Ross Thomas is so much overlooked… perhaps too sardonic for many readers? In addition to masterful storytelling— plots and characters, his eye for the absurd and the high comedy of life’s “movers & shakers” is couched in beautiful prose. Dare I say prescient of where we’d be 40+ years, after this book? Missionary Stew may just be his best in an incredible body of work. What this country needs is a reawakening of Ross Thomas’ intellect, his eye for high comedy-tragedy, good story telling, and moreover a strong moral code —sorely absent in our world today.
Our hero. “He flew in from Equatorial Africa wearing green polyester pants, a white T-shirt that posed the suspect question HAVE YOU EATEN YOUR HONEY TODAY? and a machine-knitted cardigan whose color, he had finally decided, was mauve. The mauve sweater must have belonged to a fat man once—an extremely tall fat man. Morgan Citron was a little over six-one, but the sweater almost reached mid-thigh and fitted his emaciated 142-pound frame like a reversed hospital gown. —Citron no longer cared greatly about his appearance. — That had been nearly thirteen months ago. Since then he had traded the gold links in the expansion band one by one to Sergeant Bama for supplementary rations of millet and cassava and fish. Citron shared everything with the other prisoners and consequently was not murdered in his bed. — thirty-six links in the watch's gold expansion band originally. In thirteen months, Citron had parted with thirty-four.”
Which lead to survival, a final feed of missionary stew… a gift of a diamond and his freedom.
Hero #2. “It was almost a year to the day after Citron sold his diamond in Paris that Draper Haere, the money man, flew into Denver from New York. —Haere was one of those who still compared the price of everything with what he had paid back in the economic benchmark year of 1965—a silly, unbreakable habit that he often found extremely depressing. —Haere always thought of the governor-elect as the Candidate because no sooner was he elected to one office than he began lusting after the next. His name was Baldwin Veatch— The White House was the only conceivable next step up. — Haere did walk, often as much as seven or eight miles a day. He walked because it was a sensible way to get somewhere, because it gave him time to think, and because he was one of life's great gawkers. —sad brown eyes, the weary mouth, the delicate nose, and the sturdy chin had somehow melded themselves into a long-suffering look that many mistook for past tragedy, but that was actually chronic exasperation.”
Craigie Grey put every dime she could raise into a down payment on the two-story, eight-unit beach apartment building on the Pacific Coast Highway a block or so from the pier in what was generally one of Malibu's less ritz... she hired Citron (despite his murmured protestations that his inability to fix anything broken, either mechanical or spiritual, just might border on criminal negligence) — “It pays four hundred a month and you get the grungy downstairs back unit free—that's the one on the highway.” — “It pays four hundred a month and you get the grungy downstairs back unit free—that's the one on the highway.” — “Don’t rent to any coke dealers or whore ladies. And anyone who doesn’t come up with their rent by the tenth of the month is out on their ass.”
Meeting in Montana. “Haere noticed the big high-sprung dark-blue pickup truck. It was a Dodge. — the sticker plastered across the pickup’s bumper read … There Life After Death? Fuck with This Truck and Find Out.” — “That's where it happened. In Singapore.” “What?” “What I’m going to tell you about, which is the reason you’re here.” —“Okay, let's say you also presumed that before anything gets built in some country where the weather's hot and the people’re poor there's going to be some graft—is going to be built by Replogle Construction. Instead, they’re all going to be built by the British or the Italians or those fucking Koreans, who’re getting to be a real menace. So. I’ve spread a little money around—right?” —“Yeah. Langley. What they always wanted me to do, and this has happened, with variations, maybe five or six times over the past fiff-teen years put one or two of their guys on my payroll in some country where the weather's hot. It's not going to cost me anything because they’re going to feed it all back to me. “Then what's the problem?” “With Langley? None. I stumbled across something out in Singapore. Something really shitty. Something that could blow those fuckers out of the White House in ‘eighty-four.” — right out of Maugham—shabby old suit, three-day beard, gin for breakfast— everything.” “Who?” “Meade.” “Drew Meade.” — Draper Haere had been barely twelve years old when Drew Meade, revealing himself for the first time as an undercover FBI agent, appeared as the star witness before an investigating U.S. Senate subcommittee.” Then… “ ‘Sixty-one,” Replogle said. “He wound up in Laos in ‘sixty-nine and by then he was maybe four or five years away from retirement, but he went into dope instead and Langley dumped him” —Singapore— “to tell me a story.” “How much did he want for it?” I knocked that down to ten grand pretty quick.” “It still must be some story.” — Replogle never finished the secondhand story because the big blue Dodge pickup honked and pulled up on the left. The pickup swerved, and its right front fender slammed into the station wagon, which went into a skid on a patch of ice. On either the first or second roll the right-hand door popped open and Draper Haere popped out. He landed in a snowbank. Haere got up and made himself stumble through the snow down to the burning car. — watching Jack Replogle burn to death if, indeed, he wasn’t already dead. — Haere described the blue Dodge pickup and its two masked occupants as best he could. He also said he didn’t think it was an accident: that as far as he could tell it had seemed intentional. The policemen nodded somberly. Haere didn’t mention Jack Replogle's tale about the CIA and Singapore and Drew Meade, because he could see no purpose it would serve.”
