hi this is my az masterlist. please don't copy or post my work anywhere else and enjoy <3 everything i write is 18+ main masterlist
bad boy az x nerdy school girl au (smut one shot may turn into more), bad boy az part 2 , part 3 , part 4 , part 5 , part 6 , part 7 , final part , (im sad too will add drabbles in the future)
bee (fem reader) (modern best friend>lovers) (smut/angst/fluff) (tattoo artist az) [in progress updated 9/25/24] đ¤ one đ¤ two đ¤ three đ¤ four đ¤ five đ¤ six đ¤ seven đ¤ eight đ¤ nine đ¤ ten đ¤ eleven
glass heart (fem reader, anon request, stillbirth, mated, short one shot/drabble) (angsttt) [part 2 coming soon]
necessities [in progress updated 8/25/24] (modern (fem) reader drops into prythian) ŕ˝ŕ˝˛âĄŕ˝ŕž one ŕ˝ŕ˝˛âĄŕ˝ŕž two ŕ˝ŕ˝˛âĄŕ˝ŕž three ŕ˝ŕ˝˛âĄŕ˝ŕž four
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you guys will kill me bc i know i've promised so many other things but im actually working on something new early stages but still just know im alive haha â¤ď¸
hey honey i saw ur last ask & if you need anyone to talk/vent to im here(im being fr) im also being personally affected by the current administration and it is just super depressing & stressfulđ hopefully you can get back into the groove of writing eventually but until then my dms are always open!đđđ
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summary: Following a long and brutal war, the Dusk Court has finally reclaimed the lands seized by the Night Court generations ago. Yet its new capital, Velaris, remains tangled in the Night Court's intricate trade agreements. Now, negotiations are underway.
word count: 21.3k (you're welcome, it's worth it)
content: [ explicit sexual content, oral sex (f receiving), piv, explicit language, alcohol, mentions of alcoholism, mentions of war (& like one descriptive scene) ]
author's note: important! this fic takes place in an AU where the Night Court absorbed the Dusk Court forever ago, this is where the borders are (<- google drive link lol, do u like my ramiel rendition). i've never written a fic formatted like this but i'm super duper mega obsessed with how it turned out :D i always wanna hear yalls thoughts but i EXTRA wanna hear your thoughts on this one, its kinda my baby not to be dramatic, ive been working so hard on it im sad its over :(
⌠. 1k Celebration Apothecary . âŚ
midnight essence
infused with a dash of blaze & a splash of venom
enhanced with echo leaves
stirred
THANK YOU SO SO MUCH @raccoonworld FOR THE REQUEST I LOVED LOVED LOVED WRITING THIS!!!!! i saw enemies to lovers and tension/banter and RAN with it >:) I REALLY HOPE YOU LOVE THIS
To the Most Esteemed High Lord of the Night Court,
I will dispense with pleasantries, as I doubt either of us have the patience for them.Â
It has come to my attention that despite Velaris now falling under Dusk Court rule, the existing trade agreements with the other courts remain bound to the Night Courtâs discretion. As it stands, merchants who once conducted business freely within Velaris now find themselves unable to do so, citing the stipulations you have so conveniently chosen to uphold.Â
This impasse benefits no one. The artisans and traders of Velaris are not pawns to be maneuvered at your whim, nor should they suffer disruption simply because the Night Court has yet to accept the reality of the shifting landscape. I am certain even you can see the impracticality of maintaining such restrictions.Â
Thus, I formally request the reopening of Velarisâ merchant tiesâwith full autonomy under Dusk Court governance. This is not a demand, but an offer to facilitate an arrangement that benefits both our courts. As a gesture of good faith, I am prepared to waive all tariffs for Night Court merchants entering our borders for the first decade of this renewed arrangement. Should you find yourself inclined toward reason, I trust we can discuss terms that do not waste either of our time.Â
I await your response.Â
(Y/n)
High Lady of the Dusk Court
âŚ
To Her Radiance, High Lady of the Dusk Court,
Your request has been received and thoroughly reviewed. While I appreciate your concern for Velarisâ merchantsâand your attempt to frame this as an act of mutual benefitâI must remind you that these agreements were established with the Night Court for a reason. The conditions under which they may be altered are, as Iâm sure you know, not so easily dismissed. To shift its economic ties without careful negotiation would be careless at best and disastrous at worst.Â
That said, I am not unreasonable. I am willing to entertain a renegotiation of these trade restrictions provided certain terms are met. Surely, a ruler as pragmatic as yourself can appreciate the necessity of thorough discussion.Â
I trust youâll give the matter due considerationâafter all, Iâd hate to think the High Lady of the Dusk Court acts on impulse alone.Â
Rhysand
High Lord of the Night Court
âŚ
To the Most Generous High Lord of the Night Court,
I must commend you on your impressive ability to complicate what should be a simple matter.
The conditions you mentioned remain conveniently vague, and your insistence that this requires âthorough discussionâ feels less like prudence and more like a deliberate attempt to stall. You claim to appreciate the merchantsâ concerns, yet your actions suggest otherwise. Whatever terms you are withholding, I suggest you present them plainly rather than wasting both our time beneath the guise of diplomacy.
This trade arrangement is not the delicate, volatile affair youâre attempting to make it. It is, as I said before, a practical solution that benefits both our courtsâone that should have been resolved by now had you been willing to engage in good faith.
If you are not prepared to negotiate in earnest, I suggest you say so plainly. Otherwise, I await your responseâand your so-called conditions.
(Y/n)
High Lady of the Dusk Court
âŚ
To the Illustrious and Ever-Gracious High Lady of the Dusk Court,
I assure you, I have no intention of stallingâonly ensuring that all necessary terms are made clear. Since youâre so eager for my conditions, allow me to offer them plainly: full claim over Ramiel.
I assume, of course, that you understand the significance of Ramiel to the Illyrians, though I wonder if sentimentality is a concept the Dusk Court is capable of recognizing. Perhaps youâll manage, when thousands of Illyrians take it upon themselves to storm your borders, demanding theyâve nowhere for their Blood Rite.
Of course, if youâd prefer to drag this out further, by all means keep posturing. I donât mind waitingâI hear patience is a virtue, though I doubt thatâs a concept youâre particularly fond of, either.
Rhysand
High Lord of the Night Court
âŚ
To the Self-Appointed Arbiter of Illyrian Tradition, High Lord of the Night Court,
Your terms have been receivedâand rejected.
Ramiel is not yours to bargain with. Its ownership was divided between the Night and Dusk Courts long before either of us held our titles, and I have no intention of surrendering what is rightfully mine. Whatever misplaced sense of entitlement has led you to believe otherwise is your burden to bear, not mine.
If you are truly so desperate to appease your Illyrians, I suggest you find another solutionâone that doesnât involve attempting to strong-arm me under the guise of negotiation. Or did you imagine Iâd be too naĂŻve to recognize a pathetic attempt at leverage when I see it?
Next time you attempt to disguise arrogance as diplomacy, do try harder.
(Y/n)
High Lady of the Dusk Court
âŚ
To the Tireless Defender of Lost Causes, High Lady of the Dusk Court,
Your refusal, while unsurprising, was disappointingly predictable. I had hoped you might be capable of recognizing an opportunity when presented with one.
But I understand. Ruling can be⌠overwhelming. Perhaps the burden of leadership has clouded your judgmentâor perhaps youâre simply too proud to admit that the Dusk Court cannot stand alone. Without those trade routes, I imagine itâs only a matter of time before your courtâs merchants start looking elsewhere for stability. I wonder, how long will your peopleâs loyalty last when faced with empty pockets?
Of course, Iâm more than willing to assist you in finding a solutionâif youâre willing to discuss this matter in person. Surely, a female as capable as yourself wouldnât shy from a real conversation. Unless, of course, youâd prefer to keep trading letters instead. I canât say Iâd mind. Your insults are far more entertaining than I anticipated.
Do let me know.
