When Cicadas Cry
Review
When Cicadas Cry
Caroline Cleveland's debut mystery novel, WHEN CICADAS CRY, fooled me once. Then again and again. And maybe a few more times. Now that’s what I call a really good mystery. Cleveland wrote in an Afterword that she wanted to supply her readers with plenty of curves and twists. Mission accomplished. I was blindsided by almost all of them.
One of the two major plots involves the brutal murder of a beautiful young white woman. Like any good, solid, upstanding killer, this one is awfully smart, leaving tricky clues at the murder scene that lead investigators on a wild goose chase. The villain also sets up a young Black man as the prime suspect in the crime, and the location of the homicide --- a church in a small South Carolina town called Walterboro --- cleverly sets afire the wrath of the town's white folk so that their inherent racism emerges enthusiastically, viciously and entirely willingly.
"It’s a terrific piece that grabs us and holds on to our fascination and attention until we finally can rest comfortably in the sure knowledge that the web has been successfully untangled..."
Zach Stander is the defense attorney who must figure out the identity of the real perpetrator in order to save his young client, Sam Jenkins. Sam called the police when, he claims, he found the murder victim, Jessica Gadsden. She had been bludgeoned to death in the most gruesome manner possible –-- with a heavy brass cross that was the property of the church. When the police arrived at the scene, they observed Sam leaning over the body, covered in blood with scratch marks all over his arms. Not a pretty picture, especially for Sam. He was a sitting duck.
So Zach sets out to prove Sam's innocence. He is assisted in his mission by an old lawyer, Colleton Burns, who has volunteered for the job. She seems to know everybody in town and is familiar with all the family members of both the victim and the accused. The third investigator is Addie Stone, Zach's lovely and brilliant girlfriend, who has experience as a criminal investigator but is frustrated by his dependence on Colleton as his primary assistant.
Addie decides that, since she has plenty of free time, she'll find a cold case that she can investigate. When she does so, she chooses one in the same location as Zach's present case. Hers is an unsolved double murder that occurred 34 years ago. Two young women were killed in one night, but the lead suspect was proven innocent, and the case eventually fell apart. Nobody was interested in pursuing the investigation. Until Addie.
The two cases intersect in various cross-currents as potential witnesses and suspects appear in both. Meanwhile, Colleton continues his stubborn but helpful search for clues, though Addie is bitter about his involvement. Zach and Addie argue a lot, and suspicions arise involving several of the characters. As Sam's trial approaches, all the white people in town want to see him convicted for his alleged sins while he keeps getting viciously attacked in prison. Zach becomes an endangered pariah because he has dared to defend the Black murderer of a beautiful young white woman. Addie makes slow but impressive progress in her difficult cold case.
And the reader gets pleasantly dizzy jumping from suspicion of one individual to suspicion of another. Cleveland plants numerous red herrings (Can you plant a herring? She does.) as she draws us into her web of suspicious characters and their questionable behaviors and histories.
That is precisely how a fine mystery is built, and Cleveland has provided that very construction. It’s a terrific piece that grabs us and holds on to our fascination and attention until we finally can rest comfortably in the sure knowledge that the web has been successfully untangled, and we know exactly who has committed what crimes --- and, maybe even more importantly, who the innocent victims of our own suspicions are.
Reviewed by Jack Kramer on July 19, 2024