Deadly virtues

Jo Bannister

Book - 2013

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Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Published
New York : Minotaur Books 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Jo Bannister (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
296 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250023445
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

There's an autumnal tone to Donna Leon's latest Venetian mystery, THE GOLDEN EGG (Atlantic Monthly, $26), that suits the melancholy mood of Commissario Guido Brunetti when he looks into the suspicious death of Davide Cavanella, the deaf and mentally disabled man who worked for his neighborhood dry cleaner. It strikes Brunetti as sad, as well as sinister, that he's unable to find any public record of Davide, that his mother can't produce her son's birth or baptismal certificates, school documents or any other verification of his life. In the eyes of the state, Davide never existed. "It daunted Brunetti, the pathos of it." An articulate man who delights in the lively conversations he shares with his wife and two children, Brunetti is haunted by the silent world Davide inhabited. "If the Brunettis had a religion," Leon tells us, "it was language." And so this thoughtful policeman is also led to brood over the debasement of language by the politicians and bureaucrats who cynically confuse, misdirect and misinform the public. A Neapolitan colleague reminds him that even regional dialects serve a divisive purpose, keeping people from recognizing their common cause and preventing them from realizing that "we're all the same: beaten down by this system that is never going to change." As Leon wryly points out in this unusually reflective detective story, the same system that couldn't keep track of Davide has somehow managed to overlook evidence that the mayor's son is complicit in a bribery scheme. "Why do we tolerate this," Brunetti's secretary asks when presented with this latest flagrant example of corruption, "and not go after them with clubs?" That's something Brunetti often wonders. And he sadly concludes that short of emigration or suicide, there aren't many options for people whose political system is so dysfunctional. Meanwhile, the commissario carries on as he always does, solving one crime at a time, reversing one injustice after another, then heading home to drink a little wine, read a little Tacitus and play another little language game with his family. Murdered children aren't uncommon in genre thrillers, but children who are killers are harder to find. That alone makes Lisa Ballantyne's jolting first novel, THE GUILTY ONE (Morrow/HarperCollins, papar, $14.99), something of a novelty, since it follows the trial of an 11-year-old boy accused of battering an 8-year-old playmate to death in a London park. But this young Scottish writer isn't simply out to shock; she's intent on raising awareness of how parental abuse and societal indifference instill in some children a smoldering, explosively violent rage. Daniel Hunter was one of those children. After being taken from his drug-addicted mother, he went through several foster families before ending up with Minnie Flynn, a bighearted farm woman who took in damaged children the way she rescued unwanted animals. Saving Daniel from his furies was a long and hazardous ordeal, but he finally emerged to become a lawyer specializing in the defense of juveniles like Sebastian Croll. At age 11, Sebastian is the youngest client Daniel has defended, but he's the same age Daniel was before Minnie tamed him, and he's seething with the same anger. The two stories have their parallel points, and both are sensitively told. But while Sebastian's trial provides high drama, Daniel's self-destruction is quietly heartbreaking. The protagonists in Jo Bannister's various procedural series range from clever amateur sleuths and scrappy private eyes to seasoned police inspectors, but one way or another, they're all variations on the civilized English detective who is patient with people and good at whodunits. DEADLY VIRTUES (Minotaur, $24.99) adds another detective to this roster: Hazel Best, a young cop still on probation and on her first posting - to a small West Midlands town known for its low crime rate. Hazel is a straight shooter, pragmatic but principled, and her main function is to deal with an ethical dilemma that will toughen her up for future assignments. But the most remarkable character here is Gabriel Ash, a recovering trauma victim and the baffled recipient of a coded message from a young man who knows he's about to be murdered. This is the kind of puzzle plot Bannister is known for; Gabriel is the kind of character who takes satisfying shape before your eyes; and Hazel's is the kind of classic detective work that's always welcome in a mad, mad world. The best scenes in C.J. Box's new wilderness adventure, BREAKING POINT (Putnam, $26.95), are those in which heavily armed men chase one another up a mountain in Wyoming and everybody starts shooting at everybody else. But the thrills don't stop there. Some idiot sends up a drone (a drone? in Wyoming?) with a missile that starts a forest fire, sending whoever is still alive scrambling to get off the mountain before they're toast. The thing is, the only escape route is across Savage Run Canyon, an impassable geological wonder "so steep and narrow that sunlight rarely shone on the stream in the bottom." O.K., it's hopeless; but let's just say that a few survivors (led by that nice game warden Joe Pickett) manage to make it. Do you think they might have to navigate that treacherous river on a log? Box really knows how to write this stuff; he actually seems to get better at it with every book. But he's never been very good at character development, and his current villains (mostly agents from the evil federal government) are pathetic. 'Were all the same,' a cynical colleague tells Commissario Brunetti, since we're all 'beaten down by this system.'

