Summary: Nesta has been chosen as a sacrifice from her village- to appease the monsters, she's ordered to die.
But what's monster and what's merely humanity are two wholly different things. And on Calanamai, Nesta will learn which is which.
OR WHATEVER THIS IS MONSTER NESSIAN OKAY?
[note: based on this prompt: Calanmai for the fae is a time for celebrating their magic and fucking like rabbits, but to the humans it's time to pick their sacrifice to the demons of the woods to ensure their people and lands prosper and remain safe for a year. Every year the town picks a name of a human female to dress up like a virginal sacrifice in white, bound and gagged, and left at the border of the forest for the demons to take. Girls growing up are told to be kind and pure or else they could be chosen next. This year the name chosen is Nesta Archeron. That night a group of burley and aggressive men show up and force Nesta to comply or she could see her younger sisters taken in her stead. She willing dawns the gown and walks to the edge of the forest. When the men start to gets handsy while they try to tie her up the demons show up early and decide to make a meal of the human filth before taking the tantalizing and feisty human.]
Warning: dubious consent, inappropriate use of tails, human men | 6k words | NSFW | read on ao3
“Don’t tell Elain.”
Nesta didn’t know why it was so important Elain was left out of what was happening. It wasn’t like Elain would try and stop things, nor would Nesta risk her engagement to Graysen by telling the truth.
Even it was Elain’s fiancé who’d sanctioned the entire thing to begin with. Feyre, though, the little snoop, had been listening to the entire thing. Hidden in a nearby tree, Feyre had heard the Senior Nolan approach her.
“Every decade, a maiden is chosen as sacrifice,” he’d begun while his rat faced son had grinned down at her. No doubt, this was their way of absolving themselves of all responsibility to Elain’s family. They’d get the beautiful, submissive one and be rid of obstinate, difficult Nesta.
Still, her heart had raced as they’d continued. “This year, you’ve been chosen, Nesta Archeron. Are you virginal—”
She’d kill them, one day, for forcing her to admit she was. For the way they’d looked her body up and down despite the younger Nolan being pledged to her little sister. She was nothing more than a piece of meat to them, an object to tease and torment and yes, even fuck if they so wanted. She’d been afraid, for a moment, they might drag her behind those terrifying walls where no one would be able to help her.
Instead, Nesta had submitted to their demands. She’d go when the drumming began or they’d drag her and chain her to a tree. If she didn’t, Elain or Feyre—or maybe both—would be sent in her stead. It had been implied that her sisters might meet the same terrible fate as her father. Nesta had swallowed the urge to scream and merely agreed without a smile.
Fuck them.
Fuck them.
“You’re not really going to allow this, are you?” Feyre demanded, hands on her hips the moment those men had vanished from sight. “Run away.”
“And let them drag Elain off instead?” Nesta had snapped. She could picture it. Elain, pleading with her betrothed, making him promises he would force her to honor once she was found safe in the morning. And to appease monsters who had long vanished from the world, Graysen would defile her.
And then he’d probably kill her.
Just like they’d done to their father. Nesta wasn’t stupid. Nolan wanted Elain, and the only thing keeping him from getting her had been the Archeron Patriarch. He was a miserable, ugly bastard in every other regard, but when it came to his favorite, he’d protected her as best he could.
And they’d killed him for it. Nesta knew Elain dragged flowers out, mourning and believing it had been monsters who’d killed him. Wholly unaware the monsters were nothing but trees, and it was the men in the village she ought to be afraid of.
“Don’t tell Elain.”
Feyre had sworn not to, though in exchange, Feyre wanted to walk Nesta in. Nesta still thought Feyre believed she could escape out to sea. She didn’t understand what Nesta did the moment she heard the distant drumming. This wasn’t about monsters and it never had been. It wasn’t about appeasing them, nor was it about order. It was merely about fear. Every decade, a young woman was chosen from a council of wrinkly, stupid, small dicked men who decided which woman was too frigid to ever fuck them and punished her—and every other woman in the village—by forcing her into the woods where they hunted her for sport.
And it worked. How many girls Nesta’s age had given themselves up when they didn’t want to simply so they’d never be chosen? Nesta refused. She’d refused both Tomas and his filthy, disgusting father and if she had to guess, the senior Mandray was on that council of assholes.
Feyre’s tryst with Isaac Hale was too well known, and Elain too heavily coveted to be made an example of. That left only Nesta, who had too vocally opposed the match once their father died.
She regretted leaving Elain behind. She wanted to tell her cowering sister not to marry Graysen. To do so was to betray that Nesta knew she wasn’t coming back. They’d lied, told Elain they merely wanted to see what the drumming was about. Elain would never follow.
It gave Nesta a small amount of comfort knowing that Elain would leave her flowers, too. That no matter how the village tried to erase her, Elain would keep her memory alive. The comfort was, however, small, the moment they stepped into the unseasonable warmth. Feyre drew her cloak tight around her, glancing at the bright red clasped around Nesta’s throat.
Why bother making herself hard to find? Better to just get it over with. All Nesta hoped for was whoever came for her, they made it quick and she was able to die on her feet rather than her knees.
Beside her, Feyre’s fingers brushed the back of her hand. It was better that Feyre came—she knew not to reach for Nesta, to try and hold her or offer comfort. The closest they’d ever get to acknowledging how awful things were was that small gesture.
I’m with you, those fingers seemed to say. Nesta balled her hands to fists, marching toward the swaying trees.
Nesta, Nesta, Nesta, they seemed to whisper. Mocking her, just like those distant drums. Who was banging them, she wondered? Was it all part of the ruse? Or a real festival the men in her village took advantage of? Nesta’s heart hammered in time, thudding so loudly she couldn’t hear the rustling wind or her own heavy breathing. The Nolans were waiting at the edge of the trees. And like she’d suspected, the Mandrays were there too, along with the Winchesters, the Bogdens, and the Pattersons.
“You were supposed to come alone,” Nolan said, eyeing Feyre with distaste.
“I’ve come to see her in,” Feyre replied, jutting her chin defiantly. “And make sure everything is done according to protocol.”
Nesta’s throat constricted at Feyre’s bold words. Tomas lunged, grabbing Nesta’s shoulder before she could twist away. Feyre tried to pull her back but Tomas was stronger, pinning Nesta’s back to his chest.
“Or what, baby Archeron?” he asked, his breath fanning over Nesta’s neck while he laughed. “Run back home before we make a game of you, too.”
Feyre’s stamped her foot, drawing a knife she’d hidden in her boot. Graysen stepped forward, perhaps realizing how terrible it was for his future marriage if both his fiancé’s sisters died in one night.
Or, Nesta realized as he stalked closer and closer, he’d done the math and realized Feyre would tell Elain what she’d seen.
“Feyre,” Nesta choked out, struggling against Tomas’s hold. “Feyre, run.”
She could deal with this. Nesta didn’t expect Feyre to sacrifice herself for her, besides. Someone had to take care of Elain.
Forcing herself not to cry, Nesta met Feyre’s starry-eyed stare. “Go,” she whispered. She couldn’t stand it. Let it be me, she thought wildly, trying to make Feyre understand. This is what I deserve.
Feyre stumbled back into the treeline, gobbled up by the darkness. Even Graysen hesitated for a moment, standing still in a silvery patch of moonlight. Nesta understood what had unnerved him.
The forest had stilled. No more crickets, no wind, nothing but those ominous drums in the distance. Everyone who might have been banging them was standing in a semi-circle around her. Tomas’s grip on Nesta’s arms slackened for a moment as a long shadow blotted out the rest of the moonlight.
“Fey?” Nesta whispered.
The creature that emerged was decidedly not Feyre. He was massive, made of golden brown muscle painted with blue and black inked whorls, all of it illuminated by blood red scales edging his skin. The creature towered over Graysen, tall enough to be a juvenile tree and twice as thick. Nesta didn’t know where to look first—at the rounded, black horns jutting from his forehead, the fangs gleaming in his mouth, the talons at his hands or the thick tail swishing with irritation behind him.
He turned to face her, pinning her with hazel eyes more green than brown and behind those muscled shoulders— “Oh, gods,” Nolan whispered as massive, black, membranous wings unfurled.
Where was Feyre?
The smile he offered was anything but friendly. “Is she for me?” he rumbled. No one moved, nor did Tomas release her, though Nesta wished he would.
The creature cocked his head. His dark, chestnut hair tickled against his shoulders while the wind blew the gentle waves against his high cheekbones and full lips. A scar streaked over his eyebrow, while another cut against his nose.
More, still decorated the muscles lining his ribs, his black inked shoulders and biceps, his pectorals. What kind of monster was this man?
“Well?” he intoned in that deep, gravely voice of his. Unlike the high born men surrounding her, Nesta had the sense that this creature was a brute of the highest order. A warrior of his people, the sort who had battled things far worse than the men before her and survived. “Is the maiden for me?”
“And if she isn’t?” Tomas dared to ask.
Nesta looked skyward at the full, silvery moon. Was it hysteria that made her smile? She closed her eyes as the creature said, “Then I’ll kill you for her.”
Hands shoved her at him, flinging her at his booted feet. Nesta gasped, the ground stinging her palms.
“Take her, then,” Tomas spat. “She’s worthless to us, now.”
Clawed fingers gripped her upper arm, pulling her to her feet. She was close enough for the smell of pine trees and snow capped mountains to wash over her.
“Did you touch her?” he asked, eyes never leaving her face. Nesta set her lips in a firm line, jutting her chin in the air just as Feyre had done earlier. She wasn’t his toy, either, and resented how much worth they ascribed to her virginity.
“We broke the bitch in for you,” Tomas laughed, though it sounded hoarse—forced. “You’re welcome.”
The creature’s smile made her shiver. Nesta didn’t move when his tail curled around her calf, squeezing slightly.
“Did you now?” he asked, stepping around Nesta. She skittered back, avoiding touching those massive wings of his. “I don’t recall asking you to do that.”
No one spoke. The creature paused when he reached Tomas, looking over his shoulder at Nesta. “He’s pissed himself,” he told Nesta, still smiling as if the whole thing were funny.
“Is it true he touched you?”
Nesta swallowed, nodding her head.
“And did you ask him to? No lies,” he added, as if Nesta would ever want to protect any of the men now trembling before the beast. She shook her head no.
He ran his tongue over his sharp teeth. “Seems like it’s my lucky day,” he said, advancing on the men. “It’s been a long time since I tasted human flesh.”
Nesta didn’t move—watched as those sharp talons cut through Tomas’s throat. His screams were music to her, silenced in a gurgle of blood. All she could think about was that night in the barn, his hand on her mouth to keep her quiet, his knee between her legs. Nesta didn’t let herself consider what it said about her that she enjoyed the sight of Tomas being ripped to pieces or that she wasn’t afraid.
Not until that winged, horned man turned to look at her, blood dripping from his teeth. He held her gaze for a heartbeat, smiling with a different, darker sort of hunger.
The kind that convinced Nesta she ought to run.
She was looking for Feyre, though it occurred to Nesta that her sister might have seen the monster and turned around and gone home. Nesta wouldn’t have blamed her for that. Not when the distant silence set Nesta’s teeth on edge. Shouldn’t they be screaming loud enough to wake the village?
Nesta’s legs pumped through the underbrush, dragging her closer and closer toward those loud drums. Closer to—
“Hello, Nes,” came that voice. She whirled and there he was. Blood soaked and grinning, his wings tucked tight against his back. “You got further than I thought you would. Not far enough,” he added, glancing around.
“Let me go,” she panted, resting her hands on her knees. “You got what you wanted.”
“Wrong,” he replied with easy amusement. “What I want is you. Killing them was merely a little sport.”
“A little…” Nesta couldn’t catch her breath. “A little sport.”
“I think you liked it,” he added, taking a step toward her.
Nesta shrugged her shoulders. “You don’t know what it’s like,” she said, trying to pretend she wasn’t as afraid as she was. He was massive, was made of pure muscle, of claws and horns and fangs.
“To be hunted?” he asked, his eyes the only light in the darkness. He was close enough she could smell him again. Shouldn’t he smell like fire and brimstone? Like sulfur and death?
She shook her head. “To be powerless.”
Those eyes of his found hers, so reminiscent of the first grasses of spring poking through the winter frost. Nesta blinked just as he lunged just as Tomas had. One moment Nesta was on her feet, still trying to catch her breath and the next he’d jumped, beating those massive wings.
They were skyborne.
“No!” she screamed, twining her arms around his neck. He only laughed, a deep, rumbling sound that reminded her of a cat. “Put me down!”
“I think not,” he replied, taking them higher and higher, until the treetops were mere dots beneath the clouds and Nesta—Nesta couldn’t get enough air into her lungs.
“Please,” she whispered, pressing her cheek to his chest in an attempt to slow her frantic heart. “I–”
“Don’t get sweet on me now,” he said, tightening his grip. Nesta meant to snipe. To tell him to get fucked.
