Tropéano’s Gun has psychological involvement with characters beyond Aliette but I will
focus on Aliette in this post.
In both books I have read in the series
Brooke has dealt with the psychology of police officers.
In probing the minds of police officers
Brooke did not look to the superficial – the very evil v. the very virtuous or
the dysfunctional v. the supremely competent - in Walls of a Mind. He dealt with the nuances of the relationship
between two women in authority, Chief Inspector Nouvelle and Agent Margot
Tessier from the French Internal Secret Service.
There are no physical confrontation between the women but
there is a subtler conflict of words and attitudes. They challenge the will of
each other.
Each has obviously had to deal with male
bias on their way to authority but there is no gender solidarity. The women in
authority find it no easier to co-operate than men.
Nouvelle projects a moral superiority to
the secret agent. Tessier patronizes the police officer.
They inflict wounds of the mind.
In Tropéano’s Gun Aliette’s superiors require her to see
a psychologist about her reluctance to carry her gun. While she professes not
to wear it because she has never needed to use the gun in her police work her
answer is unconvincing.
By not carrying a gun she creates risk
for fellow officers if she is unarmed in a dangerous confrontation. The problem
arose in Walls of a Mind.
Equally she may not be able to protect
members of the public if a situation spirals out of control or arrest a
criminal.
What is inside Aliette’s head that
caused her to leave her gun in her underwear drawer for 20 years?
To remain an officer she starts carrying
her gun and going to the shooting range.
Carrying a gun does not mean she will
use it but Aliette starts thinking differently with a gun on her hip. She is a
little less careful. She will venture more readily alone into risky areas of
the city. She becomes more aggressive.
How some men relate to her is different.
There are men who are excited about a woman with a gun.
We usually associate guns with men. Readers can instantly
visualize a man with a gun. Do we see a woman with a gun differently?
Jill Edmondson, in her series with Sasha Jackson that is
set in Toronto, does not have her tough girl P.I. carry a gun. In an interview
she said she will probably have to get Sasha carrying a gun to be credible.
I would say men think little about a gun. In Tropéano’s Gun Aliette thinks a lot
about her gun. She has a sense of power from carrying a gun that is absent when
she is unarmed.
When Aliette is forced to play in her
sandbox it is the psychologist who places a toy handgun in the sand to get her
started. Aliette scraps a hole in the sand to the bottom of the box. She
associates the blue bottom with the sea. Told by the psy to do as she wants in
her world Aliette leaves “the gun at the bottom of the sea”.
****
Brooke, John - (2014) - Walls of a Mind and Clashing Women in Authority; (2015) - Tropéano’s Gun