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [April 7, 2013]
Review by Booklist Review

Every village has its eccentrics. In Norbold, England, it's Gabriel Ash, known locally as Rambles with Dog. Usually speaking only to his therapist and his dog, Patience, Ash is, at best, an unreliable witness to a beating in a police holding cell. Law student Jerome Cardy's last words I had a dog once. Othello were spoken to Ash. The party line is that Cardy was in the wrong place at the wrong time, beaten to death by a violent cellmate. It's only new police recruit Hazel Best who believes Ash when he says that Cardy told him he was going to die in that police station. Against the advice of the revered chief superintendent, John Fountain, Best investigates and finds ties to Nobold's last-standing Mob boss and Fountain's nemesis, Mickey Argyle. Ash is a broken man whose body keeps shuffling along even though his heart and soul were crushed years ago. His heartbreaking backstory is cleverly teased out over the course of the novel. Bannister departs from her Brodie Farrell mysteries (Liars All, 2010) in this captivating stand-alone thriller.--Keefe, Karen Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Stubborn morality and acid-tinged whimsy drive this superior stand-alone from British author Bannister (Liars All and eight other Brodie Farrell mysteries). Recovering mental patient Gabriel Ash looks pathetic and vulnerable as he rambles through the town of Norbold while talking to his dog. One day, at the local police station, where he's recovering from a beating, Gabriel receives a cryptic message from a man who's then killed by a crazed prisoner. Gabriel forces himself back into contact with normal humanity because he feels he ought to do something about the crime. Rookie policewoman Hazel Best is also dissatisfied with the official explanation of the tragedy. And so the three-the traumatized beating victim, the idealistic young cop, and the dog-begin sniffing under the pristine surface of the virtually crime-free town. They have no idea how dangerous good intentions can be. Bannister's plotting is neat and her characterization smooth, with just enough irony to keep people from seeming ostentatiously noble. Agent: Jane Gregory, Gregory & Company Authors' Agents (U.K.). (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Hazel Best is a rookie cop in Norbold, England. Gabriel Ash is a grief-stricken man who may hold the key to a man's death, but who talks only to his assistance dog. The odds that they can solve a murder seem slim. But they do investigate a theory that the college student who died in a police cell was a homicide victim. The victim, Jerome, had confided in Gabriel just before his death-using code from Shakespeare-and, fortunately, Gabriel cared enough to follow up. After he goes to visit Jerome's parents, someone tries to kidnap him, and he's released only because a local reporter witnesses the grab. The reporter fares less well; he's the next murder victim. Hazel and Gabriel need protection-stat. -VERDICT The versatile Bannister (Death in High Places) has crafted yet another stunning, paranoia-doused psychological suspense novel guaranteed to keep readers glued to their seats. A good pairing would be Jonathan Lewis's Into Darkness, which also features an assistance dog. [See Prepub Alert, 10/08/12.] (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

After 10 years of enviably low criminal activity, things are about to heat up for the town of Norbold. Apart from his inability to do anything about local drug lord Mickey Argyle, Chief Supt. John Fountain, of the Meadowvale Police, has reduced crime statistics to the vanishing point and kept them there. But those days end abruptly when the police arrest law student Jerome Cardy for leaving the scene of a car accident and he's beaten to death by Barking Mad Barclay, a violent racist who's been arrested that same night. The crime might seem like the product of the victim's massive bad luck, but Constable Hazel Best, a probationary officer in her first posting, doesn't see it that way. Neither does Nye Jackson, the senior reporter for the Norbold News. They're struck by the accuracy with which Jerome evidently foresaw his own death and the intensity with which he insisted on passing on a cryptic message--"Othello"--shortly beforehand to Gabriel Ash, a harmless local character dubbed Rambles with Dogs who'd been placed in Jerome's cell for observation after he was savagely beaten by a bunch of bored teenagers. The fragile relationship that grows between Hazel and Gabriel may remind longtime fans of Bannister of her nine tales featuring private investigator Brodie Farrell and her damaged assistant Daniel Hood (Liars All, 2010, etc.). Once Hazel and Gabriel decide that the danger to Jerome came not from outside but from inside the Meadowvale Police Station, however, the stakes rise for Norbold. Even so, Bannister (Death in High Places, 2011, etc.) keeps the focus on her memorable, if not entirely original, characters rather than the town they share or the plot--its opening moves piquantly surprising, its later surprises more predictable--that brings them together.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

