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From Prologue
Her stomach was tight, her hands tense on the table. Hunter. Oh, Goddess, Hunter. It has been almost
four months since they'd been able to meet in the airport in Toronto--for only six hours. And three
months before that, in Germany. They'd had two whole days together then.
Morgan shook her head, consciously releasing her breath in a long, controlled sigh. Relax. If I release
and let thoughts, go, the Goddess shows me where to go. If I relax and let things be, all of life is
clear to see.
She closed her eyes and deliberately uncoiled every muscle, from her head on down to her icy toes in
her damp boots. Soon a soothing sense of warmth expanded inside her; and she felt some of the
tension leave her body.
The brass bell over the shop door jangled and was followed almost instantly by a blast of frigid air.
Morgan opened her eyes in time to have her light blocked by a tall, heart breakingly familiar figure.
Despite everything, her heart expanded with joy and smile rose to her face. She stood as he came
closer, his angular face lighting up when she saw her. He smiled, and the sight of his open, welcoming
expressive sliced right through her.
"Hey, Morgan. Sorry I'm late." Hunter said, his English accent blunted by fatigue.
She took him in her arms, holding him tightly, not caring that his long tweed overcoat was soaked
with icy rain. Hunter leaned down, Morgan went on tiptoe, and their mouths met perfectly in the
middle, they way they always did.
When they separated, Morgan stroked a finger down his cheek."Long time no see," she said, her voice
catching. Hunter's eyes instantly narrowed--even aside from his powers of sensing emotion as a blood
witch, he knew Morgan more intimately than anyone. Morgan cleared her throat and sat down. Still
watching her, Hunter sat also, his coat sprinkling raindrops onto the linoleum floor around his chair.
He swept his old-fashioned tweed cap off his head and ran a hand throw his fine, white-blonde hair.
Morgan drank in his appearance, her gaze roaming over every detail. His face was pale as winter; his
eyes as icy green as the Irish Sea not three blocks away. His hair was longer than Morgan had ever
seen it and looked choppy, uneven.
"It's good to see you," Hunter said, smiling at the oblivious understatement Under the table he edged
his knee over until it rested against hers.
"You too," Morgan said. Did her anguish already show on her face? She felt as if the pain of her
decision must surround her like an aura, visible to anyone who knew her. "I got tea for two---want
some?"
"Please," he said, and Morgan poured the spare mug full of tea.
Hunter stood up and dropped his wet coat over the back of his chair. He took a sip of tea, stretched,
and rolled his shoulders. Morgan knew he had just come in from Norway.
What to say? How to say/ She had rehearsed this scene from the last two weeks, but now that she was
here, going through with it felt like revolting against her very being. And in a sense, it was true. To
end a relationship with her mùirn beatha dàn was fighting destiny.
It had been four years since she had first met Hunter, Morgan mused. She absently turned her silver
claddagh ring, on the ring finger of her right hand. Hunter had given her this ring when she was
seventeen, he nineteen. Now he was twenty-three and a man, tall and broad shouldered--no longer a
lanky teenager, the "boy genius" witch hired as the youngest Seeker for the International Council of
Witches.
And she was no longer the naive, love-struck high schooler who had just discovered her legacy as a
blood with and was struggling to learn to control her incredible powers. She'd come a long way in a
few years since the summer after her junior year of high school, when she'd first learned there were
actually a few surviving members of her mother's coven, Belwicket. She'd been spending the summer
studying in Scotland when they came to her, finally able to reveal themselves after the dark wave was
defeated and--more importantly-- Ciaran MacEwan was stripped of his powers. They'd told her how
they'd survived the destruction of their coven by escaping Scotland, where they'd been hiding for
decades. When they'd heard of Morgan's existence, they come to enlist her help in rebuilding the
coven that had shaped their families for hundreds of years. And she'd been doing just that since
moving to Ireland a year after her graduation from high school, and loving every moment---except for
the fact that being in Cobh meant being apart from Hunter.
Hunter reached across the table and took her hand. Morgan felt desperate, torn, yet she knew what
she had to do , what had to happen. She had gone over this a thousand times. It was the only decision
that made sense.
"What's the matter?" he asked gently. "What's wrong?"
Morgan looked at him, this person who was both intimately familiar and oddly mysterious. There had
been a time when she'd seen him every single day, when she'd been close enough to know if he'd cut
himself shaving or had a sleepless night. Now he had a thin pink line of a healed wound on the curve
of his jaw, and Morgan had no idea where or when or how he had gotten it.
She shook her head, knowing she couldn't be a coward, knowing that in the end, with the way things
were, they had to pursue their separate destinies. In a minute she would tell him. As soon as she
could talk without crying.
As if making a conscious decision to let it go for a moment, Hunter ran his hand through his hair again
and looked into Morgan's eyes. "So I spoke to Alywn about her engagement," he said, refilling her
mug from the pot on the table.
"Yes, she seems happy," Morgan said. "But you---"
"I told her about my concerns," Hunter jumped in. "She's barely nineteen. I talked to her about
waiting, but what do I know? I'm only her brother." He gave the wry smile that Morgan knew so well.
"He's a Wyndenkell, at least," Morgan said with a straight face. "We can all than the Goddess for
that."
Hunter grinned. "Uncle Beck is so pleased." Hunter's uncle, Beck Eventide, had raised Hunter, his
younger brother, Linden, and Alwyn after their parents had disappeared when Hunter was eight.
Hunter was sure that Uncle Beck had always blamed Hunter's father, a Woodbane, for his troubles.
Anything but a Woodbane," Morgan managed to tease. She herself was a full-blood Woodbane and
knew first-hand the kind of prejudice most Wiccans had against her ancestral clan.
"Right," Hunter said, his eyes still on hers.
They were silent for a moment, each lost in their own thoughts. Then Hunter said, "Please tell me
what's wrong, you feel weird."
Excerpt from Sweep Super Edition: Night's Child
© Cate Tiernan & 17th Street Production, an Alloy, Inc.
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