The first time I accidentally killed someone, I passed it off as a freak accident. The second time, a coincidence. But when I’m kidnapped and taken to an underground realm where corpses reanimate on their own, I can no longer ignore the nightmare of my life. The Vaettir claim to be the children of the old gods, but all I see are monsters. The only person I recognize in this horrifying realm is my old social worker from the foster system, Sophie, but something’s not right. She hasn’t aged a day. And Sophie’s brother Alaric has fangs and moves with liquid feline grace. A normal person would run screaming into the night, but there's something about Alaric that draws me in. Together, we will search for an elusive magical charm, a remnant of the gods themselves. I don’t know if I can trust Alaric with my life, but with the entire fate of humanity hanging in the balance, I have no choice. FATED is Norse Mythology meets Lost Girl and the Fever Series. If you love books with time travel, Vikings, gods, and monsters, The Will of Yggdrasil is for you.
I thought finding the charm would be the hard part. Turns out, that was just the beginning. Now I’m stuck with a Viking—yes, an actual Viking—who claims to know more about my quest than I do. Mikael’s got a thousand-year-old grudge, a cryptic past, and a very annoying habit of being right. Next thing I know, I’m thrown back in time to the world he came from: a place of warriors, blood feuds, and fate-spinning goddesses who clearly have it out for me. If I want to make it home, I’ll have to survive battle-hardened raiders, ancient magic, and a destiny I never signed up for. But I’m done running. For the first time, I know what I’m fighting for—and who I’m willing to fight beside.
When you play with gods, you get burned. Madeline can’t run forever. Estus still wants the key, and now thanks to Mikael, she’s a bigger target than ever. The only choice left is to summon the old gods for aid, risking the chance they might sooner destroy them all, than help them harness the key’s power to defeat their enemies. Madeline is willing to take the risk, though gods can be finicky, and if there’s one thing she’s learned, it’s that no one does anything for free.
Lovers torn apart by time. A tree regrown from the beginning. What do the Morrigan, a necromancer, and an ancient Viking have in common? Nothing, except for a common goal: Defeat Estus once and for all, and rescue their loved ones trapped in the past. New alliances are formed, old friends may be lost, but will balance be restored once and for all?
The old gods have returned, and there will be hell to pay. Now that Yggdrasil has been regrown, Madeline must face the old gods’ judgment. She shouldn’t exist, and they know it. The world has been irreparably changed, and perhaps the Vaettir no longer have a place in it. Madeline had thought that once she destroyed her rival she would be safe. Now she knows just how wrong she was. Madeline will face the ultimate trial, outwitting the All Father himself. Will she survive to see her daughter grow up, or will time and fate be irreparably damaged, throwing not just earth, but all worlds into chaos?