His eyebrows drew together, and though he couldn’t be certain, he had a strange feeling she wasn’t here because she missed him, as he’d hoped. “Are you saying Isadora wants me to come back, knowing what happened between you and me? Are you saying
you
want me to return? Knowing”—his stomach churned—“what you now know?”
“Yes. And yes.”
“Just like that?”
“Your responsibilities are bigger than what happened to any of us.”
He could barely believe what he was hearing. She didn’t want him back after all. “I’m not marrying her,” he blurted. “I already told the king that before the scene at the Stone Circle.”
“I know. So does she.”
“I don’t love her. I never did,” he added quickly.
“That’s good to know. She doesn’t love you either. Not like that anyway.”
He stared at her. Completely taken aback that she was showing so little emotion at his revelation. Didn’t she feel any of what he did? Had he so totally damaged her that the connection they’d shared was completely gone?
Something in his heart broke wide open. “Then there’s no reason for me to come back, is there?”
“Yes, there is. One reason.”
He held his breath as she stepped closer. “You made a promise to protect me. Until the end. Since it looks like I’ve got at least four hundred and fifty years to go until I’m senile and forget that promise, I’m holding you to it. Every one of the Argonauts has told me your word is gold. So I want to know why you’re so quick to go back
on your promise to me, when you’ve upheld every other one you’ve ever made.”
His heart bumped. Once. Twice. “Is that what I’m doing?”
She nodded. “No one blames you, Theron. You were put in an impossible position. You did the right thing.”
Words lodged in his throat. “I didn’t—”
She gripped his hand, and electricity crackled along his nerve endings at the connection. “Yes, you did. One for many? I would have done the same. The only mistake you made was not being honest with me. It was my choice to make. Isadora’s choice. From now on we tell each other everything. No more secrets.”
Hope flared in his chest even as he tamped it out. “You don’t know what you’re saying.”
“Yes, I do. Once in a lifetime, remember? Hera’s curse and all that? Did you think I missed that connection when we made love? The same one we’ve had since the beginning, but magnified a thousand times? Theron,
To peprōmenon phugein adunaton.
Remember?”
It’s impossible to escape from what is destined.
Yeah, he remembered. How could he ever forget?
She stepped closer until the heat from her sexy little body made him light-headed. “I’m your destiny and you’re mine. Don’t turn away from that.”
He didn’t want to, but he couldn’t see another way around it. “Acacia, my duty is here now.”
“Nick is not your soul mate.”
“Nick is…” What was Nick to him? “A friend,” he decided. “I gave him my word. And he needs my help more than you or anyone in Argolea.”
She studied him a long beat. Then said, “Fine, then I’ll stay too.”
“You can’t.”
“Why not?”
“Because it’s not safe for you. And because Isadora needs you there.”
“Then I guess that makes your decision easy. Come back with me.”
She wanted him. He read it in her eyes. But the reality of their situation was that he wasn’t the guardian she or her sister or any of the others thought he was. And if he went back he’d be nothing but an imposter. He didn’t move, even though inside, his heart was breaking. Hera was getting her way. Yeah, he’d found his soul mate, and just as she wanted, it had cost him everything else he’d ever believed in. “I…can’t.”
“Can’t or won’t?”
“Won’t.”
Her arms dropped to her sides. “I see.”
“Acacia—”
She shook her head and avoided his arms when he reached for her. She made it as far as the door before she stopped and looked back. “You know the ironic part of this whole thing? You said Hera’s curse was intended only for the Argonauts. But you never mentioned what happened to the other half of the equation when all was said and done. Free will, right?” She chuckled, but the sound held no humor. “That’s a pretty crappy consolation when I’m facing four hundred plus years knowing I’ll never love anyone the way I love you.”
He stood there, feeling the stabbing pain in his chest as he stared at the empty doorway. Oh, gods, she loved him. Loved him even after everything he’d done and the numerous ways he’d deceived her. His heart kicked up even as he ticked through the thousand reasons they would never work.
Trivial. All of it. She’s all that matters. Don’t let her go.
He shouldn’t. With her he’d felt alive for the first time. Sure, he’d lived for over two hundred years, but when he met Acacia, his world had finally come to life. She’d taught him about forgiveness. She’d shown him that humans were as varied and unique as the stars. She’d proved that their compassion was what made them special, and
somehow, in all of that, she’d helped him let go of his anger and uncover his humanity. That piece of himself he’d shunned so long ago.
His heart pounded hard in his chest as every second with her passed through his mind. Every smile and touch, every whisper and kiss, every challenge along the way and the love she’d showered on him right from the start. Even when he hadn’t deserved it.
