Hearts Cursed, page 1

Hearts Cursed
GODS CURSED SERIES BOOK 4
LEISL LEIGHTON
Praise for the Gods Cursed Series
Was really hard to put this one down once I started! I can not wait to see what this new series ... Gods Cursed Series.... Holds in the future!
DIANA K – GOODREADS & BOOKSPROUT
Loved this and it's Easter orientated. Check this out.
WHITNEY – GOODREADS AND BOOKSPROUT REVIEWER
“So good! I will always love paranormal romances, they just have so many different types, and themes, and never get boring. Leighton delivers a great one!”
TAPNCHICA – GOODREADS AND BOOKSPROUT REVIEWER
I absolutely love this … Leighton brilliantly weaves in Greek and Nordic Mythology, Oestra/Easter themes, and a HUGE splash of her rich and thrilling imagination. She is a master at world building, character, plot, and oh...those sex scenes are pretty damn hot. You'd be crazy not to read this series!
LAURA BADHUS – GOODREADS REVIEWER
Loved it !! love this series !! love Korinna and Tamuel.. this is their story... they have history... a fast paced fated mates , second chances, cursed drama... a fast paced action packed drama... so good!!!
KIMKIM – GOODREADS AND BOOKSPROUT REVIEWER
This was magical and captivating throughout. Thoroughly enjoyed the storyline and characters and how they overcome things.
PAT’S REVIEWS - GOODREADS REVIEWER
I loved this! … I loved reading about the history and what happened to set things in motion. This is a very good book and is most definitely worth reading.
A SCHOFIELD - GOODREADS & BOOKBUB REVIEWER
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Cursed to never be loved; fated to never be alone …
Cursed cupid Tamuel has been told he will never love or be loved, a fate to which he’s long been resigned. Yet from the moment he meets powerful trainee witch Korinna Soteira at the Amazonian and Gargarean training camp, he knows this to be a lie – he loves Korinna like he’s loved nothing and no-one in his life. But his curse is right in one respect: he may be able to love, but he can never be loved. Korinna will only ever be his friend, a fact he has spent the last twenty years coming to terms with.
However, malignant forces are stirring in the darkest reaches of the Realms. They have plans to use Korinna and her unusual powers – plans that can only be thwarted by the cursed cupid and an impossible love. Yet breaking Tamuel’s curse now could release a force too ancient to destroy – and thus destroy any future.
What if the only way to survive the present is to place the future in peril?
Fractured Curse is a prequel novella to my popular Gods Cursed Series centring on unknown history between two of readers’ favourite characters from the series. It takes place 2000 years before the events in Love Cursed and can be read as an introduction into the world or at any time during the reading of the series.
It’s exclusive to my newsletter subscribers, so to get your copy, just click the link below, fill in your details and it will be winging its way to you along with other free reads, deals and bookish info.
Get My Free Copy of Fractured Curse
Contents
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
Epilogue
Want to read a little something sexy?
Pack Bound
The Curse of Morghanna Cantrae
Chapter 1
Join Leisl’s Legends
Also By Leisl Leighton
About Leisl
Acknowledgments
To all those who wish upon a star and believe in faeries and the joy of imagination.
This one’s for you!
Prologue
DEMETER’S SACRIFICE
“I do not wish to do this, my beloved boy.”
Triptolemus’ gaze met Demeter’s, steady and sure as ever. “You must, D. You know it is the only way.”
“But I do not wish to lose you,” she said, hating the quaver in her voice. If it was anyone but he, she would smite them for witnessing her weakness.
“I will still be here.”
“But you will not be you. And you will not know me. You will know nothing.”
“I will know this.” He gestured to the snow-laden pine forest around them, his expression peaceful.
To her, in this moment, the prettiness of the green frosted branches of the conical-shaped trees wasn’t peaceful at all. It was a slap in the face given the ugliness of what she must do with the spell they’d crafted.
He sighed, turned back to her and said, “My need to do my work will remain. It will be enough.”
“Will it?”
“It must be.” He swallowed hard, stood tall, chin raised, vibrant green eyes full of all the love and life and giving that was so much a part of him. A part of him she was about to steal away. “Do you think I wish to leave my beloved when I know my disappearance will hurt her beyond endurance? To leave before my daughter is born, to never know her, not until such a time she is strong enough to utilise her powers and endure the burden of foreseeing in a way even Cassandra could not?”
He took a deep breath, but not soon enough to cover the throb of grief in his voice; a throb she wished she could take away but couldn’t. Not for him; not for her; not for any of them. Because he was right.
They had to do this.
