“We’ve got to get out of the wind,” he said. “We need shelter.”
“I know.” She sounded annoyed, like the next time she got dragged out of a river she hoped it might be by someone a little more competent. “That’s why I was wondering . . . why . . .” shiver, shiver, shiver “。 . . we aren’t going . . .” shiver, shiver “。 . . there?”
The strange thing about nighttime in winter—especially when there’s snow on the ground and a clear sky overhead—is that nothing is ever fully black. It’s more a mix of grays and blues and glistening silver. So he couldn’t believe he’d missed the very small, very decrepit, very real castle that stood near the water, like it had grown out of the banks a thousand years ago and now the river was trying to drag it back, stone by stone.
“Will that do?” she asked, sounding far too smug for someone who was half dead and mostly naked.
“Yeah.” His smile was warm, at least, as he brushed a kiss to the top of her head. “That’ll do.”
Chapter Thirty-Two
Her
Two minutes later, Sawyer was kicking open the door of a building that was only three rooms, but they were dry, and sheltered, and empty.
“Well, it’s not much. But it’s home.”
“Thanks for carrying me over the threshold.”
“You’re welcome, Mrs. Michaelson,” he said softly.
The largest of the rooms had a table and chairs and, best of all, a fireplace. A few pieces of old wood were stacked in the corner, and there were waterproof matches in the Go Bag, so it was less than a minute before Sawyer was striking the match and holding it to the wood. When he leaned over and blew on the flame, Zoe felt herself shiver in a way that had very little to do with the cold.
“You okay?” he asked.
She would have answered but she was too busy trying to keep her teeth from rattling together because even though they were out of the wind, it was still very cold and she was still very wet and Sawyer was looking at her in a way that would have made her tremble under the best of circumstances.
“We have to get you dry.”
“I’m drying as fast as I can!” she said, inching closer to the tiny orange flame that was licking at the wood.
“Take off the coat.”
“I’m naked under this coat.”
“I thought you were wearing panties?”
“Panties are naked!” she shot back but he gave her a look. “They are, at the very least, semi-naked and . . .” Something on the shelves caught her eye. “Are those blankets?”
She sprang to her feet, but pain sliced through her body, vicious and hot, and she crashed back to the floor. “Darn it!”
“Language,” Sawyer teased, but he was already reaching for her bare foot and pulling it into his lap. “I said you couldn’t walk,” he reminded her, then carefully pulled something from between her toes. “Glass, remember?”
She had honestly forgotten.
“I guess it slipped my mind . . . what with the strangling and the drowning and the freezing—”
“And the shooting,” he offered helpfully.
“Right! Totally forgot about the shooting. So, yeah . . . glass.”
He was studying her foot in the faint light of the fire. “I don’t think you need stitches, but we’ll need to look you over in the morning. River probably washed most of the glass out which is a good thing.”
“Yay?” she tried.
“That’s the spirit!” Then he got up and grabbed the blankets. They were moth-eaten and filthy and Zoe almost wept with the sight of them. “Wet coat off. Dry blanket on.”
He dropped one in her lap but she just glared at him even though her lips were blue and her teeth were rattling.
“Well . . .”
“Well what?” He was already stripping out of his tuxedo. Which . . . a hot guy stripping out of a wet tuxedo raised her body temp a little but not nearly enough.
“Are you going to turn around?”
“You know I’ve seen . . .” He didn’t finish but gestured to what lay under Mr. Michaelson’s wool coat.
“You mean when you literally ripped my nightgown off?”
“One. Nightgown”—he did the ironic finger quotes again—“isn’t exactly the word I would use. And, two—I am, in fact, referring to the time I saved your life.”
But she didn’t speak. Didn’t scold. Didn’t laugh. And she absolutely did not move.