Accomplice to the Villain (Assistant and the Villain, #3)(34)
Evie began to move the pieces around, remembering how terrible she was at puzzles, how the pieces always looked the same. She didn’t know why she’d thought it would be different merely because she’d spent nearly all her days for half a year staring at it.
“Promise me when we’re done out here we can return it to the kitchen exactly as it was,” Evie said as she gently pushed the pieces around on the stone pavement.
Earlier, her boss had been quiet as he dismantled her favorite window piece by piece. The entire process had taken him no more than fifteen minutes, and Evie had only protested for the first ten. “I told you I would. I beg you to stop asking.”
“Well, if you’re begging.” She stuck her tongue out at the back of his head, and he must have sensed it because he turned so fast she fell back on her heels, her hand falling to the ground to prop her up.
His gaze burned, his black eyes fathomless and unreadable as he tossed a basket he’d hooked under his arm toward her. “Here. Eat.”
Evie stared at it, then lifted the wicker flap and pulled out a large loaf of bread, cheeses, a fig spread, and various fruits piled atop a folded checkered blanket. “Sir…is this a picnic?”
He stopped the puzzle to stare blankly at her. “Absolutely not.”
“Then what is it?”
He helped her lay out the blanket along with the rest of the food. “It’s dinner. Outside dinner.”
“On a picnic blanket?” Evie asked, looking pointedly down at it, giggling when she found a white rose buried at the bottom of the basket. She lifted a brow, letting the stem of the flower play between her fingers. “And this is?”
He grabbed her wrist—not hard enough to hurt, but enough to keep her from moving it. “Less talking. More puzzling,” he said, giving her a look that made her toes curl in her shoes. It was an unspoken message that said she was being obstinate and if she continued, something bad would happen. But what? She had no clue, but for some reason she wanted to push every one of his buttons until she found out.
Don’t be sadistic, Evie!
Unless it’s for a very good reason!
Was this a very good reason?
He turned to fully face her, and a sliver of skin became visible in the loose V of his black shirt.
Good enough.
The boss was staring at her expectantly. Oh dear, he’d said something just now. She’d registered the words coming from outside her head, but for some reason her brain refused to process them while she ventured onto one of her mind’s unwanted tangents.
“Well?” Trystan said, gesturing for her to answer. It was simply unfair that even disheveled with an overgrowth of stubble at his chin, he still managed to be devastatingly handsome, his skin gleaming in the moonlight. He looked warm and inviting, like a fuzzy blanket with murderous tendencies.
She was riding a train of delusion whose last stop was hopefully off a cliff. “I wasn’t paying attention, sir.”
Trystan frowned. “Why?”
“I was staring at your chest,” Evie blurted, her grin turning sheepish at the way his eyebrows shot to the top of his head.
“I beg your pardon?” he asked incredulously.
“I’m sorry?” Words continued rolling over her tongue, like a runaway carriage wheel. “You could stare at mine, too, if you want.”
What are you doing? she asked herself. Make it stop!
“To ensure we are, you know…even?”
WHAT ARE YOU DOING?
Amid her self-flagellation, her boss looked on the verge of a panic attack.
“That won’t be necessary, Sage, nor is it a-appropriate.” But Evie didn’t miss the way he stumbled slightly on the word, nor the subtle puff of his chest and the way his eyes flashed to the small amount of cleavage peeking out of her green dress.
She scrunched her nose. “After I get you some pearls to clutch, would you mind repeating yourself?”
“I asked if you’ve had any luck with the information you received when you ventured out with Keeley.” His eyes found something interesting about the stone archway in the back courtyard, and she had the sneaking suspicion that his control was slipping. It made her gleeful.
Evie clicked her tongue. “It turned out to be less useful than I’d hoped.” She eyeballed the few glass pieces he was forcing to fit together. “I still don’t understand why we couldn’t just leave the window as it was and direct the sunlight against it in the morning.”
He bent at the knee and gestured to the glass before him. “Because, Sage, it needs to be held directly in the sunlight, not at an angle to it, and it was either take apart the window or knock down the west tower.”
Well, that hardly seemed to matter; it wouldn’t be the first time part of the manor needed rebuilding in some form or another. The Villain had a standing tab with the magical contractors for all the mishaps they endured. Only 30 percent of them were his fault. The other seventy was a split between their enemies, dragons with bad aim, and of course the most destructive of all of them…Evie.
“And you’re sure the sunrise will hit it right here?” she asked. “What if we can’t put it back together exactly? What if none of the words are right or none of them go together?”
He looked away from the arch, and though he didn’t glance anywhere south of her face, she still felt blood rushing to her cheeks at the near reverence in his gaze. “Ironic, little tornado. You’re the one who taught me all words go together if you’ve the proper imagination.”