Once
again many years pass between books in the Fu Manchu series—almost
ten years between 1948’s SHADOW OF FU MANCHU and this one, in 1957.
And whatever Sax Rohmer was doing during that time-period, he didn’t
devote a lot of his time to the plot of the next-to-last Fu-novel.
RE-ENTER wins the honor of being the least interesting book in the
series, and the one with the most internal problems.
This
time the viewpoint-character is American Brian Merrick, who in
general is no better or worse than most of Rohmer’s earnest young
men. Because he’s the son of a U.S. Senator who has the ear of the
American President, the Si-Fan evolves a plan that sends Merrick to
Cairo, supposedly to rendezvous with Nayland Smith—though, for good
measure, the FBI also has an interest in helping Merrick on his path
to adventure. Merrick’s not that much of a “junior adventurer,”
but he does have a romantic allure for two sexy women, with none of
Shan Greville’s protests about not enjoying it. One lady is Lola
Erskine, an American who’s eventually revealed to be an agent of
the FBI, while the other, Zoe Montero, is a vaguely Middle Eastern
girl in the service of the Si-Fan. It won’t be any great surprise
as to which girl wins Merrick’s heart, but then, neither one is all
that compelling. Zoe even comes close to betraying Fu Manchu’s
confidence, but, as if in compensation for her not getting the guy, the doctor allows her to perform a final service to win her freedom from the
Si-Fan.
Fu’s
mercy toward Zoe isn’t precisely out of character, but it’s one
of a handful of irregularities that make one wonder how well Rohmer
thought things through. There’s no reference to Fu getting either
support or trouble from the Council of Seven, and though Fah Lo
Suee’s been missing since ISLAND, her long absence persuades me
that Rohmer simply didn’t know what to do with her once he’d both
resurrected and brainwashed her. Though the doctor was always shown
to possess a wry sense of humor, RE-ENTER breaks character by showing
him actually laughing. True, it’s sardonic laughter, when one of
Fu’s subordinates makes a comment on their Soviet allies, but the
reaction still seems poorly thought out. At least Fu’s alliance
with the Soviets is merely a prelude to his betraying them, which
means that the character’s contempt for Socialism is undimmed.
However, I never got a sense of what benefit Fu received from the
temporary alliance-- and indeed, said alliance almost costs him his
life.
Granted,
even the devil-doctor is human and capable of error. But to keep his
ongoing relationship with the Soviets, he allows one particular
Russian agent to take a sample of Fu’s priceless elixir vitae for
analysis. In his conversation with Agent Gorodin, Fu expressly says
that he did so knowing that the Soviets could not analyze the elixir,
and that he Fu held that conviction when he allowed Gorodin to take the sample. But it’s not clear why Fu allowed Gorodin to gain total access to the doctor’s only extant supply of the rejuvenating
chemical, which results in Gorodin trying to substitute a deadly
poison. Fu doesn’t fall for this, of course, but why does he fall
for the first gambit at all? As a result, the master villain almost
perishes of old age until he can receive a supplemental dose of
youth-potion from another source. It’s one thing for Fu Manchu to
make mistakes because, on some level, he might like to have willing
servants who obey him of their own volition. But it’s clear that he
has no special regard for Gorodin, so why would he trust the agent?
Fu’s
ultimate plot is actually designed to nullify the Communist control
of the East and to substitute the rule of the Si-Fan. By either
suborning or stealing the research of a German scientist with the
interesting name of “Hessian,” Fu plans to impersonate Hessian
and to present the American President with a revolutionary anti-nuclear defense, “the sound
zone.” But to gain access to the President, Fu involves the son of
Senator Merrick, and also uses Brian Merrick as a means of
transporting Nayland Smith from Cairo to America. However, the Smith
accompanying Merrick is a surgically altered double for Smith, who
remains Fu’s prisoner while the double goes to the U.S. with
Merrick. Inevitably, Smith not only gets free, he manages to fix
things so that Fu’s agents mistakenly slay the double. Smith then
plays his own double and manages to deceive Fu Manchu in a one-on-one
interview. I’m not sure Rohmer remembered that he’d often shown
both Fu and his daughter as being able to glean prominent thoughts
from the brains of their opponents on occasion, which makes the
success of such an interview improbable. On the other hand, in one
novel Fah Lo Sues tells Shan Greville that she can only read minds
when the subject is relaxed, so maybe Rohmer’s earlier works can be
used to justify at least one later novel’s problem.
Perhaps
it’s needless to state that no one gets the use of the
revolutionary anti-nuclear defense, nor does Fu achieve any of his political ends. Possibly his animus toward Communism proves a
vulnerability, since his foes know he won’t give it to the Commies.
Despite some false notes for the evil doctor, his scenes are still
the high points of this very weak concoction.
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