“What?” Evie practically yelled.
“There was a third key,” he said, squeezing his eyes shut and pinching the bridge of his nose.
Evie waited for him to continue, feeling as if she were about to spring outside her skin. But he didn’t speak, just stood there, not moving an inch. She waited one more beat before speaking, because really, this wasn’t a melodrama. “Hello! Who has it?”
He shook his head. “It matters not.” When she started to argue, he held out his hand. “Believe me, Sage. Let it go.”
Because she was so very good at doing that.
But she obliged anyway. For now. She was tired more than she was curious, and that was jarring enough that Evie took a step back.
It was nearing late afternoon, and she needed to go home. Needed to let family know she was well and assure that Lyssa was still being taken care of despite how much better their father was doing over the past few months.
Shaking her head, she held up her hands in surrender. “Sir, I’m exhausted. I need to go home. Make sure it’s still standing and all that, and then I need to take a nap, preferably with a toasty fire in the fireplace and the pitter-patter of rain against my roof.”
The surprise on his face melted into what almost appeared to be concern. But every reaction was always such a subtle shift of emotion, it was next to impossible to interpret some days.
“Yes. I suppose we can continue this the day after tomorrow.” There was no way to tell by his voice if he was angry or upset. It was too even, an almost practiced sort of steady. “I was going to announce at closing time that everyone has the day off tomorrow.”
Evie blinked. “But it’s the middle of the week. Why?”
“Until we find the person giving away our secrets, I’d like to have the office formally searched without anyone here to interfere. If the spy left even a scrap of a clue, I want to find it before they have a chance to get rid of it.”
She nodded and scanned the lines of stress across his face. He probably needed a nap as well, but that was hardly her concern.
“I’ll see you the day after tomorrow, I suppose.”
“Actually, Sage, now that I’ve considered it, you’re not getting the day off. I need your help in the search.”
Evie frowned, her brows furrowing as she said, “Why am I being punished because someone is trying to blow you up?”
The Villain lifted a brow, ready to respond, but his head whipped to the side. The sounds of whispered giggles came down the hall, and both Evie and The Villain waited for a moment so they could greet the two wanderers. Until the echo of two voices reached them—one most likely a man and the other a woman.
“I wonder if the boss will give a reward to anyone who knows information regarding the mole.” Evie could tell by the tone that it was one of her least favorite interns.
“He might…” But Evie didn’t hear the rest because in her panic, she’d thrown open a panel of the wall that lay before one of the hidden rooms and threw her boss—who was apparently so shocked that Evie touched his person that he moved without protest—inside with her.
The space was not made for two people—in fact, it was hardly fit for one. Evie’s entire body was pressed tightly against her boss’s, his low voice hissing in her ear. “Why the deadlands did you do that?” he grumbled under his breath. “Little tornado.”
“Hey,” she warned, ignoring how close together their faces were. “That time ‘little tornado’ sounded like an insult.”
“When were you under the illusion it was a compliment?” he whispered back incredulously.
She held up a hand to silence him and nodded toward the wall.
Muffled words were being spoken, but Evie couldn’t quite make them out. Pressing her ear against the cold stone panel, she squeaked when the wall gave a little under the gentle pressure of her head. Before she could fall through it, making an absolute ass of herself, strong hands wrapped around her waist, bringing her back into him.
The wall stopped moving, and the continued conversation flitted through the crack, thankfully distracting her from the large male body pressed against hers.
“Whoever’s screwing The Villain over better be counting their calendar days.”
“Did you see the way he carried Ms. Sage in after the klutz almost got herself killed? If I knew being a charity case was all it took to get The Villain’s attention, I would’ve made up a far better sob story in my application letter.”
A cruel laugh followed the words, and Evie felt a numbness settle over her. It was freeing, in a way, that words such as those did not sting and fell her the way they used to. Despite her many moments of doubt, Evie knew who she was. She didn’t always get things right, but she worked hard, and she always kept trying, even when she failed.