| A Review of: The Betrayer by W.P. KinsellaIn police investigations there is something called the Mysterious
Dude Theory, which generally gives the police a good laugh or two
in somber situations. A killer may be apprehended standing over a
corpse with the smoking gun in his hand, but he will claim that a
few seconds before a mysterious dude committed the crime, then
thrust the gun into his innocent hand. In Hennessey's novel the
Mysterious Dude actually exists. If fact his name is Hugh Michael
"Mickey" Casey, and he narrates the story. Mickey grows
up in a catholic orphanage in the 1930s in a slummy part of
Charlottetown, where the only thing good is a fellow orphan named
Emily Kate Ryan, to whom he is mightily attracted. When he leaves
the orphanage he does odd jobs and is a minor hoodlum until one
night he and two friends decide to rob an old man at his home. The
robbery goes wrong and Mickey fires a gun at the old man to save
his friend who may have been about to be killed. The three scatter,
the other two are picked up and charged with murder. Mickey is a
never a suspect. The other two do not invoke the Mysterious Dude
defense, because they understand the reason Mickey did what he did.
They are hanged for their crime. Mickey uses his native intelligence
to become a successful journalist, but he is overwhelmed with guilt,
and has been indoctrinated enough by the church to wonder "What
if the priests and nuns are right? What if there is a hell?"
Emily Kate marries another orphan who becomes a successful politician,
but Mickey brings him down , then marries Emily Kate himself. But
Mickey is an alcoholic and finally confesses his past to Emily Kate
who bounces him out of their home, but not completely out of her
life. Mickey still hopes for reconciliation. Mickey's motivation
is sound and the story generally rings true. Life in 1930s and 40s
Charlottetown is well drawn.
|