CHAPTER 1 JEROME CARDY KNEW he was going to die the moment he saw the other car in his rearview mirror. He knew it wasn't going to stop: it was already too close, if it was braking at all it was too little too late, and he had nowhere left to go. As soon as the lights changed, a milk tanker the size of Rutland had moved into the junction. With enough milk to protect a generation from rickets in front and the big silver hatchback coming up fast behind, all Jerome could do was brace himself for the inevitable. He knew what was going to happen. He'd known for weeks. He could have got out while there was still time. But he'd had too much to lose. He'd told himself that it might never happen. That the future isn't set in stone. That if he was careful, if he kept out of trouble, no one could touch him. If he played it cool, stayed out of reach, he might never have to choose between the love of his life and, well, his life.... And now it was too late to choose. The choice had been made for him. All Jerome could do was close his eyes, make himself small behind the wheel, and wait. The impact, when it came, was less than he'd been expecting. Jerome's car stayed where it was, held by its own handbrake; the milk tanker found the gap it had been waiting for and moved off; Jerome rocked for a moment in his seat belt, then settled back, still waiting. When nothing else happened, cautiously he opened one eye. It hadn't been enough of an accident to stop the rush-hour traffic. The cars that had been in line behind him were now carefully edging past and on their way home. Not so much an accident as a shunt: if nobody's hurt, you exchange details and you, too, get on your way. Jerome wasn't hurt. He turned slowly in his seat to look behind him. The other driver was a middle-aged woman, her mouth shocked to a dark round O. She made no move, nor did her expression change, as he slowly got out of his car and walked back to her. "Are you all right?" She blinked, and went from total paralysis to frantic hyperactivity without passing through normal. She didn't answer him but dived into the well of the passenger seat, scrabbling for her handbag. "We have to call the police! Have you got a phone? I have a phone--in here somewhere. I can't find it! Have you got a phone? We have to call the police." "Well, actually," said Jerome gently, "we don't. Unless you're hurt. I'm not hurt, and nobody else was involved. We can just exchange details and let the insurance sort it out." Her eyes stretched almost as wide as her mouth. She was a well-dressed, middle-aged, middle-class woman who might never have been in an accident before. The little card from her insurers that told her what to do in the event of an incident hadn't warned her how distressed she'd be, how difficult she'd find it to act logically or even to make sense. Jerome said again, " Are you hurt? Do we need an ambulance?" After a moment she shook her head. "No. You?" "I'm fine," he assured her. "Listen, why don't we park your car, I'll drive you home, and we'll swap details over a cup of tea?" It was as if she was drowning and he'd thrown her a lifeline, but she didn't like to grab it because she didn't know where it had been. "Can we? Don't we have to call the police?" He shook his head. "It's a minor traffic accident. Nobody's hurt--nobody's drunk--nobody's committed an offense. We pass it over to the insurers. I'll park your car if you don't want to." He opened her door and extended a courteous hand. Her name was Evelyn Wiltshire. She was a middle-aged, middle-class Englishwoman, and she was also shocked, which may have been part of it, but mainly she just wasn't used to young black men trying to take her by the hand. She recoiled instinctively. "Police! We need to call the police. I have a phone, somewhere...." Jerome fought to keep calm. If he snapped at her, if he frightened her, the opportunity to sort this out in a civilized fashion would be gone. And he had much more to lose than she did. "My name is Jerome. I'm a second-year law student. Really, I wouldn't tell you this was all right if it wasn't. Why would I? The accident wasn't my fault. It's not me the police will accuse of driving carelessly." Mrs. Wiltshire had finally found the phone. She stared at it as if it might bite. She stared at Jerome, ditto. His future hung by a thread. She'd been brought up to do the right thing, even if it wasn't in her own best interests. She started to dial. Jerome felt himself grow desperate. "If you're worried about the cost, why don't we just fix our own dents? We don't even have to involve the insurers, if you don't want to. There really isn't that much damage. Is that all right? Can we do that?" "But ... I ran into you...." "Yes. That's okay. My father owns a garage--he'll sort me out. There's no need to involve the police. Is that all right?" For a moment longer it hung in the balance. Then Mrs. Wiltshire swallowed. Fifty years of middle-class morality weighed more with her than her own immediate wishes. "No, I'm sorry. I'm going to call the police." Jerome was backing away before