Speak for the Dead
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Synopsis
“A literary joyride.” —Louise Penny, New York Times bestselling author of the Chief Inspector Gamache novels
More than ten years after The Foulest Things, murder and mayhem return to Ottawa in the highly-anticipated next installment of Amy Tector’s acclaimed Dominion Archives Mystery series.
It’s a stormy summer day when Ottawa coroner Dr. Cate Spencer is called to the scene of an alleged suicide. Inside a narrow vault in the Dominion Archives’ nitrate film storage facility—kept separate from the rest of the collection due to its dangerous combustibility—officers pressure Cate to rule the death a suicide. When parts of the scene don’t add up and a deliberately set spark threatens her life, Cate suspects that this death might be a murder.
Cate’s tough façade masks a deep compassion for the victims she examines. Whether she’s looking for answers because of her dedication to justice or to distract herself from anguish over her brother’s recent death, her inquiries plunge her into a world of military secrets, contentious Indigenous protests, and a seventy-year-old mystery with deadly implications. Will Cate manage to pull herself away from her scotch and grief to expose an explosive historic secret and solve a murder the police doubt even exists?
Release date: March 14, 2023
Publisher: Keylight Books
Print pages: 352
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Speak for the Dead
Amy Tector
THE WOMAN DANGLED IN THE CENTER OF THE ROOM, HANGING A FOOT OFF the floor. Though small, her body dominated the narrow vault. Floor-to-ceiling shelving, stacked with neat cardboard boxes, lined both walls. It made the cell-like space feel more cramped. Confined spaces triggered Cate Spencer’s claustrophobia, but she had a job to do. The yellow rope around the woman’s neck was tied to a pipe in the ceiling. It was braided polypropylene, common in hardware stores. It cut deeply into the woman’s throat, leaving mauve-black bruising. A stool lay kicked over at her feet.
Cate could have reached out and touched the body, but she knew better. Instead, she took a deep breath, shoving away her sense that the walls were closing in. Muffled thunder rumbled outside. The summer storm that was threatening as she drove over the rutted road of the Canadian Forces Base Eastview had arrived.
She took another breath, her claustrophobia receding. An unusual smell—sharp and chemical—permeated the air. The victim’s face was purple and her mouth spotted with blood. Curly hair sprang from her head, a dynamic sign of life amid the horror of death. She was young, early twenties. Her jean jacket hung open, and her T-shirt was some kind of artisanal thing with a wide neck and stenciled birds. A pair of tortoiseshell eyeglasses lay cracked on the cement floor. “Ident been through?” Cate asked. She couldn’t touch anything until they took their photographs.
Detective Dominic Baker stood at the vault’s entrance with a knot of others. She didn’t need to turn around to know that remnants of Sausage McMuffin clung to his shaggy gray mustache and that he looked impatient.
Normally she found his brusque manner frustrating. Her job was to review every aspect of death until she understood precisely what had happened. Baker tended to rush the coroners, anxious to get clearance so he could concentrate on the next unexpected death. In the past, she’d doubled down on her own meticulousness, ordering extra tests, interviewing additional witnesses just to annoy him. These days she welcomed the idea of a quick case, uncomplicated by police overzealousness.
“Ident was here over an hour ago,” Baker said.
Cate ignored the implied criticism that she was late to get to the scene. She struggled to move quickly lately; everything felt hard.
She pulled on a pair of latex gloves and reached up, feeling along the woman’s jaw. The lips did not part, the muscles locked. Next, she turned to the right arm, gently trying to move the thin limb, testing to see if she could flex or extend.
There was no give to the arm; the victim was in full rigor mortis. Normally this would mean death occurred at least four hours ago, but surprisingly for such an out-of-the-way and derelict-looking building, the air-conditioning was at meat locker chill. Given how cold it was, rigor would set in much faster. The victim could have died as little as two hours ago.
Usually this was where she would feel a small zing of professional pleasure. She had a puzzle to solve: the challenge of understanding someone’s final hours with the clues only medicine could yield.
These weren’t normal times, however. Nothing was normal since she learned the news about Jason’s accident. Today was her birthday, and it felt appropriate that she was spending it with death. She tried to be grateful that she was out of the house. Better than sitting in front of the TV, mystified that people could care about traffic or a Kardashian, rather than the only thing that mattered: her brother Jason was dead.
“Can someone find out what the exact temperature is?” she asked without looking back at the three men clustered at the door. Besides Baker, a young uniformed officer and a tall straight-backed guy whose name she hadn’t caught hovered at the entrance.
She heard footsteps walking away and assumed the officer was looking for the answer. She waited twenty seconds and spoke again, without turning. “I’ll also need a stepladder.”
Baker cursed, and she heard him leave. She smiled. Make the lazy bugger work.
All was silent except for the soothing hum of the air-conditioning. Cate jotted down a few notes.