Rhysand
High Lord of the Night Court
⌠. ăâş ă . ⌠. ăâş ă . âŚ
Adriata, Summer Court
The meeting had been set. The Summer Court had been Tarquinâs suggestionâone neither you nor the High Lord of Night could easily refuse. Neutral enough ground, given the mess of alliances during the war to take back your court. Enduring his insufferable theatrics under Tarquinâs watchful eye was unpleasant enough. The thought of tolerating them indefinitely only soured it further.Â
The air was thick with salt and sun, the Adriata breeze rolling in from the open sea as you ascended the marble steps of the Summer Courtâs palace. The gates were already open, a silent invitationâand the two Summer Court guards flanking them did not so much as twitch as you approached, their expressions impassive.Â
Inside, the refreshing chill of the palace provided welcome relief from the sweltering heat outside, a reprieve that mightâve been pleasant had your mind not already been preoccupied with thoughts of the impending meeting. Your footsteps echoed against polished floors as a familiar figure emerged from the arched hallway ahead.Â
Tarquin approached, dressed in deep blue, the color of a tide just before dusk, his crown of pearl and gold glinting beneath the glow of the faelights suspended above. He had never been one for ostentatious displays of power, and yet there was something effortless about the way he carried itâshoulders squared, chin high, every inch the High Lord of Summer.Â
A polite, knowing smile curved his lips as he bowed in greeting. âHigh Lady.â
âHigh Lord,â you returned, dipping your chin in greeting. âI appreciate you hosting this meeting.â
His smile deepened, but there was something almost conspiratorial behind it. âI canât say I object to the entertainment.â
You huffed a quiet laugh. âThat makes one of us.â
Tarquinâs amusement lingered as he extended his arm toward you. Without hesitation, you slipped your arm through his as he led the way inside. âI take it the correspondence has been⌠eventful?â
âThatâs a word for it,â you muttered.
He chuckled, leading you through the wide halls of polished coral and pearl, sunlight filtering through arched windows that overlooked the sea. The sound of distant music drifted through the corridorsâa low hum of strings and laughter.Â
It took you half a breath too long to place it.Â
You glanced at Tarquin, brow furrowing. âI was under the impression this was a private meeting.â
He exhaled, something wry tugging at his mouth. âIt was.â
Was.
You dropped your arm and stopped walking.Â
Tarquin turned to face you fully, sighing as he rubbed a hand across his jaw. âI had planned for it to be a quiet discussion,â he admitted. âApologies, truly. My cousinâs⌠enthusiasm often precedes her judgment.â
Of course. Cresseida and that damned mouth of hers.Â
A headache threatened at the base of your skull, and you pinched the bridge of your nose. âTell me youâre joking.â
âI wish I was.â He shook his head, sounding far too amused for your liking. âCresseida only meant well, butâwell, you know how quickly word spreads. The moment it was known you and Rhysand would be in the same room together, the interest became⌠considerable.â
Your lips parted slightly, incredulous. âHow considerable?â
A swell of noiseâlaughter, voices, the unmistakable hum of a gatheringârose from deeper within the palace, as if in answer. Tarquinâs eyes widened slightly, his expression caught between amusement and resignation. Â
You exhaled slowly, pressing your lips together, willing patience into your voice. âAnd how many High Lords are in attendance?â
Tarquinâs gaze flicked toward the crowd, then back to you, his lips quirking up at one corner. âAll, and at least half of Prythian, by my count.â
You closed your eyes for a brief moment.Â
Wonderful.Â
Of course it wouldnât be a simple negotiation. Of course this had turned into a spectacle. All of Prythian must have been abuzz with curiosity, all eager to see if the rumors were trueâif the Dusk Courtâs High Lady and the Night Courtâs High Lord could even stand to be in the same room without bloodshed.Â
And now, youâd have an audience.Â
You sighed, smoothing a hand down the front of your skirts. The dress was a deep violet-black, and shimmered with a subtle, shifting sheen that caught the light as you moved, like twilight settling over the horizon. The bodice was intricately designed with delicate lace, while the long, sheer sleeves flared gently at the wrists, trimmed in silver embroidery. And resting atop your head, a slender tiara of dark metal, woven with amethyst and moonstoneâlike the first stars pricking through the evening sky.Â
At the very least, you wouldnât look out of place.Â
Tarquin studied you for a moment before offering, âYou could always turn back and weâll reschedule.â
You arched a brow, both of you knowing that was not an option. âAnd let him spin his own version of events? Iâd rather suffer the evening.â
A low chuckle. âI thought you might say so.â
Tarquin turned, resuming his path toward the open doors far aheadâtoward the golden light and music spilling from the grand hall beyond.Â
You squared your shoulders and followed.Â
The noise struck firstâa soft roar of conversation that swelled as you stepped through the open doors. Laughter rippled beneath the clink of glasses and the steady rise and fall of music. Strings sang from somewhere across the grand hall, their notes weaving through the air, bright and liltingâcompletely at odds with the tension coiling in your chest.Â
The room was bathed in gold, sunlight spilling through towering windows that overlooked the sea. Gossamer curtains billowed with the breeze, carrying the scent of salt and citrus. The palaceâs coral-hued walls seemed to glow beneath the faelights suspended like stars above, glittering and warm.
Nobles clustered in tight groups, each dressed in silks and jewels that shimmered like fish scales in the light. A delicate blend of perfumes clung to the air, mingling with the faintest trace of seafoam. Glasses gleamed in their hands, wine swirling dark and rich as they murmured in low voices.Â
And thereâby one of the open archways that overlooked the distant cliffsâstood Rhysand, High Lord of the Night Court.
He stood tall and commanding as ever, his usual confident smirk playing on his lips as he engaged in some pointless small talk with a cluster of nobles from some court you couldnât be bothered to identify. His smile was sharp and easy, his laugh a low rumble that you somehow knew managed to sound genuine. He looked entirely at easeâall dark elegance in his finely tailored attire, the night-black fabric swallowing the warm light around him.Â
You watched as he sipped from his glass, his fingers curling around the delicate stem with calculated ease. Ever the picture of charmâpoised, composedâas if he hadnât been hellbent on driving you to the brink of madness over the past several weeks.Â
A hush rippled across the room, subtle but unmistakable. Not silence, not entirely, but it was enough. Theyâd seen you. And the whispers that followed? Soft, barely audible beneath the music, yet you could feel the weight of their stares. Curious eyes flicked between the two of you, waiting, wondering.Â
You bit back a sigh and crossed to the nearest drinks table, letting the cool stem of a wine glass rest between your fingers. You busied yourself casually moving through the hall, eyes drifting over the various High Lords deep in conversation, striking deals in hushed tones, some more conspicuously than others. A few were already exchanging knowing glances, clearly eager to witness the first public encounter between you two since your courts had ended their bitter conflict. You could practically feel the weight of their eyes, even from across the room.Â
The air was thick with pretenses, with politics, with old alliances shifting beneath carefully constructed smiles. The longer you lingered in the thrumming hum of the palace, the more you realized just how much was at stake in this charade.Â
You spent the first hour engaged in clipped, careful conversation with Tamlin and Lucien. Tamlin, all tense shoulders and tight-jawed restraint, spoke little beyond what was necessary. Lucien, at least, filled the silence with dry wit, though his sharp eyes missed nothing. There was a flicker of curiosity in them, a silent question he did not voice: What exactly is your endgame here? You only smiled, noncommittal, and let him wonder.Â
Then came Beron and Erisâan exercise in endurance more than diplomacy. Beron played at civility, but you could see the sneer behind his eyes, feel the weight of his disdain curling in the air between you. Eris, ever the sharper of the two, was all smooth words and knowing smirks, his amusement a blade he wielded with practiced ease. His compliments were barbed, his observations keen. And though you had no doubt he enjoyed watching you hold your ground against his father, there was a lingering watchfulness in him, a game being played that you had no interest in deciphering.Â
Eventually, your glass was empty, the wine gone as quickly as the patience youâd started with. You set it down carefully on a nearby passing tray before you straightened. Taking a slow, steadying breath, you steeled your spine and finally began the long walk toward him.Â
He noticed you before you reached him.Â
Of course he did.Â
Violet eyes flicked to yoursâa brief, cutting glance that held no warmth. Then he turned back to his group, murmuring something that earned a round of soft, agreeable laughter. By the time you reached him, his companions had scattered, as if sensing the change in the airâlike birds taking flight before a storm.Â
âHigh Lady,â he greeted smoothly, taking a slow sip from his glass. His eyes gleamed above the rimâcool, knowing. âI was beginning to think youâd avoid me all evening.â
You smiled tightly. âAnd miss the pleasure of your company, High Lord? Please.â
He chuckled, low and quiet. âDangerous words,â he warned, his voice just loud enough for you to hear. âI may begin to think you enjoy it.â
âI enjoy watching you run your mouth,â you countered, feigning disinterest as you reached for another drink from a passing tray. âItâs remarkable, really. You hardly need anyone else in the conversation.â
His lips twitched. âEfficient, wouldnât you say?â
Then his gaze dipped, tracking the movement as you took a slow sip from your glass. A flicker of amusement danced in his eyes, something sharp and searchingâa silent dare.
