61 pages • 2 hours read
Danielle JensenA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
A Fate Inked in Blood (2024) is the first book in Danielle L. Jensen’s Saga of the Unfated series, with the second installment expected in spring 2025. Jensen is the best-selling author of the Malediction and Dark Shores young adult fantasy series and Bridge Kingdom, a romance fantasy series.
Marketed for both adults and new adult readers, A Fate Inked in Blood features Freya, the mortal daughter of the goddess Hlin. Torn between duty and desire as she fights to protect her family and her people from power-hungry rulers, Freya embarks on a journey of exploration that exposes The Tension Between Destiny and Autonomy, The Consequences of Exercising Free Will, and Exploitation as a Means of Acquiring Power.
This guide refers to the 2024 Del Rey ebook edition.
Content Warning: Both the source text and this guide feature descriptions of violence, marital coercion and abuse, and attempted suicide.
Plot Summary
In a Norse-inspired fantasy world, 20-year-old Freya spends her days gutting fish caught by her husband, Vragi, whom she abhors. Freya’s parents arranged the marriage because of Vragi’s wealth and revered status as a child of the gods. He is one of a rare few who were given a drop of a god’s blood at conception, resulting in magical abilities.
On the beach of the fjord, Freya meets a handsome stranger named Bjorn. He is a revered warrior and the son of Snorri, the local jarl (Skaland’s term for a chieftain). Bjorn is a child of the god of war, Tyr, and wields a magic fire axe in battle. Bjorn goes on his way, and Freya runs into her older brother, Geir, a warrior in Jarl Snorri’s raiding bands.
Freya secretly yearns to be a warrior, but she is barred from this life because she must hide the fact that she is a child of the goddess Hlin and can wield a magic shield that protects her from any harm. To prevent power-hungry men from exploiting her, Freya’s parents forbade her from using her powers.
However, Vragi discovers Freya’s secret and betrays her to Jarl Snorri, who has been searching for the prophesied shield maiden for 20 years. Snorri compels Vragi and Freya to divorce so he can marry Freya himself. Snorri dreams of being king, and there is a prophecy that proclaims the shield maiden will unite Skaland under the rule of the one who controls her fate.
Freya agrees to marry Snorri after he threatens her brother’s life. When Vragi makes a threat of his own, Freya grabs Bjorn’s fire axe and kills him, severely burning her hand in the process.
Snorri returns to his stronghold at Halsar with Freya. There, Freya meets Ylva, Snorri’s first wife and Bjorn’s stepmother. Snorri marries Freya in a hurried ceremony the next day. Ylva is a volva, a witch who can use runic magic. She performs a ceremony in which the goddess Hlin claims Freya as her child by marking her with a blood tattoo. After, Snorri orders Bjorn to train and protect Freya. That night, Ylva prevents Snorri from consummating the marriage. To substitute for this part of the ritual, they bind Freya to Snorri with a blood oath.
A jarl from a nearby territory attacks Halsar with his warriors, planning to kill Freya so Snorri cannot use her power to become king. Freya defies orders to stay hidden and joins the battle, helping to drive Gnut’s army to retreat. Fighting with Bjorn during the raid triggers dangerous feelings of lust; Freya cannot afford to reveal she is attracted to her husband’s son. During the funeral for the fallen the next morning, Freya sees a spectral figure walk along the beach and then disappear.
Freya begins her training with Bjorn and learns he was abducted as a child by King Harald and held captive in Nordeland until three years ago. His mother, Saga, was killed during the abduction. Bjorn’s time away from Snorri’s group makes Ylva feel that her own son, Leif, should be Snorri’s heir, even though he is Snorri’s second-born son. Now expecting an attack from King Harald any day, Snorri decides to go to the temple in Fjalltindr to seek an alliance with other jarls.
During the journey to Fjalltindr, Freya encounters extreme challenges, including an attack by Jarl Torvin’s army and a battle against the cursed undead draug that guard the tunnels below the mountaintop. During the fight with the draug, Freya invokes an unknown power and curses them to Helheim, the underworld. Later, the spectral figure reappears and warns that Freya must make a sacrifice at Fjalltindr or the prophecy will be undone and her life cut short.
When she makes the sacrifice, the gods appear to acknowledge her. Freya discovers that King Harald is also in Fjalltindr, but temple laws forbid any fighting there. Freya attempts to spy on him and hears someone she suspects to be Ylva plotting with Harald. When she reports this, Bjorn urges her not to accuse Ylva without proof.
A seer’s vision suggests that Snorri’s stronghold, Halsar, will be attacked if he lingers in Fjalltindr. Snorri’s party races back to protect their home, but they find Halsar destroyed by Jarl Gnut. Eager for revenge, they prepare to attack Gnut’s fortress in Grindill.
Freya nearly freezes to death on the journey, and she and Bjorn finally act on their desire for each other. Bjorn urges Freya to let her frostbitten feet heal before they attack Grindill, but Freya insists on fighting. They engage in a fierce siege of Grindill’s walls.
Freya’s magic shield protects them until she trips and drops it. While it is down, a bolt of lightning—thrown by a child of Thor on Gnut’s side—strikes and kills Freya’s friend Bodil, the only female jarl. Rage overwhelms Freya. She destroys the gate, enters the fortress, and kills as many of Gnut’s soldiers as she can. After Gnut is killed and the battle is over, Freya is horrified by her brutality.
Several days later, she learns her brother and his wife have come to Grindill and fears Snorri will use her family as leverage to ensure her compliance. Bjorn urges Freya to run away with him, but Freya cannot abandon her family. She decides to learn more about Hlin, the goddess who seems to be the source of the rage and brutality inside her.
Freya’s mother, Kelda, reveals that when Freya was conceived, another goddess was involved before Hlin claimed Freya as her vessel. Kelda assumed it was Loki in disguise. After telling this story, Kelda chastises Freya for her affair with Bjorn and insists that she end it. Freya realizes her mother has always put her own needs ahead of Freya’s, and they argue.
Soon after, one of Harald’s warriors questions Kelda about Freya’s location then kills her. Freya blames Ylva revealing her location to Harald. She races back to Grindill to kill Ylva, but Bjorn stops her just in time. As Freya attempts to convince Snorri that Ylva is a traitor, Harald’s army arrives. Freya refuses to surrender herself to Harald, so he attacks.
Freya protects the fortress with her shield but cannot save the civilians outside the walls. Realizing that rulers will never stop fighting over her, Freya attempts to throw herself over the cliff’s edge, but Bjorn again stops her. Together, they stage their own deaths, making it seem as though they have both fallen over the waterfall and died.
With renewed plans to flee Skaland, Freya and Bjorn spend a night inside a cave, declaring their love and envisioning their future together. Harald finds them the next morning and reveals that Bjorn has always been in league with him. Bjorn admits that his loyalty is to Nordeland but says the rest is too complicated to explain. Freya curses Bjorn, Harald, and all his warriors to Helheim. All but Bjorn and Harald are magically killed, their souls dragged to the underworld by giant black tree roots, proving that Freya is also a daughter of the goddess Hel.
Freya tries to flee but is overtaken and knocked unconscious. She awakens on a ship sailing to Nordeland. Bjorn tells her that his mother is actually alive; Snorri tried to kill her, so she fled with Bjorn to Nordeland, where King Harald protected them. Now, Bjorn begs Freya to meet his mother before judging him. Freya realizes it is time for her to start controlling her own fate.
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