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Tequila.

Life was always better with tequila. Eli and I were better with tequila. Hell, everything was probably better with tequila. War? Famine? Plague?

“Fucking tequila heals everything.”

“Of course, it does, plum pudding. One more,” Eli urged, tilting the bottle for me as my hands were feeling less than grippy.

“Is grippy a word?”

Eli shook his head, but I wasn’t sure if that was disapproval or disagreement with my choice of “grippy” as a word.

“I’m stitching that cut, Geneviève.”

“Pro’lly good plan after all, muffin.”

He laughed. “Muffin?”

“’s what you call me. Stupid pas’ry words.” I closed my eyes.

“You like it,” he whispered, kissing my forehead as he settled my head gently on the bar floor. “And you like me.”

I did, of course, but I wasn’t dazed enough to admitthat.

Chapter Eight

When we were alone,I allowed myself to nestle into Eli’s arms. It was the sort of thing that I ought to avoid, a vulnerability that I seemed only able to share with him. Sometimes, I felt like it was what I needed most in the world, though, a safe place to rest. I was stitched and had consumed two bottles of liquor. I wasn’t feeling my best, but I was coherent again.

Eli held me so that my cheek was on his chest, and he stroked my hair. It was soothing to be held, to be safe, and to feel cherished.

“Dating you is more stressful than I expected,” Eli murmured.

I looked up at him. “This is me. What I do. Who I am.”

He sighed. “Geneviève, Iknowthese things, but I had hoped that dating during your seasonal lull would include more romance and fewer stitches. Is it so much to ask for some time where we can dance and avoid bleeding?”

A flash of guilt rolled over me. “I wore a pretty dress for you. Seductive, and wore gifts you bought to show my regard.” I turned my head and kissed his chest. “We danced.”

Eli looked at me so intently that I squirmed in embarrassment. “You read about fae customs. You wore my gifts because youresearchedmy people.”

“Therearea lot of rules. I got one right, but I get a lot wrong.”

“Youresearched,” he repeated in a voice filled with wonder.

“Fine. Maybe I read everything I could find on fae rules over the last few years,” I hedged. “I felt like I offended you often, and I just . . . you matter to me, Eli.”

He held me in silence for several moments. “Enough to take no more jobs for the next three weeks?”

I thought about it. In terms of the things he asked of me over the last year, it was perhaps the easiest request so far. I nodded. “You have my word: no more jobs between Yule and Twelfth Night. We’ll call it a witch bargain.”

He chuckled. “Terms for this ‘Witch Bargain’?”

“No talk of weddings.”

“Done.”

“Nothing that happens as a result of festivities is precedent-setting,” I tried to sound calm, but Eli’s slow smile said that he knew exactly what I was saying. Festivities often involved desserts, some of which left me as drunk as a human with a fifth of whisky.

“Of course, my crème brûlée.” His voice sent welcome shivers over me. “I cannot change the law of intercourse for my people, but . . . I can touch you as often as you allow.”

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