This is the starting point for my novel The Preserve. The gambit was set. Certain cunning American intelligence operators would soon maneuver to exploit those undisclosed spoils for clandestine special projects, using dogma and deceit, the flag and anti-Communism as their sharply honed instruments. And in 1948, with the American generalissimo at peak strength and popularity, it was also the perfect opportunity for certain powerful interests back home to coopt the whole enterprise for a devious conspiracy.
To prevail, all they needed was one desperate fall guy.
That poor fellow is Wendell Lett, the main character in The Preserve. In 1948 Hawaii, Lett, a WWII veteran turned deserter, seeks a cure to his combat fatigue (PTSD) at a mysterious facility on the Big Island called the Preserve, but his handlers aim to turn him into a vile assassin for a deadly plot that runs all the way to General MacArthur.
My novels often introduce readers to lesser-known historical events. The plight of Wendell Lett himself is fictional, as is the Preserve itself, but I did pluck certain characters and events from the established historical record.
The Imperial Japanese Army and its various confederates did plunder hordes of gold and treasure and goods from Asia. Whether they moved the spoils to the Philippines and buried them in secret caverns and underground shelters is disputed. The topic has become known as “Yamashita’s Gold,” named after the top Japanese general defending the isles from MacArthur’s storied return. The clearest and strongest substantiation of the plundering and how it was used once in American hands comes from historians Sterling and Peggy Seagrave, who wrote two books that ask many good questions: The Yamato Dynasty: The Secret History of Japan’s Imperial Family (2000); and Gold Warriors: America’s Secret Recovery of Yamashita’s Gold (2003).
The ensuing mystery of how the loot has been both exploited and hunted is a compelling story in itself. The Seagraves connect real-life persons to the liberation and commandeering of the plunder. Among them are Japanese gangster Yoshio Kodama and nefarious American intelligence operative Edward G. Lansdale, both of whom appear in my novel.