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A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennet |
This is the second book in the Shadow of the Leviathan series. It’s set in a wonderfully unique secondary world where the centuries old emperor, the last remnant of the original people, rule over a population modified with blood from humongous sea creatures who once a year make to the land, destroying everything. The entire empire is harnessed to either fight the leviathans or to make use of them.
This time, we follow the investigative duo, Dinios Kol, the narrator, and his superior officer in the law department, Ana Dolabra, outside the empire to Yarrowdale, a small seaside kingdom that the empire has rented for a century for its practical geography. The dead leviathans are floated there to The Shroud, a secret facility where everything useful is extracted of them. It’s dangerous work, as the leviathan blood mutates everything around it instantly, but necessary. Now the century is up and the empire is trying to negotiate a new contract with the king.
One of the negotiators has been killed in a bizarre fashion and the body disappeared from inside a locked, upper-floor room. Ana and Din have arrived to investigate. Well, Din investigates and Ana stays in her room to avoid overpowering herself with too much stimulus like always. Nevertheless, it doesn’t take her long to figure out how it was done. That turns out to be the easiest part of the case.
A conspiracy against the empire seems to be afoot, and the perpetrator is not only capable of changing their appearances, but highly intelligent too, thanks to illegal modifications. Poor Din has his hands full as he hunts the killer through swamps to king’s court and even to The Shroud itself, all the while risking his life to instant mutation by leviathan blood stolen by the killer who has made it into a weapon.
Even Ana seems stumped, her behaviour turning more bizarre by the day. But nothing escapes her, and in the end, the truth turns out to be fairly simple and, as she says, banal. She’s very disappointed. Reader is less so. I sort of guessed where the case was headed to, but allowed myself to be distracted by the false leads. And even if the killer’s motivations were fairly simple in the end, the case was entertaining.
Murder wasn’t the only crime committed. Ana
learns that the officers working for the empire at the Shroud have misused
their power and illegally modified the workers. All in the name of greater
good. In the end, the only arrest she’s able to make are these people. But it’s
a lesson for Din as well, about the importance of the work they’re doing for
the empire and the meaning of justice.
The greatness of the series is in the characters. Din, the engraver with perfect memory, thanks to his mods, has personal troubles. His father’s debts are his to pay, and the bank is doubling the payments, now that he’s working in such a high-risk area. He has difficulty sleeping, so he finds willing bed-fellows, men and women, where ever he goes to avoid his own bed. He dreams of joining the legion to fight the leviathans, and returning to the man he left behind, but he knows that the bank will never allow that.
With the amount of sleep he got in this book, it’s a wonder he’s able to function through it, let alone have several sword fights. But he’s ever curious and able to detect the smallest details, thanks to his modifications. And in the end, after several talks with Ana, he’s even able to make up his mind about the legion.
There was maybe a character discrepancy with the previous book though. I don’t remember well, but I seem to recall Din had trouble reading, which was only once referenced to in this book when letters danced in his eyes. Yet he seemed to be able to read well throughout the book. Maybe I misremember, but it caught my eye.
Din was joined in his investigation by a new side-kick, Malo. She’s a warden, a local working for the empire with a modified sense of smell and sight. Her job is to track and fight smugglers in the swamps. She’s a fun, rough character and not a love-interest or bed-fellow, which I found refreshing. The end saw her needing to change her life, and maybe we’ll see her in later books too.
The most interesting character is, like before, Ana. She starts as her usual cantankerous, highly intelligent, and easily distracted self. But as the case progresses, she morphs into something else, and some of it is clearly deliberate. Din doesn’t know what to make of it, and she won’t talk. It could even be that she can’t talk about what kinds of modifications she has. She can hint though, and what Din learns through his investigation is so mind-boggling he refuses to believe it.
This was another great book. It retained the cozy feel despite the gruesome mutations and sword fights, the world remained intriguing, even if this one didn’t have mushroom houses, and the case, despite the banal ending, was good. I’m very eager to read more of Din and Ana’s investigations.
I received a free copy from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.