Summary: Cassian, a single father, tries online dating for a one night stand and gets more than he bargains for. Nesta, a former professional ballet dancer, opens her own studio in her new hometown of Velaris and finds that she knows one of her studentsâ fathers from a night of utter regret.
Warnings: Mature content throughout. Language, sex, drinking, etc. NSFW.
Summary: Cassian, a single father, tries online dating for a one night stand and gets more than he bargains for. Nesta, a former professional ballet dancer, opens her own studio in her new hometown of Velaris and finds that she knows one of her studentsâ fathers from a night of utter regret.
Warnings: Mature content throughout. Language, sex, drinking, etc. NSFW.
Well, here we are. Two years and nearly four months later and weâre at the end. Before I say anything else, I just want to say thank you. Thank you for every comment, ask, reblog and little heart youâve given to this fic. Thank you for sticking with me. Weâve shed tears and laughter and frustration and I canât believe I got there and I finished it. This fic has meant a lot to me and itâs been such fun to share it with you all. Iâll stop now before I really start crying, weâve waited long enough. Please enjoy!
Masterlist
~~~~~
Work had become a necessary evil. Rowan didnât hate his job by any means, as a career it was all he wanted to do. The thing was every morning heâd kiss his daughter and girlfriend goodbye and went to the gym away from Elsie, thatâs what he hated. She was growing so quickly, already two months old, and he hated missing any moment of it. It was an unrealistic dream to want to spend every minute of every day with her, but sheâd stolen his heart and he had no plans to take it back. And Aelin, gods she was an amazing woman. She took all the challenges of motherhood in her stride, through the good days and the bad. There had been sleepless nights for everyone, and they had been overcautious about every little thing. Their daughterâs prematurity came with itâs concerns and they had a few out of hours visits from Yrene that she was all too happy to give. In spite of all the hardships, after everything that had happened, Elsie was thriving. Sheâd held true to his premonition, she was just as strong as her mother.Â
Aelin and Elsie had become his world, their apartment a sanctuary. Pulling into his parking spot Rowan was beyond happy to be home and done with the outside world for today, he was ecstatic. He couldnât get out of his truck quick enough.
The shot burned her throat as she threw it back, tracing the insides of her stomach as it settled against the other two shots sheâd had. Maybe not the best idea for the night ahead of her, but Aelin didnât care. She needed the distraction.
â5, 6, 7, 8, 9⊠whereâs the last hundred?â Arobynn asked smoothly as he counted the bills sheâd given him, and Aelin was tempted to take another shot to prepare for what she had to say.
âI had to use it to pay my water bill,â she admitted carefully, trading her empty shot glass for the ice pack sitting on the bar top. She was hovering in the corner of the bar, though the place wasnât crowded yet. Perched right in the center of the Vaults, it attracted its patrons further into the night, patrons who then came out to the street to sample the real attractions.
âYour water bill?â Arobynn asked tersely, his brows raised, and Aelin lifted the ice pack to her face, pressing it gingerly to her bruised eye.
Sheâd gone to the bank that afternoon after waking up to deposit the hundred and have it wired over to the utilities company. And once itâd been processed sheâd taken a glorious shower. Sheâd wasted some money away on a long one, but her skin had felt like it was crawling, and she needed to burn the touch away.
âYes,â she continued, forcing herself not to cower in his gaze. âIt was overdue.â He made a hum of contemplation while he grabbed a handle of vodka to pour a drink for the guy a few seats down from her. Arobynn owned the bar, but only occasionally tended it himself. He liked to revel in his wealth instead, while everyone else did the hard work.
After passing it down to the guy whoâd ordered it, he turned his gaze back to hers, and she felt a steep sense of trepidation.
âYouâre still short $25, darling,â he said, âno exceptions.â She pursed her lips, the stinging cold of the ice making her set it down.
92.5% of her earnings; thatâs how much he took. 90 was for his cut, and then the other 2.5 was for âtaxâ. The number changed based on how much you charged; she charged $1000 for a whole night while other girls only charged $500. Arobynn took 87.5% from them.
12 and a half dollars. Thatâs how much more she got than them, despite charging double what they did.
Arobynn said he was being generous, and to be grateful he didnât take more, but Aelin knew it was just a way to keep them all pinned in his grasp. They brought him money, and he brought them âprotectionâ, which consisted of his lackey Tern watching them from the safety of the bar each night to make sure no one snatched them up. Which basically amounted to nothing because that was the whole point of their situation. To be snatched up.
Sheâd threatened to leave multiple times, to no avail. Because without his influence, sheâd have no clients at all, and even this was better than starving to death. What else was she supposed to do, if not for this?
She could get another job, but who wanted to hire an ex-prostitue? And even if she didnât admit to it, it would inevitably be exposed, whether by her own history or by Arobynnâs influence making sure she had nowhere to turn but him.
âWhereâs lovely Lysandraâs money?â He asked, leaning forward on the bar to peer at her. âShe gave it to you to give to me, didnât she?â Aelinâs lips turned down, but she regretfully dug the wad of cash out of her denim shorts pocket. She didnât wear her clothes for the night until she had to.
The shots had gotten to her head a little bit, but not nearly enough as laid the cash on the bar. Arobynn was lecherous with all of them, but heâd been particularly aggressive with Lysandra, so sheâd taken to avoiding him as much as possible. Aelin had always been able to deal with him the best out of the group, so sheâd offered to help.
âOnly $200?â He asked tauntingly as he picked up the scattered twenties. âA slow night, hm?â
It was, for Lysandra at least. Sheâd only been bought for an hour, leaving her plenty of time to get a good night's sleep. That was something she needed, but money had little forgiveness.
Which was why Aelin had offered to foot the whole water bill this month. They both chipped in on the rent, and they both generally covered the utilities too. They were some of the highest paid of the group, so if that shitty apartment was all they could afford, that didnât bode well for everyone else.
âYou know,â Arobynn added, âif you two are struggling, you can always live upstairs.â A queasy feeling sank in her gut and she clenched her jaw.
Arobynn owned the bar, but a woman named Clarisse owned the upstairs part of the building. She had a close relationship with him, and together theyâd transformed it into a series of minuscule bedrooms, each more isolating than the last.
They claimed it was alternative housing, an apartment building of sorts, but Aelin knew if she took the dirt cheap rent and chose to stay there, sheâd be on call twenty four seven. It was practically a brothel, and sheâd have no place that was her own, no place of safety, or comfort. Sheâd be in hell even more than she already was.
So no, she would never.
âItâd be easier for certain other activities too,â he added slyly, glancing down at her arm, and her face hardened.
âI donât do that shit anymore,â Aelin said tensely, tugging at her sleeve. Arobynn raised a brow, a smile lilting on the edges of his lips as he returned to counting the bills, reaching away to the cash register to pull out some more.
âThatâs what they all say,â he replied loftily, and she sat there quietly, letting the shitty rock music of the bar soak through her senses. Until he threw a few bills back at her across the counter. âHereâs Lysandraâs change,â he purred, leaning in closer. âBut you still owe me $25, pet, so make sure to cover that up,â he gestured to her eye, âand try a little harder tonight. Maybe someone will even give you a tip.â
He winked and slid back down to serve other customers, leaving her with ice rolling down her spine. But it soon disappeared into a wave of emptiness once again.
ââââ
Aelin ever so carefully dragged the eyeliner across her eye lid, making sure the line was perfectly straight before switching to the other eye, repeating the same monotonous process. She couldnât count how many times sheâd done the exact same thing, filling in the rest of the lid with dark eyeshadow, giving herself a smokey eye look.
Ironic, considering how much makeup sheâd put on to cover the natural smokey eye she had.
It was almost laughable. If Aelin could laugh without a tinge of bitterness, or of anger. She hadnât had a pure, unrestrained laugh in years.
But even if she could, she didnât think it was right to. Not when Nehemiaâs blank eyes flashed through her mind. Sheâd never be able to laugh again.
âYou good, babe?â Lysandra asked, from the sink next to her, and Aelin blinked back into the present, realizing sheâd been zoning off, staring blankly at the mirror with her eyeshadow brush half hanging out of her hand.
âYeah,â she rasped, shaking her head to clear it as she dropped the brush back into her bag. âJust thinking.â
The brunette nudged her shoulder. âAnything you want to share?â She was prying, and they both knew it, but Aelin couldnât find it in herself to be annoyed about it. Lysandra was a good friend, one of the only people who really understood the kind of life she led, because they both did. Sure, they hadnât gone through all the same shit to end up here, but here they were, together.
But Aelin wasnât sure she wanted to ruin Lysandraâs temporary peace with the horrors running through her own mind, so she just dismissed it.
âNo, itâs nothing of importance,â she waved off, digging through her makeup bag for her lipstick. It was a sinful dark red color, making her mouth look even more delectable than it already was. Aelin had never been modest about her looks; she knew if her life hadnât taken this turn she couldâve ended up modeling, or something where sheâd be noticed for her beauty.
She supposed she was being noticed for her beauty now, but it was a little less admiration of it and a little more desire to own it. To own her. She was a commodity for people to satiate their twisted desires with, and then discarded until the next time they wanted to use her.
But she wouldnât think about that now, not before she was about to throw herself to the wolves.
Her eyes drifted to the sink on her other side, where there was now an empty spot. Nehemia always got ready there, the cooling, wise presence to her and Lysandraâs fire.
Whore
Ice struck her as the photograph flashed in her mind, the empty brown eyes and the ugly word carved into her beautiful brown skin. Their line of âworkâ had always come with risks, but Aelin was uneasy knowing there was someone out there who would do this.
And not just to Nehemia, but to Ansel too. Sheâd never known Ansel quite as well, but she was horrified just the same at her brutal end.
Aelin would just have to be on the lookout, to hopefully make sure that didnât happen to anyone else.
âYou ready to go?â Lysandra asked, zipping up her own makeup bag, and Aelin glanced down at her arm real quick before nodding. The carefully placed concealer was set in place, nothing visible on her golden skin. She was sure the makeup would come off at some point in the night, but by then, no one would be paying enough attention to notice.
Aelin reached down to make sure her heels were tightened enough before following the brunette girl out of the bar bathroom, dropping their stuff off in the back room office on the way. They always got ready there; it was easier than getting ready at their apartment and then trotting down the street looking like they were up to gods knew what.
This way it was contained.
She avoided Arobynnâs lecherous gaze as they walked past, her face painted in a non-expressive expression. She avoided the leers of everyone else too, the people who knew what they were there for.
Aelin generally wasnât employed by any of them; she had her set group of people that tended to show up first. They were willing to pay her fee, so she couldnât really complain. Though she supposed she had a spot to fill now that Mullin was gone.
The money wasnât worth the black eye⊠right?
She pushed the hesitation deep down inside herself as she pushed open the doors to the outside, a rush of hot summer air seeping down on her. It was sticky, and humid, but Aelin didnât think she could be wearing any less clothing, so this would have to do.
All in all, it was functioning as a pretty normal night - until she saw a familiar man in a badly camouflaged car on the other side of the street.
âFuck,â she spit, angrily stalking over there.
âCelaena?â Lysandra called out, and it took a second to catch up, to remember that was her name to everyone, like it always did though sheâd been using it for years at this point. Celaena Sardothien, because Aelin Galathynius didnât exist anymore.
She caught up to the present and waved Lysandra off as she passed the few other girls already out there.
âIâll be back in a minute,â she said, her eyes narrowing in on the driver. âDonât worry.â
---------
Rowan didnât know how successful he was going to be with his reconnaissance, but he figured it was better than doing absolutely nothing and waiting for another girl to be found dead.
Heâd taken one of the undercover cop cars available at the station, after getting this little mission approved, and parked it across the street and a little ways down from where heâd walked only the night before. He was staring at the bar that characterized the Vaults: the main hangout for all the sleazebags that then sampled the other âentertainmentâ.
Rowan didnât approve of any part of the situation, from the men to the women who thought this was their only choice. The thought made him frown, and his frown held as he saw a couple of figures exit the bar, seemingly joining the few girls already lined up outside.
That same frown only deepened when he saw who it was, when he recognized the girl heâd talked to only 24 hours ago, and it began to pull at his skin when he saw her recognize him and begin to walk his way.
He considered just driving away, but there was a small part of him that hoped she knew more than she said, and that sheâd be willing to divulge the information.
So when she tapped at his window, he rolled it down with only a slight bit of reluctance, his hackles rising at the look of disdain on her face.
Disdain that suddenly turned seductive. Rowan simply blinked.
âHello there,â she said, gently resting her elbow on the doorframe, and delicately resting her chin on top, leaning forward to show off the generous cleavage spilling out of her top. âMy nameâs Celaena.â Celaena; he catalogued the information, though he still wasnât sure what she was doing. âI have three options for you tonight,â she added, her voice smooth and sultry as she leaned forward, using her free hand to drag a finger up his sleeve. â1, you pay a measly $200, and you get a whole hour in my lovely company. 2, you pay to spend the whole night with me.â She leaned in closer, her voice breathier. Rowan couldnât deny his heart was beating a little faster. âOr 3,â she said, tugging him a little closer by his sleeve. âYou give me $25 and fuck off.â
And with that, she shoved him back in his seat, her face turning to stone.
Rowanâs jaw clenched in utter indignation, frustration spilling out of every single one of his pores. If she was going to have an attitude - well - he wasnât exactly going to let her walk all over him.
âWho the hell do you think you are?â He replied, one hand still on the steering wheel while the other inched toward his gun. Not that he was going to use it - she posed no physical threat to him at all - it was mostly just as a means to regain power in the situation. Just like his next words were for. âIâm a police officer, Celaena, I think we both know what that means for you.â
Her already icy face hardened further, and she narrowed her stunning cerulean eyes at him, like she was trying to dissect him from the outside in.
And then she laughed. A cruel, bitter sound, piercing through even his thick layers. âI donât have time to deal with bastards like you, so do us both a favor and go run along and play detective somewhere else. We donât need your help.â
And just when he expected her to leave, to go twiddle off and bat her heavily mascaraed eyelashes at the next man who came around willing to pay, she did the exact opposite.
She kissed him.
It was a rough kiss, and he didnât know how to respond except kiss her back, her soft mouth moving against his. His eyes fluttered closed, and he let her coax his mouth open with her own, feeling her hand grip his suit jacket as she leaned further into the car.
He had no idea how long it lasted, the whole experience removed from time itself, but then she was ripping away from him, leaving him cold. She retreated from the window, his wide eyes following her as she leaned into a hip, standing back from his car. And fishing through his wallet.
âWhat th-â
Celaena grabbed a few bills, pulling them out of his wallet before closing it and tossing it back into the car. He caught it easily, staring at her.
He could still taste the remnants of her kiss, but he was burning with anger at the impetuousness of it all. Especially when she gave a little flirty wave, dripping with sarcasm, tucking his money into her top.
âBye, detective,â she said, her voice once again smooth as honey. âI have my $25, so now itâs your turn to fuck off.â
And then she was finally stalking away, hips swaying as she headed back to the sidewalk, stopping to mutter something to a brunette girl who shot daggers his way.
Rowan muttered curses under his breath, but after returning his wallet to his suit jacket pocket, the only thing he could do was listen and drive away.
Heâd just have to come back another night instead.
Prompt from @backtobl4ck : Fake proposals at restaurants to get free food
Masterlist | Read on Ao3
Warnings: None
896 words
*******
âIâll have a Tanqueray martini, stirred, with a twist.â
Aelin let her long coat rest over the side of the low-backed barstool she perched on as her gaze surveyed the dimly lit restaurant behind her. Everyone was dressed to the nines, draped in designer clothing and bedecked in jewels, herself included, which only exemplified the opulent atmosphere.
Low chatter dissolved within the quiet music filtering through invisible speakers. Candles lined the walls, illuminating the soft-toned paintings placed about.
She crossed one leg over the other, the silt in her dress falling away to expose smooth skin and toned muscle, and tossed her long golden hair over one shoulder. Her heel began to sway to the low beat.
âThank you,â she murmured to the bartender who handed over her drink. Lifting the chilled glass to her crimson-painted lips, Aelin loosed a small, contented sigh at the velvety smooth cocktail. Her eyes closed for a moment while she sipped again, enjoying the light citrusy flavor of the lemon rind.
Aelin felt the corner of her mouth quirk up at the obvious display of happiness and lifted her glass in gesture as more applause rang out. She hadnât yet turned back to the bar when Aelin heard, what had to be the manager, approach the two women and insist their dinner be on the house while also offering a complimentary bottle of wine or champagne with a hearty congratulations.
She huffed out a soft snort and muttered âIâd get engaged right now if it meant getting that lobster tail comped.â
A deep chuckle to her right made Aelin whip her head around to see who had heard her, mouth already open to ask why they felt entitled to react to her obviously rhetorical comment. The words got caught in her throat, however, when her eyes landed on the man sitting two seats down from her.
His thick hair was so pale it looked silver under the glow of the warm lights. He was tall, he didnât need to get up for her to see that. And muscled. The arms resting on the sleek bar were toned and strong, and a tattoo peeked out from beneath the sleeves of his dress shirt heâd rolled up to his elbows.
Aelin dragged her eyes back to his face and found him staring at her with piercing green eyes. He was smirking, obviously enjoying the way she had hesitated and checked him out.
Blinking, Aelin remembered why she turned to him in the first place. Arching a golden brow and taking a smooth sip of her martini, she asked, âSomething youâd like to say?â
His smirk slowly widened and he lifted his own drink, an Old Fashioned by the looks of it, to his lips. She tightened her grip on her glass while he held her gaze before replying, âOnly that I would've gone with the Wagyu.â
Her brow rose higher as the hum of chattering continued around them. Aelin shifted again, angling her body more towards his. âIs that so?â
She swept her eyes over him with deliberate slowness and let him see the glimmer of interest on her face. In one smooth move, he stood from his chair, grabbed his jacket, and took the seat directly beside her.
He shrugged with an irreverence that seemed to say, your choice, but tilted his glass towards her and leaned in. âThe real question is would you accept the bottle of Zinfandel or Champagne?â
Nodding his agreement, he finished his drink and set it on the bar before extending his hand towards her. âRowan.â
Aelin held his gaze, aware of how he kept his hand out in offering as she sipped the last of her cocktail and set the empty glass next to his. She smiled and placed her hand in his. âAelin.â
Without breaking eye contact, he shifted their handshake so he lightly held her fingers and brought them to his mouth, pressing a lingering kiss to her knuckles. âAelin,â he dragged her name out, and she instantly enjoyed the way it sounded coming from him. âHow would you like to get fake engaged tonight?â
Her smile broadened and his soon followed. âI would love to.â
Aelin stood from her barstool and discreetly removed one of the rings she wore, sliding it towards Rowan and letting her fingers graze his skin for a second longer than necessary.
Standing to his full height, he pocketed the ring and winked at her. âAfter you,â he insisted and rested a hand lightly on the small of her back as they walked toward the dinner tables.
Well⊠Sorry this took me so long but I really wanted to get this right. It also sneakily snuck up like 8000 words without my permission. And Iâm not crying, thatâs definitely you.Â
Masterlist
~~~~~
So much had changed, it was hard to comprehend just how much. They had a daughter now, he and Aelin were bound by something infinitely more beautiful than what they had before. Rowan was a father, and that thought alone was enough to stun him into a reflective silence. It was so odd but at the same time it felt so right. Little Elsie was theirs and he wouldnât have it any other way.