He continued calmly when most would fall prey to their emotions – including her. “I wish I could stay. I wish this burden was not ours. But you cannot unsee what you saw. And I cannot allow myself, or my daughter because of me, to be used by one of the Old Titans for such ill purposes.” He took a shuddering breath, shoulders straightening further so he looked like one of Ares’ soldiers. “Promise me you will make sure my beloved does not suffer.”
“I promise.”
“And promise me you will look after my daughter like she is yours.”
“Persephone will take her as one of her Soteira. She will want for nothing. And we will ensure she is hidden for as long as we can.”
He nodded, then looked away over the snow-tipped pine trees surrounding them, before, fists clenched at his side, he said, “Do it now, before I change my mind.”
She lifted her hand to start the spell, but hesitated. Instead of touching the edges of her magic, she reached out to touch his handsome face, to glory in the spring green of his eyes – a green that represented his ties to her and Persephone and Gaia, and marked him for this fate.
They’d tried everything to change the path of destiny that led to the future she’d seen. But the tri-power that had been mixed with a strange other-power – a power she was certain had come from the Eternal Well itself – that had caused his miraculous creation, marked him and his offspring in a way that made them targets for a mad Titan and his rage, and nothing could undo what had been done. All they could do was postpone what was to come until the players were ready – well, as ready as they could be.
She sighed, her hand dropping to her side. “I vow, with all the love for you I have in my heart, that I will find some way of bringing you back to us before you lose it all.”
His eyes widened. “No! I do not ask that of—”
But the Eternal Well had already heard her vow, the rolling knocks in the distance cutting off his protest.
Tears filled his eyes. “What have you done?”
“What must be done to ensure a happy ending.” The rolling knocks were a sign that the Eternal Well had accepted her vow, had written it into the Halls of Power and tied her existence to its fulfillment.
“But there is no happy ending if you die.”
She smiled softly as she cupped his face one more time. “My dearest boy, the son of my heart if not my body, have some faith in me.”
Then, because she could stand the torture of this goodbye no longer, she cast the spell they’d created, taking everything from him that made him who he was except the power in his veins and the immortality that would forever mark him as different from all humans on this Earth he so loved; or most Gods for that matter.
It was a difference that would see him wander, a lost soul, never able to settle in one place for long, never to belong, eternally hearts cursed and lonely because of a cursed prophecy.
It was the only thing that would keep him safe. The only thing that would keep his daughter safe until she was ready.
The spell made him jerk and clench his teeth, frothing at the mouth for interminable minutes until, finally – thankfully – he passed out.
She caught him, cushioning his fall, laying him in the cold snow under a large pine tree next to the bags of coin that would help him in his new life. After making certain he was safe under the shielding branches and wouldn’t be covered in the snow now falling from the sky, she turned and opened a portal to her home.
She stepped through and immediately knelt down beside the pond of foreseeing she’d had Cassandra make for her before the other woman’s constant visions had driven her insane. Until Korinna was born and grew old enough to handle the power of foresight that would be hers, someone among the pantheons must still be able to see and understand and try to stop the danger that was coming for them. Not that anyone but she, Persephone and Triptolemus believed in what she’d seen.
Her brothers and sisters and all their children were nothing if not consistent in their belief that they were untouchable. As far as Zeus and Hades and the others were concerned, they had defeated the Titans once, and were certain they could do it again even if one of them did make it past the Void that separated the Beyond from all the Realms. The Gods and Goddesses of other pantheons were no better in their egotism.
They relied too heavily on Cassandra and the Fates.
Idiots, all of them!
They went on and on about the hubris of humanity, but honestly, hubris, thy name be … insert any name of any God or Goddess that ever was or ever would be!
They were concerned only with their power and how to hold on to it.
So short-sighted.
But she wasn’t. She had seen the future and couldn’t deny it.
She waved her hand over the waters of the pond, looking, searching to see if her actions today had created the change they desired.
The dark future was still there, but it was fogged, parts of it flickering and changing over and over as the echoes of her actions affected the ripples of time.
She waved her hands and part of the vision cleared to show her the birth of a boy-child, not long after Triptolemus’ baby girl was to be born, whose life seemed twined with hers. She would need to dabble in that boy-child’s life and the life of his parents to ensure a favourable outcome.
She sighed. So much to do.
She hoped it wouldn’t be too little too late. She wished she could talk to her Triptolemus. He always made her feel better. Her chin wobbled. “Please, Eternal Well, don’t let the sacrifice I made, that my beloved boy made, be in vain.”
There was no sign her plea had been heard, but then, that wasn’t really the way the Eternal Well worked. Still, she wouldn’t stop praying to it. Even a Goddess as powerful as she needed to pray to something.
