Notes: All I can do is write modern AU lately, so here is the first part of The Girl (see here for the prologue). Forgive me of any typos - I've glanced over it but I just wanted to get this out. Enjoy!
Part One: Nesta
It can’t be happening. That’s Nesta’s first thought as she sits at the large mahogany dining table at her sister’s birthday dinner and watches a man that’s horribly familiar duck beneath the doorframe. Yet… it’s undeniable. Same broad frame, same leather jacket, same rugged features. Same tattoos peeking over his collar and licking up his neck. Same shoulder-length black hair scraped back into a haphazard knot.
Nesta manages to stop the shock that seizes her, catching it before it ever makes its way onto her expression. But the man isn’t as successful. It’s only a heartbeat, but it’s there as he sits down at the table, looks up as he’s mid-way between tucking in his chair and see’s… her. The girl he fucked on his sofa only two days prior.
Then the shock and recognition is gone as swiftly as it arrived and that questionable beat where Nesta thinks she’s well and truly foiled vanishes.
It seems it’s not only her that wears masks.
They go through the necessary motions. The cordial civility Nesta despises. They pretend they have never met and Nesta tries not to flinch in surprise when he suddenly extends his hand to her over the table.
It’s an offering. It’s a ruse that Nesta is adamant on keeping.
So, she reaches across the table and clasps the same calloused hand that had cupped her ass a few nights before - as if they’re in some Cauldron-damn business meeting.
She tries not to remember that night the moment they touch. The molten heat that had burned between them. The way it had licked up her spine, all consuming.
“Nesta.” The man repeats after her slowly, as if he’s trying her name out on his tongue. Savouring it. His voice is so deep that it’s a delicious scrape across her skin and his eyes are a pool of hazel as he meets her gaze full on, unflinching - an amalgamation of brown, grey, green and gold. “I’ve not heard that name before.”
Nesta resists the urge to snap her hand back into her lap. Instead, she moves with careful deliberation. Tells him with an empty politeness that she hopes conveys that she's not a conversationalist and never will be, “It means fire.”
That, she knows, he believes.
It’s only when Nesta pulls on her coat in the hallway of the house that Feyre shares with her fiancé Rhysand, that Nesta senses that their game of pretence is over.
His footsteps are barely detectable against the hardwood floor but there’s something that tells her that he’s near. A presence that’s carved out its own space in the small hallway, seeping into the woodwork, her pores. A caress at the back of her neck. Against her skin.
And somehow she knows that he’s leaning against the doorframe, waiting, watching. Even so, she makes a point of doing up the buttons of her coat as if she’s none the wiser. Pulls her hair out from under the material and winds a scarf around her neck.
Because never again does she want to be prey.
“We’ve never met,” she announces crisply when she’s finished, cleaving back the control she desperately needs before he tries to wrangle it from her.
She doesn’t turn. Doesn’t give any indication that he’s worth her time. When Nesta started sleeping around she learnt quickly that unapologetic directness was the best approach.
After all, Nesta doesn’t pick her men out at bars with repeat sessions in mind. And, in this case, it’s vital that Nesta sets the scene and lays the foundations.
The man - Cassian - is leaning against the doorframe, larger than life and observing her in a way that is also unapologetic. It’s not leering. It’s not overtly sexual (although Nesta knows that the attraction is there as surely as she knows her heart is beating). But it’s the sort of stare that burrows into you, deeper and deeper, as if it’s trying to get to the core of you and figure you out.
And when Cassian’s eyes glint, Nesta thinks he actually might have done it. Unlocked every iron-barred gate inside of her and found out every horrible truth.
“Don’t worry, sweetheart. I’ll keep our dirty little secret.”
That’s all Nesta needs to hear. She ignores the way his voice has taken an even deeper turn than earlier. That the mere sound of it has stirred something inside of her, something that has long been sleeping.
Instead, she yanks open the front door and steps outside. The cold is like a slap to the face but she’s done here. She needs to go home. Needs a drink.
When Cassian dares to follow her out, Nesta pins him with a glare that should be like a dagger to the chest. But Cassian simply watches her, completely unbothered by the demeanour that usually has others scarpering with their tails between their legs.
She makes a point of raking her eyes from top to toe, scrutinising every wild inch of him, before she snares his gaze. “In case you hadn’t realised, we’re done here.”
Still, he watches her. Studying her, his gaze so astute that Nesta feels vulnerable.
And she hates it, detests it—
“I need to talk to you.”
Nesta actually snorts. The huff of breath comes out like steam, like she’s a dragon breathing a fire the colour of ice. “We fucked once. A five minute fumble does not requires us to talk.”
She starts walking. Her feet crunch on the gravel drive and for a moment all she feels is how cold she is. But then fingers are closing around her wrist and she’s not yanked backwards, exactly, but she’s forced to stop.
And that’s when her instincts kick in. There is no mask, no control of her expression or her body language as she jolts away from him like a mare that refuses to be reigned in.
When she’s free, she whirls on him. And despite the freezing wind biting into her limbs, Nesta is burning so fiercely she could kill. “Do not touch me,” she hisses.
It amazes her how quickly he backs off, the surprise clear on his face. And then, in his eyes, something knowing. As if he understands.
It makes Nesta want to run so badly but it’s too late. It’s happening: the constricted breath, the lump in her throat that’s clamped over her airways. The thing that has been happening so frequently recently that Nesta often finds it hard to leave the house.
He must see the sudden panic in her eyes, because he takes another deliberate step away from her, granting her space - air - so she can breathe.
It takes too long for her lungs to kick back into action. For her heart to start thudding again. Her breath shudders in, in, in, until her chest has so much oxygen her skin wants to crack.
Nesta isn’t sure how long they stand there, her desperately trying to control her breath in a way that appears inconspicuous whilst he stands by, knowing.
If Nesta was alone, she would sink to the floor and bury her head between her legs, curling in on herself, turning inwards until all she is is breath. But Nesta is not alone. So, she just tries to focus on the oxygen coming into her lungs, tries to make it measured and slow, all the while she wants to scream at him to disappear.
It takes everything she’s got to try and insert venom into her voice, but it just comes out weak - like a betrayal. “You’re still here.”
“On the couch,” he says quietly, slowly, as if she’s an animal in the underbrush about to scarper from a predator. “We didn’t use anything.”
Nesta knows she needs to claw back some control. She needs to say something cutting, but she still can’t think of anything besides getting air in her lungs in a way that doesn’t make it obvious that she’s struggling to breathe. “I take birth control.”
“Ok.”
She meets his eyes. “There won’t be a repeat.”
Cassian’s scar-slashed eyebrow cocks upwards and Nesta has the distinct impression he would be amused if it isn’t for the way that he’s studying her, concern tight across his brow. “There won’t?”
“There won’t,” she confirms.
The breathing gets easier, slowly, painfully. It’s no longer desperate to shudder in and out. Nesta is so busy focussing on her breath that she almost forgets where she is, until Cassian asks, “And does that extend beyond the couch to other locations, too?”
Nesta feels her eyes ignite into silver blue flames and suddenly she’s not thinking about breathing at all. “It does.”
“That’s a pity.”
Nesta actually snorts again. “For you, it is,” she says, as if the sex hadn’t been good for her.
Lies, all lies.
Nesta turns, walks away.
Does not turn back, even when Cassian calls after her, his voice somehow both rough and soft - and a little bit broken. “See you around, Nesta.”
***
They see each other around more than Nesta would have liked.
Yet, for the first time in years, Nesta continues to try with her sisters. She tries, even as on the inside she drowns in oily waters she can’t share with anyone. Because how do you admit to your former estranged sisters that they were right all along when you can’t even admit it out loud to yourself? But Nesta knows. She knows that she’s so broken she doesn’t know how to move forward any more. Sometimes, Nesta sits in her apartment on her beat up sofa and stares at a wall for hours with nothing going through her brain. Just this dead emptiness, this numbness that she can’t control.
More often than not, Nesta does not write. She ignores her agents calls. She ignores her deadlines. Because there’s nothing there. Nothing in her head apart from a depthless void that she doesn’t want to get rid of. Because when it disappears, unbidden and without warning, the cyclone of her thoughts, the intense, aching sadness she wakes up with every morning is all too much all too quickly.
Drinking helps keep the void.
And that’s how Nesta finds herself at the same bar that she’d first met Cassian. Rita’s, it turns out, is the brothers local. And on Friday evenings there’s an open invitation.
The air is sticky with sweat when Nesta arrives and the scent of sugar, tequila, wood and hops turns her stomach. She’s already a bottle of wine down but she has no plans to stop. The last week has been particularly rough. Tonight’s shower was the equivalent of climbing a mountain, getting dressed even more so, but she’s here and she’s got that pleasant tingling numb that fills her with a spiky personality that usually takes far too much effort to conjure.
She’s only there a total of five minutes when Cassian approaches her at the bar. Nesta knows it’s him immediately. Not just because of the hands that rest against the sticky wooden counter, but because she can smell him: pine and fresh air and musk. A pleasant distraction from the general odour of the place.
For the most part, Nesta ignores Cassian when they see one another.
But sometimes, she can’t.
“Hello, Nes.”
The sound of his voice has something sitting up inside of her. Something that scarcely makes an appearance these days - an interest, a feeling that doesn’t feel terrifying but exciting.
Mastering her voice, Nesta feigns indifference. “Hello brute.”
It’s pure instinct that tells Nesta that Cassian is studying her in that surprisingly quiet way he’s prone to. Nesta ignored it. Pretends to study the wine in the fridge behind the bar.
“You’re looking as devastating as ever.”
Slowly, Nesta turns her head.
Cassian is propped up against the bar on one elbow, but he still towers above her: all dark and dangerous with the cocky grin that’s only for her. Today, his hair is tousled half up and it makes her want to do things to him. She’s never felt this attraction to someone before, this delicious and devastating pull.
She tucks away the sensation, pushing it down, down, down, and pretends that she didn’t choose this particular outfit with the pure intention of flooring him. “Didn’t find it in yourself to brush your hair?”
Cassian’s slow-spreading grin is wolfish and delighted. It didn’t take Nesta long to realise that whilst others found her thorny and disagreeable, Cassian relishes what she throws into the ring.
He understands that it’s more play than spite.
Cassian doesn't lean forward, doesn't move into her space at all, yet when he speaks it's as if he’s imparting with a secret. “Admit you like it this way, Nesta.”
She does like it this way, but Nesta only wrinkles her nose. “I like my men well-groomed.”
“No,” Cassian says, tapping the table to the beat of the music with one tan finger as if he’s distracted, “you don’t.”
Boldened by the alcohol buzzing through her veins, Nesta asks, “Are you here to buy me a drink?”
But he throws her question back at her. “Are you buying me one?”
“That depends,” Nesta replies, cocking her head so her long hair falls over her shoulder, “on whether you plan on leaving me alone afterwards.”
Cassian does leave her alone afterwards, and the relief that floods her is mixed with regret.
Nesta spends the majority of her evening on the dance floor with Elain whilst Feyre hangs out with the dark-haired men in the corner. She drinks too much, until she doesn’t feel anything anymore and everything is numb - just the way she likes it.
When she’s like this, men don’t scare her.
When she’s like this, she feels powerful.
Unstoppable.
When Nesta’s will finally breaks and she allows herself to glance Cassian’s way, she finds him leaning against the metal bar that partitions off the dance floor, talking to a long-legged girl with long braids that swing in time with her hips.
Nesta makes a point of leaving with someone else. As she exits the club, a well-groomed man trotting after her like some lovesick puppy, she feels Cassian’s dark eyes razor sharp on her back.
This time, she doesn’t bother taking the man home. She makes him take her against the wall in a dirty alleyway, her stomach turning at the soft fingers, the smooth shaven face, the overpowering scent of aftershave. He moans and praises but he doesn’t know how to please her and Nesta can’t find it in herself to take what she needs.
So, she lets the pebbledash of the wall bite and scratch at her back until she’s sure she’s bleeding with it.
Holds onto that pain as she turns her head away from him, closes her eyes and waits for it to be over.
Notes: This fic is for my dear @bookstantrash as a very belated Secret Santa gift. I hope you enjoy this future Nessian one-shot. Sorry about the angst, but I hope there's enough Nessian goodness to make you happy <3 (sorry for any typos!)
Dinner conversation
“Your hair looks nice.”
The compliment was squeezed out around a mouthful of dinner and Nesta caught an eyeful of chicken and potatoes and something green, which if Nesta had to hazard a guess, might be the peas garnished with the fresh mint from Elain’s garden.
Setting her glass neatly down at the top of her plate, Nesta watched Amren wrinkle her nose in disgust.
It was, if Nesta was being honest, right on cue.
It didn’t matter how much time passed. Nesta knew these gatherings like the back of her hand - better than the most predictable storyline of her romance novels. The wine would be free-flowing, Mor would predictably showcase bad dining room manners, Amren would get haughty and pick at her food, Cassian would usually say something uncouth just to fan the flames and Elain would try to diffuse the situation—
“It does looks lovely,” Elain piped up unsurprisingly from beside Nesta - just as Cassian opened his mouth.
“It does,” Feyre agreed readily from across the table. Blue-grey eyes that were identical to Nesta’s twinkled at the affronted look on Cassian’s face. “The looser style suits you.”
It was for the first time in a while that they had all come together at Feyre and Rhys’s river estate. The past few months had been busy: December might have been closing in, the festive lights strung and twinkling around the city of Velaris, but their duties remained—and they were more pressing than ever.
But Mor had finally arrived back from overseas, Azriel was in Velaris rather than spying on territories, and Nesta and Cassian were back from Illyria after a month long stretch that had consisted of whipping winds, snow-capped mountains and frost-kissed pine trees.
So, here they all were, around the large wooden dining table, platters of simple food laid out courtesy of Nuala, Cerridwen and Elain: saffron roast chicken, herb potatoes, minted peas, green beans with a garlic bread crumb and other simple fare that was either grown in Elain’s generous vegetable patch or sourced locally elsewhere.
And, as always, everything was running exactly to schedule.
Picking up her cutlery, Nesta cut into her chicken with slow, well-practiced deliberation. “Thank you,” she said simply.
This time, Mor had the audacity to swallow before she spoke - but as ever, she never knew when to cease talking. “It’s the looser style,” she explained animatedly, gesturing with her fork around her own head despite her loose blonde tresses. “Much more…”
Mor trailed off with an abruptness at the sight of Nesta’s arched eyebrow.
“Relaxed,” Mor finished with a sheepish smile and the sight of it had a smile of Nesta’s own threatening to tick at the corner of her lips. “You look more relaxed. Less ready for battle.”
It was not a lie. Rather than her usual tight coronet, Nesta’s hair was swept back in a simple braid which weaved from her hairline all the way over her shoulder. It was not a hairstyle that Nesta adorned in the sparring ring - or in everyday life - but she had found that she was rather taken with it. And given that Nesta could no longer find it in herself to tackle the stairs that climbed to the training grounds atop the House of Wind - nor attempt to squeeze into her tight-fitting leathers - Nesta supposed it really didn’t matter that she wasn’t ready to clash swords with Gwyn or Emerie or a certain General of the Night Court’s armies.
The thought of Nesta’s mate was surely some sort of summoning, because a plate of potatoes materialised in front of her, balanced by a familiar scar-flecked hand encased in leather.
Black hair wild from the wind tearing around the mountain peaks during their fly down to the river estate and hazel eyes that glinted with a shard of a shared secret, Cassian blessed Nesta with a grin that was so wide his canines flashed.
And it was a rare thing to see a true smile from him these days, that Nesta found herself playing along.
“Stop,” she ordered him shortly, because she knew how much it delighted him when she bit at him. She snatched the plate of potatoes from him without further comment and ignored the way Cassian smirked at her, at the way his eyes had begun to glow at the presence of her fire.
Slowly, she piled some potatoes onto her plate. Patiently, she waited. Because just like Nesta knew how these gatherings played out, she also knew her mate.
“I did it.”
The words spilled out of Cassian as if he couldn’t stop them—and Nesta largely suspected that he couldn’t.
She rolled her eyes, but the gesture was fond, a front of long suffering rather than the truth of one. A smile finally escaped her grasp and Nesta let it lie across her face, let it linger so everyone could see it rather than tucking it away. She had long said goodbye to her reputation as a heartless ice queen. Nesta was still fierce, still fire made flesh with power at her fingertips and a sword strapped down her spine, but she could be something other than that, too. In the years that had passed since Nyx had dramatically arrived into the world, Nesta had slowly unpicked the habits of a lifetime, until she could show happiness without fearing the repercussions for revealing the chink in her armour. Here, she was not being judged. Here, she had learned to simply be.
Nesta watched Mor’s jaw drop. Her disbelieving chocolate brown eyes flitted from her friend to Nesta and back again. “You did not.”
Cassian leant back into his chair and crossed his arms smugly across his chest: the picture of self-congratulated arrogance. “I certainly did.”
At Mor’s long look, Cassian’s bravado slipped slightly and his eyes cut to Nesta’s for validation in tandem with everyone else. “Tell them, sweetheart.”
Nesta took her time helping herself to an extra portion of lemon and thyme roast chicken, but in the end, she couldn’t deny the truth. “He did,” she admitted, but Nesta was too intent in tucking into her food to actually observe the expectant faces. Her bump might be big, their unborn babe pressing into her stomach and limiting the amount she could eat, but she was determined to damn well try.
“It’s good practice,” Cassian continued, and Nesta did look up then because she could sense in the careful way he spoke—with such pride and reserved excitement—that his smile would be a blessing—a ray of sunshine piercing through storm clouds. It made Nesta’s heart clench into a fist when she saw it, squeezing, squeezing—
“For?” Mor asked obliviously, but Feyre was already looking at Nesta, her eyes wide and shining. Elain grappled for Nesta’s hand under the table, her slim fingers vice in their grip as they fastened around her own.
“For when I need to plait our little girl’s hair.”
A high pitched squeak sounded. Wine sloshed out of Mor’s wine glass as she brought it down onto the table with a delighted clatter. Azriel’s shadows completely cleared from his body and he was so light Nesta thought his skin looked porcelain.
Rhys clapped a hand hard on his son’s shoulder, but he was grinning and so was Nyx. Nesta’s nephew’s violet eyes were bright, his dark hair ruffled as he asked softly, “A girl?”
“I’m going to have two Valkyries,” Cassian confirmed. He was still beaming as he leant back even further into his chair. The wing that was always curled protectively around Nesta’s back brushed her shoulder as he leant over to press a kiss to her cheek. And he was so happy in that moment—and Nesta was so happy, too—that she returned it in full.
“It’s a girl,” Nesta confirmed, before she gestured in the direction of her head. “And this buffoon is resolute on learning to plait hair before she comes out of the womb.”
Cassian’s laugh was dark, like the delicious scrape of stubble against bare skin. “That and you’re too tired to braid your hair in the mirror.”
“It might also be that,” Nesta admitted.
Recently, she’d barely had the energy to do anything. During their time in Windhaven, Nesta had spent her time curled up with Emerie and Gwyn in their cosy bungalow: a book in hand, a fire crackling in the hearth and a cup of herbal tea.
Amren leant forwards, her smoky irises alive with what Nesta knew to be genuine and wicked delight. “Congratulations girl. We could do with more females in our cohort.” She looked pointedly at Cassian and back again. “Perhaps it might even out the egos of these dogs.”
Rhys let out a cough that Nesta was certain disguised a laugh but Cassian just tossed Amren a grin that bared all of his teeth.
“So, you decided to find out the sex,” Elain asked softly, expertly refocussing the conversation.
“Yes,” Nesta replied simply.
“And you’re both healthy?” Feyre pressed.
Beside Nesta, Cassian tensed. Nesta felt it not just in her mate’s body, but in the air around them. In the way that the bond between them pulled taut before it froze.
She sent a heat-kissed wave of her fire magic in an attempt to thaw it. Internally, nothing happened. The only response was Cassian’s wing. It curved tighter around her shoulder, instinctively drawing her into his body.
Nesta couldn’t find it in herself to snap at him. Instead, she ignored the iron stature of her mate - and the way she was all but crushed uncomfortably into his side - and commanded her body to weave the illusion of calm.
“Madja says she’s growing nicely,” Nesta replied as she subtly shifted in her chair until Cassian loosened his hold. She set herself back to the task of primly spearing some green beans onto her fork.