With her he could do anything. Even lead a war he wasn’t sure he knew how to win. But without her…without her there was no reason to be.
Don’t let her go.
He couldn’t. Wouldn’t.
He dropped the water bottle and ran for the door.
“Now that’s some mighty fine chicken noodle. Just can’t get that on Olympus.”
Theron spun around and stared at a small, elderly woman dressed in white diaphanous robes who hadn’t been in the kitchen moments before, sitting at the table eating a bowl of soup. He recognized the face. Atropos, the third of the three Fates. And there was only one reason she could be here now.
Ah, gods. Not yet. Not now. Not
before
he’d had a chance to tell Acacia that he loved her.
“Bah,” she muttered, lifting the spoon to her mouth. “Atropos only likes minestrone. And Clotho won’t eat anything with meat in it. This”—she grinned—“this is the good stuff.”
Not Atropos?
The lines around her mouth and eyes crinkled as she looked up at him. “Of course I’m not. Do I look like that old hag? And Clotho spins the thread, sonny, she doesn’t stretch it. So that leaves—”
“Lachesis.”
She grinned. “You get the golden ticket.”
“Wh-What are you doing here?” You didn’t question a Fate. To have one visit you was a sacred experience, even
if it was the one come to snip the thread of your lifeline—which, thank Zeus, this one was not.
“I thought I was going to have to intervene again,” Lachesis said, “considering how blockheaded you can be, but it looks like you’ve finally figured it all out on your own.”
“Intervene? Again?”
“Come now, you didn’t think that sweet little girl was making things up, did you?”
Sweet girl—Marissa. In the village.
Links fell into place. In a rush, he realized this was his one chance to find out what fate had in store for him. “The Argonauts—”
“Need a good leader,” she said, ditching her smile and growing serious. “And your woman is right. That isn’t Zander or Demetrius or any of the others. Only you can lead them, Theron. This war will get bloody, and many will die on both sides of the world. But if you choose not to lead them, then loss is guaranteed.”
His shoulders sagged at the enormity of what she was placing on him. “How do you know I can do it?”
“Because you’re of Heracles’s line. You can do anything. You’ve found your humanity now, thanks to your woman, and that makes you an even better leader, because now you feel. Never question your ability or what destiny has called you to do. This is your
Star Wars
moment, my son. Stand up and do what you were meant to do.”
His brow wrinkled.
“Star Wars?”
She rolled her eyes. “While you’re at it, try some pop culture on for size. If you want to lead your people, Theron, you need to be able to connect with them. You’ll find most Argoleans are as hungry for human culture as you are for that woman of yours.”
She sat up straighter. “And speaking of that woman…you might want to go stop her. She’s just reached the tunnel now.”
He glanced to the door. “She’s my curse.”
And my life.
Why hadn’t he realized that sooner?
“Of course she is. Why would you think otherwise?”
Why would he indeed?
A smile split his face, and he turned for the door.
“Wait,” Lachesis called. “Don’t you want to hear about—?”
He didn’t wait. Not for anything else. Urgency overwhelmed him, and he tore out of the kitchen and ran through the lodge, skipping down the front steps and sailing across the courtyard past the waterfall and the sea of colonists suddenly turning and staring at him as if he’d lost his mind.
He hadn’t. He’d finally found it. And his heart. And the courage to do what he’d been born to do. “Acacia!”
She was standing near one of the tunnel openings with Nick and Isadora, saying good-bye to Marissa. All of them looked up when he came running at them, but he didn’t care. All he saw was the Misos he’d fallen in love with.
He pushed through the group, gathered her into his arms and kissed her hard and hot with everything he had in him.
When he pulled back, she looked dazed. And so damn sexy, he knew the choice he made now could never be a mistake.
Choice? Who was he kidding? There was never a choice where she was concerned. And thank Hera for that.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
“Keeping my promise.” He looked up at Nick, standing behind and just to the right of her, eyeing Isadora on Acacia’s other side as if the princess might just jump out and bite him. “We’re going to need your help. Someone on the inside who knows what the Misos need and how best to protect them.”
Nick’s eyes flashed. “Who’s
we
?”
“The Argonauts.”
Those eyes widened. “I don’t think so.”
Theron glanced down at Acacia, who was smiling at him as though she’d just hit the jackpot and couldn’t believe it. “He’ll do it. You were right. They need me more there than they do here.”
“Listen up, hero—”
But Theron didn’t hear what Nick said. Acacia’s arms were twining around his neck and she was pulling his mouth back to hers. “I love you,” he whispered. “You’re right. I’d have to be a fool to turn away from my destiny.”