Another thing that had changed that put a smile on his face was Aelinâs appetite. It had returned with a vengeance and she was ravenous. Rowan tried not to leave either of them as much as he was permittedâwhich had only been a handful of times reallyâand when he did he made sure to return with something to eat for Aelin. The first time he had left he had felt sick to his gut at the thought of leaving them alone, but he had to go back to their apartment to get clothes for all three of them. Fenrys had been the one that had driven him there and back and then even popped in to see Aelin as well. Besides that Rowan had just taken a few walks outside or up the street, snacks in hand when he returned. With hospital food being the way it was, what Rowan really relied on were their visitors. They would get texts with requests for certain things before they arrived that were unfailingly picked up. None of them minded, they were more than happy to oblige the new mother. There was at least one visitor every day, Rowan suspected they had worked out a roster amongst themselves.Â
But along with all the good, there came the not so great as well.
Hello friends. I wonât distract you with any preamble, youâve waited long enough.Â
Masterlist
~~~~~
Aelin felt heavy. She couldnât move, she felt as though moving even a finger was impossible. There was a reason she needed to wake up, but in her drowsy haze she couldnât remember. Eyelids fluttered and harsh light filtered in, yet keeping them open alluded her. Sometimes she heard her name, sometimes she heard beeping or murmurs of voices. Phantom touches on her face, her hand, none of it was enough to rouse her.Â
She thought she dreamed. There was pain and screaming, Aelin supposed it came from her own body in these dreams. Then there was Rowan next to her, bleeding and trapped like she was, always out of reach. She wanted to wake up from these visions, they were torture. Despite it all the heaviness still pulled her under. But then sometimes she was holding a little baby in her arms and she felt peaceful and happy and content. It was from those dreams that she didnât want to wake.Â
Rowan helps Aelin out of a sticky situation. Elide and Lorcan offer moral support in the form of teasing and matchmaking
Masterlist | Read on Ao3 | Wintery Collection
Warnings: Language
1705 words
*******
âWhitethorn, your damn phoneâs ringing again. Answer it or shut it off.â Lorcan shouted from the kitchen.
Rowan rolled his eyes but followed the incessant ringing to the kitchen where his phone was buzzing face down on the counter. Lorcan was in the middle of dumping a few bags of popcorn into a bowl in preparation for a movie night. Aelin and Elide had invited themselves over under the guise of a Christmas movie marathon, but Rowan suspected that Elide and Lorcan would conveniently disappear halfway through.
Ever since they started dating, theyâd been disgustingly sweet. Rowan even swore he saw Lorcan getting his hair braided once before the bedroom door was slammed in his faceânot that the tall, imposing man would ever admit it.
And also since Elide and Lorcan got together, they had been trying to set up Aelin and Rowan.
It was painfully obviousâto everyone but Aelin, it seemedâthat Rowan had been in love with her for years. Heâd thought he hid it well, but apparentally, he wasnât as good an actor as heâd hoped.
Lorcan, Rowan knew, knew about Rowanâs crush that was way more than a crush on the blonde, only because of a morning after the two had gone out drinking, did Lorcan play back a recording of Rowanâs slurred love declarations. The black-haired man had been amused but not at all surprised.
So, if the two lovebirds suddenly dipped out on their group movie night then Rowan suspected it would be just as much for him as it would be for them.
He only hoped their behavior wouldnât be too obvious to Aelin. She was one of his best friends, he wasnât sure what he would do if she found out and never talked to him again.
Rowanâs phone rang again, startling him out of his train of thought. He flipped it over and saw Elideâs name flash across the screen.
âWhy is my girlfriend calling you?â Lorcan asked, leaning against the counter, and uncapping a bottle of beer.
Rolling his eyes, Rowan took the bottle handed to him and huffed, âHow should I know? Why donât you let me answer and find out.â
Lorcan merely crossed his arms and nodded to Rowan to answer.
âElide?â Rowan leaned against the opposite counter. âWhatâs up?â
âRowan! Oh thank gods, Iâve been trying to call Lorcan but his phone keeps going to voicemail.â She explained, exasperated.
Rowanâs eyebrows shot up in amusement as he pulled the phone away from his ear and put it on speaker.
âIâve got your boyfriend right here,â he met Lorcanâs confused gaze and shrugged.
âEl?â Lorcan asked, already pulling his phone out and wincing at the notifications of missed calls.
âLor, okay good, youâre both there, good.â Her voice faded and they tied to hear her muffled words, but it was like sheâd covered the speaker.
âEl, whatâs going on?â Lorcan snatched the Rowan from Rowanâs hand.
âWe have a bit of a situation.â She hedged and said something else they couldnât hear.
âWhat kind of situation?â Rowan asked before Lorcan could crush his phone in his worrying grip
Elide sighed loudly, and they could hear a second voice with her but muffled. âAelin, sheââ
âIs she okay?â Rowan asked quickly. âI mean, are you both okay? Are the two of you equally okay?â
Lorcan smirked and Elide snorted before she said, âYes, well no, butââ
ââLide,â Lorcan asked again âwhat is it?â
More muffled words, and then, âAelin got her tongue stuck to a pole.â
***
âEed, ih urssâ Aelin mumbled, pressed up against the stupid metal pole so her tongue wouldnât be stretched too far.
âYeah, I know it hurts.â Elide said, rubbing a hand down her face. âThe guys should be here any minute.â
Aelin huffed, immediately regretting it as the air clouded up around her face. âAh ohryâ
The shorter girl leaned against the pole, âI know youâre sorry.â She rolled her eyes, finally giving in to her amusement now that help was on the way. âYou just had to prove your point, didnât you?â
Aelin gestured to herself and the pole, âAn ah id!â
âYeah, you did,â Elide chuckled and raised a brow, âand howâs that working out?â
Whatever Aelin grumbled Elide didnât bother trying to understand.
Just then, a car pulled up next to them and Rowan and Lorcan got out. Rowan looked concerned, carrying a couple of water bottles, but Lorcan took one look at how Aelin was stuck to the metal pole and almost fell over laughing.
Elide knocked him on the shoulder, telling him to cut it out, but Aelin caught her smirk as she did so.
âIh ah uhee,â She protested.
âItâs a little funny,â Elide argued, grinning.
Aelin rolled her eyes as Rowan walked up to her, looking back and forth between her and Elide. Choosing to get right to the problem, he took one of the water bottles and walked around the pole trying to find the best angle.
âShould I even ask?â He questioned warily, opening the bottle of warm water.
Aelin fidgeted. âAh ay ahh hade a isayee.â
He blinked, his brain trying and failing to make out her words. âWhat?â
Elide sighed and came closer. âShe said I may have made a mistake.â
âMay have?â Rowan snorted, as Lorcan asked incredulously, âYou can understand that?â
They all ignored the single finger Aelin flashed Lorcan as Elide explained, âIâve been speaking Aelin for years. Apparentally her Iâm stuck to a metal pole voice isnât so different from her Iâve had three too many shots of tequila voice.â
Lorcan seemed far too amused as he wrapped an arm around Elide and moved her in front of him, resting his chin on her head as she leaned back into his chest.
âThis might hurt,â Rowan told Aelin quietly as he started pouring the warm water over the pole and her tongue.
She winced but stayed still, knowing it would only be worse if she jerked away. âIh ings.â
âShe says itââ
âStings.â Rowan nodded, âYeah, I got that.â He ignored the whispering happening behind him as he focused on getting Aelin unstuck.
âWell,â Elide clapped her hands together and hooked her arm through Lorcanâs before grinning back at Aelin and Rowan. âit looks like you two have this under control,â she ignored the indignant sounds coming from her friend, âso I think Lorcan and I are gonna head back. Itâs only a few blocks away, Iâm sure you two can walk that, yeah?â
She didn't wait for a response before yanking the car door open and sliding in as Lorcan hurried to the driverâs seat, started the car, and drove away.
Rowan only blinked, slightly dazed from their hasty exit, until Aelin made a grunting sound and suddenly flew back from the pole. She stumbled as her momentum took her down, but Rowan reached out and wrapped an arm around her waist before she could fall.
âYou okay?â he breathed, too aware of the short distance between them as he pulled her back to her feet.
Aelinâs hands gripped the front of his jacket as her breathing steadied. âI am now.â She smiled up at him and stepped back.
It must have been his imagination that her hands held on a second longer than necessary.
She cleared her throat and looked around, remembering what the situation was. âThey really just took the car and left us, huh?â
Rowan chuckled, rubbing the back of his neck as he looked in the direction of the apartment. âI guess better to let them get their canoodling out of their system before we have to watch it.â
Aelin snorted, pulling her scarf tighter around her neck. She grabbed the spare water bottle and walked beside Rowan as the headed down the sidewalk. âCanoodling? Who says canoodling?â
He chuckled, raising a brow as he glanced at her, âWhat would you call it?â
She mummed thoughtfully, glancing at him and hastily averting her eyes as she shrugged, âWell Iâd probably just say theyâre getting in a quicky before we get back.â
Rowan couldnât help the loud laugh that sprung out as they crossed the street, and Aelinâs laugh joined his.
âTheyâre nauseating, but theyâre cute.â She admitted.
He smirked, âI bet Lorcan would be thrilled to be called cute.â
Aelin rolled her eyes and bumped her shoulder with his. âElide makes him cute. Without her, heâs just a grumpy pain in the ass.â
âThey have a weird balance,â he agreed.
When he looked at Aelin again, he was caught by how the winter light shone in her eyes. Rowan took a breath and stared straight ahead before adding in a much softer voice, âSheâs so full of life that she brings out the happiness in him.â
Aelinâs breathing hitched softly. She was quiet a moment while Rowanâs heart was practically beating out of his chest. He was about to start rambling when she spoke. âAnd he sees exactly who she is and makes her feel like she doesnât have to hide anything around him.â
When her gloved hand brushed his, Rowan pulled her to an abrupt halt. She seemed surprised at the stop, but as he searched her eyes, he saw the vulnerability there. Pulling her towards him, he took a chance.
âI wasnât talking about Elide.â He breathed, lifting his hands to cup her face.
Her eyes widened and she gripped his wrists, holding him to her. âI wasnât talking about Lorcan.â
Rowan didn't hesitate as he surged forward and captured her lips with his. They were still cold from the pole and he smiled into the kiss as Aelin melted into him, pressing herself as close as she could get. Her hands snaked up around his neck and she kissed him back fervently.
They both were breathing heavily as they broke apart, and Rowan looped his arms around her waist.
âGo out with me.â He swallowed, trying to wrap his around the fact that this was actually happening, that heâd actually just kissed Aelin. And that sheâd kissed him back.
Her smile lit up her face as she nodded, âOn one condition.â
âWhat?â his brows furrowed, âAnything.â
Aelinâs smile grew impossibly wider. âKiss me again.â
I recommend that if you have important things to do or places to go you hold out on this for a little bit. final word count sits at 9152 and⊠well⊠here it is.
Masterlist
~~~~~
Rowan would sell his soul to Hellas himself if it meant that Aelin would open her eyes. Rain was still falling heavily around him, causing an abrasive sound to intrude on his panic. Common sense told him to get out of the car, to go around to Aelin door and haul it open so he could see her better. But that quiet voice was being drowned out by his voice saying her name over and over, looking at her unconscious form next to him.Â
There were people moving around the car and Rowan tore his eyes away from Aelin to assess the damage. It was then he realised that even if he wanted he wouldnât have been able to get out of the car anyway. From what he could tell they had spun out, and through the windshield he could see that the nose on the passenger side had taken some damage he assumed had come from another car, and maybe that had sent them into the pole that was crushed into his side of the car. Somehow his window remained unscathed, but Aelinâs was shattered but hadnât fallen from the frame which was a blessing in itselfâthose were injuries she could do without. And yet⊠she wasnât waking up. Rowan tried moving but he couldnât get far, his seatbelt wouldnât let him get anywhere and when he tried to undo it wouldnât budge. Instead he gingerly and slowly tested out his limbs all of which seemed to be working fine. It still wasnât enough.
As I finish up with chapter 48 I have this little Interlude for you. Itâs the phone call from Fenrysâ POV then a little teeny tiny bit extra. Iâm working very hard on chapter 48 and will get that to you ASAP, I promise.Â
It Take Two MasterlistÂ
~~~~~
Ever the troublesome man that he was, Fenrys had fully intended to tease Rowan when he saw him walking up. He even got as far as saying, âWhere are you off too?â with a smirk and in the hopes of turning the answer into something lewd just to see him squirm. But when he saw the look on Rowanâs face Fenrys knew something serious was a foot.Â
âYou need to call Aelin and donât hang up until I get there,â Rowan said. âI mean it, donât hang up for anything. And donât let Aedion catch on.â
The man meant business and although he was confused Fenrys agreed instantly. âYeah of courseâÂ
Rowan didnât wait for any more of an answer before walking away, and Fenrys didnât wait before finding Aelinâs number and calling it. It only took two rings before Aelin answered, her voice sounding full of tears.Â
âHey, Fen.â
âHey there,â Fenrys said. âWhatâs up?â
âOh, nothing,â Aelin said with a trembling voice.
âI donât believe that for a second,â Fenrys told her wryly.
CW: abortion, implied abuse, poverty, homelessness, death
an: this one is heavy, I need to warn you. I've been working on this for a while, and I'm finally ready to post it, but it is quite angsty. But you know me, so it ends happily, it's just quite the ride to get there. But I hope despite all of that, you enjoy it! Let me know what you think!
And thank you so much to @whimsicallyreading for being my sounding board and helping me with all of this. This fic would not be here without you!
Her socks were wet. The lingering puddles of rain had soaked through her thin sneakers and now every step was a distinct squish.
She normally hated the feeling, but she couldnât quite feel it this time. It was more of an expectation than an actual sensation. Yet her brain latched onto it and Aelin stared at her feet as they trailed along the damp pavement.
It was either that or think about the hand digging into her back, urging her forward faster than her legs wanted to take her.
Only a few months, only a few more months. Thatâs what had been running through her head for the past half a year. She was seventeen, almost legal and out on her own, but apparently she wasnât making it to eighteen unscathed.
Unshed tears sank back into her throat, making her barely able to breathe. Her arms banded around her stomach, as if she could keep away the cold already deep in her bones. The grey sky was certainly well suited for the day.
âStop dilly dallying,â a grouchy voice grumbled impatiently, and she flinched, her eyes darting upward. Aelin immediately regretted it as they landed on the building looming in front of her. Her gaze fell back to the ground.
She wondered what Sam would think about this, what he would say. She would never know though, she hadnât seen him since Arobynn found the pregnancy test, since her entire life had been upended. Not that it was a good life anyway.
Shuffled from drunk parents to a drunk foster father at the young age of eight, she hadnât exactly known much about peace, let alone happiness. Then watching other kids get shuffled through her house, never staying for more than a few months, always going home, getting adopted, or aging out. She didnât have friends, she didnât have anyone to turn to.
Until Sam. Heâd been dumped into the system by a mom who couldnât take care of him, and had ended up in Arobynn Hamelâs care instead. Aelin had just turned seventeen when she met him, and his kind heartedness in the face of everything theyâd gone to had been a comfort when there was none.
She could still picture his smile, could still hear his laugh, could still taste his kisses. He wasnât the only person sheâd kissed, but she didnât like to think about the other. It just made that cloud of grief inside of her grow even more, so she drowned it out in Samâs sunlight.
And now here she was.
The doors of the clinic slid open almost sterilely, and the icy air conditioning just added to the chill in her bones. Did she want this? Aelin didnât know, but she wasnât really given a choice.
Not that that was anything new. She was never allowed any choices. Except, somehow this time heâd framed it as one, an illusion of one. On that terrifying day, only a week ago, when sheâd mistakenly left the test somewhere easy to find, Arobynn had sat her down at the kitchen table and presented this choice.
âSo what are you going to do?â He asked, leaning forward onto his elbows. Aelin blinked, still trying to process everything that was happening. Sam, where did Sam go? She needed him, needed someone.
âI - I donât know,â she replied honestly, furrowing her brows. âI donât know what Iâm going to do.â
He reached out a hand across the table, but she shied away from it, staring at the wood grain instead. âYou donât have to do this. Thereâs that place down on 13th, I can make an appointment.â
She was confused at his tone. He was never this ⊠this gentle sounding when talking to her. No, every word that came out of his mouth was venomous. This was unusual.
And then she processed what heâd said.
âAn abortion?â She asked, stunned. For some reason, that wasnât what sheâd been expecting to hear. Arobynn nodded. âIâm⊠not sure,â she continued, and there was the familiar flicker of annoyance in his eyes.
âWhatâs the hesitation?â He asked, shaking his head. âYou canât do this, look at you. Think about your situation.â She chewed on her lip, looking everywhere but his cold grey eyes. Eyes that haunted her nightmares.
âI just need more time,â she croaked, the first feelings of a panic attack rising in her, âI canât think of anything right now. Whereâs Sam?â Her breaths got shorter, her hands starting to shake. Though, she wasnât too sure of how well Sam could help. He hadnât been able to calm her down very well when she was in a state like this, though he tried as best he could. Only one person had been able to, and he was long gone.
âSam is⊠indisposed,â Arobynn said, a sinister sneer on his face. His facade was officially gone, and Aelin was almost glad for it. Even if her heart felt like it was going to beat its way out of her chest. âThis is between you and me. Now make. a fucking. Choice.â
Her shoes squelched as she stepped into the building, Arobynnâs hand digging into her back, a clear warning. She picked at her nails, fighting the nausea rising in her gut for more than one reason.
It was happening. It was actually happening. Gods, she was going to be sick all over this stupid linoleum floor.
âHi, how may I help you?â The lady at the desk said, looking up at Arobynn. Aelinâs heart started pounding in her chest, sweat beading on her brow.
âI have an appointment at 4 under the name Hamel,â he answered, and the lady tapped away at her keyboard, likely pulling up the schedule. Aelin would pay more attention if she could break out of the haze she was in. She felt dizzy, her eyes werenât focusing on her surroundings.
She needed air.
âHow old are you, miss?â The lady asked in a drawling voice, and Aelin looked up, blinking again.
âIâm seventeen,â she answered faintly, her voice breaking as she felt Arobynnâs dark stare aimed at her. The lady just nodded, turning back to Arobynn and sliding him paperwork to fill out.
Her arms returned to holding herself around her stomach, every single nerve in her body protesting with every line he filled out, every page he flipped.
âDonât worry, sweetheart,â another soft voice said, and she glanced over her shoulder, at a young woman sitting in the waiting room. âItâs so quick, you wonât even know itâs happened until itâs over.â
The words were meant to be reassuring but it just made her feel even worse. Aelin didnât love Sam, she knew that. She was worried about him, she missed him, but she didnât think she was even capable of love. Yet, there was a glimmer of that feeling, a slight fire starting to crackle inside her, and she just knew somehow, if she went through with this, that fire would be gone.
And sheâd be left with nothing once again.
The world descended back into a fog, and she could hear her heartbeat in her ears, pounding through her body in a wave of panic. It was all happening too fast.
Her head started shaking, the movement getting bigger and bigger, but no one seemed to notice. Maybe she wasnât moving at all, or maybe she was trapped in her own little bubble, blocked off from the rest of the world. Maybe thatâs why no one seemed to care.
She stayed in this spiral until Arobynn grabbed her arm, jerking her into motion.
âCome on,â he said tersely, âthe nurse said theyâre ready.â Aelin opened her mouth to say anything, but he squeezed her arm in a death grip, a clear message in his stormy eyes.
Shut the fuck up or Iâll make you.
So she did, her face paling as she was forced to follow him, who was following another woman, as sterile as the room around them. Maybe that woman would help her, maybe sheâd see past the bubble and see her.
Because Aelin didnât want to be there. She didnât want to be there.
The building was making her sick, the smell was making her sick, the idea of walking out of here with everything back to the same shitty way itâd been before was making her sick.
But how could she get out of here? She couldnât, not with Arobynn watching her every move as they walked down the seemingly endless white hallway.
