by Boyce, S. M.
Contents
Title Page
Book Description
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter 1: A Fresh Start
Chapter 2: The Forgotten Door
Chapter 3: Inheritance
Chapter 4: Memorial
Chapter 5: The Cottage
Chapter 6: Agneon
Chapter 7: Surprises
Chapter 8: A New Master
Chapter 9: A Vow
Chapter 10: Mistakes
Chapter 11: Planning
Chapter 12: Reunion
Chapter 13: Resilience
Chapter 14: Two Evils
Chapter 15: Respite
Chapter 16: Journey
Chapter 17: Old Foes
Chapter 18: Second Chances
Chapter 19: Kirelm
Chapter 20: Mistaken
Chapter 21: Defiance
Chapter 22: Destruction
Chapter 23: Discovered
Chapter 24: Consequences
Chapter 25: Lost
Chapter 26: The Hero
Chapter 27: Return
Chapter 28: Reborn
Chapter 29: Solace
Epilogue: Revenge
A Note to Readers
About the Author
Acknowledgements
Bonus Content: Excerpt from Silent Orchids by Morgan Wylie
HERITAGE
Book Three of the Grimoire Saga
A Novel by S.M. Boyce
The Grimoire Saga
Lichgates (#1)
Treason (#2)
Heritage (#3)
Illusion (#4)
BOOK DESCRIPTION
Heritage
Grimoire Saga #3
Kara Magari isn’t normal, even by Ourea’s standards—and in a world of shape-shifters and soul stealers, that’s saying something. To the royalty, she’s a loose cannon. To the masses, she’s a failure. But Kara’s arrival in Ourea started a war, and she’s going to end it.
An ancient isen named Stone takes an interest in Kara’s training, and it turns out he has more answers than he originally led her to believe. In an effort to unearth a secret that might end the bloodshed, Kara instead discovers an ugly truth about her family—and how much she has in common with an infamous mass-murderer.
Braeden Drakonin has slowly rebuilt his life after the betrayal that tore it apart. His father wants him dead, and frankly, his so-called allies wouldn’t mind that either. Private alliances are formed. Secrets are sold. Tension is driving the armies apart. A single battle will end this war, and it’s coming. Braeden may be a prince, but it will take more than that to survive. He must take the fight to his father’s door—and win.
Copyrighted Material
Copyright © 2013 by Sarah Montee
Cover and art copyright © 2013 by Heidi Sutherlin
Book design and layout copyright © 2013 by Sarah Montee
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living, dead, or undead, is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from Sarah Montee.
www.smboyce.com
www.GrimoireSaga.com
First Edition
DEDICATION
For Geoff, my muse. I’ll be by your side even when we’re nothing but souls. You make my world beautiful.
CHAPTER ONE
A FRESH START
A hand reached around Kara’s waist and tugged her closer. Her body shifted over cotton sheets. The hem of her nightshirt caught and inched upward along her back. Hot breath sailed down her neck, setting her nerves on fire. She snuggled into a bare shoulder, her nose brushing against bumps of muscle as she itched to get ever closer to whomever held her.
Warm skin burned her cheek. A second, thick hand brushed hair from her face. Her blond locks fell over her shoulder like a sheet of silk.
Kara opened her eyes. A haze clouded the corners of her vision—the edges of a dream. She frowned. There was no fun in knowing none of this was real. It just meant she wouldn’t be able to enjoy it as much.
Braeden smiled down at her. A few dark hairs fell across his olive face, blocking her view of those black eyes that glittered with mischief. He pulled her a little closer with his rough hands, even though no space remained between them. Her frown dissolved. Every bit of her crackled with energy. He ran his fingers along the hem of her shirt, pulling it higher.
She poked his side. “I miss you.”
He ran a hand through her hair. “Come see me, then.”
“You know I can’t. Not yet.”
He grinned. “Liar.”
She faltered and glanced down at the mattress. Of course she couldn’t leave. Not even a month ago, she discovered she was an isen—a creature that could steal souls. Though she hadn’t even known what an isen was before she discovered the crazy world of Ourea, she had apparently always belonged to the hidden realm of monsters and magic. Her mother passed the isen gene to her, and their bloodline had a terrible curse: power and magic came easily to them. It sounded great at first, sure, but the power came too easily. Kara couldn’t control herself. She could kill with barely any effort.
Every day, her control dwindled a little more. If she used the air to turn a page in a book, she ripped out the sheet instead. If she tried to hit a target with her favorite attack—red sparks that danced through her fingers like lightning—she blasted the target to bits. She refused to spar with anyone for fear of what she might accidentally do to her opponent.
After she discovered she was an isen, she’d spent every second of free time with her mentor, Stone. They traveled to a safe place to train: her village, the one she inherited from the ancient ghost who had given her the Grimoire.
Kara hadn’t left the village yet only because she couldn’t do anything without destroying something.
As if Braeden read her thoughts, he wrapped her in a hug. “It’ll be all right.”
