The Golden Serpent
The Golden Serpent is the twentieth novel in the long-running Nick Carter-Killmaster series of spy novels.[1] Carter is a US secret agent, code-named N-3, with the rank of Killmaster. He works for AXE – a secret arm of the US intelligence services.
Publishing history
The book was first published in 1967 (Number A216F) by Award Books part of the Beacon-Signal division of Universal Publishing and Distributing Corporation (New York, USA), part of the Conde Nast Publications Inc. The novel was written by Manning Lee Stokes.[2][3] Copyright was registered on 30 January 1967.[4]
Tagline
Armed with only a suicide pill, Killmaster slips south of the border on a mission to stop the ruin of America's economy by a diabolically clever Chinese plot.
Plot summary
The story is set in July 1966.
The US Treasury is concerned about the enormous extent of counterfeit $5 bills in circulation.
A minor operative in the counterfeiting group based in Mexico steals $500,000 worth of counterfeit money [~$3.6 million in 2013[5]] and flies to a pre-arranged meeting with gang members on the US side of the border with Mexico. He is killed as his plane crashes before he makes contact and the wreckage is discovered by US police.
AXE chief, David Hawk, summons US secret agent, Nick Carter, to a meeting with the CIA in San Diego. They discuss the Serpent Party – a new political party in Mexico – whose manifesto calls for the return of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California to Mexico which is suspected of printing and distributing counterfeit money to support their activities. CIA surveillance of the Chinese nuclear submarine fleet reveals that one of them is missing; it is suspected of bringing in supplies of quality printing paper to the counterfeiters.
Immediately after the briefing Carter embarks on a US Navy submarine (USS Homer S. Jones) to take him to the Mexican coast with orders to smash the counterfeiting operation.
He makes his way on foot inland toward Durango. Posing as an itinerant gold miner he stops at a deserted gold mine near Cosala and discovers the body of a recently killed former SS member.
Continuing his cover as a gold panner Carter is approached by Gerda von Rothe. She is expecting to meet the SS man whom she intends to hire to murder several of her business acquaintances in her nearby castle. Believing Carter to be an itinerant she hires him instead and tells him to come secretly to the castle at midnight.
Shortly afterwards, Carter is captured by El Tigre – a Mexican bandit covertly funded by the CIA. El Tigre informs Carter that his men saw Maxwell Harper (Gerda's business partner) kill the SS man. Carter persuades El Tigre to help him enter and destroy the castle.
Gerda tells Carter that he must kill Harper and Hurtado (a Chinese spy working for Harper) who are using her castle as the base for printing the counterfeit money. She hides Carter in a secret passage in the library and sets up a fake meeting with Harper and Hurtado. At an arranged time, Gerda will leave the library allowing Carter to emerge from the secret hiding place and shoot the two men. During the meeting, Hurtado reveals that he knows Harper is a double agent – working for China and Russia, which is why the Serpent Party and counterfeit distribution are not doing as well as expected. Harper shoots Hurtado. Instead of killing Harper, Carter escapes down the secret passage into the depths of the castle.
Carter discovers the rat-eaten skeletons of four men chained up in the castle dungeons – the remains of the former lovers of Gerda van Rothe. Nearby Carter finds the printing presses for the counterfeit banknotes. He destroys the printing plates and frees the captive print workers.
Gerda's private guards kill all of the Chinese soldiers running the counterfeiting operation. Carter destroys two Chinese mini submarines used to distribute the counterfeit notes and calls for support from the USS Homer S. Jones. Unable to escape, Carter is captured. Gerda ties Carter to her bed while Erma tortures him. Gerda cuts Carter free and forces herself on him. Gerda explains that she used to be a member of the Hitler Youth. She and her parents escaped to Mexico after World War II with genuine printing plates for US banknotes secretly obtained by the Abwehr. Unable to use them for years due to a lack of proper paper, she recently teamed up with Chinese spies to produce counterfeit money to support the Serpent Party and destabilize the US economy. In the throes of passion Carter slips his cyanide suicide pill into Gerda's mouth. Gerda dies. A wounded Harper bursts into the bedroom and is shot by Erma. Carter fights Erma and she falls to her death from the bedroom window. El Tigre and his men attack the castle as pre-arranged with Carter. Carter allows the bandits to loot the castle.
Carter returns to the USS Homer S. Jones which rams and sinks the Chinese nuclear submarine Sea Dragon before returning to San Diego.
Main characters
- Nick Carter - agent N-3, AXE; posing as Carter Manning, Jamie McPherson
- Mr Hawk - head of AXE; Carter's boss,
- Gerda von Rothe - owner of international cosmetics company; Nazi sympathizer
- Maxwell Harper - business partner of Gerda von Rothe; treasurer of Serpent Party
- Hurtado - real name Chung Hee; Chinese agent
- Erma - Gerda's female bodyguard
- El Tigre - real name Hermano; Mexican bandit; Carter's ally
Other information
- This is the first novel in the series where Carter does not use any of his named weapons during the mission.
- Gerda von Rothe lives in the castle El Mirador which is likely based on Hearst Castle (“built in the early part of the century by some millionaire publisher”, Chapter 3).
- Gerda von Rothe is really 36 but pretends to be 70 years old to boost sales of her range of cosmetics. The novel refers to Black Oxen a 1923 film based on the book by Gertrude Atherton about an old woman who retains her youth through artificial means; and to She by H Rider Haggard.
- Gerda's lesbian assistant, Erma, has razor blades in the toes of her shoes similar to those used by Rosa Klebb (also a lesbian) in From Russia With Love.
- The novel notes that Carter is better at Cantonese than Putonghua, which is consistent with other books in the series, e.g. The China Doll
- Passing reference is made to a scene in previous novel in the series Spy Castle also written by Manning Lee Stokes involving phallic worship and a black mass. Spy Castle also contains the first reference to Hawk's secretary, Miss Stokes – likely a self-reference to the author of both books.
- Carter purifies water with “Vioformo” probably a reference to Vioformio (clioquinol).
- Carter uses a watch with built-in radio direction finder
Errors
- When Carter surveys Gerda von Rothe's castle it appears to be located inland not far from Cosala. However, when Carter escapes through the castle's underground tunnels, it is situated at the top of a cliff off the Gulf of California.
- The novel states that China has a fleet of six nuclear submarines. China completed its first nuclear submarine in 1974.
- Carter gives a peasant a 5000 peso note (worth USD400 in 1966, about USD2880 in 2013[6]); this banknote was not introduced until 1981.
- In the novel, July in Cosala is noted as having a mild rainy season; in fact July is the wettest month of the year in this region with an average of >250 mm, 10” rain.
- Carter destroys the printing presses with concentrated sulfuric acid which is described as green in color; concentrated sulfuric acid is usually colorless (although it is sometimes dyed brown for industrial uses).
References
- ↑ "Nick Carter". Fantasticfiction.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
- ↑ Serial Vigilantes of Paperback Fiction: An Encyclopedia from Able Team to Z-Comm. Bradley Mengel. 2009. ISBN 978-0-7864-4165-5
- ↑ "Manning Lee Stokes Spy Author Information Page". Spyguysandgals.com. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
- ↑ Catalog of Copyright Entries. Third Series: 1967: July-December. By Library of Congress. Copyright Office, p1861
- ↑ "Inflation Calculator | Find US Dollar's Value from 1913-2013". Usinflationcalculator.com. Retrieved 2013-07-18.
- ↑ "Inflation Calculator | Find US Dollar's Value from 1913-2013". Usinflationcalculator.com. Retrieved 2013-07-18.