Originally posted by Al Bundy's Eyes
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I wouldn't even put it past Mike to have phoned this firm called Bookfinders on impulse, to ask if they bought Victorian diaries, only to be told that they dealt in finding any such items on request from paying customers. Not quite knowing where to go with this, but having the scrapbook firmly on his mind and not wanting to put the phone down just yet, might Mike have come up with a request for something similar on the hoof, just to test these unfamiliar book finding waters and see what would happen? I mean, who knows if the phone call went as Mike was expecting it to go, or if it took off in an unexpected direction, leaving him wanting to know more but not quite sure what? Was he in the habit of making such enquiries, or was this virgin territory for him? Was he checking out the 'selling direct' option at the same time as the publishing route, and found the latter more instantly receptive and user-friendly, not to mention the possibilities for his own unfulfilled writing ambitions?
What isn't working for me, Al, is the idea that Mike would have been given the faintest clue on 9th March where the scrapbook had come from or when. He'd have been suspicious, naturally, but his concerns would be doing battle with his overwhelming desire to get his paws on it. He had to trust Eddie not to have got it from anyone who knew what they had and would miss it, and equally Eddie had to trust Mike with the book if he wanted it shown to potential buyers on his behalf.
I suspect if Eddie told Mike anything, it was that: "no effing bugger alive knows about it". And as far as Dodd was concerned at the time, it would have been true.
Otherwise, Eddie could have been in the same hot water as Mike, and that doesn't work for me either.
Love,
Caz
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