“I’m so pleased,” Feyre told Nesta earnestly and Nesta dipped her chin in acknowledgement, because she knew it to be true. Nobody was going to forget Feyre’s birth in a hurry. Even now, just the thought of it transported Nesta there, to that moment she watched her sister die, the sharp metallic tang of blood all around them.
“Me too,” Nesta agreed. And then, because she wanted nothing more than to rope Cassian back into the conversation, she added, “Madja says her wings are bigger than average.”
There was an expectant pause in which everyone looked to Cassian - waiting for him to boast about his daughter’s wingspan - but nothing came. He just smiled so tightly it became a grimace and clasped a rough-skinned palm around the nape of Nesta’s neck. It seemed that the subject of the healer - and the reminder of his daughter’s wings - had muted Cassian’s momentary joy.
Whilst Nesta had experienced first-hand the anamatical change in her body that allowed her to accommodate Illyrian wings, Cassian had not. And Nesta knew that it was a worry that didn’t just plague him but terrorise him. In the first six months of her pregnancy, Nesta would turn over in the middle of the night, her hips aching, her back stiff, to find Cassian lying awake, watching her.
It had taken months for Cassian to admit what he was terrified of.
So, Nesta had taken to visiting Madja with Cassian more frequently than her pregnancy required. The old wispy haired healer was always thorough, happy to answer any of their questions. She never seemed to mind that Cassian needed reassuring every visit that everything was looking good. That the wings wouldn’t cause any complications.
Today, Cassian’s anxieties had been particularly bad. Nesta had known it the moment they’d woken. Could tell by the bruised shadows beneath his eyes, the way he’d insisted that the House let him make Nesta a cup of peppermint tea, rather than the other way around.
Madja had sensed it, too, and had instructed Cassian on how to use one of her instruments until they could hear their youngling’s heartbeat in their ears.
It had been slow and steady—reassuring and so beautifully full of life. But Nesta knew that no amount of reassuring would stop Cassian worrying that something might happen to her. And Nesta couldn’t blame her mate for that, because if things were the other way around, she’d be the exact same.
“I felt the change in my body after you Made me,” Feyre said quietly in lieu of the silence that had fallen around the dining table. “I felt… so new and certain. Like my body had been widened and reformed—just slightly. I could feel the imprint of the magic—this silver kiss. A gift from you and the Mother.”
Her sister’s eyes were discerning. She had been looking at Cassian rather than Nesta, but now Feyre’s eyes slid to Nesta’s. As they always were when they spoke of her birth, they were brimming with gratitude.
Nesta knew if Nyx had still been little, Feyre would have pulled him into her lap and held him tight. Would have kissed the crown of his dark haired head. But her son was a hundred and fifty years old and was well past the age of being coddled.
But Nyx seemed to know what his mother needed. He reached for his mother’s hand and squeezed.
The touch of Elain’s palm resting lightly against Nesta’s stomach snagged her focus away from Feyre’s watery smile. At the beginning of Nesta’s pregnancy, Nesta would have wanted nothing more than to bat her sister away. But now she recognised the gesture as love and affection for their unborn, so she only leant back to give Elain better access.
“What are you going to call her?” Elain asked, her voice slightly hushed by the veil of honey brown hair that had fallen across her face. "Do you have any ideas?”
“Yes,” Nesta said - at the same time that Cassian answered, “Maybe.”
Mor straightened hopefully and the gesture was a little too much, a little too staged as she asked brightly, “Is it Morrigan?”
It worked. Cassian screwed up his face over a mouthful of wine. “A dreadful name.”
Mor simply stuck her red-stained tongue out at him.
“We haven’t decided yet,” Cassian supplied after a too long pause.
It was a lie. In the heart of Windhaven, with the wind battering at the windows of their bungalow bedroom, they had both been in agreement - unanimous agreement.
“Well, I’m sure whatever you choose will suit the babe wonderfully,” Elain reassured them.
“I’m curious,” Azriel intoned, pitching in for the first time that night and Nesta knew that it was because the Shadowsinger’s shadows were whispering in his ear about the posture of his brother - the tension. “How many names are there for the word terror?”
Amren’s cackle sounded like the continual crack of a whip. “The two of you look so indignant, but with Nesta’s fire and this dog’s mischievous arrogance that youngling is going to be the equivalent of satan.”
“Ohh,” Mor cooed delightedly as she clapped her hands together. “Is that the name? I love it.”
“Ha ha,” Cassian drawled, but Nesta noticed his wings were no longer drawn in tight. The tautness in his shoulder had unspooled. “We intended for the lot of you to be guardians but now you can think twice.”
“I didn’t say the babe would be satan,” Nyx informed Nesta with his usual calm sobriety as everyone else broke out in argument. He drummed a long finger on the the leather-bound book that lay beside his empty plate. “Do I still get to be a guardian?”
“Of course,” Nesta told her nephew brusquely. She nudged her plate towards him. She was suddenly obscenely full, the babe clearly having shifted to press against her stomach, and Nyx took after his uncle in the way that he ate every meal as if it was his last. “You were my first choice anyway.”
One corner of Nyx’s mouth inched upwards. Beneath the stubble, Nesta could still find the trace of the impish dimple that Nesta had so loved when he was a youngling. Feyre and Rhys’ son might technically be an adult now, but to Nesta, he would always be the nephew that had curled up in her lap, a blanket in hand, a thumb in mouth, as Nesta read him a bedtime story.
“Well,” Rhys announced, “satan or not, I think a toast is in order.”
When the High Lord of the Night Court raised his glass, the red wine in it deeper than the rubies on the backs of Cassian’s hands, everyone did the same.
“To Cassian’s braiding skills,” he announced and a mixture of laughter and protestation followed.
***
“You still like the name?”
The deep rumble of Cassian’s voice tickled Nesta’s ear. They had retired back to the House swiftly after dinner - most likely, Nesta suspected, because Cassian had detected the warm lap of exhaustion that had travelled down her end of the bond.
So, they’d left their friends and family around the living room fire and braved the short flight in the chilling wind. Below them, the Sidra had been a winding ribbon and above them, the brightest star in the sky had guided them back to the House.
Now, in their bedroom, Nesta lifted her eyes to study her mate’s reflection in the vanity mirror.
In the soft faelight, his features were darker then ever; his hair pitch black, his eyes not only drawing in the shadows around him, but anything he looked at - as if he were a magnet and the world gravitated towards him, Nesta included.
Slowly, Nesta set down the hairbrush she’d been waiting to use. “I suggested it, didn’t I?”
The fingers that were gently combing through her hair didn’t cease. Instead, they continued to blindly untangle her braid as his eyes fastened on hers. “You did.”
For a few heartbeats, neither of them spoke. They simply stared at one another and Nesta let her entire being tunnel towards the depths of his stare - where Nesta knew a name existed, as precious as a pearl.
“I love the name,” Nesta assured Cassian, her voice dropping into a hushed whisper that was only for them. “Would you rather we chose something different?”
Cassian swallowed and Nesta tracked the movement. Catalogued the way his throat bobbed. “No. It’s precious to me.”
“I know,” she replied simply and stood so she could cup Cassian’s face in her hands. His stubble scratched against her calloused palms and her belly pressed too tightly against his muscled one, but Nesta revelled in the warmth of him - the sensation of being home. “It’s precious to me, too.”
In truth, picking a name for their unborn youngling had been one of the easiest choices Nesta had ever made. And in a life whose early years had been dictated by a complete lack of control, it had felt like soaring to feel both so free and so aligned with her mate’s thoughts.
When Nesta had suggested it, Cassian’s eyes had rippled and shone so fiercely Nesta’s eyes had burned. Beloved - that was what the name meant. But it was also the Illyrian name for the brightest star in the sky.
“Carina,” Cassian said aloud, speaking the name that he rarely allowed the world to hear, but one Nesta knew he thought of every day.
To him, Nesta knew that the name evoked memories of his childhood. Of meagre campfires and a lilting voice. Of dark hair brushing over his shoulder as his mother pressed her chapped lips against his cheek.
They were bittersweet and incomplete memories. Cassian had once told Nesta that trying to remember his mother was like trying to close a fist around fog: when you tried to clench it, it only scattered like dust, disembodied.
And it seemed right to Nesta - when they had never found Cassian’s mother’s body to give her a proper burial - that they could remember her this way. In a way that was both physical and so full of life.
When Nesta ran a thumb over her mate’s cheek, Nesta felt the comfort of her gesture down the bond. Cassian’s large palm came to rest over her hand, holding her to him as he leant into her touch.
His breath was hot but steady, whispering over her skin, and as Nesta smiled up at him she watched his features slowly relax - until his expression was hopeful, calm, happy.
“It’s decided then,” she announced, reaching up on tiptoes as she spoke.
Cassian’s quiet laugh whispered between them at her feeble attempt to raise herself to his height.
Large hands settled on her hips, anchoring her to him.
“Carina,” Nesta said - rolling the weight of the name around her tongue, the promise of it - before she threaded her fingers through the tangles of her mate’s hair and sealed the name with a kiss.
Summary: Nesta and Cassian start meeting at the coffee shop, but on a Friday night at Rita's, Nesta is someone else. After all, old habits die hard.
Notes: Hi! I loveddddd writing this chapter and I hope you guys enjoy it too. I know you've all been keen for more Nesta and Cassian interaction and you absolutely get it in this one… The pain is still there, though, sorry not sorry (but also it's me, what do you really expect?) Let me know what you guys think! I really hope you enjoy it :)
Part Three: Cassian
Cassian doesn’t forget his phone charger next time.
He materialises in front of her early one afternoon, all broad shoulders and windswept hair, half of which brushes his shoulders, the other half tangled into a top knot. He waves a hand in front of her face in a way that’s only mildly irritating.
Nesta yanks off her headphones, stifling a frown as the noise of the coffee shop slams back into her. “What?”
It comes across with a little too much bite and Nesta wishes she could turn back time, force the hands of the clock back a few seconds and try again. But like always, Cassian just sends her that characteristic crooked smile.“What are you drinking?”
Nesta frowns down at her empty cup, the grains of tea leaf at the bottom. “Earl grey and oat.”
Cassian simply nods. Nesta tracks him as he head to the counter. Watches him pay with his phone.
When he comes back over, he simply pushes her tea and a mass of sugar packets across the table. She nods, headphones still on, and he doesn’t bother her. Merely settles down opposite, takes out his own laptop, his own headphones, and starts tapping away.
Together, they work in silence. And when the hours have passed and Nesta closes her laptop screen with a sigh that she wishes hadn’t been so audible, Cassian follows her lead.
This time it’s not raining. The sky has darkened to an indigo clotted with sooty clouds that Nesta thinks is kind of beautiful, kind of moody. It’s the sort of sky she’d write about. The sort of sky that, if she was alone, she’d snap a photo of so she can describe it in vivid detail in the next appropriate book scene.
But she’s with Cassian, so she doesn’t do any of that.
“Do you want me to walk you back?”
She does, desperately. Not for his company, but for the safety he brings.
“If you like.”
“I haven’t seen you here in a while.”
Nesta shrugs her laptop bag higher up onto her shoulder and then loops it over her head so it crosses over her chest. The scabs on her back from her midnight tryst have long since healed. “I don’t come here every day.”
Shoving his hands in his pockets, Cassian hunches over at the cold. Even so, he still seems larger than life when he glances sideways at her. “You write at home?”
Nesta shrugs noncommittally, not wanting to explain that she doesn’t truly write anymore, and Cassian clearly has enough sense not to pursue the conversation.
“I finished Epiphany last week.”
Because Nesta doesn’t know what to say, what to do when anyone confesses they’ve read one of her books - not least Cassian - she just dips her chin. Stares straight ahead at the lamplight pooling on the street.
“It’s my favourite.”
Now, Nesta does turn her head. Examines him, head cocked. Epiphany is notoriously known as her ‘second book’. The book that’s not as good as the first, not as sharp. “Why?”
Again, it comes across too blunt, but Cassian just lifts a shoulder as if he’s searching for the words.“I don’t know. Elodie’s tussle with identity resonated with me, I guess. I’ve spent so much of my life just existing without knowing who I am and I only realised it a few years ago.”
Nesta’s staring at him now, unabashed, unflinching. She can’t stop, even as Cassian keeps his gaze locked on his feet as they track their way across the pavement. “I can’t remember the exact quote. But Purdi says something like…” Cassian searches for a minute, a frown pinching at his brow, but he plunders on anyway, ‘Isn’t it weird that we’re born strangers to our own mind—“
“— People get to know us, understand us, before we even know who we are. Before we even think about it.”
Cassian looks up as she finishes the quote. And as their eyes lock, it strikes Nesta that here - this moment - is the most connected Nesta has felt to someone in a very long time, her late night rendezvous included.
“Right,” Cassian says, the knot in his throat bobbing. And Nesta knows that he’s giving away a piece of himself, something secret that he won’t get back again, a self-revelation that’s been undisclosed until now. “I don’t think it was until I got into my thirties that I realised I had no idea who I truly was, deep down, without any walls. I was just this… alien to myself.And I think you put it so poignantly. It felt like something just clicked inside of me and I was like oh shit, that’s me.”
There’s so much Nesta wants to say - so much she can’t say anything at all for a while. Until finally, “Do you know yourself now?”
“Does anyone?”
Nesta lets out a huff of a breath that says it’s a fair question. Then, “That thought came to me on a walk.”
Now, Cassian glances at her. In the fading light, his eyes are so dark yet so open. Bottomless and vast. “Oh yeh?”
Nesta nods, swallowing down the instinct to stop talking, to push down the imminent confession that wants to pour out of her. But Cassian has been so open with her and for once Nesta doesn’t want to keep things locked up, not in this moment, not during this rare moment of shared understanding. Not when Nesta feels seen for the first time in a long time.
“I’d run away to the mountains one week,” she confesses. “It rained the entire time. It was completely miserable but I didn’t care. It matched my mood - felt good even. One day I dragged myself out of the house and went for a hike. I went ambitious, too ambitious really, but I refused to admit defeat and made it up Ramiel limping and covered in blisters.”
When Nesta looks up from the pavement, Cassian is wholly focussed on her, his eyebrows raised in appreciation. “That’s quite the feat.”
Nesta snort is a dismissal. “I’m stubborn.”
“I hadn’t noticed,” Cassian comments and it’s with such deadpan that a laugh escapes Nesta without her trying to quash it down.
Cassian grin is brief and brilliant, before it falls back into something serious. “Why’d you run away, Nesta?”
“Why do you think?”
“Right.”
For a few beats, they walk in silence. But it’s not scary. It’s not tense or something that would mean to speak would be to break it. It just is; existing, quiet. So, Nesta carries on in her own time. “At the top of this mountain, I was looking out at this view and it just… it stretched out for miles and miles. And I realised how small I was, how insignificant. That I was just here in this world for a minute amount of time and I had no idea who I was - but this view made sense to me. It was so crystal clear. So profound.”
“What did you do next?”
“I had this certainty that I’d never had before and I’ve never had since. I just knew what the road ahead needed to be and I made it happen. I went back to the cabin, began the first draft of Epiphany. And then I travelled home, packed all my belongings and moved my life back to Velaris two years ago. I’m a writer, I’m not tied anywhere.”
It’s not entirely true. Nesta had been tied to Tomas. To a house, but Nesta doesn’t want to mention any of that.
“Back to your roots?”
“Back to the only roots I have - my sisters.”
Cassian’s head tilts slightly and Nesta knows what’s he’s going to say next, what he’s trying to puzzle out. “I’ve only known you for a year.”
They’ve reached Nesta’s apartment building. Nesta presses her fob against the gate pad. “It turns out finding myself wasn’t as easy as realising I had no idea who I was.”
“A couple of steps through the darkness is better than staying put.”
Nesta turns, stares at Cassian. He’s quoted directly from her book again. But all she says is, “Thanks for walking me home.”
“Nesta,” Cassian calls when the gate closes with a clang. “You’ll be at Feyre’s on Saturday?”
Again, the iron bars separate them and Nesta feels safe enough to forego the iciness, the hard-to-get brutal attitude. Instead, she’s just honest. “I don’t know.”
Again, that lopsided smile, as if Cassian knows what she’s just granted him. “I’ll bring my book for you to sign then.”
***
Together, they fall into a haphazard method of meeting one another at the coffee shop. It’s never planned. Nesta doesn’t even have Cassian’s number. But sometimes, on the days she makes herself pretend she is still a writer, when her agent is on her back again for the first draft of a manuscript she absolutely has not written, Cassian slides into the seat opposite her. Removes the bag she’s definitely not placed on the seat to save it for him just in case and places a pot of tea on the table alongside his espresso.
Together, they stare at their own screens. Tap away. Frown. Sigh. Sometimes, Cassian has meetings about complexities Nesta had no idea existed when it comes to running a gym, but it doesn’t bother her. She finds the deep timbre of his voice compliments the scores she listens to. And whilst they rarely converse, they do get up intermittently to replenish each other’s drinks.
At the end - which is only when Nesta closes her laptop with an internal sigh heavy enough to make her stomach lurch with dread - Cassian walks her home and leaves her at the gate, watching her through the bars as she makes her way safely to her apartment.
When they are at the coffee shop, they quietly exist like the silence from the other night. It’s unassuming and unrestrictive. Freeing.
But when they’re at Rita’s, they’re something else.
Nesta’s something else.
After all, old habits die hard.
When it’s Friday night and Nesta heads to the bar, she slips into a different version of herself. Someone who is starting to feel askew but so familiar and habitual after months of practice that she can’t seem to shrug them off. Nesta polishes off a bottle of wine before she gets there and doesn’t stop. Sometimes, things are so hazy the next morning, there are punctured holes in Nesta’s memory. The night before becomes flashes of bright lights and dancing bodies before they fade into writhing shadows only to do it all over again. There’s booming music that makes the floor shake, the smell of tequila that makes her stomach roil. Heavy hands on her shaking hips. A hungry mouth but no face. Panting, hot and sticky on her neck and face. Rolling hips.
Nesta always chooses a man out of the crowd and leaves with him out of principle.
After all, she doesn’t sleep with the same man twice.
Most of the time, she doesn’t remember the face of whoever she goes home with. Too often, she has no idea what she’s done until she wakes in the morning in her own bed - always in her own bed - sore and tender. Often covered in bruises the shape of fingerprints.
Rarely on those nights does she speak to Cassian beyond the necessary hello. She makes a point of not looking his way. Because at Rita’s, when Nesta is this different version of herself, she can’t deny that being around him is dangerous. At Rita’s, everything has the capability of becoming electrically charged, back to the roots of their first meeting, the ghost of their encounter. Nesta never has to search for the memory of that night. Too acutely, Nesta remembers the scratch of Cassian’s stubble against her face and neck, the coaxing demand of his mouth, his calloused palm running up the column of her throat before it twists to slide up the back of her neck and into her hair. She remembers how he tastes and the exact scent of him.
So, Nesta ignores him as best she can.
It’s the easiest thing to do. She doesn’t know how to consolidate the version of the Cassian she slept with on that Friday night to the softer version of him in the coffee shop. She knows he’s both, but she doesn’t want to unite the two. Can’t trust her gut, because when she finally let someone in before, he tore her down, brick by brick until she was nothing but rubble.
So, the drinking becomes worse. The men she sleeps with become worse. The quality of her decisions suffer in the face of temptation and Nesta knows it’s a downward spiral but also doesn’t know how to stop.
Until, finally, one night it goes too far.
Already her memory is patchy. Already, the night is like the flashing lights in the club. One moment it’s dark, the next it’s twisting bodies in blue and yellow and green. One moment she’s sitting on a jean-clad lap, a claiming sweaty palm on her inner thigh. Even in her drunk state, she recognises the gleam in the man’s blue eyes that would have anyone running the other way. Yet she leads him out the club anyway, ignoring the warning signs, too drunk to act on that niggling thought on the fuzzy edges of her mind.
But Cassian isn’t.
Nesta is so far gone that she can barely remember her own name, but the sound of his voice is enough. It has her turning and then he’s there. For the most part, he’s a blur in front of her yet there are fragments of time when he’s so sharp he’s all she can see.
“Nesta.”
Cassian doesn’t touch her but his voice in her ear is startling enough that it shocks through the alcohol in her veins, that fuzzy buzz.
The room spins, straightens. And there he is, leaning down. Cassian’s hand slips into hers so slowly, so cautiously, that Nesta doesn’t want to yank away from him. Instead, she lets herself become tethered and looks up at him to find his hazel eyes simmering.
“Let me take you home.”
It takes too long for her brain to register his words. She wants to yank her hand out of his, but she’s suddenly too unsteady on her feet. If she lets go of him, she’ll fall.