And for a heartbeat, you nearly smiled.Â
Okay. The bastard was funny. Youâd give him that much.
 âAmong other things.â
That smirk of his deepened, and you felt the annoying tug of frustration tighten in your chest. He knew exactly what he was doing, and he reveled in it. âIâll take that as a compliment,â he said, swirling the wine in his glass.
âOh, I wouldnât flatter yourself,â you shot back. âIâd sooner pay a compliment to the tableware.â
âIâve been told Iâm just as sharp,â he countered smoothly, lifting his glass in a mock toast.Â
âOnly half as useful,â you muttered, the words slipping out the moment his toast was raised, brows lifting as you took a slow sip from your glass.Â
The High Lord chuckled darkly, stepping just a fraction closerânot enough to break propriety, but enough that the air between you felt thinner. Warmer. âYouâve always had a fondness for sharp things. Trouble is,â he added, with a pointed glance at your glass, âyou havenât quite learned how to hold them without cutting yourself.â
You arched a brow. âAnd yet Iâm still standing.â
His smile widened, slow and feline. âFor now.â
âHigh Lord,â you said, voice dripping with dry formality, âif you think you can rattle me with such feeble attempts, youâre mistaken.â
âOh, please,â he drawled, sounding almost bored. âWeâve spent decades at each otherâs throats, (y/n)âsurely, you can address me by my name.â
You blinked, glass halfway to your lips.Â
â...No, thank you,â you said primly, taking a slow sip. âIâd hate to give you the satisfaction.â
His gaze danced over you, sharp and glittering. âCoward.â
âI prefer to think of it as prudence.â He wouldnât be getting a reaction out of you tonight.Â
âIs that what you call it?â Rhysand mused, swirling his drink. âI was beginning to think you avoided me out of⌠shyness.â
You let out a breathy laugh, tasting the remnants of wine on your tongue. âIâd hardly call avoiding you a loss.â
âAnd yet,â he countered, voice all lazy arrogance, âhere you are.â
âOnly because Iâm certain youâve already cornered half the room,â you said sweetly. âI figured someone should check that you havenât charmed them all into some terrible bargain.â
Rhysandâs smile turned cutting. âNow youâre giving me too much credit.â
âYouâd take it if it were offered.â
He chuckled under his breath, gaze flicking down your faceâsearching, calculating. âPerhaps I just wanted to see how long youâd last before you came to find me.â
âIf I knew itâd only encourage you,â you said coolly, âI may have waited longer.â
Something gleamed behind his eyes. âYou wound me, High Lady,â he said smoothly, tilting his head just so. âIâd hate to think the conversation is so unbearable.â
âOh, no. You mistake me,â you countered, gaze flicking over him with mock deliberation. âItâs not the conversation thatâs unbearable. Only the company.â
His laugh was a low, knowing thing, and you hated how easily it slid down your spine. âThat almost sounded personal.â
âTake it however it helps you sleep at night.â You lifted your glass to your lips, only to find it empty. Annoying.Â
Rhysand followed the movement, watched as you set it down on a passing tray and took another. His gaze lingered for half a beat too longâso brief you might have missed it had you not been so attuned to the way he moved, the way he studied.Â
Youâd already drained a glass during this conversation, never mind the two others throughout the evening. Heâd barely touched hisâjust one sip, if youâd been paying attention. And Rhysand certainly was, if you knew him at all. Which meant you wouldnât be having anotherâat least, not until you were free of his watchful gaze.Â
You let the silence stretch between you, just long enough to suggest boredom. Let him wonder if heâd lost your interest already.Â
He only smiled, unruffled. âSo?â he drawled, slipping a hand into his pocket. âShall we play nicely and discuss what weâre actually here for?â
You huffed a quiet laugh, tipping your head slightly. âAnd here I thought weâd already abandoned that pretense.â
Rhysandâs lips curved. âI suppose we have.â his gaze flicked briefly over your shoulder before settling back on you, heavy with implication. âNot that we truly have the luxury of privacy, do we?â
Your fingers traced the rim of your glass as you looked over your shoulder, following his line of sight. âThe High Lords have never been particularly skilled at minding their own.â
âNo,â he mused, swirling the wine in his glass. One of these times, it would spill, Cauldron-willing. âBut usually theyâre more subtle.â
Across the room, Beron leaned back in his chair, a smirk playing at the edges of his mouth as he murmured something to his eldest beside him. Helion, a few seats down, wasnât even bothering with discretion, openly entertained as he twirled his glass between his fingers. And TarquinâTarquin, for all his efforts to seem engaged in a separate conversation, kept glancing toward the two of you like he was expecting the walls to crack beneath the weight of whatever game you and Rhysand were playing.Â
âThat would be too convenient,â you murmured, gaze sweeping the room in one slow, deliberate pass.Â
Rhysand huffed a quiet laugh, low enough that only you could hear. âPity. I was looking forward to seeing how many veiled threats you could fit into a single conversation before Tarquin stopped you.â
âFive, at least.â
His brows lifted, mouth curving in a mockery of admiration. âAmbitious.â
You turned to him fully now, tilting your head. âConcerned?â
Something flickered behind his eyes, too quick to name, before that infuriating smirk returned. âHardly. I just prefer results over theatrics. And right now, Iâm afraid we wonât be getting any.â
You exhaled slowly, glancing once more at the gathered High Lords, at the nobles who clearly had no intention of keeping to their own business.Â
Cresseida had been cleverâforcing this into a public spectacle rather than a quiet, controlled negotiation. But if her goal had been to force you both into some kind of amicable resolution, she was bound to be disappointed.Â
You met his eye. âThen it seems weâve wasted an evening.â
Rhysand tilted his head, studying you with a lazy sort of amusement, fingers tapping idly against the stem of his glass. âOh, I wouldnât say that.â
Your jaw tightened. âNo?â
âNo,â he said smoothly, taking a slow sip of his wine. âIâve had quite a bit of fun. Iâll give you credit, youâve made it almost enjoyable to watch you stew.â
Bastard.Â
You shifted forward just enough that it could be passed off as casual to any onlookers. Just enough that the space between you thinned, that he had no choice but to notice the shift in proximity.
âTell me, Rhysand,â you said, voice dipped in silk and steel. âDo you ever tire of hearing yourself speak?â You studied his face for any sign of a reaction, a flicker in his eyesâsomething, anythingâ at the sound of his name on your tongue. You swore you saw his jaw tighten ever so slightly.
He smiled as he leaned in, matching you breath for breath. âTell me, (y/n), would you find my voice tolerable if I took the more subtle route?â he said, voice barely above a murmur.
You felt the faint pressure at the edges of your mind, like the brush of something sharp testing the barriers youâd carefully constructed for this very reason.
Your answering smile was slow, sweet, and entirely false. âTry it and see how fast I rip out your tongue.â
Then⌠he laughedâreally laughed, low and rich, the sound cutting through the tension like a blade. He leaned back with it, head tilting, and the shift sent you bristling, spine straightening before you could think better of it.Â
His laughter faded, tapering into a breath that still carried the ghost of mirth. âCareful, High Lady,â he said, eyes alight with something dangerous. âI might begin to suspect youâre attempting to entice me.â
Your nails pressed into your palm. Self-satisfied prick. As if youâd waste the effort.