“She’s so young, isn’t she?” the remaining man asked.
Cate stiffened. He wasn’t police, then. Cops knew better than to i
nterrupt while she was doing her examination.
Given his upright bearing and crewcut, she’d bet he was military. That would make sense. While she hadn’t gone through the base’s main gate on her drive across the fields, she wouldn’t be surprised if this weird building was part of the Air Force. “Yes,” she said, not turning around. “She’s young.”
She slid off one of the woman’s shoes and pressed the firm flesh of her foot. The blood pooled there, and the skin remained purple. Lividity was fixed.
“Why would someone so young take her own life? Tragic.” The man’s voice was deep, but almost plaintive, like a child’s.
She scowled. “Well, bad stuff happens.” Jason’s plane had crashed into the jungle. Her breath caught in her throat. She put a hand on one of the metal shelves to steady herself. Even through her glove, she could feel its biting coolness.
“You OK?”
The man’s solicitous tone nearly brought her to tears. “I’m fine,” she said. “Where’s that goddamn ladder?”
“Unknot your panties, Cate. I’ve got one.” She turned. Baker held a small ladder.
The junior officer had returned as well. “It’s four degrees Celsius,” he reported.
She turned back to the victim, but for a crazy moment it was Jason—his face distended and purple, his eyes bulging. She blinked, and the image was gone.
“HAS ANYONE MOVED THE BODY?” CATE ASKED. THE ANSWER WAS AN obvious “no,” but she had to ask.
“According to the paramedics, she was clearly dead when they arrived. They knew not to disturb the scene,” Baker responded, remaining in the hallway.
“That’s good,” Cate said. It was always better to examine the body in situ. She climbed the ladder and continued her scan, moving her fingers over the woman’s head, feeling and looking for signs of trauma. Nothing obvious. Folding back the woman’s right ear, she searched to see where the rope came to a point. The coolness of the vault would slow the development of bruising. It was difficult to tell if the wounds were consistent with asphyxiation secondary to hanging.
She paused to make notes. The deceased chose hanging, one of the worst ways to die. Despite the strongest death wish, the body clung to life, involuntarily thrashing against the slow denial of air. Cate had seen necks almost cut in half from the body’s refusal to quit.
Baker’s voice broke into her thoughts. “Her name is Molly Johnson. An employee at the Dominion Archives.” His voice softened. “She was twenty-three.” Baker could be a dick, but he always treated the dead with respect.
Cate looked at the body again, seeing the fragility of Molly’s collarbones jutting out from her T-shirt. Flushing, she was overwhelmed with anger. Twenty-three was ridiculously young. This girl must have hated her existence. Had she felt a yawning loneliness? Wondered what the point was?
Cate stepped off the ladder and turned her back on those thoughts. Baker and the two others stared at her expectantly, but she couldn’t find any words.
“Suicide, obviously,” Baker said.
His statement returned her focus. “Without analysis of the bruising, it’s impossible to be definitive.” She frowned. Something about the scene troubled her.
“Come on,” Baker said. “It’s clearly suicide.”
A ruling of suicide meant that this was a coroner’s case, and she was in charge, with assistance from the police. If she found the death suspicious, then it would be the other way around. She looked at the scene again. A somber quiet hung over the vault; a muted despair that belied the ferocious struggle Cate knew must have taken place not too long before. “Is there a note?” she asked.
The junior officer piped up. “We haven’t found one yet.”
Baker glared at the younger man, then shrugged. “Manner of death is your call, of course, doctor.”
He was annoyed. Undoubtedly, he didn’t want another homicide added to his caseload. His irritation wasn’t Cate’s problem.
She stepped out of the vault, relieved to escape the tight space and join Baker and the others in the hallway. Bare fluorescent bulbs lit a long, wide corridor. Metallic doors ran down both sides at five-foot intervals. Presumably, each led to similar tiny rooms. At the far end of the hallway stood a big steel door and the office area she had initially come through. There were no windows. The floor and ceiling were cement. The door to the vault she’d been in was at least half a foot of solid metal. It reminded Cate of a prison.
“What is this place, anyway?” she asked, pulling off her gloves.
“It’s a nitrate film storage facility,” the military guy said with a smile, almost as if he were apologizing for his answer.
“What’s that?” she asked.
The tall soldier shrugged, the gesture loosening his posture, making him appear boyish, even though he was pushing fifty. “I’m no expert, but it’s old film. They stopped making it in the fifties. The Archives stores it out here.”
“Why?” she asked. The Dominion Archives had a huge building in downtown Ottawa.
The soldier smiled again. “Good question.”
Cate frowned. Why was he grinning at her like that? He needed to settle down.
He continued, “Nitrate is highly flammable and can spontaneously combust if it gets overheated. They wanted it well away from the rest of their archival collection.”
