Castles in the Air

Castles in the Air by Evelyn Trimborn

Castles in the Air
Evelyn Trimborn

Beautiful but poverty-stricken Irish aristocrat Alanna Lacy is facing foreclosure on her magnificent home Castle Lacy. Powerful and charismatic property developer Bran Ryan offers her a way out of her desperate financial situation: marry him!

Faced with her father’s disapproval, Bran’s spiteful ex-fiancee, and their own insecurities about love and relationships, can they save Castle Lacy from destruction and build a future together, or will all their dreams become nothing more than fantasy castles in the air?


Castles in the Air
Evelyn Trimborn
ISBN: 978-1-58345-026-0
Word Count: 75,000
Order Now: $3.99


CHAPTER ONE

 

Wintry November sunlight flooded the gray-blue Irish sky. Noticing a taxi pulling up to the marble stairs at the front of the Castle, Alanna Lacy peered out of the elegant bay window.

“Oh dear, visitors,” she sighed aloud.

Alanna felt rather weary, and wondered if she could get her maid Alice to lead this conducted tour. But something about the appearance of the tall, raven-haired man dressed in a thick dark shearling jacket over an expensively elegant black business suit intrigued her.

Alanna removed her apron and tidied her gown and hair briefly before going to meet the new arrival in the foyer.

Much to her surprise, she saw he was carrying two suitcases. She indicated for him to set them down beside her desk so that they would be safely out of the way.

“And where is Mr. Lacy, Mr. Marcus Lacy?” the man inquired briskly in a strong American accent. “I need to speak to him right away.”

Alanna went white with shock and fear. She stalled for time as she stammered, “H-he isn’t here at the moment. I handle all the Castle business. May I ask what you wish to see him about?”

“I’m not in the habit of discussing my business affairs with servants and underlings,” the man declared in a deep voice as he shrugged out of his shearling coat.

Alanna fumed at his curt dismissal. “I’m Alanna Lacy, owner of this castle, and Marcus’ wife. I am not a servant.”

The stranger looked her over again with renewed interest, but also with bemusement in his deep blue eyes, which seemed to assess her from head to toe with one all-encompassing glance.

Finally he said, “You’ll forgive me, Ma’am, but I believe it was an honest mistake. I thought your dress was a sort of uniform for working around Castle Lacy, to give the place an authentic feel. I didn’t mean to insult you.”

Alanna looked up into the deep blue depths of his eyes as he moved closer to her to shake her hand. She said with a haughty lift of her chin, “It’s not a uniform, these are my clothes. You’ll find us very traditional and set in our ways around here. And the Victorians did have a point. These skirts and petticoats are heavy, but very warm, especially with our Irish winters.”

“Well, enough of the idle chatter about the weather, Mrs. Lacy. I need to speak to your husband regarding a business matter.”

She bristled even more at his abrupt manner. “Forgive me, but I don’t even know your name. Besides, I suspect that if my husband did have any business arrangements with you, it must have been quite some time ago, for he certainly hasn’t mentioned anything like that to me recently, and as I’ve said, I’m the owner of this castle,” Alanna said smoothly.

She led the way into the drawing room where there was a fire burning briskly in the grate, her mind whirring in panic. It must have been ages ago, for Marcus had been dead for over two years. Why was this man here? And now, of all times?

She decided to deal with this unexpected turn of events very cautiously indeed, and tried to assess the stranger by inviting him to stay to tea.

He accepted gratefully, and followed her into the drawing room.

“I’m sorry, I’m behaving rather impetuously, I know. Let me start again by introducing myself. I’m Bran Ryan, of the Ryan Corporation.”

He offered his hand, which she took tentatively. She almost yanked hers away again as the crackling power of the huge man in front of her seemed to shoot right up her arm, peaking her breasts and setting sparks running up and down her spine.

He stared at her for a moment as he clung onto her hand, then dropped it abruptly and cleared his throat. He tugged at his starched collar for a moment, squared his shoulders, and visibly tried to regain his composure as he stood staring down at her.

“As I was saying, er,” he stammered for a moment, “I own the Ryan Corporation in New York. I know I really should have telephoned, either from New York, or at least from Shannon Airport, but I had business over here, on the Continent actually, and I really wanted to come see Castle Lacy for myself first, before saying anything to you or your husband.”

“Saying anything?” she echoed blankly.

“Well, one look up the long drive told me it was like a fairy tale come true. If you don’t mind putting up with me for a couple of days, Mrs. Lacy, I think we can come to some sort of business arrangement.”

“And just what sort of business are you in?” Alanna asked him politely.

“Tourism, the same as yourself, only on a much larger scale. We have safari parks, resorts, amusement parks, all sorts of sites where people go to be entertained. Your husband approached us to see if we would be willing to develop Castle Lacy.”

Her heart lurched in her chest. This could be the answer to all her prayers, or her worst nightmare. “Develop it in what way, exactly?” she dared to ask, just managing to keep her tone even.

“I’m not quite sure yet,” he admitted, looking around him admiringly. “You’ve got a vast and historically important house here, but also a huge amount of land. Maybe a safari park, like Longleat in England. There would even be enough land left over for a small amusement park as well. I have all the figures here in my briefcase. But I need to take a look at the place for myself in person before I come to any definite conclusions,” Bran said in a very business-like manner which told her this was a man accustomed to always getting exactly what he wanted.

“I’ve seen the deed to the estate, the extent of the property, but I would need to see the landscape for myself first before committing to such a huge project.”

Alanna’s feelings swirled inside of her, so that she could hardly think clearly. This man was here to buy Castle Lacy. To set her free of all the problems she had had ever since the family fortune had dwindled, and Marcus had died.

She didn’t like the sound of the safari park one bit, but she couldn’t afford to chase him away just yet. Not without allowing him to consider its possibilities, and maybe make an offer.

But Alanna didn’t want to appear to be too enthusiastic or eager either, in case he took advantage of her desperate position, which was why she also decided for the present not to tell him that Marcus was actually dead.

“Well, Mr. Ryan, I must say that you’ve come a long way, and at a great deal of expense to see us. But I’m afraid my husband is very busy running the estate at the moment, and as I said, he leaves all the business decisions to me.

“May I just say though, that he never mentioned you to me, but a Mr. Cheevers in New York, I believe, with whom he had gone to school. Do you represent this Mr. Cheevers?”

