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Derwent refused to discuss price; informed sources 。。。
He had sold out everything; lock; stock; and barrel。 It wasn't just the
Overlook。 But somehow。。 。 somehow。。。
He wiped his lips with his hand and wished he had a drink。 This would go
better with a drink。 He turned more pages。
The California group had opened the hotel for two seasons; and then sold it to
a Colorado group called Mountainview Resorts。 Mountainview went bankrupt in 1957
amid charges of corruption; nest…feathering; and cheating the stockholders。 The
president of the pany shot himself two days after being subpoenaed to appear
before a grand jury。
The hotel had been closed for the rest of the decade。 There was a single story
about it; a Sunday feature headlined FORMER GRAND HOTEL SINKING INTO DECAY。 The
acpanying photos wrenched at Jack's heart: the paint on the front porch
peeling; the lawn a bald and scabrous mess; windows broken by storms and stones。
This would be a part of the book; if he actually wrote it; too — the phoenix going
down into the ashes to be reborn。 He promised himself he would take care of the
place; very good care。 It seemed that before today he had never really
understood the breadth of his responsibility to the Overlook。 It was almost like
having a responsibility to history。
In 1961 four writers; two of them Pulitzer Prize winners; had leased the
Overlook and reopened it as a writers' school。 That had lasted one year。 One of
the students had gotten drunk in his third…floor room; crashed out of the window
somehow; and fell to his death on the cement terrace below。 The paper hinted
that it might have been suicide。
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