“OK,” she said. “That
must be why they keep it so cold.”
Baker spoke. “Yeah, it’s quite something. They deliberately built this place far from civilization because the nitrate is so dangerous.” Baker, in his usual brown jacket, Looney Tunes tie, and wrinkled dress shirt, looked like the stereotypical cop, but he talked about the science of nitrate film with surprising enthusiasm and authority. “They store it in such small vaults on purpose, so that if one negative goes boom, it limits the damage—each vault has a metal blast door designed to withstand fifty kilograms of explosives.” He pointed behind him to the emergency exit door. Next to it was a case containing two large fire extinguishers, suppression blankets, and a firefighter’s ax.
She looked down the length of the hallway. There were at least twenty metal doors, each containing highly volatile explosive material. One spark could ignite a firestorm. She shivered, anxious to leave. “I’ve got what I need.” She injected a brisk note into her voice. If she went now, she could visit her father and be home in time for a hot shower and a smooth scotch.
She started walking up the long hallway toward the entrance, and the military guy hurried to catch up. “We didn’t officially meet,” he said.
Cate didn’t want to be here, chitchatting with this joker. Then again, there was nowhere else she wanted to be, either. Maybe Molly Johnson, hanging in that vault, had the right idea.
“I’m Major Peter Harrison.” He stuck out a hand and smiled yet again.
“Dr. Cate Spencer.” Despite herself, she was curious. Yesterday was her day off, and she’d pulled the blinds on the July sunshine, spending it chain-smoking in front of the television. The upside of that river of cable news and nicotine was that she was up to speed on the latest happenings. After a decade of legal wrangling with environmentalists and Indigenous activists, the government had sold off Canadian Forces Base Eastview to TDR Enterprises. It was the biggest land deal in Ottawa history. The groundbreaking ceremony on a billion-dollar housing development and nine-hole golf course was sometime this month.
She shook Harrison’s hand. His grip was firm, and his eyes were a clear blue in his weathered face.
“I’m second in command, CFB Eastview.”
“You won’t have much to command soon,” she remarked.
The major’s laugh was a bark. “You’re right. We’re down to one crew for the final move, and we’ve got to get cracking. Mothballing one hundred years of history.”
Lots of people were unhappy with the development. Indeed, demonstrators had set up a permanent protest site at the turnoff to the base. She’d driven past them on her way to the nitrate facility. The group was well away from the main gate, maybe to ensure better visibility from busy Turcotte Road. There were about thirty people, waving signs bearing slogans like “Stop the Rape of the Land,” “Social Housing, Not Two-Car Garages,” and “We Were Here First!”
“So, this building is part of the base, then?”
“No,” Harrison said, a note of apology in his voice. “Even though it’s right on the property’s edge, it belongs to the Archives. The first police officer on the scene wasn’t sure whether this was our jurisdiction or not, so I got the call. H
e shrugged.
Cate would have expected the second-in-command at a base like Eastview to be authoritative and autocratic, but Harrison was an eager puppy. He was clearly some kind of paper-pusher, promoted for his ability to file reports on time and kiss the right ass.
“The major’s right. The Ottawa PD are the lucky winners of this case.” Baker had caught up to them. The junior officer was left standing alone by the open door to the vault. Cate noted that he was careful to face away from the suspended corpse.
She wondered why Baker was allowing Harrison access to the death scene if he wasn’t involved in the case. In the past, she would have called him out on this sloppiness, but now she mentally shrugged. If Baker couldn’t be bothered to follow protocol, why should she worry?
They’d reached the entrance to the anteroom. Cate had spotted a couple of work rooms on her way into the vault area. She could commandeer one of those for the necessary paperwork. “I’ll get my warrants signed. Then you can move the body,” she said to Baker.
He grunted in approval. “Good, I want to cut our girl down.”
She met his eyes and nodded. She felt the same way: a desire to restore Molly to dignity and a semblance of peace.
“Glad you caught this call, and not that douche, Williams,” Baker said gruffly.
Dr. Sylvester Williams had been an Ottawa coroner for twenty years, and what he didn’t know about the job was not worth knowing, at least according to him. This was the closest Baker had ever come to complimenting her, and Cate was surprised to find herself flattered.
“I’ll need the victim’s particulars to finish up the paperwork.” She took out her phone and dialed dispatch to let them know she was wrapping up. The call failed.
Baker laughed. “Don’t bother. There’s no cell reception here.”
The ever-helpful Harrison chimed in. “This whole area is a bit of a dead zone. You usually have to drive back to the main road to get a signal.”
“Fine,” Cate said.
Baker handed her a sheet. “We got the deceased’s name and DOB from the girl who discovered the body. She was a coworker. Stowe’s interviewing her. He can collect your paperwork.” Detective Stowe was Baker’s partner, slick and smooth where Baker was rumpled and abrupt.