“In a manner of speaking, yes. I bought his smaller company from him about three months ago. I found the correspondence between Cheevers and your husband in the files. Admittedly the letter was dated from some time back. You may have changed your minds since, or had other offers, but you’ll forgive me if I observe that it must be quite a place to manage and keep up, especially for a girl as young as yourself.” He smiled then, rendering himself even more devastatingly handsome to look at.

Alanna wondered if he thought flattery would help him, for she was twenty-five, and felt anything but young. Indeed, she felt washed out and plain in her old-fashioned black homemade dress, and often longed to wear something more fashionable and cheerful. But her father had insisted she remain in mourning for Marcus, as though he had been some saint. Or as if he had been the one and only love of her life and she would never marry again.

As the maid brought the tea things in, Alanna heard herself say, “Alice, can you prepare the blue room for Mr. Ryan? He’ll be staying with us for a few days.”

She knew she was letting herself in for all sorts of problems, not least financially, for they were always so poor that scrimping and saving was a full-time job. But the temptation of selling the house, of escaping from this mausoleum, filled her with renewed hope.

Alanna became quite animated over tea, and more than once she and Bran laughed together like old friends as they chatted about Bran’s journey from New York. He told her all about the Big Apple, and she described the countryside around her home enthusiastically.

“We have a number of stately homes in the area, and a great deal of woodland. It’s excellent country for riding, farming, and rearing sheep and cattle.”

“I imagine it must be, but I detect a hint of bias in your voice, Mrs. Lacy. Were you born around here, or did you marry into the area, so to speak?”

She blushed under the intense scrutiny of his dark blue eyes. “I was born here. Apart from studying in London for a time, I’ve lived here all my life.”

“My ancestors are from Ireland, as you can no doubt guess from the name. I’ve lived in New York all my life. But now that I’m getting older and wiser, I find myself longing for a change of pace,” he said candidly.

Then he looked away from her to stare out of the window moodily, almost as though he feared he had given away something too personal.

Seeing his hard, wary look, Alanna simply sipped her tea in silence, and waited for him to finish his cake and cheese sandwiches. She noted that he had stopped eating so heartily as he had been a moment before. No doubt a powerful businessman like him must have many worries, she reflected, curious about his life despite her fears.

It was not simply her concern over him discovering the truth about Marcus being dead. She wondered why she was continuing to maintain the pretence of her husband still being alive.

In the end, she had to admit that Bran Ryan frightened her. He seemed to exude a raw masculine power which filled the whole room, almost suffocating her. He was so tall, broad, well-dressed, sophisticated, so, so, physical… The one touch of his hand had been seismic in its impact on her whole body. Her only consolation was that he seemed to have felt something unusual too.

“Whenever you’re finished, Mrs. Lacy, I should like a tour of the house.”

Bran’s voice broke into her reverie, and she stared at him absent-mindedly for a moment.

“Oh, yes of course, the house. If you’re ready?”

Bran nodded and rose from the sofa.

She hurried from the room before his nearness grew too overwhelming. Show him what he wants, settle on a price, then get away from him as fast as you can, she counseled herself inwardly as she led him to the grand staircase. He’s far too dangerous, handsome…


Castles in the Air
Evelyn Trimborn
ISBN: 978-1-58345-026-0
Word Count: 75,000
Order Now: $3.99


 

Reviews:

A brilliantly moving romance. The couple are obviously made for each other, but doubts about themselves and their motives for being together keep them apart until it’s almost too late for them to find happiness. Ms. Trimborn certainly has a knack for character; very strong and dramatic, without being too over the top. I loved Ms. Trimborn’s elegant style, and will certainly be reading more of her books in the future. – Annabelle Stevens



Castles in the Air
Evelyn Trimborn
ISBN: 978-1-58345-026-0
Word Count: 75,000
Order Now: $3.99



 

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Product Review: Chef Jays Double chocolate decadence flavor protein brownie

Product Review: Chef Jays Double chocolate decadence flavor

Chef Jays  Double chocolate decadence flavor protein brownie
Tri-o-plex 18 gram of protein brownie

I have to say, the product really tastes great, but  the package labelling is misleading. Yes, it does have 18 grams of protein, but the first ingredient is sugar. It also does not specify the protein source.
The whole brownie weighs in at a whopping  350 calories with 38 grams of sugar. Could it not be sweetened with honey to keep it moist,  and a bit mor protein content to sugar ratio?
Plus, what exactly is in the “chocolate compound coating”? Sounds like something you use to plug a hole in your wall.
I have to say, it is an awesome product, not bad at the price too, considering what you would have to pay for a bakery brownie. So it is great for those who don’t mind the calories and want a good yummy brownie with far more protein than you would ever get otherwise. But for those of us who are carb sensitive, well, we are a bit out of luck!.
And I made the mistake and ate the whole thing because I looked at the legt hand side of the label, which has the nutritional content for HALF the package.
Really, do you honestly expect any self-respecting chocoholic brownie eater to have the will power to eat only HALF of it? Impossible.

3 stars out of 5 for a dieter
5 out of 5 for a chocoholic
Supplies-you can get them at Vitamin Shoppe, or online at www.chefjays.com

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Yoga to trust your intuition

From Yogi Bhajan, Master of Kundalini Yoga
Sit cross-legged on the floor with a straight back, or on a chair with spine straight and feet flat.

Rest your left hand in your lap with the palm up, or in gian mudra, palm up, index finger- and thumb-tips slightly touching.
Raise the right index finger to about shoulder height and having it pointing upwards. Hold it comfortably in this position by bending your arm at the elbow, so the elbow is about level with your waist.
While the index finger is pointing upwards, make a relaxed fist with the rest of the remaining fingers. Breathe deeply for 1 to 3 minutes.
To conclude, stretch your right arm straight up in the air high as you exhale slowly and completely.
Then try to feel more in tune with your sixth sense.

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Free Preview: The Wizard Woman

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The Wizard Woman
Shanna Murchison
Ireland, 1169

 

The great Celtic myth of the Wheel of Fate is played out against the first Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169. Dairinn is chosen by the gods to be the wife of Senan, but first she must bargain with death to save him from the dire fate that awaits him as a result of his rebellion against the druid order.

Senan has always hated his ‘gift’ of magical power, and chosen the path of the warrior. With Ireland on the brink of invasion by the English, only his taking Dairinn as his consort and teaching her the ways of the druids can stem the tide of violence.

