Well, here I am again, back on the case with DC Fiona Griffiths of the Cardiff police. Fiona struggles with Cotard’s Syndrome, a mental illness that triggers various forms of psychosis. For Fi, this means ongoing problems staying connected with “Planet Normal”, whether it’s her relationships with her family, lover and colleagues or simply her waking/sleeping/eating patterns. She also occasionally loses connection to her body, becoming unable to feel her legs, for instance.
Still, she’s an excellent detective, dedicated to finding answers and gifted with brilliant insights that escape others on her team or her superiors. On the flip side, she is prone to ignoring policy and pursuing her ideas in ways that put herself in danger.
In this installment, Fiona, after receiving flying colors on an undercover training course, is assigned to infiltrate an organization committing payroll fraud. She takes to this role smoothly, and quickly determines that the potential theft is much greater than originally assumed. Her deepening involvement puts her in constant danger of being found out. And killed, because this may be white-collar crime, but the perpetrators are ruthless.
This is a marvelous setup for author Bingham to explore the ways in which Fiona’s already dicey sense of self is on the edge of slipping into a multiple personality disorder. She becomes so comfortable with her undercover identity of Fiona Grey, office cleaner and payroll clerk, that she flirts with possibly losing her ties to Fiona Griffiths. Toward the end of the book a third personality is layered on top of the other two, the three of them fighting for dominance as the story’s climax is reached.
Fiona continues to be a marvelous character, subtly rendered by Bingham. In books 1 and 2 we see Fi interacting with her everyday work colleagues and family; in this volume she becomes involved with the larger world, and it is fascinating to see how Bingham maintains her typical Cotard’s problems. I will try to pace myself and hold off a while before indulging in book 4.