Instead, she digs her fingers deep into his jacket. Leans her head into the coolness of the dark leather. “I’m leaving.”
“You’re too drunk.”
Nesta steps back from him, wanting that distance from his accusation. But she stumbles and then Cassian’s catching her, his hands closing tightly around her as if he’s scared she might slip away.
“This isn’t part of the deal.”
It comes out slurred, pushed together, some letters out of line.
Cassian’s brow furrows. “Deal?”
“We’re not in the coffee shop. Leave me alone.”
She remembers staggering away. Remembers leaving with the guy she’s chosen for the night, whose just observing them darkly as he stubs out a cigarette with his boot.
It’s only when she’s in the alleyway pressed too hard against the wall that Nesta realises what she’s doing. That she doesn’t want this.
She tries to push the man away, but he just grunts, thinking that she’s egging him on. He smells grimy, like old sweat and grease and all Nesta can think about is that he has two fingers inside of her and his nails must be crusted with dirt.
It’s then that she starts to panic. One moment she was sure she wanted it and now she doesn’t so fiercely that terror sets in. It fills her so quickly, so fast, that she doesn’t realise she’s screaming until she’s screaming. Her lungs ragged, her voice hoarse at the same time that her chest feels like she can’t breathe. Like she can’t get enough oxygen into her lungs, as if they can’t expand properly. As if they’re not working.
Nesta doesn’t know what happens next. She thinks she pushes the man away from her with a strength she didn’t know she possessed, because she ends up falling hard. A sharp pain steals the breath from her, cutting through the alcohol and the panic, robbing her vision.
When she finally opens her eyes, the man is gone and Cassian is in front of her in a waft of leather and musk.
“Nesta,” he says. But Nesta’s vision is swimming again and whilst his mouth is moving to indicate that he’s speaking, her name comes out muffled, as if Nesta’s head is submerged under water. He’s gripping her shoulders hard, his fingers biting into her skin, his expression full of thunderous concern. And that should ground her, his worry should, but Nesta can’t think of anything but the pain and her desperation to breathe.
It’s only when Cassian’s hands move to cup her face and his thumb strokes at her cheek does Nesta realises that her vision isn’t blurry because she’s intoxicated, but because she’s crying.
“My ankle,” she manages to slur through her heaving chest. She tries to indicate where it hurts with her hands, but that only makes her realise that her panties are what caused her to fall. They’re still around her ankles from where they’d been yanked down from underneath her skin-tight dress, before she all wanted it to stop.
And that makes the breathing even harder. The reality of her circumstances even more humiliating. The understanding that she is a mess, an utter wreck, askew on the floor of a dirty alleyway, garbage on the stained concrete around her, questionable puddles and cigarette butts stuck to her soiled heels.
“It’s ok,” Cassian tells her, his voice suddenly stark and clear, but the frown on his face says otherwise. He’s still cupping her face and Nesta wants to lean into his touch because she’s so tired and he’s being so kind even though she can tell he’s furious beyond measure. “Deep breaths, Nesta. It’s going to be ok.”
“I want to go home.”
“We need someone to look at your ankle, sweetheart.”
That is absolutely not what Nesta wants. She pushes away from him with a strength that catches him off guard. But when she tries to stand, when she tries to put weight on her ankle, the sound that draws out of her comes from somewhere deep, halfway between a gasp and a cry.
The way Cassian grabs for her as she falls is not gentle. His fingers clasp her so hard she feels her skin bruise. But she’s reeling from the pain and then it’s all too much - the excessive alcohol, the agony, the panic.
With her panties still around her ankles, Nesta throws up all over Cassian’s shoes.
After that, her memory comes back in snatches. She remembers Cassian bribing a cab and him carrying her in. She remembers the only thing she keeps repeating is that she needs her laptop which she’d checked into Rita’s cloakroom when she’d arrived and Cassian trying to calm her down. She remembers the sound of a key in a lock. She remembers how cold the bathroom tiles are as she retches into an unfamiliar toilet.
She remembers large hands holding her hair back.
She remembers lying down in a bed, the pillows soft beneath her head, the duvet crisp.
She remembers Cassian talking to her, but she’s too drunk to comprehend what he’s saying.
When she wakes, it’s because light has sliced through the gap in the curtains and her mouth and throat is so dry it’s as if someone has stuffed them with cotton wall.
Head pounding and ankle throbbing, Nesta cracks an eye open to the blurry outline of the bedroom Cassian put her in the night before. It takes a while for her eyesight to correct itself but when it does, what she see’s is not what she’s expecting.
In truth, Nesta expects a bachelor’s pad. Not that she has any evidence of the sort besides the assumption of the “night-version” of Cassian she has in her head - still single in his mid-thirties and taking women home from Rita’s rather than a serial dater.
When Nesta had come home with Cassian that fateful night, Nesta had been too preoccupied to glance around. She’d remembered his apartment in Illyria, the borough of Velaris that sits on the northern outskirts closest to the mountains, because it had cost her an arm and a leg to get back to her place. But beyond that, Nesta had only remembered the burn of the fabric couch against her bare knees as she’d straddled his waist, the scrape of his teeth against her neck and his hands sliding from her exposed waist to cup her ass.
Now, what she see’s has her propping herself up onto an elbow. There’s exposed brickwork and old wooden beams that run in lines across the ceiling. There are rustic wooden shelves stacked with what appear to be mainly business books and old diaries. Leafy tall plants that stand in rattan pots and others that sit on the bookshelves, their leaves trailing down in different shades of purple.
And to her right, a deep oak desk that runs across the entire length of the floor-to-ceiling arched window. The sun is still slicing through the slight partition in the oatmeal curtains and Nesta finds herself sitting up properly now, even though the mere movement of her ankle against the sheets has her stomach turning, the nausea rising as the pain hits her, deep and wrong.
But Nesta’s fuelled by curiosity and nothing is going to stop her. That gap in the curtains is calling to her, the dust motes dancing in the stream of light that spans from the window to the bed now an irresistible path. Nesta doesn’t know how she makes it to the desk, but when she draws the string curtains back swaying precariously on one foot, her breath is snatched in an entirely different way.
Forest green. Rolling pine forests immersed in a mist that makes them even more breathtaking. And above those, the Illyrian mountains, their snowy peaks barely visible through the wispy low-lying clouds.
It’s one of those rare moments, the stillness the view brings. The all-encompassing clarity. The window is cracked open and Nesta smells the air, fresh and clean. She feels and with it she can push the embarrassment of last night even farther back, burying it deep, that humiliation she can’t bring herself to face for fear of the self loathing that will kick in.
Here, she thinks, focussing on the here and now rather than the wreck she was yesterday - the wreck she still is now. The mountains. The forest. This is it, finally.
She sits down at the desk. Her laptop bag is lying atop it and she takes it out, fires it up. And with the view before her, stretching out for miles and miles - magnificent in its splendour, its natural beauty - Nesta begins to write.
***
Nesta doesn’t notice the knock on the door an hour later, but she hears the door handle, the creak of the hinges.
A tray is held between the same hands that held back her hair last night, strapped up her throbbing ankle. Nesta spies a cup of tea with notes of bergamot and oat milk, toast and what she presumes is a bag of ice wrapped in a charcoal tea towel.
Her chest hurts at the sight of it, as if her ribs are creaking under some sort of invisible, mounting pressure. The horror of last night threatens to consume her, but Nesta battles it back, struggles with all her might.
Instead, she focusses on how Cassian stops in his tracks in surprise. One swift evaluation of his expression tells Nesta that he expected to find her gone, the bed made and empty. No trace of her left. Certainly, he hadn’t expected to find her sitting at the arched window, headphones jammed firmly over her ears, her fingers hovering over the keyboard of the laptop he’d saved the night before.
He’d prepared a tray, anyway.
“Morning.” His eyes fly to her laptop and then respectfully flit away just as quickly, settling back onto her face. Suddenly, with their eyes connected, Nesta wants to die of a shame so visceral she wishes she could turn invisible. But Cassian doesn’t mention last night, doesn’t berate her for the excessive drinking and her bad life decisions. The relief hits her so swiftly, so fast, that she’s almost bowled over by it. “How’s the ankle?”
Nesta cuts off the score she’s been listening to and lowers her headphones. “Swollen.”
She thinks it might be worse than that and she’s certain Cassian thinks the same. There’s worry etched between his eyebrows as he tries to catch a glimpse of her ankle hidden beneath the deep desk.
Eventually, he just nods to the tray in his hands. “I brought you some ice. You should really be elevating it.”
Nesta knows by the tone in which he speaks that he’s not quite sure how she’s managed to get herself to the desk, that she should under no circumstances be walking on it. But Nesta doesn’t know how to explain how the inspiration has hit her, that hum in her blood urging her fingers to write. That she needed to sit at this desk, look at this view, shut out the world and write the words that have dogged her for the past eight months.
Nesta’s not felt like this since Epiphany. And although she’s experiencing a hangover from hell, it’s fuelling her, somehow. The pounding in her head an insistent, driving beat, the nausea compelling her. And the shame trying to push its way to the forefront drives her to keep typing, because if she keeps going she might just out-write it. Might never have to face what she’s done.
Cassian sets the tray down on the desk beside her with a soft thunk and Nesta wonders how he can be so gentle when he’s so large. “Ok to take a break?”
Nesta wants to tell him that; No, it’s not ok. I can finally write, it’s back, the inspiration is finally here and I can’t let it go. I have to sit here and chase it and hope I never run out of steam if I ever want to be paid again. But then the night before is flashing in front of Nesta’s eyes, and suddenly, Nesta’s reliving it all: the mortification of her panties twisted around her ankles, the humiliation of her throwing up over his shoes, the relief of Cassian’s rough hands as they cupped her face, his thumbs catching the tears as they slipped down her cheeks.
“We probably shouldn’t move you,” Cassian remarks through her silence. “You’re fine to sit here? Or I can carry you into the living room—”
“No.” Nesta’s voice is sharp, cutting him off mid-sentence. It’s so rude, so awfully abrupt and Nesta wishes she could take it back, both the panic in her voice and her desperate interruption. She takes a deep, steadying breath. “The desk is fine.”
“Alright.”
Cassian brings over a footstool that accompanies an armchair by the bookshelves and pushes it beneath the desk. Together they help to manoeuvre Nesta’s ankle up onto it and Nesta does her best not to make a sound, panting through her nose, grinding her teeth so hard that tears burn her eyelids.
“Ok?” Cassian asks, as he carefully rolls up the leg of the black sweatpants she woke up in this morning. Nesta’s not wearing her vomit-covered panties, only these sweatpants that are so large they barely hold up at the waist and a large t-shirt that comes down to her knees.
“Mmhm,” Nesta hums, breathing desperately through her nose and trying not to think about the fact that he must have dressed her.
But, again, Cassian doesn’t bring it up. Instead, he jerks his head towards his laptop screen as he continues to examine her foot. “Productive morning?”
For a moment, Nesta just stares at the man before her and is struck with how kind he is, how well he seems to know her despite the fact that they barely know one another at all. In the stark light that floods in from the window, Nesta sees Cassian plainly for the first time. The two versions of him melded together - not the version of him at Rita’s or the version of him at the coffee shop, but both of them, just Cassian - and realises that she was right: together they make him so attractive it’s dangerous.
Yet, she keeps staring at him, even when he presses his calloused fingertips to the swollen skin and she hisses. She clocks the scar that cuts through his right eyebrow. Follows the dark curl of a tattoo that finishes just behind his ear. Watches the way his wild ebony hair glints in the morning sunlight.
He smells of sleep, musk and ground coffee.
When Cassian glances up at her, Nesta realises that she hasn’t replied. That amidst his hazel eyes, there are shards of gold. “The view is good here,” is all she finds she’s able to say, but recognition flares in Cassian’s eyes as he sits back on his heels.
“It makes sense to you.”
“It does,” Nesta agrees.
“It’s why I bought the place,” Cassian confesses after a moment. Gently, he presses ice to her foot, holding her firm as she jerks and hisses on instinct. “I like being by the mountains.”
They’re still skirting over last night but it hangs in the air above them like a raincloud. All of those unspoken words, the anger she’d seen clear in his expression when he’d found her in the alleyway, the man with his fingers inside of her, his breath sticky on her neck.
Nesta presumes the man ran off when she’d started to scream.
And all of that suspends above them. Nesta knows its only a matter of time before the cloud spills open and everything rains down on them.
But to Nesta’s surprise, Cassian abruptly stands.
“You can keep writing, if you like,” he tells her. “I’ve got a call to make."
***
Cassian is gone for over an hour and in that time Nesta writes better than she’s written in eight months. It’s not all fully formed. In fact, it’s a bit all over the place. Snippets upon snippets of inspiration driven by the emotions and seeds of thought roiling about in her chest. Here, with the pine trees, the snow-capped mountains and the different blues of the silhouettes of the mountains behind them, Nesta can finally unwind.
Her hangover is still raging with a vengeance, the nausea a roiling sea inside of her stomach, the back of her throat, but she uses it as a driver rather than an excuse. If last night happened, it has to mean something.
But then she knocks her foot.
It happens within seconds. Nesta only has time to grab for the waste paper basket before she’s emptying her stomach. In the back of her mind, she hears the door open and Cassian come back in, but she’s retching and for once she doesn’t hate throwing up because all she can focus on is the pain that is so sharp it steals her breath.
When she’s done, she spits into the bin. Drags one hand through the hair that became an unfortunate victim of her sick and pushes it back.
“Perfect timing.”
Nesta gives Cassian a half-hearted hiss and tries to breathe, tries to gather herself again but the pain radiating from her swollen ankle too much. She bends over again, empties her stomach into the bin.
There’s a brief pause as Nesta coughs and gags. Then, “Hold on, sweetheart,” and Cassian is carrying her into the bathroom, his grip firm yet gentle.
Nesta manages to hold on until he’s deposited her in front of the toilet. Then she’s throwing up again until she can’t throw up anymore.
“Tea and toast didn’t settle the stomach then.”
Nesta is too busy gasping to snap at him - or to care. Cautious of her ankle, she twists herself around until she can slump against the bathroom wall, her leg stretched out in front of her. She’s covered in sweat, Cassian’s t-shirt damp and sticking to her chest and there’s vomit burning the back of her throat and nose. But whilst her skin feels like it’s on fire, her ankle feels like lava. She swipes at her mouth with the back of her hand. “I knocked my foot.”
Cassian flushes the toilet, closes the lid, sits on top of it.
And Nesta knows from the intentioned way in which he moves that he’s about to bring up last night. Panic should be a wild, living thing in Nesta’s chest but she’s too poorly to feel it. Instead, she tilts her head back onto the cool tiles and announces hoarsely to the ceiling, “I have a proposition.”
Her words have Cassian taking stock. For a few seconds, all he does is study her. Nesta knows, because his eyes are burning into her, marking her like a tattoo needle inking her skin.
In the periphery of her vision, Nesta see’s Cassian lean forward until his elbows are resting on his knees.
Nesta rolls her head until she’s looking directly at him, right into those hazel eyes. “It’s not sex.”
“Disappointing,” Cassian drawls. A light glints in his eyes but quickly dies and Nesta knows that he’s still concerned. Knows that he’s just acting the part with her, unsure of his next move in the game they’re always playing.
“I want to pay for your spare bedroom.”
This time, Cassian can’t hide how thoroughly taken aback he is. But he doesn’t straighten although Nesta can tell that he wants to. “You want to pay for my spare bedroom?”
Nesta claws her hands through her knotted hair and tries to concentrate on taking deep breaths. “That’s what I said. I want it.”
Cassian continues to watch her as he tries to read her, tries to understand. His words are slow as if he can’t quite comprehend them. Knows they can’t be right. “You want to live here?”
A soft snort. “Absolutely not. I want to write here. With that view, specifically.”
Nesta lowers the hand she’s waved in the direction of the bedroom. Even that movement is too exhausting for her. She feels spent. Bled dry.
Cassian stares at her a fraction too long in the subsequent silence.
“And I’ve made him speechless.” Nesta rolls her eyes. “Am I computing?”
Rolling his eyes to mirror her, Cassian snickers. “Very good, sweetheart.”
Nesta looks back at the ceiling. The nausea is rising again and she focusses on breathing for a moment. Says finally, “You don’t have a roommate. I need somewhere to write my book. It’s a good fit.”
“The coffee shop not working out for you?”
Nesta cuts her gaze back to his, serious now. “Would I be asking you if it was?”
For a few heartbeats, two ticks of a clock, they stare at one another. Then, Cassian says, “How about this. You don’t have to pay for the room at all, but on two conditions.”
Nesta cocks her head at him, pushing down the fresh wave of nausea that rolls through her. “Out with it.”
“We go to the hospital and have someone look at your ankle.”
It’s the last thing that Nesta wants to do, but she can no longer deny that it’s just a small sprain. Even with it stretched out in front of her, without her moving an inch, the pain is unparalleled.
“Fine. What’s the second?”
That muscle flecks in Cassian’s jaw again. Then, even though he’s looking directly at her, something shifts in his eyes, hardens, and Nesta almost wants to shrink away at the scrutiny of it. If Nesta wants to, she could read that expression, could admit what it means.
“Stop taking men home who I want to punch in the face.”
Her insides immediately scald with a mixture of shame and fury. But then Nesta thinks of the man’s damp breath on her neck, of his sour-smelling body pinning her to the wall. Nesta thinks of the bedroom she woke up in this morning. Of the laptop full of words that aren’t off kilter but right.
It takes her a moment to collect herself. To be able to scoff and go bold. To pretend his request hasn’t touched her at all. “Isn’t that everyone?”
Cassian’s concrete expression doesn’t so much as crack. “When you drink you make bad choices. Or do you drink to make bad choices? Whatever it is had you in quite the predicament yesterday.”
They’re going there, then. There’s no outrunning it now. And Nesta wants to open her mouth, to vocalise how if he hadn’t been there she’s not sure what would have happened to her. That she thinks he might have saved her from something she couldn’t go back from. But she can’t get the words out.
Cassian reaches towards her as if he’s going to touch her, but he stops himself at the last minute. He’s no doubt thinking of the times she’s recoiled from him and he’s no way of knowing that Nesta wouldn’t have leant away from him this time. That she would have welcomed his hands on her face again.
“Did he hurt you, Nesta?”
His voice is quiet, soft but there’s no denying the intensity he’s trapping beneath it.
“No,” Nesta replies honestly, but she can’t look at him when she says it so she fixes her eyes on the wall opposite. On the sharp corner of a photo frame that’s hung on the wall — a lethal, arrowed point — so fiercely that it hurts. She thinks of the way her throat had closed up in that alleyway, how she couldn’t breathe. How the panic that Nesta tries so desperately to run from every day had consumed her once again but when she’d been drinking this time. That had never happened before. Normally, when Nesta was out at Rita’s she purposefully drank so she felt nothing at all, so she could finally breathe without fear.
“I just…” she continues when Cassian keeps watching her, searching for the words to try and explain whilst not really explaining at all, “didn’t want it anymore.”
Her words fall into silence. Cassian’s jaw clenches, the muscles straining and Nesta can’t bear to see that look on him, so she adds, “I couldn’t breathe.”
There’s a rustle of fabric as Cassian sits back. “Ah.”
“It doesn’t usually happen at Rita’s.”
Time passes as Cassian studies her. And Nesta can almost hear him putting the pieces of her life together, the shameful way in which she tries to control the uncontrollable. “That’s why you drink so much.”
“No.” She snaps the lie and grows furious when Cassian merely raises an eyebrow at her. He doesn’t believe her and she hates that he can see through her, can dissect her so easily when no-one else has managed before.
He leans forward again, his elbows resting back on his knees. And Nesta has the uncanny feeling that the balance has shifted in his favour, that’s he’s calling the shots. “Do we have a deal, Nesta?”
No, Nesta thinks bitterly, out of instinct. Fury is still heating her insides at the audacity that Cassian not only thinks he can control this situation but understand her motivations. But… Nesta can’t afford to say no. If Nesta fails to hand in her first draft, she doesn’t get paid. She might lose her publisher. She’ll have to move out of her apartment and get a job that she hates.
And… there’s something at the back of Nesta’s head, a voice that tells her that this could be the out she’s after. The hand reaching out, guiding her back to something better.
But she doesn’t want to think about that now, not really, when she’s covered in vomit and her ankle is bleating agony.