Through Senan’s love, Dairinn discovers her own innate powers, and the truth behind her family history. As she grows in power, she begins to suspect the awful truth about the sacrifice Senan intends to make to save his country. The passionate connection between them can never be severed, not even in death.

But Dairinn has no intention of sacrificing the love she has waited for all her life. Dairinn wages a rebellion of her own against her lover and the druid ways to save Senan and her new-found clan from extinction. She must bargain with the Morrigan, the goddess of death, if she is ever to achieve happiness with the man she loves. But how high a price will she have to pay for Senan’s life?

The Wizard Woman
Shanna Murchison
ISBN-13: 9781583450185
Fantasy, Paranormal Romance
Setting: Ireland, 1169
Word Count=118,000 words
Rating: Quite sensual

CHAPTER ONE

Southern Ireland, late July 1169

The splendid hall was filled almost to overflowing. One stranger more or less would not be noticed. The hooded figure materialized by a pillar in the far corner of the room, opposite the entrance, and sat down. He observed every female in the room with a keen eye as though searching for someone.

The main jollity in the room was focused around a tall, stunning young woman. The newcomer stared hard, watching everyone in the small family group, trying to learn more about them all.

“Congratulations to my cousin Dairinn upon this joyous occasion!” Fergus toasted in front of the assembled guests.

Beannacht libh, a thaisce. Blessings upon you both, treasure,” her cousin Conn declared.

“May you be as happy in your marriage as your uncle and I, may God rest his soul, and may you live to have a dozen sons,” her aunt Mebh saluted in turn.

“This betrothal will signal even greater peace and prosperity here in Leinster. You’ve made an old man very happy, mo chroi,” her father said, beaming as he called her by his special pet name, ‘my heart.’

The stranger never took his eyes off the auburn-haired beauty they had called Dairinn. Ye gods, she was the one? They could be truly generous after all.

He watched, unobserved behind his pillar, as the lovely young girl mingled with the multitude of noble guests assembled in the great hall at Rathkeel. She graciously served them with wine and a variety of delicacies as she welcomed everyone to her betrothal feast according to tradition.

She was dressed in the finest gown the shadowy stranger had ever seen, a most breathtaking woman to behold. The dress was a rich amber velvet embroidered with elaborate gold and russet animal patterns at the neckline, wrists, and hem. The hue of the gown set off perfectly her unbound auburn hair, the color of autumn leaves, which flowed down her back to well below her waist in a mass of thick curls, and emphasized her limpid sable brown eyes. The top opening enhanced her swan-like neck, delicate shoulders, and pale flawless skin. The rich fabric molded to her shapely bosom before falling in graceful folds over her small but rounded hips, the fabric cascading down to the floor, where it swept the rushes with its long train. The lavish gold girdle which she wore as her only ornament accentuated her willowy figure, completing the elegant ensemble.

The tall dark man knew that Dairinn would have been the center of the room’s attention even had the festivities not been in her honor. She was almost statuesque with her poise and elegance, a rare jewel in this predominantly male setting. She shimmered in the torchlight, radiant in her happiness and contentment with her family at her side.

As she passed nearer to him to fill another cup, he could detect the fragrance which swirled about her, an alluring combination of musk, and the floral and woodsy scents of the glorious Irish landscape with which she communed daily.

She was nothing if not tempting. And she was to be his! Senan could hardly believe his good fortune.

Not a man in the room could take his eyes off Dairinn. She was like a lodestone to which all men were drawn. But it was not simply because of her noble birth, the stranger concluded. Though she came from one of the most powerful clans in the southeast of Ireland, there was a certain warmth and lack of aristocratic reserve about her which all men found inviting.

He could hear all their thoughts as clearly as if they had spoken them aloud. They came to him in a wild whirl. He wished he could hear her mind more clearly, to be sure she was indeed the right one. But with so many people in the room, it was hard to block all of their thoughts out and focus.

As he peeped out from behind the pillar, the shadowy figure could sense a lack of mirth in certain quarters. On the part of Dairinn’s family, many of the men envied the tall, haughty-looking Norman wearing the betrothed’s garland of flowers. As they ate heartily of the many savory dishes which were placed before them by a bevy of servants, all praised her housewifely skills. Dairinn’s knowledge of housekeeping, cooking, and herbal medicines was proclaimed second to none. Here was a wife who would make her husband proud, so long as the husband was deserving of her. But though many of the O’Ciardha sept had doubts about the bridegroom’s worthiness, they kept it to themselves for the sake of peace.

The enigmatic stranger watched as the great warriors from her own clan patted her fondly on the shoulder as she moved up and down the rows of tables. He listened to their thought, memories, recollections of the woman he did not yet know, but would have to become acquainted with soon if the prophecies were to be fulfilled.

He learnt that Dairinn had been a comrade and friend to them always, through good times and bad, ever since she had been old enough to sit astride a horse. Some of the men even made so bold as to plant a smacking kiss on her lips or cheeks, earning scowls of disapproval from Hugo du Balleroi, Dairinn’s intended.

The stranger could hear the tall, thin Norman’s thoughts. He was perhaps the only man in the room who was unimpressed with Dairinn, more fool him.

Really, these Irish were so uncivilized, Hugo reflected to himself haughtily as he drank what he considered to be the dreadfully inferior wine, and observed his fiancée mingling with her family and their allies and foster-sons and daughters.

Who ever heard of a noblewoman waiting on her underlings hand and foot? Or a woman who strutted around in breeches hunting day and night with her male cousins, who wore kilts, showing their bare legs like savages?

He would certainly put paid to that sort of unseemly behavior, and other less savory Irish pastimes, such as hurling and peile, once they were safely wed. Even if he had to lock her up in the compound, he thought, a moue of distaste twisting his arrogant, tight-lipped mouth.

“She’s beautiful and rich, but really, they’re only barbarians,” he remarked to his companion Francis de Beaumaine.

His companion was black-haired, swarthy, with the most hideous battle-scar running down one side of his face, cruelly marring his otherwise perfect features.

De Beaumaine laughed, wiped the grease off his mouth onto his sleeve, and then thumped a servant girl soundly on the rump, sending her flying. He helped himself to a huge leg of lamb, and then agreed with a huge belch.

