“All I want,” she whispered shakily, her fingers running gently along his arm. It felt easier with the contact, with his arms around her. The air between them was a divide, like this now she felt stronger. “All I want is for you to be happy, Keiran. All I have ever wanted is for you to be happy and better and to have everything you’ve ever wanted. I just … yeah.” She nodded tiredly, leaning against him. It made the most sense to cling on for fear of loss. He was right, though. It hadn’t worked. She wanted to say that it wasn’t for lack of trying, too, but that was a lie. So much had gone one it had felt like they’d never had time to breathe and when they had they’d not used it conductively. She’d not. She didn’t know him, really. He was right. Of course he was right.
“Would you really hex someone?” She asked with a little laugh, reaching up to wipe away her tears. She reached down and covered his hand with hers. She turned her head to the side and pressed a kiss to his cheek, smiling softly into him. “You’re going to be the best thing that’s happened to that place in a long time,” she murmured. “You should be excited. Ignore me, I’m a misery. But, I am going to try and be more supportive than, well, right now. Go do your thing, mister man. You’ll be brilliant.”
Four weeks later
Stretching her arm into the air, Millie let her jumper sleeve fall back a little so she could see her watch face. She squinted at the date and sighed testily. It was tonight or bust. She wouldn’t have anything to give Michael and then Urien would find them and everything that she’d fought to protect would be at risk. Peter was nursing his sick son’s cold, however, and it meant he couldn’t go with her. It was too late, by the time she found out, to go in search of Michael. So there was one place left she wanted to chance finding someone to go with her, and it felt somewhat ironic that it was at the Ministry where she found herself.
“Keiran in?”
A pair of pale eyes peeked over the top of the latest issue of PlayWizard. Millie adjusted her stance, her hand closing tighter around the black rucksack she wore off of one shoulder. Her lips pursed as she stared at the other witch, lounging carelessly at the desk as though she was at home rather than in a government building. Millie had showed off a similar sense of leisurely abandon while sat there a few years ago but she’d never quite stooped to looking at, well,
that quite as unabashedly as this witch was. Carenza seemed to catch her looking, too, because immediately Millie found herself face-to-face with ‘Miss March.’
“What’s up, female Hayes? You look like a cat burglar.” Carenza laughed, her gravelly voice echoing through the marble foyer outside of the four offices that held the four most important men in the country inside. That was a strange thought, indeed, and Millie felt a swell of pride as she cast her eyes in the direction of the door that had Keiran’s name embossed on it. The action served a few purposes – the first being that it took her eyes off of the voluptuousness that was Miss March, the second being that it allowed her to look at the door for the first time and the third being that it reminded Carenza what she wanted.
“Keiran,” Millie repeated, turning her eyes back to Carenza who had turned the page. “Is he about?”
“Yes female Hayes, Hayes is in,” Carenza replied, turning another page. “Pray tell what do you want him for? I will have no debauchery in this office.”
Millie almost choked. In fact, the sound that died in her throat sounded remarkably like it. She swallowed and shook her head, feeling her cheeks warm as Carenza’s slow smirk widened into a grin.
“Do you think Miss August is too skinny?” The magazine was flipped round and Millie flipped her head round, screwing her eyes shut. A barking laugh rose from behind the desk. “What’s the matter, love? Never seen lasses like this before? God… her tits aren’t real.” Carenaza’s face contorted into quiet wonder.
“Yes!” Millie retorted hotly. “But I don’t sit around at work looking at them! How have you not been sacked already?”
“The Minister is a soft lad,” Carenza called out as Millie sloped off towards Keiran’s door. “See you later, female Hayes!”
Millie shook her head. She was glad, in a way, when she drew up to the door. She didn’t know if she was ever going to be able to burn Miss August off of her retinas. At least once she knocked on the wood she had something else to focus on. Her hand fell to door handle and she twisted it, opening it up before stepping inside, letting it fall closed behind her. She dropped the rucksack onto the floor and she licked her lips nervously, glancing around the room.
A warmth washed over her as a familiar sense of home wrapped her up in a way that for a few moments made her feel absurd because there was no cause for it but then she realised it was him. It had always been him. The sight of him burrowing away at work, albeit now thoroughly disturbed by her presence, was a heartening one that brought a shy smile to her face.
“Hey,” she voiced, the sound carrying gently across the room.
When her gaze flicked up beyond him, she felt her feet move her away from the wall she had half plastered herself against. She drew close to the windows and peered out over London twinkling like a blanket of stars over the earth. Out there, life went on, sleepy and peaceful. She’d forgotten what it was like to be amongst the tower blocks and the tightly packed houses at night. She’d forgotten its strange beauty.
“Merlin, look at it,” she found herself whispering, her hands unconsciously coming to rest against the windows. “It’s so beautiful. How do you get any work done in here?”
She took her hands away when she realised and ducked her head embarrassedly. She reached up and rubbed at her shoulder with no idea how she was going to pose this to him. This wasn’t the sort of thing you came and asked anyone, let alone your husband. With Peter out, though, she needed a partner and it was too late now to track down Michael and pull him along. She had said she would sort it out and get her end of the bargain. She wasn’t about to go back on her word.
“How’ve you been?” She asked, coming to perch on the corner of the desk. She’d seen him rather recently. It felt silly to ask in a way but she was interested. He’d certainly been right that distance had bred something to talk about. Their days were distinct, their lives paralleled but different, and so she was truly interested in how he was and what he’d been doing.
She cast her eyes curiously over the desk and laughed. “You look busy,” she assessed as she reached over and picked up one of the quills. She sat back and began to draw her fingers along the feathers, smiling at the way the softness tickled the pads.
“I was wondering,” she hedged, glancing at him furtively. “Do you think I could borrow you tonight? If you can’t leave this, though, don’t worry about it. This is running the country stuff so it’s more important but I … I really need your help if you have some time.”