She nearly tripped as he came to a stop when the nurse turned, opening a door on the left before looking back at them.
âWhatâs your name, dearie?â She asked, gathering a bit of warmth in her words.
âAelin,â she managed to say, albeit tightly and breathlessly. Arobynn tightened his grip.
âWell Aelin, you can get changed into a gown in here, alright?â The nurse asked, and Aelin couldnât do anything but nod. âWeâll stay out here.â
She was shuffled into the room, the door shut behind her, leaving her alone. Alone, but with nowhere to go. The room wasnât small per se, but she felt suddenly claustrophobic, her arms tucked into her sides as she tried to make herself as small as possible. Maybe then sheâd have more air to actually breathe.
Her chest tightened, panic seizing her, and she went to the door to try and get someone to let her out, but paused when she heard voices.
âMr. Hamel, you can wait out in the lobby now, if thatâs okay,â the nurse said.
âIâd prefer not to,â he replied back tersely, and Aelin held back the tears that were springing to her eyes.
âItâs policy, sir, I promise sheâll be taken care of.â There was a bit of grumbling that she couldnât hear because of the ringing growing in her ears, but then there were footsteps, and the door opened again.
The nurse appeared. âSweetie, whatâs the matter?â She asked Aelin, and Aelin just shook her head immediately, her breaths catching.
âI donât want to be here,â she said, bracing herself on one of the walls. Disinfectant hit her nose and she nearly gagged, clutching her stomach with her free hand. âI donât want to be here.â
âItâs okay, darling,â the nurse added, her stony face pinched into an expression of concern. âItâs normal to be hesitant, but youâll feel better afterward. Everything will be okay then.â
Aelinâs brows furrowed, her head making a jerking motion. âNo, I -â
The nurse rested her hand on Aelinâs arm, as if in an attempt to soothe, but Aelin felt anything but soothed. Instead, tears pricked her eyes again, stronger this time, and she couldnât stop them as they spilled down her splotchy cheeks.
âCome on,â the nurse added, âletâs get you into a gown and lying down. Then we can talk, okay? Sort through this nervousness.â
But by then it would be too late to leave.
So Aelin shook her head, her lips trembling as she stood up straighter. âNo,â she said, âIâm leaving. Iâm not doing this.â
The nurse looked shocked, but she masked it back into a crafted expression as Aelin walked toward the door, suddenly on a mission. Her sneakers squelched as she started marching back toward the lobby, her eyes frantic but her feet steady.
âYouâre making a mistake, sweetie!â The nurse called out after her. âA girl like you canât handle this kind of responsibility!â
Aelin just ignored her, marching on like a soldier escaping a bloody battlefield, finally finding freedom in the form of the lobby and the glass doors past. She didnât know what the hell she was doing, but it sure as hell wouldnât be this.
She passed a few other girls in the waiting room, ignoring Aobynnâs figure burning in the corner of her gaze as she kept walking. Itâd started raining again in the few minutes sheâd been occupied, a light drizzle that promised a heavier storm.
He eventually noticed her, and she heard an âAelin Galathynius!â and heavy quick footsteps, but Aelin picked up her pace, eyes wide as the doors slid open for her. The rain was pattering down on the pavement, almost like the man behind her pattering on the linoleum floor, but she didnât hesitate. She just took a deep breath and ran.
------
The darkness in the room pressed down on her like a heavy weight, offering both comfort and a burden as she chewed on her lip. Her recently cut hair fell down around her shoulders like a child sized curtain, yet another change sheâd caused when she realized her long locks were both too recognizable and too much to deal with in her current circumstances. Vanity wasnât exactly her top priority when she was busy figuring out how to survive.
Especially since she was now living and eating for two.
Aelin sighed and tossed the pamphlet to the side, scrubbing at her face and bracing herself on her knees. The shelter bed squeaked underneath her, and she cringed for a moment, worried sheâd wake up the woman next to her.
Though she didnât really care, considering that woman was the one whoâd hesitantly passed her the pamphlet, trying to sell the free clinic it offered. Sheâd just fucking left one, why would she go back?
But the woman didnât know that, didnât know anything about Aelin except for the fact that she was homeless, and threw up in the bathroom every so often. Sheâd even lied about her age to get a bed here; if she said she was seventeen sheâd just get sent back to social services, and back to him. So she was eighteen, and that was that.
Even the workers at the shelter had tried talking to her about it, and she shut them down every single time. It was the same thing that had happened with Arobynn: they were trying to sound reasonable, they were trying to offer her a choice, but got indignant when the choice she made wasnât the one they wanted her to.
Aelin shifted to lay down, cuddling the thin blanket over herself. It was way past curfew, and everyone else was in various stages of sleep. She wished she could join, but she couldnât, her mind whirring over the events of the past week. Gods, itâd only been a week.
She was lucky sheâd stumbled across the shelter that second day, her whole body soaked and tired from spending the night out in the cold, unforgiving rain. But despite it all, despite her situation, sitting here in the dark Aelin couldnât find a single ounce of regret in her bones.
She closed her eyes, trying to find comfort in the small bed. These conditions werenât anything she was used to; Arobynnâs house had been nice, despite everything. He used his social services checks for his own gain, like the piece of shit human being he was. So sheâd lived decently for the past decade, if you could call living in a nice house with shit clothes and shit food decent. But at least it was better than this.
But sheâd chosen this, and it was worth it. Sheâd figure herself out soon. For now, she just needed to breathe.
Maybe sheâd get a job, for the first time in her life. No, she would get a job. Not only to support herself, but to support the baby growing inside of her.
Tears pricked her eyes and her hands came down to rest on her stomach, as if she could feel the life there. An unfamiliar warmth grew in her chest, coursing through her whole body with an odd sense of contentment. Like her brain was telling her yes, this is right. This is what youâre supposed to do, this is who youâre supposed to love.
Love. A strange phenomenon, a strange sensation. Sheâd never felt it before, but somehow it felt like home.
-------
About a month passed before anything really changed. Sheâd been staying at the shelter the whole time, as it was pretty much an indefinite timeline for someone of her situation. Though once the volunteers figured out she was pregnant, theyâd tried to cautiously direct her to a domestic violence shelter, and sheâd had to carefully turn down the offer.
That wasnât her case. She just didnât have anyone else in the world to rely on, so she was stuck here.
Aelin had started job hunting though; there were a few places that claimed they were starter positions, with no experience required, but sheâd been outcompeted by people who exceeded the qualifications. The shelter was helping, using some of their resources to get her into a stable position, but there was only so much they could do.
It also didnât help that she had to lie about her name. Celaena Sardothien. She wasnât a real person, which made it a tad difficult to get a job, but she didnât have another option. Going around shouting that she was Aelin Galathynius would just throw her back to the wolves.
A feeling of hopelessness was settling deep into her gut, and some days it took too much effort to get out of bed in the morning. But she did, for food, for clean clothes, and for her child, who didnât have anyone but her.
Sheâd started to show slightly, though she could still hide it under big t-shirts. When she first noticed the protruding bump, it brought back all of her worry about Sam and where he possibly could be. He was the father after all, and he deserved a say in their childâs life, but Aelin just didnât even know where to begin in her hunt for him.
She wasnât sure theyâd have even been together if not for the circumstances theyâd been thrown into, and Aelin also didnât even know if she genuinely felt anything for him or if she just wanted to feel something. Either way, sheâd feel guilty if she didnât tell him, so sheâd have to make it happen somehow.
But first, she needed lunch.
Aelin took measured steps down the sidewalk, one hand clutching her wallet and the other clutching her phone. Even if her phone was constantly shut off, to keep Arobynn from finding her, she still felt safer with it on her, just in case she needed it for anything.
Thereâd been a few missing posters for her in the first couple weeks after sheâd ran away, leading her to even dye her already shorn hair a dark red. So unlike the golden itâd been, but she was trying to fly under the radar.
And she succeeded so well that no one even glanced her way as she walked down the street, coming back from an interview at a tiny restaurant sheâd been to before. It was unpopular enough she thought sheâd maybe have a shot, but they seemed less than enthusiastic when sheâd had to admit she was pregnant.
Apparently she wasnât a suitable candidate anymore. Sheâd wanted to call the man a certain unkind word, but sheâd refrained, and instead left the building with grace. Like a civilized human being.
Aelin had also wanted to vomit the whole time, but she refrained from that as well, choosing to keep it in until she could discreetly heave her guts up into the bushes around the corner. And then sheâd wiped her face, held her chin up high, and started walking toward the soup kitchen sheâd started frequenting.
She did everything in her power to hide the fact that she was homeless, to not look the part, but she was, which meant she had no money for food.
That hit her hard sometimes, the gravity of everything sheâd done, and it always brought on a wave of uncertainty, but she just swam through it and came out the other side with as much determination as before.
There was already a line forming by the time she got to the building, and her hand gravitated to her stomach as she took her spot, like it always did nowadays. And dressed in her giant grey salvaged menâs band t-shirt, which sheâd tried and failed to turn into a more professional look, she fit right in with everyone there.
Mindlessly, she scanned the surroundings as she picked at her nails, taking steps whenever the line moved forward a bit. It was disproportionately male, and also disproportionately older, which meant she didnât fit in to a certain extent. But she didnât care, not as she got to the tables and began piling up her plate with food.
It was mostly the same volunteers as always, the nicer older lady that always gave her an extra roll, and the young pimply teen who she was pretty sure had a bit of a crush on her, but she stopped in her tracks when her gaze landed on a new volunteer a few tables ahead of her.
Fuck.
Fuck, fuck, fuck. Her face paled, her fingers tightening around her plate as she stared at the familiar figure ahead of her.
âGet a move on kid,â the man behind her said in a gruff voice and her feet stumbled into motion, launching her closer and closer.
Aelin kept her head down as she passed the next station, not even shooting smiles at the volunteers like normal. Only her red hair was visible as he dumped a serving of mac and cheese onto her plate, with a deep âHere you go, miss,â as she turned away. Itâs not like she was embarrassed, because she wasnât really, yet, she didnât really want him seeing her like this.
âThank you,â she muttered quickly, trying to move on. But she was held back by the line, and she winced when she heard that voice again.
âAelin?â He asked, shocked, and she grimaced as she slowly looked up, finally meeting the eyes of Rowan Whitethorn.
Her first crush, her first kiss, her first confidante. Itâd been a lifetime ago, though itâd really only been a little less than three years.
But those three years felt like a million.
Heâd been in the foster care system too, and had been shuffled around until he ended up getting placed at Arobynnâs house with her when she was fifteen and he was almost seventeen. Theyâd hated each other at first, sheâd been her normal bitter self and heâd been just as stubborn and combatant, both of them too wrapped up in their own shields to realize how the other felt.
But theyâd only had a few weeks of happiness before heâd been shipped away, to an uncle whoâd only then realized he had a nephew floating around out in the world. Aelin never let herself think about him, but gods itâd hurt.
And now, staring into his green eyes, all those painful feelings came back up.
âIâve gotta go,â she said, snatching a water bottle and moving to dart out of the line.
âAelin, wait!â He called after her, and she froze at the worry in his voice, a sigh escaping her. She turned around, glancing through the line of people to where he was at the table, still serving mac and cheese as he looked at her. He was still as handsome as the day theyâd met. âCan we - can we talk?â Rowan asked hesitantly, âafter Iâm done here? Like fifteen minutes?â
Aelin looked away, chewing on her lip, but nodded. His face melted into a relieved smile, and she felt a little less regret at that sight.
But she turned back around and stiltedly walked to her favorite bench outside the building, like a marionette whose strings were pulled too tightly. Her plate rested on her lap, the plastic fork in her hand, but she couldnât seem to eat anything, her stomach protesting as her brain worked in overdrive.
It was quiet out here, peaceful in the warm sunny afternoon. No rain to be found.
And all she did was sit there and wait until familiar footsteps padded up to her bench, a body sliding down next to her. She glanced at him out of the corner of her eyes. He was a little taller than before, a little broader, a little more of a man. But he was still Rowan.
âThis is a kitchen for the homeless,â Rowan said, âwhat are you doing here, Aelin?â It wasnât mean, it wasnât an accusation of her unjustly taking food, it was a breath of concern, fear for why she was here and what that meant for her.
She let out a heavy sigh, squeezing her eyes shut. âIâm getting lunch,â she said, avoiding the true purpose of his question. âItâs lunchtime.â
She dragged her fork through the mac and cheese, sloshing the noodles around as she waited for him to speak.
âAre you staying at Mistward?â He asked quietly, naming the nearest shelter, coincidentally the one she was at. She nodded stiffly, her jaw clenched. âItâs still April,â he added, seemingly randomly, but she knew what he was getting at. She always understood him.
Her birthday was in May. She wasnât eighteen yet, so she could have a roof over her head if she wanted one.
âI couldnât stay there,â she said, swishing around the mac and cheese, her baby making itself known by the bolt of nausea it shot through her. Rowanâs body tensed and his arm brushed against hers, making her freeze.
âDid Arobynn - â he asked, his voice gritted, and she shook her head quickly, still not looking at him.
âNo, not like that,â she confirmed softly, knowing what he was referencing. The environment in the household had never been good, never healthy and never what it shouldâve been from a foster father. The drinking had only gotten worse, and heâd made drunken passes at her a few times over the years.
Most of the time it was harmless, if such a word could apply, but she would never forget the time heâd been raving out of his mind on something, banging on her door while she hid out in Rowanâs room, afraid to leave his arms. Thatâd been the worst of it, but there was always that lingering sense of wrongness in the air of the house.
She could tell his shoulders dropped a bit, a fraction of his tension relieved, but the question still lingered in the air.
Why did she leave?
âI didnât know you volunteered here,â Aelin said instead, switching the topic. âIâve never seen you here, in the month Iâve been going.â She decided to offer him that little nugget of information, to give him something.
He seemed to accept the change in conversation, albeit hesitantly, and he dragged his hand down his face. âYeah,â he replied, âitâs actually my first day. So they put me on mac and cheese duty,â he added lightly, and she looked over to see the hint of smile on his face. He turned and met her gaze, and the wind was knocked out of her. Her breath rushed out in a huge sweep, and all her nerves were on fire at the sight of his green eyes. Eyes that were melted with concern and with just emotion in general. She didnât dare identify what that emotion was.
âYou can eat it, you know, itâs not poisoned,â Rowan added, gesturing to her plate, and she looked back down at it, her fork still swirling around.
She pursed her lips, but speared some noodles onto her fork, lifting it cautiously. She was sure it was delicious, but she wasnât really in the mood for any food right now. But she slowly took a bite, chewing and feeling the warm cheese coat her mouth. It was good, and she swallowed it willingly, but it settled with an off putting clunk in her stomach.
âHowâve you been?â Aelin asked, keeping the conversation away from her. âHow's your uncle?â
Theyâd stayed in touch for a bit after heâd left, but sheâd eventually stopped responding, in too much pain to reach out anymore. It was better to cut it off and avoid all ties, until Sam. Though that tie was unintentional, even if it was welcome now.
Rowan sighed. âHeâs fine, living with him was fine, though I moved out when I turned eighteen. I have an apartment downtown now,â he gestured loosely down the street, âIâm taking classes at the community college and working down at an auto shop off of 13th street. Earns a good wage. What about you, Aelin?â
But sheâd gone ridgid, her breath leaving her body at the words 13th street. Her blood pounded in her ears, her heart thudding in her chest. Her hands shook and she realized what was happening.
A panic attack.
An overwhelming sense of dread washed over her, her mouth drying up as she felt each distinct beat of her heart. Her whole body shook and the plate fell off her lap, flipping over to splat against the pavement. The sight of the mac and cheese spilled out across the concrete made her shake more, tears springing to her eyes as she fought for air.
âHey, hey, hey,â Rowan said quickly, turning and taking her hands, âItâs okay, Aelin, everythingâs okay.â
She shook her head, gesturing to her throat wildly, no breaths coming through. He took a hand, pressing it against his chest.
âJust breathe with me, okay?â He said softly but urgently, âcan you do that for me, baby?â The term of endearment slipped out, momentarily shocking her, but he didnât look fazed, just determined. So she nodded tightly. âFocus on my breaths. In, out, in, out.â
She stared into his green eyes, grounding herself in his gaze as she tried to match his breaths, fighting the tightness in her throat. It took a few tries, but soon she was able to take a small breath in and a small breath out. âKeep going,â he encouraged, keeping his gaze steady on hers. His free hand went to her cheek, and she leaned forward, her forehead touching his as they breathed together.
Aelin kept it up until she could breathe on her own, her panic slowly easing. The moment fell quiet, and she reveled in their closeness as she kept her forehead touching his. Until nausea forced its way up from her stomach through her throat and she was turning and vomiting into the bushes next to the bench.
He grabbed her red hair and pulled it back gently, his other hand rubbing soothing circles on her back as she retched again, throwing up her guts. She heaved a breath when she was able to, wiping away the puke from her mouth, but stayed bent over, braced on the edge of the bench.
The silence pressed heavily on her until she answered his unspoken question. âIâm pregnant,â she said, staring at the grass now splattered with her throw up. âIâm pregnant, and Arobynn wanted me to get an abortion. So I left.â
She sniffed, squeezing her eyes shut until he spoke, words that made her look up at him in shock.
âHey,â he said softly, âwhy donât you come back to my place and Iâll get you some more food, and then we can talk more, okay?â She considered the offer only for a moment, imagining the comfort a nice warm quiet apartment with him could entail, and she nodded.
âOkay.â
---------
They didnât talk much on the way, besides a few small talk pleasantries about the weather and things like that. They didnât bring up their past and they didn't talk about what she'd just admitted.
It wasnât the time for it anyway; Aelin didnât really feel like spilling out her secrets in the middle of a crowded downtown street.
They passed a missing poster on the way, and she ripped it down quickly, balling it up and throwing it into the nearest trash can. Rowan didnât comment.
Soon enough, they were walking up to his building, entering it and climbing up the stairs to his floor. It wasnât the nicest place in the world, but heâd gotten it himself, with his own merit and his own money and she respected that immensely.
The sounds of the street faded away as the door shut behind them, and her gaze ran over the space. It wasnât big, but it was clean and nicely decorated, with some nice wood tones and a dark green plush couch that looked like a cloud. She wanted to throw herself on it.
So she did. She walked over and collapsed onto the soft fabric, groaning with satisfaction into the pillow at finally being off her feet.
Rowan chuckled behind her, and she heard his footsteps head toward the kitchen. Aelin rolled onto her back, linking her hands over her stomach and kicking off her dirty shoes.
âWhat do you feel up to eating?â He asked, and she hummed in consideration, trying to sort through her taste buds. She settled on -
âDo you have any carrots? And peanut butter?â She rubbed her flat stomach.
âSince when do you eat vegetables?â Rowan joked, and she frowned, even if he didnât mean any harm by the statement. It was a running joke between them anyway, since theyâd suffered through âfamilyâ meals together for those few months.
âSince I stopped knowing where my next meal was coming from,â she snapped, peeling her eyes open to look over at him. He looked properly chastised, his deliciously full mouth pursing with sorrow as he turned back to go get what sheâd requested.
She sighed as he disappeared from sight, returning to staring at the ceiling. She didnât mean to direct her anger his way, she just felt⊠off her guard. Exposed. Vulnerable.
Her mouth fell shut until he returned carrying her snacks. Rowan sat down next to her as she sat up, wrinkling his nose as she dipped a carrot into the peanut butter, eating it carefully. Just to make sure she wasnât about to have an adverse reaction to it.
But thatâs what she was craving, and thatâs what her stomach seemed to want.
It felt odd to sit here so calmly next to him after all this time, yet it felt completely normal as well. She didnât quite know how to puzzle through it all.
