Page 25 of Bearly Hexed


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Her breath caught. A crack in the image she’d built of him—the closed-off corporate stranger, the abandoner who’d left his people behind. The man standing in her kitchen now, working through her supplies with careful attention, didn’t match that image at all.

“Passed down recipes?” she asked, trying to keep her voice light.

“She tried.” The corner of his mouth lifted—brief, almost reluctant, but real. “I’m better at eating than cooking. But I can identify quality ingredients. And I know how to organize a supply chain.”

“Useful skills.”

“In the right context.” He reached past her to grab a jar from the upper shelf—spelled sugar, the label written in Narla’s elegant script.

His arm brushed her shoulder.

Dahlia sucked in a breath.

The touch was brief. Accidental. The sleeve of his shirt against the bare skin of her arm, cotton against flesh. But heat spread across her skin where they’d made contact, traveling down her arm and settling low in her belly. She pressed her lips together and did not make a sound. Her body had apparently decided, without consulting her, that this was significant.

Cal went still. His arm was still raised, still close enough that she could feel the heat radiating from his body through the thin cotton of his shirt.

Neither of them moved.

Dahlia could hear his breathing. Slightly faster than it should be. Could see the tension in his jaw, the way his pupils had dilated until his gaze looked almost black. This close, she could smell him—not the pine and wild animal warmth alone, but adeeper note underneath. A scent that made her want to lean in, press her nose to his throat, breathe him in.

He felt it too. Whatever this was—this pull, this awareness—he felt it as strongly as she did.

“The jar.” Her voice came out more strained than intended. “Did you need it for something?”

Cal blinked. Stepped back. Put distance between them that Dahlia both appreciated and resented in equal measure.

“Spelled sugar.” He held up the jar, his voice carefully neutral. Too neutral. The voice of a man fighting for control. “You have more of this than I expected. It’s not as dependent on bear territory, is it?”

“No. I can source that from the coven. Narla helps with the enchantment.” Dahlia busied herself with inventory sheets, grateful for the occupation. Something to focus on besides the lingering sensation on her arm. “The honey is the critical component. Everything else is replaceable.”

They worked in silence for a few minutes. The air between them felt charged, heavy with unspoken tension. Dahlia could feel his presence without looking—knew exactly where he was in the small space. Her body tracked him with an awareness that bordered on supernatural.

Marzipan appeared in the doorway. The cat surveyed Cal with narrowed focus, tail swishing in slow, deliberate arcs.

He’s still here.

He’s helping.Dahlia replied silently.

Hmm.Marzipan didn’t sound convinced. But when Cal glanced at the cat’s water bowl—empty, Dahlia noticed with a stab of guilt—and crossed to the sink to refill it without being asked, without making a production of it, Marzipan’s tail stopped swishing.

He set the bowl back down, fresh water glinting in the light, and returned to his inventory without comment.

...Acceptable.The cat’s mental voice was grudging.For now.

Dahlia bit back a smile. High praise, coming from Marzipan.

SEVENTEEN

DAHLIA

By noon, they had a complete picture.

It wasn’t pretty.

“Two weeks of normal operation.” Cal studied his phone, scrolling through the spreadsheet he’d built. “Maybe three if you cut the honey-dependent products to half your usual output. After that, you’re looking at a fundamental shift in your business model.”

“You mean I become a regular bakery.”