Cover illustration by
Jack Harman
Anton Kramer, a man of
fierce devotion where his work as a surgeon was concerned, could never
surrender to an uncompromising love like Deborah's. Had Deborah's experience of
men been wider she must have known this, but guilelessly she consented to
the suggestion that she should join him as his bride in Indonesia when her
three years' training as a nurse was completed. But Deborah came to learn that
much can happen in three years. In three years a man can build a new world for
himself, can make a new circle of friends and can learn to exchange confidences
with a beautiful Oriental more intimate than ever he had shared with the woman
he had promised to marry. When Deborah arrived to join Anton all these things
were clear to her. Anton still loved her—of that she was certain—but was the
part in his life that he offered her big enough, important enough? And even
more significant, after meeting the young flyer, Hank Curtis, did she still
want that part?
GRADE: B
BEST QUOTES:
“Tarapang had been rent by strife and terrorists had burned
and ravaged and killed in the name of Freedom, tearing down the civilization
which the white men had brought, for no other reason than because the white man
had brought it.”
“A post at the County Hospital, when she had finished her
training, had been the height of her ambitions with, perhaps, later on,
marriage to one or other of the pleasant ordinary young men she knew and with
whom, hitherto, she had been content to spend her time.”
“ ‘You gave your word to Deb,’ Deb’s mother had reminded
him. ‘Surely you aren’t going to break your promise to her for the sake of a
few heathen natives?’ ”
“Love is giving, not taking, Miss Fane—it is making
sacrifices for the man you love, devoting your life to him, humbling yourself—”
REVIEW:
Deborah Fane has just graduated from nursing school, and as
we meet her she is jetting off to Indonesia to meet up with Dr. Anton Kramer,
whom she met at school in England and fell in love with. They’d become engaged
before he left to go to “his own country since boyhood,” where “he had spent
the war years, first as a Japanese prisoner and later as leader of the guerilla
force which had opposed the conquerors.” They’ve been maintaining a ferocious
daily letter-writing relationship for the past three years, but have not seen
each other in that time, so anyone with a brain is going to predict trouble for
the happy couple. Indeed, in recent months, his correspondence has ceased due
to a revolution that has occurred on the island of Tarapang, where Anton is
working. Undeterred by the wholly unstable situation, Deborah has hopped a jet
to Indonesia and once there hired a private plane, piloted by cowboy American
Hank Curtis, to get her the rest of the way to the island, because “her
eagerness to tend and serve its primitive and misguided people was second only
to her longing to tend and serve Anton himself.” If you can stand it.
Anton is unaware of her impending arrival, since mail
service has been unacceptably poor during the hostilities. Hank is rightfully
concerned that Deborah is a hopelessly naïve babe in the woods with an
obsessive messiah complex regarding her fiancé, who is rumored to have led the
uprising on the island. “The Anton she had known and loved could not possibly
be the leader of a violent revolt! It was unthinkable,” even though she knows
he had been one before med school. But since she’s the cutest white gal he’s
seen in years, Hank signs on to the mission and hangs out with the military
pilots to find out their timetable for bombing the island, so he can get the
jump on them early the next morning while they’re sleeping off their hangovers.
He lands Deborah on Tarapang, but not before getting shot at by another plane
and taking a bullet to a convenient shoulder (it’s never to the head, is it?),
from which he is completely recovered (or at least it’s never mentioned again)
after five pages.
Landing on the island, Deborah is met by her true love and a
gang of local soldiers driving an armed vehicle. Anton seems happy to see
her—but his associate, the vixen Dr. Liang Hosien, is less pleased to encounter
a rival. Anton is acting a little strangely, though, one minute completely
ignoring Deborah and the next kissing her passionately. She has to work hard to
convince Anton that he should abandon the island and return to the mainland
with her so they can be married and live happily ever after. “Ever since I got
here, I have been afraid. Of—of something. It sounds stupid but I don’t even
know of what I am afraid,” she tells Anton. Could it be the armed soldiers that
drive Anton around? The plane that shot at her and Hank en route to the island?
The government bombers on their way to annihilate Tarapang? Nah, “it is just
some sort of blind instinct, I think. I—I don’t know.”
It becomes increasingly clear to even dopey Deborah that
Anton is playing a military role in the uprising, and his agreement to leave
the island stems from his belief that his ragtag band of guerillas is losing
the war and that they will surrender peaceably once their leader has abandoned
them. Despite his current dubious second job, Deborah is nonetheless standing
by her man, even though “Anton had changed. She could no longer pretend, even
to herself, that he had not.” Meanwhile, Hank works overtime flirting and
kissing Deborah to convince her to leave the increasingly unhinged Anton. Anton
rightfully becomes jealous of Hank, who counters, “He should stick around and
keep an eye on you, if he wants me to stop making passes at you, shouldn’t he
now?” But Deborah, after kissing Hank twice, feels that Anton’s jealousy is
completely unfounded: Hank “had risked his life to get her here, was risking it
now and … he had kissed her. True, it had been nothing more than a brotherly
gesture, his lips had merely brushed hers in farewell. They were confronting a
shared danger and he had been about to leave her. It had meant no more than
that—Hank was an American and that was the American way, casual, light hearted,
a kiss instead of a compliment.” Even when Anton walks in as she is sobbing in
Hank’s manly arms, Deborah seems completely oblivious: When Anton shouts, “‘Do
you deny now that you’ve let Curtis make love to you behind my back? Do you?’
‘Yes! It isn’t true, Anton!’ Deb protested, the color rushing to her cheeks.” Clearly
the word “protested” should here be read as “lied.”
As it happens, a diplomat shows up on the island to
negotiate peace and is shot and held captive by the guerillas. To prevent the
all-out war that would ensue, Hank sneaks off to try to rescue the diplomat and
is captured himself. Deborah is then forced to sneak out to Hank’s plane and
use the radio to call the mainland to stop the impending bombing of the island.
The resulting delay yields enough to get Hank and the diplomat rescued and to cool
off the crisis.
Anton negotiates himself into the role of official leader of
the island, and Deborah finally realizes “the Anton she had known and loved in
England had not been the real Anton—perhaps he had existed only in her
imagination.” But Hank is so much more! So in the end, three action-packed days
after her arrival, she is leaving Tarapang to get married—but not to Anton,
after she realizes that she’d never loved Anton the way she loves Hank, of course:
“Hank, who had kissed her lightly and laughingly and had aroused in her
emotions she hadn’t known she possessed, emotions she hadn’t felt for Anton,
although she had believed that she loved him for nearly three years.”
This book technically counts as a nurse novel since Deborah
is a full-fledged RN, but all she really does in this book in that capacity is
dress Hank’s bullet wound and count hospital supplies. It’s a pretty
adventurous story, though the politics are a little hard to follow (in full disclosure,
I may not have accurately represented the plot here), and Deborah is a near-total
moron, ignorant of basic human behavior and swinging from a years-long devotion
to a man she only writes letters to, to marriage to a man she’s known for only
three days. It’s an unusual VNRN and one worth reading in that respect, but not
the best book I’ve ever read.
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