HIGHLAND PROTECTOR
The MacCoinnich Time Travel
Series, Book Five
Paranormal Romance
November 19, 2013, First
Edition
Paperback & Ebook
From New York Times Bestselling Author Catherine Bybee comes
the long awaited next installment in her MacCoinnich Time Travel Series.
No ordinary hero can save Amber
from death…it will take a Highland Protector
Amber MacCoinnich’s survival
depends on her traveling to the twenty first century, or so her mother’s
premonition told her. Death taunts Amber and offers peace in her endless pain.
Without the mysterious savior her mother spoke of, Amber prepares for death
only to wake with a handsome, dark stranger in her bed.
Gavin Kincaid spends his life
shifting time in order to preserve and protect the MacCoinnich family and their
line even though he’s never met one living MacCoinnich. A haunting portrait of
a beautiful woman captures his attention and he embarks on a quest to put a
name to the picture. When a colleague vanishes, the time-stream forces Kincaid
to the twenty first century where he finds his mystifying woman close to death.
His Druid gift can save her, but at what price? And when they both find
themselves emotionally linked, the truth behind Kincaid’s heritage just might
kill them both.
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Excerpt:
1686, MacCoinnich Keep Scotland
Fighting with a sword ranked up
there with having sex without an orgasm. Holding the damn thing took too much
energy and the end-result was anticlimactic and messy. Kincaid’s free hand
itched to pull any one of his hidden weapons from the pockets of his modified
seventeenth century clothes and finish off his opponent. The man’s death was
inevitable. He had no earthly prayer of taking Kincaid. Even without the use of
Kincaid’s gift, the kilted Scot had two fatal flaws working against him. One,
he underestimated his opponent, never a good thing in battle. Two, Kincaid’s
Druid gift would prevent any fatal blow from reaching his skin. He was damn
near immortal.
Kincaid missed being skewered
by the Scot’s blade by lunging to his right and placing one foot on the edge of
the Keep’s massive stairs. Above him, other men fought, some with powers, a few
without. Preventing the ancient Keep from falling into any hands that didn’t
belong to descendants of the original owners, wasn’t going to happen. These
missions were planned and orchestrated with extreme caution and precision.
The Scot advanced again—sweat
falling from his brow with the effort of the fight.
“Kincaid!” He heard his name
from the floor above, but didn’t make the mistake of looking up.
“I’m busy.” He blocked his
opponent’s sword again, locked the man’s free arm, and attempted to pull it
behind his back.
Kincaid was rewarded by taking
an elbow in the ribs and having the wind knocked from his lungs.
“Finish him already. We need to
move on.”
Moving on was his queue that
their time was nearly up.
“I guess…” He shoved the Scot a
foot away and lifted his sword high. “That means we’re done here.”
“Your confidence will be your
downfall,” the Scot said.
Kincaid motioned the man
forward. …said the spider to the fly…
The Scot advanced with a surge
of strength and determination.
Kincaid held his ground, threw
up his Druid shield, and watched as shock filled the man’s gaze when his sword
bounced off the shield and opened him up for Kincaid’s final blow.
Killing never sat well with
him. But he was a warrior and killing was part of his soul. Damn shame that.
Kincaid heard his name called
again, and he took the familiar stairs two at a time to reach the others. From
the corner of his eye, his gaze met a painting on the wall, one he’d not seen
before.
His steps faltered as he
connected with the haunting gaze of the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen.
Didn’t matter that the painting was one dimensional, or that the woman was most
likely dead…even in this century. He did a quick inventory of the other images
on the walls and recognized only one. The same painting hung in that very space
on the wall, so many years in the future. But this one…the picture of the woman
with her long dark hair and pained focus as she attempted to smile, beckoned
him. This painting he’d never seen.
“Kincaid! Dammit man, get your
ass up here!”
Kincaid shook away the woman’s
soulful gaze, bounded up the stairs, and trailed his band of men up the spiral
staircase of the turret.
As they moved to the privacy of
the bricked room, he noticed the small face of one of the Keep’s youngest
occupants watching from behind an adjacent door.
Rory moved to close the door
when Kincaid motioned toward their witness.
The child, a girl not more than
ten years old watched with wide eyes. She didn’t appear frightened in the
least.
“Is she…”
Rory lifted his hand, palm up,
and from it, a small ball of fire swirled from nothing and hung suspended.
The girl’s wide eyes lifted and
a small smile inched at the side of her lips. She lifted her hand and a
sputtering of fire sprang from her fingertips.
Kincaid felt his pulse dip as
he lifted his finger to his lips “Shh,” he whispered with what he hoped looked
like a friendly smile.
Noise from the long staircase
met their ears. Rory ushered them inside and closed the door. Before the noise
from below became another battle, Kincaid closed his eyes, lifted his shield,
and spread it over his small party…then he began to chant and time slid away.
About the Author:
New York
Times & USA
Today bestselling author Catherine Bybee was raised in Washington State,
but after graduating high school, she moved to Southern California in hopes of
becoming a movie star. After growing bored with waiting tables, she returned to
school and became a registered nurse, spending most of her career in urban
emergency rooms. She now writes full-time and has penned novels Wife by Wednesday, Married by Monday, and Not
Quite Dating. Bybee lives with her husband and two teenage sons in Southern
California.
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I've so got this one on my tbr list Sheri. Have been wanting to try her for a while now :)
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