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His own little hovel in the makeshift cellar surgery wasn’t much of an improvement, though he was alone there, so there was that. Alone with his thoughts, such as they were. More like a centralized chaos, but still. His and his alone.

The bed was rumpled from when he’d more-or-less flung himself out of it, arrowed down the damp stone passageway, aiming for what his brain had been shouting against but his body had been altogether too eager for.

And bugger if he hadn’t got exactly what he’d thought he’d wanted. He didn’t climb back in; the too-new remembrance of what had been tumbling through what passed for his mind when last he’d left it was just too…

something. Raw. Instead, he just sat in the dark, on the floor, back propped to the cold iron bar that supported 213

The Aisling Book Two Dream

the small cot—twin to… the other. Same damn sheets, same damn blanket, same damn hard pillow, except this one didn’t smell like—

“Just stop it.” He clenched his teeth. “It wasn’t anything. You’ve more important things to worry about.”

He couldn’t think about this now. It was just too… too
there
. There were other things to think about. Like the whole reason why he’d sought forgetfulness in the first place.

Father
.

There was this word people bandied about, talked about it sometimes like it was the beginning and the end, the only reason to be or do, or not be or not do. “Love.”

Wil tried it on his tongue. He’d expected it to have a taste, but it didn’t.

He’d seen what he assumed to be love in the eyes of Dallin’s mother when he’d stood inside her dying dreams as Lind burned around her, when she’d dragged her cold fingers across his cheek and made her request; had seen it in looks exchanged between parents and children, husbands and wives, friends and companions… He’d seen it but hadn’t ever held it, understood it, wanted it. Seen its imitation in the eyes of too many, mere lust and greed trying to hide behind it, but never quite succeeding. He was pretty sure there was nothing he loved. He grasped at life and freedom because he didn’t know how not to, but he’d never really had either, not yet, at least, so he couldn’t love them. Anyway, there wasn’t much to love about them, at least in his experience thus far. Both were too costly, and the price just kept getting higher.

He loved Father, though. Or, at least, he assumed that the hurt and grief at hearing the things Dallin had told him were some form of love. Perhaps it was merely selfish fear. What was Wil supposed to do, after all, if He suddenly wasn’t there anymore? Would Wil wink out, 214

Carole Cummings

too? The world? Was all of this running and agonizing and fear for nothing? Was any of it going to matter in the end?

“Stupid question. You know it doesn’t matter, at least not to you, and your end is coming a lot quicker than you’d like to believe, and only gets closer, the faster you run.” A growl and a quick jerk of his head. “Why am I even bothering?”

And what of Her? Shouldn’t She be doing…

some
thing? The Father’s warrior-goddess, patron to shamans and healers—shouldn’t She be using Her own magic? Was that why Father couldn’t help Wil?—because She wouldn’t help Him?

…Couldn’t?

“She’s a bloody goddess.” Scraped upwards from the anger simmering in his chest, ground out through his teeth. “
Couldn’t
. Right.”

He scrubbed at his face, blew out a heavy breath.

Maybe He hadn’t told Wil because there was nothing Wil could do. Maybe He’d told Dallin because there was something Dallin could. Maybe… maybe…

“There’s always got to be a sacrifice, hasn’t there?” he whispered, not as bleak as he would’ve thought—more cold and detached, resigned. “Is that what I am? Is that why he’s here? Some sort of reciprocity for the blood of that first Watcher? Balance out the scale?”

“Devon,” came from the door, quiet and steady.

Wil wasn’t even startled. He peered up, marked the broad silhouette leaning in the doorway, the failing torch just barely limning features set frank and measuring.

“His name was Devon—your first Guardian,” Dallin went on, flipped his hand out, waved it, then crossed his arms over his chest. “It means defender. In case you wanted to know.”

Wil hadn’t. He shook his head and let it drop to his 215

The Aisling Book Two Dream

arms, folded across the tops of his knees. “I want to be alone,” he replied softly, wincing a little at the coldness of the dismissal. “I want… You need your sleep.”