“Aye, my lord, they are indeed horrible, apart from the comely wench you’ll have to warm your bed at night. As for the rest, I can’t wait for the chance to wipe them from the face of the earth. I saw them playing peile this morning, and it was just as you described. Imagine kicking about the severed heads of your enemies up and down a field for sport. These people are pagans. You should send a letter to the Pope. You have an uncle in Rome, do you not? I am sure he could help you get a blessing from His Holiness to engage in a crusade against these savages. I’m sure even the Moors and Turks are not as bad as these Celts.”

He belched again as he fingered the hilt of his dagger gleefully.

Hugo shook his head. “You’ll get your chance soon, Francis. But there’s more than one way of skinning a cat, as you well know. Why risk our small band of comrades when we can pay others to do the work for us?” He smirked, his thin lips stretching to an even thinner line.

Even Dairinn sensed something amiss at the feast. She cast a worried glance at Hugo from across the great hall. Not for the first time, she wondered why he perpetually wore the expression of a man who had drunk vinegar. Didn’t these Normans ever smile or laugh? They seemed to do nothing but eat, drink, quarrel and stare that she could see.

Hugo, to give him his due, had behaved towards her politely enough, even if he did look somewhat askance at her as she trotted around her estate overseeing the daily routine at Rathkeel.

She could sense his wariness, and wondered if it was because he was had misgivings about her capacities or desirability as a wife. Though she was only eighteen, she knew she appeared even younger due to her large sable brown eyes, which she had inherited from her mother. Hugo might think she was not up to the task of running a well-ordered Irish or even Norman-type household.

On the other hand, she knew she had an acute intelligence and wit which had often caused her father Peadar to wish she had been born a boy. Her sharp tongue had scared away many a faint-hearted suitor before now. Indeed, at eighteen she might have been considered by some to have been a loser in the matrimonial stakes.

But despite her father’s wishful thinking, with her straight nose, high rosy cheekbones, and deep crimson lips, Senan noted, unable to keep his eyes off her, Dairinn was completely feminine. Alluringly so. Her habit of looking directly at the person to whom she was speaking with her winsome eyes only served to reinforce the impression that here was a true woman, soft, yielding, and absolutely incapable of guile.

Yet appearances could be deceptive, the tall dark stranger knew. Her iron will and strength emerged but seldom. Nevertheless, it was the match of any man’s.

As Dairinn made her way around the room, chatting amiably to all, welcoming each visitor to the feast, she reflected proudly that she had succeeded at last in doing what she had always dreamt of one day. She had found a husband who was strong and kind, who would be willing to let her stay in her family home Rathkeel forever. Surrounded by friends and family, and the stunning beauty of the Vale of Avoca, her happiness would be complete.

Ever since she had been of marriageable age she had rejected every suitor, of which there had been many, on the grounds that she couldn’t bear to be parted from her home. She had had no illusions as to the motives for these proposals. She was wealthy, well-born, and highly connected. But she had had no desire to be separated from all she loved at Rathkeel. Now she would never have to be, she reflected with a self-satisfied smile as she gazed around the feast hall, a warm, well-appointed pillared rectangular room with a hearth at each end.

She noted with pride that the room was well-lit with home-made torches, and every table illuminated with fine candles made from beeswax in clever holders fitted into the tables. In honor of their Norman guests and the great occasion, the ever-present hunting dogs were confined to their kennels outside, and the floor was now strewn with fresh sweet-smelling rushes. Dairinn had always tried to keep the pack outdoors, but the men were careless coming and going in their huge compound, and a good hunting dog was really a member of the family in their culture.

But Dairinn did enjoy a few luxuries, and made scented soaps, potpourri, and sachets herself in order to try to keep the often crowded, smoky stronghold fresh smelling. Servants brought around basins of warm water so that the guests could wash their hands between courses, and they also picked up the discarded bones and orts of food the celebrants frequently cast onto the floor whenever they were finished with each dish.

Again, as a concession to the more refined Norman tastes, her table boasted every delicacy imaginable, able to tempt even the most discerning palates even if her sept were usually content with unsauced dishes.

The long benches, tables, and high backed chairs on the dais were all finely carved and heavily ornamented, and had been made by her eldest brother Maolcholuim, a skilled carpenter as well as warrior, several years before. She noted with pride that several of the Norman lords sitting at the high table ran their hands over the patterns of leaves and flowers with obvious admiration.

She was right to feel pleased with herself, her aunt acknowledged, watching her graceful niece move about the room. Dairinn had done well with her home in recent years, ever since she had grown old enough to take her mother’s place in the O’Ciardha household. Her mother had died over ten years before, of a strange wasting disease. For a time Rathkeel had fallen to wrack and ruin, as her father, completely grief-stricken, had lost all interest in worldly affairs.

But Dairinn and her two elder brothers had been made of sterner stuff, Aunt Mebh recalled fondly. The stranger behind the pillar listened to her thoughts intently, trying to discover exactly who Dairinn Ni Ciardha was.

It wasn’t long before they had put their young heads together and developed plans for restoring their family’s fortunes. Maolcholuim and Suibhne had banded together with their clever sister, who had helped organize the food, weapons and stores, the agricultural activity on the estate, and even the hunting and fishing.

As she had grown older, Dairinn had even participated in the clan’s cattle raids and battles. Her father Peadar had always been overly-indulgent with the only daughter he had ever had in his house full of sons, five strong boys who had been the pride of his heart. Seeing her iron-willed determination, in the end he had allowed her to drill, train, and campaign alongside her brothers, and the six of them, along with their three closest cousins, had formed the backbone of the O’Ciardhas.

The stranger listened to Aunt Mebh’s reflections on her stunning niece, and nodded, pleased. He had no doubts now. Dairinn Ni Ciardha had to be the one who had been foretold.

Aunt Mebh watched her brother as he led toast after toast to Dairinn’s happiness. Peadar’s fondness for his only daughter had grown even more obvious over the years as one by one, his sons had all died of accident or illness.

Mebh reflected with a sigh that Dairinn was now the only child left to her brother since the death of his eldest son Maolcholuim in a riding accident the year before.

Peadar had, however, recently adopted Fergus, Conn, and Bearach, the youngest of the three, after the death of his sister Mebh’s husband Rian. But despite these new additions to the household, Peadar had given the beautiful Dairinn pride of place as chatelaine of his castle, even above Mebh herself.

He had also allowed her to decline the many marriage proposals she had received in order to allow her to cling to her childhood, her freedom, a little while longer.

