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Heir (Immortals of Indriell, Book Four)

Heir (Immortals of Indriell, Book Four)

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They call her First Princess.

They say she will save them all.

But there is only one person who has the power to make her claim her birthright.

 

The last Immortal Queen of Indriell has named her heir.

The title means nothing to Allie Carmichael. Nothing but more drama and attention she never asked for. Allie loves her newly discovered royal grandparents, but she just wants to finish her senior year of college and start her first job. Not step forward as the princess of a long dead nation she knows precious little about. At twenty-one, she considers herself an adult and has finally found the normal life she’s always craved. As normal as it gets for a young Immortal legacy—prophecy or not.

For nearly four years, Allie and Aidan have gone their separate ways, doing the college thing and just living their lives. Apart. It was his choice to sever their ties. A sacrifice to give her the time she needed to explore her bond with his brother, Darius. A sacrifice she never asked of him.

But when Allie discovers Aidan hasn’t been in school all this time—and his family hasn’t heard from him in more than a year, she struggles to contain her rage and the powerful judgment that burns within her.

Protecting Aidan, even from himself, fuels her every breath.

She would do anything for him. Even step forward as the heir.

Main Tropes

  • Urban Fantasy
  • Immortality
  • Fated Romance
  • Fade To Black
  • Forbidden Love
  • Strong Female Characters

Synopsis

They call her First Princess.

They say she will save them all.

But there is only one person who has the power to make her claim her birthright. 

The last Immortal Queen of Indriell has named her heir.

The title means nothing to Allie Carmichael. Nothing but more drama and attention she never asked for. Allie loves her newly discovered royal grandparents, but she just wants to finish her senior year of college and start her first job. Not step forward as the princess of a long dead nation she knows precious little about. At twenty-one, she considers herself an adult and has finally found the normal life she’s always craved. As normal as it gets for a young Immortal legacy—prophecy or not. 

For nearly four years, Allie and Aidan have gone their separate ways, doing the college thing and just living their lives. Apart. It was his choice to sever their ties. A sacrifice to give her the time she needed to explore her bond with his brother, Darius. A sacrifice she never asked of him. 

But when Allie discovers Aidan hasn’t been in school all this time—and his family hasn’t heard from him in more than a year, she struggles to contain her rage and the powerful judgment that burns within her. 

Protecting Aidan, even from himself, fuels her every breath. 

She would do anything for him. Even step forward as the heir.

Excerpt

“Here you go, Gramps,” Allie placed the worn leather journal on the table beside her grandfather’s favorite armchair. 

“Done with this one already, Allie-girl?” Alexander reached for the book. 

“Are you kidding? It was fascinating to read about the sack of Carthage from someone who actually witnessed it. I sobbed like a baby when Grandma Alísun was taken by the Coalition after.” Allie flopped onto the sofa across from him, exhausted after a long afternoon with Emma. “I never realized she spent so many years in a Coalition prison until Marcus got her out of there and took her captive himself.” 

“At first it was a relief to know she was finally free from that awful prison. But Marcus’s prison was worse in so many ways.”

“But grandma was able to know Livia. At least from a distance.” Allie was often jealous of the relationship her sister had with their grandmother. 

“Watching her granddaughter grow up was a comfort to her during the final years of her captivity. Truth be told, I’m a little jealous.” Alexander lowered his voice. “But I’d never tell her that.”

“What else you got for me, grandpa? The destruction of Pompeii? The fall of the Roman Empire?”  

He winked. “I’ll send you home with a few more of my private journals if you like reading the aimless musings of an old scholar.” 

“Aimless musings?” A smile tugged at her lips. “You should write thrillers, old man.”

“Who says I don’t?”

“Auntie, are they here yet?” Kahlynn McBrien raced into the common room and pounced on Allie's lap. The seven-year-old girl was getting too big for such entrances, but Allie refused to be the one to tell her to stop. 

“Almost, kiddo.” Allie smiled at the excitement in her niece’s cornflower blue eyes. “They’re on the ferry right now. I can see them just over there.” Allie pointed across the room where the spectral shapes of her visions were taking form. Her newest visions weren't always easy to decipher. They mostly looked like red, orange, and green people-shaped blobs, like one would see through an infrared lens. But Kahlynn didn't need to know that. Allie could see a couple that vaguely resembled Liam and Livia standing on the deck of the ferryboat making its way to Kelleys Island this very moment. 

“Are you excited? I can’t tell if you’re excited.” Allie folded her arms across her chest in mock seriousness, ignoring the shifting, indistinct forms floating around her. She still struggled with this newest manifestation of her clairvoyance, but she’d found a way to keep the spectral figures isolated to her peripheral vision, only allowing them out in moments like this when she wanted to examine them. She’d learned to cope with her gift, but when it first began to evolve, it was impossible to function like a non-crazy person.  

