Call Home the Heart

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Authors: Shannon Farrell

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CALL HOME THE HEART
Shannon Farrell

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

 

SYNOPSIS

 

 

REVIEWS

 

 

COPYRIGHT

 

 

CHAPTER 1

 

 

CHAPTER 2

 

 

CHAPTER 3

 

 

CHAPTER 4

 

 

CHAPTER 5

 

 

CHAPTER 6

 

 

CHAPTER 7

 

 

CHAPTER 8

 

 

CHAPTER 9

 

 

CHAPTER 10

 

 

CHAPTER 11

 

 

CHAPTER 12

 

 

CHAPTER 13

 

 

CHAPTER 14

 

 

CHAPTER 15

 

 

CHAPTER 16

 

 

CHAPTER 17

 

 

CHAPTER 18

 

 

CHAPTER 19

 

 

CHAPTER 20

 

 

CHAPTER 21

 

 

CHAPTER 22

 

 

CHAPTER 23

 

 

CHAPTER 24

 

 

CHAPTER 25

 

 

CHAPTER 26

 

 

CHAPTER 27

 

 

CHAPTER 28

 

 

CHAPTER 29

 

 

CHAPTER 30

 

 

CHAPTER 31

 

 

CHAPTER 32

 

 

CHAPTER 33

 

 

CHAPTER 34

 

 

CHAPTER 35

 

 

CHAPTER 36

 

 

CHAPTER 37

 

 

CHAPTER 38

 

 

CHAPTER 39

 

 

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SYNOPSIS

 

 

Ireland, 1845

 

 

Widowed by a shooting accident on her honeymoon, Muireann Caldwell
discovers that her wastrel husband Augustine has left her penniless,
and almost homeless. She now faces returning to her smothering
family back in Scotland, or charting her own course with the
crumbling Caldwell estate in Ireland.

 

 

Deciding to remain in Ireland to tackle Barnakilla and its mountain
of debt, Muireann turns to the handsome, capable Lochlainn Roche,
her late husband's estate manager, for support.

 

 

Lochlainn worries that with Augustine dead, his lifelong home will
be forfeited, especially if the young widow decides to run home to
Scotland.

 

 

But he's surprised by the strength Muireann displays, and grows to
admire her courage and determination, especially as the Irish Potato
Famine begins to spread its blight on the land he loves so well.

 

 

Muireann struggles to re-build the estate and create a sanctuary all
can call home. She grows to love Barnakilla as much as Lochlainn
does. Dare he hope she returns the love he has found for her? Or
will the sacrifices she is forced to make prove too much for her?

 

 

And dare Lochlainn even trust her? When her husband's cousin begins
to ask questions about the fatal shooting accident,  Muireann
and Lochlainn must trust to love if they are ever to save Muireann
and Barnakilla from certain doom….

 

 

 

An excerpt from the novel:

 

 

Muireann's lips parted with a sigh, deepening the sweet kiss into
something much more compelling as he raised one hand to hold her
chin tenderly and explored her mouth with a leisurely thoroughness
that thrilled them both to the core.

 

 

At last Lochlainn lifted his lips, knowing he couldn't hide his
throbbing desire for her forever. But she seemed untroubled by the
kiss, stroking her hand down the long column of his neck with her
eyes closed.

 

 

"How long will it take us to get to Enniskillen?" she asked
sleepily.

 

 

"We should be there by tea time if we have clear roads, but then
we'll have to hope for a lift out to Barnakilla," he whispered
against her silken hair, now a mass of curls which he tousled with
this hands, savoring the soft feel of her all over.

 

 

Like a rose without thorns. The thought came to him suddenly, and he
found the simile apt.

 

 

Muireann nodded, and stroked the hand around her as she returned her
head to the pillow. She reflected somewhere in the back of her
drowsy mind how wonderful Lochlainn felt in the bed beside her. How
they just seemed to fit together.

 

 

She had had the strangest sensation when she had first met him on
the docks in Dun Laoghaire, and their hands had touched in greeting.
She had trembled then as though the ground under her were shaking.
She had felt almost as if she had come home, though of course she
had never before set foot in Ireland. As though they belonged
together for all time…

 

 

 

REVIEWS

 

 

4.5 out of 5 stars

 

 

Top Pick, September 2000 issue, and Reviewer's Choice Award Nominee
2000,
Romantic Times

 

 

Widowed by a shooting accident on her honeymoon, Muireann Caldwell
discovers that her wastrel husband has left her penniless, and
almost homeless. She now faces returning to a smothering family or
charting her own course with the crumbling Caldwell estate.