Mebh didn’t resent the younger woman’s supremacy. She only envied her the freedom to order her own life as she saw fit. Too often the Fates decreed a different path from the one an individual wished to choose, as Mebh herself had discovered many years ago.

Perhaps the Fates were controlling her destiny again now, Mebh wondered uneasily. The O’Ciardhas had noted in recent months with increasing alarm that the Norman invaders who had arrived in Ireland that spring were becoming more and more greedy for prime farmland throughout Leinster, and more and more ambitious for power within the centuries-old Irish political system.

Because of Peadar’s unease, and some slight murmurings of discontent within his own clan, he had decided that the time had come for his sept to number themselves amongst the Normans’ allies, lest they run the risk of incurring their wrath.

The O’Ciardha had been a peaceful clan, strong, well-equipped, prepared to defend itself if the need arose, but never indulging in internecine warfare simply for the sake of the succession. Many young men from other clans had blinded, injured or killed one another for the chance to become tanaist of their sept one day, even to the point of maiming or murdering nearly everyone eligible the succession.

Not so with Dairinn’s family. As a lesser southerly branch of the powerful Ui Neill dynasty, they had a modicum of protection from their northern cousins, and thus many powerful allies. Peadar was known to be a fair and trustworthy man. Many were willing to entrust their sons to him for fosterage, an essential component in training the young men to be warriors and forging powerful alliances.

Peadar’s five sons had been strong warriors, but not given to unnecessary displays of power. They had defended their territory and cattle as required, and honored their alliances, but never had never gone on the offensive themselves.

Above all, Mebh acknowledged without a trace of rancor, the O’Ciardha clan had remained powerful because of its determination to remain united, a stance which Dairinn in particular, with her enormous strength of character and quick-witted resourcefulness, had persuaded all of the men in the family to agree to.

Maolcholuim, as Peadar’s eldest son, had had the greatest claim to become tanaist of the sept once Peadar eventually died. Dairinn and her younger brothers and cousins had all sworn loyalty to Maolcholuim as the acknowledged leader. Though he had been a bright young man and brilliant fighter, it had been his sister who had won them all around to the idea.

Over the years she had earned her clan’s loyalty through her intelligence and bravery, for in addition to being a superb homemaker and estate steward for her father, she could fight, hunt, and even kill as skilfully as any man in the great hall the whenever the need arose.

Senan knew all he needed to know from the connection he had forged with Aunt Mebh’s mind. He began to inch forward slowly. He had much to do, and little time. He could sense the political intrigue all around Dairinn, and now a palpable evil emanating from behind another pillar which was so terrifying that he felt his knees go weak.

It vanished as soon as he sensed it, leaving him quivering and breathless. Had it been real? Or just him sensing the Normans’ evil intentions to harm these innocent, unsuspecting people as soon as the supposed marriage alliance was complete?

Fergus, Mebh’s eldest son, nudged his mother gently in the side, disturbing her pensive mood.

“Conn’s doing it again!” he whispered.

The stranger saw Dairinn blush now as her cousin recounted her deeds of daring as a young woman when she had campaigned side by side with her clan against a mighty invasion force from Denmark.

She scolded, “Conn, please, leave some work for the bards to do tonight! Regaling the company with these old tales is only stealing their thunder, and putting everyone to sleep.”

“I tell you, she fought like a hundred men with the Vikings that day,” Conn continued to boast to all who would listen. “She killed more than Maolcholuim and Suibhne put together. Many’s the head we brought back, though the little miss here doesn’t like peile.”

Dairinn rolled her eyes heavenward, and remarked to Fergus, “It’s good thing the Normans can’t understand a word of what Conn’s saying. They already look disapprovingly enough at me without him giving them any further cause to do so.”

“There is nothing to disapprove.” Fergus grinned up at her, his green eyes glowing. “You’re lovely beyond measure. If they don’t admire you, a thaisce, they’re damned fools who don’t know what a real woman is!”

“They might have some serious doubts about my gender if Conn doesn’t stop boasting!”

“Impossible,” he growled, pulling her to him for an affectionate kiss.

She slapped Fergus playfully as he tickled her waist, and smiled down at her aunt, who sipped her wine and said nothing.

Dairinn wondered from her aunt’s expression if Mebh were disappointed that she and Fergus had never married. They were great friends, and she was terribly fond of him. But the one or two times they had ever flirted with the idea of engaging in a romance with one another, Dairinn had resisted. They were too similar. They could never be happy with one another in that way, she was sure.

Aunt Mebh looked up at her candidly then, her odd dark eyes shimmering in the candle light. “Fergus is right, child. There’s no point in marrying a man who won’t appreciate you.”

Fergus tickled her again, and with a last kiss went over to thump his brother on the back. “If you don’t stop rattling on, Conn, I shall get Tadhg the bard to make up a satire about your dull story-telling!”

The table went silent then, for here was a serious threat indeed. Tadhg was known to have the sharpest tongue in Leinster. One of his scurrilous verses was enough to make most people’s hair turn gray.

Dairinn winked at her handsome young cousin to show her gratitude for his support, and sat by her aunt, who looked downcast.

“Aunt Mebh, both you and I know the main thing any man appreciates is my dowry. And the powerful allies I bring with me as my marriage portion. I’m sorry if you’re disappointed with my choice, but it’s Father’s dearest wish that we make peace here in Leinster. To try to create a bridge between the Normans and the clans hereabouts.

“Perhaps there is someone out there in the wide world who might love me for myself alone. But I’m old enough to be married now. Just think how much this will help our sept. If the boys were all still alive, it would be different. We wouldn’t have to fear anyone, least of all the Normans, or try to consolidate our position in this region. But my brothers are gone now, God rest them, and so it’s just the four of us, with me as heir.”

Aunt Mebh nodded and sighed.

“All of you here at Rathkeel rely upon me to look after things. I know you do your best to help, Aunt, truly. But there are certain things you can’t help with. Besides, at your age you should be looking after yourself, not a whole passel of wild men.” She grinned, and ruffled Conn’s hair as he came over to give her a big bear hug and challenge her to an arm wrestle.

“Not now, Conn,” she said in exasperation. “The guests!”

“I forgot. Sorry,” Conn apologized. The huge bear of a man placed a smacking kiss on her lips, and shuffled away to search for some ale.