“I can’t believe it’s finally official. I have a mom!” Kahlynn zoomed around the common room like a Tasmanian devil, until she finally settled down beside Allie on the sofa to wait for Liam and Livia to return from their honeymoon.

Allie couldn’t believe it either. She loved her sister, but they’d traveled down a long road littered with the broken glass of heartache, betrayal, and forgiveness before they finally arrived where they were now. Livia was unrecognizable from the hateful woman she had been the night she became a captive of the McBriens four years ago. And an incredibly long four years it was. Allie could hardly remember what it was like to think of Livia as an enemy and not a sister.

“What do you think, Grandpa Alex?” Allie shot her grandfather a wink. “She’s not nearly excited enough. And I’m not sure her new mom is even going to recognize her after a month away.” 

“She’s grown so much, her dad might not recognize her either,” Alexander said, putting on his most serious Scholar face.

“He wouldn’t dare,” Kahlynn said in a huff. “Liv—Mom would kill him.”

Allie admired the way Livia and her new daughter had bonded so quickly. Allie suspected she saw the girl’s innocence as something to protect. Kahlynn was everything Livia should have been if circumstances hadn’t taken her from her family at such a young age. 

“Are they here yet?” Kahlynn asked again.  

“Not yet, but I think we have other matters to discuss, don’t we?” Allie eyed her niece with a frown. “Out with it, kid. What do you got for me?”

The girl emptied her coat pockets of chocolate bars, potato chips, and snack cakes she'd pilfered from the kitchen when Naeemah wasn't looking. 

“Did you forget your great-grandpa?” The Scholar gave the little girl a wounded look. 

“No way, Gramps.” Kahlynn handed him a fist full of beef jerky. 

"You two are diabolical.” Darius shook his head as he watched them from kitchen doorway. “Using the kid to feed your bad habits.”

Allie beamed at the sight of him, the Syntrophos bond igniting between them like a living thing. “You’re just sad because she didn’t bring you anything.” Allie tore into a bag of potato chips, sharing a secretive smile with her niece.  

“Alísun doesn’t think jerky qualifies as real food.” Sighing, Alexander leaned back in his overstuffed armchair. “I beg to differ.” He cracked open a beef stick and inhaled the spicy scent. “It’s the best food there is.”

“You two are dangerous.” Darius came to sit beside Allie. “What kind of trouble did you get up to yesterday? Your cover story of ‘going out to dinner’ was total BS.”

"We went skydiving," Alexander said. 

"In the dead of winter?" Darius asked.

“It was awesome.” Allie leaned across the side table to give her grandpa a high-five. Of all her Immortal family, she’d slipped into her relationship with Alexander as if she’d known him her whole life. He was so easy to love, and it didn’t hurt that they were pretty much the same person. 

"So that's why my heart stopped for no reason yesterday afternoon?" Darius said. "Give me a heads up next time you two decide to get destructive." 

"Sorry, Dare." She squeezed his hand. Their bond hummed with the satisfaction of reunion. 

“Where are they now, Allie?” Kahlynn asked eagerly.

Allie glanced around, checking for the ghostly images still wandering about the room. “Oh, it looks like they’re in the tunnel. You’d better go if you want to meet them in the hall.” 

Kahlynn shot to her feet and raced across the common room. “Daddy’s home!”

Allie took a deep breath, pushing the spectral figures back into her peripheral vision now that she no longer needed them. Her chest heated with the use of her power, casting her world with a tinge of green light as the forms reluctantly receded. Just as she exhaled, she thought she saw some familiar faces among the shapeless blobs but couldn’t be certain. It was a struggle to force the visions out of her main line of sight, but once she managed it, they stayed there. She could still see them, but it made it easier to function if they weren’t right in front of her face. 

“Where are my girls?” Liam's voice echoed across the vaulted hall as he raced to scoop Kahlynn up into a big bear hug and kept moving into the common to envelop Allie in his arms—Kahlynn clinging to him like a monkey. 

“We missed you,” Allie said, burrowing into her brother's side. A month was a long time to be away from her brother and sister—who were now married. To each other. “Where’s your sister-wife?” She grinned up at him. 

Liam rolled his eyes. “We’ve told you a thousand times, your sister is not my sister. That’s not how this works.”

“My mortal brain just can’t see it like that.”

“The natural bond between us would have been as brother and sister-in-law, but because we met first and neither of us knew Livia, we bonded as brother and sister instead because that was the only way we could understand our relationship. It does not make Livia my sister and my wife.”

“If you say so, bro.” Allie slapped him on the back. She got it. It made perfect sense, but she liked messing with him.

“Stop teasing him, Allie,” Livia said as she entered the room. “Even though he does make a rather large and easy target.” She winked, reaching to hug Allie. “I missed you way more than I care to admit.” Livia gave her an extra squeeze, almost cutting off her circulation. 