 

 

 

Deciding to tackle Barnakilla and its mountain of debt, Muireann
turns to the handsome, capable Lochlainn Roche, her late husband's
estate manager, for support.

 

 

 

Lochlainn worries that with Augustine dead, his lifelong home will
be forfeited, especially if the young widow decides to run home to
Scotland. But he's surprised by the strength Muireann displays, and
grows to admire her courage and determination.

 

 

She grows to love Barnakilla as much as he does. Dare he hope she
returns the love he has found for her?

 

 

The author weaves a wonderful tale of survival and love that defeats
seemingly insurmountable odds. It is refreshing to see a heroine
with such strength and common sense, and a strong hero who actually
believes she can have it!
CALL HOME THE HEART
is a story you
won't
want to put down.

 

 

-April Redmon

 

 

 

5.0 out of 5 stars

 

Moving and passionate Historical Romance

 

Ireland, January 1845

 

 

Muireann Graham Caldwell and Augustine, her husband of two weeks,
are on a journey to Barnakilla, his estate in northwest Ireland.
However, Augustine goes no farther than a Dublin grave, after
putting a gun to his head and pulling the trigger.

 

 

After living with constant criticism from her mother and sister for
not being a proper lady, and defying her strict father by learning
all sorts of masculine things, Muireann Graham Caldwell is not about
to run home to Scotland now. With the help of Lochlainn Roche,
Barnakilla's estate manager, Muireann is determined to travel on to
her new home.

 

 

When Lochlainn met the ship carrying the newlyweds, he was taken by
the ethereal beauty of Augustine's wife, but the next months prove
the lady possesses strength...and a will of iron...that belie her
fragile looks

 

 

She needs that toughness, for her "wealthy" husband bankrupted a
once prosperous estate in the three years since he inherited, and
he'd already gambled away the thousands of pounds from Muireann's
father that he had been given as her dowry.

 

 

The last few years have been hard ones, and the hundred tenants who
depend on Barnakilla are in arrears with their rents and have no
means to pay in the foreseeable future. Muireann always wanted
adventure; she's wanted to prove to herself and her family that
she's capable of more than tea parties and dancing. Here is her
chance.

 

 

CALL HOME THE HEART
is very much Muireann's story. She has an
almost
impossible task ahead of her -- already the portents hint at the
disastrous potato famine to come -- but she rallies and leads the
people in rebuilding Barnakilla.

 

 

Lochlainn grew up on the land, and he's there to help her, but she's
the dynamic one. He's an interesting character, who was betrayed in
the past and loath to risk his heart again. He's torn between
wanting to be Muireann's partner, and believing he's not good enough
for her.

 

 

The tenants and landed neighbors play important roles in
CALL
HOME
THE HEART
, for they add warmth on the one hand and conflict on
the
other. While the relationship between Muireann and Lochlainn waxes
and wanes, the plot revolving around the fight to feed the people
and save the estate takes off at a run and turns
CALL HOME THE
HEART
into an all-nighter. And a nail-biter.

 

 

CALL HOME THE HEART
is a moving and passionate novel fans of
history
and romance will enjoy.

 

 

Jane Bowers,
Romance Reviews Today

 

 

 

5.0 out of 5 stars

 

Call Home The Heart

 

By Amanda Killgore,  (TOP 500 REVIEWER, Amazon) 

 

 

When suicide ends the life of a tyrannical landowner, his new bride
is left bewildered and saddled with a failing set of holdings.
Fortunately, those lands come with a handsome, loyal, and passionate
manager, Lochlainn Roche, who is more than willing to help Muireann
Caldwell save his boyhood home.

 

 

Their passion for Barnakilla extends to each other, then from the
grave, Muireann's husband reaches out to endanger their joy. With a
cloud of suspicion and possible murder charges hanging over them,
the lovers must clear Lochlainn's name before they can have a life
together. Using a seldom utilized setting, Ireland during the Potato
Famine, and strong characterization, Ms. Farrell has created a true
gem for historical fans in search of something new and different.

 

 

 

CALL HOME THE HEART
Shannon Farrell
HerStory Books

 

Copyright the author

 

First edition 2000, Domhan Books, Ireland, and New York.

 

Second edition 2003, Wotch Media, Australia.

 

Third edition 2004, condensed version published by Leisure
Lovespell.

 

Fourth Edition 2008, 2011, original version, with additional
material.

 

New Kindle Edition, 2012

 

 

All rights reserved.

