A blushing Gabrielle had insisted they venture forth. Had given him a quick lesson in human manners, a lesson he’d not liked one bit. He loathed the idea of sharing her with anyone, for any amount of time.
But Gabrielle had been resolute, and so the six of them had spent the past several days hiking the Highlands during the day, dining in the evening, and drinking and playing cards or chess or some such human game into the wee hours. And Adam had done his damnedest to wedge all his desire for her into the time it took the moon to bridge the sky. Christ, he’d begun to hate the dawn.
Not since his days with Morganna had he lived on such an intimate daily basis with humans, and never had mortals welcomed him so completely as these. (Apart from the maids—those he just couldn’t figure out; he’d never seen a bunch of women more obsessed with his groin: For some bizarre reason a curvy redhead kept offering him bananas, and the other night at dinner, a blonde serving maid had stabbed a knife in a plump sausage before plunking it on his plate with a downright baleful glare.)
But the MacKeltars treated him as if he were one of them. Ribbed and jested with him as they did among themselves. Thrust their wee bairns into his arms and made him hold them. He’d not had a baby in his hands for over a thousand years, had never had one spit up on him. Regurgitated formula was hell on silk and leather, but then he’d caught the look in Gabrielle’s eyes and decided tiny Maddy MacKeltar could spit up on him all she wanted.
They even got testy with him when they felt he wasn’t being forthcoming enough about himself. In the past few days he’d talked of things, shared experiences he’d shared with none before. His own kind would have scoffed, and mortals had never truly seen him as one of them, never freed him so completely simply to be, without censure or preconception. Not even Morganna. He’d always been one of the Fae to her, and his son had never welcomed him at Castle Brodie, refusing to acknowledge him as his father.
But here, in this enchanted time, he was Adam. A man. Nothing more. Nothing less. And it was a completely fascinating thing to be.
He glanced about the library. Drustan and Gwen were playing progressive chess near the fire, laughing and talking.
Their tiny, beautiful dark-haired daughters were slumbering nearby, waking occasionally to be fed.
Gabby and Chloe were laughing, insisting to Dageus that they would never cheat, how could he think such a thing of them?
The great clock above the mantel chimed the hour eleven times.
In one hour Lughnassadh would begin. And the walls between realms would start to thin.
And he would sit here in the castle and wait for the queen.
By the close of day tomorrow, at the very latest, Aoibheal would be warned, Darroc would be revealed for the traitor he was, the realms would be safe, and Adam might very well be his immortal, all-powerful self again.
His petite ka-lyrra, however, would continue aging day by day.
And he would have to stop that.
He glanced at Gabrielle. She was nibbling her lower lip, shooting Chloe a mischievous look over her hand of cards. Around her there was—as there was around each human in the library—that infernal golden glow. That glow that ever made of him an unstable magnet, drawn in spite of himself, repelled despite his efforts to cozy near. That which lured him, that which he could never touch or understand.
He inhaled deeply, exhaled slowly. Tossed back a swallow of scotch, savoring the way it burned his human throat as it never had in his Tuatha Dé form.
For the first time in his existence he wished for an ability no Tuatha Dé possessed. Though they’d learned to move backward to certain degrees in it, and forward again to their present (though never beyond that; legend held there was only one race that could navigate what was yet to be, but Adam gave little credence to such legends), not even the queen herself could stop time.
“Halt!” hissed Bastion.
The Hunters stopped instantly. “But we’ve got his scent. He’s in these hills, very near here,” one protested.
Bastion grimaced. “There are wards. The queen protects this land. We dare not cross them.”
“But Adam Black and his human crossed them,” the Hunter said impatiently.
“Should we summon Darroc?” another asked.
Bastion shook his head. “No. There’s nothing Darroc can do so long as Adam hides behind wards. We wait. We watch for the first opportunity. Then we summon Darroc. We’ll not lose our chance again. The Elder won’t move against the queen until this enemy of his is gone.”
And more than anything, Bastion wanted Darroc to move against the queen, to topple her from her throne. This brief time of roaming the human realm again had awakened all his senses, sloughed away the boredom and ennui of his Unseelie hell. Reminded him of how alive he felt, how good it was to be a Hunter. How many delicious humans there were to prey upon.