WHISPERS OF THE DEAD by Spencer Kope: Book Review
Edmond Locard was a scientist known as the “French Sherlock Holmes.” The Locard Exchange Principle states that one who commits a crime leaves something behind at the scene–hair or fabric or (now) DNA–that will connect him to the act. In Whispers of The Dead, the second in the Magnus “Steps” Craig series, that principle is taken to supernatural ends, as Steps has the ability to find and follow trails that even fellow agents in the FBI’s Special Tracking Unit cannot.
The reason for this skill is known only to three people beside Steps: his father, his partner Jimmy Donovan, and the head of the FBI. Steps has a form of synesthesia, an unexplainable ability to see what we might call an “aura” that a person leaves behind. In other words, if he has an object that was worn by a suspect he can see the person’s aura, or shine as he calls it. He can follow that shine via footprints or handprints on any place the suspect has touched.
Of course, something so outré, so bizarre, can’t be explained very easily, and trying to would seriously compromise Steps’ place in the Special Tracking Unit. But it is this ability that has allowed him success after success in finding criminals; the difficult part is to account for how he has found them after other agents or police have not.
Steps and Jimmy are called to investigate a particularly gruesome item left in the living room of a judge’s home in El Paso. Jonathan Ehrlich’s reputation as a member of the bench is that he unfairly favors the defendant and either dismisses cases that shouldn’t be dismissed or hands down the lightest sentence he can.
So it’s definitely possible that someone is outraged at a decision that Ehrlich made and is showing his displeasure in an especially dramatic way with a Styrofoam box, like those available in every supermarket or big box store to keep items cold, containing a pair of feet, partially frozen and wearing white socks and gray sneakers.
The two agents fly back and forth across the country from Washington to El Paso to Tucson to Albuquerque, investigating two other deaths that involve boxes with similarly gruesome contents. The killer, now being called The IBK or Ice Box Killer, is on the move and leaving no clue of his identity except for the shine he leaves behind. And that’s a clue that only Steps can see.
When, if ever, is murder legitimate? If the law doesn’t mete out what one considers justice, is a person permitted to take things into his own hands?
Spencer Kope now is a crime analyst in Washington State and was formerly an intelligence operations specialist with the office of Naval Intelligence; in the latter position he traveled throughout the world. Whispers of the Dead is a thriller that will keep you in suspense, reading until the last page explains it all.
You can read more about Spencer Kope at this website.
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