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Stolen Hearts

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by Elise Noble




  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1 - Emmy

  Chapter 2 - Black

  Chapter 3 - Emmy

  Chapter 4 - Emmy

  Chapter 5 - Emmy

  Chapter 6 - Emmy

  Chapter 7 - Black

  Chapter 8 - Black

  Chapter 9 - Black

  Chapter 10 - Emmy

  Chapter 11 - Emmy

  Chapter 12 - Emmy

  Chapter 13 - Emmy

  Chapter 14 - Black

  Chapter 15 - Black

  Chapter 16 - Emmy

  Chapter 17 - Emmy

  Chapter 18 - Black

  Chapter 19 - Emmy

  Chapter 20 - Black

  Chapter 21 - Emmy

  Chapter 22 - Emmy

  Chapter 23 - Emmy

  Chapter 24 - Black

  Chapter 25 - Black

  Chapter 26 - Black

  Chapter 27 - Emmy

  Chapter 28 - Emmy

  Chapter 29 - Emmy

  Chapter 30 - Emmy

  Chapter 31 - Black

  Chapter 32 - Black

  Chapter 33 - Emmy

  Chapter 34 - Black

  Chapter 35 - Emmy

  Chapter 36 - Emmy

  Chapter 37 - Emmy

  Chapter 38 - Black

  Chapter 39 - Emmy

  Chapter 40 - Emmy

  Chapter 41 - Black

  Chapter 42 - Black

  Chapter 43 - Emmy

  Epilogue

  What's next?

  What's next?

  What's next?

  Want to stalk me?

  End of book stuff

  Other books by Elise Noble

  STOLEN HEARTS

  Elise Noble

  Published by Undercover Publishing Limited

  Copyright © 2019 Elise Noble

  v4

  ISBN: 978-1-912888-05-4

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organisations, places, events, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the author.

  Edited by Nikki Mentges, NAM Editorial

  Cover design by Abigail Sins

  www.undercover-publishing.com

  www.elise-noble.com

  Some men will unlock your heart,

  Others will release the devil inside.

  - Emmy Black

  CHAPTER 1 - EMMY

  “DIAMOND? DO YOU want the good news or the bad news?” my husband asked from the cockpit of our jet.

  We’d just boarded at Cairo International Airport, ready for a short hop over the Med to Italy to dispose of a particularly pesky oligarch’s son who’d developed a penchant for bumping off competitors to his daddy’s business. Whether it was to help the old man or simply to protect his inheritance, we weren’t sure, but either way it didn’t matter. Sonny boy’s last murder had been on American soil, and the powers that be had deemed he needed to go.

  “Gimme the bad news.”

  Get it over with.

  “We’re not getting paid a million and a half bucks to dispose of Anton Ludovich.”

  “Oh?”

  “That’s the good news. He died all by himself.”

  “How?”

  “Drove his Ferrari off a bridge. Cocaine was mentioned.”

  “So where does that leave us? Should I file a new flight plan?”

  More bloody paperwork. The bane of my life. What do you think it’s like to be a jet-setting assassin? All glamorous parties and car chases and silenced pistols? I wished. No, mostly it was meetings and planning and occasionally, I got to crawl in mud. Then there was the time I almost died in the desert, but that’s a whole other story.

  “Yes. We need a new flight plan.”

  “Virginia?”

  Virginia was home. Or at least, it had been for the last seventeen years—more than half of my life. At heart, I was a London girl and always would be, but I’d moved to the US after a job offer I couldn’t refuse, and look at me now—I’d clawed my way to the top of the ladder, leaving chaos, destruction, and piles of bodies in my wake. And still inconsiderate assholes dicked with my plans.

  “We’ll need more fuel,” Black said, followed by a tiny hesitation. Most people wouldn’t have seen past my husband’s poker face. Me? I sensed there was a “but” coming. “But we do have a gap in our schedules now.”

  See? “And?”

  “We could take a…vacation?”

  He said the word tentatively, testing it out. Black didn’t take time off as a rule. The occasional minibreak, maybe, or undercover work in sunny climates, but not proper holidays. In the fifteen years we’d been married, we’d only been on one bona fide vacation, and that was more of a recuperation period than anything else.

  “Are you feeling okay?”

  “We’ve got two weeks before our next job starts.” A joint security exercise with the Secret Service. We’d been hired to play the bad guys, hurrah. “We’re apart too much, and just for once, I’d like to spend some time doing nothing. See how it feels.”

  “What do you have in mind?”

  “Since we’re already in Egypt, why don’t we go to Dahab? How long since we visited?”

  Two and a half years had passed since I last set foot in the tiny town, but the memories of dragging myself up the beach in my underwear after trying to start World War III on the other side of the Gulf of Aqaba were as vivid as if it had happened yesterday. For Black? It must’ve been three or four years since he’d been there.

  Together, we ran Blackwood Security along with two of Black’s old Navy buddies, and over the years, it had grown to be the second-largest security and investigations firm in the world. Thousands of employees and offices on six continents meant vacations were something other people took, although Nate, my husband’s best friend and one of our business partners, did threaten to send me to Antarctica on a regular basis.