âYou dyed your hair,â Rowan commented, and she raised a brow, chewing on a carrot.
âThatâs what you have to do when youâre on the run,â she said like it was obvious, and his lips quirked up on the side.
âI suppose youâre right,â he conceded. âThough Iâm not sure this beats the time you accidentally dyed your hair blue.â He couldnât hold back his smile at her squawk of indignation, knowing exactly what he was referencing. Back when theyâd just met, when Rowan had just been transferred, and she was going through her stubborn âhating himâ phase, sheâd bought hair dye to prank him with and dye his light hair a bright green.
Turns out, not only had she bought the wrong color, but Rowan had known her plan and replaced her shampoo with the dye, leaving her hair a streaky blue for about a month.
She was lucky she did school online and hadnât had to face any bullying for it. In fact, she was also lucky she did online school because sheâd managed to get so far ahead with her classes sheâd graduated early. No more high school bullshit for her to worry about now on top of everything else.
âThat was your fault and you know it.â She pointed an accusing finger at him, and he lifted a brow.
âWasnât it your malevolent plan in the first place?â He asked, and Aelin frowned grumpily, knowing he was right. âI can see right through you, Galathynius.â
He was teasing her, but the words sobered her and she sighed, glancing at him out of the corner of her eye. She just needed to get the words out. Get this story over with. âAbout half a year after you left for your uncleâs, a boy named Sam got transferred to take your spot,â she said, and he straightened, looking at her with more attention. âI was still cut up about losing you, even if I tried not to show it. So I kept him at a distance, but not even in the way I did with you. I was just cold,â she explained, furrowing her brows.
âThe thing about Sam is, that heâs so endearingly persistent about being nice that itâs almost impossible to stay mad at him,â she waved a carrot in her hand. Rowan looked like he understood, but with a current of unease beneath his calm facade. Fair, itâs not like sheâd really want to hear about a girl he was with after her, even if theyâd never done anything more than kiss. It was the emotions that mattered more, which is what she needed to explain to him. âBut I never felt anything beyond friendship, or maybe a little inkling of something more, but nothing that really meant anything.â
Rowan looked a little assuaged by that, but she kept talking, burying herself into his comfy couch. âI donât know what made me do it, really,â she shook her head, the words surprisingly calm. âArobynn had been slightly better once you left, though the closer I got with Sam the worse it got again,â she made a sound of almost hysterical disgust, âwhich is just so unbelievably twisted, like he was staking some sort of claim on me.â Her lips wobbled and she hugged herself around her stomach. Rowan looked sorrowful and angry at the same time.
âBut then I think I slept with Sam as kind of a response to that, a big giant fuck you.â She dropped her head into her hands, scrubbing at her face. âWhich is even more twisted. But I was seventeen by that point and I was just so tired of it all.â She looked up at him. âIâm just so tired, Rowan.â Her voice cracked.
He wrapped his arms around her then and she fell into them, fighting back tears of pure exhaustion. âI know, Fireheart. I know.â
âI kept doing it,â Aelin continued into his shirt, âand Arobynn knew, and sent Sam away when I found out I was pregnant. I still donât know where he is, and Iâm worried about him.â She shuddered, and Rowan smoothed a hand up and down her back. âAnd then he pressured me into getting an abortion, even when I told him I wasnât sure. I was at the place, I was at the fucking place, but I didnât want to.â She shook her head. âI didnât want to go through with it, but I didnât know what heâd do to me if I had to go home with him after that, so I just ran instead.â
Aelin sighed heavily. âIâm just trying to figure it out now,â she said quietly, âIâm trying to get my life together but it just keeps falling apart.â
Rowan pulled back a little, pressing a chaste kiss to the top of her head, before looking at her with sincere green eyes. âWell, you always have a place here.â
------
She agreed to stay at least one night, at his request. According to him, heâd never forgive himself if he let her go back out to the shelter alone, especially while pregnant. Aelin wasnât too surprised, he was a gentleman in every sense of the word, and always was there to help a friend out.
A friend. Because thatâs all they were right now, thatâs all that she could handle.
But it was more than she had before, and she appreciated it. Especially when he insisted she take his bed, and she was able to sleep on a comfortable surface for the first time in months. And wrapped up under his comforter, surrounded in his scent, was the most comfortable sheâd really been in years.
So of course it was ruined by a fucking dream.
Aelin slammed her door shut behind her, darting over to Rowanâs room and slipping inside. He groggily looked up at her, rubbing his eyes as he squinted through the darkness.
âAelin?â He asked, âwhatâs wrong?â She wouldâve answered if not for the current of panic racing through her, keeping her from doing anything but clambering up onto his bed, burrowing herself into his arms. They wrapped around her automatically, though his brows were still furrowed from tiredness and from confusion.
âHeâs drunk,â she managed to say, her eyes wide and her hands shaking. âI - he hasnât been this bad before.â
Bang! Bang! Bang! Came from down the hallway, where her room was, and she flinched with every iteration, even more when he spoke.
âAelin!â Arobynn slurred, âI know youâre in there! Come on darlinâ, let me in.â But the door was unlocked, and she heard the telltale sound of it opening, and footsteps that changed direction when she wasnât found.
Rowan looked furious, but rushed to get up when Arobynn walked that way, getting to the door and turning the lock just as Arobynn grabbed the doorknob on the other side.
Aelin didnât want to look so vulnerable, but she was trembling as Rowan walked back over, laying down and pulling her shaking body into his.
âCome on!â Arobynn yelled angrily, too close to the door, and she squeezed her eyes shut. âDonât be like this.â He hit the door and she flinched; Rowan tugged her in closer, drowning out the manâs words with words of his own.
âHey, did I tell you what my Math teacher emailed me earlier?â He said softly, trying to distract her. He did online school too, and theyâd spend their mornings and afternoons working in the living room together while Arobynn trudged off to work.
Aelin managed to shake her head, the starchy sheets scratching her cheek. She tried to ignore Arobynnâs shouting, focusing on Rowanâs voice instead.
âYeah,â he said, brushing hair back behind her ear, âhe told me that Iâm doing really well in the class, that I had a bright future ahead of me.â
âThatâs great, Rowan,â she managed to say, her words sincere.
âIâm thinking of applying to college next year,â he said, and the shock of that drove out some of the panic. Thatâd never really been in either of their plans. His was to graduate high school and get a good job; hers was to make it to graduation.
âOh,â Aelin said, flinching slightly when Arobynn banged on the door again. âI didnât know you were thinking about that.â
âJust recently,â he said, the words whispered across the bed. âAnd I was thinking that -â
âWait,â she interrupted, ears pricked. âI think heâs gone.â Silence settled in the room, both of them listening for noise outside in the hallway. When nothing happened, Aelin sighed, tension pouring out of her. She closed her eyes, dropping her head onto Rowanâs chest. He rubbed her back soothingly. The scent of his pine body wash, having just showered, was heady, and she wanted to bury her face in his shirt forever.
He started talking again, whispering soothing things to her to calm her down, and soon enough, she was falling asleep.
Aelinâs eyes jerked open, a wave of anxiety rolling through her. The lack of Rowanâs arms suddenly made her feel cold, and empty, and lonely. Which was ridiculous, but she couldnât fight the urge to climb out of his bed, trekking to the door, her bare feet barely making any noise as she cracked it open, padding out the living room where he was laying.
He looked ridiculous on the small couch, sprawled on his back. His long legs dangled off one side, his arm thrown over his face. She hesitated, not wanting to wake him up, but he cracked open his eyes anyway, like he could sense her there.
âAelin?â He asked groggily. âIs everything okay?â
She nodded, but chewed on her lip, her eyes darting away from him.
âCanât fall asleep?â He guessed, sitting up, and she nodded again.
âWould you mind,â she asked hesitantly, âsitting with me for a bit?â He paused and she immediately backtracked. âYou donât have to, forget what I said, thatâs way too forward of me-â
âOf course I will,â Rowan cut in, pushing himself to a stand. He was wearing sweats and a black t-shirt, and Aelin had a fleeting thought, wondering how he looked so good in everything.
She padded back to the bedroom, hugging his big t-shirt around herself as she climbed back in bed. Rowan followed, sliding into place next to her. He sat against the headboard and she snuggled under the blanket, laying facing him as his hand went to smooth back her hair. One of her hands settled under her pillow, the other one resting loosely on her stomach.
âGo to sleep, Aelin,â he whispered softly, âyouâre safe now.â
Her eyes fell closed, and she slipped away into the dark.
-------
A few months passed, and Aelin hadnât left. Sheâd turned eighteen with as little fanfare as Rowan would allow; sheâd tried to just let him forget about it, but heâd woken her up with a stack of pancakes and a heartbreakingly gorgeous smile. She wanted to devour both, but she settled for just the pancakes, which her child appreciated.
She was showing a fair amount now, which continued to be difficult when going to job interviews, which sheâd started again now that she was eighteen and didnât have to lie about her name. No one was looking for her now, at least not in a legal missing child sense.
Because she wasnât a child anymore.
Aelin had let the dye wash out of her hair, and it was now kind of a pinkish blonde, while the rest of the red faded away. She said she looked like watered down Pepto Bismol, Rowan said she looked like a warm summer sunset. But he was always too sweet to her.
Heâd been doing well at his job, though he was still continuing his education to eventually try and break into the corporate world there in downtown Rifthold. His original plans of going to college had been derailed by moving in with his uncle, heâd explained to her, but he was making up for it now.
He earned a good wage, but Aelin wanted to contribute, needed to contribute, so she was trying her hand at the job field again.
She had an interview coming up that day, for a small, locally-owned bookstore. Aelin was prepared to grovel, using her love of books and her good grades as reasons to hire her. Maybe she could prey upon their emotions too, a heartfelt reason sitting right on her stomach as evidence to anyone with eyes.
She kept a hand on it through her âprofessionalâ thrifted blouse, walking down the sidewalk to the corner of 6th ave and 18th street, where the bookstore was. Aelin hadnât had the pleasure of being a patron there before, though it seemed like a place sheâd love, with cozy chairs and warm wood shelves overflowing with books. She couldnât deny that she was a bit nervous for this interview, as the last one hadnât gone too well.
Just like last time sheâd fruitlessly been job hunting, sheâd been forced to listen to the same spiel about how it was difficult to hire someone who was pregnant, because of the setbacks sheâd have as an employee. This man had deigned to tell her about the setbacks sheâd have in life as well, which just made her more determined to prove them all wrong.
Aelin had gone home to Rowan after that one spitting mad, and heâd calmed her down, joking about having to reign in the beast. She half wanted to scowl at him and half wanted to kiss him for the joke, though she always wanted to kiss him so she didnât know if that was the proper reaction.
Despite the time theyâd been living together, and the obvious feelings on both ends, neither of them had made a move. So overall, with all the time theyâd known each other, their kiss count was a solid one. Which was completely unacceptable. But she knew there were lingering things that hadnât gotten closure, mainly on her end, and Rowan was waiting until she was ready.
He knew her so well, and she loved him for it. Shit, she loved him. Sheâd never uttered the words before, hadnât recognized the feeling, but it was true.
There were two people in the world she loved, and both of them were with her in that tiny apartment.
Aelin smiled faintly as she opened the door of the bookstore, a bell ringing to signal her entrance, and a sweet looking older lady behind the desk smiled at her.
âHello,â she said cheerfully, âhow can I help you today? Just browsing or looking for something specific?â Aelin shook her head, walking closer to the desk.
âIâm actually here for the open interview,â she amended, making sure to smile, âMy name is Aelin Galathynius.â She felt a momentary flicker of worry that the lady would recognize the name from her missing personâs case a few months back, but no recognition passed through her face. âI saw the sign on your door the other day and I wanted to put myself into consideration.â
âOh how lovely!â The woman clapped her hands once, pushing herself up to a stand. âMy name is Philippa,â she continued, leaning forward to shake Aelinâs hand. âIâll be conducting your interview today.â She waggled her brows, gesturing to a cozy sitting area by the front window. âIf you want to take a seat; do you have a copy of your resume with you?â
Aelin pulled one out of the cross body bag she had, handing it to Philippa. It was made and printed from the library computers, but it did the job.
Her blouse was loose, which covered the bump when standing, but when she sat down, it flattened against her stomach, showcasing everything that had been hidden. But Philippa hadnât noticed yet, reading over her resume.
âOoh, you went through the Adarlan Virtual School program?â Philippa asked. âMy granddaughter used to take classes through them over the summer semester.â
âYes,â Aelin answered, âIt was more compatible with my circumstances at the time.â An understatement. Arobynn didnât like letting her leave the house too often, so it was easier to not fight him and just do school virtually.
âYour circumstances?â Philippa questioned, prying a little bit as she still looked over the paper, and Aelin steeled herself to answer.
âFoster care,â she said, her voice a little sad.
âAh,â Philippa said kindly, âI see.â She finally looked up, eyes going wide at Aelinâs stomach. âI see.â
Aelin nervously smoothed a hand over her bump, trying to gauge what the womanâs reaction was. Philippa seemed to sense the hesitation and smiled warmly.
âDonât worry dear,â she said, âI had my daughter at seventeen. Of course, sheâs all grown up now with her own kids, but I still remember how it felt.â She leaned forward in the chair, her voice turning a bit more serious. âIt feels like everyoneâs rooting for you to fail, like the world wants to see you knocked down.â Philippa grabbed her hand and squeezed it. âBut believe me, it can only raise you up.â
She smiled and squeezed her hand again before leaning back. Aelinâs chest filled with warmth.
âNow, tell me a bit more about yourself, Aelin.â
--------
Aelin was floating on air as she walked back, her smile too wide for her face. She couldnât wait to tell Rowan.
She had a job. She had a fucking job. She couldnât believe it.
She felt like she could fly, she felt like she could jump into the air and soar through the sky, thatâs how good she felt. The pavement felt like nothing under her feet as she practically skipped down the street, hurrying back to their apartment.
Nothing could stop her, nothing could ruin her good mood right now, she felt like punching the air. If this was a movie, sheâd have an upbeat song playing in the background, something she could dance to in triumph as she raced home.
The sun was bursting from her godsdamned chest as she ran up the steps to their apartmentâs door, being careful while also hurrying to tell him the good news.
Except, when she unlocked the door and walked inside, she found him sitting at the kitchen table, his head in his hands. Her smile faded.
âHey Fireheart,â Rowan said sadly when he saw her there. A sense of foreboding took over. âCan you come sit down?â
Aelin shuffled forward, stiffly taking the seat next to him.
âWhatâs wrong, Rowan?â She asked quietly. âYouâre scaring me.â He sighed and took her hand.
âYou know how you told me about Sam?â He asked softly, and she nodded, her jaw clenched. Nerves ran through her whole body, sparking in her veins and making her jumpy. âWell Iâve been looking for him.â Her eyes went wide. âArobynn had him sent to another house after, everything, but I traced where he went.â
Her voice shook as she said, âAnd?â He squeezed her hand, looking regretful as he answered.
âIâm so sorry, love, but there was a car accident.â He took a deep breath, while she felt like she couldnât breathe at all. âSam didnât make it.â
Her good mood was completely gone as she took in the words. Her heart was stuck in her throat.
âHeâs gone?â She managed to croak out. If she wasnât sitting down, sheâd be falling to the ground right now, her knees unsteady. Even if she didnât care about Sam romantically, this was still a - a huge blow. He was still her friend, her first time, the father of her child.
âYes,â Rowan confirmed, his eyes so sad. âIâm so sorry you had to find out like this, but it didnât feel right to keep it from you.â
Aelin furrowed her brows, staring at the table as her hand drifted to her stomach. âNo, I - would want to hear it from you.â Her hands shook. âI just⊠donât know what to say.â Her voice was tight, tears forming a lump. âSomehow, I knew I wouldnât see him again, but it still - hurts, you know? Even if I didnât love him.â
He squeezed her hand. âYou still cared about him, heâs still the father of your child.â He was just repeating the words sheâd told herself, but it felt more convincing coming from him. âYou have every right in the world to be sad.â
âYouâre right,â she said weakly, wiping her eyes. âI just donât know how to process this.â She laughed wetly, cynically, without any humor. She shuddered, letting go of Rowanâs hand to bury her face in both of them, her elbows on the table.
His hand settled on her back, rubbing it lightly. âIâll be here while you figure it out.â A hot tear slipped out of her eye, and she leaned over until her forehead was against his shoulder, her tears silent as she took comfort in his presence.
They sat in silence for a moment, until she sniffed, wiping her eyes.
âI got a job today,â she said quietly. âAt the bookstore on 16th. The lady interviewed me and unofficially offered me the job on the spot.â Rowan pressed a soft kiss to her hair.
âThatâs great, Aelin,â he said gently, âIâm so godsdamned proud of you.â The emotion in his voice made more tears spill down his face, and she buried herself in him and let herself cry.
âââ
Five months along and Aelin still hadnât felt her baby kick. It wasnât something she worried about constantly, but it was a needle in the back of her mind. Sheâd gotten a check up at the pregnancy resource center near her, utilizing their free resources just to make sure everything was okay. And everything was; she just needed to be patient.
Which wasnât her strong suit.
She rested her hand on her stomach as she walked through the bookstore, returning a book someone had moved back to a shelf. The store was quiet that morning, but the outside street was bustling, people hurrying to work or to wherever else they needed to go on a Wednesday morning.
Aelin just observed through the windows, in her own little bubble of peace.
Sheâd been working here for about a month now, and it brought a small smile to her face every time she thought about it. She had a job, she was making money and being successful on her own. Well, almost on her own. But Rowan was a benefit, not a burden.
Things had slowly but surely grown even more comfortable between them. Ever since the devastating news about Sam, thereâd been more of that sense of closure as awful as it was to say. She missed him of course, but there was no longer that lingering guilt of not knowing where he was, of not having him be a part of their childâs life. Sam was gone, had been gone for a while.
It was just her left to raise their kid. Well, her and Rowan.
Rowan had taken to the paternal role like a moth to a flame, and was fussing more than ever. Theyâd shared a bed ever since that first night, even if it was technically still platonic, and every night and every day she fell a little bit more in love with him.
She just had to figure out when the best time to tell him was.
Aelin resumed her post at the front desk, flipping through a book of her own, when she glanced up, her face blanching. The glimpse of red made her wheel around in her chair, hiding her face from view just in case he decided to look inside the store. Her whole body was on edge, her nerves lit up on fire in pure panic.
But when she surreptitiously glanced back out, she realized it wasnât Arobynn, not even close. It was some random young woman, just making her way down the street, her red hair swishing behind her.
Aelinâs stomach dropped, her eyes squeezing shut as she tried to calm herself down. She shouldnât be reacting like that still, her first instinct shouldnât be to freak out. A tired sigh escaped her, the adrenaline still racing through her worn out body as she rested her forehead on the book, her hands resting on her stomach.
Just then, she felt a little flutter against one of her hands, almost like butterflies in her stomach. But she knew what it was. Her baby.
Her face cracked into a smile, a bright, broad one that was as happy and charming as could be.
âHi there,â she whispered, âitâs nice to finally feel you.â Aelin rubbed her hand gently over her bump. âI havenât talked to you a lot, and I donât really know why. Maybe because it didnât really feel real? But it does now,â she laughed wetly, tears pricking at her eyes. âYouâre here, youâre really here.â
She wiped her face. âI just want you to know that youâre worth it, youâre worth all of this.â She sniffed. âI canât wait to meet you.â
The door jingled, and she glanced up, wiping her eyes, but smiled when she saw Rowan.
âHey, Fireheart,â he said, walking over and leaning on the desk. âWhatâs got you so smiley?â
Aelin chuckled, grabbing his hand and reaching it to rest against her stomach. Just then, her baby kicked again, and Rowan let out a noise of surprise.