“I’m going to kill you,” she whispered. Darkness was encroaching on her vision, and it was, she decided, a mercy to lose consciousness up here.
“I look forward to watching you try,” he replied, lips in her hair.
“Bastard.”
Her neck hurt. That was the first thought Nesta had when she came to. Her neck and her shoulders ached, stretched in a way that felt unnatural.
“There she is,” came his voice. Nesta opened her eyes, blinking away the remnants of oblivion to look at him.
“You’re naked,” was the only thing she could think to say. She was in a cave illuminated by torches hanging on the four walls, bathing the two of them in a warm, orangey glow.
He’d restrained her, looping her wrists together with rope he’d then suspended to a ring in the ceiling. Nesta was forced to sit on her knees, the purpose of which seemed obvious enough.
He wasn’t aroused, which was a small mercy. That didn’t make her feel much better. Not when she couldn’t keep her eyes off the log hanging between his legs. Nesta had seen penises before—she’d seen Tomas’s pathetic thing when he’d pulled it out, releasing his hold on her just long enough for her to sink her teeth in his ear and escape. There would be no escaping this. Nesta knew he was watching her examine him, practically preening if those splayed out wings were any indication. It was just…she didn’t think they were supposed to be so tapered, and definitely should be scaled…or covered in thick ridges.
Nesta’s eyes returned to his face. “Do I please you?”
“You disgust me,” she returned, breathless and scared. “Untie me right this instant.”
“How will you pretend you hate me if I unbind your hands?” he replied, still smiling. He’d wiped away the blood and the blue paint, leaving nothing but his scarred, brown flesh and the blank inked whorls she was certain foretold her doom.
His wings stretched end to end in the cave, taloned tips hovering over his broad shoulders. He snapped them in close and stepped closer. Behind him, Nesta could see he’d folded up her cloak and dress just beside his pants and boots. Why? If he was going to eat her, too, why bother at all?
“Don’t toy with me,” she told him, letting her desperation color her words. “Just…just make it quickly. I swore I wasn’t going to die on my knees—”
He laughed, jolting her back. “Die? Is that what you think?”
Nesta couldn’t help but look back to his cock, unmoved and yet…he was naked. “Yes?”
He came closer and closer, until he was kneeling, too, on that soft bed of blankets. Nesta could hear the steady thrum of the drums, pounding until her blood jumped, too. “I’ve been looking for you for a long time,” he whispered, running a callused hand over her cheek. “And I’d untie you if I didn’t think you’d claw my eyes out.”
“Don’t you dare,” she hissed, for all the good it did. He was closer still, running his tongue over her collarbone.
“Make a deal with me,” he whispered. Don’t, a voice in her head whispered even as she looked down to meet his gaze.
“What kind of deal?”
He chuckled, lips trailing toward her breasts. Fuck him, and the way her body was warming beneath his touch. It was magic—she’d swear it was. He’d woven some spell, had gotten in her head somehow.
“If I can’t make you feel pleasure with only my mouth, I’ll release you back to your little hamlet before the drums stop.”
Nesta blinked. With just his mouth? A red tinged haze had settled in her mind, clouding her judgment because she thought that was a decent idea. “And if you can?”
“Oh, Nes. I think we both know what happens then.”
She didn’t, but maybe it was better he didn’t spell it out. Besides, Nesta was known for her iron will. If he thought a couple minutes of kissing her was going to be enough to break her, he had another thing coming.
“Fine,” she said. Given he’d already removed her clothes and tied her up, she had little room to bargain. How fun, besides, to wound the monster's pride. “Do you have a name, or shall I call you brute?”
“You can call me whatever you like,” he told her, licking her peaked nipple. Nesta swallowed—she hated it, she hated it, she hated it–-and focused her eyes on the flickering light of one of the torches.
“But most people call me Cassian.”
“Cassian,” he repeated, catching how his breath stuttered. “That’s a rather nice name for a creature like you?”
He shrugged those inked shoulders. “And Nesta seems like the sort of name you’d give your daughter knowing she’d grow up to be a witch.”
Well. Nesta huffed and Cassian licked again, looking up at her as if to ask, did I guess right? Do people think that about you?
She didn’t deign to answer, nor did she need to. He knew he was right, had marked her just as surely as she had the moment he’d seen her.
“Is this your great plan?” she asked, still staring at the flame when his lips sucked around her nipple. Nesta knew how to bring herself to completion and this was not how it was done. Not that Nesta was going to tell him that. Let him waste his time—she’d be back in bed, this whole thing little more than a memory.
“Are you always so impatient?” he murmured, his tongue lavishing praise over her sensitive skin.
“When I’m tied to a ceiling? Strangely, yes, I do find myself impatient. Get on with it, Cassian.”
He grinned, nipping at her neglected nipple gently. “The words every male wants to hear. Get on with it, Cassian,” he mimicked, grinning as he…as he laid himself on the floor.
“What are you doing?” she breathed, squirming when those big, broad hands reached for her waist. Nesta twisted, straining her shoulders in an attempt to keep him from lowering her directly against his face.
“Using my mouth to please you, remember?” he asked, looking up at her through dark lashes.
“That’s not—this isn’t what I meant—Cassian, don’t—”
She hadn’t realized his tongue was forked until it slid from behind his teeth to lick her cunt. Nesta screamed, unsure if it was fear or rage or even the betrayal of her enjoyment that made her do so. Cassian didn’t stop, digging his fingers tighter into her hips to keep her still.
“Cassian,” she panted, thinking she could convince him to stop if she just…if she just what? Begged? When his tongue was swirling over her clit the way her fingers often did, but softer and wetter than anything she could have managed herself? “Cassian, stop. Let’s…lets just talk—”
He sucked her clit between his lips and Nesta bucked into him, unable to help herself. Instinct demanded she rub herself against him while the last remnants of her good sense begged her to fall limp until he grew tired and just killed her.
That was the crux of it for Nesta. She didn’t truly believe he wasn’t going to kill her, that this wasn’t some game in which he wound her up, took everything he could get, and then bathed in her blood, too.
Twisting against her restraints, Nesta could go nowhere and do nothing but submit. There would be no pretending, of that Nesta knew for certain. His mouth was too precise, messy in a way she thought she should have hated and yet secretly she relished it. She liked the smacking noises of his lips, the rumbling moans from his lips.
And when she’d twisted, she’d seen that thing standing at attention between his legs.
“Cassian,” she whispered. It was a test to see if she was right—that saying his name did something to him. Nesta didn’t know what, exactly, but when she said it, he bucked, fingers digging against her flesh hard enough to bruise.
Nesta was nothing if not petty. If Cassian was going to drag every inch of pleasure out of her then she’d do just the same to him. In this battle of wills, she would be the victor. He would regret giving chase in the woods, would rue the day he’d ever chained her up.
She’d leave him here, his own hands suspended over his head and if he begged her really pretty, maybe she wouldn’t kill him—a sweet fantasy given the horned monster was currently licking at her furiously, desperately.
And his tail— “Don’t you dare,” she gasped, her words little more than a moan.
“You’ll like it,” he replied, just as desperate, just as ragged. “Trust me.”
“I don’t—”
He growled, those hazel eyes flashing. It’s not like she could tell him no. Cassian flat out refused to hear her say it. Nesta closed her eyes and took a breath, fighting the urge to scream. She was so close, and it did occur to her his tail might stall her. It was so strange, scaled and fleshy like the rest of him and yet unnatural. She couldn’t pretend he was human, not with the horns and certainly not with the wings and yet when she looked at him, sometimes he looked like a man.
His tail stroked at her inner thigh. Nesta’s head fell to her chest while she tried—and failed—to act like it didn’t feel good.
“Stop,” she tried, clenching tight when she felt the tip tease against her entrance.
Cassian merely sped his tongue, his eyes never leaving her face. Gods, Nesta was going to come all over his face, he was going to get to keep her and she’d failed and—
His tail pushed into her body, maybe an inch. Not more than two. The stretch was enough to set her over the edge. There was no denying what was happening. Even with her teeth clenched so tight she could taste blood on her tongue, Nestas legs shook around his face, clenching so tight she didn’t know if his groan was pleasure or pain.
“That’s enough,” she whispered when he kept pushing in. Nesta hated him for the reaction he drew, for making her come a second time when he began to gently thrust in and out of her, still working her too sensitive clit with that forked tongue of his. “Cassian—”
“I’ll tell you when it’s enough,” he panted, pulling away just long enough to see his glistening lips and shining, bright eyes. And, was it her imagination, or had the drums increased their tempo? Cassian, too, was licking faster, had begun to really work her with his tail and Nesta…well, Nesta was wrecked. She pulled at her restraints, twisting her body not in an attempt to escape him, but because he needed to lay forward.
Secretly, she needed to touch him, too.
“Cassian, please,” she whispered, ignoring the string of words grunted from his throat in a language so old, she had no idea what he was saying. Uxor mea, or something close to it. Nesta, who’d been given a thorough education by their mother before she passed, had no idea what he was trying to say.
“Please, please—Cassian no—!” Nesta came so hard her whole body went taut and slack all at once, jerking around him. She managed to throw herself sideways, kneeing him so hard in the face blood trickled from his already crooked nose.
Cassian snarled, eyes flashing even as he propped himself up on his elbows. “I need a break,” she said, writhing against his tail still buried inside her. “I need to breathe.”
He looked toward the entrance of the cave, the movement so animal it set her on edge. Behind him, his wings flared before tucking tight against his body while his lip curled upward, revealing those sharp teeth. Nesta thought she heard rustling, a dress perhaps slithering over the ground, and soft footsteps walking closer, closer—and then nothing at all.
Cassian waited another heartbeat before those broad shoulders of his relaxed.
“What was that?”
“Not for us,” was all he said in response. “Have you taken a breath?”
He withdrew himself from her entirely, letting Nesta sag to the ground. Arms still held over her head, she wondered what it would take to convince him to untie her. Would he believe her if she said she wasn’t going to claw out his eyes? Not for lack of want, but simply because Nesta lacked the energy.
“What have you planned now?” she asked, delighted there was still bite to her words. Cassian was unaffected in a way no other man in her life ever had been. By now, they’d be bristling, determined to punish her for her smart mouth. Violent, even—hadn’t Tomas done that? Wasn’t that why she was chosen for the monster now rising to his feet before her?
“I’m going to fuck you until you purr like a kitten,” he replied, flashing her a blood tinged smile.
“Am I allowed to use my hands?” she retorted, looking up at her wrists still over her head. He hesitated, once again surprising her. The answer ought to be no. It hurt her and kept her at his feet, and that was what he wanted.
Wasn’t it?
“Are you going to hit me?”
“I think you might like it if I was rough,” she responded silkily. And Cassian didn’t bother to hide how right she was, shuddering as his eyes rolled upward.
“Yes, I think I would,” he agreed. “I’d let you draw blood if you wanted.”
“Untie me,” she urged. Cassian hesitated even as his fingers became tipped with those sharp talons.
“There is nowhere to run,” he said, eyeing that door again. “I’ve warded the entrance, but even if you did manage to incapacitate me and make it out, something far worse would harm you. I wouldn’t be able to help you.”
His words rang in the silence, punctuated by those pounding drums. He stood, muscled and broad—and erect, which she was trying so hard not to stare at despite being eye level with the thick appendage.
Nesta shifted. “What is out there?”
He flashed her a smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes. “We’re males, almost like the sort you’re accustomed to. But on Calanmai, we revert back to beasts. We’re driven by instinct,
Nes—and not everything out there will find you as beautiful and charming as I do.”
Nesta’s heart hammered. “Don’t lie to me.”
He strode toward her, reaching up and slashing. She collapsed to the soft bed beneath her, frantically unlooping the rope that had bound her. As she worked, Cassian crouched before her, his tail gently curling around her ankle. Just as it had done when she’d been standing outside the forest, waiting for him to exact his revenge.
Lifting her chin with one gentle finger, Cassian said, “I would never lie to you. Ever.”
The drums drowned everything else out. “What are you going to do with me when this is all over?”
“Take you away,” he whispered, his mouth ghosting over her own. “I think you’d like it. You’d be the most terrifying thing those mountains had ever seen.”
“What about…” Nesta swallowed, because she knew what she’d have to say if he told her no. And Nesta wanted so badly to let him drag her off to the mountains, wherever they were, where she’d never have to see that miserable village ever again. “What about my sisters?”
Cassian’s eyes sparkled. “I thought you were the bravest female I’d ever seen, staring down Death the way you did. You did see him standing in front of you, did you not?”
Nesta reared back. “No. I only saw you.”
“Lucky me,” he replied with a grin. “I would have fought my brother if you’d preferred him. He has your sister—and the other one…the timid, weepy thing—”
“Elain,” Nesta said, waiting to hear Elain was still in bed, still safe.
