“Do you know what it means to be loved by Death? ... Do you know what it means to have Death know your name?” ― Anne Rice, “Interview with the Vampire”
I have written several reviews lately where I begin with “this isn’t really my kind of story but …”
And here is another one.
I did watch “Interview with the Vampire” but never made it through any of the “Twilight” series. The romance just didn’t hit me. And, frankly, the romance here, while very strong, isn’t something I felt deeply. But the mystery! The danger! The betrayal! Don’t miss it!
“And what constitutes evil, real evil, is the taking of a single human life. ― Anne Rice, “Interview with the Vampire”
We never see Darcy, the Colonel, or anyone from their houses taking human life. Not so for our favorite villains: Catherine de Bourgh and Wickham. The prologue recounts the first meeting of Fitzwilliam Darcy, Master Vampyre, and Elizabeth Bennet, child. Darcy pursues Wickham and finds him in the act of draining the last blood from an adolescent female. Darcy must make a choice: save the girl or capture the killer. We know what his decision will be.
Ten years later, Netherfield Park is let at last.
Quote from the book: He had shoved the memory of the girl into the furthest recesses of his mind. Forgotten her, he thought.
Except he had not. Ten years was a goodly period of time, but not so much as a blink when measured against his vast life span, and though he marvelled at seeing her again, he felt no astonishment, no surprise. It felt like returning to Pemberley after a fifty-year absence. Like home, as nowhere else could ever be.
A pity, then, that he could only walk away.
Relationships between canon characters are altered. Richard Fitzwilliam is Darcy’s uncle (Anne Darcy’s brother) instead of his cousin. Wickham is the illegitimate son of George Darcy. The Earl of Matlock was George Darcy’s closest friend. Catherine de Bourgh heads the powerful House of de Bourgh. Anne de Bourgh is not her natural daughter. The Bingleys are in a supporting role. In the absence of Wickham, Lydia marries a different soldier.
Canon P&P events are included: an insult at the Assembly, Collins’ arrival with instructions from his patroness, the Netherfield party’s departure, a heartbroken Jane, and eventually, even a Hunsford moment although it is not at Hunsford.
Quote from the book: Darcy had to flee. His vaunted self-control was suddenly a flimsy, insubstantial thing, hardly worthy of his race. He was a Master, even one whom other Master vampyres feared, the head of a great House; yet when her blush plumped her skin with rosy heat, his attention was immediate and fiercely insistent. Worse still, only one word echoed in his thoughts, demanding utterance despite his fervent rejection of its meaning: Mine.
Darcy returns to Meryton to save Elizabeth from Collins (and de Bourgh). Elizabeth marries without knowing her husband’s secret.
“Evil is always possible. And goodness is eternally difficult.” ― Anne Rice, “Interview with the Vampire”
Quote from the book: Mine, Mine, Mine. Her proclamation was a chant inside Darcy’s head, battling in his brain. Would she allow it? But it did not matter; the beast had been given its freedom, and it was hers.
Villainy is obvious in the Vampyre world. One by one, villains are eliminated. Does betrayal still exist?
“Tempt Me” is a long, complex story that drew me in deeper and deeper as the book progressed. As with all stories from Quills and Quartos, it is edited and proofread. I recommend it to anyone who enjoys JAFF, especially the Vampyre lovers!
I received an ARC of this book, with no promise of a review.
“A starving child is a frightful sight. A starving vampire, even worse.” ― Anne Rice, “Interview with the Vampire”