“I’m just so lost, Braeden. I don’t want to hurt anyone, but I don’t know how to stop.”
He pulled away and held her face in his hands. “You don’t have to do it alone, you know.”
“You’re right, I guess.” She smiled and slipped her arms around him in return, burrowing her face into his torso. Her fingers tightened around his waist.
Something shifted in her palms. A sharp crack cut through the dream. The crash of breaking glass rocked her. Braeden tensed in her arms.
Kara pulled away, trying to figure out what was going on. Braeden studied her, his smile gone. A fissure inched along his face as if he were porcelain and she’d dropped him. It splintered, dividing his handsome features into pieces. His eyebrows shifted upward, likely to question what was going on—or worse, what she was doing to him.
Kara gasped. Oh, Bloods! Did she hurt him, too?
She reached for him, unable to form words. Fragments of his shirt broke away like ice in her hands. The cracks in his face widened.
His voice shook. “You’re not alone.”
“Braeden!” she screamed.
Kara bolted upright in bed, her scream lingering in her chest.
White light swam in her vision, blinding her. Something crashed again, as if on replay from her nightmare. Glass tinkled. The wall vibrated with the thump of a heavy object ramming it with great force.
A breeze ruffled her hair. Chills raced down her back. She shivered. Salt stung her nose, as did
the sweet tang of honeysuckle. Her fingers tensed, grabbing handfuls of the cotton bedspread as her vision blurred.
She rubbed her eyes.
Bit by bit, her familiar bedroom in the Vagabond’s village shifted into focus. White walls. Wooden bed posts. Silk blue canopy over her bed. White comforter. Cotton sheets. Two mahogany bedside tables. A stack of paper on a desk in the corner. The pages shifted in the breeze, and a couple drifted to the floor.
Sunlight streamed through the windows on her left, catching on the jagged edges of a broken window. Wind rattled the drapes, shuffling them aside as it whipped through the room. Shards of glass littered the floor, glinting.
A red brick lay on the carpet in the middle of the pool of broken glass, a white piece of parchment tied around it with a string.
Kara jumped out of bed and tiptoed across the remnants of her broken window, though it didn’t matter if she cut herself. She knew plenty of charms to heal a cut well enough to leave no scars.
She picked up the brick and yanked the note from the baked clay. A few words covered the other side of the small square of paper, written in tight handwriting.
We’re done with the basics. Your real training starts today. Meet me in the clearing in the forest behind the kitchens. You have much to learn.
—Stone
Kara cursed under her breath. Her mentor threw a brick through her window to wake her up. That dramatic son of a—
“Couldn’t he just knock?” she muttered.
Her pulse settled. Adrenaline dissolved in her veins. She took a deep breath to clear her head, and the cold air swirled in her chest. Her worry hadn’t been anything more than the panic of being woken from a dream.
She sighed. And until the interruption, it had been a wonderful dream.
Something squeaked by her bed. Her tiny pet Flick stretched from his place on the pillow beside hers, his bushy tail straight up in the air. His ears—still too big for his head, even though he was mostly grown—twitched as he shook himself awake. No bigger than a squirrel, the furry red creature hopped along the folds in the blanket, battling the valleys of fabric on his way to her.
“Morning, munchkin,” she said.
He burped in answer. Charming thing.
Kara focused her attention on the broken window. She hadn’t fixed a window before, but she could manipulate the air and start a fire with the magic coursing through her. Since the glass just needed to be fused back into place, fixing a window couldn’t be too terribly difficult.
She reached her fingers toward the shards. With a deep breath, she borrowed the breeze sweeping through her room. Tension pulled on her hands, dragging her knuckles downward. She resisted, pulling back to lift the fragments of glass. The pieces hovered. Her palms warmed.
The shards slid through the air, and Kara directed traffic as best she could. When bits of the glass pushed into their neighbors, she focused the full weight of her gaze on the seam, fusing the pieces on contact.
In a matter of seconds, her window was once more whole. A little worse for wear, perhaps—she hadn’t quite gotten rid of some of the cracks in the pane—but solid nonetheless. She smirked with satisfaction.
A dull pain throbbed in her wrist. She scratched at it, her nails catching on leather. She sighed and resisted the impulse to rip off the wrist guard on her right arm. The ornate leather band on her right wrist covered spikes that dug into her skin, helping keep her uncontrollable magic at bay. Her arm ached when she wore the thing, but even her grandfather, Agneon, had worn the band at one point to restrain his magic.
After Stone awoke her isen nature, he told her to never take off the wrist band for fear she would lose her last ounce of self-restraint. So far, she had obeyed.
She headed to her closet to change. However good Stone’s intentions may have been, he’d forced her into the life of an isen. She hadn’t wanted any of this. Since he turned her, Stone was her master and could control her. He could make her hit herself in the face if he wanted, but she listened to him out of respect. He’d lived for centuries.
Still, despite his vast knowledge and experience, she would give him a piece of her mind when she found him.