“Missed you too, Liv.” Allie gazed into her sister’s silver eyes. Those eyes used to be so full of hate and resentment, but now they sparkled with happiness. Livia was still a guarded and severe woman. She probably always would be, but Allie also knew her sister didn’t feel like she deserved the life she had now. Allie sometimes still felt a lingering resentment toward the woman her sister used to be, but Livia was not that woman anymore. She’d redeemed herself and deserved whatever goodness life had in store for her now. 

“Can I have the munchkin now?” Livia held out her arms. “I need to squeeze her.” 

Liam beamed as he passed his daughter to her mother.

“I missed you … Mom.” Kahlynn buried her face in Livia’s shoulder.

Livia wrapped her arms around the girl, inhaling the scent of her hair. “I missed you, too, Munchkin.” 

“What’d you bring me?” Kahlynn glanced up at her mother. 

“Your mom has plans to spoil you rotten with all the presents she brought home from our honeymoon,” Liam said. “But I need to get a report on your behavior before you get anything.” Liam grasped Kahlynn’s hand as he turned to Allie. “Give it to me straight, Auntie Allie. Was she a holy terror for you or your parents?” 

“I don’t know what you mean. Kahlynn’s a perfect angel,” Allie insisted.  

“Right. I forgot who I was asking.” Liam shook his head. “What new bad habits have you taught her?”

Allie gave him an affronted look. “We did homework together every night after training and when I had class, she was on her best behavior for my parents.”

Liam rolled his eyes and turned to Darius for a translation. 

“Behind all that waffle about angels and best behaviors, Kahlynn was her usual mischievous, prank-loving self, but she was mostly good. It's these three together that can't be trusted.” Darius gestured at Allie and Alexander. “Vince and Kayla helped with babysitting during our few evening classes, and she spent most of her afternoons with Lily and Carson after school and training.”

“I see.” Liam frowned. “Didn’t we talk about that before I left?” He turned to Allie with an accusing glare. A glare that would make most people tremble in fear.

“We did, but I decided you’re an ass,” Allie said, folding her arms over her chest. “The munchkin loves Vince and Kayla, and they are happy to babysit—for free, I might add. So don’t get your undies in a twist about it.” 

“Fine.” Liam grumbled. He’d always had a difficult time trusting Allie’s mortal friends with his daughter. He felt like they had a little too much interest in her. 

“By the way, what’d you bring me?” Allie cocked her head and smiled. 

“Aren’t you too old for presents by now? You just had your twenty-first birthday.”

“As long as I live, I will never be too old for presents, Liam. And my birthday was months ago. We’ll be gearing up for my twenty-second soon.”

“I may have gotten you a little something.” His serious demeanor thawed with the half smile he reserved just for her. 

“I'd settle for an open tab at your bar,” Allie said, grinning. “The law says I’m old enough.”

“As far as I’m concerned, I’m the law inside my bars, and they are no place for you or your friends. And no, you don’t get an open tab. Are you nuts?”

“If you got me a snow globe, I’m going to divorce you.”

“He got you a leather jacket in Milan,” Livia interjected. “You’ll love it. I got you a fully stocked wine fridge for the cottage.” 

“Wine and leather, that’s more like it.” Allie wrapped her arm around her sister’s waist. Her hair stood on end as an icy prickling sensation swept through her. The Ice Queen's here. Allie and her grandmother—Queen Alísun of Indriell—hadn’t always seen eye to eye. Allie loved and respected her grandma, but the queenly side of Alísun made for one intimidating Immortal.

“Relax, Allie. Your face is going to freeze like that.” Livia turned to greet their grandmother. 

“It’s so good to have both my girls home again,” Alísun said softly as she hugged her granddaughter. “I trust you’ve had a relaxing honeymoon?” Leaning back, she gave Livia a once over.

“It was wonderful,” Livia replied.

“You both deserve it.” The queen turned to her new great-granddaughter. “Kahlynn, darling.” She bent down to her level. “Run along to the kitchens. Emma and Parker have a treat for you.”

“Bring me some,” Allie whispered before Kahlynn ran off to find Emma and her two-year-old son, Parker. 

“Now that we’re all together for once, I’d like to call a family meeting in the yard,” Alísun said. “Navid will meet us there.”

“I’ll catch up with you later,” Darius said, squeezing Allie’s hand.

“Nonsense. You are my granddaughter’s Syntrophos, Darius. You are family,” the queen said. 

“Uh, thank you. Ma’am.” Darius was always flustered whenever the queen spoke directly to him. Allie felt the same way but for different reasons. Whenever the queen looked at her, Allie felt like she was disappointed with what she saw. Alísun was an ancient prophetess who foretold of Allie's birth thousands of years ago. Allie couldn’t help but think there was no way she’d ever measure up to her grandmother's expectations.

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