A Ghost of a Chance

Troy Brannon’s unusual gifts made him invaluable to the Navy SEALs…until he died in the line of duty. Now, he’s a ghost gone rogue, searching through time for the soul of a man lost in the Civil War. He figures a side trip to save a drowning woman won’t hurt. But as he pours his energy into her limp body, he realizes he’s made a terrible mistake.

Carey Magennis knows it’s all over as icy seawater claims her, so she’s more than a little confused when she wakes and finds the ghost of the green-eyed, lion-hearted man who saved her haunting her.

Troy knows that until her can untangle their auras, he’s along for the ride, and protecting Carey from her ex becomes his new mission. First on the agenda is not falling for her, even though she could be his only lifeline.

The books in the Legends series are best enjoyed in order:
Book #1 Beaudry’s Ghost
Book #2 A Ghost of a Chance

1100401352
A Ghost of a Chance

Troy Brannon’s unusual gifts made him invaluable to the Navy SEALs…until he died in the line of duty. Now, he’s a ghost gone rogue, searching through time for the soul of a man lost in the Civil War. He figures a side trip to save a drowning woman won’t hurt. But as he pours his energy into her limp body, he realizes he’s made a terrible mistake.

Carey Magennis knows it’s all over as icy seawater claims her, so she’s more than a little confused when she wakes and finds the ghost of the green-eyed, lion-hearted man who saved her haunting her.

Troy knows that until her can untangle their auras, he’s along for the ride, and protecting Carey from her ex becomes his new mission. First on the agenda is not falling for her, even though she could be his only lifeline.

The books in the Legends series are best enjoyed in order:
Book #1 Beaudry’s Ghost
Book #2 A Ghost of a Chance

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A Ghost of a Chance

A Ghost of a Chance

by Carolan Ivey
A Ghost of a Chance

A Ghost of a Chance

by Carolan Ivey

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Overview

Troy Brannon’s unusual gifts made him invaluable to the Navy SEALs…until he died in the line of duty. Now, he’s a ghost gone rogue, searching through time for the soul of a man lost in the Civil War. He figures a side trip to save a drowning woman won’t hurt. But as he pours his energy into her limp body, he realizes he’s made a terrible mistake.

Carey Magennis knows it’s all over as icy seawater claims her, so she’s more than a little confused when she wakes and finds the ghost of the green-eyed, lion-hearted man who saved her haunting her.

Troy knows that until her can untangle their auras, he’s along for the ride, and protecting Carey from her ex becomes his new mission. First on the agenda is not falling for her, even though she could be his only lifeline.

The books in the Legends series are best enjoyed in order:
Book #1 Beaudry’s Ghost
Book #2 A Ghost of a Chance


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781640632097
Publisher: Entangled Publishing, LLC
Publication date: 07/31/2017
Series: Legends , #2
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 270
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Multi-award-winning author Carolan Ivey is a North Carolina native living in Ohio with her husband, two highly opinionated dachshunds, and far too many books.

A freelance writer by day, in her spare time she tries to indulge as many of her varied passions as possible: reading, traveling, winery hopping, and exploring her Scottish roots through music. She is also a Karuna and Celtic Reiki Master.

If she’s not playing with her grandchildren, she’s probably out riding her motorcycle with her husband or one of her Chrome Angelz sisters. Road name is Ghost Wrider.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Gráinne Cottage, Dingle Peninsula, Ireland

"I cannot complete this reading."

The older woman's hands moved quickly to gather the Tarot cards spread on the kitchen table, the movement causing the flame of the single white candle at its center to flicker.

Carey Magennis leaned back in the creaky wooden chair, trying to decide if she should be amused or alarmed. For now, she chose the former. After all, Genola's informal Tarot reading was only for fun.

She sipped her tea, admiring the vase of freshly picked heather on the table. The moist breath of an afternoon breeze felt unusually cool on her cheek as it puffed in through the open window. But then again, an Irish July felt downright arctic to any North Carolina native. The morning rain had passed, and through the storm door she saw the rich, green hillside below the cottage. Beyond, the sea glittered like muted pewter. Great Blaskett Island lay a few miles offshore like a sleeping giant, half covered by a fluffy blanket of mist.

