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Love Beyond Reach: Book 8 of Morna’s Legacy Series
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Love Beyond Reach
Book 8 of Morna’s Legacy Series
Bethany Claire
Contents
Copyright
Love Beyond Reach
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Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Epilogue
Links to all Morna’s Legacy Books
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Letter to Readers
About the Author
Acknowledgments
Copyright 2017 by Bethany Claire
All rights reserved.
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License Notes
All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
* * *
This story 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 or dead, is entirely coincidental.
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Editor: Dj Hendrickson
Cover Designed by Damonza
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Available In eBook & Paperback
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eBook ISBN: 978-0-9961136-5-6
Paperback ISBN: 978-0-9961136-6-3
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http://www.bethanyclaire.com
~Book 8 of Morna’s Legacy Series~
by Bethany Claire
© 2017
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* * *
A Love Story for The Centuries
All Morna Conall wants is freedom—freedom to practice and learn about the magic inside her. Perhaps then her world wouldn’t feel so small. When she finds the spell books and journals of an old mentor, Morna believes she’s found the key to her happiness, but when she crosses paths with an injured man in need of help, her plans are derailed. As she spends more time with the strange but alluring man, her dreams change. Maybe magic isn’t the only thing capable of expanding her world.
Jerry never expected anything other than an ordinary existence. When he wakes one morning to find himself in a different century, he embarks on one of the most baffling and difficult years of his life. He spends every day searching for a way to return home, but when the only person he believes can help him perishes in a fire, he worries he will be trapped in the past forever. His hope returns when a beautiful lass offers him aid, but with each passing day, he finds himself less sure of his desire to return home. The witch occupies his every thought. If she does find a way to send him home, it will mean leaving his heart hundreds of years in the past.
As they confess their love for one another, a shared acquaintance from their past plots against them. Will their love be enough to fight the magic that seeks to break them, or will another become the ruler of their lives?
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Dedication
* * *
For my readers,
You guys have tremendous patience.
Thank you so much.
* * *
Prologue
Morna’s Inn—Present Day
* * *
“So…what do ye think?” The question tumbled nervously from my lips. He’d taken his time reading our story. Each passing hour might as well have been a day as slowly as the minutes seemed to pass.
Spells, matchmaking, meddling—these were my talents, not writing—but my need to get our story down into a tangible form was so great that it had nearly driven me mad. My hands ached from the hours, days, and months spent working on my great project. Now that it was in front of my husband being read for the first time, I was sick with nerves.
“Did ye exaggerate for creative purposes?”
I knew without looking at the pages, without asking him, just what details in my story he questioned. I wouldn’t lie to him to spare his feelings—not after so many years together. Our secrets were ours to keep but there was no room for lies between us.
“No.”
“Hmm.” He nodded in unison with the small noise. He may have wished for me to say otherwise, but he expected the answer I gave him. “I never knew ye loved him. I thought…”
My husband shook his head as he reached for me. Both our hands were wrinkled and weathered from time, but the feel of his touch still quickened my pulse in a way little else could. Time was powerless in dampening my desire for him.
“I thought ye stayed there to wait for me to return to ye, not because ye were happy at his side. But ye were. No matter how glad ye were to have me back, it broke yer heart to leave him. I dinna see that then. I am sorry for it. I am sorry for anything that has ever caused ye pain, but by God, I am glad that ye chose me.”
“All hearts must be broken now and then.” I smiled and squeezed his hand. “And I was there waiting for ye. ’Tis only that I often wondered if my waiting would do any good. But ye have to know that there was never any choice for me to make. It was always ye.”
I wasn’t sure my words would ease the pain I knew he must feel after reading certain parts of my story, but every word I said to him was true.
“Morna, who is this story meant for? I know that ’tis not only for us.”
My husband knew me too well. Our story was meant especially for another—to lead her to the man worthy of holding her heart.
“There is a lass—the next to go back—that I intend to share my writing with. There are lessons she can learn from our story—lessons she will need before she makes a great journey of her own.”
“Hmm.”
My eyes were still turned toward our joined hands but I glanced up in response to his soft noise.