His own face spread into an expression of wonder, and his eyes filled with tears too.
âGods,â he let out, âtheyâre really there.â Aelin nodded, beaming at him. He leaned forward, and they rested their foreheads together, both breathing in each otherâs giddy air as they basked in the moment together.
Five months of pregnancy, three months of him, and a lifetime ahead of all of them.
-------
Her bright mood was shattered that afternoon when a customer walked in, a middle aged woman seemingly on her lunch break from some sort of corporate job, if the sleek pantsuit and brushed to perfection hair were any indication.
âHi, can I help you with anything?â Aelin asked with a smile, setting down her book, and the woman smiled back.
âYes actually,â she said, her heels clicking as she walked over closer to the desk. âMy friend at the office recommended a book to me, and I thought Iâd try it out.â
âWhat book is it?â Aelin asked, typing on the computer. âI can check to see if we have it in stock.â The woman named the book and Aelin pulled it up on the screen. They did have it in stock.
So she pushed her chair back, standing up to make her way over to the shelf it would be on.
âOh!â The woman said, her hand on her chest. âSorry, I wasnât expecting that.â Aelinâs smile faded, knowing what she was referring to.
âWhat, me being pregnant?â She asked, tilting her head and feigning innocence. The woman stood her ground.
âYes, you just look so young,â she added, and Aelin replied.
âIâm eighteen.â She made it to the shelf, keeping an eye on the woman as she searched for the book.
âWhat about college?â The womanâs immaculate brows were furrowed, and Aelinâs jaw clenched. âHow is that ever going to work?â Aelin slid the book off of the shelf.
âIâm not sure what you mean,â she replied carefully, purposefully placing one hand on her bump as she walked back to the counter. The woman followed.
âI mean, how will you make it through a college with such a big burden?â She looked legitimately confused, but that didnât soothe Aelinâs frustration.
âMaybe college isnât in my plans,â she said cooly, scanning the book. The woman took her wallet out, not deterred at all by her tone.
âSo youâre throwing away your potential?â She asked, and Aelin didnât know if she was attempting to help, but it was just making everything worse. âWhat do you want to do, work here the rest of your life? With a bushel of kids and no career?â
Aelin snatched her card from her, swiping it and tapping on the screen. âMaybe what I want is to not have my choices judged by someone who isnât living my life.â She bagged the book aggressively, sliding it back across the counter. âAnd who says I canât go to college with a kid? I think itâs rather shortsighted to think that thereâs only one way to do things, and rather offensive that you think Iâm incapable of it.â She snapped the words, and over exaggerated a smile.
âHave a nice day, maâam,â Aelin added, âI hope you enjoy your book.â
The woman looked affronted, her eyebrows nearly up to her perfectly groomed hair, but she took the bag and turned without another word. The moment the bell chimed and the door shut behind her, Aelin sagged. She fell back into her seat with a sigh, her eyes squeezing shut.
College.
The idea ran through her mind, bouncing off of old ideas sheâd had of what her life would be like. She never really intended to go to college, and she certainly wasnât going to just because of what that old bat had said, but she wondered what itâd be like. What it would mean for her.
Sheâd talk to Rowan about it. Heâd know how to sort out the mix of things inside of her head.
The thought swirled in her mind the rest of her shift, until she was packing up her bag, switching with another girl Philippa had hired. She was so focused on it she didnât even notice the walk home, though she kept an eye out for any red hair. But that was almost subconscious, she didnât need to pay attention for that.
Rowan only had a half day at work that day, he was working on schoolwork the rest of the afternoon and evening, so when she got back to their apartment, he was there, sitting on the couch with his laptop out and his silvery brows furrowed.
âHey,â Aelin said with a smile, tossing her bag down on the table as she entered the living room. She leaned against the entryway, a hand on her stomach. It seemed that once her baby had started kicking, it wasnât going to stop.
âHey, love,â Rowan said, typing up a storm before he managed to pry his eyes away, shooting a smile at her. âHow was work?â Her smile faded, and he noticed. âEverything okay?â She nodded, pushing off the wall to come sit by him. He set aside his laptop.
âIâve just been thinking,â Aelin said carefully, watching his handsome face furrow into worry. âAbout college.â His face relaxed, returning to a soft smile.
âYou want to go to college?â Rowan asked, turning to face her more. She shrugged.
âIâm not sure, but itâs been on my mind.â She chewed on her lip. âItâs never been an expectation of mine, I always had in my head that I wasnât the type of person to go to college. But then I realized, why? Why am I not the type? Who decides that and what does that even mean?â Her voice fell back down. âI just - have been thinking.â
âWell,â Rowan said, grabbing her hand to gently play with her fingers. âWhat do you want out of life? Where do you picture yourself in five, ten, twenty years?â
It was her turn to furrow her brows. âIâm not sure,â she said honestly, âIâve never thought that far.â She chewed on her lip.
âWell, wrack your brain,â he said with a light smile, âI know you can accomplish whatever you put your mind to, but what do you want to do?â
Aelin considered the question, a hand on her stomach. What did she want to do? What kind of impact did she want to have on the world? Flashes of drunken shouting, uncomfortable possessive touches, that sinking feeling of hopelessness, all flashed through her mind. And she knew. She didn't want anyone to have to go through what she did.
âSocial work,â she found herself saying, âI think I want to be a social worker.â She looked at Rowan, who was smiling softly at her, with a flicker of pride in his face. âYou were there, Rowan. You know that something a lot worse couldâve happened to me, and there was nobody who wouldâve done anything to stop it.â She lifted her chin. âI want to be that person, I want to make sure nobodyâs in a situation like I was ever again.â
Now that sheâd had the idea, her brain was running with it. She sat up straighter. âI can apply for Rifthold University when the fall rolls around, and I can take classes there while still working so Iâm still making money. And I got good grades in high school, so maybe Iâll get a scholarship too, which would make my life easier.â A smile grew on her face, excitement flowing through her veins. âIâm a year late, but who the fuck cares?â
âNo one should give a fuck,â Rowan confirmed, âif they do, theyâll have to go through me.â
âOkay, macho man,â she laughed, but her smile was too big for her face. This⊠felt right. Her laugh settled and she was left staring at his green eyes, meeting his soft expression with one of her own.
His eyes flicked to her lips, and her breath hitched. The one kiss theyâd shared, right before heâd left, had never left her mind, but she knew this one would beat that one by tenfold. She leaned in a little, and he did too, like they were gravitating toward each other. He was going to kiss her, he was going to kiss her.
But right when their lips were about to meet, his phone rang, and they both jerked back, heat staining her cheeks. Rowan cleared his throat, reaching for the phone, and she leaned back against the couch, her hand drifting to her lips.
âFuck this,â he said, throwing his phone to the side. She barely had time to process what was happening as he grabbed her cheeks and pulled her face to his, catching her lips in a searing kiss.
She moaned into it, her lips immediately opening for him as he swept his tongue in, devouring her like heâd been waiting too long for this. Aelin melted into him, clutching his shoulders and crushing their bodies together.
He reciprocated immediately, moving one hand to the back of her head to pull her even closer.
Eventually they had to pull back, panting for air as they slowly met the otherâs eyes.
âI love you,â she whispered first, seeing his face break into a beautiful smile.
âI love you too, to whatever end,â he said quietly, the words richer than any jewel anyone could ever own.
âTo whatever end.â
---------
Pain. So much pain it was almost unbearable flooded her whole body as she yelled through gritted teeth, squeezing Rowanâs hand so hard she was pretty sure she was going to break something.
âOkay, thatâs it, Aelin,â Dr. Yrene consoled her, âJust a few more pushes, okay?â
Aelin nodded, her sweat soaked hair stuck to her face as she breathed through the slight reprieve, knowing it was going to soon come to an end. Rowan smoothed some of it back, pressing a quick kiss to her temple right as another wave of contractions took over.
âOkay, now push!â Yrene commanded, and she followed suit, using every muscle in her body to push her godsdamned baby out of her. A scream ripped out of her, white creeping into her vision. She threw all of her energy into it, panting at the never ending pressure.
âI canât do this, I canât do this,â she repeated deliriously, shaking her head.
âYes you can, Fireheart,â Rowan promised, squeezing her hand, âYouâve done so well already, just a little bit longer, alright?â She sobbed but nodded, dropping her head into the hand he brushed across her cheek.
And when the next wave came, she breathed deeply and gave everything she could, her head getting thrown back as she kept. Pushing.
Eternity passed, and then⊠a babyâs cry.
Aelin panted, but opened her eyes slowly, her vision hazy as she came out of that delirium of pain.
âCongratulations, Aelin,â Dr. Yrene said warmly, carrying her baby in her arms. âYou have a beautiful baby girl.â A nurse helped Aelin unbutton her hospital gown, and then her baby was placed against her bare chest, the little girl still crying.
âOh,â Aelin said softly, âhello, you precious darling.â The newborn quickly quieted down, blinking and cracking open her tiny eyes. They were warm, brown eyes, Samâs eyes.
Aelin blinked back tears, looking over at Rowan, who had tears in his eyes too. âSheâs perfect,â he said, and she smiled, gesturing to him to come sit next to her. And he did, climbing up carefully and peering down at the child.
âHello, sweetheart,â She said quietly, âIâm your mom, and this is your dad right here.â Because in all senses of the word besides biological, he was. Their daughter blinked, looking up with wide eyes at the both of them. âWeâre so beyond thrilled to meet you.â Aelin traced her cheek with a finger. The little girl yawned, waving her little arms and legs. She had a small tuft of blonde hair, so light it was almost invisible.
Rowan pressed kisses to her temple, her cheekbone, her cheek, and Aelin leaned into him, completely enraptured by their daughter.
It was worth it, everything was worth it for this wonderful little miracle right here. All the pain, all the struggle, all of the judgment, it was worth it.
And Aelin didnât regret a single thing, because it all led here. To where she could be staring down, and have a little bundle of joy staring back.
-------
Four Years Later
Aelin hunted through the crowd, her eyes darting between crowds of people as she searched for her people. Her cap was in her hand, her other hand lifting up her gown to keep from tripping on it, and to keep it from dragging against the grass.
The ceremony had been outside, which wouldâve been horrendous in Adarlan summer, if not for the cold front that had come through the night before, leaving the weather cool in the morning hour.
She got briefly held up when a girl from one of her classes stopped her to say hi, introducing her parents, but after quick small talk, Aelin managed to extricate herself, continuing her search.
It only took her about a minute longer to find who she was looking for, and her face broke into a bright grin.
âMama!â Her daughter cried out from atop Rowanâs shoulders, and Aelin hurried over to them, practically running through the crowd.
Rowan was smiling too, shifting to take Eloise off of him just in time for Aelin to jump at him, hearing an âoofâ as he caught her.
âWell hello Ms. Valedictorian,â he teased, dropping a quick but heated kiss on her lips before letting her slide back to the ground. Aelin pressed one more kiss to his mouth before turning and crouching to hug their daughter.
âHello, sweet girl,â she said warmly, âdid you enjoy my speech?â Eloise was practically bouncing up and down, her smile too big for her face.
âYou said my name!â She said, all excited, and Aelin had to laugh.
âYes I did.â She booped her nose before standing up, hefting her daughter up to hold her in her arms. âThat was the most important part of the whole thing.â She shared a soft smile with Rowan.
Aelin had taken a long time to craft the perfect speech, almost too long. And yeah, she mentioned the trivial stuff, like âlook how far weâve comeâ and âweâve finally made itâ, and she even took the chance to brag a little bit, tactfully mentioning the Masterâs program sheâd gotten into for social work and the prestigious internship sheâd been offered, but talking about her daughter had been the most crucial part.
Because without Eloise, Aelin wasnât sure sheâd be standing here today. She wasnât sure anything wouldâve pushed her to reach her potential, wasnât sure that anything wouldâve been important enough to her to push her to make her life better. Because being successful for herself was one thing, being successful for her daughter was completely different. And infinitely more important.
She kissed Eloiseâs forehead, unable to contain the giant smile on her own face. Rowan slid an arm around her waist, hugging them both.
Sheâd made it, theyâd made it, a lot farther than Aelin had ever imagined. It hadnât been easy, but she hadnât expected it to be. And not being easy didnât mean it wasnât right.
And being here, with her family, family sheâd been searching for her entire life, she wouldnât change a godsdamned thing.
I think youâll be getting an update at least weekly now. Shall we get to it? Iâve been sitting on this chapter for a very long while.
Masterlist
~~~~~
Aelin still wasnât awake by the time Rowan returned to the bedroom after his shower. She was still soundly asleep, but it looked as though at one point she had been awake enough to grab his pillow and hug it to her. She had begun claiming all the pillows when she could, her own was tucked under her bump. The sheet was tangled in her legs, kicked off and discarded at some point in the night. Rowan had taken to using his own throw blanket at night because Aelin had decided subconsciously that she did want anything on her once asleep, except him of course. She kept his arm in a vice grip around her most of the night when her restlessness had allowed her to be still enough.
Last night had been bad for Aelin, Rowan was pretty sure there were hour-long stretches when she hadnât been able to sleep at all and sheâd woken him a few times getting in and out of bed. Yet right now she looked so peaceful and calm, like she was getting the rest she finally needed. Aelin had asked him the night before to wake her so that they could have breakfast together before he went to work but he thought it best to leave her, so he got dressed and let her be. Next he went out and prepped his lunch and ate his breakfast, quietly hoping to himself that Aelin might wake up on her own. The whole reason Aelin had wanted to be woken up was because Rowan was working a long shift at the gym, heâd be getting dinner there as well before staying for the evening shift. Sheâd pouted about missing him and heâd kissed her and told her heâd miss her too.
Hello! Could you do number 9? I absolutely love your writing!!! đ
<3 love you nonny!
"Quit it, or I'll bite." Rowaelin
...
College was proving to be more and more difficult than Aelin had anticipated. With or without the full load of classes--it was an adjustment. She was away from home for the first time, unable to call her mom as much as she'd like, and then she was working at the student run journal two nights a week.
Now as she was sitting in one of the study rooms in the library, Aelin stared at the Biology homework she and her study group were supposed to be completing. Well, study group was a loose term. Tonight it was just her and Rowan Whitethorn.
It wouldn't have been an issue if the two of them actually got along. Whitethorn was arrogant, cold, and a general stick in the mud. Aelin didn't think she'd seen him smile once. Not to mention they shared two other classes, just her luck, and he'd often found ways to undermine Aelin at every turn.
Whatever. At least he was nice to look at. And he actually cared about school and his work.
She clicked her pen as she stared down at the text book. They were supposed to be preparing for a quiz on cell structure and division. Click-click. This was impossible to understand. No matter how hard she tried or how often she looked at the text. Click-click. She wanted to go into business management, since when did that involve understanding biology? Click-click.
"Seriously?" Whitethorn grumbled.
Aelin looked up to meet his pine green eyes. "What?"
"The clicking," Whitethorn said. He nodded, giving her pen a glare to rival that of his usual broody self.
"It's a pen." She clicked it again.
"It's annoying," he said.
Click-click.
"Poor buzzard," she bemoaned.
Whitethorn scowled and Aelin grinned. Sometimes he made it so easy.
"You're a menace," he said.
"You're a hard ass," she retorted.
"How does that have to do with anything?"
Click-click.
"Please Whitethorn, it's nine-thirty on a Friday night and yet you insist on studying."
He stared with those deep, intoxicating eyes. But Aelin could have sworn she saw a spark of amusement there. Maybe he wasn't as much of a hard ass as she thought.
Click-click.
"You didn't have to come."
Click-click.
"And leave you all alone?"
Click-click.
"Quit it."
She grinned. Click-click.
"Quit it or I'll bite you."
Click. Aelin quirked one of her perfectly shaped eyebrows.
"Promise, Whitethorn?"
There was no mistaking the way his mouth twitched at one side or the little huff of laughter. But he looked away and buried his nose in his textbook.
"Shame, just when I thought you would surprise me," she said.
Rowan looked up again and Aelin felt her body heat immediately. Hell, he really was the most attractive student on campus. And here she was playing his own game and acting like an ass.
"Trust me, princess," he said, "I could do plenty that would surprise you."
Aelin licked her lip and was about to take him up on that challenge when their study room door opened.
In came Connall dragging his twin brother with him. Connall tossed Fenrys into the nearest chair and scowled.
"We're not failing this class," Connall said before taking his own seat.
"It's Friday!" Fen groaned. He looked between Aelin and Rowan, begging for sympathy, but the two were staunchly avoiding looking anywhere but their books.
"We're on number three," Rowan said. "If you want to join us."
Cursing, Fenrys glared at his brother. But soon the group fell into a rhythm again. With Aelin and Rowan barely missing each other's glances.
CW: mentions of abuse, depictions of abuse, discussions of sexual assault, mentions of drugging
~ 5k words
---------------------------------------------
They decided to elope, much to Aelinâs original chagrin. Sheâd always expected to get married at a temple, with hundreds of high society people there, in a poofy white gown while her parents praised her for marrying a man from such a well to do family. She would be happy of course, and dreadfully in love, so in love she didnât care about anyone else there.
But sheâd always expected thereâd be at least someone else there. Instead, there was no audience to celebrate with her, there was no poofy gown, and there werenât any parents. Arobynn was estranged from his parents, who lived thousands of miles across the ocean, and her parents - well, they werenât exactly able to attend.
Aelin technically did have a dress, though it wasnât the fairytale ballgown of her childhood dreams. Sheâd let Arobynn pick it out, and his style wasnât quite the same as hers.
None of that really mattered though, she was just happy to be there, in a small scenic temple on the edge of Adarlan, a private jet ready to fly them to the Southern continent for a romantic honeymoon. It was a different sort of glitz and glamour, and Aelin was completely enthralled by it. Completely enthralled by him.
The ceremony itself was quick, and Aelin was left smiling after it as she realized what that meant for her. She wasnât alone anymore, which meant everything.
His private jet loomed before them, but she wasnât on it, wasnât walking toward it. Instead, she was leaning against the railing overlooking the coastline. They were perched up on the cliffs that lined the pebbly beach in Adarlan, but it was no less beautiful than some of the picturesque destinations they would be at in a few hours.
She sighed happily, the sound of the ocean almost drowning out the sound of the airplane hum. Sheâd always liked the ocean, and the beach, though she hadnât been to one since her family vacation more than five years ago. There was something soothing about it, something that seemed to counteract the fire in her blood that sometimes made her unbearable restless. She was at peace there, and that was a feeling she missed.
Arms slid around her stomach to hold her from behind, and she hummed, leaning back into the body behind her.
âHello, Mrs. Hamel,â he crooned, and she smiled again, turning her head to look up at him.
âGalathynius-Hamel,â she corrected fondly, âIâm hyphenating it, remember?â Arobynn leaned down and pressed a quick kiss to her cheek.
âI already filled out the forms, hyphenating it is unnecessary.â Ice flooded her veins.
âOh.â She knew she sounded dejected, confused, tense, but he either didnât notice or didnât care. âBut thatâs what I wanted to do,â she protested, her brows furrowed. âWhy did you just decide to ignore me?â A weird feeling was crawling over her, a feeling she didnât quite know how to describe.
No longer a Galathynius, but a Hamel instead. She should be glad to get rid of that lingering stain of her parents, glad to spite it all and dissociate herself from the people whoâd wrecked her life. But it still felt like a loss. A loss heâd caused.
âYou donât need both names,â Arobynn replied, his arms tightening around her. They suddenly felt like a vice-like grip around her and her breaths quickened.