“She is fine, as well. In the morning, I’ll take you to see them both,” he added. And, she supposed for good measure, he slashed one of those talons over his wrist, letting the blood drip toward his elbow. A promise written in blood.
“I will not harm you,” he whispered, rolling his shoulders as the drums outside increased in tempo. “I swear it.”
She thought all she had to do was shake on it. When she offered him her palm, Cassian curled those claw tipped fingers around it, slashing through her own thin, delicate skin.
Nesta hissed even as he pressed the wounds together. Warmth flooded through her bones, some magic that made Nesta feel settled.
Almost peaceful, given the circumstances. Maybe as much peace as a person could feel when they were kneeling and naked on a blanket, and their come was still shining on a monster man's lips.
“Come here,” he whispered, tugging at her elbows. Nesta was staring at the wound, teeth gritted against the white hot pain. Blood trailed down her arm in little rivulets, staining her fair skin. And the wound itself…was knitting itself back together. There was no other word for what was happening. Like magical stitches, one moment it was an open line of blood and skin and the next it was unblemished and the pain was gone.
Nesta held it up to her face, ignoring how Cassian had manipulated their bodies so she was perched in his lap, her legs spayed around his massive, muscular thighs. She thought of Feyre, and all the times she’d come home injured from hunting in the woods and how useful this little trick might have been back when they were cutting up dresses to bandage the wounds.
Something tugged in her chest. A muscle Nesta had never been aware of, something glimmering and golden and warm—something she would have noticed before, because that little tug filled her stomach with butterflies.
Cassian’s hand returned to her swollen clit, causing her to jump.
“It’s too much,” she whispered, realizing only right then that his massive, tapered cock was pressed against her wet cunt, glistening with his own arousal.
The sight of him so close to her was obscene.
“You can take it,” he replied roughly, not understanding what she meant. His touch was too much, but his cock…Nesta had the sneaking suspicion it was just enough. It would hurt, and she’d beg him to keep going, to unmake her.
“What is happening?” she asked him, because surely her want, her need—hell, her agreement—was some different sort of magic.
“You are mine, and I am yours,” he replied, his voice dark. Sharp teeth grazed her neck, drawing a shiver from her naked frame. “There will be no others.”
Nesta had a million questions, all forgotten when those big hands of his, devoid of the talons from before, cupped her ass and lifted her ever so slightly. Just enough to sink down on that tapered tip.
“Relax,” he gritted out, as if it pained him to speak. Nesta looked over her shoulder at him, surprised to find those hazel eyes wide and blown out, nearly black with what she assumed was arousal. In the distance, the drums seemed fevered and frantic.
Cassian did, too. He gave her no time to adjust to the sheer size of him, nor did she think it had occurred to him that before his tail, no one and nothing but her own fingers had ever been inside her body. A conversation for another day—though he realized it the moment he seated her fully on him and Nesta doubled over, squeezed so tight around him she didn’t think she could breathe. He was in her lungs, her throat, her—
“Breathe,” he rasped. “Fuck, Nes, I—”
“It’s fine,” she said, because it was. Gods, but it was better than fine, even with the strange pain of the stretch and the invasion, it was good. “It’s fine.”
Why was she comforting the monster? When had that happened?
“Tight,” was all he managed to say. Cassian was unraveling with just one touch—that kind of power was bound to go to her head. “So fucking tight, Nes.”
“Move,” she whispered, writhing her hips. The position required him to do most of the work, not that she cared. He leaned back, gripping the tops of her thighs to lift her just enough—pulling out only to plunge right back in.
They both moaned loud enough for a moment, she heard nothing else. Not the frantic, uneven beating of the drums or the world around them. Just him, groaning softly with each new thrust of his cock. His tail curled over her thigh, teasing the sensitive skin like it had a mind of its own.
Cassian licked the side of her neck, growling at the taste of salt and maybe fear. She would have given anything to have even a fraction of his senses. Nesta wanted to taste what he tasted, wanted to smell what he smelled.
Cassian withdrew himself, snarling not at her but she thought, himself. He hadn’t thought the position through, and now he couldn’t find his own release. She grinned even as he positioned her on her hands and knees like she, too, was an animal. She certainly felt like it.
Watching him over her shoulder, her braided hair slipping from the pins to drape over her slim shoulders, Nesta knew she was in trouble. Wrecked, even, at the sight of that winged, horned man gripping the swell of her ass. He was so handsome despite his monstrosity—he wanted to keep her? Maybe she’d let him.
Cassian slid into her body with another snarl, not of warning, but approval. Of pleasure. Nesta pressed her cheek into the soft blanket beneath her and did as Cassian had said.
Breathe.
Relax.
There was nothing nice or gentle about the thrusting behind her. She didn’t want it, and he didn’t offer it. Nesta suspected he couldn’t. This was the quietest he’d been and she had a feeling it had something to do with the discordant drums in the distance, thudding wildly in some messy culmination she was unaware of. To her, it rang through her chest into that threaded cord, demanding more.
More, more, more.
“Cassian,” she gasped, feeling his tail prod at her backside. He didn’t say a word, growling softly.
“Cassian, you—”
“Take it,” he ordered, spreading her cheeks apart with those big hands of his.
“I can’t,” she said, eyes rolling upward. “It’s too much—”
“It’s enough when I say it’s enough.”
There was nothing else to convince him, not without squirming away to go where, exactly? This was where she wanted to be and Nesta couldn’t deny it. And when his tail pushed into her ass, stretching her beyond what she’d ever imagined she had capacity for, Nesta let him.
Breathe.
Relax.
More, more, more.
It was exactly how she imagined. Pleasure edged in pain, rough and unforgiving. She could feel his tail and cock rubbing between that thin layer of skin, and once Nesta got past her discomfort, the fullness of the fucking felt good.
She felt mindless. Cassian had said the creatures like him were guided by instinct that night, but she felt as if she were, too. All she cared about was chasing pleasure, pushing back and meeting him thrust for thrust. Her fingers curled in the blanket, digging so hard she broke one of her nails in the process.
“Cass,” she panted, her voice muffled by the fur. “Cass, I—”
She came, clenching so tight around that ridged cock and tail that Cassian snarled approvingly. Of course he’d like it. Cassian kept pumping, though his own movements, will still rough, were also out of sync. He’d lost his rhythm just like the drums.
It hadn’t occurred to her that Cassian was waiting. Holding himself back for the exact moment the drums just stopped. Nesta didn’t know, though, and was too tempted to reach for one of the wings draped over them both. Running her finger over it, she found it was soft rather than slimy or tough.
Something yanked viciously in her chest. Nesta came, still worked up, still sensitive from the soft rub of his ridged cock and his overeager tail. Cassian did, too, pouring himself into her with a roar that shuttered the torches on the wall. Nesta could feel it dripping down her legs, could hear him panting in the dark.
His tail withdrew first, and then his cock. She expected him to get up, to leave her laying in a mess of his own making. Maybe dress himself and leave, or say something about how disgusting she was, how he’d broken her, ruined her—
“Nes,” he whispered, his eyes the only light in the dark. “Come here.” Already he was reaching for her, bringing her to his chest still half wrapped in the blanket. Maybe it was all the fucking, and the being bound…and probably the murder, too, but Nesta felt exhausted. Wrung out and barely able to keep her eyes open.
“My dress,” she whispered when he stood.
“I won’t forget,” he told her, his voice hoarse like he’d been screaming. Had he? She barely remembered.
“What’s going to happen to me?”
Cassian chuckled. “You’re my wife, now—I’ve bound us did you bite me Nesta?!”
She had. It was the last thing she remembered before the darkness took her.
Nesta woke with a start. Gone was the oppressive heat of summer, of the humidity that made her hair curl against the back of her neck and her clothes stick to her skin. A chill bit through the air, invading even the warmth of the blankets she lay beneath. Nesta sat against a mountain of pillows to survey the room. A fireplace roared while frost blotted out the sun on the large, wall to ceiling window panes. Dark wood furniture mixed with red and cream walls made Nesta feel safe—at home.
And Cassian was there, lounged naked in a chair. Those big, soft wings were draped behind him, and he’d tied half of his wavy hair off his lovely, rough face.
He grinned when he saw her. “I was starting to think you’d never wake up.”
“Where am I?” she demanded, her heart settling at the sight of him. If Cassian was here, she was safe. Nesta knew that for a fact.
“Home,” he agreed, rubbing absently at a ring of scars on his forearm. Teeth, she realized with no small amount of satisfaction. She’d forgotten she’d bitten him. “In the mountains, just like I promised.”
“And my sisters?” she added, certain he would not honor that promise.
Cassian stretched those long, powerful legs while Nesta ignored the way his cock, once stuck to his thigh, was stirring to life. He sighed.
“Elain,” he said pointedly, and she wondered if he’d forced himself to learn their names or some other creature had forced him to, “Is by the sea.”
She’d love that, Nesta thought ruefully.
“Happy,” Cassian added, like he knew it mattered to her. “And Feyre is in a palace not far from here. We’ll see her first.”
Nesta nodded, pushing the blanket from her body. “Now?”
“Soon,” he agreed, catching her around the waist to haul her into his lap. His wings furled around them, blanketing them in soft darkness. The light from the fire glowed softly through the membranes, beckoning her to touch.
Nesta did, surprised when his cock jumped against her bare stomach. “You like that?” she questioned.
“Yes,” he agreed, sucking in a breath through his sharp teeth. “Do it again.”
“We’ll never get anything done,” she warned him, dragging her finger along the edge all the same.
Cassian only smiled.
“That's fine by me.”
Since you asked... Soft Nessian headcanon: Nesta is absolutely the type to read through the night and Cassian will be passed out asleep curled up next to her but periodically there will be a sleepy mumble of "go to sleep" but Nesta will just keep saying "one more chapter"
This technically was just a really good headcanon, but I am so sleepy that I wrote a fic about sleep. This is my second fic about sleep... being half awake must inspire me or something.
~
Nesta’s chest is a beautiful thing. Not just because her breasts mold perfectly in his hands and she becomes pliant as he tugs and bites, but because when Cassian lays his head there, he can hear her life like trickles of water. Her heart is the pitter-patter of rain.
There’s nothing quite like music than the sounds that Nesta Archeron makes. From her moans, to her yells, to her quick snapping fingers when she’s frustrated. There’s nothing much that can compare to the sound of her breathing. Even the symphonia can’t rival her heartbeat.
So Cassian finds Nesta’s chest most agreeable. It’s the best place to sleep, where he can wrap his arms around her while she reads. It’s the best position for his wings.
He worries about his weight hurting her at first, but Nesta assures him that she’s comfortable. She’s always cold, Nesta reminds him.
You keep me warm, she says.
Cassian swears he blushes at her words but he buries his burning cheeks in her blue nightgown and she burrows her fingers into his hair.
It’s easy to sleep with her heartbeat in his ears. It’s like his soul calms at the thump it makes and she reads the night away, absent-mindedly stroking his hair. He wants to cry at first... at the touch. What it means. She, the female of his dreams, in his arms.
More than that, Nesta loves him. He’s never felt more loved in all his life so it’s easy to drift, to float down still waters where sleep awaits. He has never felt more safe than in her arms.
And sometime in the night, she laughs. A soft bell rings in his ears and the movement of her chest has him grasping her tighter.
“Go to sleep,” he mumbles.
“Shhh,” Nesta whispers as if his interruption disturbs her. “It’s night already, you should be sleeping.”
He merely gives her a slow blink and when she raises a brow as if to say of course, she’s right, Cassian can’t seem to argue when he’s only half-awake.
“Go to sleep,” he grumbles, when he hears the shift of a page.
“There’s only one more chapter,” Nesta says.
“That’s a long chapter,” Cassian muses as he closes his eyes.. He can still see the chuck of more than a few chapters under her hands, but he’s too tired to argue and Nesta’s much too soft and warm to resist.
And when Cassian awakens for the third time that night, he can only frown at the book still in her hands. The light is still on and the heavy glow makes him want to shield them both with his wings.
“Go. To. Sleep.”
“There’s only a few more chapters,” Nesta pleads, showing him the pages as proof. “I’m not lying this time.”
Cassian concedes, tucking himself into her chest as he grumbles about sleep. He drifts off to dreams thinking of rain.
When Cassian wakes for the fourth time, it’s to a heavy book thumping on his back. Her thumb is still stuck in-between pages and Cassian reaches for her bookmark first.
Her chest moves languidly like ships rocking on the sea, and Cassian thinks he’ll dream of waves tonight. He'll hear siren songs as he sleeps.
But first, he reaches for the light and tucks her closer.
@arinbelle
Me: What song from midnights do people want a song fic for?
Everyone: ANTI-HERO! VIGILANTE SHIT!