âRest assured,â you said, voice smooth as glass, âif I meant to entice, you would not be left wondering.â
His brows lifted, just barely, before his weight shifted away, as if to study you. âAh,â he said at last, a touch too light. âThen I must have misjudged your intentions. My sincerest apologies.â
Your breath felt too shallow, your skin too warm. Unacceptable. And of course, he knew it.
So you only smiled again, slow and sharp, before turning on your heel. âEnjoy your night, High Lord.â
You didnât wait for a response, only tossed the words over your shoulder and kept walking, leaving him standing there. Watching you go.Â
⌠. ăâş ă . ⌠. ăâş ă . âŚ
To the High Lord of the Night Court, whose lack of talent in negotiation is rivaled only by his truly abysmal attempts at seduction,Â
It seems our time in the Summer Court was just as unproductive as our letters, though I suppose I should commend you for attempting a new strategy. Unfortunately for you, whatever effort you put into wooing me was wastedâI can assure you, I am not so easily swayed by charm, nor will I be seduced into accepting an entirely unreasonable deal.
Now, unless youâd prefer to spend more time failing miserably at that endeavor, perhaps we can return to the actual purpose of these discussions. You proposed a meeting to negotiate, yet Iâve still heard nothing of whatâaside from the absurdâmight convince you to release the other courts from their trade agreements with the Night Court. So, tell me, Rhysand: do you have any real terms to offer, or should I expect another pointless conversation?
(Y/n)
High Lady of the Dusk Court
âŚ
To the High Lady of the Dusk Court, whose wit remains as swift as her refusal to entertain reason,
I see your patience is as thin as ever. I was hoping youâd save your biting commentary for after our negotiations, but I should have known better. Your sharp tongue is always ready to make an appearance, even when the subject is far more pressing than whatever petty barb you think will get a rise out of me.
As for this wooing nonsense you insist on mentioning, had I wanted to spend the evening trying to seduce you, I certainly wouldnât have agreed on the Summer Court. Iâd have taken you somewhere far more secludedâperhaps an estate along the Day Courtâs southeastern coast, where the sunsets are golden and endless, and the warmth of the air would make it all too easy to lose yourself in far more pleasant distractions.
Iâd even go so far as to arrange a romantic candlelit dinner. A small, intimate table set for two, close enough that youâd have no choice but to brush against me whenever you so much as reached for your glassâthe first, second, and third. Though, knowing you, Iâd likely have to wait until your eighth before you finally deemed my shoulder worthy of supporting that insufferably high-held head of yours. Roses, of course, scattered in excessive, bordering-on-ridiculous abundance. A personal violinist to serenade usâno, perhaps an entire string quartet, just to ensure the moment is properly insufferable. Iâd be remiss if I didnât include poetry of courseâsomething overwrought, preferably recited under the stars with all the solemnity of a male professing his undying devotion. Really, (y/n), if seduction had been my goal, Iâd have made sure to leave you with no doubt about my intentions.Â
Weâd have had plenty of time for meaningful conversation, uninterrupted by the chaos of Cresseidaâs âenthusiasmââwhich, I might add, was the delicate (I say delicate with the utmost sarcasm) term Tarquin managed to muster for the spectacle she orchestrated. I suppose it was foolish of me to expect any self-respecting High Lord to take command of his own palace and dismiss his unwanted guests, though Iâm sure youâd prefer to dismiss such reasonable suggestions as impractical, as is your way.
But, of course, I digress. As it stands, my terms remain unchanged: Ramiel. The western half. Youâll find that without it, thereâs little incentive for the Night Court to make concessions. No amount of your desperate little dramatics will sway my stance. I think we both know this is the only real term on the table.
Rhysand
High Lord of the Night Court
P.S. I must thank you for the satisfactionâI believe that was the term you usedâof hearing my magnificent name fall from your lips the other night. And now, to see it written by your delicate hand as well⌠Truly, I must be the most Cauldron-blessed male in all of Prythian.
âŚ
To the ever-persistent High Lord of the Night Court, whose ego remains as unshakable and misplaced as his faith in his own charm
It seems I underestimated just how much time youâve spent considering the matter of seducing me. Such detail, such effortâfew males would go to such great lengths to convince a female of their supposed disinterest. If I didnât know better, I might think itâs been occupying that scheming mind of yours far more than youâd care to admit. Though I have to wonder⌠Do all your fantasies involve me drinking myself into some pliant, starry-eyed fool? Or is that your way of compensating for the fact that I would never find you charming of my own accord?
And here I thought you were merely insufferableâimagine my surprise to learn youâre a gossip as well. I should have guessed. You seem precisely the typeâsharp-eyed and sharper-tongued, always poised to collect whatever little scraps of intrigue fall into your lap. I can only assume you relish hoarding such information, tucking it away until it serves some greater purpose. I wonder, do you find as much satisfaction in keeping secrets as you do in sharing them? Or is it just my ability to match that insufferable wit of yours that has you so eager to write?
Speaking of which, your remarks about Tarquin were as predictable as they were shortsighted. Iâm sure it must be easy business to force out fae who have ruled for millennia when you yourself have only been alive for a fraction of that time. Even easier when one in particular has a habit of reducing things to ash.Â
Tell me, Rhysand, do all your enemies receive such personal attention, or am I special? I must be, considering how quickly you seem to find time to respond to me. Itâs impressive, reallyâyour letters reach me in a fraction of the time I typically receive correspondence. Youâre either woefully impatient or remarkably eager, and Iâm not sure which is worse.Â
But since youâre so determined to keep the discussion of rights to Velarisâ trade agreements at a stalemate, perhaps I could put my delicate hands to some use. That is, if you can manage to set aside your fixation on Ramiel long enough to consider alternatives. I wonder if I ought to bring something else to the tableâsomething of more⌠immediate value to you.Â
That being said, youâll have to quell your impatience for the time being. Iâll be away on business, which means youâll have to find some other means of entertaining yourself for the time being. As much as I hate to deprive you of my company, I suspect youâll manage. Try not to let your restlessness get the better of you. Iâd hate to return to a stack of letters detailing all the ways you âcould haveâ won me over, if only Iâd let you.Â
(Y/n)
High Lady of the Dusk Court
P.S. As lovely as your rose-petaled fantasy sounds, I much prefer mirabilis. I wouldnât expect you to appreciate the significance.Â
âŚ
To the High Lady of the Dusk Court, whose ability to misinterpret my intentions is truly something to behold,
I hate to shatter your illusions, but you are not specialânot in this regard, at least. The speed of my letters has nothing to do with my enthusiasm and everything to do with geography. Our courts share a border, after allâan unfortunate reality, considering how much of it you carved from my own. Proximity is a rather mundane explanation, but if youâd prefer to believe I spend my days waiting by the window for your next scathing remark, far be it from me to rob you of that fantasy.Â
On the subject of fantasies: You do love to twist my words, donât you? If I recall, you were the one to pose the questionâam I not allowed to entertain it? I simply offered you the scenario that seemed most realistic. And yet, you seem quite fixated on the idea of me seducing you. I wonderâdo all your rebuttals involve projecting your own preoccupations onto me? Or is this your way of compensating for the fact that Iâve gotten under your skin more than youâd care to admit?
What you refer to as gossiping, I prefer to think of as being well-informed. A skill you should appreciate, given your own sharp tongue and penchant for gaining leverage. But Iâll admit, secrets do make for excellent companyâparticularly when the alternative is a conversation as dull as this stalemate of ours. And I have yet to decide whether the pleasure of matching wits with you outweighs the agony of your stubbornness.Â
Now, as much as Iâd love to ignore the blatant baiting in your letter, I find myself⌠curious. I can certainly imagine the lovely image of those delicate hands of yours being put to useâafter all, I distinctly recall them attempting to drive a sword through my neck not long ago. Iâll admit, Iâm rather torn between dreading the thought and finding it intriguing. And if that amuses you, then by all means, enjoy yourself. Iâm sure you will.Â
Iâm sure Iâll find some way to pass the time. Perhaps Iâll spend it in quiet reflection. Perhaps Iâll take up a new hobbyâpainting, poetry, composing terribly romantic ballads in your honor (for the string quartet to play, of course). Or perhaps Iâll simply use the opportunity to reclaim whatâs mine. Ramiel, for instance. Wouldnât that be amusing?