âWhy didnât I get a say in that, though?â Aelin asked, tensing and turning her face back to the ocean. She tried to push free of his arms to face him properly, but he kept his grip.
âYouâre not thinking properly about it,â he said, a brow raised, âYour input is biased, and dare I say, invalid.â She bristled, and opened her mouth to respond to the insult wrapped in pretty technical terms, but he shushed her, pressing a kiss to her temple. âCome on, letâs just forget about it and go enjoy the beach, hm? Youâll forget about this in no time.â
Aelinâs brows furrowed at the phrasing of the sentence, but didnât protest as he grabbed her hand, ignoring the warning signs in her head as he led her to the plane.
---
Her shopping bags crinkled in her arms as she maneuvered them to open the front door, smiling and beating Mullin to the chase, who tried to open it for her.
âIâm rich, yes,â she joked, âbut I can still open my own doors.â Mullin smiled back, like he was laughing at the joke, but Aelin glimpsed an odd light in it that made her uncomfortable, so she just kept going into the house, letting him close the door behind her. She dropped the bags with a huff, the sound echoing through the grand foyer of her new house.
She didnât know where Arobynn was, her husband. It was still so new the word still surprised her. Maybe he was still at the office.
Aelin had recognized his name when he finally told her that first day they met; he was in the same business as her⊠parents were in. Real estate. Something she didnât have much interest in, but sheâd come across his name when her parents used to talk about the business, still hanging on to the hope that sheâd change her mind. She hadnât, and now it was too late.
But real estate meant money, and money meant -
âShopping, hm?â A familiar voice said, and she turned around, smiling. But while his voice sounded light, his face was tense, and her smile faded.
âYeah,â Aelin said, trying to sound cheerful. âI didnât have anything to do today, so I figured why not?â Arobynnâs face was unreadable as he stalked over to her, leaning down and snatching one of her bags off the ground.
âAnd what did you buy?â He asked rhetorically, taking the first item out of the bag. It was from a high end store at the Rifthold mall, they all were really, stores sheâd shopped at since she was big enough to fit in them. It was a tradition she used to have with her mom, going on monthly shopping trips and spending whatever she wanted. Granted, it wasnât with her money anymore, though she supposed it kind of was. Her inheritance had been absorbed into Arobynnâs bank account, her parentsâ company now signed over to him.
She didnât know what to do with it, and he insisted that he did, so she just let him have it. All she needed was his credit card.
He scoffed as he held out the first dress sheâd bought, a dress she rather liked. It was floral and loose, made from a flowy material that made her feel like she was floating on air, perfect for the upcoming spring season. It was whimsical and light and -
âChildish,â Arobynn spit, and she flinched, âthis is childish, Aelin.â He held up the dress, and she averted her eyes. âHow do you expect anyone to take you seriously when you wear things like this?â
âI -â
He ignored her, dropping the bag as he picked up another one, pulling out the black dress sheâd bought. It was short, and practically backless, with a halter neckline and a golden embroidered dragon climbing up alongside the hem. This one was definitely not childish, it was -
âWhorish,â he decided, âyouâd look like a slut in this. Is that what you want?â He leveled a dark stare at her. Aelin blinked, her mouth turning down into a frown.
âNo, but I donât thin-â
âWho took you shopping? You canât drive, who went with you?â Arobynn asked, snatching up the rest of the bags, and snapping his fingers at Mullin, who took them without another twisted smile, disappearing with them into another room.
âBen did,â she answered, naming the chauffeur. âHe offered to when I said I was bored.â Her hands clenched in fists unconsciously, tucked by her sides. He let out a snort of derision.
âBen, huh,â he said, his voice dripping with condescension and anger, âwell Iâll have a little chat with him.â
Aelin stared after him as he stomped away smoothly, left alone once again in the grand room.
She never saw Ben again.
â
Aelin couldnât deny that she was a tad nervous as she walked into Arobynnâs office building, the man himself at her side. It was his companyâs end of quarter cocktail party, and for the first time, Aelin got to see where he spent his days. And who he spent his days with.
She was draped in a dark red dress, professional looking but not too dowdy, edging the line of appropriate and not. Heâd picked it out, ever since her shopping trip she just let him dress her. Saved herself an argument.
âAre you nervous, darling?â Arobynn asked her, picking out her thoughts with precision, and she nodded, not finding it necessary to lie. âDonât be, if you keep your mouth shut youâll be perfectly fine.â The words were said warmly but Aelin just felt cold.
She didnât speak again as they walked into the lobby. It was already an upscale building, with marble and glass characterizing the space, but it was even more dressed up now, with white covered tables, soft lighting, light jazz music, and waiters carrying around drinks and appetizers.
Arobynn used the arm on her lower back to guide her, and she followed willingly, having nothing else to do, nowhere else to go. He took them up to a man sheâd never seen before. He was on the shorter side, with ruddy brown hair and a plain brutish looking face.
âTern,â Arobynn said, reaching out to shake his hand. âNice to see you here.â
âSame to you,â Tern said, a tilted smile on his face like there was something she didnât know. âThough this party could be a lot more fun.â
âOh?â Her husband asked idly as he snatched a glass of champagne from a waiter. Aelin was craving one, she wanted that bubbly burst of warmth in her stomach, but she was waiting for him to say it was okay. She wasnât legal yet after all, and while she drank plenty at home, Arobynn was odd about her drinking in public.
It was fair, as if anyone questioned her it could be bad for both of them, but it was still disappointing.
But she didnât dare say anything about it, not when last time she ordered a drink at a restaurant, they ID'd her and heâd been visibly upset. He hadnât let her drink at all for a week after that. Itâd been utterly miserable.
âYeah, thereâs not nearly enough women here,â Tern said, chuckling like it was a joke between the two of them, and to her dismay, Arobynn laughed too. âSpeaking of women, whoâs this lovely lady?â
Aelin looked up, aware he was talking about her, but when she went to answer, she was cut off.
âThis is Aelin Galathynius, my plus one.â
Galathynius. His plus one. Her polite smile faded, a queasy feeling replacing it. It was his turn to lie apparently.
âGalathynius, huh?â Tern asked, looking her up and down in an appraisal that made the queasy feeling grow. âInteresting, you being here at a competitorâs party.â Sheâd be confused if she could direct any energy toward the feeling. Did no one know she didnât own the company anymore? âNo matter though,â the man added with a twisted smile, âthe more the merrier.â
She managed to nod, her lips pressed together in a thin smile, a smile that remained for a good portion of the evening. But the more people she met, the more Arobynn introduced her like that, the harder and harder it was to keep the tears at bay. She just wanted to go home.
When Arobynn saw her glistening eyes, his mouth tightened, and he used his hold on her to direct her out into a hallway, away from the party.
âWhat. is the issue,â he asked tensely, and she used the privacy to wipe her eyes, shaking her head.
âNothing,â she insisted, ânothingâs wrong.â He surprised her by grabbing her arm and shoving her up against the wall. Her face paled at the show of aggression.
âObviously somethingâs wrong,â he said, his teeth gritted, âotherwise you wouldnât be standing here looking like your dog just died.â
âI just donât understand,â she decided to admit, albeit hesitantly with the way she was pinned against the wall. Apprehension rolled through her.
âEnlighten me to your struggle then,â Arobynn replied, a dangerous light in his eyes. She clenched her jaw, lifting her chin in a show of strength, though she didnât feel very strong now. She hadnât felt strong in months.
âYou changed my last name yet you refuse to use it,â she said, letting the words fall out of her mouth, âyou also married me yet you refuse to acknowledge it to anyone. Itâs like youâre ashamed of me.â
Her heart was pounding as adrenaline raced through her veins.
âAnd why shouldnât I be?â He spit. âYouâve embarrassed me enough this evening.â
âEmbarrassed you?!â She replied incredulously, suddenly frustrated. âI havenât done anything but shut up and smiled, just like you asked!â She blamed that frustration for her next words. âIf anything, youâre embarrassing me.â
Aelin didnât see the slap coming, but once she did it was too late to avoid it. Stinging spread across her left cheek as her head ricocheted to the side, leaving her breathing heavily, her eyes wide. She brought her hand up hesitantly to cover the pain, looking at him slowly.
âYou⊠hit me,â she said slowly, trying to comprehend what just happened. âYou hit me.â Her words were a bit more firm. âHow could you do that?â She truly didnât understand, but there was too much yet not enough running through her head to even say anything beyond that. She was in disbelief. âWhy would yo-â
âLetâs go home,â Arobynn said firmly, not looking the least bit remorseful. She hesitated, and he dragged a hand up her bare arm, in a show of soothing her. It didnât. âCome on,â he smirked a bit, changing his tune, âIâll make it up to you I promise.â
Aelin hesitated at that too, knowing what he meant. And she wasnât sure that would accomplish his goal. Itâd been good at first, great even, but lately, sheâd felt a little less desired and a little more used.
But when he grabbed her arm and led her to the exit, she didnât protest.
-----
Her head ached like crazy, that was the first thing she noticed as she blearily blinked her eyes open, a tired sense of terror in her veins. Lingering more than tired really, like the last vestiges of it quickly slipping into resignation. And realization.
It was Arobynn, of course it was Arobynn. There was a slight chance it couldâve been some random guy in the bar who thought she was attractive and paid the bartender to drug her, Fenrys, which sheâd have words with Rowan about. But she didnât talk to anyone besides Rowan, she didnât even see anyone besides Rowan.
So it was him. Heâd done it before even, and she admonished herself for not recognizing the feeling when itâd been happening, but it hadnât felt the exact same way. Before, thereâd been at least some preparation, she was aware of it; this time she was blindsided purely for his own amusement. Just because he could.
Her gut sank and she rolled over onto her back, staring up at the ceiling of her bedroom. She wasnât surprised she was here, she recognized Rowanâs voice now as the one whoâd called to her as she fell unconscious and heâd probably gotten her back safely. But where was -
âElia,â she managed to say, her throat unbearably dry. Aelin pushed herself up in bed, squinting at the bright light. âWhereâs Elia?â
She didnât know who she was talking to, there was no one in her room with her, but when Rowan walked in, she knew sheâd really been asking him.
And he looked absolutely wrecked.
He was still in his outfit from the night before, though it was all wrinkled, and his hair was all over the place, like heâd strung his fingers through it an infinite number of times. There were dark circles under his eyes, like he hadnât slept all night. He probably hadnât. But those eyes lit with relieved surprise when they landed on her.
âOh, youâre awake,â He said, loosing a breath as he walked over to her, setting a glass of water down on her nightstand.
âWhereâs my daughter, Rowan,â she asked urgently, âEmrys doesnât watch her overnight.â He nodded, sitting hesitantly down on the edge of her bed.
âYeah, after I got you into the car, I picked her up and took her to Elide and Lorcanâs apartment,â he answered, and her eyes widened. She opened her mouth to respond, but he cut her off, lifting his hands in supplication. âBefore you murder me, know that I never wouldâve left her there if I wasnât one hundred percent confident that sheâd be safe there.â She narrowed her eyes but let him talk. âIâve known Lorcan for ages, and I trust Elide even more than him, and theyâre going to take perfect care of her.â She hesitated, but met his eyes as he said, âTrust me.â And she did.
So she nodded. âWhy though? Why not bring her here?â She questioned, even though she pretty much knew the answer already.
âI wasnât sure what was wrong with you,â Rowan answered honestly, and she picked up the glass of water, draining the whole thing to soothe her fiery throat. âWell at first I didnât know if you needed to go to the hospital or what I needed to do or if you were even going to be okay, and I couldnât take care of her at the same time as I was figuring all of that out. I knew sheâd be better there for the time being.â He looked at the clock on her nightstand. âI told them Iâd come pick her up at noon, is that okay?â
That was about three hours from now, gods sheâd been out for a while. She tested the idea in her head for a moment, but eventually nodded. âThatâs okay, as long as you trust them.â
âI do,â he replied, âwholeheartedly.â A quiet moment passed, until she winced at a sharp pain in her head. That seemed to spur him into action, and instead of the bed, he sat in the kitchen chair conspicuously placed right by her. Idly she realized he mustâve sat there the whole time she was asleep. A strange sensation grew in her chest at the thought, rushing through her body and filling every inch of her veins and taking her breath away. She shoved it aside for later examination.
âHow are you feeling?â Rowan asked, his brows furrowed, and she chuckled drily.
âPretty shitty, I canât lie.â She dragged a hand down her face, sliding down until she was wrapped in the covers again. âI havenât felt this bad in a while.â He made a hum of acknowledgement, looking concerned when she tilted her head his way. âDo you know what happened to me?â She asked, almost like a test.
He sighed, leaning forward to brace his arms on his knees. âI do,â he said, clearly upset, âand I'm going to have words with Fenrys, believe me.â He huffed. âThe audacity of some people, itâs absurd. Who actually thinks itâs okay to drug someone, just because they think theyâre attractive?â He was on a rant now. âI will never understand, itâs just horrible and Iâm sorry youâve had to deal with that, that anyone has had to deal with that.â
Aelin stepped in then, voicing what sheâd wanted to say since she woke up. âThatâs all true, but it wasnât some random guy,â she admitted, âit was Arobynn, Iâm sure of it.â He froze, lifting his head slowly to look at her, horrified.
âArobynn?â He asked, and she nodded, her jaw clenched.
âI donât even need to think about it,â she added, âit was definitely him. Iâm glad you were there,â she continued, her words vulnerable. âIâm glad there was someone I could trust to get me home safely. Otherwise⊠I donât know what wouldâve happened.â Their kiss flashed in her mind, kisses, and everything they still hadnât said to each other. But theyâd worry about that later.
âIt was terrifying finding you on the floor like that,â he said quietly, his eyes haunted, âI - donât think Iâll ever forget that feeling.â Aelin wanted to reach out and squeeze his hand, but she didnât, just staring at him instead. âBut Iâm also glad I was there, Iâm glad nothing worse happened.â
âYeah,â she rasped, âIf heâd gotten to me, that - wouldn't have been good.â An understatement.
Rowan froze, icy rage etched into his statuesque features. âHas he-â he began, searching for the words. âDid he used to-â
âRape me?â Aelin filled in for him, her voice hollow. She fidgeted under the covers, fighting the pounding in her head as she pushed herself up to a sitting position, leaning against the headboard. She turned her head to face Rowan where he was perched on the edge of the bed, wariness overtaking his face, like he was scared of how sheâd react to the question. Scared, and concerned for what that answer would be.
She sighed, dropping her head back against the wood veneer. âDepends on your definition of it.â Her voice was weak with her tiredness, her exhaustion, her flickers of trauma sparking through her nerves at the faint thought of what happened. âI wouldnât say so at first.â She shrugged. âAs repulsive as it is to think about now, I wanted it.â Maybe if she wasnât so drained the words wouldnât come out with such nonchalance, but she couldnât even find the energy to care.
Not with what had happened.
âBut?â Rowan asked, and she sighed again, patting the bed lightly to gesture for him to sit there fully. And he did, scooting over so their shoulders were brushing. His arm immediately went to drape over her shoulders, and the way his fingers combed through the ends of her stringy hair soothed her in a way she didnât think was possible. It gave her the courage to keep speaking.
âBut,â she continued, eyes flicking down to look at the comforter. This was the first time sheâd ever uttered these words. âAs things got worse and worse, well, it had never been about me to begin with. And I think maybe he started to enjoy toying with me more?â
Aelin took Rowanâs other hand with both of hers, just to have something to do with them, to mess with his fingers to vent her nervous energy.
âIt got more - painful,â she admitted, looking everywhere but his face. âAnd he seemed to enjoy it more when I-â
âDidnât?â Rowan supplied quietly as her words failed her and she nodded stiltedly.
In almost a whisper, she said, âthatâs how I know without a doubt it was him whoâd drugged me last night. Heâs done that multiple times before.â He stiffened next to her. âOne of his âexperimentsâ Iâd complied with just to make sure he didnât lash out at me.â Her voice got tighter and tighter, a lump stuck in her throat. âBut even then, I didnât realize - I thought I was happy because I was making him happy.â
She shook her head, her voice practically gone as she forced out, âI was so wrong.â
Rowan sighed, his arm a soothing weight on her shoulders. With his free hand, he tilted her chin gently to make her look at him. She did, albeit warily.
âWhy did you want to sleep with him? Originally?â He asked, and she furrowed her brows.
âWhat?â She was dumbfounded. âWhy would you-â
âWhy did you want to sleep with him?â He repeated, and she jerked out of his hold, indignant.
âI donât know, Rowan,â she spit, suddenly defensive, âwhy does one normally sleep with someone? Because theyâre hot, or theyâre a good kisser, or they just want to, I don't know. I regret it now, obviously, Iâm disgusted, but I just wanted to then.â
âDid you?â Rowan continued, looking calm and collected in contrast to her sudden fire.
âWhat do you mean? Of course I did.â
âSo there was nothing off at all,â Rowan spoke, and she tried to stutter for an answer before he continued, âit was that straightforward. There was no underlying feeling of coercion, no part of you that felt like it wasnât right, or a part of you that felt like you owed him that to fulfill some sort of debt you thought you had?â
âHeâŠâ she trailed off, trying to orient her memories.
âWhere were you the first time?â He asked. âWhen was it?â
âThe cabin he bought up in the mountains,â she answered, feeling small at the thought. She wanted to sink into the mattress. âHe told me we were going on a vacation the same hour that we left. And then we⊠and he proposed too.â
Rowanâs mouth tightened. âSo he surprised you with this trip, isolated you, after spoiling you with a bunch of clothes and other stuff you said,â she nodded to confirm, âand then he slept with you, full well knowing you were barely legal and had just gone through a major trauma. And then proposed to make sure youâd only ever be turning to him. And youâre sure there was an equal balance of power there? Youâre sure that in the beginning it was okay?â
Aelin blinked. And then blinked again. âOh.â
Her chest felt too tight. Rowan was waiting, waiting for her to speak, so she did. âI guess I - knew that?â She tried to explain, âmaybe? Somewhere I did. I knew it wasnât right, I knew I was too young, but I just am struggling to grasp that my memory could be lying to me. That Iâm lying to myself.â She blinked rapidly, her voice as tight as her lungs. âIt was always assault.â The words tasted bitter.
âAm I supposed to feel like this, Rowan?â She asked, looking at him and his eyes that held infinite sorrow. Not pity, sorrow. And anger. âAm I supposed to feel like Iâm being eaten from the inside out by this creature stitched together with my stupidity, my suffering,â she shook her head, her lips trembling, âand my shame.â
Rowan wrapped her in his arms quickly, squeezing her tight and letting her shudder into his chest. âIâm falling apart,â she whispered into his shirt, âIâm falling apart but I canât because I have Elia. And I canât because being in pieces would mean I crawl back to him to fix me, when he was the one who shattered me first.â
He pressed kisses to her neck, to her jaw, to her face. Not languid ones, quick desperate ones, like he was trying to put her back together with just his lips. But still, she didnât cry.
She just clutched his shirt, trying to keep afloat, blaming her addled state for the words she let leave her mouth. âHeâs been here the whole time,â she admitted, feeling Rowan tense.
âWhat?â
âHe left me that note,â she said, not daring to look, âhe keeps texting me, he never stops, he sends me pictures of me, harasses me,â she shook her head, growing frantic, âhe hacked my bank account, gave me money and paid my rent but didnât let me buy groceries one time, and now this. Iâm just so scared of what heâs going to do, Iâm scared of what heâs thinking, Iâm scared of him.â The words were an admittance, something she hadnât said out loud. âIâm scared of him, and I donât know what to do.â
Aelin pulled back a bit, a wave of dizziness hitting her. She felt like sheâd been hit by a truck. Rowan was silent as she leaned back against the pillows, his face twisted into one of anger, more anger than sheâd ever seen from him. Logically, she knew he wasnât mad at her. Right?