So, Nesta stretches out her clammy hand between them despite the anger hot and roiling in her stomach. Watches Cassian’s eyes widen ever so slightly, the only hint of his surprise.
Callouses scratch at her palms, but Cassian’s grip is strong, his skin warm.
And with that one clasp of their hands, the deal is struck.
Notes: Wow, this took longer than I'd like to upload but here we are and I'm finally happy with Nesta and Cassian's journey since their tumble on the couch in part two. Enjoy :)
Part Three
Everything had, in truth, turned to shit, Cassian thought from where he lay spread eagle on the couch.
In one hand, was an ice pack which he pressed to his throbbing knee. In the other was his arch nemesis - his phone - which, because he was a male with absolutely no control, he unlocked for the hundredth time that morning.
On autopilot, he thumbed open his messages and tapped on Nesta’s name.
There their conversation remained, cold and untouched.
Cassian let out a sigh of frustration that evolved into a growl.
Eight days had passed since Cassian had last heard from Nesta. It had been eight days since he’d kissed her the way he’d been wanting to for a very long time. He could still remember the way her warm body slitted against his on the couch. Remembered the surprised moan that had broken out of her. The way her expression had cracked open, so trusting that his chest had felt tight.
When he’d left her apartment that afternoon, Cassian had thought they were good.
He’d still thought they were good when they’d exchanged messages later that evening.
And again, as he had stared and stared at his phone, waiting for the bubble with three dots to indicate that she was typing.
But there had been nothing and Cassian’s question still hung in the ether, unanswered: When can I see you again?
In the subsequent radio silence, Cassian had played their interactions over and over in his mind. Had Cassian been mistaken in thinking that Nesta had been into something she wasn’t actually into? Had he pushed her too far? Had she only really agreed to go on these dates to essentially draw a line under everything? To say they had tried but it wasn’t working, that they weren’t destined to be together in the way that Cassian had been so certain of since the very moment he’d lain eyes on Nesta at that party all those years ago?
But Nesta hadn’t drawn a line. Instead, she’d ghosted him. Left him hanging out to dry whilst she got on with her life.
And despite the millions of questions that barraged him, battering around in his head on repeat, Cassian did what he’d always promised himself when it came to Nesta. He respected her silence.
He did not text her. He did not ring her. He did not turn up at her apartment or at the coffee shops he knew she frequented to write.
Instead, he grew more and more frustrated, until he was nothing but an angry, bitter version of himself. He threw himself into work, he drove his clients harder than he ever had at the gym. And when he couldn’t sleep, he dragged himself out of bed, laced up his running shoes and ran along the dusky river, until all he could hear was the pounding of his feet on the pavement, his breath as it sawed out of him and his knee barking in protest from overuse.
And even then it did nothing to erase his hideous mood.
Blowing out a frustrated sigh, Cassian tossed his phone onto the couch beside him and tugged out the tie he’d used to scrap back his hair. The last thing he wanted to do was drag his sweaty ass into the shower and get himself to Rhys and Feyre’s weekly brunch.
But Nesta would be there. Today was Elain’s birthday and whilst Nesta might skip an ordinary brunch, there was no chance that she’d dare to miss this one.
And given that Cassian had resisted the very compelling urge to turn up at Nesta’s door uninvited, the only truly neutral turf he hoped wouldn’t send her running for the hills was her pregnant baby sister’s weekly brunch event.
And how Cassian hoped.
***
“You’ve been a stranger.”
The accusation hit Cassian the moment he stepped into the kitchen.
Ignoring Feyre’s narrowed eyes, Cassian strode over to the floating island that separated the main kitchen from the large oak dining table. When he’d relieved himself of the grocery bags he was cradling in his arms, he turned his head to pin Feyre with a look.
“And thank you,” Feyre amended quickly at the sight of his raised eyebrow, “for picking up the last minute supplies.”
Eyebrow still lifted, Cassian pulled a packet out of one of the brown paper bags and held it up to her. Feyre actually flushed, but her chin rose in a way that was so obstinately Nesta that Cassian would have normally chuckled.
She folded her arms firmly over her chest. “Shoot the pregnancy cravings, not the pregnant woman, Cass.”
If it had been any other day, Cassian would have made a wise crack. In their tight-knit group, he had always been the joker, the one who brought in the sun when it was a little too cloudy. But now his mind was only on Nesta - was she here? was she here? was she here? - so he just leant over to drop a consoling and affectionate kiss to the crown of Feyre’s golden brown head. “I’ll make sure to have a word with the cravings later.”
“That’s it?” Feyre asked, looking frankly baffled at the lack-lustre response. She snatched the aforementioned bag from him - a pickled onion flavoured corn snack - and waggled it in front of his face. “Nesta blank right refused to sit with me when I ate these with her and Elain last week.”
Without knowing it, Feyre had said the magic word.
It was ridiculous, Cassian thought, that his mouth suddenly felt dry and his heart had begun pattering a faster beat at the mere sound of Nesta’s name.
Turning his attention to the grocery bags so Feyre wouldn’t catch his expression, Cassian began to pull out items at random. If Feyre even had an inkling of what was going on between he and Nesta, he’d be in the firing line and that was the last place he wanted to be - especially considering that he didn’t know what the fuck was actually going on between them.
So, he feigned casual. Too casual. Stupidly, idiotically casual. “Nesta?”
Immediately, Feyre’s head cocked in suspicion. Cassian didn’t even look at his friend’s wife to witness the movement, he just knew. Heard it in the deadpan of Feyre’s voice.
“My eldest sister. The writer. The one with the semi-permanent coronet. The sister I know you can’t have forgotten about because you’ve been pining after her since I introduced you three years ago.” Feyre’s words fell into a confiding hush. “Speaking of which, if you’re planning on asking Nesta out today, I wouldn’t bother. She’s in an awful mood and—”
“Who’s in an awful mood?”
Feyre jumped, whirling in a clumsy blur, the food packet clutched to her chest as if it might prevent her heart from battling its way out of her chest.
For in the kitchen doorway stood Nesta, dressed surprisingly casually for a brunch, even with her hair twisted into a braided crown around her head: stretchy black jodhpur leggings and a loose cream knitted jumper that fell to mid-thigh. As always, she looked breathtakingly stunning. But whereas Nesta usually wore an aloof, queenly air like someone wore their favourite jumper, today there was something off. Not only did Nesta give off the aura of someone who was sharp and unyielding, but she also gave the impression that she was slightly out of sync with the rest of the world. Someone who, under no circumstances, would deign to dally with her little sister’s friend.
Just one sweeping assessment of Nesta set the tone for Cassian. And despite the bell clanging at the periphery of his mind, warning him that there was something he hadn’t quite put together, his pride had him automatically weaving the illusion of nonchalance.
He leant back against the kitchen island and crossed his ankles, the picture of casual rather than someone who’d been losing their mind over the female in front of them for the past eight days.
And Cassian was thankful that he had mastered the facade. For when those ice blue eyes slid to him, there was no warmth in them. No indication that they were anything but two people who hung out because of her sister.
And in that moment, Cassian fell prey to the same mistake he’d been kicking himself for since Nesta had ghosted him: he lost sight of the years he’d spent patiently waiting until Nesta finally conceded to date him. All he could think about was that she hadn’t contacted him all week and if she was going to look at him like that—not only like he was nothing but with such emptiness—then he was going to spark that fire in her, make her feel something, not just because she needed it but because he was hurt.
The wolfish grin that crept across Cassian’s face was a touch too cold. And he knew he shouldn’t say it, but he couldn’t help but tread where he wouldn’t usually dare. “Your sister was just warning me not to ask you out.”
Nesta walked straight past him towards the kettle in an air of jasmine and vanilla. With her back to him, she flipped open the lid and peered in to check the water level. “And have you decided whether you’re going to heed my dear sister’s advice?”
Drumming his fingers on the marble counter, Cassian pretended to consider. “Not yet, no.”
A resigned sigh escaped Feyre. But she was either rooted to the spot or harbouring a death wish, because she only propped her hip against the kitchen island and rested her hands on her bump rather than taking a quick exit.
Nesta picked up the kettle and carried it stiffly over to the sink to fill it up. Still, she did not look at him. “Maybe you should.”
Cassian was warmed up now. He was playing the game that they had always fallen into so easily. The thorny, needling comments. The baiting. All wrapped up in something both casual and dangerous. It was a game. A hunt. A tussle between predator and prey.
Cassian made a show of putting a pint of milk in the fridge before he turned back to her. “Is that what you want?”
For a split second, Nesta paused and Cassian thought he’d cracked her to expose her underbelly. But then she simply shut off the water, placed the kettle on its base and flipped the switch.
There was a moment where all they could hear was the crackle and hiss of the kettle. And Cassian wanted to snap it off, to stop the noise and demand answers from her. He wanted her to stop avoiding him and look properly at him.
And if Feyre hadn’t been in the kitchen with them, Cassian might have. But instead he watched Nesta lift the wooden lid off of the tea jar and… frown.
The strangled sound mingling with the noise from the kettle was the first real sound Cassian had heard from Nesta since she’d stepped into the kitchen. Cassian watched her blank mask fall to the wayside for the real Nesta to flood in, but it gave him no satisfaction. Nesta looked tired and irritable, as if being at the house had taken every ounce of her strength.
“What I want,” Nesta muttered tightly into her hand, her fingers pinching tight across her brow as if the pressure might detract her from the pain elsewhere, “is a cup of tea.”
“We ran out.”
Slowly, Nesta turned to face her sister. And as she moved, her expression transitioned into something that was suddenly too much: bereft and fierce. So much so that Cassian could have sworn the air in the room changed, like that pause just before a lightning strike, when your breath catches and your heart thunders in your ears.
And it was in that exact moment, with Nesta’s guard down and her emotions plain across her face, that a piece of the puzzle slotted back into place for Cassian.
After all, he'd spent the last three years studying Nesta in a way that nobody else dared.
“I asked Cassian to get some more tea for you.” Feyre was practically tripping over her words now. “English breakfast - your favourite.”
Sensing Feyre’s desire to be saved, Cassian took it upon himself to fish out the last two items in the grocery bag.
He held them out towards Nesta, his palms facing upwards, his eyes glued to her face, watching, waiting…
For a moment, Nesta stood rooted to the spot, her eyes trained on his hands; at the box of Yorkshire tea in one and the specialised tin of chai in the other.
Given Nesta’s reception to him so far, Cassian hadn’t expected theatrical gratitude. If the stars had been aligned in his favour—if this was he and Nesta eight days ago—Cassian would have hoped for some banter or a smile. At the very least, scant acknowledgement that he’d tried to do something nice.
But when Nesta met his eyes, he saw the exact same expression he’d been gifted when he’d presented her with his homemade bottle of chai: lips parted, eyes stunned and slightly wary with disbelief. It was that exact same heart-wrenching look that came from someone who never expected to be thought of.
All of the anger Cassian had held towards Nesta began to flake away. And when she stepped towards him and raised a hand to take the tin of chai from him, it disappeared entirely.
Ice cold fingers brushed against his palm, paused. And in that frozen heartbeat, Cassian had the distinct impression that Nesta wanted to command her body to stop looking at him - to stop touching him - but she couldn’t. Just like he couldn’t.
Memories sprinted through Cassian’s mind, slotting into place like a storyboard, rolling faster and faster until it was just them on the couch, their bodies fitting together like married puzzle pieces as Nesta moaned into his mouth—
Nesta snatched her hand away so quickly Cassian thought she might have whiplash. Elain’s voice rang from somewhere else in the house, the middle Archeron’s voice sweet and lilting as she called for her eldest sister. But it was too late. Cassian had seen it: the colour staining Nesta’s cheeks in what was an undeniable blush.
As she was always prone to do, Nesta fell into her usual dynamic when it came to Elain - she put her sister first.
The tin made a clattered sound as it struck home on the marble counter.
“I’ll go and see what Elain wants.”
For a few seconds, Cassian and Feyre just watched the doorway Nesta had disappeared through.
Then Feyre turned to Cassian. Her eyes, which had been wide with astonishment, narrowed to suspicious slits. “Did something happen between the two of you that I don’t know about?”
“No.”
The lie came as naturally as if it was truth. But inside, there was now a flicker of hope within Cassian, a heat as the embers stirred and glowed. The gears were turning in his mind as he ran over everything he’d witnessed since Nesta had entered the kitchen. The stiff gait, her off kilter presence that was out of step with her usual detachment from everything and everyone. Her blush.
Could Cassian dare to hope that Nesta’s blush was a sign that she hadn’t cut him off completely? Because Cassian knew Nesta better than anyone. She was usually a master of control and if she was done with someone? That was it. She cut them off as swiftly as the screeching slice of a guillotine. But that blush was evidence that something had seeped through the cracks of that icy fortress of hers, like ink blotting and fissuring on paper.
It meant that Nesta might not have closed the door on them and thrown away the key. It meant that Cassian might have a fighting chance. That not all was lost. He just had to gather all of the pieces and stitch them back together so he could nudge the door ajar. And he’d already grasped one of them, knew what to do next, his in-road. His plan of action.
It might not be over. It might not be over.
Ignoring Feyre’s narrowed eyes, Cassian grabbed the tin of chai and sauntered over to the steaming kettle.
And, suddenly brimming with the sort of hopeful elation that wanted to spill over and flood the room, Cassian began to put his plan into place: he started to make tea.
***
When Cassian entered the snug holding a tea tray ten minutes later, he found Nesta curled up on the sofa opposite Elain. The snug - a small, cosy room located to the west of the house - barely had room for furniture besides a sofa, an armchair and a low lying coffee table. Today, logs crackled and glowed in the good-sized hearth that ran along one wall, chasing away the winter freeze that frosted the window panes and hung in the air.
Cassian knew the snug was Nesta’s favourite room in her sister’s house and it wasn’t just because it was warm. Floor-to-ceiling shelves were built into every available wall. Painted a deep midnight blue, they harboured different coloured spines on every inch of them. This was a room designed purely for the intention of curling up by the fire with a cup of tea and a favourite book. It was, essentially, Nesta’s spirit place.
The female in question didn’t turn when Cassian entered, nor did she give any indication that she knew he was there, which was impossible given that he all but had to squeeze into the room. But Cassian just thought of that blush in the kitchen, of Nesta’s taken aback expression when he’d held up that box of chai, as he placed the tray down onto the lying coffee table with the show of a waiter serving a restaurant’s most valued customers.
“Tea for you madame,” he announced to Elain with pomp as he set a mug of tea down on the table. “And for you, witch,” he said, finally turning to Nesta. “Chai and a glass of water.”
Nothing. No flare behind those eyes as Cassian pressed the warm mug of chai into Nesta’s hands, just an expression swept clean. That control was back, iron-clad and determined after that blush. But Cassian was undeterred. He’d broken through once and he could do it again. He knew he could.
So, he did what no other male would dare to do and dropped her a wink.
There. An almost imperceptible flare of Nesta’s nostrils. Cinders that he’d impossibly fanned back into the smallest of flames.
Cassian’s grin was all teeth.
“Thank you, Cassian.”
Elain’s voice pulled at Cassian’s attention from where she sat in the armchair nearest the fireplace, weak but there all the same. It was nothing to the magnetism of Nesta’s stare, but he made himself tear his gaze from hers. Continued to carry out his plan as he plopped himself down unceremoniously onto the cushions beside Nesta. “You’re welcome sunshine. Consider it your birthday present.”
A smile bloomed over Elain’s face, like the soft glow of morning sunshine. Her eyes twinkled. “How thoughtful, thank you.”
“There’s also a plant in the driveway with your name on it,” Cassian informed her as he stretched an arm across the back of the couch. Nesta stiffened. His fingers were a breath away from the nape of her neck. “Can’t remember the name of it, but the owner at Flourish assured me that it needs partial shade and will flower twice a year if you look after it properly.”
That full smile somehow widened into a beam. “That is so thoughtful of you, Cassian. Isn’t it thoughtful, Nesta?”
It was common for Elain to do this: to try in vain to ease the tension between them. Cassian had always wanted to tell the middle Archeron sister that it was futile. Things would always be taut between he and Nesta. He had tried so many times to make sense of their dynamic, and the only metaphor he could come up with was that they both had the end of a shared rope entangled around their ribcage, connecting them in a way that would always snap taut every time they denied what was between them. Which, Cassian supposed, was more often than he’d like.
Elain was looking pointedly at Nesta now. Cassian got the impression that if they were sat at the dining table, she’d have kicked at her sister’s shins.
“Very thoughtful,” Nesta replied eventually. She made no effort to mask that she was saying it out of obligation and another silent war was had between the sisters. Unfazed, Cassian took the opportunity to stretch out his legs - a particular feat given the cramped nature of the room - until he was the picture of relaxation. And all the while he thought upon that blush and what he hoped it meant.
“So, what are we talking about, ladies?”
“Period cramps,” Nesta announced shortly, finally turning that dead gaze back to his. “How have your ovaries been treating you lately?”
Elain bit her lip, whether it was to hold back a smile or a grimace Cassian couldn’t tell because now he had Nesta’s attention he wasn’t for one second going to let it drop.
“Oh, you know me, sweetheart,” Cassian countered easily with a shit-eating grin that even he wanted to slap off his face, “no cycle for me.” Overcome with a sudden foolishness, he leant over to tuck a stray strand of hair behind Nesta’s ear. He waited for her to smack his hand away but instead she simply stared at him. An alarm bell started to sound in his head, warning him to stop, to not continue with his train of thought, but it was too late. The words were rolling out of him, carried away like a gust of wind tunnelling through a canyon. “Just a sizeable—”
“Cassian.” A smooth, chilled voice came to his rescue. As always, Azriel’s entrance was as discreet as ever, as if he’d simply stepped out of shadow and had been there all along. His interruption was certainly too well timed to be a coincidence. “Rhys wants you to carve the joint.”
“I’ll be back,” Cassian vowed, but as he stood he reached into his jacket pocket and tossed a pack of paracetamol onto the cushions beside Nesta. It was the second step in his plan, the cup of chai being the first. “Thought you might need these for the cramps, sweetheart.”
Nesta’s startled expression followed Cassian all the way to the kitchen, until Azriel turned on him and stopped him with a dark look. “What are you doing?”
Rhys, who was taking a joint of beef out of the oven, asked over his shoulder, “What is he doing?”
“I’m doing nothing,” Cassian replied shortly as he strode over to the kitchen island where Rhys was setting down the meat. “You should let that rest before I carve it up. And where’s the rosemary?”
“The rosemary rub didn’t happen because someone turned up late,” Rhys replied pointedly. “And I didn’t ask for you yet.”
Definitely a well-timed interruption, Cassian thought as Azriel crossed his arms over his chest and levelled Cassian with his signature flat look. “Is riling Nesta the best idea?”
Rhys started scraping juices out the bottom of the pan so he could ladle them back over the joint. “Riling who?”
“Nesta,” Azriel informed Rhys at the same time that Cassian let out a snort at Rhys’s ignorance.
The sound had Rhys shooting Cassian multiple exasperated glances as he tried to keep his focus on basting the joint. “I don’t know why I asked.”
For the first time since they’d entered the kitchen, Azriel’s attention turned to Rhys. Cassian could have sworn the shadows from the kitchen cupboards jumped towards him, drawn to the darkness and mystery that always seemed to surround his brother. Or, Cassian realised, it was because his brother and business partner was about to part with a secret that categorically did. not. belong. to. him. “They went on a date. Multiple dates, actually.”
From the cessation of the spoon scraping the pan, Cassian suspected that Rhys had now fully abandoned his task. Cassian was too busy staring daggers at Azriel to notice. “And they didn’t go well?”
Cassian continued to glare at Azriel.
Azriel simply stared back like the Cauldron-fucking traitor he was.
In the end, when Cassian conceded that Azriel was not going to rise to Cassian’s open aggression, he clenched his jaw. He tried to look at Rhys, but in the end, he focussed on a spot beyond Rhys’ shoulder—to a smudge of dirt on the kitchen cabinets. “They were perfect.”
Rhys frowned. “I’m not seeing the problem.”
“She hasn’t text me since the last one.”
Not since their dirty texts. Not once.
Rhys let out a huff of air and went back to the joint. “So you thought you’d fire Nesta up and get her to spar verbally with you because you’re feeling dejected?”
Yes.
Maybe.
No.
Cassian didn’t know how to explain the fucked up workings of he and Nesta. Didn’t know how to put into words that he was stoking her fire because he was certain, even though she had ignored him all week, that she still felt something for him, even if she was conflicted about the two of them. So, instead he drummed his fingers against the marble counter in an anxious tempo. “What I’m doing is neither of your concern.”
