Table of Contents
Title
Copyright
Author Notes
Reviews
Map
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Epilogue
Excerpt
Acknowledgments
About the Author
About the Publisher
Additional Titles
INISH CLARE
By
Jennifer Rose McMahon
***
Copyright 2017 Jennifer Rose McMahon
Edited by Amanda Roberts.
Cover Design by Tina Moss. Map Design by Jake Peterson.
All stock photos licensed appropriately.
Published in the United States by City Owl Press.
www.cityowlpress.com
For information on subsidiary rights, please contact the publisher at [email protected]
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and not intended by the author.
Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior consent and permission of the publisher.
Don’t miss the Pirate Queen novels with book 3, INISH CLARE.
When your dreams become reality, the legends become truth.
Pursued by Ireland’s notorious pirate queen, Maeve O’Malley is on a quest to Ireland’s medieval past to save the future of her clan and break her ancient family curse. Learning to use her haunting visions to travel to medieval Ireland leads Maeve on the adventure of a lifetime, or centuries of lifetimes.
Torn between the legends of ancient Ireland and the truths of modern life, her loved ones pressure her to end the visions and leave history undisturbed. But her unexpected loyalty to a familiar medieval boy from the loathed rival clan complicates matters.
Time is running out as threats of clan battles clash with the burden to make things right when Maeve realizes the danger of becoming trapped in the past forever and is forced to make the boldest decision of her life.
BUY NOW!
Praise for the Works of Jennifer Rose McMahon
“McMahon’s excellent debut, BOHERMORE, makes a contemporary paranormal mystery feel cozy and romantic... The slowly unfurling romance doesn’t go in obvious directions, which adds to the story’s allure. Teen and adult readers alike will be clamoring for the sequel.”
- Publishers Weekly Starred Review
“INISH CLARE raises haunting visions of an ancient pirate queen. Fresh and atmospheric.”
- Publishers Weekly
“Engaging, beautifully written scenes, and idyllic descriptions of Ireland and lyrical dialogue keep the tale of the Pirate Queen moving at a quick pace. The characters are engaging and they draw a person in to this tale of adventure and intrigue...Adrenaline-fueled action and enough twists and turns to keep even the most astute readers on their toes, this is a captivating story with a heroine who is forcefully engaging.”
- L. Kane, InD'tale Magazine
“Jennifer’s novel captures the connection with the past which we treasure in Ireland. The Irish landscape, contemporary social life, the Irish language and romance are woven into this fantasy story. I am certainly looking forward to the sequel.”
- Sarah Kelly, O’Malley Clan Chieftain
To the O’Malley Clan
“Terra Marique Potens”
Powerful by Land and Sea
Chapter One
Return to Grace
Scrambling over shifting stones of the ancient rock wall, laid by hands of countless generations, I cursed the stinging Irish nettles as I vanished into my family cemetery. Every inch of the hallowed space was familiar, from the oldest tombstones with weathered medieval carvings to the “newer” centuries-old gravestones—Celtic crosses that were cracked, tilted, or fallen. The decrepit O’Malley boneyard was in the same state of time-crushed ruin as last winter when I’d almost lost my life there.
Cloaked by heavy spruce boughs laden with hanging ivy, the silent stillness of the graveyard was ethereal, isolated from the outside world. Mist stirred like thick smoke around the foundation of each tipped cross or limestone slab as I moved deeper into the solemn sanctuary. My curiosity drew me in farther as thoughts of my haunting visions swirled in my head.
Tracking my ghostly hunter was my primary focus, because I was growing weary of the torment of forever being stalked. I had new information now that made me stronger, smarter. I intended to end the curse before it ended me and any future I might have.
The raw scar on my chest burned back to life as I crept close enough to read the gravestone epitaphs. My hand jumped to the ancient ring hanging from my necklace and closed around it with a fist as I looked back for Paul.
Thoughts of my grandmother placing the relic around my neck sent chills through me. It had only been a few months since her passing, back in Boston. She’d died two months after my grandfather. Of a lonely broken heart, I was sure. My return to Ireland after their deaths was an easy choice for me. My family was gone. Ireland was where I felt most at home now. For many reasons—my roots especially. Rebuilding my life here made sense.
I released the heavy ring and it dropped back to its rightful spot, nestling into the scarred burn as a micro-pulsing of molten intensity returned. The rising discomfort, then pain, sharpened my senses, reminding me of the other ancient relic in my jacket. My hand moved to my pocket by instinct and pressed around the outline of the contents to be sure the leather parcel was still there.
“Come on,” I whispered like a sneaking child and waved for Paul to catch up. “What are you doing?” My eyebrows scrunched as I watched his paranoid gaze scan the perimeter of lumbering trees that dated to far before my grandparents ever left Ireland. I peeked back over my shoulder in the direction he was perusing, half expecting to see a spook.
“Wait, Maeve. Somethin’s different.” His brogue thickened and his head tilted as he froze, listening.