Was he mad sheâd lied to him? Mad she hadnât trusted him? Hadnât told him when his safety was possibly in jeopardy? He should be mad. It would only be what she deserved.
It was those thoughts circling her head that made her do what she did. Those thoughts controlled her movements to the point where when he leaned over, getting closer to her ⊠she flinched.
She fucking flinched.
It was like all the air was sucked out of the room, Rowanâs eyes wide and her own frozen.
âI was just fixing your blankets,â he said quietly, lifting his hands up. She looked down slowly, seeing her comforter all twisted, half falling off the bed. âThatâs all.â
A noise close to a sob escaped her, her throat tightening until her eyes began to water. And for the first time in years, she cried.
Tears streamed down her face as she sobbed, simultaneously feeling like her soul was breaking apart and also being freed at the same time. Rowan responded faster than she could blink, wrapping his arms around her and pulling her close. Aelin buried her head in his chest, his dress shirt getting wet as she spilled out every single emotion sheâd buried deep inside.
âWhy did he treat me like that, Rowan?â She asked through her tears. âWhat did I do to deserve it?â
One hand was looped around her back, and the other landed on her head, smoothing back her hair. âNo, donât think like that,â he insisted, âyou didnât do anything to deserve that, thereâs no way you could even deserve that.â He sounded close to tears himself. âHeâs just cruel, and heartless, and a sorry excuse for a human being, and he took that out on you.â
âBut why?â She whispered, squeezing her eyes shut. âWhy me? Why did he have to break me?â He combed through her hair, almost like a massage, and she sighed. âHe took everything that was still normal about me after the crash and wrecked that too, and now Iâm just left with nothing.â
âYou have Elia,â Rowan reminded, âand youâll always have me.â
Her eyes were swelling with the force of her tears, but she didnât care as she looked up at him. She lifted a shaky hand to his cheek and moved closer to press one soft kiss to his lips. He let out a shuddering sigh, their eyebrows touching as they breathed the same air.
âYouâll always have me too,â Aelin said quietly. âTo whatever end.â
âTo whatever end,â he agreed, and that was all she needed to hear.
Rowaelin, follow up to the study group drabble found here
...
Rowan barely made it through the rest of study group. Not only was Fenrys complaining at every opportunity, but he was seated directly across from Aelin. Aelin who had stopped clicking her pen but instead was sucking on the end of it, lashes fluttering every so often. She was far too distracting, even in the simplest of ways.
Connall stood at the white board trying to draw out a gene map that they would needs to fill out for their quiz on Monday. No one had the desire to tell him that they werenât actually paying attention.
By midnight, Fenrys finally jumped from his seat.
âI canât do this anymore,â he said. âIâll take the F.â
They disbanded not long after that. Except for Aelin and Rowan. Aelin wanted to finish an English paper and Rowan wasnât convinced he was prepared for the Biology quiz. And neither would admit annoyance or defeat.
And Rowan would have been fine with the silent company. If she hadnât started clicking her pen again.
âSeriously?â Rowan asked, slamming his textbook shut.
Aelin looked up and blinked. âIâm getting deja vu. I swear weâve been here before. Do you feel that too?â
âOh for the love of--â Rowan broke off and stood. âI gotta go.â
The woman across from him let out a sharp laugh as she packed up his bag.
âYou really are as stuck-up as everyone says,â Aelin said. She leaned back in her seat and watched him. âEarlier, I thought you were going to surprise me?â
What was it about this woman that made him say the absolute stupidest things? And then he ended up acting like an ass in front of her. But Rowan cared about his schooling, his potential career. Â
âIs the great Aelin Galathynius admitting she wants something?âÂ
âOh please, youâre the ass who thinks heâs above everyone else.â She flicked her hair over her shoulder and fixed him with a cool stare.
Rowan smirked. âSays the woman who thinks she walks on water.â
âAnd he never admits heâs wrong,â she threw at him.
âOnly thinking of herself,â he said
âCold and emotionless.â
âSpoiled.â
âBastard.â
âPrincess.â
She leaned across the table glaring at him. Her skin was flushed and her breathing elevated. Rowan would only admit it to himself, but she was the picture of beauty. Her eyes were alight with fire and her chin tilted defiantly. She may be all the things she accused him of--but there was more. There was so much more to this woman he had come to know in his classes. Sheâd gotten under his skin and managed to nestle out a hovel in his head.
âOh shut-up,â she said.
âCome over here and make me.â The words were out of his mouth before he even had time to think about them. He was certain that he didnât regret them--but what the hell had gotten into him to actually say them?
Aelin straightened, arching a perfect brow. Slowly, she walked around the table, her finger dragging across the marred wood. Rowan tracked her movements. It was damn near impossible to ignore her. Not with that lean body of hers. Not with those enticing eyes and that sinful smile. Â
âMake you, hmm?â she murmured. Â
Rowanâs eyes flicked her mouth and she grinned. Â
They moved at the same time, Rowan grabbing her hips and Aelin fisting her hands in his hair. And when their mouths connected, Rowan could have sworn he felt something pulse between them.
Her lips were soft and molded perfectly with his, a breathy moan escaping her lips when he pulled her against the hard lines of his body. And when her nails scraped against her scalp, Rowanâs hands tightened against her.
Their kisses were desperate, hurried. As though they knew that if they stopped everything would go back to the way it was. And Rowan--Rowan wasnât ready for that to happen.
The sound of the jingling keys of a security guard broke the bubble of security around them. When they broke apart, Aelin remained close and pressed her forehead against his. They stood there in the quiet study room until they heard the security guard coming closer. They hurried to gather their bags and leave when prompted by the guard.
As they stepped out into the chilled night air, they finally looked back to each other. Rowan looked into her eyes, bright against the backdrop of the the outer flood lights.
âWell,â Aelin breathed, a blush still tinting her cheeks. âI guess Iâll see you.â
And then Rowan, deciding to throw all caution to the wind, grabbed Aelin before she could walk away. She stared up at him a look of confusion, maybe even hope, on her face. Â
He kissed her slowly this time. Taking his time to memorize the feel of her against him, her taste, her touch. Rowan cupped Aelinâs face with one hand, angling her chin to deepen the kiss.
When she moaned against him, Rowan knew theyâd never be able to go back to being fellow rival students. Not even close.
Aelin gripped the lapels of his jacket keeping him close. She looked up at him, small smile playing on her lips.
âSo,â she said lightly, âdoes this mean youâre going to start admitting Iâm right in our classes?â
âOf course not,â he replied, then grinned when she frowned, âIâm actually looking forward to how riled up I can get you.â
Before she could protest, Rowan kissed her again.
...
not sure about the dialogue with this one, or rowanâs voice either. yeesh. my bad.
The day of her exam had finally arrived. It was finally happening. Not that this was the last exam sheâd have to take for the class, she still had her final, but this was the exam that was going to determine if she needed to drop the class or not. Which was the worst case scenario, as she wouldnât get the tuition money back.
But she could do this. She could get a good enough grade on this. A passing grade was a 70%, and Aelin had a 65%, which was an average from her last two exams and all the homework she wasted time doing. In order to boost her grade up just that final 5%, she needed at least a 75% on this one.
She could do it. This is what sheâd been studying for. But the nerves were settling in her stomach as she waited in the hallway with everyone else in her class, the tense sound of silence waving over the crowd.
Most of her exams were online, and this one technically was too, but Maeve required them all to be in the same place, so here they were.
Aelin had left Elia with Rowan, trusting him to watch her while she was gone for a few hours. They were going to meet at Mistward once her exam was finished, as it was much closer to campus than her apartment was, just in case something went wrong. Elia would probably be sleepy, as it was almost her bedtime, but she also would probably be excited to be with Rowan, and would be fussy when Aelin finally brought her home.
The door to the testing room opened, and hundreds of studentsâ heads popped up, the collective feeling of dread settling.
It was a grim affair as they all shuffled into the lecture hall, taking their normal seats. They were all far enough apart so they couldnât see anyone elseâs screens, though Aelin wasnât the type to cheat. Besides, she had faith in herself this time. She had much more of a grasp on the concepts on this exam than she did for the first two, when sheâd gotten a dreadful 38% and then a not much better 55%.
But her hands were shaking as she opened her computer, ignoring the differences between it and everyone elseâs sleek laptops. That was the last thing on her mind now.
âOkay class,â Maeve herself said from down at the front, pacing smoothly as she looked at them all with level eyes. âYou know the rules. You have an hour and a half to finish. Any talking or any sign of collaboration or communication results in an immediate zero.â
Her heels clicked on the floor. âYour grades will be released once everyone has finished, but you may leave when you are done. Any questions?â No one raised their hands. âGood. You may begin when youâre ready.â
Aelin signed onto the testing server, loosing a single breath as she hit the start button. There was no Arobynn on her mind, nothing distracting her from getting the grade she knew she deserved.
She could do this, she could do this.
She would do this.
------
Aelinâs steps were hurried as she walked back down the hallway of the math building, passing a few other stragglers as she rushed out into the cold.
Another cold snap had hit Doranelle, and itâd even snowed a bit that day, leaving an icy layer on the sidewalks as walked outside, her boots crunching. This campus was all too familiar to her, despite only being present on it for about three days a week. It was hard to forget when the path on and off had been ingrained into her.
She fit in when she was by herself, she was the right age to be on a college campus, she almost looked like she belonged with the hoards of sorority girls who wandered in clumps to their classes, laughing and clutching coffee theyâd bought from the very cafe she worked at. No one questioned her, though they were surprised when she said she was a freshman.
Most freshmen lived in one of the shiny new dormitories lining the brick streets, most freshmen partied and went to the football games and had fun. Aelin put the football game on TV every weekend, letting it play idly in the background when she was at her apartment, but she didnât have a season ticket, and never tried to pawn one off of someone else. Who would she even go with? She didnât have any friends.
Rowan, her rebellious brain whispered, but she didnât even know if he watched football, let alone if heâd want to go with her to one of their schoolâs games.
Aelin had always liked football, had liked the energy. She used to watch the Terrassen Stags play every weekend with her parents, and occasionally the cousin she hadnât seen in what felt like a lifetime.
She never thought that when she was finally at college herself, it would just fade into the background. But there were more important things, and she knew that more than any of the other freshmen here with her.
There were a few other people walking on campus with her, the wednesday night not too busy, but she didnât linger, making a beeline toward Mistward. Maybe sheâd even get back before she got her grade, there were multiple people still taking the test when she left. That gave her a bit of wiggle room.
Except her wish was to no avail, because the notification hit her phone just as sheâd made it onto the block Mistward was on. And she couldnât resist pausing, leaning against the wall of the cafe as she pulled out her phone to check the grade.
She swiped past her text notifications, ignoring her conversations with Arobynn on her quest to get to her grades app. Heâd wished her luck on her exam earlier, with the snarky undertone like he knew sheâd fail, and sheâd wanted to avoid replying, she really wanted to, but she had. Just like sheâd replied to every other text heâd sent her over the past week.
She hated that twisted hold he had on her, but it was better for now. Because Aelin had an inkling of an idea that if she stopped responding, heâd come find her and make her respond.
Her heart was pounding in her chest as she opened the exam grade, her breath catching as she read it.
And then she was rushing into the cafe. Running more like it. It was after business hours, but Emrys had left the doors unlocked for her.
She burst through the glass doors, eyes scanning the room, finding Rowan behind the counter with Emrys and Elia, holding her propped up on the counter. Her tiny hand was in his as he guided them to spray whipped cream onto the top of what looked like some sort of chocolate frappe.
Elia looked enthralled by the drink making process, but Rowan paused when he looked up, seeing her there. He looked hesitant as he passed Elia to Emrys, maneuvering to get out from behind the counter, brows furrowed. She couldnât blame him, she wasnât giving any indication of what she got on her face.
But then she broke into a blinding smile, and she was running, jumping at him. âI got an 82%!â She squealed, and he caught her easily, spinning her around in a circle.
âThatâs amazing, Aelin,â Rowan said warmly, hugging her tight, her face buried in his neck. Here he was, supporting her, holding her, helping her. She didnât let herself think about it too much as she pulled back and brought her lips to his.
His mouth was soft and warm, and she was content to stay there forever as she slowly slid to a stand, her hands slipping to cup his face as his fell to her hips. The kiss was slow too, languid with just a bit of pressure before it broke into a few short ones, Aelin breathing heavily as she pulled back, remembering where they were.
Rowan was staring at her, but she ignored his gaze, staying in his arms as she looked around him at Emrys, who was smiling softly at her.
âIâm happy for you, Aelin,â he said, and she knew he wasnât just talking about the grade. She smiled back before hesitantly looking back up at Rowan.
âWell,â she said, trying to hide her vulnerability, âyour tutoring worked.â He laughed brightly, sweeping her up into another hug, and she relished in being surrounded by him.
âMama!â Elia called, and Rowan released her gently, his hand slipping down to link with hers loosely as she leaned against the counter, smiling at her daughter.
âHello, love,â she said, taking her from Emrys and pressing a smacking kiss to her hair. She was in a good mood, she was in a really good mood.
âOh, that reminds me,â Rowan said, letting go of her hand and leaning over the counter. He came back with the frappe in his hands. âMe and Elia made you a chocolate hazelnut frappe to celebrate.â
She half smiled as she took it, the same drink she made every day suddenly precious. âYou didnât know Iâd do well.â Rowan just shrugged and smiled gently.
âI had no doubt you would.â
She looked away, suddenly shy, and took a sip, the sweetness of the drink only amplified by the lingering taste of Rowan. Elia babbled, and Aelin took out the straw, picking up some whipped cream and letting her daughter taste some, laughing at her reaction.
âWhy donât you two go out tonight?â Emrys offered. âI can watch Elia for the evening.â The sly old man. He knew what he was doing.
Aelin chuckled but looked up at Rowan, who shrugged, as if to say why not?
âOkay, if youâre sure,â she replied, taking another sip of the frappe, and Emrys just tossed the towel heâd been holding over his shoulder, taking Elia from her arms.
âYou know Iâll take any chance to steal the little angel,â he teased, and Aelin laughed. Elia was getting tired, she could tell, her little turquoise eyes starting to flutter closed. She could use some good rest. âNow shoo,â Emrys gestured, âgo have fun.â
------
The silence was heavy but not uncomfortable as they drove to her apartment, their hands linked loosely together over the center console. Her lips still tingled, but neither of them seemed eager to break that silence and talk about what just happened.
That was, until they pulled up to her apartment, her heart pounding as he stopped the car. She slung her purse over her shoulder as they headed toward her door, Rowanâs hand ghosting her lower back as they climbed the stairs. Heâd produced a button up shirt from somewhere in his car, but she didnât exactly want to wear her sweatpants and heavy sweater out to a bar. Not that she had anything much better, but she could find something.
His heat behind her as she unlocked the door had her breath catching, and she almost stumbled as she went to open it. The creak of the hinges felt louder than normal, or maybe that was just because of the tension coating them as she took a step into the apartment, as he followed that step.
And when she turned to lock the door behind them, it was a slow turn, just like it was to face him again. His green eyes were dark and piercing, and she let out a shuddering breath, his gaze dropping to her lips.
One breath. Two breaths. And then they were on each other.
Their first kiss was gentle, but this one was not, neither of them willing to wait any longer. She pried open his mouth with her own, clutching his hair with both hands as his dug at her waist, pressing her back against the door.
She was going to die, she was going to fall apart, she was going to completely combust and melt into him. That wouldnât be a bad way to go, kissing Rowan. He was godsdamned good at it, if the heat soaring through her body was any indication.
One of his hands came up to cup her jaw, his fingers sliding behind her ear and into her hair, tilting her head just right for him to devour her. Aelin was willing prey.
She hadnât been completely inexperienced before Arobynn, sheâd had a few boyfriends in high school. Rich, well connected boyfriends to suit her rich, well connected family, but theyâd been normal teenage boys. So she hadnât been a virgin thank the gods, but Rowan⊠Rowan was something else.
Sheâd thought Arobynn was the end all be all of men, as disgusting as that was. Sheâd willingly fallen into bed with him in the beginning, but she didnât know what the hell sheâd been thinking because there was nothing compared to this.
His tongue swept through her mouth and she moaned, her legs trembling beneath her. Rowanâs hands traveled back down her body, sliding her coat off and running them down her sides, until he was scooping her up. Aelinâs legs went around his waist, melding her body to his as he started walking.
Her eyes were closed, her senses completely lost in him as his lips slid sexily against hers, so it was only because of how well she knew her apartment that she could tell where he was heading. And when they reached that destination, she hesitated.
It wasnât that she didnât want to, because she did, it was justâŠ
And either Rowan didnât plan on going further either, or he could tell she was tensing, because he just set her down gently, pressing three short kisses to her lips before pulling back completely.
His eyes were dark with lust, his lips swollen and pink, but he smiled softly, gesturing to her closet. âCome on,â he said, âitâs time to go celebrate.â
Rowan kissed her forehead then headed out toward the living room to go change into his own shirt. Aelin pressed a hand to her lips as she went toward her closet, hiding her smile. She didnât have much to wear out, but she could find something. After flicking through the nonexistent dresses and the nonexistent party clothes, she settled on a pair of jeans and a black long sleeved shirt sheâd had for ages but never wore.
Most of her clothes were second hand, a drastic comparison to the mounds of designer clothes sheâd had before, but Aelin had tried to maintain some sort of style with her budget. She was hoping she looked retro chic, not two steps away from the streets.
She changed quickly, brushing through her hair and throwing on some nicer looking shoes before grabbing her purse and heading back out to the living room. Rowan was sitting on the couch, scrolling through his email, and damn - it should be illegal for him to look that good. He was just in a simple black button up, unintentionally matching her, but Aelin wanted to rip those buttons apart and devour him.
âReady?â She asked, breathless, and he looked up, his eyes darkening as he looked at her. She didnât think she looked like anything special, but apparently he disagreed.
âGods,â he laughed shakily, standing up as she walked over, taking her hands and playing with their entwined fingers.
âWhat?â She asked, smiling and looking up at him through her lashes. âThis old thing?â She looked down at her outfit. Using the grip on her hands, he turned her around, coming to hug her around the waist.
âYou have no idea how beautiful you are,â he said into her ear, âhow beautiful you always are.â Her cheeks flamed, but she managed to smirk, looking up at him.
âOf course I am Rowan,â she teased, âhow else did you think I got my 82%?â He chuckled.
âYou seduced Maeve?â He joked, and she nodded like it was obvious.
âSheâs very into blondes.â She couldnât hold it in any longer, dissolving into a series of giggles, way too giddy after everything that had happened that evening. Rowan kissed her temple sweetly.
âCome on, you menace, letâs go.â But the moment she stepped away and his breath caught, she remembered why she never wore this shirt. The back was lower than most of the ones she normally donned. Fuck.
âAelinâŠâ his voice trailed off and she sighed, but didnât turn back around, letting him get a good look at the beginning of her trauma. âDid he do this to you?â His voice was heartbroken, and she had to correct him.
