Do Your Worst(47)



“Oh yeah?” Riley’s temperature rose in alarming spikes. Of all the self-important, hypocritical bullshit she’d heard from him, this was the tops. “Well, you’re a villain who thinks he’s a victim.”

Hurt flashed across his eyes, but Riley ignored it, barreling forward on a lethal cocktail of rage and unwanted lust. This guy? This asshole had to be the hottest man she’d ever seen? Really?

How many times did she have to save his ass before he believed she could handle herself?

She should have let that snake bite him. Should have stood by and watched as he writhed in pain at her feet.

“And you know what else?” Her voice shook slightly with anger, “If I hadn’t come to Arden, you’d have nothing to show for almost six weeks of work.”

Clark seethed, grip on the ladder tightening, his knuckles going white.

Riley thought he might storm out and relished the thought. She’d come for this fight. If she was afraid of getting her hands dirty, she wouldn’t be here.

Instead, he stalked closer. “I’m not the only one floundering here, though, am I?” He stood over her, looking down his nose. “When are you going to admit you’re completely out of your depth?”

Riley sucked in a breath. He’d struck a nerve she didn’t touch, didn’t look at. Suddenly, it felt like more than her top was see-through, like he could stare through her skin to her tender, striving heart.

“You might have a few family parlor tricks up your sleeve.” His voice wasn’t raised, no, it was dark, and low. “But when it comes to actually”—he raised his hands to make fucking finger quotes—“breaking the curse—”

That was it. If she had that dagger in her hand right now, Clark would lose more than a button.

“—so far all you’ve done is drop a priceless artifact in a fire and hang a bunch of ugly wreaths. Which, let’s add that up, amounts to precisely nothing. Hmm.” He tapped his chin. “If you can really do what you say, how come everything you try fails?”

He’d said rude things to her before, but those barbs had been easier to dismiss, unequivocally not true.

They knew each other now. These insults weren’t shots in the dark. They came after almost two weeks of weighing, measuring, and he’d aimed for maximum damage.

Just as Riley surrendered to her anger, letting it burn up her weakness, her fear that he was right, the clouds shifted outside the window, changing the light in the room. A piece of the ornate crown molding glimmered—winked at her.

Ha!

If Clark thought the worst thing she could do was pity him, he was wrong.

“You wanna talk to me about incompetence?” She pushed past him, purposefully ramming her shoulder into his as she grabbed his stupid ladder. “You’ve been working in this room all morning, and you don’t even know where to look.”

The metal ladder made a heavy scraping sound as she dragged it across the floor. Damn. It wasn’t terribly tall, maybe eight feet, but the thing was heavier than it looked.

As Riley moved, so did the clouds outside, until the room grew progressively dimmer, the sun all but blotted out. By the looks of it, Arden Castle was in for a storm.

“What do you think you’re doing?” Clark stomped over.

“Your job, only better than you.” Hand over hand, she started to climb.

“Oh, excellent,” he said sarcastically. “Scale a rickety old ladder in heeled boots inside a castle notorious for freak accidents. That’ll end well.”

Despite his protests, he reached out to hold the base, stabilizing it.

“What’s possessed you this time? Oh. Let me guess. Smelled sulfur again, Lassie?”

Riley knocked on the part of the wood she’d seen illuminated, going up on her toes as she tried to hear if it was hollow.

Clark warily eyed where she was prodding. “Do be delicate, that could very well be remnants of the original design—” he said just as she curled back her arm and struck her elbow through the weakest spot in the wood.

While she yelped—that hurt more than she’d anticipated—Clark massaged the bridge of his nose with the hand not holding the ladder.

“Tell me truly. Are you or are you not the personification of chaos?”

Ignoring him, she rooted around in the hole she’d created. There must be something up here. The light had been so odd, such a tantalizing temptation.

“I can’t tell if there’s something back here.” She leaned on one foot to get her hand deeper.

“Riley, you really shouldn’t—”

“I’m fine.” She shushed him.

“Did you just—Never in my life . . .” he muttered.

After a few more minutes of failed inspection, she deflated. “I guess there’s nothing here.”

Her cheeks burned. All her instincts had told her to climb up here to prove Clark wrong. Now it felt like the curse laughing at her expense.

She’d been so sure she’d have this moment of triumph, whipping out another artifact. Instead, all she’d delivered was another dramatic act of failure.

Clark was going to be even more insufferable now.

Riley moved to step down but before she could even lift her foot to descend the first rung, Clark cut in, “Be careful.”

“I am,” she said, realizing in the same moment that her sleeve had caught on the splintered wood of the hole.

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