Me: Cool, cool, um actually I’m gonna do Bejewelled tho
*Sorry guys I was in a Nesta fucking shining away from the Night Court mood rather than a depression fic mood so here you go*
Link:
https://archiveofourown.org/works/30357864/chapters/106906422
Snippet:
Nesta had gripped a sword that never belonged to her and trained her body into a weapon she never wanted to be. She wrung the plum red wine from her brain and confused a soldier doing his duty with a prince come to save her. She trusted even the beast that raged beneath her skin to be tamed by this male. This person who was … who was supposed to be her person.
Cassian was a broken promise. A great, cosmic joke. Just hers enough to fool her.
ao3 - master post
as promised, chapter one today, even though the cost was my writing 6k words in an afternoon RIP me i thought this was going to be a lot shorter lol. enjoy!
---
When Nesta awakes, she knows she had a peaceful dream, she is in the House, and Cassian is by her side. She nearly smiles, more content than she's felt in living memory--when slowly, but not scarily, she remembers.
The scrying yesterday...it had left her mind bare and vulnerable and the Cauldron had taken advantage. She doesn't feel the pain now, but remembers that she felt it. Cassian, still asleep in the chair, had come in because of her screams. And...Rhysand?
Cassian rouses soon after, asks her how she's feeling. What is she supposed to say?
"Rhys is going to join us for breakfast," he tells her.
Nesta tries not to make a habit of swearing. But fuck.
He had, it must be said, comforted her last night. Left her in peace. Even though she was too tired to look, she knew the place was beautiful. She felt warm and safe and her pain had been entirely forgotten. Generous, she supposes. He had not needed to do that. But it's not as though they're friends now. Nesta knows what's coming. A lecture--at best. A reprimand for letting her magic run amok, for endangering Cassian and Azriel and maybe even the priestesses, for being so out of control she needed someone else, him, to come and pull her out of her own mind. It'll probably just be to scare her. They won't actually chuck her into the Prison. But that's where the threats will go, she's certain.
The peace of her dream fades completely by the time she trudges into the dining room. Cassian is there. And Rhys. They both stand when she enters.
"Good morning, Nesta," Rhys says. "How are you feeling?"
Nesta narrows her eyes. Cordial...even pleasant. "Fine."
"Glad to hear it." He smiles at her. Real, not mocking.
Nesta keeps her hands at her sides when she sits. Cassian chooses a spot next to her.
"Coffee or tea?"
"Nes is picky. I'll get it." Cassian flashes her a grin, which she doesn't return.
Buttering her up for something, that's clearly what this is about. But what?
Cassian and Rhys make idle conversation, accepting her short, one-word answers and not making a fuss over them. Cassian does nudge her until she's eaten to his satisfaction, though, but the smothering ends there. It's not how she'd like to spend her morning, but it's not too bad, until--
"Cass, could you give me a moment with Nesta?"
Cassian squeezes her thigh under the table and nods encouragingly at her. Her heart skips--for him or Rhys, she does not know.
---
Nesta's eyes are precisely the same shade as Feyre's, and yet always appear different. More gray. Lifeless, or afraid. Rhys has never seen her smile.
"I want to offer you something," he says.
Nesta's face tightens. "You want to offer me something?"
"Something I offer everyone. And I...had not thought to offer it to you. I apologize."
Nesta's brow quirks. He grimaces inwardly.
"I know that you've...experienced a lot of pain," he starts, in a careful voice. She freezes anyway. He continues, undeterred, "I can take the pain away. If you want."
Nesta's head tilts to the door, where Cassian is waiting outside. She shifts her gaze back to Rhys--not lifeless, not scared, but intelligent. "You can take it away?"
He nods slowly. "I can...make you forget."
It's something he offers them. All of them. All the females, when they come here. But he had never really considered Nesta a female who had come here, even though it was his idea to bring her. She was always something else entirely. His mistake. But he can right it now.
"You can make me forget?" she repeats, as she's been doing this whole morning. She frowns a little, different than her usual scowl, more curiosity than ire. Then she sucks in her lip, eyes widening. "Yes," she says. "Yes. All of it. Do it now."
"All right," he says, calm. Most females turn him down, too frightened, but Rhys doesn't judge either way. He isn't sure what he expected of Nesta, honestly. "It won't hurt. I just need you to lower your shields--"
"No," she says, standing. "I mean...all of it." Her eyes, the most beautiful eyes in the world, stripped of any joy, stare at him with such urgency. Her hands clasp themselves tightly in front of her lips--pleading. "All of it, Rhysand."
His lips tug down. "Yes, I can make you forget it all--"
"All of it," she insists again. "I mean everything."
Rhys nods. Sometimes, even for the females who want to have their memories erased, the idea of anyone seeing them is too painful to process and renders them inconsolable--but then he realizes what she means.
"Nesta," he says, slowly, carefully. "I don't think--"
"You don't understand," she says, hands slamming down on the table. "You--if you saw--look," she says, shields dropping entirely. "Look."
Rhys raises his head, and he does.
He braces himself for the pain he felt last night, but this is entirely different. It's so much worse.
Were he not already sitting down, Rhys thinks the wave of self-hatred that falls over him would knock him over.
It all hits him--over and over again, worse than last night. Some of it is there, yes, but clearer. The woman is her grandmother, beating her. The man is--ugh--Rhys physically recoils as he sees Nesta's fanciful ideas of love with this man, so young, so hopeful--and how he had ruined that, how he had stripped it away from along with her dress and her dignity--
And how all of it is tied to love. Such deep, unending love...for Feyre, for Elain. It's all intertwined, it can't be severed from her being.
He sees the rest, but he does not look. He knows enough.
"Nesta," he says, gently, pulling out of her head.
"You're not going to do it," she says, eyes lined with silver. "I don't believe you. You're actually not going to--then leave! Just leave!"
"Nesta, wait," he says, raising his hands. "I didn't say I'm not going to help you."
"But that's it, isn't it?"
"You don't want to lose yourself like this. You love your sisters too much. Trust me, it's worth it."
"You...why did you even offer?" she asks, voice shaking. "You weren't going to help me. And know I'm just...if I were anyone else, you would do it. It's only for Feyre that you don't."
Rhys hesitates. She's right. If it were anyone else, he would let her start her life afresh, quietly, peacefully. But she is Nesta Archeron, his mate's sister, and there's something to fight for here. "All right," he says. "I'll make you a deal."
"I don't want to hear it," Nesta says immediately, but Rhys pushes.
"Give me two months."
Nesta crosses her arms over her chest. Her eyes still shine with unshed tears. "For what?"
"To prove to you that you don't need to do this."
Nesta shakes her head vigorously. "I'm not living like this for another second--"
"One month."
"No--"
"Two weeks."
"Don't you understand what you're asking me? Don't you see how I live?"
"One week," Rhys says firmly. "One week. If at the end of the week, you still want this...I'll do it."
Nesta pauses. She wipes her eyes, then narrows them at him. "You'll do it all?"
"You have my word."
She sucks in her lip again. "What will you tell them?"
"Leave it to me," he says. "They won't have any say. I'll do it...if you give me this week."
Nesta stares at him, face once again devoid of emotion, as she considers without letting him in on her thoughts. But he knows what she'll say. That's why he started with two months, bargaining down.
"All right," she says, finally. "One week. I'll do it. And then...you have to wipe my memory clean."
"If you want," he adds.
"Yes."
The magic seals the bond between them; Rhys feels it make its mark upon his skin. He lifts his left palm: three stars, at differing heights, like the Night Court insignia. Nesta purses her lips, and Rhys stifles a grin. Hopefully she won't mind it so much by the time the week is over.
"The week starts now. Spend two days here," he tells her. "I'll come get you on Tuesday morning."
Nesta looks up from her palm. "And take me where?"
"Don't worry about that. See you in two days, Nesta."
He strolls out of the House, keeping himself leisurely while in Nesta's line of sight. Clapping his hand on Cassian's shoulder, he shows him his other palm.
Cassian swears. "What did you do?"
"I've got work," he says, ignoring him. "Stay here with Nesta. Don't leave her for two days. Don't irritate her too much."
"Oh, that's rich. She actually likes me, you know."
"I know," Rhys agrees. And without another word, he takes off into the morning.
---
The next two days pass without any word from Rhysand. Nesta doesn't see anyone else besides Cassian. They train together on the roof, but more of the stuff she enjoys than what he says is important. He's teasing, but doesn't rise to her testing bait. In on Rhys' plan, she supposes, though he doesn't mention it at all.
He spends the first night in her room, in the chair he had slept in the night before. They don't mention it; they both pretend it's normal. He asks her if she'll read him any smut. She chucks a mystery novel at him. They go to sleep.
The next day is much of the same. Not unpleasant, but not worth living life.
"You're going somewhere," Cassian says to her on the morning of the third day.
"How do you know?"
He points to the trunk packed at the foot of her bed in answer. "Shame you won't have any good-looking roommates coming along with you." He grins at her.
Nesta turns away from him, bending down to look at the trunk, to hide her face. He had stayed in the chair, ready to protect her from herself, but he had not joined her in her bed.
"Do you know where I'm going?" she asks, the contents of the trunk too diverse to pinpoint any one climate.
"No. I've been here with you. But you'll find out soon enough. I like the dress you're supposed to wear today, though," he says, pointing to wear it hangs on the wardrobe.
When Nesta is washed and changed into the lilac chiffon daygown, and breakfasts with Cassian in the dining room, Rhysand walks in.
"Ready to go?" he asks.
She glances at Cassian. "Yes."
With a wave of his hand, the trunk, brought in by Cassian, disappears. Rhysand waves them out onto the veranda. Nesta's stomach clenches--they'll have to fly. She had forgotten.
But neither of the males seem to notice anything amiss. Cassian bends down to kiss her cheek--in front of Rhysand--and says, "Bye, sweetheart," as though they are lovers, leaving for the day. There is the promise of seeing each other again that night, but Nesta knows...she will never see him again.
"Goodbye," she says, voice catching.
Again, neither of them seem to notice. Comfortably, Rhysand lifts her into his arms--she will never see the House again, she will never again take pleasure in its friendship, she will never see Gwyn again--and flies a few dozen feet in the air--
They winnow onto solid ground.
Foreign ground.
A small cavalry of dark-skinned Fae, darker than Cassian, dressed in bright colors and light fabric greet them.
Nesta vaguely recognizes one of them. Eyes like the sea and hair like its foam. A handsome forehead, with soft cheeks and a rigid jawline. Even if she did not recognize him, Nesta would know the power in the air immediately. One of the High Lords.
"High Lord, Lady Nesta," he says with a slight bow, "welcome to the Summer Court."
Rhysand returns a small one, so Nesta dips into a curtsy as he says, "Thank you for having us."
"Ottilie and Cordelia will take your things," the High Lord says, waving over two females to the trunks which have appeared behind them. "I trust you're ready to begin?"
Rhysand inclines his head and offers his arm to Nesta. She grimaces inwardly as she takes it.
"This way."
The group of faeries part for the three of them to pass through. Only when she walks by him does Nesta notice Varian--right. This is his home court. He's some sort of prince here.
Doesn't matter. He doesn't seem to be going where Tarquin--that's his name, she remembers--is taking them. As long as she won't have to remind him of any of the Night Court's pleasantries, she doesn't care. Although perhaps he'd need it more than anyone, being with Amren, Nesta thinks bitterly. One person she will not miss seeing again. In fact, the only thing that makes her queasy is the idea of Amren meeting the new Nesta and once again tricking her into believing they are friends.
"Welcome to Adriata, Lady Nesta," Tarquin says, turning around and holding out his arm in the direction of a large window. Nesta's eyes widen as she takes in the view.
It's leagues more beautiful than Velaris, that much is certain. A sparkling teal sea hugging a white-sand coastline, and brightly colored buildings only one or two stories high, not breaking the incredible skyline. There's a pier stretching out farther than Nesta would've thought possible, and a staircase cutting right into the water.
"Our Sea Steps," Tarquin says, following her line of sight. "May I escort you there?"
When Rhys doesn't answer, she realizes she's supposed to. "You may," she replies, too distracted to think about whether she should add please or thank you.
Tarquin and Rhysand are both polite the whole way down to the pier. Nesta finds she falls back into the role of a dignified lady easily--this is just like being shown someone's estate, just like a proper dinner. It's only the characters that don't fit, but if Rhysand can act, she can too. How this is supposed to make her change her mind...perhaps he's struck some sort of deal with Tarquin? She'll live here instead?
"Do you spend much time at the Night Court's beaches, Lady Nesta?" Tarquin asks her, when they reach the shore.
"I...haven't yet had the opportunity to go."
"Excellent," he says. "The first Prythian beach you see should be ours."
Rhysand laughs. "She's walked along the Sidra river plenty."
Nesta stops herself from flinching--she hates the thought of being watched.