she'd finished dialing. "I'm sorry, too. I really am sorry. But I can't wait." He ran back to his car and drove off without knowing or even caring where he was driving to, only that he was putting distance between himself and the scene of the accident. Such a little accident. Such a trivial reason to die. * * * "I see you took my advice." The woman had a nose meant for pince-nez: sharp as a blade, with a pair of diamond gray eyes above. Everything about her--the nose, the glasses, the tailored suit she wore, the way she scraped her dark hair away from her face and pinned it into a ruthless bun--said severe. But as she glanced at the dog curled up on her rug, she smiled, and the smile knocked ten years off her age and softened her face in unexpected ways. Her name was Laura Fry, and she was a trauma therapist. The man looked at the dog, too. As if he couldn't quite remember where it had come from. "Yes." "Is it helping?" He considered. "I'm not sure." "It's a nice dog. I'd have thought you'd enjoy the company." "I do." "Being alone can become a habit that's hard to break." "Yes." Laura Fry smiled again. "Gabriel, this process would be more useful if you didn't spend words as if they were fifty-pound notes." The man blinked, managed a pale flicker of a grin. "Sorry." Then, as if he was trying to cooperate, to enter into the spirit of the thing: "I talk to the dog." "Good." Laura nodded reassuringly. "Talking to the dog is good." A faint, fragile frown. "Is it?" "Of course. She likes you talking to her, doesn't she?" "Yes." "And you feel better for talking to her?" Again, he had to think. "I suppose so." "Then where's the downside? Unless you start thinking she's talking back." He didn't return her sly grin, so she pressed on. "Gabriel, this was always going to be hard. We both knew that. Getting a dog isn't going to turn your life around--make you forget what happened, or make it hurt any less. It's a dog, not a magician. "But it will help. You need to find ways of relating to the world again, and looking after something that needs you is a start. It doesn't actually matter whether you like dogs or not. She's your responsibility now. She was a stray dog with nothing, not even much time left, until you came along. Now she has a home and someone to love. You don't even have to love her in return. A square meal every day and she'll think you love her, and that's what counts." "Then what's the point?" His brow was creased, as if he was genuinely trying to understand. He was a man in his late thirties with rather a lot of dark curly hair and creases that looked like laughter lines around his deep-set brown eyes. They'd been there a long time. He hadn't laughed much recently. Laura elevated a pencil-sharp eyebrow. "Apart from the fact that because of you she lives instead of dying? Looking after things is good for us. It makes us feel needed. It makes us think about something beyond our own hurts. It forces us into some kind of routine, and routine is good, too. You're eating better, aren't you? I can see. You make her meal, and then you get something for yourself. She needs walking, so you walk her--fresh air, exercise, nod an acknowledgment at other people doing the same thing. You were hardly leaving the house, and now you are. That's the point." She looked down at the dog again, all nose and legs, curled on the rug as if posing for an illuminated manuscript. "What do you call her?" "Patience." "Ah." Just that. Gabriel Ash looked at her warily. "That's significant?" "Possibly. Do you know why people talk to dogs?" He waited. "Because they feel silly talking to themselves. It isn't always easy to find a human confidant. The dog is an uncritical listener"--the diamond gray eyes twinkled mischievously--"a bit like a therapist. Talking to a dog is like holding a conversation with yourself--with another aspect of yourself. The fact that you call your dog Patience suggests to me that, somewhere inside yourself, you recognize the fact that patience is what you need. To be gentle with yourself, to give yourself time to come to terms with what happened. You could have called her Spotty, or Snowball." He almost flinched as he looked down at the animal at his feet. "If I'd called her Snowball, she'd never have spoken to me again." "Ah." He darted a furtive sideways look, as if he'd let something slip, something that would cause him trouble. But then, he always looked as if he was afraid of causing trouble. "Again with the 'ah'?" "You think she wouldn't like it because it's an animal's name?" "Because it's not a name at all--it's a thing. Like a chair, or a tablecloth. If we want animals as companions, why would we name them after inanimate objects? It's not ... respectful. Giving them a proper name--a person's name--makes you think of them as some one rather than some thing. Encourages you to treat them decently." He saw the way Laura Fry was looking at him and rocked back in his chair, his gaunt face catching the light from the window. "And now you think that because I chose a bitch and gave her a woman's name, I'm thinking of her as a wife substitute." The therapist shook her head. "Not at all. Gabriel, there's