  Sometimes, I felt tempted to take him up on the offer. Business was booming, which meant our schedules barely allowed enough time to shit in the mornings, let alone go sightseeing. Black oversaw the investigations division while I ran Special Projects, which basically meant I got sent all the crap nobody else wanted to touch. Everything from rescue missions to spying to common or garden assassination came across my desk.

  And I was tired.

  “It’s been too long. A vacation? Are you serious?”

  Stupid question. He was always serious.

  “Change the flight plan. I’ll call Bob and let him know we’re coming. Actually, speaking of coming…” He eyed up the tiny bedroom at the back of the plane. “The admin can wait for ten minutes.”

  “Only ten minutes? What happened to your stamina, old man?”

  He picked me up and threw me over his shoulder, slapping me on the ass with his free hand. Any other man would have died for that, but with Black, I only giggled. Giggled. What was wrong with me? This whole vacation thing was already messing with my mind.

  But who cared? A fortnight on the beach doing nothing but my husband sounded like heaven to me. Sun, sea, sand, and sex—the perfect combination as long as we didn’t mix the sand with the sex, because that could get painful.

  I landed on the bed in a heap, but I was smiling. “Love you, Chuck.”

  “Love you too, Diamond.”

  Three hours and as many orgasms later, we sped along the dual carriageway between Sharm el-Sheikh and Dahab. Not so long ago, the town had been nothing
more than a Bedouin fishing village clinging to the coast halfway up the South Sinai Peninsula, but over the last few decades, it had morphed into one of the world’s premier water sports destinations, although it still managed to retain a lot of its original charm. And its goats. There were goats everywhere.

  I glanced in the rear-view mirror, and the driver Captain Bob had sent with the pickup didn’t look particularly happy in the back seat. Neither was I. The “too fast” warning chimes had been going for thirty minutes now, and I didn’t have any earplugs. But eighty kilometres of smooth tarmac with only half a dozen other vehicles in sight was too good an opportunity to pass up, and if it hadn’t been for the tour bus we got stuck behind at the second police checkpoint, I might have beaten my record for driving the route.

  Beside me, Black tapped away at his tablet, letting everyone know of our change in plans. There’d be a few raised eyebrows at Blackwood, and probably some cursing too, but it was time to practise what we preached and improve our work/life balance. They’d cope.

  At last, the third and final checkpoint came into view, and I smiled as we were waved through.

  “Such incompetence,” Black muttered.

  “Good for us.”

  Although we’d left most of our hardware on the plane, there were still two guns and a selection of sharp things in the luggage strapped down in the bed of the truck. Be prepared, that was our motto. Or at least, it would have been if the Boy Scouts hadn’t trademarked it.

  The whole town was just a couple of miles square, and it wasn’t long before we drove up to the gates of the Black Diamond Hotel. As you can probably guess by the name, we had an interest in it. A decade ago, we’d provided the bulk of the money to purchase and renovate the sprawling estate on the edge of the laguna, a beautiful blue bay sheltered from the worst of the waves by a spit of sand reaching across its mouth in the distance. The renovation project had been the brainchild of Captain Bob Stewart, a colleague of Black’s back in his days as a Navy SEAL, and Bob still ran the place with his wife, Sondra.

  When we first laid eyes on the place, it had been derelict, the victim of an investor who’d mortgaged himself up to the hilt then made a series of spectacularly lousy business decisions. Not many owners had wanted to buy chicken-flavoured water for their pets, and his range of fashion burkas flopped too.

  We’d picked the land up for a song and rebuilt, and now sixty guest villas nestled amongst tropical gardens, complete with a spa, two restaurants, two bars, a tennis court, and a conference centre. No high-rise buildings for us. We kept it traditional with arched windows, domed roofs, and mosaics made by local craftsmen.

  Honestly, I loved the place. It had a feeling of peace about it, and my only regret was that I didn’t get to spend more time there.

  Of course, we had an emphasis on security too—it was in our blood—and Bob strode towards us as a guard stepped out of the gatehouse with a mirror to examine the underside of the pickup. Blackwood’s people were slightly better trained than the police.

  “Chief Petty Officer Black.”

  “Captain Stewart.”

  Black climbed out of the car, and the two men saluted each other while I turned to check on the dude in the back seat.

  “It’s okay—you can get out now.”

  A tiny nod.

  “Shall I help you with the door?”

  Another nod.

  The instant he got free, he scuttled into the main building. Captain Bob stared after him.

  “What happened to Ahmed?”

  “He’s not such a good passenger.”

  Bob gave a surreptitious sniff, but the smell of burning rubber had all but dispersed by then. I grabbed my suitcase out of the back and headed for the tiled path at the side of the lobby with Black and Bob following behind. Both knew better than to ask if I needed a hand with my luggage.

  The smell of the sea air soothed my senses, and that tight knot of tension that lived in my gut—the force that drove me—loosened just a little. Despite being in the desert, the gardens were lush and green thanks to a sprinkler system that came on each day before dawn. Fragrance washed over me as I strode along the path to our seafront villa.

  “I haven’t touched the place since you were here last,” Bob said. “Let me know if you want me to send housekeeping over.”

