Having not read any of the Ethan Gage Adventures series by William Dietrich, but heard good reviews, I wanted to read his latest book, "The Emerald Storm". Self-proclaimed adventurer, antiquarian and spy in the 1800's, the swashbuckling Gage sounded akin to James Bond with a powder-packed pistol and waistcoat. Page one finds him clinging to the side of a frozen fortress. I was hooked. However, Gage is now a devoted newlywed with a young son; his main goal in life is to settle down with his family in his native America. But he is learning, in his new role as provider, that adventuring and gambling do not put food on the table. Womanizing is not an option. And, as he fumbles with fatherhood, he realizes that his skills as a "savant" and "electrician" are useless as he keeps misplacing his son "like a button".
When called to meet with Napoleon Bonaparte one last time before he retires, he cannot resist. Bonaparte needs him for a final mission: stay in Paris and convince the Americans to purchase the Louisiana Territory. His colony in Saint-Dominigue, now Haiti, is crumbling due to the slave rebellion and yellow fever is diminishing his army at an alarming rate. He has no troops to protect the Territory, the British are threatening a naval war, he needs the money. Gage agrees to stay, if only to sell an emerald he "procured" from an Ottoman in the last story. It is his retirement fund and pension for he and his wife, Astiza, and son, Harry.
Disaster strikes when the emerald and Harry are snatched by a renegade police inspector, Martel, who tortures Gage while cryptically demanding "where are the flying machines?" At this point, the reader would expect an impassioned search for Harry and revenge against Martel. But instead, the book takes a circuitous meander involving British spies, Gage becoming a double agent, and a French prison break-in. The British tell Gage that Martel is searching for Montezuma's hidden treasure in Haiti. And Gage, being a treasure hunter at heart, sets out to find this prize and his son. He and Astiza set off for Haiti with Gage fretting over the state of their marriage. Astiza is questioning their union and foresees tragedy.
When they finally, after sailing for over a month, arrive in Haiti, the story becomes meatier, the action more focused, new characters are introduced. Dietrich's depiction of the historical French sugar plantations with it's slave population adds a stimulating essence. Attempting to establish a Little France on the island, the Europeans build huge mansions in the humid forbidding jungle. They fill the houses full of antiques, overdress in the oppressive heat and throw parties while the colony dies off and their wallpaper molds. They enslave the native population to harvest sugar, the island's gold. This all comes to a head with voodoo, rebellion, treasure, betrayal, battles on land and sea, and a deadly hurricane. The last third is the best part of the book.
Although this is part of a series, "The Emerald Storm" can be read as a stand alone novel. But throughout the book, Gage makes passing references to "an extremely unhappy experience with a Nile crocodile" or "an Ottoman that came to too close to his wife" or submarine adventures that inspire me to read the other novels. This book appears to be a marital lull and judging from the state of affairs by the end of the story, I expect by the next book Gage will come out of retirement with pistols blazing.
The Historical Note chapter at the end of the book explains that many of the events depicted in the novel were true, most characters did exist, and the hidden treasure of Montezuma is legend.