Twenty minutes later, Kara stormed out of the neighboring forest and into the empty clearing Stone mentioned in his note. Flick purred from his place on her shoulder. His fur tickled her neck, but she tuned out the sensation.
She had one mission: find Stone and rip him a new one.
Kara narrowed her eyes and glanced around the forest clearing where he’d said her training would begin. Dirt filled the unimpressive circle, the ground void of grass as though someone had tilled the soil. A breeze tumbled by, stinging her nose with the hint of raw carrots and rust. Trees surrounded her on all sides, their trunks blocking out everything beyond the mini arena in which she stood. Wind tussled with the canopy, interrupting the forest’s silence with an eruption of clapping leaves.
A six-foot stack of bricks sat in the middle of the clearing. She tightened her hands into fists and walked over to it, not altogether convinced she actually wanted to know what Stone had up his sleeve this time.
Light poured through a three-inch hole in the bricks at shoulder level. She bent down and peered through to the forest line on the other side. One tree stood out from its brothers, perfectly centered through the circle. Dapples of sunlight broke through its leaves and glinted off a red “X” painted on its trunk.
“You have to hit that target,” a voice said from behind her.
She spun. There hadn’t been footsteps or even a breath, and yet Stone stood inches behind her. His tall frame blocked out a fair bit of the forest behind him. He frowned, his salt and pepper hair and beard framing his face.
Kara’s fists tightened. “You broke my window.”
He shrugged. “You fixed it, didn’t you?”
“Why would you wake me like that?”
Stone walked about ten feet away and dragged his heel through the dirt to make a line in the soil. “Shoot from here.”
“Stone, answer me.”
He laughed. “I am your master, child, not the other way around. Enough prattle. You wanted training, and this is it. Now that your blood is moving, let’s get started. Come over here and shoot from this line.”
She took a deep breath for patience—so much for giving him a piece of her mind—and glanced over her shoulder. “Where do you want me to shoot? Through the hole?”
“Obviously.”
She grimaced. “Look, I need to learn real magic. I need to learn techniques that can win a fight, not...whatever this is.”
“That will come. For now, you’re to hit that target by shooting a fireball through the gap in the bricks. If the fire is too large, it will knock over all the bricks. And if that happens, you have to restack each one by hand before you can try again. It won’t be easy, either, since you have to stack them such that the hole is in the same place.”
“That’s mundane.”
“It’s your training. Take it or leave it.”
Kara groaned. What a terrible teacher. She wished she had Braeden back. At least training with him was fun.
Her dream flashed again in her mind. She blushed. Braeden—she couldn’t think about him right now. She had trouble focusing as it was without her heart racing at the thought of the man she loved.
“Why do I have to stack them by hand?” she asked.
“Because it will frustrate you, and it’s harder to focus on the task at hand when you’re angry. You must learn to control that temper.”
She huffed. “Is that why you threw the brick through my window? You designed a training exercise around pissing me off?”
“That’s one way to put it.”
Kara shook her head and walked to Stone’s line in the dirt. Flick jumped off her shoulder and trotted to the edge of the forest, as if he knew she needed the freedom of movement. Often, she figured he understood everything.
Stone shifted out of her way as she reached the line, so she tur
ned to face the wall. She could barely see the opening in the bricks, much less the red target beyond.
She sighed. Whatever.
A breeze whistled by, and she borrowed some of the air to feed a spark in her hand. Fire blazed to life, hovering above the creases in her palm. Magic coursed through her, warming her veins with its vigor. A second pulse thrummed in her chest, an energy she had begun to recognize as magic itself.
With each beat of her heart, the fire grew. It flickered and crackled, burning the energy she’d kept pent up inside. The flames licked her fingers, but fire made by magic would never hurt its master. If anything, it tickled.
She frowned and held her breath in an effort to scale back the flames. They shrank ever so slightly, and she shrugged. It would do.
The brick wall loomed ahead, the tiny hole her only hope of getting to try any useful magic. It should be simple enough compared to what she had already accomplished. Kara killed shadow demons and escaped entire armies on multiple occasions. She rescued a prince. She was tortured and left in poisoned chains for days on end. She faced Death himself and came back alive.
She could hit a stupid target.
Kara aimed for the gap, took a deep breath, and threw the fireball with every ounce of strength she had.
The fire crashed into the bricks to the left of the hole. Dust billowed into a cloud that hovered like a swarm of flies. The bricks tumbled, clattering to the ground in a heap.
Stone tisked. “Wrong. Restack and do it again.”
Kara grumbled under her breath and strode over to the pile of charred bricks. She rummaged through them, looking for any brick with a circular indent in it, and set those aside when she found them. The rest, she began to stack.
And with each clack from every brick she set back on the pillar, she resented Stone just a little bit more.
Thirty minutes, two bruises, and several curse words later, Kara walked back to the line in the dirt. She had only just reset the bricks scattered by her first attempt. Now, she once more needed to throw a fireball through the tiny hole in an effort to hit the target on the other side.