“No. It’s exactly the same.” My classic impatience poked at him. “Just like when we flew out of here last time. Look.” I pointed. “That’s the ivy that snagged my foot as we ran from her and the….” My eyes moved to the tomb mound and I fell silent. The danger of our last visit brewed in my muscles and turned my bones soft. Fear crept back in, once again, to curtail my plans.
The heat generated from my pounding heart turned me to rubber as I moved from confident explorer to skittish quarry.
“Aren’t we safe this time? I have her ring….” My words faded into the mist, losing any promise they may have held.
Facing my ancestor from five hundred years ago, the great pirate queen Gráinne Ní Mháille, shot fear through my soul. The medieval legends of Grace O’Malley told tales of piracy, battle, and revenge.
I’d always believed she was responsible somehow for my mother’s death, and for the centuries-old curse that had plagued generations of the O’Malley women. I needed to end it if I was goi
ng to have any semblance of a normal life and any hopes of a future for the women of my family. If any were left.
“Shh.” Paul’s finger went up to freeze time and he moved his palm across the air as if to detect any disturbance. “We’re not alone.”
My ears flinched, like a deer sensing its hunter.
“What?” My quivering feet carried me to him in a millisecond and I grabbed his arm, turning then to see his view. I watched and listened. “Do you think it’s her?”
The wind hadn’t whipped up yet. The blasts and the terror hadn’t come. All the wrath and vengeance of her soul, ready to attack. But nothing happened. How could she be near without the terrifying accompanying wind, violent bursts, and screams?
The screaming.
The blood.
My body shuddered at the memory of my visions.
Every muscle in my body tensed around my bones, turning me to a rigid statue where only my eyes could move.
She would come for the ring.
I was sure of it.
That was why I brought it back.
It was like it connected me to her, somehow, and I would use this to my advantage.
My hand wrapped around the ring on my necklace again, feeling its heat and vibrating anticipation. It was the ring from her true love, Hugh, given to her over five hundred years ago before he was murdered by the rival MacMahon Clan. Visions of the brutal slaying replayed in my mind as I recalled the vivid details of my horrific nightmare that played out the devastating historical event.
I swallowed hard and wondered if I was playing with fire. My impulsive nature always got the best of me and somehow landed me in situations like this—in a cemetery with the ring of the wrathful pirate queen. My second thoughts crashed in on me, making my knees tremble.
My grandmother had protected the ring for years, back home in Boston. It had been passed down and kept safe for generations, but now I’d brought it back. Back to Ireland’s legendary chieftain, the pirate queen. She’d been hunting me my entire life, in my strange visions—my awake dreams. All for this. I squeezed the heirloom, feeling its centuries of suffering.
I opened my hand and looked at the ring. The ornate Celtic designs swirled in my eyes and the heavy gemstone protruded among the mythical beasts and spirals, holding secrets of medieval times. This ring could be Grace’s direct connection to Hugh. Maybe it held the power to heal her eternal suffering and grief… to settle her tormented soul.
All I knew was that the power of the ring was strong enough to cause my grandfather’s mother to send her eldest son away to America to hide the ring and never come back. Thoughts of Joey leaving his Irish home to protect his family filled my heart with sadness.
I missed my grandfather and hoped my final hours with him back in Boston, telling him every detail of my original trip to his homeland, the discovery of Grace, and my hopes to end the curse, were enough to bring peace to his soul. A part of me knew I had come back to Ireland for him. My Irish roots ran deep, especially through my grandfather. Patrick Joseph O’Malley. My Joey.
I figured I could use the power of the ring to stop Grace from hunting and terrorizing me. And future generations of O’Malley women, like all those from the past who suffered the same visions and stalking. Many losing their lives to it in one way or another, including my own mother. I had to end it. Confronting Gráinne Ní Mháille and offering her ring back seemed to be my only option for a resolution.
I looked at Paul’s face and traced his stubbled jaw, chiseled with clenched focus, but his warm blue eyes softened with caution and concern. Guilt washed over me as I worried about putting him in harm’s way… again.
Grace attacked us here last winter, with clear intent to kill, and there was no certainty that she wouldn’t try again. But she had recognized him then, right before attempting to strike him with her sword. She looked straight into his soul, like she knew him, and dropped her sword in the ivy. She fell to her knees and buried her face in her hands.
The memory of her grieving form constricted my throat.
A glint of light flashed in my eyes and my head twitched in its direction. Paul’s chin jumped toward it at the same time.
His wide eyes turned to mine and I met them with equal hope.
The sword!
It visited my dreams again and again, glinting its vibrant light at me, luring me back to Ireland from its ivy-covered bed.
I squeezed Paul’s hand. “Oh my god! It’s her sword. Do you think it’s the sword?” My nerves bounced me in my shoes. “Come on.”