Rhys let out a dark laugh. “It is if my house is caught in the firing line.”
“I know what I’m doing.”
Azriel tilted his head ever so slightly. “What he’s been doing is moping.”
This time, Cassian didn’t stop his hands curling into fists. “What I’ve been doing,” he countered through gritted teeth, “is respecting her silence.”
“And now?”
Cassian levelled his brother with a look. Azriel’s hazel eyes were muddy but unwaveringly steady - just as they had been all week in the face of Cassian’s terrible mood. “It’s been eight days.”
Rhys hummed as he picked up the tray and headed to the oven.
“Would you like to partake further in the discussion brother?” Cassian drawled, leaning an elbow against the marble because he had to do something with his body. “You’ve made a noise that indicate you might.”
Rhys turned his head to look over his shoulder so he could lift an eyebrow. “Nesta’s here. Isn’t that answer enough?”
“Because it was Elain’s birthday this week,” Cassian corrected. “Nesta hates disappointing Elain.”
But Rhys was undeterred.
“The sisters already met for lunch this week, so you’re wrong on that count. And Nesta regularly misses these brunches throughout the year, but over the past few months she’s been here every Sunday without fail. Feyre commented on it just yesterday. We’ve seen her more in the last three months than we did in the better half of last year when she was on her book deadline.”
The tray was slid back into the oven. The oven door was shut in the wake of billows of steam as the heat escaped into the kitchen.
“So,” Rhys continued as he removed the oven gloves, “what you need to ask yourself is; if Nesta truly wanted to avoid you, would she be here now?”
***
Frigid air nipped at Cassian’s skin as he shucked on his leather jacket and stepped out the front door.
The long sweeping drive was still kissed with frost, the paving stones covered in tiny snowflakes, the flowerbeds dusted with ice. If it was any other day, Cassian might have marvelled at the beauty of it.
But now, the only thing preoccupying his mind was the female turning down the street, the words Rhys had said to him in the kitchen and the third part of Cassian’s plan: to simply talk to Nesta alone.
Unsurprisingly, Nesta had slipped out of the brunch without a universal goodbye. But it hadn’t gone unnoticed by Cassian. He had got up so abruptly, the legs of his chair screeching on the hardwood floor, that Cassian knew that he had done exactly the opposite of what Nesta had wanted: he’d drawn attention.
It didn’t stop him. Her name came out in a clouded breath that echoed in the quiet residential street. In fact, Cassian was certain that they would have heard it inside the house. But he didn’t have the foresight to care when Nesta surprised him by halting in her tracks rather than picking up the pace.
His long legs ate up the distance as he strode towards her, his feet crunching on loose stones and ice. And then he was there, in front of her. Just them - and potentially his family at the window watching the entire fucking spectacle.
Slowly, Nesta turned to face him, the irritation clear on her face for anyone to see.
“Didn’t care to say goodbye?”
Against the frosted scenery, Nesta looked like a snow queen. Her skin so pale it appeared bloodless.
Silently, she watched him in a way that bore into him, her hands hanging stiffly at her sides. And there was something in the way that she stared at him that suddenly snatched the speech from Cassian’s vocal chords.
In the end, it was her that spoke. “I want to go home.”
Simple. Cutting. Truthful.
Nesta’s arms came up to curl around her body and Cassian realised that he was an idiot. That she was in pain. That the least of her worries were him, begging her to talk to him, to tell him what was going on. She’d always had a vicious cycle.
As always, it was that instinct to protect that had him saying, “Let me drive you.”
Nesta’s grip tightened around herself to ward off the weather. When her eyes rested on him, Cassian felt cold. “I can’t give you what you want.”
Something curdled inside of Cassian. His breath was snatched from his lungs and he recovered his composure a fraction too slow.
It felt like his world had stopped, but he found himself doing what he always did, playing along, pressing those buttons until he could read her. “Care to embellish, sweetheart?”
A frown of irritation flickered between Nesta’s brow. “Was the mention of period cramps not enough?”
At that… Cassian blinked, confused. His brain scrambled to process her train of thought. But he’d been up since four am and he was tired.
Right now, if they were in the sparring ring, Nesta would have a blade to his throat.
In the end, he asked the only thing one did when they didn’t understand. “What?”
“I’m out of service,” Nesta clipped irritably. “I don’t know how else to explain it to you.”
By now Cassian’s brain had started to work again, the rusty gears grinding and deducing. When he understood, he actually blinked, so thoroughly surprised that he took a step back. “Is that what you think this is?”
A faint colour bled into Nesta’s cheeks, but her chin tilted upwards, as if it was propping her up, giving her courage. When she replied, her eyes flashed as white as a lightning strike against a grey sky. “Isn’t it?”
“No.” The response came immediately and it took everything in Cassian not to pinch his nose in despair. At the last moment, he caught himself. Instead, he imagined thrusting his fist into Tomas’ face. Imagined bone crunching. Imagined the scream.
Unable to stop himself, he stepped closer towards her and Nesta didn’t back away. Didn’t so much as flinch as Cassian stared the love of his life dead in the eye, unflinching, seeing all of her and letting her see all of him—her trauma, the spiral of her thoughts, his sadness and understanding—and said, “Please let me drive you home, Nesta.”
***
The car was freezing. Puffs of air clouded in front of Cassian as he released the brake and put the car in gear.
He’d left Nesta in the car with the heating on full blast whilst he scraped the ice off the car. She hadn’t protested. Hadn’t said anything and, Cassian realised, as he pulled out onto the residential street, that it didn’t seem like that was going to change anytime soon.
So, they drove in a silence that felt viscerally cold, even as the car warmed and Cassian’s body thawed. And everything Cassian wanted to say, the words that wanted to burst out of him, built up inside of him, the pressure unbearable.
By the time he pulled up outside her apartment, Cassian’s hope felt as if it had been thoroughly suffocated. Snuffed out like a flame.
Cassian watched Nesta slowly remove her seatbelt before he couldn’t take it any more.
“I’m not here to fuck around and leave.”
Nesta seemed to freeze. Slowly, she released the seatbelt from her hands and turned her head.
Her eyes were vacant, her irises more grey than blue, and for a long moment, Cassian thought she wasn’t going to say anything at all.
But he just stared back at her, challenging her, and in the end it was that which seemed to probe her into speaking up.
“I—” Nesta started but then she clamped her lips shut. Cassian didn’t know if it was because she couldn’t bring herself to say what she wanted to say or because she couldn’t.
And it was then that Cassian knew what he had to do. He knew the next step in the plan, even though it could land them at a dead end. Even though he didn’t like it.
When he murmured her name, Nesta’s shoulders tightened as if the sound was painful. Her gaze cut away, to stare blankly out of the windshield.
“If I haven’t made it clear over the past three years, here it is straight up,” Cassian said through the lump in his throat. “I like you. A lot. I’ve always liked you, right from the start. I want to spend time with you. I want to see where this goes. We can go as slowly as you like. However you want, Nesta. You tell me and that’s how we’ll do it. But if you want to stop, then that’s where it ends. I promise. I’ll respect your decision.”
His words fell off into silence. Nesta didn’t stop staring ahead. Her fingers worried at a stray thread on her scarf.
“Do you not want to do this anymore?”
It was the question that had terrified Cassian for over a week, now spoken out loud between them. But Cassian realised that there was no moving forward - if there even was a way forward - if they didn’t address this. If he didn’t give her an out, an opportunity to draw the line.
A choice.
Nesta’s only response was her teeth digging into her lip. But Cassian knew her thoughts were racing a mile per minute. He just knew - in that uncanny way of his when it came to her - and it’s that which told him what to do next, even though it was painful.
Cassian clenched the steering wheel so tightly he thought it might crumple beneath his grip. Said softly, “Let me know what you decide, Nes.”
It was a dismissal. And Nesta didn’t turn to him and say, I know what I want and it’s you. Or what Cassian desperately hoped to be the truth - because he did still foolishly hope: I like you but I don’t want to get hurt again.
And whilst it was painful, Cassian knew he couldn’t expect more. Knew that things had been going too well for someone who had been hurt so deeply before.
Nesta got out the car. And Cassian watched the ramrod straight line of her back as she walked up to her apartment.
Notes: Sorry for any typos or inconsistencies, I wrote this in sporadic bursts on the train and I can't be held accountable for a tired brain. I hope you enjoy!
The next time Nesta meets Cassian, it’s in a coffee shop a week later.
She’s in the midst of a rare writing urge, the itch in the tips of her fingertips even if her hands are unable to actually fly over the keyboard.
It had been the glimmer of that urge which had gotten Nesta out of bed this morning well before noon. And Nesta had seized the feeling with a useless sort of hope. Because whilst the inspiration Nesta experiences now is never what it used to be, it’s something. So, Nesta had clung on to it, digging her claws in as she’d rolled out of bed with a wince.
In the fear that time would erase her need to write, Nesta hadn’t showered or eaten. She had just pulled on the first clothes she could find, bleary eyed, stale and wincing at the still-healing scratches on her back. Then, she’d looped her laptop strap over her shoulder and left her apartment without so much as brushing her hair.
Nesta had arrived at the coffee shop just as Marta had been opening up. And that’s where she’s been ever since, at her usual table against the wall, her noise cancellation headphones jammed over her head. With the world blocked out, still halfway between dreams and waking, Nesta has forced her head down and done her best to write.
And it’s sort of worked. Her head, Nesta consoles herself, is at least down. But then a threaded magnetism in the mid-afternoon nags at Nesta enough that she finally tears her eyes away from the screen and looks up.
The first thing she notices is him. Not how busy the coffee shop has become, the toddlers running riot at the mother’s table by the wall or the teens flicking cream at one another with their straws. All she sees is Cassian, at the counter, looking so ordinary and so unordinary at the same time. As always, he’s dressed head-to-toe in black: a rain-spattered Northface jacket protecting him from the rain, clean trainers, slim-fit tracksuit bottoms that make it evident that he never misses leg day. Work attire, Nesta assumes. She knows that he owns a gym, a small start up in the same rough-around-the-edges part of town that Nesta’s currently in.
The apologetic expression on Cassian’s face has Nesta automatically lowering her headphones. The world rushes back in as is someone’s flipped a switch, loud and assaulting and it takes her a moment to adjust to life going on around her, the chatter of conversation around the rammed coffee shop before she can actually focus again on Cassian. At the way he speaks to Marta behind the counter, his hands gesticulating as he pats his pockets for a wallet that clearly isn’t there.
It’s the blush on his tan cheeks that does it, but Nesta pretends its the cellphone with the dark screen. She doesn’t think, she just acts. Stands, strides over to the counter and scans her loyalty card from the app.
The scanner chirps happily as it accepts payment and Marta dips her chin at Nesta before she bustles off to make whatever Cassian has ordered.
But Cassian… he just stares at Nesta as if the superior opposition in the sparring ring has just thrown down their boxing gloves in defeat. He blinks. Once. Twice. And then, as if realising his mistake, he’s recovering, that complacent mask sliding over his face so he can fall into their usual role of push and pull.
Hazel locks onto blue, and Nesta does her best to stand tall, to command the space even as she remembers that she hasn’t brushed her hair today.
She’s just planning a brutal retreat when Cassian opens his mouth and lays her plan to ruins. “And the ice princess does indeed have a beating heart.”
Nesta tilts her chin higher at his drawl. Sniffs. She knows his delivery was designed to be taunting, but her insides are bristling. “Don’t read too much into it, I had a full stamp card.”
Ignoring her cold reply, Cassian appraises her as Marta froths the milk, the steam billowing plumes to the ceiling. And Nesta wishes that he’d stop looking at her like that. She knows that people think her cruel, but she’d thought that he had read her at least. That he knew there was more to her than barbed words and a frosty delivery.
It’s that thought that has her finally following through on her escape plan. Nesta turns so abruptly on her heel that the floor squeaks. But she doesn’t care, because she’s in control as she walks away from him and back to her seat. Because as far as Nesta is concerned this conversation is over and she can go back to her quiet, lonely life.
She doesn’t allow herself to violently jam her headphones back onto her head like she wants to. Instead, Nesta feigns complete calm and control. Starts up the brown white noise she had been listening to in the hope that it would help her to think clearly and corrects a typo so obvious she’s surprised she didn’t spot it before.
Despite her word count, today has been painstaking. Every word feels jarred and off-kilter. As if she’s slipped beneath a veil and can’t get back to the other side. Instead, she’s stuck staring through the gauze at what should be whilst being unable to access it. Essentially, she’s writing a different, far worse version of the story she’s supposed to be telling and she can’t do anything about it.
This is what has been happening lately. On the rare day Nesta can bare to open her laptop, her writing is simply wrong. The words desperately grasping at something out of reach.
But this is the first time in months that Nesta has been able to even think about writing and she can’t afford to stop just because things feel off - and especially not because Cassian is here, existing in this coffee shop with her, cruelly surprised by her act of kindness. After all, Nesta has got bills to pay, a dingy apartment to rent. Being a writer has never been glamorous, but it’s never been less glamorous when your ability to do the thing that brings you income is virtually impossible.
Nesta hammers away at the keyboard, aggressively deletes a sentence. Tries again. Fails to find the right synonym. She’s so busy stifling a scream, turning it inward until it roars dully inside of her, that it takes her a few seconds for that awareness to pull at her again.
For her to realise that he’s right in front of her.
Cassian has the audacity to look sheepish when Nesta appraises him with the most vicious glare she can summon. It should be the equivalent of a bullet to the heart but the corner of Cassian’s mouth just ticks up with a tentative hopefulness that Nesta will never understand.
He gestures to the seat on the opposite side of her table. Mouths, “Can I?”
Or, Nesta supposes that he asks, but she hasn’t deigned to lift her headphones. Quickly, she darts her attention to the busy coffee shop - the full tables and the long queue out the door that indicates that there is absolutely nowhere else he can sit.
Nesta doesn’t continue look at him - can’t. Instead, she fixes her gaze resolutely back to the traitorous bit of writing on the screen before her, the blinking accusatory cursor that’s waiting for her to type something, and gives an order that’s short, perfunctory, and absolutely not to be disobeyed. “Be quiet.”
Cassian sits. He does not say anything. Does not try and interrupt her death stare which is very much focussed on the damned blinking cursor.
Nesta makes herself write, every button on the keyboard she taps an attempt to erase his presence. But after a few minutes, she caves. Pushes her charging cable across the table to him without so much as a glance up at him.
She ignores the warmth of his fingers as he takes it from her and plugs in his phone. Just continues typing the absolute shit that she’s been writing all day. The shit that she knows in her core will end up deleted tomorrow.
Even so, Nesta makes herself persevere, trudging on with her work until she simply can’t anymore. She has no idea how much time has passed, but what she does know is that her tea is cold and Cassian’s double espresso is abandoned on the table, drained to the dregs.
But he’s still here, sitting back in his chair, his long legs like a table in themselves. But Nesta’s thoughts are dragged swiftly from his thighs the moment she spies the book in his large hands. The familiar cover. Her name. Her book.
The emotion comes so swift, so fast, Nesta feels almost breathless with it. She doesn’t know when she’s last felt this fiercely, this viscerally.
She yanks her headphones off her head. The facade of boredom and indifference on her expression is eradicated as swiftly as someone snuffing out a candle. “What are you doing?”
Cassian does not lift his eyes to meet hers - and it’s not out of fear. Nothing changes on his expression as he turns the page of her latest book with the deliberation of someone hanging onto every word. If anything, he seems distracted by her - as if she’s bothering him from something important. “What does it look like?”
“Give me that,” she spits, but snatches the book from his hands before he has the opportunity and snaps it closed.
Finally, a reaction crawls across Cassian’s face. A slow grin, a light in his eyes pulsing like the beat of a heart. “Is now the time to tell you that I’ve read everything else that you’ve published?”
“It is not,” she snaps..
To Nesta’s surprise, Cassian does not laugh. Instead, his smile fades and he looks her dead in the eye, waiting until her fire stops spitting. Waiting until she’s really paying attention. “You write beautifully.”
It is nothing but sincere. Nesta knows, because she can read everyone. Usually she finds it exhausting, reading every tell, the smallest shift in facial expression. But with Cassian, she finds herself wanting to know - greedy.
Heat floods to her cheeks before she can stop it. She looks away from him. “Thank you,” she mutters - without thinking. Then, because it feels like a crack in her armour, she sniffs, “I didn’t think you knew how to read.”
This time, Cassian does laugh, the sound rough and lovely - warm. “Then it turns out I’m full of surprises, Nesta Archeron.”
They leave together in some unspoken agreement that Nesta can’t explain. All she knows is that when she finally scans her writing for the day, truly acknowledges to herself that it’s absolutely useless and that her career is over, the snap of laptop as it closed shut has Cassian shouldering on his rucksack.
It’s raining outside, the sort of fine drizzle that coats your hair and clothes like fuzz. At the street corner, beneath the weak lamplight, Nesta’s phone starts to buzz. Her laptop bag is only looped over one shoulder to stop the strap rubbing at the scabs on her back, and Nesta tries to juggle the weight of it to free the phone trapped in her pocket, only for it to clatter to the floor.
Cassian swoops down at the same time that she does, and she’s already thrown off by dropping her phone that the fast movement has her startling, jumping away from him, creating that distance her body needs to feel safe.
Slowly, Cassian straightens. When he holds out her phone, his arm stretching across the distance between them, it’s with such deliberation that Nesta would pray for the pavement to swallow her up if her heart didn’t feel as if it’s fluttering in her mouth, trying to get out.
For a moment, Nesta studies his outstretched arm. Tries to dull the skittering tempo of her heart before she snatches the phone from him.
She can’t help the additional step she takes away from him.
And it’s not him that’s the threat - it’s the one specific ghost that shadows her every step - but Cassian’s eyes harden. “Who hurt you?”
His question sets Nesta’s heart clamouring even harder. And Nesta feels sick that not only he knows, but that he’s trying to talk to her about it when nobody else dares. It makes her angry again. “What does it matter?”
“It matters.”
Snorting with derision, Nesta pockets her phone. “What so you can be a knight in shining armour? Ride in on a stallion decked out ready for war? What’s in the past is in the past.”
“You believe that?”
At her look of confusion Cassian continues. He does not step towards her, but it feels like it. The distance between them suddenly feels as intimate as the sudden dip in his voice. “You flinch if someone touches you without permission. When someone makes a sudden movement you’re not expecting, you rear back. Last week at the club, when that guy you left with touched the small of your back, you jumped out of your skin.”
Nesta begins to walk because she can’t do it, she can’t look at him and have this conversation that she won’t have with anyone - including herself. “Sounds to me like you’re possessing some stalker-like qualities that you might want to address in your next therapy session, sweetheart.”
Her feet start to eat up the wet pavement, but Cassian keeps up with her as if he’s merely taking a stroll. Nesta doesn’t have to look at him to understand how dark his eyes have become, how they are dissecting her. Ripping her apart, her mask nothing but tattered and bloody ribbons.
“Sounds to me like you don’t know how to deal with someone who actually pays attention to you.”
Nesta’s nostrils flare. “I don’t want someone to pay attention to me. What I want is to live a male-free life unless its on my terms on a wine-fuelled Friday night.”
“I’ve noticed.”
She stops so abruptly anyone would bump into her. But not Cassian. He halts in tandem with her. Merely watches her in a way that has her hackles cresting like a wave.
Her eyes turn to slits and that fated finger she uses on the rarest of occasions comes out, wielded like a weapon. “Are you judging me?”
“Nesta,” Cassian starts, before he stops. Sighs. “Despite what you might think about me, I’m not a dick. Your body is your body — one that I greatly enjoyed by the way—”
Before he can continue, Nesta cuts him off. “I don’t look at anyone twice.”
Cassian’s head tilts, just slightly, but the movement is there. “Well, that’s simply not true, is it?”
Nesta actually snorts at the audacity of him. “You’re delusional.”
“What’s delusional is you pretending that our midnight tryst isn’t some of the best sex you’ve ever had.”
“Stop it.”
“Why? Because it’s true?”
“I said stop it.”
And her words are so sharp that Cassian raises his hands in surrender. Lowers them slowly, as if she’s a spooked animal - which she is.
“All right,” he concedes softly and she can tell from his pained expression that he regrets pushing her this far. “Can I walk you home at least?”
Nesta doesn’t deny him that. She can’t.
They walk in a silence that is as heavy as the swollen clouds overhead, bursting with words that will never be said.