“What? Say whatever it is ye mean to. I canna stand it when ye beat around things so.”
“Ye keep saying that ’tis our story, but ’tis not yet t
hat. What ye have written here…’tis yer story.”
He was right. It was the story of how we came to be, of all the events that led up to our life together, but there are two sides to every story, and I truly only knew my own.
“Aye, but I doona know what ye wish me to do about it. The only way for me to know all that happened in yer own life during that time is for me to spell ye, and I promised ye long ago that I wouldna do that. Unless ye finally mean to tell me everything.”
Through our years together, he’d shared bits and pieces, but I never saw reason to press him on the subject. As long as we were together, I was fine with letting the past stay there. After all, I had plenty of my own secrets that I’d kept hidden until now.
“I willna tell ye a thing, but perhaps I shall try writing down my version just as ye have done. If ’tis rubbish when I finish, ye doona have to include it with what ye leave for the lass. Will ye let me try?”
Of course I would. Despite his modesty, he knew full well that whatever he wrote down wouldn’t be rubbish. My husband was a closeted creative—I had a chest full of love letters and poems to prove it.
“Aye. Can ye finish it within three weeks? The lass arrives then.”
He stood, still clinging to the pages he held in his hand and winked at me as he moved toward the stairs.
“I’ll have it finished in half that time. The words are surfacing even now.”
* * *
Conall Castle—Three Weeks Later
* * *
It was odd for me to be watched so closely in the place that had once been my childhood home. I stood nervously inside the familiar walls of my old bedchamber, twisting my head at every noise or possible footstep to make certain no other tourists or castle employees were headed in our direction.
“It sure looks good, Morna. You did a really good job of making the outside look like a bunch of the other old books here. Do you have another copy? I want to read it.”
A brief moment of terror filled me at the thought of Cooper opening the pages of my book and taking in the words inside. He understood far too much about everything already. The last thing he ever needed to read was every little—and sometimes scandalous—detail of my life.
“Cooper, if ye love me, ye will promise me to never, ever read what I’ve written. It is meant for someone else’s eyes, and those are not yer own. Do ye understand?”
While young Coop usually did the exact opposite of what he was told, I could see by the concerned look in his eyes that he cared enough about my plea to listen this time.
“Fine, but I know what that means. It means there’s the same stuff in this book as in the books that Mom used to read when we lived in New York. I bet you talk about kissing in there, huh?”
I could live with it if all Cooper thought was inside those pages was a little kissing. “Aye, Cooper. I’ll admit there is some mention of kissing within that wee book.”
“Yuck.” Cooper’s expression twisted into one of disgust, and he held the book away from him as if he worried the nearness of it might allow him to absorb the words. “You don’t need to say anything else. I promise to never read it. But can I ask you one more thing? Why did you want me to come?”
I laughed but didn’t argue the point with him. I had, in fact, not wanted him to come. If not for Cooper’s unexpected arrival at our home a week ago, I would’ve brought the book to the castle myself but, as was customary for Cooper, he’d been quite insistent on coming with me. Apparently, now that I’d given him a job to do, he felt needed enough to forget the previous conversation.
“I suppose I just thought that mischief is more fun in the company of others, and I know how good ye are at keeping a secret. I can trust ye to keep a secret, aye? Ye know how the others feel about my meddling. I doona wish to explain it all to them.”
If Cooper felt he had an important role to play in anything, he was sure to meet it head-on.
“Of course you can. Don’t you worry. How long do you think it will take for her to find it up here?”
I couldn’t be certain. I would no longer spell anyone to do exactly as I wished them to, but I would always point people in the direction I knew they needed to go.
“I hope not verra long at all. She’s here actually. In the castle at this verra moment.”
“Really?” Cooper’s voice rose several octaves in his excitement. “Can you show her to me on our way out? I promise I won’t say anything to her. Let’s just walk by her or something, okay?”
I was just as keen to see the woman in person myself. “Aye, fine. Now, hurry before someone finds us.” I paused and pointed in the direction of the small table next to a sitting chair in the corner of the room. “Ye see there? Lay it just there as quickly as ye can. Then we must be on our way. Magic works best if ye set it and then release it to do as it should.”