Roping her thoughts back in, she stared at the ripples before her.
There was a face in the water now. A woman’s face. The image glowed strangely – first blood-red, like the gem she’d wrested from Tiberinus a century ago, then changing to the colours of dawn, before being washed in blood-red then finally settling on shining silver, like moonlight. There was something familiar about it. Something she …
She gasped. Could this be the soul trapped in the HeartsBlood Gem? Is that why she’d been so determined to take it? She’d never quite known what to do with it, having no interest in the prophecy that tied the soul inside the gem to God Killer powers. She’d put it with the rest of her collection of powerful gems and trinkets. But she should have known it meant something. The Eternal Well could move in mysterious ways. Was it trying to tell her something about the gem or the soul inside?
As if in answer to her question, the ripples from that image bled out and linked with the ones of Triptolemus’ fate. Which could only mean one thing:
The soul in the gem and her precious Triptolemus were linked in some way!
How, she didn’t yet know, but it was something when she’d had nothing before. Something that might help her fulfill her vow despite the unfortunate prophecy. Now, she just had to figure out how she could use it to her advantage while bypassing that particular prophecy.
She had no plans to die now or in the future.
She had to see this war with the oncoming darkness that was Perses through to its conclusion. A conclusion she would force to go her way, even if she had to sacrifice her heart.
Chapter
One
Ilia sat bolt upright, hands clutching at her chest. Her heart thundered under her ribs – so hard, so fast – it felt like it might tear itself in two.
“Fuck-fuck,” she gasped, blinking sweat from her eyes – or was it tears?
Both. “Fuck.”
Her chest was hot. She looked down to see glowing pinkish-gold light. It had to be Clodia, the evil ancient witch now trapped in the HeartsBlood Gem she’d melded into her chest months ago.
But how could the bitch-witch be doing this? It had taken Ilia centuries of being trapped inside the gem to figure out how it worked, and centuries more to be able to affect the person wearing it. There was no way the evil old witch could have discovered those secrets so quickly and used them against her.
So what the fuck was this?
“Wait a minute.” The gem usually glowed red, not pinkish-gold. Maybe this wasn’t Clodia. Maybe this had something to do with her newly acquired powers.
She still knew so little about them. Her own powers had been burned out after fighting Clodia in the Void. She wasn’t unhappy about that given they were part of the reason she’d been blood-cursed into the gem in the first place – even though they’d not been strong, they had been perfect to mesh her soul with the gem. She would have been perfectly happy never to have powers again, but no, of course she wasn’t allowed that kind of peace. These ones had been ‘gifted’ to her when Tamuel’s use of an ancient spell from the Eleusinian Mysteries Grimoire and Dawn’s burgeoning powers, so incredibly strong even though she’d just been born, had given Ilia a corporeal form.
It still made her shudder that part of that spell had used blood magic. Blood magic had been what locked her inside the HeartsBlood Gem all those years ago. Why hadn’t she realised that all those times Tamuel had used the sigil spell that it used blood magic? He’d carved it into his skin for fuck’s sake! At the time she’d put it down to the fact that there were many spells that only worked if made a part of the worker in some way. She’d thought that the blood was just a by-product of the carving not that it was powering anything.
But when he’d used it on her – as it had always been meant to be used, to make a worthy spirit corporeal – she’d realised just how important the blood was in the working of the spell. She’d been so shocked – and it had happened so quickly – she’d not been able to stop him. Then after, she’d been so overwhelmed by the new life she’d been given, and the fact that everything she’d lost was once again a fresh wound in her now corporeal heart, she’d barely been able to say anything.
After they’d got home and she’d come to terms with what had happened, it had seemed churlish to make a fuss when Tamuel’s intent had only been good. As had Korinna’s use of blood magic with the Eleusinian Mysteries Grimoire and the ring she’d got from her long-lost father. Although, from what they’d been learning, that had more to do with the qualities of their blood being magical. So it wasn’t really blood magic in the way she knew – and hated – it. It was something else entirely.
But blood magic – it wasn’t good. Look what it had done in this instance: tied her to the baby whose magic had been instrumental in letting her live again and in getting them out of the Void.
Thinking of it made the power in her chest flare brighter.
Fuck. She put her hand to it, feeling its warmth, its urgency. She couldn’t go out there like this. The others would worry – and they already worried enough.
She had to think of something else.
The dream. Yes. Her dream. She needed to try to remember it. It had felt important.
She closed her eyes, breathing slowly, bringing the feeling she’d woken with back to the fore.
Fragments of her dream fluttered to life, but stayed foggy and elusive. All she could grasp was that it had been a thing of import – a great hope and a terrible loss.