“When you’re alone,” Dallin told him, the barest hint of a smile in his voice, “there’s no one about to poke holes in your conspiracy theories. You talk yourself into all manner of dire scenarios, every one of them some evil plan to bring about your end.” He paused; Wil could almost feel the piercing gaze cutting through the darkness, flaring into his chest. “So, what was that before?” Dallin asked mildly. “Hedging your bets?”

It made Wil’s head snap up and his eyes narrow, strangely indignant, despite… everything. “I didn’t hear you complaining,” he snapped. “Or protesting.”

Dallin shrugged. “What man would?”

You would
, Wil thought but didn’t say.
And you’re not
nearly so unaffected as you’re pretending. Trying to make
it easy for me? Trying to make me believe that everything
I do doesn’t hurt you in some way, that when I choose
myself for the last time, it won’t live behind your eyes for
the rest of your life?

His hands fisted.

Why couldn’t you have been a selfish bastard like
everyone else? Why couldn’t you have been a monster?

Why do you have to make me give a fuck?

“What do you want?” he whispered, shaken.

Dallin paused for a moment, looked down. “I wanted to know why you were apologizing.”

Wil gave a little start. “You were awake.” He didn’t know why he was so surprised. The only time he’d ever seen Dallin sleep deeply enough not to jerk awake at the slightest noise was when he’d been drugged enough to make his teeth swim and trying not to die. “How long have you been standing there?” And why was this great lummox of a man the only one in the world who seemed 216

Carole Cummings

able to sneak up on him? And how much had Wil said aloud?

“Too long,” Dallin replied, distant. “Not long enough.

Something in the middle.” His head came up, gaze once again slicing the darkness. “All of this…” He waved a hand between them then raised it to encompass… well, the universe, for all Wil knew. “It would be so much easier if you’d just be straight with me.”

Wil sighed, ran a hand through his hair. Straight.

Was there such a thing? Everything had its little hidden passageways and trapdoors. Even straight lines had their crooked little flaws, if one looked closely enough.

“Is there something you want?” he asked, impatient now, overfaced and starting to quiver.

Dallin didn’t answer right away. “What do I want?”

he mused after a while. “You do ask big questions.” He shifted against the doorframe, scratching at that stupid beard. “I want you to know that I understand.”

Wil puffed a jaded chuckle.
You understand. Right.

How about explaining it to me, then?

“Terrific,” he said tiredly. “Thanks. Good night, Constable.”

“It’s got to be a difficult thing,” Dallin went on quietly,

“to ask of someone what you’ve asked of me, and then come to understand that…” For the first time, he faltered and looked away. “You don’t think so, but it’s better that I… care.” His voice was hushed, a little uneven.

Wil closed his eyes and dipped his head back down to his knees.
All right. So, you do understand. Which makes
this… really fucking hard. Why do you have to keep
making it so hard?

“I’ll choose me.” Wil lifted his gaze, found the low glimmer of Dallin’s and held it. “Right up ’til the end.

And I won’t care if it’s a betrayal. Someone with a gun to your head, or you with a gun to mine—it’s all the same.

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Someone’s going to end up with a bullet through the brain, even if I have to pull the trigger myself.”

“You say that like you think I didn’t already know it,” Dallin told him calmly. He didn’t give Wil time to respond. “I need to know—was… before… was it merely to… seal the deal?”

Seal the deal. Wil would’ve laughed if he didn’t think it would come out a watery sob. A pact made not in blood, but in something Wil hadn’t even known he’d been giving, hadn’t even known he’d had. And oh, save him, he hadn’t
wanted
to know.

Dallin had been wrong—a lie would be so much easier than being straight. Somehow, Wil couldn’t make himself speak it.

“No,” he whispered, nearly choked on it. “I…” He wanted to bow his head, look away, but he couldn’t. “I wanted it. And I knew you’d let me have it, because…

because that’s what you keep doing, you keep…
caring
, and I don’t understand it, but I took it anyway, because that’s what
I
keep doing. I didn’t mean for it to be…

wrong.”

A longer pause this time, heavy, before Dallin finally spoke, voice soft and slightly strained: “And was it?”

Lies wouldn’t come again. “No,” Wil answered, far too quiet and shaky. “Not for me.”

He left the,
Probably for you
, unspoken. Dallin was sharp, surely he’d pick up on it.

“Then might I suggest,” Dallin said, just as softly,

“that we don’t waste whatever time we have?”