âNo,â she turned back around, âno this one wasnât him.â She grabbed one of his hands, but didnât look at him, trying to sort through the painful memory. âI told you my parents died in a car crash, that I survived.â He nodded. âWell that wasnât the whole story, or at least, that was a very edited version of it.â
She let out a heavy breath. âIt was on my eighteenth birthday, and weâd gone out as a family. I had friends, but most of them were superficial, it wasnât any sort of lasting relationship, which is why I lost practically all of them after that.â Her lip trembled, her eyes still dry. âMy dad was speeding on the way home, and I donât remember too much, but I do remember the impact. We hit another car head on on the interstate and⊠I was out for a bit. I was buckled into the backseat, but they werenât buckled in at all and-â he pulled her in close, letting her speak the next words into his chest. âI couldnât open any of the doors, so I crawled through a broken window to get to them. It tore up my back, and I even had to get surgery because some of the pieces of glass cut too close to my spine.â
She shook her head against his shirt. âAnd then,â her voice got tighter, âI found out later they were drunk.â He breathed in sharply. âThey were drunk and they still drove, knowing it, knowing I was in the car. They were drunk and I crawled through fucking glass to get to them.â
His hands tightened around her. âIâm so sorry, Aelin. Iâm so sorry.â
âI got into alcohol after that, ironically,â she spit, âArobynn encouraged it. Which is why I donât drink anymore, why I didnât drink at the bar that night. I wonât let myself be like them.â
âAnd I was about to take you to a fucking bar,â Rowan said disparagingly, âIâm so-â
âNo,â she shook her head, âdonât feel bad. There was no way you could know. And I still want to go, itâs been long enough where I can handle one drink, or I donât have to drink at all, itâs fine.â
Rowan was hesitating, she could tell, so she lifted a hand to his cheek, pressing one kiss to his unfairly soft mouth. âTake me out, Rowan.â
He sighed into her mouth, nodding. âOkay.â
------
The bar was more crowded than she was expecting for a weeknight, but she supposed thatâs what happened when your bar was blocks away from a college campus. Aelin even recognized a few people from her stats class, obviously getting in with fake IDs, much to her cynical amusement.
It was the same bar theyâd gone to the first time, which she hesitated at. Arobynn had some sort of connection here, if heâd gotten the note through to her, but Rowan didnât know that. And his friend Fenrys was working, and could get them drinks for free, so she just sucked it up, choosing to look at it optimistically.
After the incident at her apartment, Aelin had wanted to change shirts, uncomfortable knowing part of her scars were visible, but when Rowan had kissed them all, whispering words of comfort to her, sheâd decided to try and stop being so ashamed of them. Just another thing Arobynn had engrained in her.
But her skin prickled uncomfortably as she sat down on the barstool, even when Rowan set his hand lightly on her lower back, ordering them both a drink. Sheâd have one Sex on the Beach, which she couldnât resist getting, waggling her brows at Rowan when she relayed her choice. She didnât anymore than that, but she deserved to celebrate at least a little bit.
Aelin had gotten a laugh from Fenrys too, whoâd passed it to her. Sheâd barely gotten to talk to him the first night, but he seemed decent enough, though she didnât trust people who laughed a lot. It usually meant they had something to hide. Sheâd been like that before, hiding her abuse and unbearable sadness, and sheâd promised herself to never be like that again.
âSo, do you think this bodes well for me for my final?â She asked Rowan, propping her head up on her elbow. She looked up at him through her lashes, it seemed now that sheâd started flirting with him she couldnât stop. But he was equally as guilty, trailing a hand up and down her jean clad thigh as he leaned in closer than necessary.
âI think youâre going to crush it,â he said, inches away from her mouth. âAbsolutely demolish the exam.â
âOh?â She breathed, eyes dropping to his lips. âYou think so?â
âYeah,â Rowan said, his hand trailing higher, and he smirked, âAll you have to do is wear this top again, Maeve wonât be able to resist.â Aelin burst out laughing, throwing her head back, and Rowan looked mighty proud of himself, though his smile was as soft as it was pleased.
Theyâd have a proper conversation about everything tomorrow, she didnât want to ruin her good mood by having reality drop in now. Arobynn wasnât even on her mind, a rarity that she would do anything to keep.
She took another sip of her drink, the fruity taste coating her tongue, so different from the bitter burning liquids Arobynn used to punish her with. The thought made her drain a bit more.
Rowan had ordered an old fashioned, and was sipping on it just like her. As if he was content to be in the moment instead of wasting it away like most college students.
âAny news on your internship?â Aelin asked, swirling around her drink. Rowan sighed through his nose.
âMaeve is still stringing it out,â he complained, ânot telling me when theyâre going to tell me if Iâm in or not. I still donât even know if I want to accept. Eyllwe is just⊠so far away.â
A queasy feeling sunk in her gut. She looked behind him, toward some of the lights lining the bar instead of meeting his eyes. âWell, you said itâs a good opportunity. Do you want to miss out on it?â The lights blurred a little and she blinked, trying to clear her vision.
âIt is, but do I want to be working under Maeve?â Rowan mused. âItâs in Eyllwe, but she has a hand in the company, itâd basically be like Iâm reporting directly to her.â She blinked again, shaking her head slightly. It was loud in here, the second half of his sentence had gotten muddled.
Her body felt fuzzy, the alcohol going through her faster than she thought. Sheâd only had half a drink, why did she feel like this?
âIâm gonna be right back,â she told Rowan, standing up on shaky limbs. His brows furrowed, at her slurred voice, at her strange walk, she didnât know. She needed to splash cold water on her face. She was going to be sick.
The lights were messing with her head, and there were too many people in her way. Her eyelids kept trying to close, and when she reached the hallway to the bathroom, she had to pause, leaning against the wall and trying to breathe slowly.
Gods. She wasnât sure her legs could hold her anymore. Rowan, where was Rowan? She shouldnâtâve left him. But she didnât think she could call out to him, her mouth felt like it had cotton balls in it. She could hear the liquid rushing through her ears, everything muffled, and her neck felt like jelly, flopping forward.
She just wanted to go to sleepâŠ
Aelin? A familiar voice called out. Aelin? Whatâs wrong?
But whoever they were, they were too late. Her legs gave out and she was falling...falling...falling. She collapsed to the floor, her heart beating all too slowly.
Her body coaxed her to sleep, and this time, she let it take her.
A bit of a filler chapter, but we get to some action next part...
------------------------------------------
â3...2...1⊠okay, drop your pencil.â Rowan stopped the timer, looking over at her as she dramatically lifted her hand, dropping her pencil so it clattered onto her practice exam. It earned her a half smile.
âHow did you feel about this one?â He asked, grabbing her paper before leaning back in his chair, running a hand through his hair idly. Aelin felt her cheeks heat. He was wearing a simple gray t-shirt, and just like that day at the gym, she was struck with the thought of how unfairly attractive he was. Just another thing to add to the list of what she now knew about him.
Heâd stayed up on the phone with her for hours that night a few days ago, until sheâd managed to fall asleep, waking up to a text from him reading Get some good sleep, Iâll see you tomorrow.
True to his word, heâd talked about himself the whole time, just the simple stuff like who his parents were and what he liked and disliked, a few memories from his childhood, messing around with his cousins on the farm they owned. She didnât know what his âdark secretâ was, but that felt like something too personal to pry into. Sheâd figure it out eventually.
This was a turning point for her, not just learning more about him, but just the simple fact that he would stay up with her, would chat with her for that long just because sheâd asked him to. Rowan was just good; good to her, good to Elia, just good. She wasnât used to that.
âPretty decent,â she replied, chewing on her lip as her gaze flicked up to the windows lining the study room they were in. Being at the campus library had its benefits, such as the quiet space to work, and the proximity to classes, but it had its hazards too, such as the double takes they got from people walking by.
She and Elia were a novelty everytime they were here, even if her daughter was sound asleep, curled on her lap like always.
âDefinitely not a hundred percent,â she elaborated, âbut I think it went fairly well.â She grabbed the pencil, idly tapping it on the table.
âWell,â Rowan said, all businesslike and professional as he flipped through the packet, his green eyes scanning her work. âIt looks pretty good from what I can tell, no clear errors, but Iâll let you know when I grade it.â He sighed, dropping it on the table and sending her a charming half smile.
âCause you have nothing better to do on a Tuesday night then grade my stats work, huh.â Aelin teased, tilting her head. âJoining me in the no social life club?â
He shrugged. âWhy not? Itâs not a bad place to be.â She smiled softly, meeting his eyes as an unconscious blush rose to her cheeks. He held her gaze, a charged moment passing between them. They were sitting close to each other, it wouldnât take much to just lean over there, to press her lips lightly against his. Or even just be closer to each other, to feel his delicious heat on her skin. It was the first time sheâd thought about anything like that in ages, but there was just something about him that made her feel safe. She wanted him, she realized. She wasnât sure if that scared her or not.
His gaze dropped to her lips, and she unconsciously wet them, her heart pounding.
She leaned in to do - something, when her phone buzzed. It was like a bucket of ice water had been poured on her head, and she jerked back, looking away from Rowan as she pulled it out. She didnât even bother to open it once she saw that familiar unfamiliar number.
âFor fucks sake,â she muttered under her breath, dropping the device on the table, the mood utterly ruined.
âWhatâs wrong?â Rowan asked, ruffling his hair and looking away too, like he was trying to act cool after that little moment. She even caught a faint flush on his face.
âNothing.â She cleared her throat, sitting up in her chair. Itâs not like she wanted to lie to him, but how exactly did she tell her kind of crush that her unfortunately still legal husband was harassing her? Heâd been there at the beginning of this mess, but she was pretty sure he thought itâd been a mistake and that nothing was wrong, and she didnât really want to shatter that little bubble.
Why would she? He wouldnât be able to help, and sheâd just be putting him into even more of a difficult position. Even if she longed to be able to have someone to confide in.
The cash was burning a heavy hole in her pocket, a glaring reminder of why she couldnât have anyone to confide in. That first step away from independence was fine, but it was all too easy to slip and fall and slide to the other side of the line.
âI think I need to head out actually,â Aelin said, feeling the strange urge to get rid of the evidence. Rowan looked surprised at the sudden change.
âOh, okay.â He straightened in his chair, starting to collect her things as she did too. âLeaving me alone in the no social life club?â He asked jokingly, but with a hint of vulnerability underneath it.
She couldnât lie when he sounded like that. âIf the bank counts as a social life,â she replied, shrugging and smiling as she stood up, shifting Elia carefully so she didnât wake her up.
Rowan let out a breath that was half a chuckle, half a sigh of relief, and she bristled slightly at the way he was relieved at the idea of her not having a social life. It hit a familiar chord, even if she knew it wasnât exactly the same. Just in the very nature of it itself, relief was different than a sense of success.
âDo you need a ride?â He asked as he slung his backpack over his shoulder, picking up hers too before she could grab it. All she had to carry then was Elia, and the girl was dead weight right now so Aelin appreciated it. She wasnât sure how physically fit she could consider herself right now.
She smiled placidly at him as she accepted, walking ahead as he gestured for her to go in front of him.
She ignored the stares as she walked out of the library, well used to them by now. And his car was parked in the attached parking garage, which kept them at least semi-warm until she could crank up the heat.
But when she opened the passenger side door, she froze, her eyes caught on the backseat. If she could cry, she knew her eyes would be filled with tears right now. Instead, she just stood there, glancing back and forth between the car and Rowan, who was standing there sheepishly, like heâd forgotten what heâd done.
âRowanâŠâ
He rushed to explain himself. âI was out shopping,â he said, fiddling with both backpacks and not looking at her. âAnd it was on sale, it was such a good deal I thought why not you know? Just in case you ever needed to borrow my car for something.â He opened the backseat door, and she watched him through the car, not moving from her spot. âBut itâs not bad quality,â he seemingly felt the need to amend, âI researched the safety rating and everything and -â
She raised a hand to stop him, and he fell quiet, looking like a schoolboy about to get chewed out by the principal.
âYouâve gone soft, Rowan Whitethorn,â was all Aelin said, staring at the carseat now taking up the back seat on the driverâs side, lined in a nice pale blue. The perfect size for the child currently in her arms.
When he saw that she wasnât about to yell at him, Rowan relaxed, smiling slightly. âWhat can I say, I have to balance out the rest of my personality,â he said drily, and she let out a breathy laugh, walking over to the other side to join him by the door. The carseat was perfectly placed, facing the back for a safe position, a clear line of sight set up for her in the passenger seat.
âSo does this mean youâre my official chauffeur now?â Aelin asked, only half joking as she leaned into the car, examining the seat. Deeming it safe, she shifted Elia to place her gently into it, not even waking her.
âWhen Iâm free, of course,â Rowan replied, âbut you can always borrow it if you need to also. I trust you.â His words sent a burst of warmth through her veins, surely spreading onto her face yet again. She just couldnât stop being flustered around him, much to her chagrin.
âI donât have my driverâs license, but I appreciate it,â she answered honestly, messing around with all the fancy buckles on the car seat to make sure Elia was hooked in properly.
Rowan didnât say anything after that, and when she turned back around, she caught a glimpse of his face coated in anger, which he quickly wiped away when he saw her looking. She had a feeling the anger wasnât directed at her.
âSo yes then,â he said after a moment, swinging her backpack off his arm to hand to her. The slight contact with his skin made her shiver. âI suppose Iâm your chauffeur.â
If only he was just that.
-------
The bank was crowded for a Tuesday afternoon, but Aelin didnât let the chaos dissuade her, charging forward to get her place in the line. Sheâd left Elia with Rowan, wanting to let her nap, and while she was a bit hesitant about it, she trusted him. And it was only for twenty minutes max; she wasnât letting this stop take any longer than it needed to.
By the time it was her turn, Aelin was fidgeting where she stood, frustrated with the lack of urgency. When a worker freed up, she walked quickly up to them, plastering a quick smile on her face as she set the envelope of cash down.
âCan I deposit this, please?â She asked, using manners but conveying her urgency. The lady behind the glass smacked her gum as she took it, typing something on her computer before looking back up, her glasses falling down her nose.
âYour name?â She drawled.
âAelin Galathynius,â she answered, tapping her fingers on the counter. âI have a checking account opened with this bank.â
âFill this out,â the lady said, sliding her a deposit slip. âAnd maybe next time consider an ATM, okay sweetie?â She added, condescendingly, and Aelin bristled.
âThatâs not all Iâm here for,â she replied tersely, filling out the slip with a tense flourish.
âOh?â The lady asked sarcastically, boredom clear across all of her features. She wasnât even looking at Aelin anymore, clicking at something idly on her computer.
âYes.â Aelin tapped the counter again, louder this time to get her attention. She wasnât putting up with anyoneâs bullshit. âI wanted to see if thereâs been any suspicious activity on my account.â
âHas there been any indication?â The lady sighed, fixing her glasses.
âNo, but I have reason to believe my accountâs been hacked.â
âOh really?â The lady huffed under her breath. âCan I get your account number?â Aelin said it, waiting semi patiently as the bank worker pulled up her account on her computer. She hummed a bit as she scrolled through, and Aelin was indignant at the nonchalance. âEverything looks normal. Did you get the second card you requested?â
âYeah, it says here you requested a second card be linked to your checking account. It got sent out the other day.â The lady scoffed derisively. âAnd it seems like you just want to waste my time. You used an ATM this morning.â
âNo I didnât,â Aelin replied, âI didnât do either of those things.â Fuck.
âYou didnât deposit five thousand dollars at the atm on the corner of Oak and Walker this morning at 9:35?â Aelin choked, at the amount and the location. It was the atm nearest to Mistward.
âI did not,â she managed to say, shaking her head in disbelief. She hadnât checked her account today but gods.
The lady just hummed derisively. âWell I wouldnât complain. You look like you could use it.â
Aelin didnât know what to say to that, so she just cleared her throat, trying to get a handle on what she needed to do. âCan I close that second card?â She didnât know how Arobynn had managed that, but she wasnât too surprised to be honest.
But the money⊠that wasnât a gift. It was a message with plenty of strings attached.
Look at what youâre missing, darling. Look what I can do. Donât you want more? All you have to do is come back to me.
------
By the time Aelin got done with the bank and got back outside, Elia was awake. And she wasnât in the car anymore. Instead, Rowan was holding her, standing in the afternoon air. It was cold, having finally crossed into November, but the day was unseasonably warm, and it was decently nice out.
Aelin had seen trick or treaters Halloween night, but nobody came to her crappy apartment complex to get candy, and she wasnât really in the mood anyway. Besides, Elia didnât even know what Halloween was yet, so sheâd worry about that later.
She blinked at the sight in front of her, smiling as Rowan tossed Elia into the air, hearing her precious giggle. It was only a tiny toss, but it probably felt like she was flying. Rowan laughed too, before swinging her around and pressing a smacking kiss to her forehead. Aelin was going to combust.
And then he pretended to drop her, making the little girl shriek with delight. His radiant smile softened when his eyes landed on her. âHey,â he said, âI hope you donât mind. She woke up and was fussing, so I took her out for a little stroll.â
Aelin walked over to them, boots crunching on the icy sidewalk. âYou managed to calm this hellion? How could I be mad?â She teased.
âMama!â Elia said, waving her arms, and Aelin took her from Rowan, hugging her daughter close. Elia snuggled into her jacket, blinking her matching turquoise eyes.
âGot everything you needed?â Rowan asked her as they headed back toward the car, and she nodded.
âJust a few things for my rent payment I needed to sort out,â she replied, omitting a few details. At Aelinâs behest, theyâd canceled the other card, and placed her account on high alert, tracking any sudden changes more carefully. Though she was sure Arobynn could easily find a way around it; she just wanted to make it as hard as she could. âIt needed to be done.â
âGood to get it out of the way now,â Rowan said, shrugging with his hands in his pockets. âThat means youâre free for dinner.â
âDinner, hm?â Aelin asked nonchalantly, shifting Elia to open the car door. âAnd what makes you think I want to go to dinner with you?â
Rowan chuckled lightly, smirking as he opened his own door, letting her pass as she walked to her side after buckling in her daughter. âWell, you get my lovely company,â his deep voice rumbled sarcastically and she raised her brows as she slid into her own seat.
âIâm not convinced,â she said mockingly, âwhat else do you have to offer?â
Rowan lifted his arm to put behind her headrest, looking over his shoulder to back out of the space, and she clenched her legs together. Damn, what was it about that made men look so sexy?
When he straightened, none the wiser to her lecherous thoughts, he tapped his fingers on the steering wheel. âYou drive a hard bargain,â he said, shaking his head, âbut I suppose I can offer you food.â
âFood at dinner?â She widened her eyes. âWow, well I have to accept now.â They exchanged a smile and she relaxed back into her seat. It was just so easy, being with him. She wanted to stay like this forever.
-----
It required some digging through stuff Aelin didnât even remember having, but eventually she found the journal. It was a soft cover notebook with beautiful falling autumn leaves, looking like little streaks of fire.
It was unused.
Well, practically. A few pages in the front were filled from when she was still at the shelter, but she hadnât kept up with it.
Grabbing a pen, she opened the journal, hearing the long since touched pages crinkle as she flipped to a new page, smoothing it out. Elia was asleep, so there was nothing else for her to do but stare at the white paper until she thought of something to say. There was no desk in her room, so she was just curled up on the carpet, one low light on with her hair pulled up into a loose bun. She was ready for sleep, she just - needed to do this first.
Yrene used to encourage just writing the flow of what her thoughts were telling her, not necessarily holding herself to a specific prompt, but there was a prompt if she needed one. Journaling was supposed to help her process what happened, to help her sort through her thoughts, but Aelin had had a block ever since sheâd been out on her own.
Sheâd shoved it all down apparently, instead of sifting through it, but Aelin didnât know how to sift through it without having a complete breakdown. Which she couldnât afford.
But she could do this; she was just letting everything through on a very tight leash, like a dam with a small leak instead of bursting altogether. So, she put her pen to the page.
3 specific controlling behaviors he exhibited
2 reasons why she left
1 thing better about her life now
A breath escaped her. She could do this.
3. Dictating what I wear, calling me trashy or a slut or whorish if he didnât like what I picked
2. Gaslighting me into thinking everything was my fault, that him hurting me was my fault
1.Coercing me to sign over my parentsâ company to him