Ceolag mentioned that there will be a 2nd talk with parents about templar invasion into his private life.
Sweeping issues under the rug doesn't seem to be Ceolag's style.
I don't really care about another confrontation with the parents regarding their past decisions. We can forgive them or not, which is nice and all, but there's really nothing more to discuss on that front; they were hopelessly incompetent when it comes to how they treated the MC (and Jessica), end of story.
I would, however, very much like answers on what the Templars do and how that matters to the Alfar. Those are questions that could potentially help us work out WTF is going on, and the MC's parents
might have meaningful insight on those topics. Unfortunately the MC has steadfastly refused to ask those questions so far. It would be nice if Finnabair's death finally drives him to get some real answers, but I'm not holding my breath.
The MC had home, family and work. He was told he was temporarily safe. Home was a painful empty place. His family were the cause of his pain. So the MC went to work, a safe place with his good friend Elea to talk too. It makes sense to me that the MC would go to the one place familiar and safe.
I believe I made that exact point in the second half of my post. The MC's actions made some sense at the time.
But that time didn't last long, and no one has gone back to revisit the issue. When Medb walked out of the meeting without involving the MC in her demands, that raised the obvious question of why he was at the meeting in the first place. The MC didn't ask. When Medb claimed the Alfar never tried to kidnap the MC, that begged the blindingly obvious question of why they'd grant him safe conduct until the meeting. The MC didn't ask - not the Templars, nor the Alfar once he went to visit them.
Now the Alfar are going to declare war on the Templars for supposedly murdering Finnabair. That begs even more questions, but I'm afraid he's going to run off half-cocked to bitch at the Templars for being big stupid meanies rather than take a step back and recognize all the holes (if not outright contradictions) in the things he's been told.