"I wasn't going to," Reed replied abruptly, his eyes narrowing on Marisa as he saw the look in her eyes, that trapped look. She was afraid of him too, and he supposed she should be, but he couldn't ignore the way it made him feel either. For whatever reason, Marisa had ensnared him differently; she was interesting because she didn't fall for all of his usual charms. She refused his gifts, seemed to hate his attention, and he rarely caught her staring, not even when he took an incredibly long time putting his shirt back on at the tailor shop. She wasn't like so many other witches that seemed to give in when Reed offered them any attention, and the wizard respected that about her. He'd considered it as some game, and as with all games he plays, Reed never lost. He either won, or he learned.
And he didn't like this newest revelation. That Marisa wasn't thankful he'd saved her, but rather that she blamed him and was afraid of him. It was terrible news, really, and Reed felt it like a kick in the stomach. He hadn't rescued her for the praise, but there was some part of him that thought she might have felt at least a little bit of appreciation toward him for it. That maybe it would have tipped the scales in his favor, and she might have removed a few of the bricks in the solid wall she kept between them. But nope, he wasn't that lucky, it seemed.
He hadn't meant to corner her, but she'd moved first, so this was her fault. Reed took a step back, his hand pulled from the door and rose in the air, a sign of surrender, but he wasn't letting her leave either. The wizard sighed loudly as his hands moved to run up his face and rest on the top of his head. He paused, not speaking for a moment as he thought about all of the angles, and watched her for any sign of movement. If she went for the door again, he was ready, but Reed would instead convince her with his words. "Look, Marisa, I get that you don't want to be here, but you don't have any better choices right now." The anger was gone, and so was the rest of the emotions Reed was feeling. He put on his business voice, the calm one that deflected easily and hid the chaos bubbling underneath.
"Please do not try to leave again," Reed asked, and he might have laughed if not for the bruises already pooling on his sides. Usually, he was trying to get witches out of his apartment, not the other way around. He turned away before moving across the room to the liquor cabinet. "I have whiskey?" He offered his version of an olive branch. Reed was careful as he bent down to reach into the cabinet, pulling a decanter and two glasses out painfully slow, and sucked in a breath of air. And he hoped the whiskey would help with the spells he'd need to do next to fix his ribs.
The anger he harbored for the men who had come to hurt her grew as he realized how useless he might be if they found them here. He was more than adept when it came to magic, and Reed could fight better with his hands than most wizards could with their wands, but he wasn't a superhero. He wasn't immune to pain, adrenaline, and exhaustion. Fighting off three wizards in her shop hadn't been easy, no matter how much he trained or prepared, and he needed time to heal. And so did she. Reed's eyes slipped from her face and down to her bloody hands, and he felt the need to find those men and return the favor rising, despite the exhaustion he felt.