Money is not the root of all evil-no. It's the love of money that is deep-rooted in an unsuspecting, tormented soul.
Beth Harrison, the heroine in Beyond the Whitecaps, is very old and dying. Her entire life had been clouded with sad desire, tragic wealth, and contaminated fame.
In and out of consciousness, Beth drifts back to when tragedy, greed, and murder took hold of her family-the wealthiest family in the world. While vacationing in England, a horrific accident took the lives of a Harrison grandchild and a daughter-in-law. Being the wealthiest family in the world and having strangulated ties to the royal family, the accident would change the course of world history, and it would sadly chase the Harrisons forever.
Greed and social concepts of royal blood, blueblood, and the ill-bred come together in unwarranted sex, violent sex, and painfully needed sex, with homosexuality more welcomed than the natural state of lubrication. The love of money sharing the love of power is much more than beyond evil; it's beyond the whitecaps.