"Oh, Bella," he said gently, like he'd found a tiny bird trying to look fierce. "You're so cute."
"Stop." She jabbed a finger at him again, because pointing was all she had left. "Stop calling me cute. I am not cute. I don't want to be cute. I am many things—powerful, terrifying, possibly a little unhinged—but I am not cute."
His blue eyes warmed. "You're cute."
"Stop it!" She pressed her hands to her cheeks because they felt like they were about to combust. "I'm going to die. This is how I go."
"Not on my watch," he murmured. The tease was light, but his tone wasn't. It wrapped around her, protective and sure.
She hated him. She loved him. She was going to dissolve into mist.
To put distance between her and her dignity's shallow grave, she pivoted, pretending to adjust her skirt, pretending to look for something on the table, pretending she hadn't almost just climbed back into his lap, the temptation buzzing through her body like static.