Chapter One #2

impervious to her woes. Or, she decided, after observing him for a few moments, perhaps not so unaffected after all, for unless

she was mistaken, he’d spotted her.

She could feel his sharp stare.

Even sense a slight angling of his head as he swooped lower, coming ever closer, keen interest in each powerful wing beat.

Challenge and conquest in his deep, throaty cries as, suddenly, he dove straight at her, his great wings folded, his piercing

eyes fixed unerringly on hers.

Gelis screamed and ducked, shielding her head with her arms, but to no avail. Flying low and fast, the raven was already upon

her. His harsh cry rang in her ears as his wings opened to enfold her, their midnight span blotting the sky and stealing the

sun, plunging her into darkness.

“Mercy!” She fell to her knees, the swirling blackness so complete she feared she’d gone blind.

“Ach, dia!” she cried, the bird’s calls now a loud roaring in her ears. The icy wetness of the rock- strewn shore seeped into her skirts,

dampening them, the slippery-smooth stones shifting beneath her.

Nae, the whole world was shifting, tilting and spinning around her as the raven embraced her, holding tight, his silken, feathery

warmth a strange intimacy in the madness that had seized her.

Gelis shivered, her entire body trembling, her breath coming in quick, shallow gasps. Mother of mercy, the raven’s wings were

squeezing her, his fierce grip and the pressing darkness cutting off her air, making her dizzy.

But then his grasp loosened, his great wings releasing her so swiftly she nearly choked on the first icy gulp of air to rush

back into her lungs. She tried to push to her feet, but her legs shook too badly and her chill-numbed fingers slid helplessly

across the slick, seaweed-draped stones.

Worse, she still couldn’t see!

Impenetrable blackness surrounded her.

That, and the unnatural stillness she’d noted earlier in the bailey.

It crept over her now, icing her skin and raising gooseflesh, silencing everything but the thunder of her own blood in her

ears, the wild hammering of her heart.

Her well-loved hills were vanished, Loch Duich but a distant memory, the hard, wet coldness of its narrow shore barely discernible

against the all-consuming darkness. The raven was gone, too, though his breath-stealing magnificence still gripped her.

She hadn’t even seen him speed away.

Couldn’t see . . . anything.

Terror pounding through her, she bit her lip, biting down until the metallic taste of blood filled her mouth. Then, her legs

still too wobbly to sustain the effort, she tried to rise again.

“Please,” she begged, the nightmare of blindness a white-hot clamp around her heart. “I don’t want —”

She broke off, losing her balance as she lurched to her feet, her gaze latching on to a dim lightening of the shadows, a slim

band of shimmering silver opening ever so slowly to reveal the towering silhouette of a plaid-draped, sword-hung man, his

sleek, blue-black hair just brushing his shoulders, a golden, runic-carved torque about his neck. A powerfully built stranger

with a striking air of familiarity, for even without seeing him clearly, Gelis knew he was watching her with the same intensity

as the raven.

An unblinking, penetrating stare that went right through her, lancing all resistance.

Claiming her soul.

“You!” she gasped, her voice a hoarse rasp. Someone else’s, not hers. She pressed her hands to her breasts, staring back at

him, her eyes widening as she sank once more to the ground. “You are the raven.”

The bright silver edging him flared in affirmation, and he stepped closer, the gap in the darkness opening just enough to

show her his glory. And he was glorious, a man of mythic beauty, looking as if he could stride through any number of the legends of the Gael. Dark, pure

Celt, and irresistibly seductive, it almost hurt to gaze on him, so great was his effect on her. He was a Highland warrior

ripped straight from her dreams, and Gelis knew he’d be terrifying in the rage of battle and insatiable in the heat of his

passion.

She also knew he wanted her.

Or, better said, needed her.

And in ways that went far beyond the deep sensual burning she could sense rippling all through his powerful body. His eyes

made him vulnerable. Dark as the raven’s and just as compelling, they’d locked fast with hers, something inside them beseeching

her, imploring her to help him.

Letting her see the shadows blackening his soul.

Then, just as he drew so near that Gelis thrust out a shaking hand to touch him, he vanished, disappearing as if he’d never

been.

Leaving her alone on the surf-washed little strand, the high peaks of Kintail and the shining waters of Loch Duich the only

witnesses to all that had transpired.