nothing wrong with you. There's nothing wrong with how you're feeling or what you're doing. Something terrible happened in your life, and you're struggling to deal with it, and anything that helps, even a little bit, is a good thing. Getting a dog is a good thing. Caring about her is a good thing. "You're not mad. You're not even slightly unhinged. In the normal way of things you and I would never have met. All I'm trying to do, all these conversations are about, is to help you find a way of managing what happened without it destroying you. Whatever you call her, if the dog gets you out of your chair and makes you go into the kitchen, and then makes you walk as far as the park, she's already had a positive influence." She leaned down and patted the white dog. "She doesn't..." He bit his lip. "What?" He wasn't going to answer; she pressed him. "What, Gabriel?" "I'm not sure she likes being patted." "No? Well, in that case you chose her name well--she's very patient." But she had the grace to leave the dog alone. She saw the pair of them out. Her office looked over Norbold's Jubilee Park, a view she enjoyed, even if most of her clients were too wrapped up in their own troubles to appreciate it. "Next Wednesday, yes?" "Yes." Behind the pince-nez Laura Fry's sharp eyes were concerned and almost affectionate. "I'm always afraid that you won't come. That you'll decide therapy is for wimps and you can manage without. That you'd rather manage without. You've thought about it, haven't you?" He wouldn't lie. "I was never much good at sharing. Even ... before." "I know that. I know these sessions are a trial to you. All I can tell you is, you are getting better. Stronger. I can see you getting stronger." "Yes? Then why--" He stopped. "Why what?" He looked across the expanse of the park, the trees in their fresh spring livery, so he wouldn't have to look at her. "Then why do I feel afraid all the time?" He was a client, and Laura Fry didn't weep for clients. She helped them instead. She said softly, "Because the wounds are still raw. Because the situation is unresolved. Because not knowing is worse than knowing the worst. Because not enough time has passed yet for you to pack the hurt and the uncertainty away where you can get on with your life without constantly tripping over them. Because you need"--she looked at the dog, now tugging with gentle insistence at her lead--"patience. You won't always feel how you feel today." He nodded, and walked away and didn't look back. Not until he judged she'd have gone back inside did he wipe his sleeve across his eyes. * * * Jerome Cardy was heading for the motorway. From there, all England was before him. He should have done this before. He could call, explain. She could join him. They'd be safe. Anywhere but Norbold, they'd be safe. He almost made it. He could actually see high-sided vehicles on the motorway overpass, to his right and maybe a mile ahead, when the police car swung out of a side street and into line behind him, and his heart shot into his throat. For ten or fifteen seconds, driving with infinite care and watching it in his rearview mirror, Jerome tried to tell himself it was a coincidence. A patrol car, patrolling. That everyone experiences a momentary anxiety when a police car comes up behind them, but ninety-nine times out of a hundred it's just doing what it does, showing the flag and deterring people from dropping litter and murdering their neighbors. But at the end of those ten or fifteen seconds the police car didn't turn away and vanish as mysteriously as it had appeared. It turned on its siren and flashing blue light, and when Jerome looked back in dread, he saw the officer in the left-hand seat signaling him to pull over. There was no time to think. Either he did as he was told or he made a run for it. No one who knew him, no one who knew what had happened at the junction, would have thought there was any question about what he would do. But then, almost none of them knew what he was facing. What falling into the hands of Norbold's police would mean. And the motorway was less than a mile away. All England waiting ... Like the woman in the silver hatchback, Jerome was a law-abiding citizen. It went against every tenet to run from the police. If there's been a misunderstanding, you stop and sort it out. Running only makes you look guilty. He swallowed. He passed a hand across his mouth. And then, acting on purest instinct, the instinct for self-preservation, he floored the accelerator. Once again luck was not with him, so the escape attempt was over almost before it had begun. It was the middle of the evening--people heading out formed a bottleneck at the approach to the motorway. Traffic slowed to fifteen miles an hour. You can't make a dash for freedom at fifteen miles an hour, but neither was he prepared to risk lives by driving up onto the pavement or against the traffic flow. Jerome Cardy clenched his fists on the wheel, wiped the sweat off his brow with his cuff, and, feeling sick, pulled over. Copyright © 2013 by Jo Bannister Excerpted from Deadly Virtues by Jo Bannister All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.