After The Devil Aspect, Craig Russell returns with an equally haunting gothic horror, set in Edinburgh, of a certain Edward Hyde, returned from the terrors inflicted by the British in India, now serving as a Superintendent of Detective Officers at New Town Station for City of Edinburgh Police. This is tale that draws on Scottish folklore and legends, of the notorious Deacon Brodie, and the resurrection of a secret Dark Guild, of the devil, a monster, a black hellhound, intent on setting fire to the present Scotland and return it to its more worthy past. Hyde is a troubled man, seeing his psychiatric friend and physician, Dr Samuel Porteus, for he loses time and cannot remember what happened or what acts he might have been responsible for, plagued by nightmares, seeing the dead and glimpsing in his dreams the ancient Celtic Otherworld. Porteus has diagnosed him as epileptic, certain he is a good man, with nothing to worry about, dispensing medication that is continuously altered when it appears to have little effect.
Hyde, however, is a deeply worried and disturbed man, and for good reason when he finds himself following a banshee cry and at the scene of a gruesome 3 fold death at the Waters of Leith, a man hanged upside down, drowned and with his heart removed. He has no idea why or how he came to be there, and deep inside is the fear that perhaps he is the killer, a predicament that leads him to confess all to a exceptional and strong Dr Cally Burr, one of the first female trained doctors in a city that is still resistant to them. Matters are exacerbated with the suspicious disappearance of Elspeth Lockwood, from a wealthy and privileged family. There are agitators, occultists, hanging trees, an execution believed by Hyde to be of an innocent man, more murders, including another 3 fold death, the victim strangled, stabbed and with their eyes removed, the presence of pure evil, and a Hyde facing grave and deadly dangers as connections begin to emerge, but can he trust himself?
Russell has a real talent for writing multilayered atmospheric gothic stories with elements of the supernatural, and plotlines that had me terrified and biting my nails as I tried to work out where all the threats and dangers were coming from. The creation of his Hyde is perfect for a unsettling and disturbing narrative with oodles of dark suspense and tension, ideal for Autumn and Winter reading, and I loved how it all begins and finishes, Hyde with his friend, a Robert Louis Stevenson who finds himself inspired to write his own tale featuring Hyde! A fabulously entertaining read from an author who knows how to spin the darkest of yarns. If you are a fan of Russell and or enjoyed The Devil Aspect, or just enjoy superior storytelling, then this is highly likely to appeal to you. Many thanks to Little, Brown for an ARC.