Enjoy your business, (y/n). Try not to miss me too much.Â
Rhysand
High Lord of Night
P.S. The mirabilis is an exquisite flower. I had a bed of them at my townhouse in VelarisâI always admired them for being the only flora wise enough to appreciate the beauty of night in the Night Court.Â
âŚ
To the High Lord of the Night Court, whose delusions of grandeur are as endless as they are exhausting,
I must confess, I almost missed these letters in my brief reprieve from them. Almost. Though I must say, I imagined your anticipation a little differently. Not waiting by the window, pining for my response, but rather rifling through your mail, skimming past important matters of state in search of your name in my handwriting.
Iâm right, arenât I?Â
As amusing as it is to imagine, youâll have to forgive me for not sharing in your enthusiasm. Youâll find I have more pressing concerns than indulging whatever thrill you get from these exchanges.
And yet, despite that eagerness, you still managed to disappoint me. You dodged my question so artfully, I almost didnât notice. Again, almost. You say Iâm not special âin this regard, at leastââwhich begs the question: in what regard do you believe me to be special, Rhysand? Go on, amuse me. Though I imagine youâll find a way to dodge the question, just as you so skillfully sidestepped my last.
On the matter of your other fantasies, I do hope you werenât too attached to the idea of reclaiming Ramiel. Iâm surprised I wasnât informed of an attempt while I was away. Either you truly were joking, or you failed spectacularly. I suspect the formerâif only because the latter would wound your pride too much to keep quiet. But donât delude yourself into thinking Iâll let you take it so easily. Should you ever try, I suggest you prepare for far more resistance than the last time your court made an attempt at mine. I suggest you spare yourself the embarrassment and resign yourself to the reality of the border as it stands.
And speaking of revisionist history, I see youâre still clinging to the notion that I carved something from your court. Let me remind you that I took back only what rightfully belonged to Dusk. Not an acre more. The distinction may be an inconvenience to your pride, but I assure you, itâs quite important to me.
As for the truly pressing mattersâyou say you can imagine my hands being put to use, torn between dreading the thought and finding it intriguing. How very dramatic. I only meant to say I would see what strings I could pull. What exactly did you imagine I was referring to?Â
Speaking of whichâI do have another portion of my reacquired land that I might be willing to bring to the table. But before I entertain any offers, I think Iâd like answers. To all of my questions.Â
Try not to let the anticipation distract you too much.Â
(Y/n)
High Lady of the Dusk Court
P.S. A poetic interpretation, though an inaccurate one. The mirabilis does not bloom for night, Rhysand. It blooms for dusk. Iâm hardly surprised you managed to make it about yourself. Though, I suppose I canât fault you for finding familiarity in beautiful things.Â
âŚ
To the unshakable guardian of borders, both territorial and personalâthough one seems far less impenetrable than the other, High Lady of the Dusk Court,
Iâll admit, my evenings were far quieter in your absence. Dreadfully so. I found myself quite bored without your charming insultsâperhaps I should be worried? I fear I may have grown too accustomed to your scrutiny.
I did have an enjoyable time speculating about what, exactly, could have kept you from writing. Was it boredom? A newfound commitment to your so-called pressing concerns? Or were you simply trying to teach me the virtues of patience?
A noble effort, if so. Though I must say, for someone with more important matters to attend to, you seem remarkably preoccupied with my pride. Your fixation on it would almost be endearingâif it werenât so transparent. Are you hoping to wound it? Searching for some weakness, some bruise you might press your thumb against? If my ego is as fragile as you imagine, why are you working so hard to shatter it?
On the matter of Ramiel, Iâm flattered by your assumption that I would go about reclaiming it in such an underhanded way. But contrary to popular belief, I am not entirely cold; I can make a joke. I make many of them, really. And taking Ramiel back with anything less than a true effort would be disgraceful to it. A sacred mountain deserves a worthy battle, donât you think? I can only assume you agree, given how fiercely you cling to what youâve takenâexcuse me, what youâve reclaimed. Iâve found myself agreeing with you on this frontârevisionist history is an unfortunate thing. Perhaps we should compare records sometime, particularly those regarding the last time our courts clashed. Preferably over a bottle of that wine we had in Adriata. Seven glasses that night, was it? Or was I too distracted to count? Either way, Iâm sure the discussion would prove enlighteningâit may remind you history has a habit of repeating itself.Â
Speaking of indulgences, I find it fascinating that, of all the questions I so skillfully evaded, the one youâre most intent on prying an answer from is what I think of your hands and what youâll do with them? An interesting choice, considering your previous insistence that you have far more pressing concerns than indulging me. But who am I to question your priorities?
I suppose I can be merciful and share the long-awaited answers you so demandingly requested (Mother help whatever poor male ends up as your mate, if this is how you insist on getting your way):
Partially. Matters of state demand priority, but I do allow myself certain distractions.Â
If I told you, Iâd lose the pleasure of watching you try to figure it out yourself. But since you seem desperate for an answer, Iâll offer a hint: itâs not your modesty. Or your patience. Certainly not your generosity.Â
I thought it was quite evident what you meant to imply. But if you insist on feigning innocence⌠Truthfully, I assumed your offer was one that would require privacy. And a great deal of generosity on your part. This is something, I now realize, you certainly wouldnât have put into writing if only to uphold the charade that youâd never find me charming. And now that Iâve said as much, I do hope youâll allow me the dignity of never having to elaborate further. For both our sakes.Â
Yours in anticipation,
Rhysand
High Lord of Night
P.S. Can you blame a male for admiring fine calligraphy? The way you curl the R and y on the envelopeâit does wonders for an already stunning name. Almost makes me forgive the rest of your letter.Â
Almost.Â
P.P.S. You canât fault me for finding familiarity in beautiful things? It seems Iâm beginning to grow on you.Â
âŚ
To the High Lord of Night, who wields wit like a blade yet underestimates the sharpness of my own,
I should make one thing abundantly clear: I did not call you beautiful. I merely acknowledged your tendency to find yourself in the presence of beautiful thingsâan unfortunate distinction you seem determined to misinterpret. Your ego has always had a habit of bending words to its will.Â
As for your supposed concerns over my absence, rest assuredâI had no ulterior motive for not writing. No grand scheme to test your patience or see how long youâd last before you wilted from neglect. I was simply occupied. The life of a High Lady is not one of idle indulgence, after all. I leave that to you.Â
And yet, you speak as though I spend my precious time working to shatter your ego. An interesting claim, considering Iâve done nothing but respond to the words you so generously provide me. If anything, youâre the one offering up your pride, Rhysand. If itâs cracked, I certainly wasnât the one to drop it.Â
On the matter of history, I must say, your memory is sharper than I gave you credit for. Seven glasses, was it? And here I thought Iâd lost track. I wonderâdoes an obsessive enemy count each sip so meticulously, or only a male in love?
Speaking of unanswered questions, youâre still avoiding mine. And until you decide to remedy that, I see no reason to disclose what I plan to bargain with (a term I use loosely, as I know your court has a rather⌠rigid interpretation of the word). But since you seem so desperate to know, Iâll offer you a choice: either admit there are too many ways in which you find me special to list, or do your best to name them all.Â
And regarding your⌠interpretation of my offer, Iâd suggest you check your assumptions. Whatever it is you imagined, that was entirely your own doing. A slip of the mind perhaps? A rather telling one, if so.
(Y/n)
High Lady of Dusk
P.S. Since you seem so taken with my calligraphy, I made some additions in honor of your rather devoted attention. A fitting touch, donât you think? Do let me know if youâd noticed before reading this.