Only when they draw up beside the gate to her block of flats, does Cassian speak. “Consider my gentlemanly duties complete.”
Nesta has the impression that he wanted to deliver an over-flourished bow but didn’t want to risk her wrath. But Nesta has a lump in her throat from earlier that she can’t get rid of, so she questions, “Gentlemanly?”
One dark eyebrow rises in surprises, quickly playing along. “Knight in shining armour?”
“No,” Nesta tells him bluntly and when a laugh breaks out of Cassian, Nesta thinks it might be one of the loveliest things she’s ever seen. On her first impression in that shadowy bar, Cassian had been dark, rugged and mysterious. And he’s still all of those things. But when he laughs, his face comes alive in a way that allows Nesta to glimpse something softer. Something kind.
Nesta doesn’t know the last time a man treated her kindly.
The sound of the gate clicking open when Nesta swipes her fob against the keypad is so loud its intrusive. It cuts through Nesta’s thoughts. Reminds her what’s important.
“Don’t talk to Feyre.”
The intensity on Cassian’s expression deepens. “About the amazing sex we had or the fact you’ve clearly been assaulted?”
“Both.”
Cassian’s arm twitches and Nesta has the distinct impression he had intended to lay his hand upon her arm before deciding against it. Instead, he snares her gaze and it feels like falling, being drawn in, reeled so close that the distance between them is suddenly nothing but intimate.
“I would never, Nesta.”
The words are so solemn, so sincere, that something twists inside of Nesta - like a rag being wrung of water.
The feeling hurts, like that ache before you cry, because he knows that despite the fact she’s been nothing but horrible to him, he cares about her.
But Nesta doesn’t deserve his empathy, so her nod is curt and perfunctory.
“Good,” she tells him.
The cold metal of the gate bites through her gloves as she pushes it open. She waits until it clangs closed before, on spontaneity, she turns back to look at him. Separated by the metal bars Nesta feels safe and it’s that protection which has her guard dropping.
And for a moment, Nesta feels as if she’s just a girl talking to a guy. No past to haunt her, no ghosts. Just them.
“Don’t forget your wallet next time.”
There’s a beat of silence. And Nesta knows it to be surprise, but then one corner of Cassian’s mouth ticks upwards again and with it, the world keeps turning. “I wouldn’t dare.”
Notes: I needed angst and raw Nessian so... here we are. I have no idea if this is a prologue or a one-shot at this moment in time ( I think it's a prologue...) But here you are, a gift to you all because I am so shit at posting / writing these days...
And because it's not my jam writing-wise, now is the time to highlight that this will not be a pregnancy fic.
Prologue
Cassian
It’s winter when he meets The Girl. Solstice lights are strung around the city and the music playing in the cramped bar is essentially a questionable mix of eighties, garage music and festive bangers that people scream along to until they’re hoarse.
Amongst the writhing bodies, Cassian spots her. Scarlet cami, hair like honey. He watches her for too long, the way her hips move to a rhythm nobody else quite seems to get like she does, the length of her ponytail as it swings to and fro.
When she turns and meets his eyes, he’s a goner. And at the end of night, when he backs her into his apartment, he realises quickly that whoever this girl is, she takes what she wants and he’ll take what he can get.
None of it takes long.
It’s electric. It’s fire. It’s as if alone, they are both embers - but together they are the wind that ignites the spark, burning up a frenzy. His mouth on hers, the length of her hair wrapped around his palm whilst her fingers bite at his scalp. Her legs clamped around his hips as she unzips him and sinks down.
It’s obscene that Cassian doesn’t think about protection. It’s there in the back of his mind, this small niggle. But he bats it away, marvelling instead at the pull and push of this primal attraction he’s never had before, relentless as the tide as it rushes back only to curl over inside of him again and hook him right back in.
When it’s over, Cassian has the distinct impression that he’s lost something, so he keeps his head buried in the crook of her neck a little too long. She smells like jasmine and vanilla and salt. Cassian feels as if he’s been shattered from some great height.
And then she’s untangling herself from him and tugging up her leather-look leggings over her hips, tucking her breasts back into her bra and pulling the scarlet satin cami back over her head.
Cassian is still not quite back in the room when she grabs for her bag. Her voice is scratchy and thick with what they’ve just done. “It’s been fun.”
The words have him scrambling up from the couch but his jeans are caught around his ankles.
“Hey,” he says as he manages to stand. The zipper jams in his shirt and he mutters a series of curses under his breath.
By the time he’s turned, the front door is shutting.
She’s let herself out.
In all Cassian’s time sleeping around, he’s never seen such a quick exit.
A very long wait for this next chapter, but it's here! And it's long! Big love to @noirshadow who listened to me moan about depression ruining my ability to write, how I might have to stop writing this fic, how I can't write Nessian anymore. BUT here we are and @noirshadow not only didn't kill me for my whining, but she also beta'd this fic for me so I could bring you a chapter before the new year :)
If anyone is still reading this fic, thank you for your patience! And drop in and say hello below so I know I'm not posting to tumbleweed, haha.
And for anybody who celebrates this time of year, I hope it's been a merry one <3
PS If, like me, you haven't read this fic recently, I'd recommend rereading chapter 53 as a refresher - I had to do it, too *face palm*
Chapter 54
Cassian
“And the Seer of the Sage was certain of Kallon’s intention?”
Beside him, Nesta didn’t bristle at Rhys’ line of questioning, she merely raised her chin, commanding the space. If Cassian wasn’t so tense he would have been brimming with pride, but instead he remained seated on the U-shaped couch back in Windhaven and tucked in his wings a little tighter.
From where she stood behind him, Nesta’s hand came to rest lightly on his shoulder. The gesture was like a language in itself, albeit a voiceless one.
Cassian tried to relax, to loosen his shoulders and let out a slow, measured breath.
It didn’t help.
It had been like this since he and Nesta had planned their next steps in the forest. With the threat of the Blood Rite looming over them, there was no dispute that it was imperative that they move quickly. The information Nesta had learnt beneath the Lake needed to be shared. Their family and friends needed to know about Kallon and Cassian—about Cassian’s mother—so they could stop the death of more females and the bonding of a Enalius’ sword to someone truly terrible.
And whilst common sense and years of formulating strategy told Cassian that the truth needed out, his whole chest ached at the thought of parting with information that felt sacred to him.
When Nesta had unfolded Cassian’s history before him, an uncomfortable mixture or emotions had coursed through Cassian: adrenaline and wonder - and an intense sadness that had both brought him to tears and made him angry at his mother’s fate. He longed for the time to truly process it all, for it all to truly sink in. And whilst Cassian was no fool—whilst the general inside of him couldn’t help but barrage him with the hard facts—it felt as if the choice was being ripped from him
Despite Cassian’s best efforts, the Rebellion was strengthening day-by-day amongst the savager clans. And just last week, Azriel’s spies had reported that Kallon’s Killing Power in the sparring ring continued to grow.
That in itself was of great concern. If the Prince managed to bond the sword to him at the top of Ramiel, there was no telling what power Kallon could wield against the Night Court. With the supposed support of Enalius behind him combined with the swelling anger of his Illyrian supporters, Kallon might finally be able to take that mighty, arrogant step forward and invoke a civil war.
So, even though there was so much swilling around inside of Cassian’s head and inside of his gut, Cassian had done what any general would do. He’d opened his mind, reached out into the ether for his brother and called for an informal council back in Windhaven. And then, despite the elusive and ever-moving tangle of emotions, Cassian winnowed himself, Nesta and Sala back to the camp he’d grown up in.
They’d landed clumsily, stumbling and righting themselves atop the main dirt path that ran through the camp.
Illyrians whisked past them, giving them a wide birth when they realised exactly who they intended to mow over. It took Cassian a few seconds for his instincts to reestablish themselves, and then he was tugging Nesta off of the road and out of harm’s way.
Windhaven looked as it always did, both beautiful and harsh. The usual clash of steel rang around them, partnered with the clang of cast iron pots over campfires and the beating of wings. On both sides, past the war tents and the scarce wooden houses, were the walls of the craggy mountains. They staggered upwards, past the needles of the pine trees until they met the sky.
To their right, against the rare clear blue, the tombstone rock that marked the old widows camp was a harsh foreboding of grey.
Cassian wondered how the weather dared to be so cheerful when he felt like the world had been ripped out from beneath his feet.
“I’m not used to winnowing,” Cassian apologised, his words hoarse against the dryness in his throat. His head felt light-headed, as if he’d left some of the weight of it behind.
Nesta didn’t lift her eyes to him. Instead, she straightened, the column of her spine climbing, her shoulder rounding back until she was set in her usual formidable posture. Then, she tracked her gaze around the camp, cataloguing every movement despite the bright sunshine threatening to blind her vision.
“We’re here,” Nesta replied simply. Her voice also sounded diaphanous, but whilst Cassian felt as if a part of him was still in the forest, he knew that Nesta was caught somewhere in the future.
It had been that way since she’d arrived back from the Lake. There was a determination that had set inside of her, a clear direction in which she was resolutely headed.
But whilst Cassian could sense the drive inside of her, outwardly Nesta merely lifted a hand to create a makeshift canopy across her brow, blocking out the sunlight. “Go on ahead, Sala,” she commanded. “Let Mas know we’re coming.”
The manticore didn’t need telling twice. Sala vaulted into movement, the fire from her tail blazing silver, a disappearing beacon that Nesta and Cassian didn’t hesitate to track.
They set a punishing pace. Clouds of steam billowed in front of them. The morning frost had long since thawed from the hardened earth and mud slicked and squelched at their boots. But finally the bungalow took shape against the mud and the rocks.
Home. They were home. And it looked so perfectly picturesque that Cassian’s throat burned. Because everything that was happening threatened to destroy it. His life, finally right, stacked as precariously as a house of cards. One breath of wind, one wrong turn, and it could all collapse in on itself.
That, Cassian supposed, was the problem with happiness. Ever fragile and transient. Slivers of time, fragments of moments, rather than something permanent and steady.
Cassian hadn’t realised he’d come to a standstill until Nesta said his name. “Look,” she said, but there was something imploring about the way she ordered him, as if she knew the direction of his thoughts and wanted to divert him from the truth of it.
And, because Cassian needed to be distracted, he looked.
Mas stood on the stone step at the front door. Her wings were held proudly behind her back, her thick, dark hair ruffled by the wind. Her grin was toothy and wide, her expression pleased. And at her feet, clinging to her legs, was Roksana.
“Sinta,” Mas said in greeting as they climbed the few steps that staggered to the door. She clapped Cassian’s face between with her palms and peered into his face in a way that made his chest tighten, as if someone was fisting his heart. Hazel eyes skated over him and what Mas read in his expression had her recoiling slightly. Cassian could have sworn a light winked out in the depths of her irises.
He knew he must look a state. Whilst his body had healed from his fall from the sky, he was still covered in mud and pine needles and only the Old Gods knew what else.
For a few heartbeats, Mas just studied him. The concern on her face was indisputable, but in the end, all she said was the blatant truth. “You are tired.”
For a second—just a second—Cassian allowed his eyes to close. He leant into Mas’ touch. She had been his mother in so many ways, had loved him irrevocably, filling the empty space in his heart that longed to have someone care for him in the way mothers did. “Just a little,” he admitted, even if it was a lie. Now he’d had a moment to stop, his exhaustion was so weighted his limbs felt like lead.
Understanding deepened in Mas’ expression. She stepped back slightly, giving him space. Her head tilted slightly to the side. She glanced sideways at Nesta and then back to him. “You have had bad news?”
“Some,” Cassian admitted, because he couldn’t begin to explain, not even to her. Not even to his brothers.
But Mas didn’t push him to explain. She only patted his forearm before she rested a hand on Nesta’s arm. “Come inside and sit by the fire, both of you. Roksana and I will bring you chai.”
Now, Cassian sat with a drained mug cupped in his hands that Roksana had masterfully skimmed over the floor to hand it to him - the obvious skill a credit to Lorrian’s regular flying lessons — and waited for Nesta to reply to his brother.
“My trip beneath the Lake was enlightening,” Nesta told Rhys in that way that was so Nesta—so artfully worded. “From what I’ve learnt, it’s clear that Kallon has been planning this long before he called to vote the suspension of the Rite. Ramiel has always been his back up plan, when all else failed.”
Nesta paused, her fingers closing around Cassian’s shoulder, asking his permission. So far, Nesta had purposely evaded Rhys’s assumption that she had met with the Seer of the Sage below the Lake of Souls. But now there was no avoiding it, the truth had to come out, and Nesta knew that Cassian couldn’t look his family in the eyes and tell them about his mother.
Cassian did not turn his head. He didn’t nod or say anything. But something unravelled slightly in his chest, the barest of movements, like gears slipping before they locked back into place.
Nesta took a measured breath.
“There’s more,” she announced to the room.
Cassian felt the peak in interest, the weight of everyone’s attention but he fixated his gaze on the threads of the carpet, on the individual fibres and didn’t look up. He couldn’t.
And then Nesta told them.
She explained how she’d not met the Seer of the Sage, but the real Maya—the twin and mother who had fled to Spearhead pregnant in the face of a Prophecy. The twin who had raised her youngling away from prying eyes, hoping that he could be better than other Illyrian males.
When Nesta’s voice fell away, a stung silence followed.
“So, Maya is not Maya,” Feyre said, eventually. Cassian imagined her eyes darting to him, but he remained hunched over on the couch, his elbows propped up on his knees.
The words fell into the quiet, sinking like a stone plummeting through water.
It took Cassian too long to understand that they were respectfully waiting to see if he might speak.
Cassian clasped his hands together, watching the way the tendons at his knuckles strained, the blood squeezed out until they were bone white. His siphons caught the light from the movement, the log burner blazing in the gems’ reflection, creating the illusion of a wet well of blood.
His lips flattened, the muscle in his cheek ticked before it disappeared completely. Cassian knew he was taking too long to answer, but he felt as if he were mute. “No,” he said eventually, his tongue thick, his speech slow even though he’d only spoken one word.
And that was all he said. His throat clogged up again, his ability to speak locked away, the key tucked into some secret pocket inside of himself that even Cassian wasn’t aware of.
He hadn’t known he’d be like this—so silent. His body had decided for him, his slowly processing mind shutting everything down. Perhaps it was trauma of some kind, a delayed reaction that had everything in him grinding to a halt. His past had been cracked open and laid bare for everyone to pick at and Cassian wanted to hoard the truth of his mother, of his lineage, as fiercely as Amren guarded her jewellery.
Cassian had still not reconciled that the female living in his countryside cottage on the outskirts of Velaris was not just someone they had rescued from Ironcrest. She was his aunt, his mother’s twin, and her real name was not Maya, but Lyanne.
As if sensing the knot of his thoughts, Roksana crawled across the carpet from where she’d been sitting close to Lorrian and Frawley and came to sit at his feet.
“Lyanne was protecting her sister,” Nesta announced in wake of Cassian’s silence. “She can’t be blamed for keeping the oath to her twin.”
“Of course not,” Rhys cut in smoothly and Cassian felt his brothers violet eyes searing into his skin, felt the lightest touch of a claw raking down his mental shields. “I would do the same for my brothers—for anyone I consider to be family.”
Cassian knew that was true. He, himself, would do the same for Azriel and Rhys. For Mor and Amren. For Feyre—for any members of his family—without a second thought.
And Lyanne had sacrificed so much to ensure that everyone believed her twin to be dead. She had faked her own death and taken on the identity of her sister so convincingly that nobody suspected that she was not Maya. She had watched the male she had loved grieve for her even though she’d been right in front of him all along. And it was Marsh’s grief which had been the greatest distraction of all. It had stopped him looking too closely, had stopped him from realising that the wife he’d loved had not been unfaithful and burnt to death but had been living alongside him masked as someone else.
It was that mask which had acted as a constant reminder to Marsh of the wife he had lost. To Marsh, Maya had become an object of hate. She was the wrong twin: his brother’s widow had lived and she was the spitting image of the wife Marsh believed he had lost.
But he’d bedded her anyway. And in all that time, he’d never grasped that the wool had been pulled over his eyes.
It made Cassian question how deeply Marsh’s love had really run.
If Nesta had an identical twin, Cassian could never mistake the two. He knew Nesta, down to his bones. Down to the cavern within himself where even now, her name still whispered like a secret that only he and Nesta understood. Nesta, Nesta, Nesta—
As if his innermost thoughts called to her, Nesta’s fingers fastened even tighter on Cassian’s shoulder.
“It makes sense.” Azriel’s voice cut through the sigh of Nesta’s name. As always, the Shadowsinger’s voice was chilling—not awful but the soft caress of midnight clouds passing over stars, the coolness of shadows seeping into your skin, dew on the grass sinking through your boots. “We’ve been wondering why Kallon hasn’t been acting, why no more females have been sacrificed in his attempt to bond the blade. Illyrian magic is amplified over the Rite.”
Cassian knew Azriel had directed the conversation purposefully, shifting the focus away from Cassian’s family history. His mother.
He and Rhys knew better than anyone that Cassian had mourned his mother. Since the moment he’d been torn from her and thrown into the Windhaven camp, Cassian had grieved for a female that memory had finally eaten away at, until she was nothing but the barest of fragments.
“It’s a sacred time,” Rhys admitted slowly—carefully. Cassian could still feel Rhys’ gaze on him, but he didn’t look up. Instead, he rested a scarred hand on the tangle of Roksana’s wind-tossed hair. The youngling didn’t shrug him off, she only nestled closer until she was tucked in the valley between his legs, her wings resting against the sofa.
“And Ramiel can only be accessed tomorrow?” Feyre interjected. “If Kallon wanted to attempt to bond the blade by dark magic, then he’d have the best luck there?”
“It was Maya’s belief that the immense power found on Ramiel could be used to amplify the magic Kallon would need to bond the sword to him,” Nesta confirmed. “And Cassian and I have discussed it at length. Everything adds up. We believe that Kallon visited the Seer of the Sage to try and confirm his belief that he could bond the blade at Ramiel. And whilst we don’t know what the Seer of the Sage told him, we know for a fact that the Blood Rite isn’t just a time for Illyrians to gain status, it’s the anniversary of the thirty-third day of the battle against Vanth. Oya and Enalius defeated Vanth atop Ramiel’s summit and if the sword originally belonged to Enalius, where better to sacrifice the females than—”
“—atop Gods-blessed ground,” Rhys finished, the cadence of his words slow and stretched out as the realisation hit him. “And Kallon has sole access to it.”
There was a breath of silence, short and fleeting, and then Rhys was interrupting it with an abruptness that mimicked the change in his entire countenance. No longer was he their brother, he was the High Lord of the Night Court ready to defend his territory and brimming with power.
It made Cassian look up.
“How successful will Kallon be if he attempts to use dark magic, complete the sacrifice and bond himself to the sword?”
Rhys’s gaze had pinned itself on the pale witch sitting in the corner of the couch, a blanket draped over her knees.
As petite as she was, Frawley’s very existence had a way of commanding a room. It was like a tug at the periphery of your senses, like prey sensing something other.
Frawley didn’t so much as move but Cassian felt her authoritative presence expand into the room, until she was larger than life, even whilst she sat small in frame in the corner of the couch.
It was a while until the witch spoke up, her voice scratchy and beat up in a way that told Cassian that she hadn’t yet recovered from her trip to the Lake with Nesta. It gave Frawley’s voice an eerie, prophetic quality.
“Dark magic exists to attempt the unnatural, Rhysand, you know that.” Frawley laid out her palms, as if there was a story unfolding in the centre of them. The rest of her body was so still it was almost as if she had been frozen in place. Only her lips moved and whilst her eyes remained directed at Rhys, they blazed with focus, one burning hot, the other cold.
“In the past,” Frawley began, “dark magic has been used to bend original intention and force the intended direction of power against its will. And sometimes it has worked, whilst other times it has caused great devastation in its failure. Dark magic is rarely ever permanent.” Now Frawley’s frosty blue eye snapped in Cassian’s direction, to the female standing guard at his shoulder. “As I’ve taught Nesta, magic feeds off sacrifice and eventually, it will get hungry.”
The static quality to Frawley disintegrated as she leant forward, her focus back on Rhys. “So, Kallon might be successful in bonding the blade to him but it will only be for a time. And when the blade begins to fade again, when its magic starts to flicker like a dying star, what will he sacrifice then? How will he maintain his facade?”
Nesta’s voice cut in without hesitation. “A sacrifice will become a ritual.”
