The People’s Will by Jasper Kent (Bantam £8.99) is the fourth
volume in the Danilov Quintet:
“Turkmenistan 1881: Beneath the
citadel of Geok Tepe sits a prisoner. He hasn’t moved from his chair for two
years, hasn’t felt the sun on his face in more than fifty, but he is thankful
for that. The city is besieged by Russian troops and soon falls. But one
Russian officer has his own reason to be here. Colonel Otrepyev marches into
the underground gaol, but for the prisoner it does not mean freedom, simply a
new gaoler; an old friend, now an enemy. They return to Russia to meet an older
enemy still.
In Saint Petersburg, the great
vampire Zmyeevich waits as he has always waited. He knows he will never wield
power over Tsar Aleksandr II, but the tsarevich will be a different matter.
When Otrepyev delivers the prisoner into his hands, Zmyeevich will have everything
he needs. Then all that need happen is for the tsar to die.
But it is not only the Otrepyev
and his captive who have returned from Geok Tepe. Another soldier has followed
them, one who cares nothing for the fate of the tsar, nor for Zmyeevich, nor for
Otrepyev. He has only one thing on his mind – revenge.”
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