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She glances back, smile brittle. “I used to hate a lot of things.”

I watch her ascend a few steps, hips swaying with unconscious grace.

Damn woman.

I follow, boots echoing in the narrow space. Halfway up, she pauses, breathless.

“Stairs suck more than I remember,” she mutters.

“Getting old?” I tease.

Her glare is pure fire. “Careful, Harbor Master.”

I smile—real and sharp. “Noted.”

We climb in silence for a stretch, the tension between us a living thing.

Near the top, the wind howls through a cracked pane, rattling loose glass.

Evie presses a palm to the rail, knuckles white.

“You okay?” I ask, voice low.

She exhales slowly. “Fine. Just... tight space.”

“You want out, say the word.”

Her gaze flicks to mine, guarded. “Since when do you worry about that?”

I take a step closer—close enough to feel her heat, the faint tremor in her breath.

“Since you walked back into town like a storm.”

For a heartbeat, neither of us moves.

Then her hand lifts—half-reaching, fingers brushing the seam of my jacket.

My pulse kicks hard. Her eyes darken—gold and green, fierce and vulnerable.

I lean in, slow, giving her every chance to pull away.

She doesn’t.

Our mouths hover—barely a breath apart.

A shiver rakes through me. Years of restraint, of buried want, strain like a taut rope ready to snap.

Suddenly, CRACK.

A thunderclap shatters the moment, rattling the tower.

Evie jerks back, breath sharp.

I curse under my breath.

“Storm’s moving faster,” I say, voice rough. “We should go.”

She nods—too fast. “Yeah. Good idea.”