 

Under the 1988 UK copyright laws, the author asserts the right to be
identified as the creator of this work.

 

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents
are the product of the author's imagination, and any resemblance to
any actual persons, living or dead, events, is entirely
coincidental.

 

 

 

ISBN: 978-1-58345-396-4

 

Published by HerStory Books

 

http://www.herstorybooks.com

 

 

HerStory Books is pleased to publish high-quality romances in a
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Happy Reading!

 
I pray thee leave, love me no more,
Call home the heart you gave me,
I but in vain the saint adore,
That can, but will, not save me.
Michael Drayton,
To His Coy Love
, 1619

 
CHAPTER ONE
Dublin, January 1845
The gunshot echoed through the corridors of Gresham's Hotel.
Lochlainn dropped his water glass and dashed up the stairs two at
a time.
"Mrs. Caldwell, Mrs. Caldwell, open the door! Muireann! Open up,
please! It's Lochlainn Roche!" he shouted as he hammered at the
oaken portal.
Lochlainn could hear nothing in the chamber apart from the sound
of someone weeping. After jerking at the latch futilely, he threw
all of his weight against the solid bulk of the door.
"Muireann! Open up, please!" he demanded between blows.
At last the manager, stunned by the gunshot and the commotion
Lochlainn was causing, produced his master key. With a deft flick
of his wrist, Lochlainn opened the lock quickly and stormed into
his employer's bedchamber. There he saw Muireann, kneeling beside
the body of her husband.
It was evident from the state of his head, or what was left of it,
that Augustine was dead.
"God, no, please, this can't be happening to me!" the raven-haired
woman whimpered as she rocked back and forth, tugging frantically
at the lapels of Augustine's coat.
"How could you! Oh God, why! What am I going to do?" she wailed,
growing more and more hysterical, repeating the words over and
over again.
At last Lochlainn, unsure as to what else he should do, dragged
Muireann away from the corpse, and gave her a firm tap on the chin
with his fist.
She crumpled like a rag doll into his arms. He caught her up
before she fell to the floor and demanded of the manager, "Give me
another room for Mrs. Caldwell, now!"
The little man, gaping at the carnage before him, barely heard a
word Lochlainn said.
"I'll see Mrs. Caldwell's things are moved myself. She's not to be
disturbed, is that clear?"
"I suppose I'd better fetch a doctor," the manager said
doubtfully, shaking his head.
"For the lady, yes, Mr. Burns," Lochlainn replied grimly.
"Augustine certainly won't be needing one."
The hotelier stared at the handsome, ebony-haired estate manager
with something akin to horror. How could he remain so calm in the
face of such an appalling spectacle?
Lochlainn's steel-gray eyes warmed a little as he tried to soothe
Mr. Burns' ruffled feathers. "I'm sorry to sound so cold. It's
just that everything must be handled correctly. I imagine there
are certain formalities in these sorts of cases. I shall trust you
to look after things."
Lifting Muireann high, he followed the little silver-haired man
down the corridor to a room at the back of the hotel, far from the
noise of all the carriages passing outside through the busy
streets of Dublin.
"This chamber is smaller, but the bed is quite large, and there's
a trundle bed underneath as well. The lady shouldn't be left
alone," the hotelier said, staring regretfully at the unconscious,
disheveled form that Lochlainn held in his arms as though she were
as light as a feather.
"She won't be alone. I'll look after her, never fear," Lochlainn
reassured the worried man as he laid Muireann down on the bed.
"Just ask the doctor to look in on her whenever he's finished with
Mr. Caldwell, if you please."
"Yes, of course, sir. What a terrible tragedy. And to think it
happened in my hotel," the little man complained, almost in tears.
"A terrible tragedy to have happened anywhere, when a man takes
his own life," Lochlainn observed with a set jaw as he undid the
top buttons of Muireann's gown, and began to remove her boots.
"But surely, sir, it was an accident!" the dapper little man
gasped. "He was cleaning his gun, and-"
Lochlainn looked up at the man in sheer disbelief, his eyes
glittering dangerously. "You want me to lie, Mr. Burns?"
"Not exactly lie, Mr. Roche, more, well, er, give another
plausible version of events," the little man stammered. 
"After all, his poor young wife. It's bad enough for her to have
lost her husband on her honeymoon, without being esposed to
unnecessary gossip and, well, dare I say it, scandal."
Lochlainn sighed. "I hadn't thought about that. You're absolutely
right, Mr. Burns. I doubt that anyone's interests would be served
if the whole truth were to be revealed. Thank you for being so
considerate of Mrs. Caldwell's position. I'm sure I can rely on
your discretion."
