Another Friday and Barry Ergang is back with another review
for Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by Patti Abbott. This week he reviews Terror Is My Trade by Stephen Marlowe.
The work of Stephen Marlowe is a frequent topic of Barry’s reviews. Among others
here on the blog, Barry has reviewed Killers
Are My Meat and Drum
Beat-Dominique.
TERROR IS MY TRADE (1958) by Stephen
Marlowe
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
D.C.-based private detective
Chester Drum has been hired by former Congressman Wade Rumbough as the latter’s
bodyguard on a trip to Europe on the luxury liner Queen Victoria. Rumbough, who is the head of the Emergency Mission
to the NATO Powers, has with him his daughter Helen, his brother Rufus, and Dr.
Eve McGivern, who is aboard ostensibly as a companion for Helen.
Also on board are Gino Garda,
a racketeer who has been deported from the United States, whose career goes
back to the days of Prohibition and Al Capone, and his friend Frank Caretti. Rumbough
knew Garda years earlier as “a friend of a friend.” Garda is famous for flying
wherever he has to go, so Drum wonders if his decision to sail back to Europe
has anything to do with Rumbough and the diplomatic project he’s undertaken.
It’s finally decided that
Drum’s role as bodyguard could be politically damaging to the nature of
Rumbough’s mission, so the latter says he’ll pay Drum for his time and for his
passage home from England once they dock. But while still aboard the Queen Victoria, Drum meets a State
Department official named Paul Bible. After a drink and a conversation, they go
their separate ways. But that night, while the ship is hosting a fancy dress
ball, Drum has a brutal confrontation with Frank Caretti in Gino Garda’s
stateroom. Later he finds a note from Bible that has been slipped under his own
stateroom door: “I must see you tonight. I
have to see you. I’ll be looking for you every fifteen minutes on the
starboard boat deck starting at nine.”
After some delay, Drum keeps
the appointment—just in time to witness Bible’s murder at the hands of someone
dressed in the costume of a Buckingham Palace Guard, but unable to identify,
let alone capture, him or her. The one certainty? He knows he won’t be
returning to the States anytime soon; he’s determined to find out which of the
ship’s passengers killed Bible and threw him and the murder weapon overboard.
But this is the bare
beginning of a very short (159 pages in the original Fawcett paperback
edition), fast-paced, action-packed and intricately-plotted novel. Intricate to
the point of occasionally being confusing because of its brevity, I might add,
as Drum—a refreshingly fallible P.I., as he admits throughout—goes to work for
Gino Garda with official approval, digs into and uncovers murky Rumbough family
secrets, and penetrates the Insurance, the mysterious organization that serves
as the protector for international smugglers of Swiss watch parts, diamonds,
and drugs.
A well-written novel of its
type, as this reader has come to expect from this author since said reader
first discovered said author when the former was a teen, it’s one that some
might take the time to parse about plot complications and others will just cruise
along for an entertaining ride. Neither is likely to be disappointed. But I
recommend the latter’s approach.
© 2015 Barry Ergang
Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s written work has
appeared in numerous publications, print and electronic. Some of it is
available at Amazon
and at Smashwords. His website is http://www.writetrack.yolasite.com/.
3 comments:
I've read two or three Chester Drum books and enjoyed them, but this one os new to me. Think I'll try it.
I'm a fan of the Chester Drum series and all of Stephen Marowe's work. Hopefully, STARK HOUSE will reprint these wonderful books.
Mysterious Press has the Chester Drum series available in e-book form, including TERROR IS MY TRADE: http://mysteriouspress.com/products/search/?SearchTerm=stephen+marlowe&ign__submit.x=14&ign__submit.y=6&pg=2
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