Sadly,
Balalaika is the last Quiller novel
(published 1996). Adam Hall (Elleston Trevor) died the day after he finished
it, in July 1995.
It’s
contemporary: following the fall of the Soviet Union, the Russian mafiya is
poised to take over the new Russia by destroying the country’s economy. The man
responsible and capable of achieving this is a British Moscow-based national, a
defector from the Foreign Office, who escaped the country and was given the
rank of Colonel in the KGB. ‘His name is Basil Secker, and he uses the Russian
alias of Vasyl Sakkas’ (p11). Sakkas is elusive and powerful. Quiller’s mission
– Balalaika – is to infiltrate the
mafiya and then find and neutralise Sakkas in some manner.
Briefed
by Chief of Signals Croder, Quiller is made aware that this is a dangerous ask,
with poor chance of success. Quiller requires Ferris as his director in the
field; this is so important, that Ferris will be pulled off the Rickshaw mission in China.
As
before, Quiller shuns the use of any gun. He is adept at unarmed combat,
delivering death when his life is threatened or the mission is at risk of collapsing.
All
the style of the previous novels is here displayed at the hands of a
75-year-old thriller writer at the top of his game: the usual spare prose, the
stream-of-consciousness writing, the extensive scene of hand-to-hand combat
(subsequently employed by Lee Child, among others), and his continual argument
with his pain-averse conscience, often referring to himself as ‘the little
ferret’.
‘It
was eight days since Ferris had been ordered out of the field and by now the
lights would be switched off over the board, either that or a new mission would
already be set up there with data coming in from the director in Algeria or
Baghdad or Beijing, while Mr Croder shut himself up in his tempered-steel shell
to consider whether or not to resign, how much guilt to feel for the little ferret
he’d left running in circles through the snow, or whether he could hold out a
spider’s-thread hope for an eleventh-hour last-ditch breakthrough for the
mission, knowing as he did the blind tenacity of said ferret when the jaws of
adversity gaped from the shadows of the labyrinth’ (p232).
The
breathless climax in wintry Moscow is fitting, another Hall-mark fast-paced
ending.
‘That’s it.’ So the author
finished his last book. There’s a poignant four-page Afterword contribution by
Jean-Pierre Trevor, his son.
Editorial notes:
Combat
In two places Hall mentions hitting the nose with force, driving the
bone into the brain and causing instant death. However, when researching my
recent Leon Cazador novel No Prisoners, I learned that this is
probably not so: ‘Next instant, Leon deployed the ninja Fudo-ken, the clenched
fist slamming full into the man’s nose, shattering the bone structure. While
the bone and cartilage probably wouldn’t penetrate his perverted brain, the
blow would undoubtedly cause subdural hematoma which was bound to deny the
brain adequate blood flow. As a result, a biochemical cascade was in all
likelihood happening right now as Leon dispassionately watched. Brain cell
death was imminent. No great loss to humanity.’
Chapter titles
The single-word chapter headings were not always evident. In The Quiller Memorandum of the 23
chapters only 12 are single words; interestingly Ch3 is ‘Snow’ and in Balalaika Ch1 is ‘Snow’.
His fourth Quiller (The
Warsaw Document) is the first with the consistent use of single-word
chapter headings. There is only one other exception, in Quiller’s Run, with 11 of 32 being two-word titles, one of them
being ‘Pink Panties’!
Certainly, inevitably, as mentioned already, some chapter
headings will be repeated, not least ‘Midnight’.
Why mention this? For my Tana Standish psychic spy novels I
adopted Adam Hall’s penchant for single-word chapter titles (Mission: Prague, Mission: Tehran, and Mission: Khyber). In contrast, my Leon
Cazador novels have two-word chapter headings (Rogue Prey, No Prisoners, and Organ
Symphony).
See also: WRITEALOT: Book review - Quiller: A profile and Bury Him Among Kings (nik-writealot.blogspot.com)