She had left Kyle poring over maps and guidebooks while she had gone in search of a cup of tea to settle her still-queasy stomach, the aftermath of getting food poisoning from a Killarney restaurant. Thanks to her twenty-four-hour stint on her knees before the porcelain god, they were now a full day behind schedule. They were darned lucky Genola McCarthy had a vacancy in her little cottage B&B at the height of tourist season. Carey had been too ill to make it to their original destination.

Kyle had been less than thrilled with the comparatively rustic accommodations, but Carey, now that she was well enough to have a look around, loved the old stone cottage with its thick, whitewashed walls and cozy thatched roof. Traces of the morning peat fire still tanged the air inside the little dwelling, blending with the aroma of fresh bread baking in the Aga.

Genola had welcomed her warmly into the homey, low-ceilinged kitchen, and cheerfully joined her for a cup of strong Irish tea with plenty of fresh milk and sugar. Spying the new engagement ring on Carey's left hand, Genola had reached into her apron pocket and withdrawn a set of Tarot cards, saying with a wink that she was going to see how long it would be before Carey and Kyle began adding to their respective family trees.

Carey glanced down now at the sparkling diamond solitaire on her left ring finger as Genola continued to gather the spread-out cards. She'd thought they'd only be spending a few days in Dublin, Kyle making contacts for his fledgling, international real-estate development firm, while she wandered in and out of old churches and museums, feeding her insatiable appetite for all things historic. But he'd presented her a ring at dinner one night — in between taking business calls on his cell phone — and swept her off on a surprise whirlwind tour of Ireland, attempting to see the entire country in five scant days.

She idly turned her hand and wondered why the sight of the glittering stone didn't set her heart to glittering in return. She ought to be deliriously happy. She should. After all, her life was turning out exactly as she'd planned.

"Are the spirits carrying around erasers these days?" She tore her gaze from the ring and, propping her chin in her palm, winked to let the woman know she was only kidding.

Genola smiled and winked in return. "Oh, 'tis nothing, darlin'. Simply a mistake, that's all."

"What kind of mistake?" Carey was relieved to see the Death card disappear back into the deck.

"This blank card —" Genola held it up, "— shouldn't have been in the deck. It's included only to replace a lost card." She put the card back into a small wooden box and firmly shut the lid, then shuffled the deck three times. "Now, let's be after tryin' this again. Please cut the deck into three piles."

Carey did as she was told, and watched Genola spread the cards across the table with one smooth motion.

"And choose three cards, please."

Again, Carey pulled three cards at random and placed them face down in front of her.

Genola turned over the first card, and Carey swallowed a gasp. It stuck in a painful knot at the base of her throat before she forced herself to relax.

"Now that's interesting," said Genola, unconcerned. "You drew the Death card again. This card represents your past, and at some point ..."

"I'm going to die?" Carey croaked, only half joking.

Genola chuckled. "Not at all, dear. You simply underwent a time of great change. Or you will. Sometimes the timeline is a bit vague."

Carey relaxed, and leaned her elbows on the table again, and allowed a small smile. "Well, I got engaged recently. Maybe that's it. And I lost my parents at a very young age ..." She quickly shut her mouth. This wasn't something she normally shared with relative strangers.

Genola stilled, her expression distressed. "I'm so sorry, child."

Carey reached out and patted one of Genola's hands. "It's all right. It was a long time ago and my aunt raised me."

Genola relaxed, then looked her up and down, eyes slightly unfocused. "Your aura is very strong, particularly around your heart. It's bright green." Her eyes focused again and she smiled gently. "I thought when I first saw you, that you had the look of a faerie child."

Carey found herself toying with one of her wild black curls. Chemical processing had tamed the unruly mass that was her hair, but Ireland's damp weather had brought back its tendency to kink. All she had managed to learn about this gift from her father's side of the family were four clipped words, "Black Irish and Indian." At which point her aunt's lips would compress into a tight, thin line.

"Faerie. Yes, well, I don't much resemble Tinker Bell," she said ruefully, remembering her own mother's petite, fair beauty, lost to her now except in photographs.

"Oh, the other crowd are a dark, little folk. Nothing like you see in the movies. The Magennis people in Ireland are mostly fair in coloring, but once in a while they throw a dark one, and it's said such people are touched by the good folk. You may be several generations removed from Ireland, my dear, but the magic still lingers about you, that I can see."

Oh, this was getting good. Carey dismissed the uncomfortable notion that Genola McCarthy could somehow know exactly how she'd been feeling these past months. As if she were poised on some great precipice of change. She'd chalked it up to the ticking of her biological clock.