Wil shook his head. Damn it, did he really have to spell it out for him?

“I’m using you. I’ll keep on using you, as long as you’ll let me. And then I’ll use you some more. It’s what I do.”

Inexplicably, Dallin snorted. “I know you believe that,” he answered. “But you also believed once that 218

Carole Cummings

I’d find great pleasure in killing you.” He paused for a moment—not nearly long enough for Wil to process the implications. “You forget,” Dallin furthered softly, “that I see you.”

Wil finally allowed himself to look away, dipped his head again, and slid his fingers into his hair. “And yet, you keep looking,” he muttered, stung and he didn’t know why.

“Wil.” Louder, with a touch of command. “Look at me.”

Reluctantly, Wil peered up from beneath his fringe.

“You’re borrowing trouble,” Dallin told him soberly.

“It won’t come to it. I won’t let it.”

If there was anyone who could make that statement truth, Wil reflected bleakly, it would be this man. And yet, no one and nothing could. He could argue the point, use some of that reason and logic of which Dallin was so fond, but the interesting thing about Dallin was that, for all of his quick-mud, once he believed in something, the belief became a fundamental part of his being, unshakable.

No… that wasn’t right. The belief was there, but buried, held hostage by the sentinels of Reason and Logic; one merely needed to stymie the sentries to let the belief loose.

And right now, for whatever reason, it seemed he’d chosen to believe in Wil.

“I’m going to get you killed,” Wil whispered, small and strangled. “I may even end up doing it myself.”

And I want to hate you for making me give a damn.

Except I can’t.

There’s your betrayal, Constable. And it appears I’m
not strong enough to gentle the coming blow.

“I don’t believe in fate,” Dallin answered. “I don’t believe in prophecies. You don’t need to believe in anything but yourself. And me. I know what I’m doing 219

The Aisling Book Two Dream

now, Wil. I know what this is about.”

It made Wil’s eyes grow hot. He meant to demand explanations, answers to questions he’d never dared ask, but when he opened his mouth, “All right,” was all he said. Resigned. Defeated. Simply and profoundly unable to take another second of misery and all of the other tangled emotions twisting in his chest.

Like he’d been waiting for permission, Dallin finally pulled himself away from the door, took two cautious steps into the room. He held out his hand. Waited.

Wil only stared for a long moment, wound tight and vibrating. Some part of him knew exactly what was being offered, wanted it. Another part was dubious as to how to take it, backing away,
afraid
to take it, sure that it wouldn’t be there when he reached for it. Sure that he wouldn’t even recognize it, know what to do with it if he did manage to take hold. Sure that it would only make everything hurt more.

But oh… you’ve already sipped the sweetness of that
pain. A crueler addiction than the leaf, and it only took
the one taste.

Wil stood, very slowly, almost hoping that Dallin would grow impatient, withdraw his outstretched hand with a thwarted scowl, stalk away. He didn’t—the man had no end of patience, it seemed—still waiting there when Wil finally gained his feet, stared at that wide hand that had only a little while ago dragged strained cries and hungry whimpers from him… gentled him and held him while he flew apart from the inside-out.

Wil took the hand. And then he stepped in close, took the embrace. Took the comfort inside it.

This is my cage, right here, and I’ve gone and walked
willingly into it after all.

“The hearts of mountains, remember?” Dallin whispered into Wil’s hair. “I’m not done impressing you yet.”

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Carole Cummings

Wil juddered out something that was trying very hard to be a sob, but he forced it into a weak laugh instead.

“Stop giving me hope,” he mumbled into Dallin’s chest, trying to find fury and missing completely. “It just isn’t funny anymore.”

“Hm,” Dallin hummed; somehow, Wil could hear the small smile inside it. “Someone once accused me of having no sense of humor.” He gave Wil’s shoulders a squeeze and pushed him back a little. “Oh, right, that was you.”

The chuckle that rippled out of Wil this time was real, though still a bit watery and rather subdued.

“We’re getting out of here,” Dallin went on, a little more directive in his tone than before. “I wish I’d thought of all this a few hours ago, we’d already be gone. Now we’ll have to wait out the rest of the night and then the day, and leave once it’s dark again.”

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