People--children, she realizes, lots of children--run along the beach, playing games or exercising, but the dock they walk along is empty. Tarquin, again noticing her observations, says, "The Sea Steps are normally open to the public, but we had them closed for everyone but personnel today. For your pleasure."
"Personnel?"
"We have a facility down here."
The staircase at the docks looks like any other, except for the fact that it descends into the water. When Tarquin takes the first step, his feet under the sea, Nesta's throat tightens. The water--she can't--
But when his hand touches the waves, the sea breaks, forming a sort of hallway around the steps. Rhysand doesn't stop his stride, and Nesta keeps pace with them, as they follow Tarquin down.
She would have assumed it would be dark. It's not.
The sunlight shines through the walls and ceiling of the staircase, and when they reach the bottom, the floor opens up to...the ocean.
Tarquin turns to see her face. "Well?" he says, his polite pesona dropping into something a little more smug.
"It's," Nesta says, struggling to find the right words. "It's like...a reverse aquarium."
Tarquin laughs. "That's the idea."
The room is ridiculously large, and offsets a few corridors. The floor beneath Nesta's feet feels dry and stable, the air cool but not uncomfortably so. And all around her...
Fish. Eels. Creatures she's never even imagined. All swimming through the sea, gliding, like flying.
Nesta approaches one of the walls, letting go of Rhysand's arm. She lifts her palm to it, but doesn't touch. It feels cool.
"It's water," Tarquin says. "You can stick your hand in."
Gingerly, Nesta presses in a finger. It goes through, easily--it's water. The walls are water. The walls are the sea.
Nesta raises her eyes. A school of fish--gracious, but she doesn't know any of their names! Not beyond the generic--fish, eels, jellyfish...crab and coral and a dolphin! Nesta's never seen a dolphin before!
"Bottlenose, Lady," a faerie says to her, appearing out of nowhere. As Nesta looks to see him, she realizes she's wrong--there are plenty of other faeries, all dressed in teal--the personnel--milling about. She only had not noticed, entirely taken by the sight.
"The dolphin," the faerie adds. "They're not unique to the faerie world. You get them in mortal seas, too."
Nesta turns back to the sea-wall. "And this?" she says, pointing to a bright orange fish.
"Those are faerie, Lady. We call them Orange Biters."
"Biters?"
Wordlessly, the faerie reaches into his pocket and pulls out a small, dried anchovy. He reaches his hand into the water, tossing the anchovy in the direction of the fish--which opens its jaws wide, revealing a set of terrifying fangs, and chomps down on it.
"They don't bother with the shore," the faerie assures her. "It's perfectly safe to swim there."
"Oh," Nesta says. Not as though she was worried about that, as there's no chance of her swimming anytime soon, but...it's incredible; she can't think of what to say.
"Shall we begin the tour, Lady Nesta?" Tarquin asks her.
She looks to Rhysand, who, again, is waiting for her answer. "Yes, please."
Tarquin leads them into different pathways through the sea, introducing her to the faeries working there and letting them explain what they specialize in, what they're doing. Some of them are monitoring breeding patterns, some tracking coral growth, but most are simply watching the fish, noting everything they do.
"Does it ever get tedious?" Nesta asks a female.
"Never," she says, raising her arms. "Could you ever get tired of this view?"
Nesta supposes not. But the tour ends, and Tarquin leads them back up the stairs and onto land.
"Did you enjoy the Sea Steps?"
"It was the most incredible thing I have ever seen," Nesta answers honestly.
Tarquin grins broadly at her. "You're more than welcome back, any time you'd like."
Before Nesta can thank him, Rhysand says, "Perhaps you might allow her to bring Cassian next time." To Nesta he says, "Tarquin's predecessor had banned Cassian from ever entering the city."
"Rightfully so, I believe," Tarquin says lightly. "Would you not agree, Lady Nesta, that someone who destroys a building loses privileges to reenter the city limits?"
"But he'd like the Sea Stairs too, don't you think, Nesta?"
Nesta shoots Rhysand a look. "I'm sure anyone would."
"Maybe you could make him fight a shark for it," Rhys suggests.
Tarquin laughs. "That would be something. Do you agree, Lady Nesta?"
"I suppose so," she says after a beat. It is only after she says it does the vision hit her: Cassian, wings flung out behind him the water, fighting a shark in front of the Summer Court to win the chance to return to this city. Her lips quirk upwards of their own accord.
---
Lunch is an affair as well. Tarquin shows them to a seaside restaurant, cleared of its patrons. The chef comes out and bows to them, low, thanking her for honoring them with her first meal in the Summer Court.
She had forgotten what it was like to be treated this way. The High Lady's sister. Here with Rhysand, it seems impossible to deny her place in the Night Court. But she goes along with it anyway, thanking them for having her, eating the meal they serve and sending her compliments to the kitchen.
Afterwards, they walk along the streets for an hour or two. It isn't a parade, but Night Court flags have been hung up, and people at booths call out their cheery hellos and ask if Lady Nesta would like to try their seasalt scrub, if the High Lord would like a pearl set to bring home to the High Lady.
"See anything you like?" Rhys says to her.
"It's all lovely," she replies, diplomatic.
"Oh, come on," he says, nudging her, and she clamps down on her jaw to keep it from dropping. "Anything for yourself? Gwyn, or Emerie?"
Her heart pangs at that. Gwyn and Emerie.
"Are these all ocean pearls?" she asks a faerie at a jewelry booth. "Anything from a river?"
With a flourish, the faerie shows her a tray of river pearls, strung in various fashions. Running her fingers over the gems, she selects a teal-stone string, the same color as Gwyn's eyes.
"For you, Lady Nesta?"
"For a friend," she says, voice turning hollow.
The faerie beams at her, wrapping it up in pretty paper. "Your friend will love it very much, Lady."
"Thank you," she says, as Rhysand pays.
They walk a little further, Nesta mostly ignoring the salespeople except to offer slight nods of acknowledgement, until she finds a spice spread. She picks out the most fragrant, and every kind of seasalt they have, into a small chest. For Emerie.
She wouldn't want to spend her last week out of the House, with Rhsyand of all people, but perhaps it's for the best. Even thinking about her friends is painful enough. They don't know who she is, what she has done. If they had...it would only be a matter of time before they left her, rejecting her, like everyone else has done. If Elain, sweet, heartfelt, patient Elain could not love her enough; if strong, resilient, defiant Feyre gave up on her...only Rhysand stands at her side, and not for love. At least, not love for her.
He'll be proven wrong, she knows. Her sisters won't even lose her. They'll remake her however they want, in whatever image they please. Maybe it'll even be one Cassian will favor.
The streets quiet somewhat, in the afternoon, and Tarquin tells them his people take naps around this hour every day. The heat, he explains, can be taxing. So he shows they back to the palace, tells them to rest or wander as they like, and would they please join him from a celebratory dinner at seven.
Celebrating what, Nesta isn't sure, but Rhysand accepts, and then she does too.
"Our rooms connect," he tells her when they get there. "I'll be in there if you need me."
"What..." would I need you for, she wants to say, but instead switches to, "should I do?"
He shrugs. "Wander, like Tarquin said. Or nap. Whatever you'd prefer."
He leaves her at her door, pushing into his. Nesta rolls her eyes to no one and enters her room.
Her trunk sits at the foot of the bed. The patterns are all complimentary of the sea, and the scent of it floats in through the open window with a warm breeze.
The heat is taxing. Nesta slips out of her daygown and into a robe, lying down on the silken sheets. What will she feel like, she wonders. When she is made anew. Will she wonder about who she was? Will they tell her? No, they won't; what would they say? They will make something up. Feyre will tell her she's their emissary, happy to serve. Elain will tell her they meet for breakfast every day. Perhaps they won't ever mention being human, and Nesta will never wonder about what she has lost.
Surely, she'll accept it. She'll be as easy as they all want. She has to be. Because Nesta doesn't know what she'll do if...when even after the pain is wiped away, when none of her remains, if she is the same. If it is not the hurt that makes her so, it is simply who she is.
It is perhaps her biggest fear, albeit a new one, and not easy to fall asleep to, but she does, and awakes sometime later to windchimes and a knock on her door.
"Lady Nesta? May I come in?"
"Uh, yes," Nesta says, bringing a hand to her forehead. "Enter."
The door opens slightly. One of the females from earlier. Ottilie. "May I help you prepare for this evening?"
"Yes," Nesta says dimly, massaging her temples, too distracted by her headache to realize what she's agreed to. She's become very used to not having any staff around at the House, and yet, still not having to do much of the work herself, beyond what she pleases. She likes it, never having liked being fussed over. Staff have always been frightened of her, anyway, even when she was human.
But Ottilie doesn't seem to show any fear. "Headache, Lady Nesta? From the heat?"
"I think so."
"This will help," she says, bringing out a small blue pill from her pocket and pouring her a glass of water from the pitcher by her bed. Nesta takes it, and Ottilie says, "But it's best to remember to drink when you visit us, Lady Nesta."
"Thanks," Nesta says, swallowing. "Tonight is..."
"Dinner, lady. And dancing. And a performance."
Dinner and dancing. She can do that. It's all she used to do, actually. Elain had it enjoyed it more, obviously, but...Nesta knows how to play the part. She isn't sure why Rhysand thinks this will show her life is worth living with all her pain, but...just a few more days. She can do this.
Ottilie is pleasant, chatting as she lays out Nesta's dress from her wardrobe and steaming it straight. She doesn't mind Nesta's short answers and keeps most of the conversation going herself, but not annoyingly so. She talks of the history of the Summer Court, explaining about the type of performance they'll see tonight. Vaguely interesting, but nothing too mind-occupying.
Nesta hates the feel of others touching her hair, and Ottilie doesn't protest when Nesta takes the brush to do it herself. She styles a coronet with a bit more twists and braids than usual, in honor of the celebration tonight, and picks out pins studded with sparkling blue stones, matching her dress.
Nesta doesn't know if the House packed for her or if Rhysand did, but the dress is magnificent. Modest in the way no one else in Prythian seems to care about--except maybe the priestesses--covering her breasts, back, and arms, like it should. But the fabric switches sheer from her elbows to her wrist, and there are matching panels from her waist to the ground, her legs cleverly hidden with a deep turquoise slip. It gives the illusion that she's showing more skin than she is, Nesta thinks as she eyes herself in the mirror, which she decides is all right. As long as she's not actually bare...that's fine.
Rhysand is waiting for her right outside her door when Ottilie opens it and lets her step out.
"You look lovely," he says, and grins when she only narrows her eyes at him in response. Nonetheless, she takes his arm and lets him lead her to a large courtyard overlooking the water.
The sun sets later in Summer, and even though it's seven, twilight has only just begun to touch the sky, and they catch the last of the sun's rays as it dips below the sea. With it, faelights flicker on, leaving the evening nearly as bright as the day. A glance upwards tells her what everyone has told her about the Night Court is true: the stars shine brighter there than anywhere else.
"Good evening," Tarquin says, too loud to be addressing just them. Indeed, the courtyard silences, all the Fae splendor-dressed Fae turning to face him. "And welcome to our honored guests, the High Lord of Night...and his sister, Lady Nesta, Kingslayer."
Nesta starts--at being referred to as Rhysand's sister and Kingslayer both. The crowd does not care, smattering an applause.
"Let the night begin," Tarquin continues, raising a glance.
The faeries cheer in answer, raising glasses of their own.
Tarquin approaches, a waiter trailing him. "Something to drink?" he offers them.
Nesta flushes.
But Rhysand only says, "Thank you. Nesta?"
She looks at him, trying to decipher if this is some sort of test. But he doesn't appear to be hiding anything, only casually asking her as polite society demands he does. So she takes it, gingerly, carefully.
What would Elain say? Feyre? Cassian?
But they aren't here right now. She can do what she likes.
"To a lovely night," Tarquin says, holding out his glass.
"Indeed," Rhysand coos, and Nesta stifles an eye roll as she clinks her goblet to theirs.
With the very first sip, Nesta knows. She isn't going to get drunk tonight. It hadn't been that that she'd craved, ever, it was only the dulling of pain. But being so far away from everything that has caused her hurt is good enough for tonight. The Summer Court is its own distraction from her own head. Plus, she'd always hated feeling out of control of herself. That was part of why she'd drunk. Her punishment for being...herself.
But it's not like Nesta's a masochist. Only realistic. So there's no reason for any of that tonight. She can just enjoy this sweet, sparkling wine, and manage with everyone's company.
She supposes with its fishing industry, it's only natural for so much of the food to be seabased, but she finds she tires of it quickly. The table Tarquin shows them is laden with tiny portions of other things, too, though, enough for a bite of each, then staff whisk the empty plates away and serve something else. Most of the conversation revolves around the food, with Tarquin explaining what each dish is, and Nesta commenting on what she likes about, or else making something up if she doesn't. After about an hour of this, a hush falls over the courtyard as the faelights dim.
