Regicide never turns out well. It didn’t for MacBeth and like MacBeth, Invendir who has murdered Helvettian King Brymir, and assumed the throne, is plagued by paranoia. Ivendir correctly suspects Andvari, a Vardir (an elite military commander) of an attempt on his life. He wrongly suspects Vardirs Hefri and Erilaz who are in fact loyal, it is their sworn duty, after all, to protect the king. The mind can play tricks, especially a mind riddled with guilt.
Erilaz, Brymir’s adopted son, loved his father so much that he acquiesced to his father’s wishes to become Vardir when he longed for a career in diplomacy. Receiving his father’s praise was more important. His grief at his father’s death flings him into a Hamlet-like existential crisis. Late in the story, after Ivendir has Andvari, Hefri, and Erilaz arrested, Erilaz discovers Invendir has murdered his father and swears revenge. He finds a purpose in life again.
And Invendir is doing nothing but making himself miserable by suspecting everyone is plotting against him and by making enemies of former allies, the Moryans who, at the final meeting with Ivendir, hint that they could destroy Helvetto without breaking a sweat.
In this richly descriptive novel, Dagmar Rokita has created likeable characters, despicable characters, and flawed characters like Andvari who is a blend of good and bad and who unintentionally causes so much trouble for his friends Erilaz and Hefri that the trio is forced to flee Helvetto altogether.
There is plenty of action. Battles are described in blood-pumping, bone-crunching detail. However, I would have liked more setting. We're too close to the wounds inflicted, to the pain, to blood flowing, limbs bruised, broken and throbbing that it takes up so much of the foreground the background is obscured.
There are problems with the flow of the narrative, with wondering who is speaking at times, and with grammar, but the author is Polish. So, that may be due to faulty translation. I gave 5 stars because Dagmar is in her early twenties, and not only grasps motives, emotions, and the dynamics of power but writes fluidly and convincingly. Each character has a rich inner life and she has drawn identifiably unique characters.