Does it though?
Seth didn’t do relationships. He’d never been in one before her; he was increasingly tense about her bond with Keenan; and he’d sounded fine when he called. He didn’t sound quite right, but telling someone good-bye over voice mail was weird. Maybe he went to see his family. She’d spent hours thinking it through, ordering faeries sent to various locations, having them check ticket receipts at the bus and train station. None of it made her feel any better—or brought answers.
Seeing Keenan was all that eased the ball of tension she felt. Today though, when she walked through the door of the loft, he greeted her with a sentence she wasn’t sure she wanted to hear: “Niall would like to speak with you.”
“Niall?” She felt both fear and hope at the thought of talking to him. She’d tried to contact
him the day after Seth had first vanished, but he’d refused to see her.
Keenan’s usually transparent emotions were tamped down so tightly that she couldn’t get any sense of what he was feeling. “After you meet with him, we can go over Tavish’s notes and have dinner.”
She was unable to breathe around the tightness in her chest. “Niall is here?”
The look on Keenan’s face was a brief blur of fury. “In our study. Waiting for you alone.”
Aislinn didn’t correct him as she once would’ve; the study was hers too now. This was her home. It had to be. Immortal only if I’m not murdered. She’d not thought about the finite and infinite until she’d become a faery, but since the change, the idea of reducing forever to just another heartbeat terrified her. The recent threats from Bananach, Donia, and Niall made the possibility of ending seem too real. There were those who could take everything away—and one of them was waiting on the other side of the door.
Knowing Keenan stood a moment away helped, but the trepidation she felt at seeing Niall was still awful. In the first rush of changing, she’d still felt terror, self-doubt, worries—all the stuff she’d hid over the years when she saw the faeries but had to keep her Sight secret. Fear for her safety had faded. It was back now, stronger than it had ever been before.
“Do you want me to come in?” Keenan’s offer was without inflection.
“If he said ‘no’…if he has information and didn’t tell me because…” She gave him a pleading look. “I need answers.”
Keenan nodded. “I am here if you need me.”
“I know.” Aislinn opened the door to go see the Dark King.
Niall sat on the sofa looking as comfortable as he had when he’d lived there. It was familiar enough to ease the tension Aislinn felt—but his expression of contempt wasn’t.
“Where is he?”
“What?” Aislinn felt her knees go weak.
“Where. Is. Seth.” Niall glared at her. “He’s not been home; he’s not answering my calls. No one at the Crow’s Nest has seen him.”
“He’s…” All the calm she’d been struggling to feel slipped away.
“He’s under my protection, Aislinn.” Niall’s shadowy figures appeared and perched behind him in postures of judgment. One male and one female sat on either side of Niall; their insubstantial bodies leaned forward attentively. “You cannot keep him away from me just because you don’t like—”
“I don’t know where he is,” she interrupted. “He’s gone.”
The shadowy figures shifted in agitation as Niall asked, “Since when?”
“Eighteen days ago,” she admitted.
The look on his face was censorious. He stared at her for several moments, not speaking or moving. Then, Niall stood and walked out of the room.
She ran after him. “Niall! Wait! What do you know? Niall!”
The Dark King spared a hostile glare for Keenan, but he didn’t stop. He opened the door and left.
Aislinn attempted to follow, but Keenan restrained her as she tried to pass him, before she could reach out to take hold of Niall.
“He knows something. Let go—” She pulled free of Keenan. “He knows something.”
Keenan didn’t try to touch her again or close the door. “I’ve known Niall for nine centuries, Ash. If he walks away, it’s not wise to follow. And he’s not our court now. He’s not to be trusted.”
She stared into the empty hallway beyond their loft. “He knows something.”