She was smiling when her lips met his. “My hero, the fool,” she mouthed against him. “All mine. Four hundred and fifty years. How will I ever survive?”
“Don’t worry. I’ll protect you.”
“We’ll protect each other.”
“Damn right.”
ándras
; pl.
ándres
—male Argolean
Argolea—realm established by Zeus for the blessed heroes and their descendants
Argonauts—Eternal guardian warriors who protect Argolea. In every generation, one from the original seven bloodlines (Heracles, Achilles, Jason, Odysseus, Perseus, Theseus, and Bellerophon) is chosen to continue the guardian tradition.
daemons—beasts who were once human, recruited from the Fields of Asphodel (Purgatory) by Atalanta to join her army.
élencho
—mind-control technique Argonauts use on humans
Fields of Asphodel—Purgatory
gigia
—grandmother
gynaíka
; pl.
gynaíkes
—female Argolean
Isles of the Blessed—Heaven
matéras
—mother
meli
—term of endearment; beloved.
Misos—half-human/half-Argolean race that lives hidden among humans
ochi
—no
oraios
—beautiful
patéras
—father
skata
—swearword
Tartarus—realm of the Underworld similar to Hell
yios
—son
As with every project, I could not have gotten through this book without the help of my friends, family and colleagues. Special thanks go to Lisa Catto, my expert in all things Greek mythology related; my fabulous critique partner, Joan Swan, for keeping me on track every step of the way; my pals Becky Hakes and Kendra Elliot for praising me when I got it right and never pulling punches when I got it wrong. To Nicholas Roussos for his help translating at the last minute; and my wonderful agent, Laura Bradford, who read this manuscript so many times I’m pretty sure she could have written it herself. Big thanks also to my editor, Leah Hultenschmidt and the entire staff at Dorchester for all their hard work on my behalf.
And finally, to my husband Dan and our three kids, thanks for giving me the opportunity—and encouragement—to be the writer I always wanted to be. I love you all.
“Gripping, dangerous, and sinfully sexy,
Marked
is a top-notch read! Elisabeth Naughton combines dynamic dialogue and sizzling romance with a wicked cool world. Do NOT miss this series!”
—
New York Times
Bestselling Author Larissa Ione
“The sensuality of Sherrilyn Kenyon and the intensity of Patricia Briggs. Naughton’s foray into paranormals is deep, dark and sexy as hell.”
—
New York Times
Bestselling Author Angie Fox
“A rock-solid debut…Naughton’s intelligent adventure plot is intensified by the blazing heat that builds from Lisa and Rafe’s first erotic encounter.”
—
Publishers Weekly
“Naughton deftly distills deadly intrigue, high adrenaline action, and scorchingly hot passion into a perfectly constructed novel of romantic suspense.”
—
Chicago Tribune
“When a tough-as-nails and slightly repressed archaeologist meets a charming bad-boy thief, they test each other’s limits, narrowly escape danger, and fall in love…Naughton creates an action-packed and satisfying story line. She also delivers one very charming and sexy hero—with a heart of gold.”
—
RT Book Reviews
“
Stolen Fury
puts an intelligent, spirited heroine together with a mischievous hot-blooded rogue. The sparks fly! Danger threatens at every corner as these two race around the globe and delve into the secrets each keeps from the other.”
—Merrimon Book Reviews
“This is an exciting romantic suspense thriller that starts off hot and…turns up the heat and action.”
—
Midwest Book Review
“
Stolen Heat
is an awesome combination of deadly suspense, edgy action and a wonderful romance with characters that you’ll laugh, cry and yell with.”
—Night Owl Romance
“Ms. Naughton offers readers an intense read with nonstop action, suspense, and sizzling chemistry.”
—Darque Reviews
“This book has got it all: an adventure that keeps you turning the pages, an irresistable hero, and a smoking romance.”
—All About Romance
“
Stolen Heat
is a very well-written romantic suspense with excitement and intrigue on every page. I fell in love with the characters and their witty personalities. A great read!”
—Fresh Fiction
“The action, danger, suspense, and romance haven’t slowed down one bit in this second book in Ms. Naughton’s series…a well-thought-out concept and wonderfully written…The mysteries are complex but the love is simple, a balance achieved with characters you can’t help but like.”
—The Good, The Bad and The Unread
“This book started out with a bang and didn’t stop the entire book through! Often when reading RS it’s not equally balanced, but not so in this one. If you like romantic suspense, if you’ve never tried it before but are curious and looking for a good one—
Stolen Heat
is a book to put on the Be On The Lookout For.”
—Ramblings on Romance
“Ms. Naughton hooks you with characters way too human to be perfect, and plotlines that are delivered with laserlike precision.”
—Coffee Time Romance