"The main entertainment," Tarquin says, gesturing towards the water. Nesta's eyes follow his hands, and she waits, unsure of what she's supposed to be seeing. A performance, Ottilie had said.
It is entirely silent but for the waves when the violin starts. First one, then another, and few more join. For a wild moment, Nesta thinks they might be coming from the water--but no, they are merely on the other side of the courtyard. The violins all strike the same chord and then fall quiet together, for a moment, two, and then--
Something rises from the sea, sparkling too bright to properly make out at first. Nesta soon deciphers what the shape is: two faeries raising a third, each of them clutching a leg. But how are the lower two standing straight up in the water? Is there a hidden platform, like the Sea Stairs?
The top faerie flips backwards into the water, the violins starting up again with the splash. The two lower faeries rise, higher than the top one had--each of them held up by two faeries as well. They flip backwards into the water, their sparkling uniforms glinting like diamonds in the starlight, and the pattern repeats, larger and more fanciful, until a wild applause and a change in the music signifies the start of a new act.
The music is more exciting, Nesta wants to watch the performers. But she can't draw her eyes away from the water as the water-acrobats, flipping in and out of the sea, move in some way akin to play staging. There's a war, that much is certain, by the way the faeries launch themselves at each other. Wild, brutal, and unfathomably beautiful. There's a break in it, as two entwine together, and the music turns sad, slow, and Nesta thinks the war is over, lost, before one the faeries launches themselves at someone sneaking up on them from behind, knocking them both into the water. Then it is over. A final act of flips again, and Nesta is first on her feet to clap when they finish, standing on--aha--a raised podium to take their bows.
"We're supposed to follow that?" Nesta asks Tarquin.
"I'm glad you enjoyed it," he says pleasantly. "I'm sure you can keep up. May I?" He holds his hand out to her.
Nesta hasn't been asked to dance in...she can't even remember.
"You may," she says, not looking at Rhysand to check if she can.
The violinists play, and other couples join them. Rhysand is dancing with some female who greeted them this morning. One of Tarquin's cousins, she supposes.
"Any shows like that in the Night Court?" Tarquin asks her.
"Have you never been?" she asks, because she doesn't know the answer.
"I have not. You might remind your sister she should invite me. The least she could do, after she so rudely ruined her welcome here by robbing my family."
Nesta raises her eyebrows, but Tarquin doesn't smile. "Are you here as an emissary, too, Lady Nesta?"
"No." Oh, that's right. Feyre had had that stupid title once.
"Well, that's what Rhys told me she was. But she was just here to steal for him."
"Why did you invite him back?"
"He made amends when he saved my people," Tarquin admits, grudgingly. "And I wanted to meet you."
They pause their conversation as they spin: she twirls out, in, out, then he pulls her back.
"Why did you agree to come?" he asks. "I hear you are not so interested in policy."
Nesta shudders slightly. He hears from spies, he means. For she is the High Lady's sister, so all the other Courts have spies watching her. "Is this policy making?"
"No," he says. "This is pleasure."
"Then I suppose you could say that's what I'm here for."
He grins at her. A real smile, not the polite, detached ones of today. "Any specific kind you are looking for, Lady Nesta?"
Is he...flirting?
"No," she says. "Just learning what other Courts have to offer."
"Well, I'm flattered you chose to start with ours."
Is that it, then? Is Rhysand taking her around the other Courts? He has four days left, but five other Courts...Spring, she supposes, will not be on their itinerary.
"You dance very well," he says.
"Thank you. You make a fair partner."
He laughs. "Fair?"
"Fair's better than most."
He laughs again. "Did you have lessons?"
"I did, actually...ballet. For years." But it's been quite a while since Nesta's thought of that, hasn't it?
"Then perhaps you could be one of the Night Court's performers."
Nesta huffs. "I don't think I could be one of the Night Court's anything."
"Good," Tarquin says. "You're wasted at night. You're too beautiful to be kept in the dark."
Definitely flirting.
"Tell me of mortal dances. Are they anything like ours?"
Nesta looks over at the crowd, the violinists, the sea beyond. "On paper," she says, "but this is...well, I have never seen a show like yours before, as I said."
"Well, you won't find that anywhere else. But the same, otherwise? Food, dancing, music?"
"The same," she confirms.
"Hm. I suppose we might be having this very evening anywhere, then."
"I suppose we might," she says.
"But I'll always remain partial to my own Court."
"I can certainly understand that," Nesta answers honestly.
He likes her answer. He asks her more about the mortal world, gentle things that don't trigger painful memories. She talks without saying much, and he finds ways to compliment her genuinely anyway. She had watched Elain had conversations like this once. It had looked nice. It is.
Rhysand cuts in, after a while. For propriety's sake, presumably, as he doesn't say much beyond asking her if she's enjoying the evening.
"Tarquin wants to dance with you again," he says when their number is up.
"So do I," she replies, somewhat surprised at herself, and he hands her to him with an incline of his head.
This time, she asks him things. If he can swim as well as those performers. He laughs. "Not as well as they, no. But perhaps stronger than most."
"And what of the fish?" she asks. "Do you know about the fish as well as the personnel at the Sea Stairs do?"
"Not as well as they do, either. I...I'm the youngest High Lord--well, after your sister. I'm just past eighty years old."
"Oh, young," Nesta says, and they both laugh, surprising herself again. "I only mean that's about as old as human beings get."
"I know," he says. "But young for us, at any rate." Us. "So there's much I haven't yet...I was far down the line for this throne, you know."
"Oh?" Nesta asks. She knows it doesn't pass how she'd expect, from High Lord to eldest, that power has something to do with it, but she isn't quite sure of it all.
"My uncle was High Lord. He...and most all our family, all his children...slaughtered. By Amarantha."
"Oh," Nesta says, faltering. "I-I'm sorry--"
"We're all so grateful to you and your sisters," he says, unperturbed, "for ending her reign, for ending Hybern." He grins, shifting the mood back. "Even if she did rob my coffers."
"What did she take?" Nesta says.
"A book."
Oh. That book.
Doesn't make any sense to Nesta. This High Lord seems...well, regardless of how he seems, he fought alongside them in the war. He has a personal grudge against Hybern. Surely he would've wanted to aid them...but Nesta doesn't ever claim to understand how the Night Court operates.
"Would you like to see some of our collection?" he asks her. "If you promise not to steal." His tone is light, but Nesta knows he is serious.
"I won't," she assures him. She could tell him she has little use for anything, doesn't own anything herself and doesn't particularly care too. But she doesn't, content with the night as it is, and lets him lead her back inside, to a quiet area of his castle.
Two guards stand in front of a massive door, but they only bow when they see them approach and move out of the way. Tarquin opens it with a wave of his hand, his magic shifting something in the air.
"Oh," Nesta breathes when she steps in. She can't help it. Once a merchant's daughter, always a merchant's daughter.
Any number of jewels, tiaras, goblets...Tarquin's family is a wealthy one indeed. She supposes they all are, all the High Lord's families.
"It's too much," he says. "Wouldn't you agree?"
"I..."
"I'm in the business of selling, now actually," Tarquin continues. "I never thought I'd be High Lord, but now that I am...well, it's not as though I don't have ambitions. I want to do right by my people."
"That's admirable," Nesta says distractedly, bending down to try and guess if a chest of fat rubies is real.
"I abhor the differences our society places on High Fae and lesser faeries. We're all faeries...do you agree with me?"
"I do indeed," Nesta says, but she doesn't agree the way he assumes. Nesta's never given much thought to the status levels of different types of Fae in Prythian. Her base instinct is to view them all as monsters anyway. But, realizing it's true, she says, "I don't like very many High Fae anyway. The only ones I do like are part-nymph and Illyrian."
He laughs. "I suppose you don't consider yourself High Fae."
"No, I don't," she says. "I'm not."
"You're not," he agrees. Then he says, a bit awkwardly, "And I suppose the Illyrian you're fond of...Cassian?"
"Oh, no," she says, not thinking. "I was speaking of my friend Emerie."
He perks up at this. "Oh."
"She's the one I bought the spices for."
"Oh! Well...you're very welcome to bring her along on your next visit."
"Thank you," she says politely.
"And...your friend, the nymph...I suppose the river pearls are for her?"
"Yes."
"Well, it seems as though you don't have anything to remember my Court for yourself, then." He sounds as though he's teasing her.
"I have the memories," Nesta says, remaining polite, even though soon she won't.
"Well, then, please," he says, waving a hand. "Choose a momento."
Nesta laughs, unable to stop herself, but he doesn't. "I insist."
"I--no. That's very generous, but--"
"No, please. What kind of host would I be if I didn't give you something to remember your trip by?"
"This is very kind of you, but--"
"Please, Nesta," he says, dropping the made-up title. "If not a gift for tonight, consider it incentive to come back."
She blushes, flustered. He's...it's wrong, isn't it? He's a good man--male. It's wrong of her to deceive him like this. She's obviously not...he thought he was talking to one female, but he's not, he's talking to someone entirely different.
"Very well," he says. "I shall have to choose for you."
He turns, ignoring her protestations, and reaches his hand high up, calling a wooden box to his hands. "Good thing, too," he says, "because you never would have found this on your own. And it suits you perfectly."
Nesta is about to argue again, but then he opens the box.
A fine-gold chain links together dozens of tiny blue stones. At first Nesta thinks the chain wraps around twice, like a long necklace, but then she realizes one is a necklace, and the other is a matching circlet, for her head.
"You didn't wear any jewelry today or tonight," he says. "But this is delicate enough that it should suit you nicely. And the color brings out your eyes, I think. Do you like it?"
"I...do," she says, hands itching to touch it. Merchant's daughter, whether she likes it or not.
"Then please accept," he says, holding out the box to her.
Nesta looks up at him, studying him carefully. "Feyre didn't have to steal from you," she says. "You would have given her anything."
Tarquin meets her gaze, not backing down as most males tend to. "No, I wouldn't have."
---
Nesta walks towards Rhys with a slight smile on her face, faint blush in her cheeks. Her hands are holding a small box.
"Did you have a nice time?" he asks her.
Her smile fades. She looks at him, frowning slightly. "I'm a person. Of course I had a nice time. But life isn't vacation, Rhysand. I still go to bed at the end of every day. I'm still alone with my thoughts, in my head...you know what that's like." Her voice turns accusatory.
"I know," he says evenly. "But you did have a nice time, otherwise?"
"I already said so," she says, impatient.
"Good," he says, turning to his door. "Get some sleep. We leave for Winter tomorrow."
---
She had half-hoped that she would be wrong, that the pleasure of the day would bleed into her dreams, that she'd be spared the horrors of herself for the night.
But she isn't.
Aleksander asking if Alina was sure mid-kiss was such a cute, soft, and unexpected moment for me. Of course Ben Barnes came up with it.
hii i hope you’re doing well! from the prompt list, could you do a blackevans brotp for general #18?
18. “Cheers, I’ll drink to that.” “You drink to everything.” “Cheers!”
“I heard Haswell is retiring next year.”
Across from her, Sirius perked up, lifting his head in acknowledgment before bringing the cigarette to his lips and inhaling deeply, dragging it away from his mouth a moment later.
They were sprawled out across his bed, her leaning against the fluffed-up pillows by the headboard, Sirius spread-eagled at the foot of the mattress. He was resting his head on his elbows, his hair falling into his eyes only to be tossed over his shoulder when he brought the cigarette to his lips again.
“Cheers, I’ll drink to that. Haswell was a fucking bitch,” Sirius said with a satisfied smile. He wasn't wrong; Professor Haswell, their DADA professor, was a total bitch. He'd had it out for Lily from the first class he'd taught, ruining her entire first year of NEWT Defense.
Thankfully, Professor Haswell wouldn't be there the next year, just like all the DADA teachers before him— he was apparently taking a sabbatical to move to Japan and study Japanese dueling techniques. Good riddance, Lily thought happily, with wretched satisfaction.
“You drink to everything. And you don't even have a drink, idiot,” She pointed out, but she couldn't keep the smile off her face. In an effort to save face, she pulled her cigarette up to her lips to take a drag, not coughing even once when the smoke burned her chest.
“Cheers!” Sirius replied cheerfully, winking at her before letting his head drop back onto the bed covers, exhaling loudly. A puff of gray-black smoke hovered in the air in front of his mouth, shaped like a cloud, and she thought, vaguely amused, that just a year ago, she would have balked at the thought of willingly spending time with Sirius Black.
She didn't realize that she'd laughed aloud until Sirius arched an eyebrow in question.
“Sickle for your thoughts, Evans?”
“As if I'd tell you,” She retorted automatically, but with no malice behind her words.
He hummed in response, casual as ever. “You're only making me more curious.”
Lily sighed in defeat. If she backed out now, it would be suspicious. “Just thinking how appalled fifth-year Lily would be to see this. Us, smoking cigarettes on your bed.”