Dairinn turned back to Aunt Mebh. “I can see you’re unhappy about this match. He is no doubt a fortune-hunter, as all Normans are. But since Hugo is willing to live here at Rathkeel always, I consider that I’ve made the best bargain possible. Even if he doesn’t care for me truly, I shall be mistress here in my own home, and that is enough.”

Mebh looked at her speculatively for a moment. “Pray God your words come true, my dear. For once you are wed to Hugo du Balleroi, you’ll have no chance to change your mind.”

“This is my home. You’re my family. Rathkeel means everything to me. Why would I ever alter my inclination?” Dairinn laughed with the glib assurance of a young woman who seldom changed her mind about anything.

“You mentioned it just now, Dairinn. True love. For that you should be willing to surrender everything, even that which you hold most dear,” her aunt stated firmly, her dark eyes glittering.

Dairinn was about to laugh again at her aunt’s uncharacteristic sentimentality, when suddenly the hairs on the back of her neck prickled. As she stood up from the wooden bench, the stone floor seemed to give way beneath her feet.

The Wizard Woman
Shanna Murchison
ISBN-13: 9781583450185
Fantasy, Paranormal Romance
Setting: Ireland, 1169
Word Count=118,000 words
Rating: Quite sensual

 

Reviews:

Thoroughly fascinating, Four stars

Kathy Boswell, Romantic Times

This thoroughly fascinating Druid fantasy was rich in detail as it told the story of Dairinn and Senan. I found myself reading this book more slowly than I normally read in order to capture every detail. The story opens with Dairinn being betrothed to a Norman in order to try to cultivate peace between her Irish clan and the Normans who have invaded their lands. Little does she know that a stranger has arrived, a Druid, there to fulfill her destiny.

Senan, a Druid Wizard comes to claim Dairinn for his own, but he has no way of knowing how hard a road they both must travel in order to find true love and peace. Dairinn’s heritage is hidden from her for years. When she finds out who and what she is, can she handle it? Can she leave her family behind for a stranger? Can they fight the evil that threatens to overtake their land?

Shanna Murchison created two very strong characters in the hero and heroine. They held onto their love and their beliefs even through the worst adversities, making them a force to be reckoned with.

Five Stars: A stunning talent

Ed, Connecticut, software programmer

This writer has it all, from fantastic heroes and villains, to sparkling love scenes, to vivid action. Add to that the historical element all based on the history of the invasion of Ireland, and this well-researched historical fantasy novel shows that truth has to be stranger than fiction. It is one hell of a great book. Both men and women will LOVE it.

Five Stars: An incredible book

A moving saga of love and loss, and also redemption. The heroine is a memorable one as she is called upon by cosmic forces to rebalance the universe. She and her love must make hard choices in an Ireland being torn apart by foreign invasion. This is one book you will never forget.

Five Stars: Fantastic

A wonderful gripping fantasy romance set in Ireland, with wonderful heroes and villains. This will keep you on the edge of your seat. And just when you think you know what is going to happen, the author manages to surprise you! Terrific! Enjoy it!

The Wizard Woman
Shanna Murchison
ISBN-13: 9781583450185
Fantasy, Paranormal Romance
Setting: Ireland, 1169
Word Count=118,000 words
Rating: Quite sensual


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Book Review: Guardian of the Horizon by Elizabeth Peters

3.0 out of 5 stars

Another enjoyable installment but quite disappointing with regard to Ramses

Especially after having recently re-read Children of the Storm, the characters in this book all seem so flat compared with their usual panache.

Also, Ramses having meaningless sex with a new stranger while everyone else is in peril, including his beloved Nefret, is the height of bad taste, and not true to the character at all. Daria has no redeeming features, and the psychobabble to explain Nefret’s supposed frigidity is just too terrible for words.

Really, I want to see the whole family solve mysteries, have adventures, not read about their romantic troubles.

And making Sethos the master criminal virtually harmless is just to silly for words, and also foreshadows the friendships between the characters which chronologically comes way later in the series.

If she is going to go back in time, why not to the good old early days with Ramses as a baby/child!! Instead of making them all seem so puerile when they are in their 20s. I loved the early Amelia and Emerson. Ramses lacks the heroic stature of his father.
198 words

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Free Preview: The Missed Match

Here is another great free fiction read specially for Valentine’s Day!

The Missed Match

A Rakehell Regency Series Novel

Sorcha MacMurrough

The wrong man!

Beautiful heiress Charlotte Castlemaine is just about to elope with the man of her dreams when fate takes a hand in the form of handsome Thomas Eltham, the Duke of Ellesmere. Only a few minutes in his carriage nearly proves her undoing.

Compromised by this near-stranger in front of her father, she faces the prospect of certain ruin, until Thomas declares that they are engaged. Charlotte’s passionate response to the Duke is bad enough; the fact that Thomas persists in making wedding plans even though he knows she is in love with another seems a disaster of the worse magnitude.

Thomas has admired Charlotte from afar, but little thought he would ever have an opportunity to marry her until he overhears three of Charlotte’s supposed friends plotting her ruin. Determined that his long time enemy Herbert will never harm Charlotte if he can help it, Thomas warns her father that the young woman has fled, and races to the appointed meeting place before it’s too late.

Thomas’s single kiss in order to make their supposed elopement look genuine sparks off an inferno of passion, jealousy, suspicion and revenge which can only have one outcome: the former soldier must fight for the woman he loves and all he holds dear in a cataclysmic battle that can have only one winner.

The question is, will Charlotte prove Thomas’s enemy, or ally? Can she ever come to love this stranger with kisses like fire, or will she flee from the desire that blazes within her at his merest touch, scorching all reason and commonsense. Will Charlotte return to Herbert, or learn to trust the enigmatic Duke and help him in his quest for justice against the man who once tried to kill him and all his Rakehell comrades?

The Missed Match
A Rakehell Regency Series Novel
Sorcha MacMurrough
Setting: Regency England, 1813
Word Count=93,000
Rating: Sensual

Prologue

February 14, 1813

The tall dark-haired Duke of Ellesmere stepped into the anteroom, about to collect his cloak to depart. It had been a long evening, made even more tedious by the fact the only woman he longed to stand up with for the exquisite pleasure of even one single dance had been monopolized by every young buck in the region.

The Fates had most certainly conspired against him. But perhaps it was for the best, Thomas tried to tell himself. Perhaps the despondent ache in the region of his heart might somehow ease if he attempted to reason it away.