“Yes,” Frawley agreed, her voice dropping out of its rasp to something hushed and undulating. A teacher praising their student, not in a condescending way, but in the way of two people being on the same wavelength. The witch and the Made.
For a short time, Nesta and Frawley looked at one another, but then Frawley’s hazel eye slid to Cassian. It felt like a touch, like something burning, and Cassian knew that Frawley would dare to tread where noone else would. “Yet whilst that is a problem in itself, we also need to consider that Kallon might want to keep the sword bonded to him not only for the sake of status and the support of the Rebellion, but due to his increased strength.” Frawley’s brown eye swivelled to Azriel, whilst the blue remained on Cassian. “You noted at Ironcrest that the Princeling’s power had grown to earn him a fourth siphon in the training ring—weeks after he’d acquired the sword—did you not, Shadowsinger?”
Azriel’s cold hazel eyes barely moved yet somehow they met Frawley’s. “I have it from multiple sources.”
And, as Frawley knew it would, it was the new direction of conversation which instinctively loosened the noose around Cassian’s throat, the one trapping his speech. Because just like Rhys had slipped from brother to High Lord, when it came to a question of power - of strength on the battlefield - Cassian couldn’t help but fall into his role of general of the Night Court’s armies.
Cassian’s voice was terse. “Kallon comes from a lord’s bloodline. His Killing Power is still reaching maturity. The growth in his power could be entirely unconnected to the sword, especially given that the blade disappears when he tries to wield it.”
“But what if it’s a byproduct of both?” Feyre asked quietly, tentatively treading down the path they all knew they needed to head down.
Unsurprisingly, Rhys agreed. “That’s a good question, Feyre darling.”
Rhys leant casually against the mantlepiece but Cassian was not fooled by the illusion of calm. Cassian knew that despite his best efforts, Rhys had read Cassian’s body language down to a tee. And whilst Rhys knew how close Cassian was to snapping, he still asked, “Remind me, brother. How many training siphons were you using at the age of twenty-four?”
A growl coalesced in Cassian’s throat. Six. He’d had six siphons at the age of twenty-four and Rhys damn well knew that. “Don’t ask questions you know the answer to,” he replied shortly.
Seemingly unfazed, Rhys merely shrugged. “If Maya is your mother, then you and Kallon share the same blood. If, like you, his genetics have provided him with a large amount of Killing Power and Enalius’s sword grants him even more, he could potentially harness magic that makes him the most powerful full-blooded Illyrian in history.”
“If you combine a Prince’s status with an impressive amount of Killing Power and a fully-bonded sword, you’ll have a hard time convincing the Illyrians that Kallon isn’t God-given flesh,” Azriel added. And if Cassian hadn’t been bristling at how blasé everyone was being with his heritage, he would have been surprised to detect something dark in his brother’s voice, as pitch as the shadows curling around his ears.
“And that there is both the key and the danger,” Frawley announced, lifting a finger before Cassian could even open his mouth to interject. The witch settled back into the cushions, as if their understanding meant that she could now rest. “Cassian and Kallon share the same blood. They are cousins. It is possible that the reason that the sword showed itself to Kallon is because the sword recognised the bloodline.”
“But,” Frawley continued with an abrupt finger, ignoring the way Cassian had finally straightened up, his expression black, “I’d wager that Kallon’s blood isn’t quite right. It’s not the blood the prophecy foresaw, so the blade disappears when he tries to use it.”
Feyre straightened up from where she was sitting across from Cassian, her palms pressed together between her knees. “If the blood isn’t quite right, how will Kallon successfully bond it to him?”
Frawley observed Feyre unflinchingly. “Dark magic twists and turns the intention of normal magic. That shared blood connection could be the very thing that allows Kallon to bend the sword to his will.”
Then, her eye swivelled to Nesta before she even spoke. “Maya thought that the sword might be using Kallon as an avenue.”
Cassian stopped feeling affronted about the way everyone was talking about him with a suddenness that was jarring. His heart had given an awful, adrenaline-fuelled thump.
“Smart female,” Frawley remarked with a dip of her chin.
“So you think she’s right?”
“Do you?”
Cassian didn’t need to look at Nesta to know that she was raising her chin. “I think that Kallon was never the intended end recipient of the sword.”
Rhys nodded. “I think we all hope that to be the case.”
Quiet hung around them for a pause, suspended like stars in a night sky. And Cassian couldn’t bear the pregnancy of it. He knew where the conversation was leading, what everyone around him had likely come to the conclusion of given his heritage.
Even he and Nesta hadn’t touched upon it. But just as he opened his mouth to say something, anything to break the awful suspense-filled silence, Nesta was speaking again. “Even so, Maya warned me that prophecy is not guaranteed truth, but an alignment in the stars that can rearrange themselves into a new orbit at any time. Allegiances can change.”
Feyre was following along, her chin bobbing, her eyes knowing and… old, somehow. It was something Cassian hadn’t seen in Feyre for a long while, but when he did, it was usually at times like this — when they all came together to discuss politics and enemies.“If that’s true, then we have to consider the possibility that the sacrifice might result in the sword acknowledging Kallon as its master?”
For a few breaths, Feyre’s question hung above them like a canopy of stars.
Slowly, all eyes turned to Frawley.
“It’s possible,” Frawley contemplated slowly. She lay out her palms again but the gesture was not unsure. Instead, it was as if the lines and creases on her palms were a map of constellations. A foretelling of what was to come.
When Frawley looked up, both irises were glowing. And Cassian knew from the moment that her eyes hooked on his what the witch was going to say and that he wasn’t going to like it. “Kallon is not the only one who has the bloodline.”
The heat of everyone else’s attention was scorching, but Cassian didn’t back down from Frawley’s challenge. Even if under the surface he was thrashing like an animal caught in a trap.
Star-born. They thought he was star-born.
The statement was so direct and so blunt that it would have pierced like an arrow if Cassian hadn’t mustered every ounce of warrior training into deflecting it.
Cassian imagined Frawley’s words skittering off of him, the metal of the arrow head crumpling rather than piercing as Frawley leant forward and asked, “When you were in Ironcrest, did you touch the blade?”
Internally, deep down inside the impenetrable fort Cassian had built for himself, he bristled. But outwardly he didn’t allow himself to so much as blink. Even his wings remained motionless and expressionless, tucked in tight.
Nesta’s hands tightened on his shoulder, just a fraction, and the movement felt as if she’d taken the brunt of the attack for him.
Cassian fought the instinct to clench his jaw. “You know I didn’t.”
“But you felt its aura, didn’t you?” Frawley probed.
“It would have been hard not to,” Cassian replied curtly, because it was true.
“Your siphons winked,” Lorrian remarked. He’d remained quiet until now, his mouth set in a grim line, but now he spoke up, voicing what Cassian had already admitted to himself but had not spoken aloud. “And the gem at your chest. It lit up like a beating heart. I didn’t think think much of it at the time, I assumed it was because you have more siphons than the lot of us, but perhaps the sword was calling to you.”
Cassian thought of that moment. Everyone had felt the power of the sword in that room. They’d all known, undoubtedly, that it had been Enalius’. Nobody had disputed it, even before Frawley had confirmed what they all knew.
He forced his voice to come out calm and steady. He knew where this conversation was leading and he wished they’d all just say it, speak their conclusion out loud so they could put a damn plan in place. “The sword called to all of us. Power thrummed off of it in waves. It was indisputable."
That, at least, was true. At the time, Cassian’s blood had howled, battering against his skin as it tried to beat its way out of him.
But had Cassian truly felt the sword’s power more keenly than the others? He’d not thought anything of it at the time. Lorrian had described the sensation as odd, but to Cassian it had felt like a rush of adrenaline, a calling. It had felt, Cassian realised, the exact same way as when he’d first met Nesta. As if something had turned over inside of him, flipping to the other side of a coin.
His skin had itched for hours afterwards. His magic had moved inside of him like a restless tide, his power desperate to surge, on edge and ready to expel itself in a way that Cassian knew would have been relentless.
Cassian had attributed that to his proximity to Nesta, to the stress of their situation as they walked the precarious tightrope during their time in Ironcrest. They’d shared a room that night. They’d exchanged heated and angry words. They’d argued about Mor, about the war. About the bond between them, even though they hadn’t addressed it directly.
And all of that seemed so long ago. So much had passed since then. A bond had been accepted.
And it had been broken.
“My mother,” Cassian announced slowly, “told Nesta what we already know. The prophecy is a prediction, not a clear glimpse at destiny. We can’t fly headfirst into a plan that relies on me being—“
“—Starborn?” Frawley finished.
The word made Cassian’s stomach knot. And it almost bordered on humorous that Cassian had spent his entire life searching for answers about his mother, about where he came from, only to discover that he was linked to an ancestry that he despised.
For years, Cassian had searched Illyria. He’d destroyed Spearhead camp and the males who were complicit in his mother’s death looking for answers. But now he was confronted with the truth of his past, he found that it was not how he’d imagined.
All Cassian had ever wanted growing up were people that he could call his own and who would accept him for him. People who would recognise his worth not for the siphons on his hands, chest, knees and arms, but for who he was inside.
It turned out that Cassian had living cousins, an aunt, maybe even a father. He’d spent the first half of his life abandoned and so lonely it had ached inside of him, weaving into his blood until it became a part of his identity as a bastard. He’d never been able to shake off that feeling.
It was only Nesta who had eased that ache, like a palm smoothing over a brow. When her arms were banded around his neck, her nose in his hair, nothing else seemed to matter.
A sword would do nothing for Cassian. He had long learned that his race’s begrudging acceptance of him was due to the Killing Power in his veins and his ability on the battlefield. And it had never made it easier to bear the sneers and the derisive comments. Because at the crux of it, Cassian would always be one thing to them: a bastard.
Yet, Cassian knew that his mother had taken a great risk when she had fled from Ironcrest. But she had done it because if the prophecy had turned out to be true then the child growing inside of her was destined to be star-born. And Cassian’s mother had wanted her child to grow up fighting for what was right. If her child was destined for the sword, she wanted it to be wielded by someone good.
But Cassian couldn’t help but wish that there didn’t need to be a sword at all.
“We are going to stop Kallon,” Cassian announced, grim resolution in his voice as he redirected the conversation where it needed to be—to the issue at hand. “Before he even gets to the top of Ramiel, we’re going to stop him. We are going to confiscate the damn sword and then we’re going to decide what to do with it. Wield impenetrable wards around it, just like we’ve done for the Cauldron.”
“And what if you have to intercept it?” Frawley pushed.
“I am a warrior,” Cassian replied tersely. His jaw felt tight, his wings were tucked in so tightly his muscles ached with the effort of restraint. “I will always do my duty.”
“Do you know how it works?” Nesta asked from behind him. “If someone worthy was to touch the sword, would it immediately bond to them?”
Frawley’s head tilted to the side, her hair moving with the gesture. “If legend is to be believed, then yes. For the true intended recipient, there will be no need for dark magic. But we must also consider that the sword may be broken.”
“Broken?”
“The gem is missing on the guard,” Frawley reminded them. “Enalius might have wielded the blade to defeat Vanth, but it was Oya who forged the sword from her own blood and bone. Without that gem, we must consider that the reason that sword might not be bonding to Kallon isn’t because he’s not worthy, but because the sword is damaged.”
“And from her chest she drew a blade / Bloodied steel and amplified rage / Bone of a prison,
the scarlet of sacrifice / A sword to banish immoral greed,” Nesta whispered. “Heroicis.”
“Yes,” Frawley confirmed sinisterly. “Roksana, can you fetch us the book?”
Thrilled to be useful, Roksana scooted over to the shelves and then made in Frawley’s direction, the brown leather-bound book too big her small hands. But Frawley shook her head. “Give it to Cassian, please Roksana. It’s his, after all.”
The leather was soft and supple as it always was—worn from hours and hours of perusal.
His mother had touched this book, Cassian thought, as he stared at the cover. He’d known that all along, but to have a piece of her now, after Nesta had so recently met with her, had a lump forming in his throat.
He opened the front cover, his eyes trying not to fall upon her writing inscribed on the inside of it, even though he knew the words by heart—warrior heart, never forget that you are loved—and turned to the drawing that he’d stared at countless times. He knew it like the back of his hand. When he couldn’t read, this is what he’d stared at. This line drawing with the arced blade and the curved pommel which he knew to be bone, not just because of the Heroicis’ stanza, but because he’d seen it in real life.
“The gem was definitely missing from the sword in Ironcrest,” Cassian confirmed. He held the book up and tapped at the drawing so everyone could see it. “The handle was cracked, too.”
“Expected from centuries of existence,” Frawley replied matter-of-factly.
“But does Kallon know the jewel is missing?” Nesta asked. “And is the sword not bonding to him because the jewel is missing or because he’s not the intended wielder?”
“If we don’t stop the sacrifice we’ll find out,” Frawley said gravely.
Cassian’s jaw tensed as his brain worked overtime and came to the conclusion that he was sure Frawley had already drawn. “Blood. You think the females’ blood might restore the jewel, just as Oya used her blood and bone to create the sword.”
“What I think,” Frawley replied sternly, “is that dark magic might have the capability of manipulating the girls’ blood so the blade accepts it as a substitute of Oya’s.”
“We can’t let that happen,” Nesta said shortly. She looked to Azriel. “What do your shadows whisper to you? Have your spies tracked Kallon’s movements?”
“We believe that he remains at Ironcrest.”
Cassian knew what that meant. “What you mean is that nobody has seen him leave,” he said grimly.
Because Kallon could winnow - any Illyrian could the day before the Rite.
Azriel remained still as always, his expression unreadable. But his shadows coiled around his ears. “Yes.”
Lorrian’s eyes darkened. “How many people have you got watching him at his residence?”
“Enough,” Azriel replied. “But he could winnow from within his rooms. My spies are excellent, but they can’t follow him there.”
Cassian heard the urgent bite in Nesta’s tone. “He could winnow himself to the base of Ramiel and your spies could be none the wiser for hours.”
Longer than that, Cassian thought. But he didn’t see the point in highlighting the obvious.
“So, what do we do?” Feyre said.
“We need warriors patrolling the skies and on the ground around Ramiel,” Cassian said brusquely.“Kallon can’t winnow directly to the summit until tomorrow. If we can pin down his location now then we can catch him before he has the opportunity to act.”
“I can look to deploy some Windhaven warriors that I believe we can trust,” Cassian continued, falling back into the role of general. Already his mind was sifting through the male faces that he ordered about during training, remembering which males stood out from the crowd. Loyal males that he knew didn’t follow the Rebellion and would have his back in battle.
“How many?” Lorrian asked. “Mallory, Andreas and Protheus stand out from the aerial unit,” Lorrian said. “They’re quiet flyers, excellent at keeping out of sight, but I don’t know where their loyalties lie.”
“We can’t take risks,” Rhys said. “If any of those males are loyal to Kallon then we risk everything—”
“The widows will fight.”
Everyone turned.
Mas stood in the left-hand archway that led to the kitchen, a dishtowel in her hands. She was only looking at Cassian, as if to her, there was noone else. “We are not much, but we are loyal. And we will fight for you.”
***
The soapy water in the sink was so hot it was scalding, but the scream of Cassian’s nerve endings felt like a balm somehow - a silent expression of something that he could not express outwardly but wanted his body to scream all the same.
“That is not your job.”
A voice came from behind him. A familiar one. A motherly one. It held the sort of understanding that came from someone who knew him very well. From someone who saw it as their duty to analyse someone in the way that only family could. When they knew his every tick, the thoughts running through his head, without even glimpsing his face.
Mas drew up beside him, a tea towel in hand. “And by the looks of it, it’s not one that you’re good at either."
She ushered him aside to the draining board, until he had switched places with her and her hands were submerged in the suds. Silently, she handed him the cloth and he took it, because whilst he might lead the Night Court’s armies, he’d handed over the duties of the bungalow to her.
“You are angry with me,” Mas observed after a silence that stretched out taut and thin. She handed him one of the mugs the colour of Nesta’s eyes and Cassian took it, stuffing it with the cloth and twisting the fabric to dry the inside.
He did not look at her. “I’m concerned for your safety.”
The clink of porcelain promptly stopped and Cassian knew that if he cut his gaze to the housekeeper he’d not find Mas glaring at him, just simply watching him.
It took him too many heartbeats to summon the courage, but when he did turn his head to meet her eyes, she was waiting for him. Her expression was one of steady earnest, burnished with silent understanding.
But she did not back down. Instead, she gripped the top of his hand. Her skin was chapped and rough, forever weathered from her years as a laundress, but her grip was strong. Insistent. Her voice soft. “This is what the training has been for, has it not? We are learning to protect ourselves, to stand up when a threat rises against us. We might not be much, but we will fight for you.”
With slow deliberation, Cassian set down the mug onto the draining board. Then he closed his palm over the top of hers and let the barricades he’d constructed fall away so she could see his true expression.
All the worry. For her. For Nesta. For all of the Illyrians who would be harmed as a result of Kallon—his cousin.
When Cassian spoke, he heard the crack in his voice, the roughness around the edges before he exposed the soft and vulnerable middle. “You are much,” Cassian told her with quiet vehemence, “but nothing prepares you for using the sword. For battle. You saw Nesta. She’s the strongest fae I’ve ever met and Hybern haunts her even now.”
A shadow passed over Mas’s irises, but she straightened, an invisible hand of courage supporting her. And Cassian supposed he’d nurtured that hand. Since the moment he’d met her, he’d wanted to teach Mas to defend herself so she could walk with confidence. And now here she was, small yet tall before him.
“You forget I have seen battle fatigue, sinta,” Mas told him. “I have seen battlegrounds—I’ve been a part of them.”
The skin around Cassian’s mouth tightened, bracketing his mouth like a grim smile. Because Mas was wrong on that count. He would never forget the day of the kerit attacks. He would never forget Mas’s body on the ground, her blood. He would never forget Nesta kneeling beside her, wreathed in the purest of light as she knitted the torn flesh back together. As she healed long brutalised wings.
“Nesta saved me,” Mas continued, her voice resolutely soft in its purpose but determined all the same. “She brought me back for another life and I intend to fight for that life. For you. For Nesta. For everyone who has ever suffered under our own people. For a better life.”
Her words fell away and into more silence. Mas retracted her hands and reached back into the suds, her fingers slipping against cutlery which clattered against the sink. Eventually, she drew out a teaspoon and began to methodically clean it before she extended it out to him without glancing away from her task.
Cassian found that he was relieved. To look at Mas now would mean to memorise every inch of her face, terrified that he’d not have the chance to study it again. He’d already begun to do it with Nesta without meaning to, his mind whispering its own cruel prophecy.
“You saved me, too,” Mas continued into the grim yet resigned silence Cassian had woven himself into. “When we met, I was beaten down. I was so small and insubstantial, the wind could have just tossed me away. Do you remember?”
Now, Cassian forced himself to look at her. He felt his brow collapse in on itself, his eyes felt as if they might melt with the emotion—with the memory. “Of course I do,” he rasped through the chokehold in his throat.
Because of course he did.
It had been a particularly icy day in November that Cassian had flown to Empyr’s monthly market. He’d braved the trip in frozen temperatures to order some specialised steel with a travelling Illyrian blacksmith and afterwards, he’d stopped at one of the many stalls to buy some food before he hit the skies back to Windhaven.
Cassian had been leaning against his chosen food stall polishing off a pastry when he’d noticed a small female in the long queue. Her clothes were clean but, like most Illyrians, they’d seen better days. Yet, it had been the black eye that had snagged Cassian’s attention. Hunched over and hobbling, Cassian guessed that the female was suffering from cracked ribs that had yet to heal properly.
And from the look of her cracked and bleeding hands? Laundress. Definitely a laundress.
As it always did when Cassian forced himself to truly look at the Illyrian females around him, Cassian’s heart panged, as if someone had plucked a sad and melancholy string inside of him. The female had looked so small—not just in height, but in presence. She was a ghost, wraithlike, folding herself up, allowing the males to go ahead of her, head bent, timid and forgettable.
By most Illyrian standards, she was the perfect female.
It had taken her a while to make some headway in the line. And the entire time, Cassian had watched her, unsure why he was so transfixed by her progress—until it happened.
Throughout Cassian’s life, he had learnt that good things happened because you brought them about yourself. Through blood, sweat and tears. Through fighting tooth and nail to survive and then to thrive. But sometimes, on a rare occasion, Cassian believed in destiny. He believed people could step right out in front of you, people who would change your life because the Gods had destined it so, if only you’d seize the reigns.