âŚ
To the most self-important High Lady in all of Prythian,
Love? You flatter yourself. A male in my position would be reckless not to keep a close eye on his greatest adversary. And a sharp memory is hardly a crimeâthough I suppose I should be grateful you only accuse me of counting your drinks and not of slipping something into them. It would not be the first time you assumed the worst of me.Â
And since youâre so eager for me to list themâvery well. The ways in which you are special:
You wield words like weapons, yet claim innocence when they strike true. A fascinating contradiction. Iâd almost admire it, were I not so often on the receiving end.Â
Your dedication to antagonizing me is truly unparalleled. The effort, the commitmentâitâs impressive. One might even say admirable.Â
Youâve managed, against all odds, to make even silence feel pointed. A rare skill. Not one Iâd expect of someone so supposedly burdened with more pressing concerns
You have an impeccable memory for every instance in which Iâve stalled or withheld negotiation details for my own gainâyet here you are, doing the very same. Hypocrisy has never looked so graceful.
I could continue, but I wouldnât want you to mistake it for admiration. And besides, I believe Iâve humored you enough.Â
I am not going to argue the wording of your offer with you. You chose your words carefully, as you always do. And I am but a male. Where, exactly, did you expect my mind to go?
And if I were to claim that you, of all people, would never be so sentimental as to embellish my name with heartsâwould you deny it? You accuse me of obsession, of something more, yet only someone utterly besotted would go to such painstaking effort. Curious isnât it?
Yours in ruthless scrutiny,
Rhysand
High Lord of Night
P.S. You can spare yourself the trouble in your next letterâI will not be listing any more. I wouldnât want to inflate the ego of my greatest admirer lest she believe me to be interested.Â
âŚ
To the most infuriatingly self-satisfied High Lord in all of Prythian, who so skillfully dodges a direct answer while pretending itâs beneath him to do so,
Besotted? I would have thought a male in your position would be reckless to mistake a simple acknowledgement of his shortcomings for something so tragic as infatuation. But if it soothes your ego to believe I spend my waking hours consumed with thoughts of you, I suppose I shouldnât deny you that small comfort. The fragile need their delusions.
Where did I expect your mind to go? If my phrasing left room for your mind to wander, it says far more about you than it does me. Projection is an unbecoming look on a High Lordâthough, lucky for you, it seems to suit you well.Â
And if you were to claim that Iâof all peopleâwould never be so sentimental as to embellish your name with hearts, Iâd wonder what youâd do if I denied it. But alas, I have no need to lie. It was not painstaking to do the calligraphy, nor did I waste away hours perfecting it. It comes quite easily to someone as skilled as myself. But if you prefer to imagine me blushing, lovestruck, ink-stained fingers pressing to my lips as I sigh over the flourish of your nameâfar be it from me to rid you of such a fantasy. We all must have our amusements, mustnât we?
Now, I ignored it the first time, but I canât any longer. Twice now, youâve signed off your letters, âyours, Rhysand.â A rather bold choice, donât you think? Unless, of course, Iâve missed something and you are. Mine, I mean. Seems an odd habit for a male so determined to deny any particular interest in me.
Not yours, in measured indifference,
(Y/n)
âŚ
To the ever-distractible High Lady, whose selective attention is as impressive as her deflections,
You seem to have overlooked a few key matters in your last letter. Namely, any mention of our negotiations. I upheld my end of your demand by providing the list you so graciously insisted upon. And yet, curiously, I find myself still waiting for the slightest indication of what land you intend to put forth in this bargain. A mere oversight, Iâm sure. Or perhaps my entirely accurate assessment of your infatuation left you so flustered that you simply forgot?
And speaking of such flustered statesâyou made quite the fuss over how I sign my letters, yet in your haste, you seem to have neglected to properly sign off your own. Are we abandoning such formalities now? A shame. I had so been looking forward to seeing what you might come up with next.Â
Yours, as ever,
Rhysand
âŚ
To the most persistently arrogant High Lord, whose ability to fixate on trivialities is truly unmatched,
Oh, I do apologizeâwas there something important hidden between all the self-satisfaction and baseless accusations? How careless of me to overlook it. Youâre right, of course. I should have addressed the matter of our negotiations. Itâs just that I found myself distracted by your transparent attempt to shift the conversation. A flimsy strategy, Rhysand. I am ashamed it hit its mark.Â
You claim to have upheld your end of the deal, and yet, all youâve provided is a list dripping with backhanded compliments and veiled frustration. Hardly the fair exchange you make it out to be. But fine. Since youâre so desperate to discuss it, here it is: shared rights over the Prison. The island was, historically, my ancestorsâ land, after all. You should consider it an honorâand a rare olive branchâthat Iâm willing to grant you even that much.Â
As for your signature dilemmaâwhat an astute observation. If my lack of a formal sign-off has rattled you so, I can only imagine how unmoored youâd be if I started leaving my letters entirely unsigned, much in the same way you have a habit of leaving my questions unanswered. A terrifying prospect, Iâm sure. But since you so clearly long for my parting words, I wouldnât dream of disappointing you.Â
Still not yours,
(Y/n)
âŚ
To the ever-elusive High Lord,
It has now been a full week past when I expected your replyâan unusual delay, given not only the geography of our courts (as you so helpfully pointed out before), but the sensitive nature of my last correspondence as well. Surely, by now, you have some response, unless, of course, there is truly so much to discuss with your advisors? I would have thought a male of your remarkable intelligence could have reached a decision long before now.Â
But perhaps you are merely searching for the perfect way to tell me what I already knowâthat this is a wonderful opportunity for the Night Court. I have no doubt your brilliant mind will find some way to convince the Illyrians that they only need half the mountain for their precious Blood Rite. Surely, their warriors will be just as fearsome without every inch of Ramiel beneath their feet.Â
Patiently (for now),
(Y/n)
âŚ
Rhysand,
I sincerely hope my last letter has reached you. It would be a shame to have to fire someone over such a careless mistake. But since I have yet to receive a response, I must now assume one of two things: either my words were lost twice, or you are deliberately ignoring them. Neither is particularly reassuring.Â
That said, I have reconsidered a portion of my last letter. In hindsight, my suggestion was both insensitive and entirely wrong. It was not my place to suggest forcing the Illyrians to alter a sacred tradition they have upheld for generations. I recognize that now. So let me be clearâI have absolutely no problem allowing them full access to Duskâs half of Ramiel for the duration of their Blood Rite. It is not my intent to rob them of something so integral to their history.Â
I trust this correction will not go unnoticed. And I expect to hear from you soon.Â
Yours (less patient than before),
(Y/n)
âŚ
To (y/n), the High Lady whose patience, it seems, is as thin as her restraint in letter-writing,
I appreciate the flood of correspondence awaiting me upon my returnâtruly, it is touching to know that my absence was felt so⌠acutely. Though I must say, I expected better of you than to jump to the most uncreative conclusion. Ignoring you? Deliberately? You wound me. And here I was, under the impression that you enjoyed a bit of mystery.Â
I am sure you will be surprised to find that I, in fact, do not have the luxury of spending my days hovering over my desk, eagerly awaiting the arrival of ink-stained letters. I have been occupied. Surely, a mind as sharp as yours can deduce that certain matters require my undivided attentionâones that, regrettably, cannot be shared in writing. Or perhaps youâd rather I neglected those responsibilities to promptly return your ever-charming correspondence?
As for the contents of your latest correspondenceâfinally, some substance. Shared rights over the Prison. A bold proposition. I find it endearing how you frame it as an honor rather than the calculated power play it truly is. Your generosity is noted, as is your gracious concession regarding Ramiel. I suspect the Illyrians will be deeply relieved to know you have found it in your heart to grant them access to land they have fought and bled upon for millennia. How lucky they are to have your benevolence.Â
And now, to address the most pressing concern of allâI do wonder if you are more fixated on our negotiations, or on me. I will grant you the mercy of answering your most burning question. Am I yours? A dangerous thing to suggest, especially from someone so insistent that she feels nothing at all.Â
Yours, as always,
Rhysand
âŚ
Rhysand,
I had no place to suggest altering a tradition that is not mine to change. It was careless, and I regret it. Please consider this my formal apologyâto you and to the Illyrians. I will ensure that my future propositions are made with greater thought.Â
As for the matter with the Prison, I will not waste either of our time dressing it up as anything but what it is. A necessary arrangement. One that, should you still wish to discuss, I will be available at your convenience.Â
(Y/n)
âŚ
(Y/n),
How uncharacteristically⌠restrained. I confess, I find myself at a lossâwhere has the sharp-tongued, impossible-to-rattle High Lady gone? I was rather enjoying our exchanges, yet now you write to me as if I am nothing more than a bureaucrat awaiting your next trade proposal. It does not suit you.Â
Something must be weighing on you to make you forget our less stately topics of conversation. I wonderâshould I be concerned? Or will you insist, as always, that nothing at all is amiss?