The Irishwoman flipped the next card. "This card represents your present. Oh ... dear ..."

Carey stared in amazement. She'd drawn the exact same card as last time.

"My, my! The oracle certainly is speaking strongly this afternoon." Genola's voice quavered a little, despite her efforts to sound cheerful. "I can't remember any other time someone has drawn the exact same cards in this way, in spite of the deck having been shuffled. Very ... odd."

"What do you think it means?" Carey watched Genola's face. This was only a Tarot reading, for heaven's sake.

"This card represents your present situation. It's the suit of Wands, which is the suit of change, restlessness, possibly upheaval. And this is the Knight. There's a man involved. Quite possibly a blond man."

Curious, Carey leaned in for a closer look at the card in question. The card depicted a warrior in battered Athenian armor standing on a hilltop overlooking an ancient city. The soldier held a heavy sword, and a helmet adorned with a horse-tail plume covered his head. Lion-colored hair flowed out from under the helmet. But it was his direct stare that snagged her attention. His vivid green eyes — all she could see of his face — glowed like living things in the stillness of the picture.

She had the absurd notion that she wished she could step into the picture and straight into his protective arms. With a hard, mental shake, she tore her gaze away from the warrior and noticed a banner flying over the city in the background. It was clearly labeled Troy.

Her scalp prickled.

"Interesting." She tried to sound offhand. "My middle name is Helen."

Genola's eyebrow went north. "Is that so? You should see the queen of this suit. It is, indeed, Helen of Troy."

A woman who brought disaster down on an entire kingdom for loving the wrong man. Carey's stomach started to feel funny again, and she forced herself to relax. "But I don't know any blond men. At least not well enough to consider them part of my personal life."

Genola smiled, serenely confident again. "If there isn't one now, there will be. And I daresay his entrance won't be subtle."

"Hm. If you say so." Maybe Kyle was going to bleach his dark hair or something. Then she laughed to herself. Not bloody likely.

"I certainly do say so." Genola nodded and reached for the third card. "Well, then let's see what all these changes and this mysterious blond man will mean for your future. At least we know the card won't be ..." she flipped the card, "... blank."

Now Carey's heart really did turn over. What the ...?

Genola's calm demeanor vanished, and she turned white.

The card was blank. Again.

"Impossible," Genola whispered. "I just put that card back in the box. You saw me put it there, didn't you?"

"Don't be silly," said Carey, reaching for the box and popping off the lid. "Maybe it stuck to your hand."

But the first blank card still lay inside. She looked up at Genola. "Is there more than one blank card in this deck?"

Genola shook her head. "Only one."

"Do it again."

"What?"

"Shuffle the cards and let me draw again."

Genola seemed to come back to herself. "Of course, of course." She gathered the cards and began to shuffle them, then her fingers slowed. "Let's try a different deck. This one's new — I haven't worked with it much." She leaned back in her chair, reached into a half-open kitchen drawer, and extracted a small, battered wooden box. Sweeping the offending deck off the table and back into its own box, she spread the well-used deck face up on the table, so they could both see that no blank cards lurked. Then she quickly shuffled, humming softly to herself as she worked.

"Now," she said confidently, her face relaxing into another smile. "This deck has never failed me."

Again Carey went through the ritual of drawing three cards, wondering why she was doing this when she ought to be telling Genola "t'anks, but no t'anks".

"Here we go." Genola turned over the first card.

Carey gave a bark of surprised laughter and nearly fell out of her chair.

The Death card grinned mockingly up at her.

"Ehm ..." Genola turned the middle card. Knight of Wands. Again. "I, ah, don't know what to say, Miss Magennis. I truly don't. This has never, ever happened before. To draw the exact same cards repeatedly? From different decks ..." She reached for the third card, her hand visibly trembling.

Carey reached out and gripped her wrist. "Let me." If the woman was indeed doing a sleight of hand, she was going to make darned sure it didn't happen again. Not that she believed in this stuff, not at all. But she'd rather sleep without nightmares, thank you very much.

She turned the card. Blank. She let it drop from her numb fingers.

Get a hold of yourself, girl. It's a trick. Just a trick.

She forced a laugh and quickly gulped the rest of her tea. "You're very good. Ever thought of going on the road?" Her laugh trailed off when the other woman said nothing.

