Rampart Street: A Valentin St. Cyr Mystery
by
David Fulmer
Order:
USA
Can
Harcourt, 2006 (2006)
Hardcover, CD
Read an Excerpt
Reviewed by Hilary Williamson
T
his is the third - following
Chasing the Devil's Tail
and
Jass
- in an excellent historical mystery series, starring detective Valentin St. Cyr in early 1900s New Orleans. Born to a Creole mother and a Sicilian father, St. Cyr is technically a colored man, but his ancestry is not widely known and the fact that he can pass '
in proper society
' for white aids his investigations. He is also a former police officer.
T
he story opens in 1910 as a wealthy American, Mr. John Benedict, is shot and killed in the roughest part of town - on Rampart Street. What was he doing there? An alderman, '
knocking on the devil's back door
', presses Tom Anderson,
King
of Storyville (the New Orleans red-light district), to have St. Cyr look into the murder. After a mysterious fifteen months absence from the city, a thinner, threadbare St. Cyr has returned to
work the floor
at Anderson's Café and Annex. His parents both dead, Valentin boards with an old friend of theirs, Frank Mangetta, somewhat of a father figure to him. The reader wonders what part his mysterious fellow boarder, Angelo, will play in events.
O
thers in St. Cyr's circle include young
Beansoup
who runs his errands; Justine, a
dove
who lived with, and loved, Valentin before his disappearance; police Lieutenant Picot who shares secrets with him and resents the detective; and hard-drinking reporter Joe Kimball, who's an old friend and source of information. St. Cyr investigates on behalf of Benedict's daughter Anne-Marie, who knows something that has driven her to drink brandy at all hours. He uncovers a connection to business magnate Henry Harris (who's prone to rail against the city's '
festering pool of mixed-blood malignance
') and to his own past history, is threatened and attacked, as dead bodies pile up steadily.
T
he ambience and historical detail intrigues, while the action mounts and the mystery is steadily unveiled. While I found the detective's confrontation of the villain late in the story somewhat implausible, I enjoyed
Rampart Street
very much, finding its hero rather like Barbara Hambly's Benjamin January, for the '
hard roads
' he chooses to take. I look forward to more Valentin St. Cyr mysteries.
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