"Lenny, but not Corky," by Daniel Stashower, in Cleveland Noir, edited by Michael Ruhlman and Miesha Wilson Headen, Akashic Press, 2023.
The publisher sent me a copy of this book.
Cleveland rocks. There are a lot of good stories in this anthology.
Some stories are primarily about plot, others about character. This one is about style.
The narrator is talking to a reporter, "you." We never hear her speak, just Anders' reaction to her questions.
We learn that she is writing an article about the disappearance of a paper boy fifty years earlier. Everyone refers to him as a boy, but he was actually nineteen. Anders and his wife were hippies and they were close friends with the kid. They could have been the last people to see him alive, except they had had a fight. The guy who wrote a book about the disappearance "the great and all-knowing Julian Story," Anders calls him, made it look as if it was Anders' fault, that if hehad been there the boy might have been saved.
Anders doesn't like Julian Story or the book, and he thinks this article may be his last chance to spell things out.
If you have to drag all this up again, at least let me tell it my way, like you said. No, I'm not bitter...
Oh, he's bitter, all right. And he has a fine story to tell.