For this final Friday in
February 2020, it seemed like a good time to blow the dust off of this review
which first ran back in 2014. After you read his review of Drum Beat-Madrid by Stephen Marlowe. Make
sure to head over to Todd Mason’s Sweet Freedom Blog
where he will have the roundup of the FFB reviews for this week posted as soon
as possible.
DRUM BEAT--MADRID (1966) by Stephen Marlowe
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
His primary office is in Washington , D.C. ,
but private detective Chester Drum has also opened one in Geneva , Switzerland
because his cases so frequently take him out of the United States . One of his most
prominent clients, and a recurrent character in several books in this series,
is Axel Spade. As Drum explains, “Axel Spade gives professional advice to black
marketeers and smugglers. His going rates for an interview are a hundred bucks
a half hour, and if you need the kind of advice Spade gives, a half hour of his
time is the best investment you can make.” Spade has homes in New York City and Geneva , but must be careful about traveling
elsewhere. He’s wanted in more than twenty countries.
When Drum Beat--Madrid opens, Spade
and Drum are driving to Navarre ,
Spain ,
specifically to the ranch of Captain General Don Santiago Sotomayor, retired
commander of the Guardia Civil. The purpose of the trip? Spade is going to
marry Sotomayor’s niece, Luz Robles. Drum is to be his best man and, because he
has a fair number of enemies, his bodyguard.
The Sotomayor family, the
reader soon learns, is as dysfunctional as any outside of a Ross Macdonald
novel. Don Santiago’s brother Hernando was a Loyalist during the Spanish Civil
War. Don Santiago turned him in, and Hernando was executed. His son José was
raised by Don Santiago. His wife and daughter went to Caracas , Venezuela .
The wife died there, and Luz was raised by the Robles family. Son Ramón was
adopted and raised in Baltimore ,
Maryland by Hernando’s closest
friend. He’s now in the American Army, stationed in Spain , and calls himself Ray
Moyers. He clearly has more than a platonic interest in his sister.
The schedule calls for José,
who hasn’t seen his sister since they were children, to fly Luz from Madrid to Don Santiago’s
ranch. When he lands and Luz is not with him, he explains: “We met in Madrid in the Ritz bar
at noon . She had some
shopping to do, she said. We were to meet later at the airport. I waited. She
did not come. Still I waited. And then, at last, she sent a note saying she was
afraid to fly with her señorito of a brother and had decided to take the train
to Pamplona
instead.”
A ransom note arrives at the
ranch the next morning demanding fifty thousand dollars for Luz‘s return,
leaving Drum and Spade to wonder why the ransom amount is so low, since Don
Santiago can afford a great deal more. Drum spent two years with the FBI before
going private, and has more experience handling kidnappings than the Guardia
Civil. But Spade is initially unable to persuade Don Santiago to keep the two
of them in the loop, let alone to permit Drum to investigate. It’s only after
the kidnappers fail to appear at the designated ransom site they send Don
Santiago to that the old man grudgingly agrees to let Drum take over. Take over
he does, heading immediately to Madrid
to try to retrace Luz’s steps and get a line on her current whereabouts--and
those of her kidnappers. In doing so he encounters his share of colorful and
well-delineated characters; surprises and revelations, not the least of which
is the secret of the Sotomayor family treasure; some moral and ethical issues;
and plenty of action, especially in Pamplona
during the running of the bulls.
According to Marlowe’s
obituaries in The New York Times
and The Boston Globe,
he was well-traveled and lived in France , Spain and Switzerland . To anyone who has read
any of the Chester Drum novels, this will come as no surprise: Marlowe’s sense
of place and its culture was always meticulously and vividly rendered. Drum
Beat--Madrid
is no exception.
Barry Ergang ©2014, 2020
Among
other works, Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang's own impossible crime
novelette, The Play of Light and Shadow, is available
at Amazon and Smashwords as is his recently released book
of poetry, Farrago, and other entertaining reads. For more
on Barry’s books as well as his editing services, check out Barry’s
website.
Once Marlowe moved out of his early formulaic work (mostly published under Milton Lesser, his birth name), he became a force to reckon with. His early crime novels and his Chet Drum books have been greatly underappreciated. These, as well as his later mainstream novels, deserve a rediscovery.
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