Highlander’s HeartCalled by a Highlander Book Three

Mariah Stone

Contents

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Prologue

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

Epilogue

Also by Mariah Stone

Scottish slang

Acknowledgments

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Notes

About the Author

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

© 2020 Mariah Stone. All rights reserved.

Cover design by Qamber Designs and Media

All rights reserved. This book or parts thereof may not be reproduced in any form, stored in any retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise—without prior written permission of the publisher. For permission requests, contact the publisher at http:\\mariahstone.com

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Goodbyes are only for those who love with their eyes. Because for those who love with heart and soul there is no such thing as separation.

― Rumi

Prologue

Baghdad, Abbasid Caliphate, 1307

“Hey, Scot. Scot, wake up.”

Ian opened his eyes and lifted his head, ignoring the ache in his old wounds. Moonlight fell on the dirt-packed floor through tiny vertical windows up by the ceiling. It was warm, even at night. Around him, other slaves wheezed peacefully on the benches by the walls. The air smelled of unwashed bodies, dry dirt, and the orange tree that grew outside the windows. Even after eleven years here, Ian missed the fresh air of the Highlands.

Abaeze, the slave from Africa, whose bench stood right next to Ian’s, raised his head, his eyeballs glowing white in the darkness.

“Yes?” Ian whispered back. “What is it?”

They spoke Arabic, the common language here. Learning it when he’d arrived had been the difference between staying alive and dying.

Abaeze glanced around, sat up, then slithered soundlessly to Ian, quick and efficient. A slender man even taller than Ian, he was as dark as the night, his hair a black cloud.

Abaeze crouched next to Ian’s bench. “Abaeze hear a thing,” he whispered, his accent thick. Since Abaeze had only arrived recently, his Arabic was limited, but he could get his point across. “You be careful today. You watch you.”

A bad feeling settled in Ian’s stomach. “For what? Something during the fight?”

The man nodded. “Abaeze sleep and see death. You watch you.”

Fear gripped Ian’s throat in its icy hand. With that final message, Abaeze left Ian and settled back on his bench. Soon, he wheezed rhythmically.

Ian lay on his back and stared at the lime-cured white ceiling.

Death.

Would it be so bad, to let it finally take him? What hope did he have with a life like this? He’d never see the Highlands or his family again.

He always asked this question before a fight. His opponent and he needed to kill the other to live, to continue giving their masters the bloody satisfaction of power. The entertainment. The rush of a bet.

And on and on.

Every fight he’d won since he’d been here meant he’d taken a life. Ian had lost count of how many he’d killed. He’d become famous. The red-haired unbreakable beast of the caliph—the Red Death, they called him. Or simply, the Scot. Because the caliph valued him as a rare find—no other Scotsman had been captured.

Thank God.

He’d fought Germans, Spanish, Indians, Turks, English, Africans, and many, many Arabs. It didn’t matter what skin color they had, what language they spoke, if they had a family back home, mayhap children and a wife. They all fell from Ian’s hand.

Because he wanted to live.

But maybe Abaeze had seen the time for him to welcome his own death. Was he ready?

Ian asked himself that question repeatedly during the sleepless night and again in the morning. The sun shone into the room, and slaves brought food. The men were let out into the inner yard to clean and sweep. He was still thinking about it during the midday meal.

Other slaves were afraid of him. Abaeze, being relatively new, was Ian’s only friend. He’d had friends here before. They all were dead now.

The fights were always in the afternoon and towards the evening, when the sun had already started to set, to avoid the main heat. As always, Ian and the others were given armor first, then led into a windowless chamber full of weapons—scimitars, spears, and shields. There were two doors: one lead to the courtyard where the caliph held the fights, the other—back into the small wing of the palace meant for slaves.

“You watch you,” Abaeze repeated, taking a sword.

“You watch you, too,” Ian said. “Thank you for the warning, friend.”

The door to the courtyard opened, bright light blinding Ian in the darkness. They waited to see who’d be called first. But instead, many feet pounded against the dusty ground outside. Guards who stood lined along the walls shoved the first of the men standing closer to the courtyard door, yelling for everyone to get out.

Abaeze and Ian exchanged glances. “Looks like we fight many against many,” Ian said. “I will have your back.”

“And Abaeze fights for Scot.”

They shook hands. Then the crowd pushed them forward, and they were out in the daylight. Bloodthirsty shouts and cries filled the air. Warriors beat their weapons against their shields. There weren’t many spectators for these things, just the caliph and his rich, important subjects and their invited guests. They all sat up on the second-floor balconies—away from the warriors, away from the danger of

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