The little man nodded, and stared sympathetically at the lovely
dark-haired woman lying prone on the bed.
"Can you stay here for one moment while I go get Mrs. Caldwell's
things from the other room?"
"Yes, of course."
Lochlainn was back in a few moments with several valises and an
armful of gowns. "I'll wait here while you send a maid up to look
after Mrs. Caldwell. Then I'll finish clearing the room, and go
fetch my things from the coach."
"Thank you, Mr. Roche. I'll go attend to your, er, problem, and
will see you later," Mr. Burns said before scurrying out of the
room.
Once he was alone with her, Lochlainn stripped Muireann's
blood-soaked gown off her limp body and hurled it into the fire,
then covered her with a spare blanket he found at the foot of the
bed.
Then he brought an armchair closer to the bed. He sat down
heavily, and cradled his head in his hands. Augustine, dead. My
God, how often he had wished it. Yet now that it had happened,
well, what on earth was he to do?
Why had this happened, just when he had begun to hope there might
be some light at the end of the tunnel for the Caldwell estate,
Barnakilla? How had the Fates conspired to have everything he held
most dear be taken away from him just when it all seemed to be
falling into place for the first time in years?
Disappointed in love, he had fled the estate where he and his
sister, Ciara, had grown up, longing to escape from the memories.
The old lord, Douglas Caldwell, had been alive then. Barnakilla
had been a prosperous estate, elegant, well-ordered, despite
Augustine's extravagance, which his parents had accepted because
he was their only child.
But Douglas Caldwell had died, and then his wife, giving Augustine
free rein to despoil the estate with his gambling and
devil-may-care attitude.
Lochlainn had run away from the home that held such bittersweet
memories for him, and had traveled the world, seeking his fame and
fortune. He had done well enough for himself, certainly, but in
his opinion Australia could never rival the beauties of Ireland,
the glories of his home.
After three interminably long years, Augustine Caldwell's summons
for Lochlainn to return to Barnakilla had been the answer to
Lochlainn's most heartfelt prayers.
But what would the future hold for him now? And what was he to do
with the delicate young beauty who lay unconscious on the bed?
Poor girl. How had she come to be mixed up in all of this?
But then she had loved Augustine, hadn't she? He recalled her
hysteria in the bedroom a few moments before. I always did have
the damnedest luck, Lochlainn thought gloomily, as he reached out
to stroke her fair, petal-soft skin. He fingered her silky
raven-black hair, admiring her beauty while she slept. Her
complexion was so pale, she looked as though she were a visitor
from another realm. Her high cheekbones, long, moderately thin
nose which turned up slightly at the tip, and ruby red, full lips,
might not be to every man's taste, being so ethereal, but for
Lochlainn she was lovelier than words could ever hope to describe.
He had never believed in love at first sight until he had seen
this tiny nymph staring at him with her incredible amethyst eyes
the day before, when he had guided his employer and his new bride
off the boat from Liverpool, straight from their honeymoon in
Scotland and England.
Quite tall for a woman, though tiny in comparison with himself,
Muireann Graham Caldwell had moved down the gangplank like a
queen, her head held high, her limpid eyes moving neither to the
right nor the left, until they'd lighted on his face. They had
seemed to look into the very depths of his soul. She had taken his
hand in greeting, and shock tremors had passed up his arm, until
he had regained his self-control, cursing himself for being so
fanciful.
Now here she was, a widow, no doubt heir to the Caldwell estate,
but probably completely unaware of the dire financial straits her
husband Augustine had been in before he died.
But surely Muireann must have married him for love? After all, how
could she not have known about all of his faults? Perhaps she was
just as vain, frivolous, and addicted to gambling as Augustine had
been. If so, the Lord help them all, Lochlainn thought with a
shake of his head, looking at the lovely face resting on the
pillow with a certain degree of resentment.
If Muireann was fool enough to have loved Augustine, she deserved
whatever happened to her.
Then he felt a twinge of guilt at the uncharitable thought. He was
not normally so spiteful, but experience had been a bitter
teacher.
He leapt from the chair and began to pace up and down in front of
the window, until at last he stilled to watch the sun set over the
rooftops of Dublin.
Damn it, how could a woman like Muireann, so lovely, so gracious,
have married an idle, worthless, drunken lout like Augustine
Caldwell?
And what would she do with his beloved Barnakilla now?

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