Cate nodded. “Have you contacted the family? I’ll need the next of kin details.”
Baker held up an old flip-type cell phone. “This was in her pocket. It’s only got work numbers, so we’ll look at her employment file.”
“Good,” Cate said. Thankfully, she didn’t have to inform Molly’s family, but she did need to speak with them and answer their questions about the manner of death.
Nodding to Baker and Major Harrison, Cate pushed through the door to the anteroom. The air was warmer, and the soothing noise of the rain against the windows was a c
omforting change from the coldness of the vaults. The deluge was already easing; nothing so fleeting as a summer storm. Stowe and the witness were nowhere in sight.
Unlike the vaults, this room was chaotic. Boxes were scattered on the floor and every surface. Cate cleared a place at the table and sat down to fill out the forms.
She needed to make notes for her preliminary report. She thought back to the image of Molly’s body hanging there—a brutal note of discord in an otherwise well-ordered scene. There was no sign of struggle. No boxes knocked over or kicked in. That didn’t jibe with suicide by hanging.
Was there more to this? In Cate’s experience, death was almost always straightforward. Murder mysteries only existed in novels or on TV. During five years on the job, no one had ever tried to mask a murder through suicide. Her stomach knotted: at least none that she had caught.
SHE WAS BEING RIDICULOUS. WHILE MURDER MYSTERIES FLOURISHED IN popular culture—seemingly every quaint British village had hosted at least one murderous vicar—Cate knew they didn’t happen in real life. Murder, when it occurred, was depressingly un-mysterious: look to the partner (almost always male); look to the gang associates (almost always high); and then call it a day.
This was her first suicide since Jason’s death. She hadn’t expected to be unsettled like this. The idea that Molly had chosen to end her life was so heartbreaking, final—and seductive. Cate frowned. Was she actively hoping the death was murder rather than suicide so that she wouldn’t have to face her own bullshit? Technically, she shouldn’t even be on this case. Her shift had been over for five minutes when Dispatch called. She could have said no, but somehow spending time with a corpse was more appealing than the alternative: staring at the television until it was time to go to her father’s for the obligatory birthday visit. Her first birthday without Jason.
She’d never been good at self-awareness. She’d relied on Jason to call her out on her unique crazy. Cate closed her eyes briefly and pulled the paperwork to her, turning to the job’s routine. Until she signed a warrant to take possession of the body, it couldn’t be removed to the morgue. Similarly, no autopsy would be performed without her signature. She filled out and signed her two warrants and the small tag that would be placed on Molly Johnson’s toe to keep her identity straight at the morgue.
Stowe still hadn’t returned. She didn’t want to go back into that icy cold vault and deal with Baker. She’d give his partner two more minutes. The boxes surrounding her were all the same size, but some were brand-new, with white barcodes in the right-hand corners and indecipherable codes printed above them. Others were older, yellowed, and squashed. Restless, Cate opened one of the newer ones. A row of stacked white envelopes greeted her. She pulled one out. The top-right corner of each envelope was labeled. “R1455, Portrait Series. L.M. Montgomery.” The Archives had collected negatives related to the author of Anne of Green Gables.
She placed the envelope back in the box and turned to an old container. Its cardboard edges were battered. It wasn’t barcoded, and someone had scrawled across its front with a Sharpie: “For Destruction.”
A strong smell, like rotting socks, hit her as she opened this box. Instead of a neat row of envelopes, it contained a jumble of loose photographic negatives. Some were curled up tightly like little cigarettes. Others had a thick whitish stain covering them. Others were gooey, as if they were melting. Still others were almost iridescent. These were beautiful. She put on a pair of the nearby white cotton gloves and picked one up. It was a polarized image; the light and dark
areas reversed. It had been years since Cate saw an image like this. Looking at it reminded her of going to the shopping center as a kid to pick up a roll of film that had been developed, that moment of excitement as you waited to see how your photographs had turned out. Now that anticipation was gone forever, though she supposed today’s teenagers had Snapchat or TikTok pleasures she couldn’t begin to fathom.
These negatives were different from the ones she’d fetched from the mall. Rather than small strips of images, they were individual, each about four by five inches. The negative in her hand was of a ghostly woman in an old-fashioned dress staring at the camera, her hair in a tight bun, her eyes humorless. The switch between black and white made it challenging to interpret. Cate strained to understand what she was seeing.
The polarization of the image, the dress so dark against the whiteness of the background, made the woman stand out, alone and bereft in an unadorned room. The world might pity this lonely-looking woman, someone who couldn’t build a family, or keep relationships, but her very isolation was her source of strength. This woman would never be left devastated and gasping over a lost relationship. Cate was sure the woman in the photograph, her eyes so uncompromising, was a survivor.
The film’s deterioration was fascinating. A shimmery stain covered half the image, ...
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