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- BOOKS, Page 96Savory Gambits
-
-
- DADDY
- by Loup Durand; Translated by J. Maxwell Brownjohn
- Villard; 374 pages; $18.95
-
- Occupied France, 1942. A righteous Christian banker is helping
- Jews to conceal their savings from the Nazis. Detained by the
- Gestapo, he commits suicide rather than yield the numbers of the
- secret accounts he has opened. Now only one person in the world
- knows how to retrieve the hidden $350 million: the banker's
- great-grandson Thomas. The eleven-year-old chess prodigy has
- memorized the long list of digits. A brilliant homosexual SS
- officer sets out in pursuit of the money and the boy.
-
- French novelist Loup Durand fills out this scenario with the
- graceless prose that marks other classics of the genre, including
- John Buchan's The Thirty-nine Steps, Frederick Forsyth's The Day
- of the Jackal and almost everything written by Ian Fleming. The
- boy's doomed mother Maria is not merely an eyeful, she has a
- "passion for beautiful things and more than enough money to indulge
- it . . . Coco Chanel suits, tea roses, the best restaurants, jazz,
- and driving her Bugatti at a reckless speed."
-
- In Durand's narrative, and J. Maxwell Brownjohn's translation,
- cold feet are "like blocks of ice." A bashed villain goes "out like
- a light." A neighborhood is "as silent as the grave." An event
- happens "in a flash." Matters are as clear "as daylight." If the
- author were competing with John le Carre, these bromides might undo
- his tale.
-
- But the Good War is not the cold war, and an international page
- turner should never be confused with a geo-political thriller. The
- one man who can save Thomas is American David Quartermain, who
- fathered the illegitimate boy and is sitting out the war in
- Vermont. Quartermain, whose name evokes the dauntless hero of King
- Solomon's Mines, is not just well off. He is a member of the most
- powerful banking family in the U.S. For lagniappe, he bears a
- striking resemblance to Gary Cooper. The boy's only protector is
- a supermarksman out of Ghostbusters. Miquel is the sort of fellow
- who can shoot out the eye of a fly at 100 paces and vanish at will
- into a wood or a city, beyond the reach of ordinary humans.
-
- There are no moral complexities here, no cunning passages of
- history, no double agents trading allegiances for meaning. But
- there is a tumultuous plot, an appealing young protagonist -- who
- except Hitler could root against a pre-pubescent? -- and a prime
- villain. Colonel Gregor Laemmle, the SS officer in pursuit of
- Thomas, is far more than the usual posturing sadist. A former
- philosophy professor, he is a connoisseur of art and literature and
- something of a chess master himself. Laemmle regards the hunting
- of Thomas as a large-scale tournament, with gambits to be savored
- even when they go against the Germans.
-
- The opening game features a well-devised trap. But the lad is
- too slithery to hold, and he is soon en route to maman, with fatal
- consequences for her. From that fiery shoot-out until checkmate,
- the contest becomes increasingly taut, vicious and engaging. At
- each turn, Laemmle edges closer to his goal. At every escape,
- Thomas becomes a little wearier, a trifle more dependent on a cast
- of peasants, restaurateurs, shopkeepers and devious intelligence
- operatives. None are so devious or inventive as he is. The most
- adept, of course, proves to be Quartermain, flown in to rescue the
- child of his brief and passionate liaison with Maria.
-
- Between the maze of subplots, Durand allows a sex scene or two,
- but his real love story is filial. As Daddy nears the end game, the
- book presents its sole ambiguity as father and son compete for the
- title role. Is the innocent American fit for parentage? Or has the
- little French garcon acquired a more mature knowledge of human
- treachery and altruism? Debating the question, Europeans have
- driven Thomas' adventure to the top of their best-seller lists. It
- is likely to have a commensurate success in the U.S., where some
- people fondly remember Father Knows Best and the rest are aware
- that outsmarting adults is one of youth's most hallowed traditions.