It is a joy to return to Victorian Scotland and the mismatched Edinburgh detectives, Inspector Ian Frey and Inspector Adolphus 'Nine-Nails' McGray, the duo looking into the strange, the supernatural and the horrific. This time they are to be found in the Highlands of Loch Maree and its islands. The Koloman family housekeeper, Millie Fletcher, is afraid for her illegitimate son, Benjamin, whose father, Maximilian Koloman, finally recognised him as his son and heir on his deathbed. 16 year old Ben has been raised by a goodly priest in Thurso, and a threat has been made on his life if he returns to the Koloman mansion. Millie lures McGray to protect her son by tantalisingly offering him what he most desires, a cure from the healing waters of a well for his traumatised and mentally ill sister, Pansy, in an asylum since she murdered their parents and attacked McGray. Frey travels to Loch Maree with the one family member he loves, Uncle Maurice. Murder of the priest sets the tone for this blood drenched tale of gothic horror, as McGray and Frey find themselves isolated, in danger and manipulated in their most testing investigation.
The privileged and wealthy Koloman family have a strong sense of entitlement, acting as patrons for vital services for the locals. Minerva does good works and provides medical services for locals, and Konrad Koloman engages in a range of disciplines from weather to medical knowledge. Their twin daughters, Veronika and Natalja, are beautiful, bohemian and drawn to their own areas of research and fashion, with the design and making of their own clothes. Dominik, the son, is arrogant, travelling overseas with his sleazy companion, Calcraft. Ben is set to inherit half of the Koloman estates and vineyards, leaving the Koloman siblings having to share the remaining half. There is motive enough for the family to regard Ben with ill will and disfavour, perhaps even entertain thoughts of murder. However, on the surface, all seems well, Ben is welcomed with open arms and embraced by the entire family. The murder of an incompetent and reviled man in odd circumstances results in McGray and Frey locking up 3 suspects in the Koloman home with tensions rising as they await the arrival of police support. The poverty stricken and cursed Nellys rely on the charity of the Kolomans to survive, residing on Juniper Island, infested with blood sucking bats and the location of the miraculous well with healing waters. McGray and Frey find themselves out of their depths in an area where legends, folklore, witchcraft, paganism and horror proliferate, nothing and no-one is as they seem.
Oscar de Muriel has created a brilliant series and this addition is spectacular with its atmospheric air of creepiness and menace, where the locals are beholden to and loyal to the Kolomans, irrespective of what the family may do. Frey and McGray are on their own, sorely tested to their limits, beginning to find they are slowly developing the capacity to trust and work with each other, although the comic banter is still there. McGray experiences the most debilitating form of sickness on the water, a prisoner of his primeval need to help his sister, and Frey must find the inner resources to fight the battle of his life. This is a wonderful and entertaining historical novel, with twist after twist, that had me totally enthralled. If you like horror in your Victorian crime fiction then this is a perfect read for you. Many thanks to Penguin Michael Joseph for an ARC.