Sirius snorted, tilting his head to meet her eye, the right side of his face pressed into the bed. “Believe me, fifth-year Sirius would be even angrier. I used to think you were awful.”
She smirked softly. “Who said I ever stopped thinking you were awful?”
“Ah, don't lie, Evans. I know you find me irresistible,” He said with a wink. “Just don't tell Prongs, he'll be devastated.”
He'll be devastated. Lily battled furiously against her genetics, hoping against hope that her flustered demeanor wouldn't show as a blush.
She knew she'd been found out the moment a wide, shit-eating grin spread on Sirius' face.
“You really fancy him, don't you?” Sirius asked, still grinning. “Merlin, he'll be so thrilled when—”
“Don't tell him!” Lily shrieked. “This is so embarrassing— I can't believe I really started liking him—”
Sirus roared with laughter, looking utterly delighted with her words. “Really, Evans, don't tell me you didn't see it coming.”
Well. It sort of felt like she always knew she would fall for him in the end; in a convoluted, confusing way, Lily has suspected that this would happen eventually. That didn't make it any easier to deal with, though.
“Don't you dare tell,” Lily threatened. “I need time. Time. This is so fucking— ugh.”
Sirius' smile didn't diminish for a moment, but it sobered slightly, and he nodded to show that he understood.
“Alright, alright, don't get your knickers in a twist. Shit, will Prongs be mad that we're talking about your knickers?”
She cut him off with a smack to his arm, snorting in disbelief. “You're an asshole, you know that?”
“Asshole is my middle name,” Sirius quipped. “Sirius Asshole Black. Fitting, I think.”
It was Lily's turn to dissolve into laughter, clutching her stomach as she dropped her head next to where his leg lay.
“You're a decent bloke, Sirius. Who knew?”
“You're a decent bird, Evans,” Sirius parroted, almost as if it was a challenge. “Who knew?”
“Everyone other than you,” Lily retorted, flipping her hair over her shoulder haughtily. “Sirius Has-No-Fucking-Taste Black.”
Sirius scoffed indignantly at that. “Take that back, you heartless harpy! I have wonderful taste! You're just jealous that I didn't like you until this year.”
“I could say the same of you,” Lily said triumphantly, taking another drag from her cigarette, before stubbing the butt of it out on the headboard with a thump.
“Whatever,” Sirius said with a scowl, but his eyes were dancing with laughter.
For several moments they were silent, the only noise coming from Sirius' cigarette. The slightly sour, earthy scent wafted up to her nose, and Lily closed her eyes, relishing in the way she felt grounded up here in the boys' dormitory, with her back pressed against the bedsheets and the cigarette smoke just a few feet away.
“Sirius?”
“Yes?”
“Thank you.”
Thank you for being my friend even when you could have resented me for hating your best mate for so long. Thank you for cheering me up when the world is shit. Thank you for letting me stay up here with you when everyone else is busy and I don't know how to tell the one other person I want to talk to that I think I love him.
“That's what friends are for, Red,” Sirius said quietly, so quiet that she almost couldn't hear him. “I was lucky enough to have some good ones. Ought to pass on the favor, hm?”
But she did hear him, so she reached out to grab his hand, squeezing it gently, and smiled when he squeezed back.
Always. Continuously. With increasing apprehension, and decreasing hope.
I will love you with no regard to the actions of our enemies or the jealousies of actors. I will love you with no regard to the outrage of certain parents or the boredom of certain friends. I will love you no matter what is served in the world’s cafeterias or what game is played at each and every recess. I will love you no matter how many fire drills we are all forced to endure, and no matter what is drawn upon the blackboard in a blurring, boring chalk. I will love you no matter how many mistakes I make when trying to reduce fractions, and no matter how difficult it is to memorize the periodic table. I will love you no matter what your locker combination was, or how you decided to spend your time during study hall. I will love you no matter how your soccer team performed in the tournament or how many stains I received on my cheerleading uniform. I will love you if I never see you again, and I will love you if I see you every Tuesday. I will love you if you cut your hair and I will love you if you cut the hair of others. I will love you if you abandon your baticeering, and I will love you if you retire from the theater to take up some other, less dangerous occupation. I will love you if you drop your raincoat on the floor instead of hanging it up and I will love you if you betray your father. I will love you even if you announce that the poetry of Edgar Guest is the best in the world and even if you announce that the work of Zilpha Keatley Snyder is unbearably tedious. I will love you if you abandon the theremin and take up the harmonica and I will love you if you donate your marmosets to the zoo and your tree frogs to M. I will love you as the starfish loves a coral reef and as kudzu loves trees, even if the oceans turn to sawdust and the trees fall in the forest without anyone around to hear them. I will love you as the pesto loves the fetuccini and as the horseradish loves the miyagi, as the tempura loves the ikura and the pepperoni loves the pizza. I will love you as the manatee loves the head of lettuce and as the dark spot loves the leopard, as the leech loves the ankle of a wader and as a corpse loves the beak of the vulture. I will love you as the doctor loves his sickest patient and a lake loves its thirstiest swimmer. I will love you as the beard loves the chin, and the crumbs love the beard, and the damp napkin loves the crumbs, and the precious document loves the dampness in the napkin, and the squinting eye of the reader loves the smudged print of the document, and the tears of sadness love the squinting eye as it misreads what is written. I will love you as the iceberg loves the ship, and the passengers love the lifeboat, and the lifeboat loves the teeth of the sperm whale, and the sperm whale loves the flavor of naval uniforms. I will love you as a child loves to overhear the conversations of its parents, and the parents love the sound of their own arguing voices, and as the pen loves to write down the words these voices utter in a notebook for safekeeping. I will love you as a shingle loves falling off a house on a windy day and striking a grumpy person across the chin, and as an oven loves malfunctioning in the middle of roasting a turkey. I will love you as an airplane loves to fall from a clear blue sky and as an escalator loves to entangle expensive scarves in its mechanisms. I will love you as a wet paper towel loves to be crumpled into a ball and thrown at a bathroom ceiling and an eraser loves to leave dust in the hairdos of the people who talk too much. I will love you as a cufflink loves to drop from its shirt and explore the party for itself and as a pair of white gloves loves to slip delicately into the punchbowl. I will love you as a taxi loves the muddy splash of a puddle and as a library loves the patient tick of a clock. I will love you as a thief loves a gallery and as a crow loves a murder, as a cloud loves bats and as a range loves braes. I will love you as misfortune loves orphans, as fire loves innocence and as justice loves to sit and watch while everything goes wrong. I will love you as a battlefield loves young men and as peppermints love your allergies, and I will love you as the banana peel loves the shoe of a man who was just struck by a shingle falling off a house. I will love you as a volunteer fire department loves rushing into burning buildings and as burning buildings love to chase them back out, and as a parachute loves to leave a blimp and as a blimp operator loves to chase after it. I will love you as a dagger loves a certain person’s back, and as a certain person loves to wear daggerproof tunics, and as a daggerproof tunic loves to go to a certain dry cleaning facility, and how a certain employee of a dry cleaning facility loves to stay up late with a pair of binoculars, watching a dagger factory for hours in the hopes of catching a burglar, and as a burglar loves sneaking up behind people with binoculars, suddenly realizing that she has left her dagger at home. I will love you as a drawer loves a secret compartment, and as a secret compartment loves a secret, and as a secret loves to make a person gasp, and as a gasping person loves a glass of brandy to calm their nerves, and as a glass of brandy loves to shatter on the floor, and as the noise of glass shattering loves to make someone else gasp, and as someone else gasping loves a nearby desk to lean against, even if leaning against it presses a lever that loves to open a drawer and reveal a secret compartment. I will love you until all such compartments are discovered and opened, and until all the secrets have gone gasping into the world. I will love you until all the codes and hearts have been broken and until every anagram and egg has been unscrambled. I will love you until every fire is extinguished and until every home is rebuilt form the handsomest and most susceptible of woods, and until every criminal is handcuffed by the laziest of policemen. I will love you until M. hates snakes and J. hates grammar, and I will love you until C. realizes S. is not worthy of his love and N. realizes he is not worthy of the V. I will love you until the bird hates a nest and the worm hates an apple, and until the apple hates a tree and the tree hates a nest, and until a bird hates a tree and an apple hates a nest, although honestly I cannot imagine that last occurrence no matter how hard I try. I will love you as we grow older, which has just happened, and has happened again, and happened several days ago, continuously, and then several years before that, and will continue to happen as the spinning hands of every clock and the flipping pages of every calendar mark the passage of time, except for the clocks that people have forgotten to wind and the calendars that people have forgotten to place in a highly visible area. I will love you as we find ourselves farther and farther from one another, where once we were so close that we could slip the curved straw, and the long, slender spoon, between our lips and fingers respectively. I will love you until the chances of us running into one another slip from skim to zero, and until your face is fogged by distant memory, and your memory faced by distant fog, and your fog memorized by a distant face, and your distance distanced by the memorized memory of a foggy fog. I will love you no matter where you go and who you see, no matter where you avoid and who you don’t see, and no matter who sees you avoiding where you go. I will love you no matter what happens to you, and no matter how I discover what happens to you, and no matter what happens to me as I discover this, and no matter how I am discovered after what happens to me happens to me as I am discovering this. I will love you if you don’t marry me. I will love you if you marry someone else – your co-star, perhaps, or Y., or even O., or anyone Z. through A., even R. although sadly I believe it will be quite some time before two women can be allowed to marry – and I will love you if you have a child, and I will love you if you have two children, or three children, or even more, although I personally think three is plenty, and I will love you if you never marry at all, and never have children, and spend your years wishing you had married me after all, and I must say that on late, cold nights I prefer this scenario out of all the scenarios I have mentioned. That, Beatrice, is how I will love you even as the world goes on its wicked way.
Pity is for those who have lost. He cannot lose Nesta. There is not a universe he can fathom where he does not belong to her.
Cassian handles their breakup like a champ.
AO3
Warning: Cassian is a creep here-manipulation, stalking, the gamut
It takes weeks before Cassian begins to understand why she left. And if that isn't symbolic of their relationship he doesn't know what is.
Nesta knowing better, being better, as he trots behind. Coated in the arrogance of ignorance, always righteous until he's not, always catching the rhythm a beat too late.
***
He is a goner from their first meeting, leaning against the bedecked wall, grin growing as he watches her rip apart Rhysand's familiar monologue bemoaning the generous Christmas holidays he offers his workers (mostly under pressure from himself and Azriel).
She takes apart his brother's feeble justifications with the precision of a surgeon, irate expression contrasting beautifully with the festive and absolutely horrendous confection of lights and yarn she is wearing.
She is bewitching.
He waits, nursing his drink, quiet for once just watching, eager for a chance to introduce himself.
He is enthralled.
***
It takes three encounters to get her number and an embarrassingly sincere drunk confession to obtain a date.
Then in pieces, in the compounding fragments of the trust he earns, they become a pair.
Their relationship, his life's great love affair had always been loud. Screaming, fighting, laughing, fucking. Always wild, careless in their abandon, in their feckless behaviour as they jumped off the cliff, intertwined.
So why was Nesta's departure so quiet?
The muted rolling of a suitcase on carpet barely disturbing him from sleep, the ring left to catch morning light on the side table until he'd cops it on his way to work and rolls his eyes. Nesta is in a huff and he is indignant, ready to whinge to Azriel.
It's six months later, on their anniversary, that he sees Nesta's ending wasn't quiet.
He just wasn't listening.
***
It takes three days for him to realise she isn't coming back.
Convinced she'll return with the bang of a door, with sharp words he'll take and worse ones he'll offer in return, that after some makeup sex the ring will be home on her finger and he'll be thumbing through a wedding magazine before bed.
This misplaced confidence keeps him from calling. To let her cool off. Leads him to saunter to the apartment door Saturday morning only donning grey joggers. Wanting the upper hand, wanting to see Nesta flush so prettily and clench her jaw tightly, seeing right through his feeble tactics.
Gwyn and Emerie, stony faces and empty cardboard boxes in hand, become a live audience to the destruction of his world.
He stands stunned, head reeling as Nesta is removed from their apartment. He finds himself carrying out boxes of her books. All he wants is to take it all back, slam the door in their faces like a child because she can't just do this. But more importantly he needs to find Nesta. So a willing pack horse he becomes, trying to wheedle information from Gwyn.
His voice shaking, tears gathering, bile rising in his throat.
"Do you know where she is?"
A nod.
"Will you tell me please Gwyn?"
Her red curls shake, a strong refusal.
"I didn't realise she was being serious, I swear."
Gwyn stops in her tracks, head turning sharply to bestow a look that calls him an idiot in five languages.
***
When his house is emptied of anything that is her, anything he could not save, he returns to the ring still on the sidetable despite him begging Gwyn and Emerie to return it to Nesta.