She might well be of age now, but that did not mean she was ready for marriage. Far better to let her spread her wings for a time, discover more of the world for herself, than lock her in a prison of his own choosing. A gilded cage was still a cage, after all.

He took up his black silk cloak and tossed it around his shoulders, before stepping out of the French doors into the orangery. It was a charming addition to the splendid old mansion, a man-made paradise in white painted wrought iron and crystal.

He could picture his lovely lady reclining on one of the low chaise longues with a book in her hand. It would no doubt be a Gothic novel. He watched her in his mind’s eye as she tittered over the truly terrifying bits in the safety of the broad daylight which poured through the glass panels.

But now all was cold and dark within. He wished to avoid any awkward goodbyes and expressions of gratitude for having come, or for his humble gift. He would slip out the side door into the garden and walk around the house to the front to meet his carriage. Enjoy the biting mid-February air for a few minutes before heading home. The bleak weather would be perfectly suited to his mood.

Just as St. Valentine’s Day was the perfect birth date for his lovely blue-eyed goddess, he thought with a sigh. As divine as any on Mount Olympus, and just as out of reach. He drew his cloak about him more tightly, longing for just one touch of her hand, some small gesture of affection and comfort. Then, telling himself to act his age, nearly thirty, not thirteen, he moved forward.

The Duke hadn’t gone more than three steps when he froze.

The orangery was already occupied. He heard the hurried whispers, and drew back at once. He had no wish to interrupt a romantic tete a tete. Especially since he was fairly certain the white-gowned figure partly obscured by a tall potted palm was the lady of the house herself.

To his surprise, he heard the swish of a second woman’s skirt.

Ah, discovery. And no doubt histrionics to follow.

But no. There was only more whispering, the third person’s low-timbred voice indicating this was no gaggle of silly schoolgirls gossiping about the ball.

He pressed his back to the wall and sidled closer, and strained his ears to hear.

“It’s all set. I urged her to press forward as subtly as possible. She’ll be at the bottom of the bridle path leading to Millcote at midnight.”

“Good work,” a man’s voice murmured.

“Are you sure you’ve done your part?”

“Never fear. All is ready. And mine will be easy enough. Tumble the wench, then see what we can squeeze out of her father. I’m counting on you to play your part to the letter.”

“Haven’t we done so already? The silly bitch doesn’t suspect a thing,” the second woman said with a gloating note of triumph which turned Thomas’ blood cold. Her voice was lighter, more soprano than mezzo.

“Good. See that she doesn’t,” came the growled reply.

“It hardly matters now. Once she’s in that coach, even if she has second thoughts, it will be too late,” the deeper-voiced woman pointed out. “Just write to us as soon as you’re at Gretna and the thing has been done safely. Then I shall come to you both to help manage her.”

The man snorted in derision. “I’m sure I’ll figure out a way to manage her once we’re wed. Never met any woman I couldn’t handle. It’s her pa I’m concerned about.”

“Never fear. Her friends will all see she wants for nothing. We just need to be patient for a short while, and then we can all have everything we’ve ever dreamed of.”

“Aye, and then some. But you’d better go now. There’s the cake to attend to, and after that she can slip away unnoticed.”

“Good luck. And enjoy your wedding day.”

The man let out a vulgar snigger. “It’s the night I care about.”

The first woman glided out of the orangery without noting the tall dark man’s presence. He heard her slippers slap along the tiles of the anteroom hurriedly, leaving the other two conspirators far behind.

There was no more conversation for the moment, just the sound of clothing being fumbled with, and the moist sounds of clinging lovers. Then he heard a sigh.

“I can’t wait until this is over,” the woman’s muffled soprano voice declared. “But I just hate the thought of you and her-“

“I’m doing it for us, love, you know that,” the man wheedled.

“But what you just said about the wedding night-“

“The marriage needs to be consummated for me to get her family right where I need them. Otherwise the silly chit can go to blazes so far as I’m concerned.”

The Duke heard the sound of several ever more passionate kisses, and at last the rasp of their labored breaths as they broke away.

“We’ll be together again soon, I promise. A few days at most, once we’re sure of the money,” the all too familiar voice asserted. “Now off you go, lass. Fill the giddy Miss Castlemaine’s ears with endless paeans of praise for me, and hold forth at length about all the joys of marriage that await her as soon as she’s wed.”

“I’m certainly an expert on that, aren’t I,” the woman practically purred.

“You most certainly are. Once the mad dash to Gretna is over with, I’ll look forward to an even wilder ride with you, my pet. Now off you go. I need to get ready.”

He gave her a lusty thwack on the buttocks which echoed around the room, and she giggled happily.

Thomas pressed back into the ornamental alcove formed by two Doric columns, his mind racing.

The girl was gone before he could even try to interfere, scurrying away to perform her nefarious part in this dreadful plot against an innocent, unsuspecting girl.

He let her go. He had a few keen suspicions as to who it might be. In some senses she didn’t really matter. She was a mere pawn.

No, it was the king he needed to deal with here in this most deadly game. For he knew beyond the shadow of a doubt that Herbert Paxton betrayed women with all the skill of Judas. And that his latest intended victim was in the most deadly peril imaginable.

His head swam.

Not again.

No, not again.

He hadn’t been able to do a damn thing for the last sweet, tender girl Paxton had abducted and ruined irrevocably.

He had to save Charlotte Castlemaine no matter what.

Paxton had been bloody clever. Charlotte too, come to that. She had been surrounded by so many beaux he had never even suspected that things could have progressed so far. Certainly not with Paxton of all people.

Hare and hounds, what was he to do?

His fury was such that he would quite happily have throttled his worst enemy with his bare hands and left him for dead in the garden. But he wasn’t prepared to leave his family to suffer the consequences of that brutal act. However vile the beast was, Paxton wasn’t worth swinging at the end of a rope for. Not when Thomas had so many people depending upon him. Two pairs of green eyes in particular haunted him every night.

Think, Thomas, think…

He searched his pockets quickly. No, he would be damned if he would give Paxton the special sapphire jewelry he had hoped to work up the courage to give to his heart’s desire on this most special of nights, her eighteenth birthday.