Genola didn't look at her, but down at the cards, her face pale and still. Then she looked up at Carey, her eyes seeing something beyond the here and now.

"I tell you, miss, these cards have never lied."

Carey gave the woman what she hoped was a bright smile that hid how rattled she was. "Thanks, Mrs. McCarthy. I ... think I'll take a little walk down to the headland. Kyle should be finished re-planning our schedule, thanks to me and my rebellious tummy."

Genola nodded and began picking up the cards, one by one, examining each one as if she'd never seen it before. Carey rose from the chair, uneasy and unsure what to say next. Genola touched her arm as she passed, eyes troubled.

"Just be careful, miss. Be very, very careful."

Carey chuckled again, trying to put the poor woman — and herself? — at ease. "Oh, don't worry. My fiancé plans everything down to the last detail. I won't have time to get myself into trouble. Trust me."

*
Cape Hatteras Beach, North Carolina

Where the hell are you, John?

Troy Brannon gave in to frustration and roared out loud, the release of energy kicking up a half-dozen whirlwinds that scattered Outer Banks sand in every direction.

A nearby fisherman yelped in surprise, hunched his shoulders against the onslaught and dropped his gear into the knee-deep Atlantic surf.

"Ah, hell." Troy muttered an unheard apology as the startled man gathered up his gear and warily scanned the skies, undoubtedly wondering if an errant nor'easter was on the way.

Troy turned his face toward the late-morning sun he could not feel in any normal way, except perhaps how a battery feels when it's in recharge mode. He pivoted in a slow circle, trying to focus his scattered thoughts, trying to hone in on the familiar energy pattern of John Garrison's missing spirit. A spirit Troy himself was responsible for losing.

Most people, he mused as he watched the frightened fisherman make his way over the dunes, thought ghosts were just protoplasmic mist floating around in some nether world. Scary on a dark night, but basically harmless.

He indulged in a grim smile. If only they knew how much havoc one determined spirit could wreak on the tangible world.

He ought to know. He'd wreaked enough of it all by himself to affect the lives of dozens of people. One in particular. The one he'd meddled with and lost.

He knew John's energy fingerprint. He'd felt it when he'd wrested the man's spirit from his body so another desperate spirit, that of a Union soldier named Jared Beaudry, could use it to regain honor lost during the Civil War. He'd felt it again when he'd tried to guide John back to where he belonged. But he'd failed. In some misguided attempt to be noble, John had let Jared's spirit remain in his body while he took his chances elsewhere.

The trouble was, Troy had no idea where that elsewhere was. In the blink of an eye, John had disappeared into the void of space and time. Troy'd had the devil's own time learning to drill down through time as well as he could move himself through space. But with his inborn bulldoggedness, he'd figured out how to focus his thoughts and energies in just the right way. It was a tremendous drain, and after each jump it took him hours, if not days, to recover.

The process was tedious and more time-consuming than he'd anticipated, penetrating down through layers of time and sweeping the area he'd last seen John on the Outer Banks. Day by day. Hour by hour. Hell, minute by minute. He'd come up empty, time after time. He'd gone as far into the past as he dared — he wasn't sure how far his ability extended — and back again until he'd bumped up against an unexpected ceiling. What he could only surmise was his twin sister Taylor's current time. He could sense her nearby. She must not have moved far from where she'd last seen him.

Good girl. Stay right there, T-bird. I'll find you after I'm done here.

Troy scratched his head — an old habit left over from when he'd possessed a body of his own — and dredged up from his memory what he'd learned about the real Jared Beaudry. Where he'd been born, what battles he'd fought in. Maybe John would end up there. If not ... Troy closed his eyes against the daunting task before him.

A task with a ticking clock. For a long time now, he'd sensed he was being tailed. Probably by forces that were none too pleased that a lowly human spirit such as himself had learned to mess with people's souls, to skip through time and space at will. Staying one step ahead of those who would force him to be a good boy and get along to heaven.

Troy had no use for heaven. He had things to do, rights to wrong. A family to protect.

He groaned, his formidable powers of concentration failing him, exhaustion threatening to send his energy sinking into the sand at his feet, where it would lay until he found the strength to gather himself up again. He couldn't let that happen. It left him too vulnerable.

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "A Ghost of a Chance"
by .
Copyright © 2008 Carolan Ivey.
Excerpted by permission of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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