Yours,
Rhysand
âŚ
Rhysand,
I regret to inform you that I am currently preoccupied with matters of importance. Your musings about the missing High Lady of Dusk, while charming, do not qualify. I have neither the time nor the energy to explain, but rest assuredâitâs nothing that requires your concern.
(Y/n)
âŚ
(Y/n),
Iâm not asking for the inner workings of your court. Only some assurance that the High Lady Iâve been painstakingly coaxing into a negotiation hasnât decided to throw herself into the abyss. A waste, trulyâin more ways than one. Iâd hate to lose the only opponent whoâs ever managed to keep pace.Â
Yours (against my better judgment),Rhysand
âŚ
Rhysand,
If you must knowâthough I suspect you already doâIâm fine. Truly. Or at least as fine as one can be when balancing the weight of a court that seems determined to pull itself apart at the seams.Â
I wanted this. Fought for it. Sacrificed for it. I would do it all over again if I had to, if only to reclaim what was stolen from my ancestors and restore Dusk to what it once was. But I canât say I anticipated how steep the price would be.Â
Beron, for one, seems intent on ensuring I feel every thorn in the crown I now wear. I knew his help would come with stringsâbut I misjudged how tightly heâd be willing to pull them. Heâs been pressing me for greater trade rights along the southern border, a thinly veiled attempt to undercut Velarisâ control over the merchant routes. I refused, of course. Which only gave him an excuse to retaliateârestricting shipments of raw materials that my court requires to rebuild. He knows exactly how far he can push before Iâm forced to give him something in return.Â
And then thereâs the matter of Thesanâs generosity. Or rather, the staggering debt it left me with. His support during the war was invaluable, but now the treasury is running thin. Iâve already levied new taxes, cut court expenses, not to mention countless other efforts, but itâs not enough. It will never be enough.Â
As for Tamlinâheâs been⌠circling. Watching for weakness. He hasnât demanded anything outright, not yet, but the implied threat is clear enough. I suspect heâs waiting for Beron or Thesan to draw blood first, hoping Iâll come crawling to him when Dusk begins to buckle under the weight of their demands. And Iâm certain heâll enjoy every moment of it.Â
And through all of it, Iâm expected to smile and remain composed. To reassure my people, my advisors, my alliesâthat I have it all under control. That their High Lady is not unraveling beneath the pressure of debts and threats and politics. That I am not coming apart at the seams from the sheer exhaustion of being tugged in every possible direction.Â
I know I shouldnât be telling you any of this. Iâm sure youâll eventually use it against meâsome leverage to play when it suits you best. Hopefully Iâll come to my senses and burn this letter before it reaches you. If youâre reading this, then evidently I need to be evaluated for hurling my courtâs politics into the hands of my enemy.
I knew this would be difficult. I was not naĂŻve about the cost. But there is something uniquely punishing about knowing I fought so hard for this crown, only to find myself bound by a different set of chains.Â
And yet, Iâll keep going. Because what other choice is there? Because this is what it means to ruleâto carry the weight alone.Â
You understand that donât you?
(Y/n)
âŚ
(Y/n),
I canât decide whether I should be flattered or insulted that you think me capable of using this against you. If I were going to exploit you, I would have done so long agoâby making sure everyone knew just how fond you are of me.
Beron is not nearly as clever as he thinks he is. His entire approach relies on you needing him more than he needs you. Which means you need to make it clear that you donât. If heâs restricting raw materials, look elsewhere. Thereâs a port in Day, just south of your shared border, that could cover the loss. Speak with Helion. Itâll be more expensive, yes, but not so much that itâd justify letting him think he has the upper hand.
And Thesan is not unreasonable. He wouldnât have extended his aid if he didnât believe Dusk was a worthy investment. But debts of this scale arenât meant to be paid off in coin alone. Offer him something softer: diplomacy, information, a trade route that benefits both courtsâperhaps the one Beron is panting after. Show him that aiding your court wasnât charityâit was a strategic decision. If you position it correctly, you can turn him from a creditor into an ally.Â
Tamlinâwell. I wouldnât waste too much thought on him. Heâs not bold enough to make the first move, and even if he were, heâs too predictable to catch you off guard. Let him watch. Let him wait. Heâll tire of it eventually. And if, by some miracle, he proves otherwiseâyou wonât be the only one handling it.Â
And youâre rightâthis is what it means to rule. To be pulled apart, worn down, tested until thereâs nothing left but steel and bone. But youâre not as alone as you think. And if you ever tire of pretending you have everything well in hand, you know where to find me. Iâll even provide the wine (Eastgate Ruby, Tarquin tells me, is what was served at our âmeetingâ).Â
You should knowâyouâre doing well. Better than well, actually. They wouldnât be pressing this hard if you werenât already a threat.Â
Yours,
Rhysand
P.S. Take your time respondingâsee to what needs seeing to. But do keep in mind, every day we linger in this stalemate is another day merchants are kept from Velaris. And I do hate to keep good wine waiting.Â
âŚ
Rhysand,
I imagine I owe you an apology for how curt Iâve been. If I were you, I wouldnât have bothered replying, much less with actual counsel. And yet, here you are. I wonât pretend to understand why, but Iâd be a fool not to recognize the value of what youâve given me.Â
Your assessment of Beron was correct. Helion has surprisingly agreed to supply what we need, though not without cost. I suspect Iâve a certain High Lord to thank for thatâŚ
But thatâs not why Iâm writing. You said my offer of the Prison was somethingâ but is it enough? You were adamant before about Ramiel. Has that changed, or are we only delaying the inevitable? Iâd rather know where we stand than waste time circling the same conversation.Â
And despite my better judgment, Iâll say it againâthank you, Rhysand. Truly.
Yours,
(Y/n)
P.S. I am not fond of you. Do not spread baseless rumors.Â
âŚ
(Y/n),
The advice was nothingâreally, if this is all it takes to earn such enthusiastic gratitude from you, I almost feel guilty for not demanding more in return. Try to keep your wits about you, will you? Itâd be a shame if our negotiations were cut short because you keeled over from sheer appreciation.Â
Speaking ofâthe High Lordsâ meeting next week seems as good a place as any to finalize our discussions. I doubt weâre the only ones eager to put this matter to rest.Â
Let me know if I should move your place card beside mine.Â
Yours,
Rhysand
P.S. The rumors would not be baseless.
P.P.S. Iâll see about officially changing them to High Lordsâ & Ladiesâ Meetings.Â
⌠. ăâş ă . ⌠. ăâş ă . âŚ
The marble gleamed gold beneath the afternoon sun, intricate carvings twisting along each column of the Day Courtâs grand hall. Sunlight spilled through arched windows, catching on the etching along the ceilingâeverywhere you looked, there was radiance, warmth. But the mood within the room was anything but bright.Â
Tamlin and Tarquin were already at it.Â
âI donât give a damn what your scholars have said,â Tamlin bit out, his fingers curled into the polished wood of the table. âYour dam project diverts water away from the Riverlands, which directly impacts all ofââ
Tarquin exhaled sharply, leaning back in his chair. âYou mean it impacts Spring. The other Courts seem perfectly content withââ
The argument barely cut through the layered hum of conversation. The hall was packedâHigh Lords, High Ladies, emissaries, and advisors all seated along the sprawling table or just behind the leaders of their court, quiet but watchful. Courtiers lingered at the edges of the chamber, murmuring among themselves. Further down the table, the room had splintered into smaller conversations, hushed discussions carried between tilted heads and subtle glances. Viviane murmured something to her counterpart in Autumn, her fingers tracing the rim of her glass. Eris murmured something low enough that only Azriel could hear. Whatever it was made the shadowsingerâs mouth curl. Some spoke of alliances, of shifting borders and trade disputes, while others engaged in idle pleasantries, weighing their words with careful calculation.Â
You hadnât spoken to each other yet. Hadnât needed to. But his attention settled over you all the same, a quiet pressure against the edges of your awareness.Â
Rhysand lounged beside you, one arm slung over the back of his chair, fingers drumming idly against the carved wood. His expression was the perfect mask of boredom, his violet eyes sweeping the table as if merely observing, gathering.Â
But each time you spoke, each time your voice wove into the discussion, something in him tensed. Not noticeably, not even in a way you could explain, but you felt it. The way his fingers stilled against the chair, the way his head tilted just slightly.Â
Your place card was, in fact, next to his.