“Morgan Citron was parking his 1969 Toyota sedan on the edge of the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu. As fas as Citron could determine that the apartment building was constructed of redwood and shingle, which would burn quite merrily when one of the periodic fires swept down from the Santa Monica mountains and hopped the highway. If the place was really worth upward of four million dollars, Citron decided it must be because of the sound caused by the bang and crash of a heavy surf, which was so loud he could scarcely hear the highway traffic. It took Citron only two trips out to the Toyota to bring in everything he owned. —a woman's voice said from the still-open door, “Can you fix a running toilet?” Without turning, Citron said, “No.” “What about a broken heart?” “Not that either,” —she was not nearly as young as she looked —Twenty-one at most. Somehow Citron knew she was at least thirty. “I’m in Apartment E—in front,” she said. “My name's Keats. Velveeta Keats.” “Velveeta.” —“You’re wondering what kind of folks would name their youngest daughter Velveeta.” The answer is: my kind of folks. The Keatses. Miami Keatses. My family was very big in the drug trade down there in the sixties and seventies.” “But no more,” Citron said. “They cashed out and went into T-bills. At least, that's what they were in a year or so ago. They may be in municipal bonds by now. Keatses went from dirt-poor to hog-rich to banker-stuffy. — “They still like Velveeta?” “The name?” “The cheese.” “They don’t like either one anymore. Mama calls me Vee now and they switched to Brie.” — “I remember these. Pimento cheese usedto come in them. The Keatses always drank out of these and jelly glasses. Back when we were poor. Are you poor?” “Extremely,” Citron said. “What’d you do—before you got poor?” she said. “That's my personal question.” “I wrote and traveled.” “You mean you were a travel writer?” “I guess I was really more of a writing traveler. I’d travel to someplace where not too many people go, live there awhile, maybe six months, sometimes longer, and then write about what it was like.” —Velveeta Keats cupped her face in her palms. “I was married to a Cuban for three years.” “His family used to own all the milk in Cuba.” “Before Castro.” - When I married him, he was in the dope business. That's really why I married him. —After Velveeta Keats had gone, Citron continued to sit at the table. He felt it stir then, almost uncoil, the first faint signs of the disease that had killed a billion or so cats. Curiosity. He began to wonder how it would all turn out and where he would be a year later. He was not accustomed to thinking of the future in terms of more than a day or a week—a month at most.”
“home to Draper Haere had been a two-story red brick commercial building on Main Avenue at the northern fringe of Venice, almost in Ocean Park, a community that helps spell out the difference between Venice and Santa Monica. It had been a cheap neighborhood back in 1968, he had paid $27,500 for the old building with ten percent down. Less than thirteen years later an Iranian offered him $425,000 for it, cash, thus convincing Haere that property, after all, was indeed theft. In the seventies, speculators discovered Venice. The Haere Building was forty feet wide and one hundred feet long, and ran from the sidewalk to the alley. —With the last tenant gone, Haere had all the partitions knocked down. That gave him one enormous room, forty by a hundred, four thousand square feet. —he decided, perhaps perversely, to create the most enormous room of them all. — It took four years to get everything just right, because Haere kept running out of money. When at last all was done, he found it magnificent. Nearly everyone else thought it monstrous. — Haere was a bachelor not only by choice, but also by misadventure. —least seven women that he had been fairly serious about. Possibly eight. One had died. Four had married. Two had fled, one to Rome, the other to Costa Rica, and one had simply disappeared—suddenly, mysteriously, absolutely. Late at night Haere often worried about her. —Finally, Haere did what all bachelors are said to do: he got a cat. The cat was an extremely garrulous castrated half-Siamese tom that Haere named Hubert. When Haere traveled, he boarded Hubert at the Musette Hotel for Cats in Santa Monica, where Hubert seemed to like it, possibly because he could talk endlessly to a captive audience. — FBI agents were no novelty to Haere, not since the early fifties when they had started coming around to investigate his father's old friends. The two who appeared on Haere's doorstep that night were mere tykes, neither a year over thirty-two. One was blond, the other brunette. —Yarn wore a suit and tie, Tighe a gray herringbone jacket, dark-gray slacks, and no tie. Haere noticed that both wore loafers with rubber heels. — “We’d like to talk to you about Mr. John T. Replogle,” “Did Mr. Replogle tell you he had seen Mr. Meade in Singapore?” “He mentioned it.” “What did he say?—exactly, if you can.” “He said Mr. Meade looked like something out of Somerset Maugham.” “ Tell us a little about yourself, Mr. Haere, what it is you do.” “Well,” Haere said, “I try to shape the events that alter and illuminate our lives.” “Politics.” “I’m more of a shadowy figure who moves behind the scenes, a faceless manipulator grasping at the levers of power. If you want more, there's a fat FBI file on me nearly four inches thick that goes back almost thirty years to when I was a kid.” “Much money in politics?” “Not if you’re halfway honest.” — “About Mr. Meade,” he said. “What about him?” “He seems to have disappeared.” “Vanished,” Tighe said. “Into the usual thin air, I suppose,” Haere said. Yarn nodded. “Where else?”