“Aye, aye, Morna. I am your humble servant, Pirate Cooper.”
“A pirate? Have ye moved on from dinosaurs then?”
Cooper’s voice, when he answered, sounded astonished and horrified.
“Move on from dinosaurs? Are you crazy? I don’t think I could ever do that. But a man has to have varied interests. It makes him well-rounded.”
I laughed at him and gently reached for his shoulder to steer him from the room.
“Right ye are, Cooper. Ye are a well-rounded young man, indeed.”
It was my every memory—my husband’s, as well—and I hoped that when the lass found it, she would treasure every word. Only time would tell.
* * *
“I think this one is my favorite, so far. There’s just a feeling to it. I don’t know what it is, really. Something magical about it, wouldn’t you say?”
Laurel turned and awaited Marcus’ response. She could tell by his glazed expression that her usually patient friend was losing his resolve to indulge her obsession with all things old.
“You’ve said that about every castle. Each one is more magical than the last, each new one is now your favorite. I’ll be honest, they are all starting to look the same to me—just one big blur of stones and crumbling junk.”
While many sites they’d visited over the last ten days had indeed been crumbling, Conall Castle in no way fit that description. Well-tended and magnificent, Laurel could all but see the castle’s history swirling around her—could almost feel the people who lived here before.
“That’s because they do keep getting more magical. I swear it. Especially this one. But you know, it may just feel that way because it seems like we are the only ones here. It’s lovely to have the whole castle to ourselves rather than bumping into other tourists around every corner.”
Marcus laughed and Laurel knew what he was going to say before he uttered a word. He’d complained about it for the entirety of the drive.
“It doesn’t surprise me that we are the only ones here. I know lots of the places we’ve visited have been isolated, but this is quite literally in the middle of nowhere. If our car broke down on the way back tonight, there would be nowhere for us to stay.”
Laurel found herself hoping, however wrong, that the car would break down just before dusk. She couldn’t think of anything more enjoyable than being stranded amid such beauty.
“I don’t think I would care too much if we got stuck out here. Surely a castle as old as this wouldn’t be too hard to slip into after everyone leaves for the night. To sleep in a place like this would be pure heaven.”
Marcus couldn’t sound less enthused. “It probably has ghosts.”
“Oh, I hope so. All of the best ones do.”
Marcus’ hand on her forearm drew her attention away from the tall window she stood gazing out of. “Hey, look. We’re not alone, after all. Still, I agree with you that it’s nice being around fewer people.”
Sure enough, as Laurel turned she could see two people approaching—an older woman accompanied by a young boy who held himself very proudly as he walked.
“Let’s head down toward the other end, Marcus
, so that they have this area of the castle to themselves.”
The woman and boy said nothing to either of them as they passed, but Laurel found herself struck by the intensity of the unabashed stare she received from both of them. She gave them a friendly smile in return, and the young boy raised his left hand and waved in greeting before they went on their way.
“Did you see the way they both stared at me? Has my blouse popped open or something?”
Laurel looked self-consciously down at herself as she tried to make sense of their wide, questioning eyes.
“No. Everything is covered as far as I can tell. Maybe they recognized you.”
Laurel laughed and continued to move down the long hallway toward the last room at its end.
“Did you see how small that child was? There is no way he knows who I am. If his parents let him read one of my books at his age, then God help him. No, it definitely wasn’t that. Maybe they were staring at you, and I just mistook the direction of the boy’s gaze.”
“Because I’m black? Come on, Laurel. Surely you think better of them than that.”
Laurel couldn’t tell if he was joking, but it wouldn’t surprise her if he wasn’t. Marcus had so many wonderful qualities. While his humility was to be admired, it drove her crazy just how incapable he seemed of recognizing his own attractiveness.
“No, Marcus. I most definitely didn’t think they were staring at you because you are black. Perhaps they were staring at you because the only other human I’ve seen with your shape is the guy who plays Captain America.”
Marcus huffed and stepped into the room to their right.