A gift. The words sent a bolt of displeasure through me, and I was struck by the oddity of this situation. The Archbishop, hiding the icing on his fingers. Me, clutching a Bible to my chest. “Right. Well, I’m going to go—”
“Of course. I, too, must retire—”
We parted ways with equally awkward nods.
Reid opened the bedroom door quietly that night. I shoved the Bible beneath his bed and greeted him with a guilty “Hello!”
“Lou!” He nearly leapt out of his skin. I might’ve even heard him curse. Eyes wide, he tossed his coat on the desk and approached warily. “It’s late. What are you doing awake?”
“Couldn’t sleep.” My teeth chattered, and I burrowed deeper into the blanket in which I’d cocooned myself.
He touched a hand to my forehead. “You’re burning up. Have you visited the infirmary?”
“Brie said the fever would last a few days.”
When he moved to sit beside me on the bed, I clambered to my feet, abandoning my blanket. My muscles protested the sudden movement, and I winced, shivering. He sighed and stood as well. “I’m sorry. Please, sit. You need to rest.”
“No, I need to get this hair off my neck. It’s driving me mad.” Inexplicably furious, I yanked the offending strands away from my sensitive skin. “But my arms, they’re so . . . heavy . . .” A yawn eclipsed the rest of my words, and my arms drooped. I sank back onto the bed. “I can’t seem to hold them up.”
He chuckled. “Is there something I can do to help?”
“You can braid it.”
The chuckle died abruptly. “You want me to—to what?”
“Braid it. Please.” He stared at me. I stared back. “I can teach you. It’s easy.”
“I highly doubt that.”
“Please. I can’t sleep with it touching my skin.”
It was true. Between the scripture, the fever, and the lack of sleep, my mind whirled deliriously. Every brush of hair against my skin was agony—somewhere between cold and pain, tingle and ache.
He swallowed hard and stepped around me. A welcome shiver swept down my back at his presence, his proximity. His heat. He expelled a resigned breath. “Tell me what to do.”
I resisted the urge to lean into him. “Divide it into three sections.”
He hesitated before gently wrapping his hands around my hair. Fresh gooseflesh rose on my arms as he threaded his fingers through the strands. “Now what?”
“Now take an outside section and cross it over the middle section.”
“What?”
“Must I repeat everything?”
“This is impossible,” he muttered, trying and failing to keep the strands separated. He gave up after a few seconds and started over. “Your hair is thicker than a horse’s tail.”
“Hmm.” I yawned again. “Is that a compliment, Chass?”
After several more attempts, he successfully managed the first step. “What’s next?”
“Now do the other side. Cross it over into the middle. Make sure it’s tight.”
He growled low in his throat, and a different sort of chill swept through me. “This looks terrible.”
I let my head fall forward, relishing the feel of his fingers on my neck. My skin didn’t protest as it had earlier. Instead, it seemed to warm under his touch. To melt. My eyes fluttered closed. “Talk to me.”
“About what?”
“How did you become captain?”
He didn’t answer for a long moment. “Are you sure you want to know?”
“Yes.”
“A few months after I joined the Chasseurs, I found a pack of loup garou outside the city. We killed them.”
Though no witch could ever claim friendliness with a werewolf, my heart contracted painfully at his pragmatism. His tone held no remorse, no emotion whatsoever—a simple statement of fact. As cold, barren, and improbable as a frozen seascape. Jean Luc would’ve called it truth.
Unable to muster the energy to continue the conversation, I sighed heavily, and we lapsed into silence. He braided steadily down my back, his movements quickening as he gained confidence. His fingers were nimble. Skilled. He seemed to sense the tension in my shoulders, however, because his voice was much softer when he asked, “How do I finish it?”
“There’s a leather cord on the nightstand.”
He wrapped the cord around the braid several times before tying it into a neat knot. At least, I assumed it was neat. Every aspect of Reid was precise, certain, every color in its proper place. Undiluted by indecision, he saw the world in black and white, suffering none of the messy, charcoal colors in between. The colors of ash and smoke. Of fear and doubt.