It was just as well he hadn’t dared. His secondary gift of a matching fan and reticule had elicited enough of a shocked response as it was. Not least because she could not fail to have noticed how they matched her gown so perfectly. But then he had taken such pains that it should do so, locating her modiste in Bath to be sure her ensemble would be perfect in every respect.

Damn. What was he to do? He could certainly buy the bastard off, but it was no permanent solution, of that he was sure. There was nothing to stop Paxton from pocketing the cash and coming right back to sniff around after Charlotte once more.

On the other hand, if Paxton had no chance to marry her because Thomas held his past over his head–

But no, that wouldn’t work either. It would only expose many of the people he loved to certain ruin.

And a thwarted young miss was a force to be reckoned with. The Lord only knew how they could bear to cling to such scoundrels and reprobates. But many kind-hearted women did, even when it meant certain ruin, he recalled with a shudder.

And Charlotte Castlemaine would never believe him anyway. Not even if he marched into the ballroom straight away and confronted her with everything he had just heard. She wouldn’t give him the least credence if she fancied herself so in love that she was willing to risk everything in the world to elope with Paxton. And she would hate him forever for exposing her lover and herself.

Thomas continued to go through his pockets while his enemy lit a cheroot and sat down on one of the stone benches to enjoy his leisurely smoke. He could just imagine the smug, satisfied smile on the blond man’s florid face.

Well, he was going to wipe that look off it in a moment, he determined. That poor child…

He had to stop him. Now, and forever. Even leaving aside his own regard for Charlotte, it was the decent thing to do. And there seemed only one way to do it, though his mind rebelled at the dreadful underhandedness of the whole scheme. But needs must when the Devil drove.

The only way to ever be sure of stopping Paxton from eloping with Charlotte Castlemaine and marrying her would be to ensure she was already married.

To marry Charlotte himself.

He wished now he had not been so aloof, had wooed her more overtly. But he had had just enough vanity to desire absolute certainty with regard to her being willing to marry him for himself, not his fortune or title. And for her to be sure that she was making a mature and considered choice.

But mature and considered be damned when there was love at stake. Love, and one’s very life.

He stepped out from behind the pillar before he even realized his feet had moved. “I heard you, you bastard. Heard every disgusting word.”

Paxton leapt up in alarm, flinging the cigar aside, poising for a fight.

“And what do you think you’re going to do about it, Eltham?” he demanded. “Kill me? You haven’t the guts.”

“You remember our days in the Army as well as I do. I think you’ll recall that I most certainly do. But I’ve never resorted to murder.”

“No, nor a duel neither?” he mocked.

“What purpose would be served? To expose my whole family to scandal and even further tragedy?”

“A real man–“

The raven-haired Duke flung his purse at him, almost striking him in the face with the well-stuffed leather drawstring bag.

“All guineas. And a banker’s draft you can draw five hundred upon. You’ll get the same amount every month for as long as you keep away from Miss Castlemaine and my family.”

“Ah yes, and how is the delightful Jane these days?”

Thomas gritted his teeth, determined not to be goaded. “Take it and get out, now.”

“Ah, but you see, the lady is waiting for me even as we speak-“

“And if you want to see the sun rise on the morrow you’ll leave now, and not look back.”

Paxton’s tone took on a plaintive note that made Thomas all the more furious. “Is this any way to treat an old friend?”

“It’s certainly the way to treat a bad one. Get the hell out.”

“All right,” he said, weighing the purse in his grasping hand. “I’ll take this now, but only because I’d rather have a bird in the hand than speculate on her father being talked around into granting his approval and her money.

“But mark my words, I’ll be back. And I’ll make you pay for poking your nose in where it doesn’t belong, Eltham. I’ll make all of you pay.”

“Threaten me all you like, but leave Miss Castlemaine out of it. She’s done nothing to you. And if it’s only money you’re after-“

“You know what I’m after.”

“You’re not getting them!” he barked.

“Oh, I will, Your Grace, believe me, I will,” Paxton threatened with a mocking laugh. “I’ll bide my time, watch and wait. I’ll have it all. You’ll see if I don’t.”

“You can never prove-“

“Oh, I think I can. I’ll be more than glad to give convincing testimony in front of the highest court in the land if you don’t pay up. What will you look like then? The brave noble, decent soul who would lock a woman he claims he loves in a madhouse rather than-“

Thomas’ fury began to claw its way upwards despite his Herculean efforts to keep it under control. “Get out, now.”

Paxton raised his hands in a gesture of surrender. “I’m going. But mark my words, you’ll pay. All of you. For as long as it suits me. Give Charlotte my best regards, and tell her I’ll see her soon.”

Thomas swung then, but Paxton had already vanished, fleeing through the garden doors and out into the black night.

Thomas pivoted around on his heel. He had bought him off cheaply, not even having to offer him the sapphires as a last resort to protect Charlotte’s virtue, but he also knew that Paxton was not to be trusted.

In fact, now that Herbert knew of his interest in the girl, things would be far worse for her than the poor girl could ever imagine. Worse for them all.

At that thought, Thomas knew he hadn’t a moment to lose. He dug out his pocket notebook and pencil, and scribbled a hasty missive, which he handed to the nearest footman as he charged through the anteroom and down the corridor.

“Give this to Mr. Castlemaine in ten minutes, do you understand?” he said urgently, pressing it into the young man’s hand along with a bright shiny guinea.

“Aye, sir, ten minutes. But, sir, you’re going the wrong way-“

Thomas knew he couldn’t risk being waylaid in the foyer of the mansion. Once more he returned to the orangery. He was out the garden door in a flash, and up into his waiting carriage moments later.

“Take us around to the foot of the bridle path that runs from here to Millcote.”

“Aye, sir, gladly. But-“

“Don’t ask. For God’s sake, just hurry. Before it’s too late.”

The Missed Match
A Rakehell Regency Series Novel
Sorcha MacMurrough
Setting: Regency England, 1813
Word Count=93,000
Rating: Sensual

The Rakehell Regency Series: What Jane Austen would have written about if only she’d dared….

 

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© HerStory Books http://www.herstorybooks.com All Rights Reserved. Excerpted with their permission.

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Yoga for elimination

From Yogi Bhajan.

Cleanse your apana with this asana.
Sit on your heels.
Bow to bring your forehead to the floor in front of your knees.
Place your hands by yor head and rest your elbows on the floor.
Bring your buttock up as high as you can.
Breath long and deep through the nose for 1 to 3 minutes, then relax.

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