“They met for breakfast the next morning at 7:30, the three of them: Draper Haere, Baldwin Veatch, and his wife, the former Louise Guidry of Crowley, Louisiana, where in 1967 at age eighteen she had been crowned queen of the annual rice festival. —graduated in 1972, she had gone to work in Sacramento for Baldwin Veatch, then a newly elected state senator. They were married later that same year. In the fall of 1973 she and Draper Haere had begun their long, hopeless, and often acrimonious affair. —Draper Haere liked working breakfasts because he had found that most people were not at their best in the morning. It sometimes proved to be a slight, useful edge. “They want it then—whatever Replogle had,” Veatch said. “Who?” “The FBI.” “I think they’ve already got what he had,” Haere said. “What I suspect they’re trying to do is put the lid back on and make sure nobody else gets it.” — “Can you handle it?” Veatch asked. Haere shook his head slowly. “I don’t know how.” “Who would?” “A trained investigator, maybe a smart reporter, someone like that.” —Louise Veatch returned to the table wearing a pleased smile. —“I recollect now. About the Pulitzer. He was in Vietnam. It was a series he did on corruption. They threw him out of the country.” Veatch sighed. “Okay. Go ahead. You and Draper size him up and if he looks good, hire him.” He turned to Haere. “But he’ll be working for you—not me. — “Mr. Citron?” she said. “My name's Mrs. Veatch,” she said, extending her hand. “Mrs. Baldwin Veatch.” “I know,” Citron said, accepting her hand. “And this is my friend and associate, Mr. Haere.” “Draper Haere, right?” Citron said. “The money man.” — “You were in Africa not too long ago.” “It must’ve been a lousy experience—being in jail there, I mean.” It was Louise Veatch who asked the question Citron had been anticipating. “Was he—well, was he really a cannibal?” — Haere is very good at sizing people up, but I’m even better, and what I see sitting across the table from me I like. —Anyone who tells me he’ll take the job provided I buy him a new suit can’t be much of a bullshitter, and in this town that's as rare as green snow. — Citron smiled again, but only slightly, and looked at Haere. “How many political due bills have you people got in Washington?” “Would plenty be enough?” “Maybe,” Citron said.” —On the job.— “FBI,” Citron said, “May I speak to Agent Richard Tighe, please.” “Agent Tighe, please. Richard Tighe.” This time there was no hesitation. “We don’t have an agent by that name,” she said. “I see,” Citron said. “What about Agent Yarn—Y-A-R-N, first name John, middle initial D?” “We don’t have an agent by that name either,” Citron said thank you and hung up with the conviction that he was already earning his money.”
“He had decided to cross at Mexicali. The long bus ride up from Mexico City had tired him and made him look much older than his sixty-three years… U.S. immigration official, who gave him the quick practiced glance of an experienced sorter. “Business in Mexico?” “Just rubbernecking.” — Drew Meade walked across the border into his native land, the country which he felt had betrayed him, although he never thought of it in quite those terms. —he railed against having been handed the shitty end of the stick, which, arguably, is a form of betrayal. At the Calexico bus station, the first Trailways out was bound for Redlands. Meade bought a ticket. From Redlands he would bus his way up and over to Santa Barbara and then come down into Los Angeles from the north.”
“How’d you find me?” Citron said. “It wasn’t hard.” “What does she want?” “Just to say hello. After all, it's been a while, hasn’t it?” “Not long enough.” His mother had always been a remote figure, almost the Mysterious Stranger that parents were said to warn their children about. Two months earlier he would have refused to see her. A month earlier he would have hesitated. Now he shrugged and said, “Okay. Let's go.”
—Gladys Citron—ok you’ve met mom… owner/editor-in-chief of The American Investigator tabloid. There are other characters to follow, we have cannibalism & political intrigue, add in some incest. — You didn’t think I’d take you all the way to Tucamondo? —This is one heck of a tale … I suggest reading Missionary Stew from start to finish… If not, more of my highlights are available for viewing on Goodreads.