In this third installment of the Collins-Burke series, Halifax criminal defense lawyer Monty Collins is asked to represent the victims of an alleged murder-suicide. The bodies of two men, one more well to do than the other, were found in the early morning hours in the parking lot of the Fore-and-Aft, a nautically themed strip joint across the street from the Wallace Rennie Baird Addiction Treatment Center. They were later identified as Corey Leaman and Graham Scott. As far as could be determined, they did not know one another. A gun with smudged fingerprints was found in Leaman’s right hand. It appeared he had shot Scott with two bullets in the back of the head, then put a bullet in his own right temple. The medical examiner had declared the case a probable murder-suicide.
Corey Leaman had often been in trouble with the law, was an addict in treatment at the Baird Center and had been released shortly before his death. His mother was in prison in Kingston and neither he nor his mother knew the identity of his father. Corey had a live-in gilfriend named Amber and a small toddler named Zach. Graham Scott came from a very different background. He had dabbled in recreational drugs as a teenager but was getting clean, had completed three years of a science degree at Dal and planned to head to medical school. His parents were comfortably well off, his father, Canon Alastair Scott was an Anglican priest with a doctorate in divinity and his mother Muriel was a stay-at-home Mum, the kind who wore pearls and attended church teas. The family lived in a large comfortable home across the street from King’s College. They had never met Graham’s girlfriend or their grandchild until their son's funeral and were unaware the couple had another baby on the way. It appears Graham had kept one part of his life a secret from his parents.
Three months after the deaths, Monty’s firm was hired to represent the two families in a suit against Baird, claiming the treatment facility had been negligent in releasing Leaman early while he was a danger to others. The families were hoping to reach a settlement and a big payday for the center’s professional error. Although the crime has been ruled a murder-suicide, the case file remained open. Monty has his own thoughts about the case and believed it might be a double murder, but he also wanted to be well prepared for his day in court and not be sabotaged by unexpected evidence pointing in another direction. Monty has Ross Trevelyan, another lawyer at the firm, working with him on the case.
When with Monty's help, the police link the gun to the previous suicide of a flamboyant city lawyer, Marty begins to believe there is more to the murder-suicide than once thought and his sense about it being a double murder may be right.
Father Burke Brennan plays an important role in the investigation but is much less present than in the last book when the two friends worked side by side. Burke still adds important pieces to the case and makes important discoveries that help Monty solve the crime, but he is more present at choral practice and drinking dates than in the detective work.
Marty’s investigation takes him into a seamier side of the port city, into the dark world of hookers, the homeless and the drug addicts as well as a number of high placed, well-heeled prominent Haligonians anxious to keep secrets about the depraved parties that once took place in a downtown office building.
A number of fascinating characters fill the narrative including a hard drinking widow, a ruthless businessman, a psychologist who may be a favorable witness but may also have crossed ethical boundaries, a potential witness who has disappeared, a lawyer who loved to party, a homeless man known as the gladiator and a pastor who roams the streets looking for young people.
Marty takes up the investigation at a leisurely pace, more involved with choral practice, drinking in pubs with his bandmate lawyer Ed Johnson, being with his kids Tom and Norma and taking a long planned for vacation to attend a ceilidh in Cape Breton. He is well on the way to carrying out his plan to bring his estranged wife Maura back into his arms until a sudden shocking public revelation completely derails him and sends him spinning. He even has a major altercation with Father Brennan in which fists are thrown.
The concern over what is going on in Monty’s personal life turns out to be a major problem. The shift of focus to Monty’s personal life, leaves solving the crime taking secondary importance, as if it is just something he is doing on the side. With the murder investigation lacking any sense of urgency, exciting action or tension, the pace of the narrative meanders and slows.
Emery always includes humourous moments in these books and she does this once more especially in describing the appointment Monty has with Corey’s live-in girlfriend Amber and their son Zach, who is a terror. Then there are the chorus of hookers hired to sing at a bar celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of Father Brennan’s ordination in the priesthood and the many cryptic conversations in various bars during bouts of drinking. Like other books in the series, the amount of beer and whiskey consumed is enough to sink any ship and one wonders how these people ever continue to function after consuming so much booze.
The crime itself is convoluted, involving several characters, diverse motives, different time periods and locales. Readers will guess at the edges but probably not be able to unmask the killer with so much going on and so many viable suspects.
An enjoyable read, but more for Monty’s personal story than for the criminal investigation.