It is the only time they look upon him with an ounce of pity which only makes it worse. Pity is for those who have lost. He cannot lose Nesta. There is not a universe he can fathom where he does not belong to her.
The ring he cradles in battered hands amidst shattered glass and splintered oak.
His blood an artful, awful, Pollackesque smattering over the mess.
Flimsy furnishings seeming a small casualty when his heart is now a necrotic organ burning in his chest.
The ring he picked,
with a white dress,
a honeymoon in Paris,
the rest of their life, in mind.
A silent killing blow.
***
One last blazing row the night before.
Cuts landing too deep this time.
The final fragment of a trust he'd once treasured sacredly, spent so terribly,
"Who the fuck could stand you Nesta when I can't?"
It makes his stomach turn with sickening guilt. He would stitch those words into his skin with wire rather than say them to her now.
He'd like to think he's a different man, maybe a better one, but that's up to her.
She's the only deity he wants to weigh his soul.
He'll come up wanting.
But maybe...
Maybe she'd look at him.
Face him.
Let him burn alive in the grey fire of her glare.
He would delight in his damnation to have her look at him once more.
***
Saturday is a haze. Rhys and Az try to coax him out to no avail. His pain is raw. Anger, frustration, desperation a tumour growing unchecked in his chest. The broken sidetable now had a broken vase, two pictures frames and three tumblers to match it.
She isn't answering his calls, vision blurry from tears and drink, the blue light of his phone is the only thing he can focus on in a world that is swimming. Her contact, Nes 🖤, a beacon a wavering light keeping him from going under.
She isn't answering his calls and so the voicemails begin.
"I have your ring. Sweetheart I'm not taking that back. It's yours. I'm yours... Nesta please just talk to me. I'm sorry about Wednesday night. Come back and we can talk."
Beep.
"What is this about Nes? We fight rough, always have baby. I'll do anything, say anything, get you anything you want just please Nes don't do this. We can get a fucking dog. I swear. We'll move to a different apartment. We can open a fucking dog hotel if that is what you want just.."
Beep.
"Tell me you're safe. Please. I'm going out of my mind here. I love you. More than anything."
Beep.
"Mor was right, you know you're such a fucking bitch sometimes. I'm trying to apologise when you left without a word. Fuck you sweetheart."
Beep.
"I'm sorry. I'm so sorry. That came out wrong, I didn't mean it, just I..I'm beginning to think you're not coming back to me. This isn't goodbye Nes right? Right?"
Beep.
"Just punish me in person, I'll grovel for you Nes, you know that..........It's just a break. It's just a break. That's okay sweetheart you can have it all. Anything you want. Just talk to me first. Talk to me."
Beep.
"I love you. More than anyone else ever has, will or can. Just. If you're going to shred my heart. Do it in person. Do it in person and I'll walk away. Otherwise I'm going to fight you tooth and fucking nail love."
Beep.
The last voicemail a gauntlet thrown by a drunk fool. A sealing of their fate.
***
She arrives on Sunday. Suitable for it to be a holy day if this is his last visit from his god.
He is relieved to see her. Drunken promises of walking away temporarily forgotten. She had texted him an hour before to let him know she was on her way. Giving him time to put the house back in order, air out the smell of alcohol, sweat and despair. He's in his nicest jeans, hair tied in a low bun just how she likes. In the bedroom he has candles and rose petals, ready to worship her.
He wants to remind her she loves him, or she at least she did once.
Purple is painted in the hollows under her eyes, a slight tremor in her hand, greasy hair falling limply around her drawn face. She looks terrible and still the most stunning person he knows.
He's done this.
He'd rather Az pummel him in the ring than see her like this.The aching in his chest makes it hard to breathe. He's made a mistake forcing her hand.
She looks around, avoiding his gaze, eyebrows raising slightly at the very absent sidetable.
She'd been so happy when they found that at old flea market off Washington St. when they first moved in together. He should have thought of that before he left it in splinters.
"There was an accident. I fell, you know how clumsy I get Nes. The table never stood a chance."
Her eyes land on him, and now it's him that can't bear to look, hand rubbing on his neck nervously, focusing on his white socks.
The silence is choking him.
"It's okay. It's okay. We'll get one just like it. I'll check Ebay. I'll ask Amren, she prowls around all the good antique shops. I'll make a replica if I have to. Lucien knows an excellent carpenter. I can fix it Nes. I promise."
He can fix it. He can fix this.
He meets her gaze and wants to vomit.
She looking at him with care, tears running down her face, voice barely audible.
"Cassian. We can't be fixed."
He can't think, he can't breathe, the world is on its axis and she's going to leave. The distance between them has vanished, he's on his knees, soft carpet beneath them a luxury he does not deserve, burying his face in the cotton of her tshirt hands wrapped around her waist.
"No. Nes, no. You can't do that. You can't leave. I'm going to convince you to stay. That's why you're here. You want to stay. I love you. I love you. I love you. I can't be without you."
Pulling his hands from her waist she kneels beside him, caressing his face.
"I'm here to end it in person like you asked."
Her voice and his heart break simultaneously.
'I love you too Cassian. But love is not enough. I can't live like this anymore. On a pedastal at home while you ignore how I'm treated by your friends."
The words friends is spat out.
'You either worship me or we're fighting. So much fighting. Aren't you tired? I'm so tired Cassian. I need more. I need to be by myself for a while. I need someone who doesn't live at work. I need someone you're not Cas."
This is what hell feels like. He's being excommunicated for his sins. She's even doing it in person. His god, so cruel and alluring.
"I'm leaving now Cas. I'm moving away for a while. A clean break will be good for us. You'll thank me for doing this one day."
She let's out something that an alien might count as a laugh. Nervous and watery, choked and uncertain.
"I'll never thank you for this Nes."
She leaves.
He's still kneeling hours later her words a painful, unending echo in his mind.
***
He doesn't go out much now and drinking himself numb in this empty apartment is not who he is anymore.
He doesn't drink often but on their anniversary he let's himself drown in rum, in albums, in the box of her stuff he managed to keep after Gwyn and Emerie cleared house.
He cries into that stupid fucking Christmas jumper.
He sprays her bottle of perfume, letting the vanilla, blackberry, sage sink into the air, a ghostly embrace. Sitting amidst his shrine to her he allows himself to reflect.
Regret every overlooked sneer and snide comment. He doesn't see any of his friends, his brothers anymore. Nesta doesn't like them.
Rue every time he came home late, missed a date, was too tired to talk. He has a new job now, remote with flexible hours. It pays less but he still has his stocks and the nest egg he built breaking his back working for over a decade.
Rhys was frantic to keep him on. Bullshit talk about how he was spiralling, how she wasn't worth it. Punching that remark from his mouth, in front of the board, forced his termination quite effectively.
He has enough for Nesta to retire in the morning. He has enough to buy that fancy brie she likes, and handpainted books, and enough jewellery to fill a small store. He has enough to stay beside her so she won't have to miss him.
He's even bigger now, all his free time spent in the gym, ignoring how eating so much protein makes him feel. She always liked feeling safe in his arms.
He's read all her books. Found her goodreads and follows it like his gospel. Has watched every show, every podcast she consumed on their accounts. He'll share all her likes. He'll never fight her on anything.
Once he earns her forgiveness they can be happy again.
***
She's coming back to town next month. A flying visit apparently. He's going to change that.
His chance is coming to show her how much better is.
The type of man she needs. The type she'll never leave.
Just hear me out ok?! Ok. Thank you.
Understanding each other when the whole world is against them.
Eris about to throw hands but getting THAT look from Nesta and shutting his mouth.
Eris and Nesta gossiping about everyone like, “Love his jacket” - “he might be a dick but he sure has good taste”
Imagine Morrigan’s shock, imagine the inner circle’s shock.
I’d live for the drama. Full on.
Call me a bitch but… Feyre understanding that Nesta can make friends outside of the IC… as can Lucien.
Nesta would be his confidant and he would be hers.
I honestly think Eris would protect Nesta from the venomous snake that is Morrigan (My hate for her is deep and don’t even bother trying to change it)
“Don’t talk to her like that. whatever problem you might have with me, DO NOT DEMEAN NESTA.”
I also think that Nesta would protect Eris from Cassian and Azriel. Like we all know mami is a fucking physco (I aspire to be like that) so she’d probably just jump in between like”Move Nesta”- “make me” while Eris is trying to subtly push her outta the way
“DON’T TOUCH ME VANSERRA,”
“yes ma’am.”
Cassian’s jealousy
Nesta getting mad at Cassian because he belittles him at every chance he gets as does Eris and she just watches them fight.
I’m basically seeing Nesta just in the middle saying a Veronica lodge line:
“I can’t stand the male toxicity in this room.” every time they fight.
The IC might make peace with Eris because if Nesta knows the truth, what happened and why he did what he did then they might…ya never know.
Matching outfits.
And the most important thing:
He would belong solely to her and no one else.
He’d make her laugh and she’d make him show his true self to the world.
The Queen of Death and the Lord of fire.
Would you consider a part 2 for the fic where nesta just does as she’s told? Maybe where Cassian confronts the inner circle about it?
Pretty please <3
I’m not sure this is the closure people are looking for from this but uh … this is what came out. Sorry everyone.
Feyre rolled her eyes before Cassian could even finish speaking. It wasn’t like her, to be so dismissive. But that look in her blue-grey eyes, so alive that it twisted his gut thinking of the shade, it was pure dismissal.
“Listen, Cass,” she sighed, as if speaking to Nyx when he wouldn’t finish his mushed up sweet potatoes. “I … I don’t know what went on between you and my sister in the war. I know that she pushes your buttons and I know that you two have your … whatever it is, but just because Nesta doesn’t want to play that game anymore doesn’t mean anything is wrong with her. She’s finally herself again.”
“No she isn’t,” Cassian insisted. “She’s … I don’t know, faking it. Going through the motions. She’s -“
“Healing,” Feyre said with yet another sigh. “She’s healing, Cassian.”
“She’s numb, Feyre. And I swear to the Cauldron if you sigh at me one more time-“
“You haven’t known her as long as I have!” Feyre crossed her arms over her chest, clearly fighting back a fucking sigh. “You didn’t know her when she was young. Before we lost everything …” Feyre swallowed hard, shifting on her toes. “This is what she was like. Free, unburdened, quiet. I’m sorry that you liked the version of her that was bitter and afraid, but that wasn’t her. Not really. This is her.”
“Bullshit,” Cassian spat. “You said it yourself months ago. Nesta is like a wolf who never got to be a wolf. If she acted like this when you were rich humans it was only because she thought that’s what the world wanted from her!” Cassian knew Nesta. Feyre was her sister, had known her longer, but Cassian … Cassian knew her. In his bones, in his soul, the piece of him that was … not missing, that wasn’t how to describe it. The piece of him that was reaching. It knew. He knew.
This was not Nesta.
“Even if that is true,” Feyre sighed, “it just proves my point. She is healing. Finally. It took me so long to remember who I was again and Nesta … she’s been through so much. We all have.”
Suddenly, Cassian understood why Nesta snapped when he tried to shove stories about Rhys and Feyre and their special little journey’s down her throat.
“She. Is. Not. Ok.”
“She is,” Feyre spat. Hands tightening and jaw clenching. “She is fine. My family is finally together and happy and I won’t let you ruin it because she won’t fuck you, Cassian!”
Cassian stumbled back three steps. Feyre’s hand flew to her mouth. “I didn’t. Cassian I didn’t mean that. I know-”
“It’s fine, Feyre.” Cassian held his hands up in surrender. “I get it.”
And he did.
He should have gotten it a long time ago.
It was never about Nesta or her behaviour or her power. It was about Feyre, it had always been about Feyre.
Rhys’s plan, the insistence on training, it wasn’t about Nesta.
Nesta never wanted to be a warrior. She said it herself, there are other ways to be strong.
The plan … the entire plan had never been about Nesta.
It was about Feyre.
Fixing Nesta when she was never broken.
Creating impossible choices.
Using him to manipulate her.
No one had ever cared if Nesta got better. They only cared that Feyre was happy. That Feyre had her family. That nothing upset Feyre after everything she went through.
And the worst part of it all was that Cassian couldn’t even blame anyone. He couldn’t blame Feyre for wanting to believe that everything was finally fine. He couldn’t blame Rhys for doing all of this because … he was doing everything he could to protect his mate. To make her happy.
The same thing that Cassian was supposed to do for Nesta.
He was supposed to be the one on her side the way Rhys was on Feyre’s.
Complete loyalty.
He was supposed to protect her, and instead he broke her.
Failed her in every way a male could possibly fail.
Nesta Archeron had lived through a war, had removed multiple heads with her bare hands, had been shoved into the freezing waters of good and evil and creation itself and had her humanity ripped away.
But none of that broke her.
None of that was the worst thing to happen to her.
He was.