“ Oh- dear-saints,” Gelis breathed, lowering herself onto a damp-chilled boulder. Scarce aware of what she was doing, she

dashed her tangled hair from her brow and turned her face into the stinging blast of the wind, letting its chill cool her

burning cheeks, the hot tears now spilling free.

Tears she wasn’t about to check, regardless of her proud name.

The blood-and-iron strength of her indomitable lineage. A heritage that apparently held much more than she’d ever suspected.

More than she or anyone in her family would ever have guessed.

Still trembling, she tipped back her head to stare up at the brilliance of the blue autumn sky. To be sure, the raven was

nowhere to be seen, and the day, nearing noontide now, stretched all around her as lovely as every other late October day

in the heart of Kintail.

But this day had turned into a day like no other.

And she now knew two things she hadn’t known upon rising.

Her heart full of wonder, she accepted the truth. She was a taibhsear like her mother, inheriting more than Linnet MacKenzie’s flame-colored tresses, but also her taibhsearachd.

The gift of second sight.

A talent that had slumbered until this startling morn, only to swoop down upon her with a vengeance, making itself known and

revealing the face of her beloved.

Her future husband and one true love.

There could be no doubt, she decided, getting slowly to her feet and shaking out her skirts, adjusting her cloak against the

still-racing wind.

“I was wrong,” she whispered, thinking of the scrying bowl as she turned back toward Eilean Creag and the postern gate. The

magic hadn’t disappeared.

It’d only gone silent.

Waiting to return in a most wondrous manner.

A totally unexpected manner, she owned, slipping back into the now-bustling bailey. She possessed her mother’s gift, and knowing

how accurate such magic was, she need only bide her time until her raven came to claim her.

Then true bliss would be hers.

Of that she was certain.

About the same time, but in one of Eilean Creag Castle’s uppermost tower chambers, Duncan MacKenzie, the redoubtable Black

Stag of Kintail, stood at an unshuttered window, hands fisted at his sides, the twitch at his left eye threatening to madden

him. Scowling as only he could, he clenched his jaw so tightly he wondered he didn’t crack his teeth.

He did feel the weight of his years. They bore down on him as ne’er before.

Their burden and his outrage.

His scowl deepened and he glared at the sparkling waters of Loch Duich, the fair hills of his cherished Kintail, and the eye-gouging

clarity of the cloudless autumn sky. The lofty cliffs and headlands on the far side of the loch earned his especial disfavor.

Too impassive was their stare, too uncaring, the soaring rock that should have been weeping.

He wouldn’t weep either. As one of the Highlands’ fiercest and most powerful chieftains, such a weakness fell beneath his

dignity.

But he was mightily grieved.

“Saints, Maria, and Joseph,” he swore, curling his fingers around his sword hilt, then releasing it as quickly. His trusty

brand wouldn’t help him in this pass. Truth be told, he dare not even consider the like. He did allow himself another glower

at the wild mountain territory he called his own, great and boundless hills that had the gall to appear at such peace, so

calm and untroubled.

He could scarce breathe for vexation.

Never in all his days had he felt so cornered, so well and truly trapped.

He blew out an angry breath and shoved a hand through his hair. That such a day should taunt him with its beauty only tossed

fat onto the fire. The afternoon ought to be hung with shadows, a chill wind gusting round the curve of the tower, rattling

shutters and bringing the stinging bite of rain. Or, better yet, the relentless pelting of icy-needled sleet.

Och, aye, such weather would suit him better.

Instead, the sun shone with a brightness that rivaled the finest summer day and fired his frustration to a nigh unbearable

pitch. Wheeling around, he ignored the rolled parchment lying so brazenly on a magnificently carved oaken table, the missive’s

broken wax seals as damning as the words inked within, and fixed his wrath on the one person who should have warned him.

“You!” he fumed, his tone peremptory despite his great respect for his lovely lady wife, a woman as desirable now as she had

been the day he first glimpsed her, but also the seventh daughter of a seventh daughter and, as such, blessed — or cursed

— with the second sight.

She should have seen this coming.

“Why did you say nothing of this?” he demanded, striding across the chamber and snatching up the dread parchment. He waved

the thing at her, his displeasure rolling off him to fill the tapestry-lined solar. “I willna believe you didna know. Not

something of this import.”

To his wife’s credit, she didn’t retreat in the face of his anger. As always, his beloved Linnet simply remained where she

stood, her hands clasped before her, her gaze steady and unwavering, her chin lifted with just the wee shiver of stubbornness

he secretly admired.

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