I pulled on him to follow me as my other hand held the ring at my chest. The scarred spot where it burned me months ago was throbbing to a point of warning and hysteria.
Paul’s hand tightened on mine.
“Don’t move. There’s someone here.” He stopped short.
Blood drained from my head, leaving me dizzy at the thought that he might be right. Though he was no longer my professor, thank god, I still knew enough to believe his every word.
Crack. Snap.
At the edge of the trees. Motion.
A dark figure lurked in the shadows of the gloom. It moved like fluid away from the far edge and into the maze of gravestones. My feet stepped backward along with Paul’s, though I didn’t take my eyes off the… person.
His tall frame, masculine in its size and stature, was covered in a dark brown cloak. The oversize hood draped over his bowed head, concealing any features. Only his hands remained exposed in a creepy, prayer-like position. He continued to move toward us, as if he were gliding across the ground.
“Let’s get out of here.” My whisper caught in my tight throat.
“Come on.” Paul turned with me and moved in a determined gait, heading toward the bright light of day radiating just outside the sallow shelter of the graveyard.
Following his steady pull, I turned back to the ghostly figure and let out a yelp as I saw his form moving toward us at a sprinter’s pace, hands extended forward, palms facing each other, beating up and down for stealth speed.
My head spun back toward the light of day.
“Run!” I screamed.
I pulled on Paul in a panic and before he had a full view of our attacker, his pace amped up to full sprint as he yelled, “Jazus! What the….”
He raced with me toward the ancient stonewall—the border between our ghostly world and the real one. I fell in sync with his strides as my ears filled with a blood-curdling growl from behind us.
It started out low and grew into a complex sound of a runaway freight train or an evil boar possessed by the devil himself. The terrifying sound shattered my mind as it pushed through my hair and coated my skin, proving he was nearly upon us.
We flew over the wall, slipping on damp moss and knocking loose a top stone that rolled past my feet, tripping me up. Paul gripped my elbow in a steel lock, steadying me as we ran for the car, stumbling on rocks and gravel.
I looked back over my shoulder, expecting to be grabbed any second by terror in human form, but the cloaked stranger was nowhere to be seen.
Paul fumbled for his keys as my eyes darted all around.
“Hurry up!” The shake in my voice worsened with every quake of my body.
The engine revved to life and Paul threw it in reverse and blasted us backward down the lane as I watched the graveyard move farther and farther away from us.
Regret brewed in my stomach as the desire to go back overtook me immediately.
“Wait. We didn’t get to….” My words of longing to go back for the sword were cut short as my eyes jumped to the tall figure standing rigid on the stonewall, watching us pull away. His hands interlaced again in a prayer position and his head tipped down, allowing the hood of the cloak to flop over it.
He remained motionless as we drove away.
***
“In here, in here.” I pointed to the parking lot near Warde’s Pub. My hands rubbed my knees until they were hot. “We can’t just go home after that. We need answers,”
I panted. “Let’s find Padraic.” I brushed my messy hair away from my face. “He knows a lot about my family… and Brigid.”
My defeat at the cemetery turned to determination in a heartbeat.
Paul turned to me with tight lips, then parked the car. “Fine. It’s worth a shot.”
Our stools in Warde’s Pub beckoned us back since our last visit months ago, and Padraic welcomed us as he wiped the counter and set our square napkins in place.
Though it was just a couple miles from the O’Malley graveyard, the safety of the pub made it feel like light years away.
“Ach, sure, was wonderin’ when I’d see ye again. Back for more, are ya?” Padraic snapped his towel at me.
I leaned forward to get a look down the length of the bar, hoping Donal might still be at the back of the pub, dwelling in the shadows. Stories of my distant cousin Brigid began with these men in Warde’s. Tales of a possessed girl with visions. Not unlike me, really, which made it even more disturbing.
Their tales said she was taken away from the O’Malley farm when she was eighteen and sent to the Magdalene laundries. My eyes closed to clear the haunting thoughts. I could have ended up just like her—committed, institutionalized in an asylum, and forgotten.
I looked at Padraic, still unsure how to feel about him. He had been the bearer of bad news about the laundries last time we were here, but shooting the messenger wasn’t going to help. “They was a cursed family, them O’Malleys,” he said last winter with little empathy or filter. “The women had all gone stark ravin’ mad.”
My mouth pressed into a frown remembering his crass words. I shook it off with a twitch of my shoulders. I knew different. I had the same visions as Brigid, of the pirate queen, and knew Gráinne Ní Mháille wouldn’t stop tracking the O’Malley women until she got what she wanted. The ring.
If I could just throw the ring at the vision of Grace O’Malley and have it all poof into oblivion, I would. I’d throw it and run. But there was more to it. I was certain. The unfortunate nagging in my gut told me the ring needed to be passed, directly and cautiously, at just the right moment, like a sacred ritual. My lip curled up in disgust and self-loathing, wishing I didn’t have to take it all so seriously, but I knew I was right.
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