the brim.
“Well, goddamn,” he said. “Didn’t never expect it would come to this.” He
kicked at a rock with his boot. “Goddamn,” he said again.
“Uh huh,” I replied.
Mimi stood tall, all four feet and a bit of her,
and blinked back tears. I’d never seen Mimi cry before. “He’s really gone,
isn’t he?” she said.
“Fraid so, Mimi,” I said. “I wish like hell he
wasn’t but …”
She nodded, ran a finger under both eyes, and
hugged herself. Cowboy draped an arm around her shoulders.
Ed Durkee’s brown suit had wilted while we were
getting the rowboat ready, and the coming chill of the evening wasn’t going to
breathe life back into it. He dry-rubbed his face and sighed. “I can’t believe
you talked me into this, Rafferty. A goddamned Viking funeral! If anyone comes
down here, I’m gonna pretend like I don’t know what’s going on and I’ll bust
you all.”
“You didn’t have to come,” I pointed out. “Relax,
Ed. It’ll all be over soon,” I said. “He’ll either make it into Oklahoma or
completely burn up. My money’s on burning up. Did you leave any lighter fluid
in the can, Ricco?”
Ricco pulled the toothpick from the corner of his
mouth, shook his head twice, and grinned.
The flames were really going now, they must have
been fifteen, maybe twenty feet high, as the little boat turned in circles,
caught in an unseen eddy.
Hilda wrapped an arm around my waist.
“I’m so sorry, Rafferty,” she said in a low voice.
“Are you okay?”
Shook my head.
“We’ve known each other for so long, it felt like
he’d just always be there. I knew that wouldn’t be the case but, dammit, I
wanted it to be.” I looked around the circle of faces, knew that they expected
me to say something in the moment.
I toasted the flaming boat with my beer.
“Glenn Duncan. He was the best of all of us. A
doer, a man who made things happen. In fact I’m reminded of a quote by
Heinlein. It goes something like ‘A man should be able to change...‘“
At that moment something important in the
structure of the boat must have burned through because there was an enormous
hiss, a cloud of steam, and then nothing.
I looked at the lake surface, ripples fanning out
in all directions from where the rowboat and Glenn had slipped beneath the
water.
I like to think that those ripples will always be
there. They may be small, they may be far away, and they may even be too hard
to see with the naked eye, but they will be there.
Always.
I turned from the lake and looked at my friends.
“Hell with it. You guys ready to kick ass and take
names?”
Mimi nodded, reached into her oversize purse, and
checked her Uzi.
Cowboy slid his hunting knife into the scabbard at
the small of his back and said, “Let’s git amongst ‘em.”
Ed shook his head and pretended like he was
somewhere else.
Ricco just grinned.
Hilda leaned into me, nestled her head into my
chest, and rubbed her hand on my back.
“It’s what he would want,” she whispered.
I nodded.
Damn straight.
In the two posts below you will find the two part interview I conducted
with W. Glenn Duncan in 2017...
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