  I took a mental inventory of the place. Yes, anything interesting was locked up in the floor safe.

  “If someone could give the place a freshen-up while we have dinner, that’d be good. Want to join us?”

  “And ruin your romantic getaway?”

  I refrained from pointing out that Black had fucked me quite thoroughly before we left Cairo airport. A sideways glance, and his tiny smirk showed he’d had the same thought.

  “Always good to catch up with old friends,” he said.

  “Wish I could, but I can’t.” Bob overtook me as we walked up the steps to our Egyptian home, the key in his outstretched hand. “Lynn’s here, and I promised I’d eat with her tonight. But I could ask the chef to set a couple of extra places…”

  Lynn was Bob and Sondra’s only daughter. In her mid-thirties, if I recalled correctly, with a high-pitched voice, a love of crochet that bordered on an obsession, and a tendency to sniffle if things didn’t go her way. The last thing I wanted to do was share a table with her.

  “No, it’s fine. You enjoy your family dinner, and we’ll drive into town. We’ve already planned to go to that Mexican place by the bridge if it’s still there?”

  “It’s still there. The tacos are still every bit as good as they used to be.”

  “How long is Lynn staying?”

  My real question: could we put off a Black-Stewart get-together until after she left?

  “A month.”

  Shit. “That’s a long trip.”

  “She’s here to get married. The pair of them figured they could combine the wedding and the honeymoon to save money. They’re tying the knot on the beach in two weeks, and you’re invited of course.”

  Black raised an eyebrow. “I thought she was already married?”

  “She was. This had better be third time lucky because I was this far…” Bob held his thumb and forefinger a millimetre apart. “From a murder charge with number two.”

  “You could’ve made it look like an accident.”

  “I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that.”

  The door to the villa creaked open, heat radiating from the thick wood in the afternoon sun. The inside, with its domed roof and AC unit, would be cooler, but before I could step into the shade, a voice drifted across from the other side of the thick shrubbery that surrounded our private terrace. Dammit, I really needed those earplugs.

  “I’m not wearing that dress!”

  “Zena, you chose the design.” No mistaking Lynn’s voice, and she sounded exasperated. “Please don’t argue with me again.”

  “No, I said it was the least horrible out of all the ones you showed me, which is totally different. Plus we were in America. This is Egypt, and it’s boiling. I won’t be able to breathe.”

  “Zena?” I mouthed at Bob, and he rolled his eyes.

  “My granddaughter. From husband number one.”

  Ah, yes, the guy who ran off with the babysitter, if memory served me right. Seemed he couldn’t stand Lynn’s whining either, and if my first impression of Zena was any indication, the attitude was genetic. A funny thing, genetics. Bob was a legend, Sondra was sweet as cotton candy, and somehow, they’d ended up with Lynn. If it weren’t for the fact that Lynn had Bob’s pale blue eyes and Sondra’s delicate chin, I’d suspect a mix-up at birth.

  “You only need to wear it for a couple hours,” Lynn told her daughter. “And it’s real pretty.”

  “If I have to truss myself up in that thing, I’m not going to the wedding at all.”

  “But where are we gonna get a different dress? There aren’t any bridal shops in Dahab, and that one took me weeks to make.”

  “Can’t I just wear shor
ts?”

  “No, you can’t.”

  “Why not?”

  “Because it’s a wedding.”

  “So? That’s not a proper reason.”

  “Okay, so how about because you’re sixteen years old, and I’m your mother. In two weeks, I’m going to become Mrs. Christopher Holt, and I want you there to celebrate with me.”

  “I hate you. You’re determined to ruin my life!”

  Running footsteps signalled Zena’s departure, and I began to wish we’d gone to Italy after all. Planning a risky, high-profile assassination was infinitely more fun than dealing with a stroppy teenager.

  Captain Bob let out a long sigh. “I’d better go and mediate.”

  Black edged towards the threshold. “Rather you than me. See you tomorrow.”

  The door clicked shut, and I flopped back on the sofa. A cloud of dust puffed up as I landed, and if I wasn’t mistaken, that was a pile of dead ants in the corner under the TV. Yup, the place definitely needed a clean.

  “Should’ve gone to Milan,” Black muttered.

  “Don’t worry; if we’re out on the water, they can’t get us. I guess we should probably pick up a wedding present, though. I’ll email Bradley.”

  Bradley was our personal assistant, a self-confessed shopaholic who wouldn’t bat an eyelid at the request. The small matter of an ocean and a language barrier wouldn’t stop him from finding the perfect gift.

  “Good plan.”

  “Is the door locked?” I asked.

  “Of course.”

  “In that case, you’re wearing too many clothes. Get ’em off, Mr. Black.”

  He peeled his T-shirt over his head, and I’d never get sick of the sight of that chest. And the abs… Don’t drool, bitch. We’d had our ups and downs over the years as a marriage of convenience turned into something altogether more sweaty, but now that we were together, properly together, nothing could prise us apart. Occasionally when I drank too much, I was liable to ramble on about two souls joining and becoming one, at least until Black told me to shut up and carried me to bed, but it was true.

  Black had stolen my heart.

 

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