Cassian had sensed it when Rhys had found him in his draughty and battered tent in the middle of the night. He’d felt it the moment he’d lain eyes on Azriel, even if he and Rhys had made it as hard as possible for the Shadowsinger at first. Later, he would believe it of himself and Nesta. From the very moment he’d set eyes on her in the human realm, he’d felt that flutter in his gut, some magnetism pulling them together.
And Cassian had felt it then in Empyr as he watched a female that he’d later learn went by the name of Masak give her meagre coin away just so a little girl could eat.
The little girl had snatched up the pastry as if she couldn’t believe what was happening to her. And then, fearful that it was too good to be true, had taken off, half-flying half-running across the frozen ground, across the bridges, until she disappeared into the woodland and was gone.
Mas had watched the girl disappear with a look that was both heartbroken and rueful. But before she could turn away from the line, Cassian had found himself moving.
A heavy, deliberate clunk had sounded as Cassian placed two small coins on the wooden counter. “Four more pastries, please.”
The Illyrian male behind the counter froze. Cassian had watched him sneer down at the youngling, ready to snap at her to scarper. And when he’d not been able to emit his anger, Cassian had known it was coming for the Illyrian female next in line.
But Cassian’s face was known all over Illyria. Even if he hadn’t been sporting his siphons that adorned the backs of his hands, his knees, his shoulders, his chest… the Illyrian community knew the face of the General of the Night Court’s armies.
“And some chai,” Cassian added firmly, as he remembered how the female had eyed the cauldron bubbling gently away behind the counter. “Two cups.”
The male’s lips drew back for a second, as if he couldn’t stamp out the instinct to show his disgust at the female before him, before his expression was wrangled under control. “Anything else, General?”
“Not from you,” Cassian rebuffed coldly, the instruction in his voice the sort he used on the battlefield rather than with friends. Then, he’d turned to Mas.
When his eyes had met hers, she had taken a small step back. Then another.
When he held up the pastries and the cup of chai, she actually flinched. Stepped even farther away from him, jostling accidentally into some a male who sneered in disgust—as if she was dirty.
And in that moment, Cassian chose to do what he did best. He read his opponent.
The female before him knew who he was. Knew the control he had in Illyria. She was a low-born female who had been brought into the world to serve the male species. She would not dare disobey him and he… wanted to speak to her. Needed to.
The tug in his gut instructed him to.
So, he kept his voice deep and commanding. “Come with me.”
For a moment, he thought he’d read Mas wrong. That she might bolt. Her eyes darted around her but when she remained on the spot, when she fleetingly dared to meet his eyes, Cassian knew that her hunger was great enough that it won over her fear of him. And he could scent the latter on her, the tang of it so sharp, it could cut. It didn’t matter that he wouldn’t use the weapon on him—none of the males who came to Empyr would use their weapons out of respect for the sacred site—every Illyrian female was raised to fear the fist just as much as the edge of a blade.
Cassian had walked over bridges with water running steadfast beneath him. The air at Empyr was always heavy with the tantalising scent of food, the finest sort of mist, and the slap and roar of cascading water against rock.
When he reached a wide clearing in the woodland that closed around the lip of the valley, Cassian stopped.
There, he set down the food and drinks on a rock and took a few steps back. His senses told him that Mas had kept to the trees that hugged the open space, but he gestured to the pastries anyway.
“Please,” he said. “Eat. Drink.”
Mas remained silent. She didn’t move, but her eyes darted to the food before they snapped back to him. The bruise around her eye socket was still black and purple—fresh, rather than old. A fae body should have healed her by now. And if she wasn’t healing? She hadn’t eaten for a long while.
So, Cassian told her straight. “Those injuries won’t heal if you don’t eat.” Pine needles crunched under his weight as he sat down on the cool earth and began to eat one of the pastries he’d kept in hand.
Slowly, he ate. Slowly, he drank his chai.
Patiently, he waited.
Eventually, Mas crept over to the food. Snatched at a pastry before she backed away to the trees again, far away from him. As if the pines would grant her safety.
Finally, she ate. Small bites at first. Then huge ones, as if she hadn’t had a meal in days. In moments, the pastry was gone.
Slowly, so as not to startle her, Cassian stood. Entreatingly, he held out a cup of chai to her. He did not dare her to look her in the eye. It was an olive branch—a sign of respect, a choice not to dominate and Cassian was certain Mas had never been granted that courtesy in her entire life.
In fact, Cassian looked purposefully at his leather boots as he placed the cup on the ground between them, before he backed away.
The winter wind ribboned around the clearing and Cassian scented roasted chestnuts and wood shavings beneath the dirt and grime of a fae body, heard the crunch of pine needles break as Mas chose to take the cup.
He felt her eyes on him the entire time she drank.
When she finished, Cassian gestured to the remaining pastries as he took another bite of his own. “Don’t let them waste.”
She didn’t.
When Mas was done, Cassian had formulated a plan. He knew what he was going to do and how he was going to go about it.
Gaze still averted, Cassian took a drag from his cup. The chai was too sweet and already lukewarm thanks to the punishing Illyrian weather, but he swallowed before he asked, “Where are you from?”
Mas stiffened, her fear spiking sharp. Yet, when she didn’t turn on her heel Cassian lifted his eyes.
It struck him that she was a small female by Illyrian standards, her dark hair thick yet cropped short, the ends hastily and unevenly cut in a way that made Cassian suspect it had, until very recently, been long. But it was her hazel eyes that haunted Cassian. They were dark in the only way someone’s irises could be when they’d witnessed too much.
When their eyes connected, Cassian found that there was something steadfast in Mas’ expression. It was not hope, more of bleak resolution. A female who had no choice but to run away from everything she’d known.
Mas’s voice was scratchy, as if she hadn’t used it for days. Broken, as she spoke the dire truth Cassian had suspected, “I can’t go back.”
“I don’t imagine you should,” Cassian commented with a forced lightness that didn’t quite hit home. There was a grave quality frosting his voice that Cassian hadn’t managed to thaw out. And to be honest, he hadn’t wanted to. The way females were treated in Illyria? It was a crime. “I certainly won’t be taking you,” he added.
Mas’s lips parted. The bottom one was still red and swollen, but she managed to jam her mouth shut without a hitch of breath. It told Cassian that she was not unfamiliar with pain.
A few beats passed before she spoke again.
“Spearhead,” she admitted in a whisper. And Cassian knew that the fault in his voice had convinced her that he would not take her back there, because she affirmed more loudly, “That’s where I’ve come from.”
Just the mention of the camp had Cassian’s expression tightening. Yet, he made a show of brushing his hands together, ridding himself of the wayward flakes of pastry as he nodded slowly, processing the information.
Then, he looked up at her. The bruises and scrapes were starting to heal, her body no doubt able to begin repairing itself now it had the energy to do so, but her wings—her clipped and brutalised wings—remained mangled. “And how did you get here?”
Clearly having noticed Cassian’s gaze, Mas tucked her wings in tight, away from view. “I paid someone to fly me.”
Cassian nodded again. The gesture seemed stupid and meaningless, but it gave him something to do. He knew better than anyone that paying someone to bite their tongue didn’t mean anything in Illyria. And the males at Spearhead? They gave Ironcrest a good run for their money when it came to cruelty. “And now? Where do you plan to travel to next?”
Mas didn’t say anything, but he could see behind her eyes that her thoughts had began to stampede. Cassian might have extended a kindness to her so far, but if she betrayed her next location—if she even had the money to move on—he could track her. He could report to whoever was looking for her where she planned to fly to.
But, even so, Cassian could tell Mas had more pressing issues. If she had decided to leave her camp, she was running from something—or Cassian would guess, someone. And Illyrian males did not take the possession of their females lightly. They would hunt for eternity for something they believed to be theirs.
So, to go on the run? Mas either had no choice or she was formidably brave.
And Cassian respected bravery, both on the battlefield and off of it.
“I’d hazard a guess that you’re out of funds,” Cassian commented, nodding to the empty wrappers and cups. “I’m in need of a housekeeper back in Windhaven. I travel often for work and I need someone to take care of the day-to-day running of the home: overseeing laundry, cooking, cleaning, tending to the fires. I can offer free accommodation and a good wage, but more importantly, I can offer you safety.”
For a long while, Mas remained in shocked silence. Her hazel eyes—which over time would shape into something soft and motherly when she looked at him—had been wary and confused.
“Why are you helping me?”
“Because you had barely any coin to your name but you gave your last pennies to a little girl who could not afford to eat,” Cassian told her. “Because this,” he gestured to her black eye and took a step closer to her, “is everything that is wrong with Illyria and you do not deserve it. Because you look like someone who has been beaten down and needs a new start. I can give that to you.”
“I might have deserved it.”
The words were so unexpected that Cassian wanted to blink. But he just stared her down, telling her with every second that passed that he didn’t believe her. Even if Mas had hurt someone, it was most likely in defence. If she’d made someone bleed, if she’d lashed out, Cassian was sure whoever who had received it had deserved it.
He raised an eyebrow. “That’s not true though, is it?”
“No,” Mas admitted after a moment. She had grown brave enough to study him a little and he knew she was attempting to read him, to catalogue his face. It seemed to be something instinctual that she’d been tamping down—a warrior instinct suppressed from birth but clawing to get out. “Don’t you want to know what I’m running from?”
Cassian lifted a shoulder. “Not if you don’t want to tell me.” He didn’t really need her to. He could hazard a pretty accurate guess: her husband. Not mate—a mate would never harm the one they were bonded with.
“You’ll be safe in my residence,” Cassian told her. “If you work for me, I can promise you protection. And I can absolutely promise that I’ll never lay a finger on you. What do you say—”
A hand fell on Cassian’s shoulder. The sensation jolted him back to his place in the kitchen and away from the past.
Beside him, Mas was shooting him a knowing look. Her face was so different from when they’d first met. It was clean and free of bruises. Her eyes rippled as if she’d too just come out of the memory of that winter day.
“I’d lost all hope when we met,” Mas reminded him, even though it wasn’t needed. Cassian had just relived it, after all. “I had no faith in anyone around me. But you saw me, bruised and dirty, and you bought me food anyway. You offered me an honest job, the chance to live a different life. And I took a leap of faith and decided to trust you—”
“Because you were out of options,” Cassian interrupted in reminder.
He handed her the towel he’d been using and offered it to her so she could dry her hands.
But Mas ignored it, focussed instead on their conversation. She tapped a wet finger over his heart and leant towards him. “Not because I was out of options. Because you were different from the other males. And in time, as I came to trust you, I learnt that you were simply kind and good.” Mas punctuated her next words with a pointed tap against his chest. “You. Saved. Me. And I will never forget that. I don’t want to.”
A thick hand seemed to clutch at Cassian’s throat. Suddenly, it was hard to speak, but somehow he managed. “It was my pleasure.”
Mas dried her hands on the towel before she patted his cheek to show she understood. But she wasn’t done. “You freed me from my husband, a life of abuse, sinta. And now I owe you. Let me do this. Let me fight for you.”
The words unravelled something bound tight within Cassian, unfurling faster and faster until his emotions were unbound and swimming.
“What I did is not something you are meant to repay,” he started, but he had to stop to swallow. To gather himself, to speak the truth that needed to get out. Because he knew that Mas had heard them talking earlier—about his past and his ancestry. Knew she finally understood. And he needed her to know. Wanted her to, despite the fact that his voice dropped into something both hushed and cracked—exposed. “But if that’s what you’re worried about. You already have. You’re the mother I never had.”
Mas smiled sadly. Her eyes had grown soft and shining. In that moment, they looked like butter melting in sunlight. It was a vast contrast to her eyes when they’d first met. Lost and scared. Now, there was nothing but truth reflected in her irises. Something simple and uncomplicated and true. “And you are my son, stella,” Mas said simply, as if it was obvious. “And Nesta, my daughter. I like to think that we have given each other family.”
Cassian had to blink to stop the burning in his eyes. When he looked to Mas again, he saw that a tear of her own was rolling down her face. He caught it. As always, the skin of Mas’ face was soft and thin with age, but so lovely. “Does this mean you’ll finally move into this outhouse when it’s all over?”
Mas’s expression shifting into something earnest. “I like to stay with the other widows, the orphans. But when this is all over, when we’ve beaten Kallon, we will build houses in the camps together. We’ll give other females a home—anyone who wants a roof over their heads. How about that?”
One corner of Cassian’s mouth ticked. His heart was so warm and so painful. Like it was bleeding.
But he just said, “That sounds like a deal.”
Mas straightened. “So you’ll let us come? Whoever wants to?”
“We’ll need to be selective,” Cassian told her. “Only the most competent and only if they want to come. I trust your judgement, but know that we’ll brief them in an hour and that they can’t breathe a word about it to anyone.”
Mas dipped her chin to let him know that she understood. “They won’t, not when it comes to you,” she told him. Then, she gave him a toothy grin. Ruffled her wings with mock-pride. “And not when it comes to me.”
Cassian couldn’t help it. He conceded a laugh.
***
Nesta found Cassian in their bedroom. He’d left on the pretense of readying himself for battle, but really his intention had been to stand by the window and watch Mas leave. The housekeeper’s wings were held high and proud behind her and she held Roksana’s small hand in hers as they walked in the direction of the widows’ camp.
The youngling fluttered alongside, fluctuating between walking, hopping and skating over the mud.
If Cassian could paint, this would be the image that he’d choose to brush against canvas. An endearing portrait of two seemingly happy figures retreating into the distance—a distance which meant that they were out of reach and safe. Unharmed.
The sensation of Nesta’s fingers sliding through Cassian’s snagged at the periphery of his attention. As always, his body sung at the proximity of her and he let that feeling vibrate through him until their fingers were interlocked.
“You agreed?”
Nesta’s voice was muffled by the scales of his leathers. She’d pressed her chin into his bicep as she looked up at him. Affection was something that Cassian had been yearning for without realising it, but now Nesta was leaning into him, the warmth of her soaking into him, Cassian sensed the desire for it etched deep into his bones. It was like an unbearable ache, a building pressure that layered upon itself. And Nesta pressing against him, holding him to her? It made that pressure deflate a little.
If Nesta’s hair wasn’t woven back tightly for battle, Cassian would have threaded his free hand through her hair in thanks. Instead, he pushed back the sigh that coalesced in his throat. “They’re not as battle ready as the males.”
“They won’t be for a long time,” Nesta supplied simply. “Someone once told me it takes years to become a warrior. That it’s constantly a work in progress.”
“And you listened?”
Nesta’s snort was a wave of air, but she didn’t admonish him. She just clutched at his arm a little tighter, the silent gesture his admonishment. “I did.”
Usually, Cassian would have smirked—anything to rile her. But now, in their shared bedroom, Cassian couldn’t summon it. Not when he knew what they were about to walk into. “It’s going to be dangerous.”
Nesta straightened at his words and the scent of her, the jasmine and vanilla, finally tugged his focus away from Mas’ retreating back to the female beside him.
Nesta had changed out of her everyday leathers and into the ones Rhys had gifted her. The smoky silver scales rippled in an exact replica of the flames at her fingertips, but Cassian couldn’t marvel at the magic of it, not when the female in question was pinning him down with her formidable eyes. “Isn’t battle always dangerous?”
“It is,” Cassian agreed lowly. “But I’m already worried about your wellbeing. And now Mas? The other females?” He swallowed, and his words caught in the clog at his throat. “There’s so much at stake—”
“You are not responsible for our lives, Cassian.”
Cassian’s voice became sharp without his command. “I am always responsible for those that step onto a battlefield for the Night Court, whatever shape that might take.”
“You are forgetting,” Nesta told him calmly, unperturbed by his whipped reply, “that those who step onto the battlefield do so out of their free will. Tonight, when we make our way to Ramiel, none of us will be coerced. But we are all driven by the same motive: to stop Kallon gaining power and starting a Civil War. The females are taking a stand because they have been oppressed for too long. They are finally standing up for themselves, showing their allegiance despite the fact that they could suffer the consequences. And I am doing the same. You can only respect that. You can’t take responsibility, Cassian, it’s not your right.”
There was no response to that, so Cassian just stood still, fighting the temptation to rub his tired eyes.
Together, they had a rough plan in place but they didn’t know how it would all go. And if Cassian had learnt anything in his long years as a warrior, it was that no battle was a sure thing. There was no guarantee that everyone entering the battle would emerge breathing and whole. The battlefield was swathed in the promise of glory, but when you were in the thick of it, when you were knee deep in guts and shit and blood, it was nothing but horrifying.
And whilst they might not be entering a true battlefield, none of them expected to emerge from their conflict with Kallon unharmed.
None of them were that deluded. It wasn’t a pessimism, just a hard truth. A possibility.
Cassian turned his body fully to face Nesta, his hand slipping from hers only for both of them to find purchase on her arms.
“Don’t say it,” Nesta interrupted him, reading the grim look in his eyes.
It took everything in Cassian to arch an eyebrow. To play. “Some might accuse you of being superstitious, sweetheart.”
Nesta let out a huffed breath. “Why tempt fate?”
“You are my fate,” Cassian told her quietly. He tracked her face, cataloguing it all—his Nesta. Again, that thought hit him: he wanted Nesta to be his wife. He wanted them to be joined in that way. She’d given him everything when she’d accepted the mating bond, and now he wanted to give her something human, something that she had always thought had been in her future.
If she wanted it, that was.
Nesta’s hand tightened on his just as her mouth flattened. The movement was so brief Cassian would have missed it if he hadn’t been watching her so closely.
“And you’re mine,” she assured him slowly, and even though her face was near unreadable, Cassian felt the spark of embers in his chest as they glowed. Knew that she was telling him the truth.
For a brief instance, Nesta observed him. And Cassian let her, unstacking every guard he held around himself, as tight as a burning ring of flames until there was nothing left behind but ash and the heart of him.
What Nesta saw pulled a faint smile onto her face, but it was too brief and it was not wielded out of happiness. It was too sad. And when Nesta confirmed it by drawing his knuckles to her mouth and pressing her lips there, he knew that every worry he had for how tomorrow would play out… it festered inside of Nesta, too.
They both had a feeling. An ominous sense of something dark and lurking.
Cassian watched Nesta drop his hand and turned towards the door.
But when she reached the entryway, she paused. Her slim fingers wrapped around the frame and held on tight.
Seconds passed as Nesta hesitated. Then, without turning to face him, she told him, “Ask me when we’re on the other side.”
The ensuing pause ate up her words, until nothing but a ringing silence hovered between them.
If they were in different circumstances, Cassian would have closed the distance between them and wrapped her hair around his palm. He would have looked down at her, revelling in the way her chin would tilt stubbornly up to meet him, that regal air wreathed around her like its very own crown.
But instead, Cassian just stared steadily at Nesta, waiting for her to turn. But she didn’t.
Cassian fought the temptation to curl his hands shut in a bid to distract the quickening tempo of his heartbeat. His siphons pulsed in anticipation. A whisper of something wound through him. A sighed name. “And what will I be asking, Nesta?”
He couldn’t see her but he knew Nesta had raised an eyebrow, the execution as perfect as the arch of it.
Her fingers tightened around the door frame, but still she did not turn. “Ask me when it’s over. And I’ll say yes.”
And it was in that pause, as her words stretched out between them, that the screaming started.
Notes: I’ve not been in the mood for E&L lately but I’ve been on a modern Nessian writing spree. Here’s a snippet of the next chapter (just edits to come thanks to @noirshadow being on it, as always). I hope you like 🥰
Given Nesta’s reception so far, Cassian hadn’t expected theatrical gratitude. If the stars had been aligned in his favour—if this was him and Nesta eight days ago—Cassian would have wished for some banter or a smile. At the very least, scant acknowledgement that he’d tried to do something nice.
::readmore::
But when Nesta met his eyes for the second time that day, his breath caught. Her stormy grey eyes were… startled and Cassian watched her mentally stumble, watched as her lips parted in the exact same way that they had last week when he’d presented her with a bottle of his homemade chai. It was that somewhat heart-wrenching look that only ever came from someone who never expected to be thought of.
The anger in Cassian began to flake away and then it disappeared entirely as Nesta conceded a quiet thank you. As she, with one arm curled protectively around her abdomen, raised a hand to take the tin of chai from him and paused…
For a heartbeat, their fingers remained against one another, her ice cold ones, his warm ones. And Cassian had the distinct impression that Nesta wanted to command her body to stop looking at him - wanted to stop touching him - but couldn’t. Just like he couldn’t.