You hadnât asked him to move it. Hadnât responded to that letter of his.
Youâd gone to read it, expecting nothing more than the usual formalities, maybe a carefully chosen turn of phrase or two. But the first page had barely contained a paragraph, just a handful of neatly penned lines before cutting off entirely. Youâd frowned, turning it over, checking for moreâonly to find the second page clinging to the back.
The moment you saw it, you realized the second page wasnât part of the letter. Not officially.Â
The stray notes scrawled in the margins, phrases crossed out and rewritten, thoughts scattered between lines of unfinished sentences. Lists, remindersâhalf a to-do list squeezed into one corner, a set of numbers you didnât recognize. And then, amid all of it, a letter. A real one. One that had never been meant to leave his desk.Â
The handwriting was messier, less composed, as if written in haste. He hadnât redrafted it. Hadnât refined the words or arranged them carefully. It was raw. Unpolished. And as you read, a slow, twisting pressure built in your chest.Â
You still didnât know what to do with any of it.Â
So you did what you always did: you kept your expression unreadable, smoothed down the silk of your sleeves, and shifted just enough to let yourself feel the weight of his attention.Â
Youâd chosen your dress carefully. The rich midnight blue of Dusk, the embroidery catching faintly in the afternoon light, shifting between silver and violet in the right angles. The fabric was sheer in places, opaque in others, with delicate beading that traced the bodice and sleeves like constellations. The silhouette was deceptively simple, fitted through the torso before cascading in effortless folds, pooling slightly where you sat. Your jewelry was understatedâa bracelet of woven platinum and black diamonds, earrings and a necklace to match. But the tiara was another thing entirely.Â
Duskâs coronet was a thing of starlight and shadow, its intricate metalwork impossibly delicate yet undeniably strong. Bands of dark silver twisted together, slender but unyielding, their curves resembling the arms of a crescent moon. Small gems were inlaid at precise points, catching the light like scattered stars, a constellation mapped in precious stone. At its center, the design wove into an intricate lattice, almost imperceptible unless one looked closelyâa reminder, woven into its very structure, that not everything of Dusk could be seen at a glance.Â
Still, there was business to be done.Â
âThe borders between Dusk and Night remain unchanged,â you said when the conversation made its way to you. Your voice was even, measured. âThe western face of Ramiel remains under Duskâs jurisdiction, but the Illyrians retain access for the Blood Rite.âÂ
There was a beat of silence. Agreement, consideration.Â
Then from beside youâ
âMy Court shares access to the Prison,â Rhysand said smoothly. âAnd as long as there are no tariffs imposed on the Night Court, trade will resume with Velaris at Duskâs discretion.â
He didnât look at you when he said it. His voice was cool, each word delivered with the sharp precision of someone well-versed in negotiation. Nothing in his tone hinted at the letters heâd sentânot the formal, measured ones at the start, but the later ones, where the careful mask had begun to slip. Where the words had become⌠something else.Â
You werenât sure what unsettled you mostâthe contrast, the deal, or the fact that, beneath all of it, you still hadnât decided how to act on that letter.Â
âThat brings us to trade,â you continued, your gaze sweeping the table. âAfter lengthy discussions, the Solar Courts have reached an agreement regarding our eastern waters.â
A ripple of interest passed through the room. Some leaned forward slightly, others tipped their heads, listening. Across from you, Helion and Thesan exchanged glances with you and Rhysandâsubtle, knowing.Â
âOnly the Solar Courts may conduct trade with one another through the eastern waters,â you announced evenly. âAny trade between the Seasonal and Solar Courts must be conducted through land or the western waters.â
The statement settled like a stone in the roomâs collective understanding.Â
Tamlin, Tarquin, and Kallias looked largely unbothered. The arrangement changed little for themâthey had ample access to the western coast of Prythian and had conducted most of their trade through those routes already.Â
But Beron.Â
You turned your attention to him then, the barest trace of a polite smile tugging at your lips.Â
âSurely, you all understand the desire to avoid unnecessary hassle,â you mused lightly, watching as the realization sank in.Â
Autumn had no western coastline. No direct route to the western waters. Which meant Beronâs merchants would now be forced to transport goods through other courts to access those trade routesâincurring delays, additional taxes, and the general headache of relying on the goodwill of neighboring courts.Â
Beronâs jaw tensed. His fingers flexed slightly where they rested against the table, and though his face remained carefully neutral, you caught the flicker of something sharp in his eyes.Â
A quiet hum of approval came from Helion, his grin barely restrained. Tarquin exhaled a soft chuckle, though he masked it with a sip of wine. Even Kallias looked vaguely entertained, his cool blue stare flicking toward Beron before settling back on you.Â
Rhysand, howeverâ
Your peripheral vision caught the slightest tilt of his head. The slow, deliberate tap of his fingers against the arm of his chair. But it was the glint in his violet eyes that held your attention, the way his lips parted just slightly, as if he might say something. It seemed youâd surprised him.Â
You smoothed an idle hand over your skirts and said simply, âThis arrangement best serves the Dusk Courtâs interests.â
And you settled back in your chair, your expression unreadable, the matter closed.Â
The meeting stretched on for another few hours, dragging through the usual political pretense, minor disputes, and long-winded proposals that wore your patience thin. Rhysand, ever the picture of relaxed authority, lounged in his chair as though he hadnât a single concern in the world. But every so often, when some lord made a particularly absurd suggestion, his gaze would flick toward youâdry, incredulous, as if waiting to see if youâd heard the same nonsense he had.Â
When it finally ended, the room shifted from rigid diplomacy to something looser, easier. Wine flowed, platters of food were brought in, and the stiff atmosphere gave way to quiet chatter, laughter, the clinking of glasses across the grand table.Â
You turned to Rhysand, leaning slightly toward him as you picked up the thread of conversation from the meeting. âDonât think I didnât notice you trying to guide the negotiations with Kallias in your favor,â you said, voice smooth.Â
He exhaled a soft laugh, setting down his glass. âYou wound me, (y/n). I did nothing of the sort.â
Your brows raised. âMmm. Youâre insufferable when you lie.â
âI wouldnât know. I donât do it often.â His eyes glittered with that infuriating look, the one that made you want to roll your eyesâor perhaps throw your glass at him, just to see if heâd still be smirking afterward.Â
You huffed a quiet laugh. âNo, I suppose you wouldnât. Lying is a delicate art. You, Rhysand, are a hammer.â
His brows lifted slightly, amusement flickering in those violet eyes. âAnd yet, I always seem to get the job done.â
âBlunt force trauma has its uses, I suppose.â
That earned you a low chuckle, the sound curling through your spine. Before you could savor your victory, he glanced over his shoulder, scanning the room. âI believe theyâve got Eastgate Ruby here somewhere. I requested itâfor your sake, of course. Iâd hate for you to suffer the effects of withdrawal.â
You exhaled a sharp laugh. âHow thoughtful. I assume youâll be the one administering the cure?â
Rhysandâs grin was slow and wicked as he stood from his seat and reached for your chair, pulling it back with an easy grace. âItâs the least I can do.â
You didnât move at first, just arched a brow at the gesture. He only held out a hand, expectant.Â
When you finally slid your fingers into his, his grip was warm, steady. He helped you up with an ease that felt almost practiced.Â
You gave him a look. âChivalry, Rhysand? Really?â
âIâm not uneducated, (y/n),â he murmured, the edge of his thumb brushing against your knuckles before he released your hand. âI do know how to treat a lady.â
âAnd yet, I remain unconvinced,â you replied dryly.
His smirk deepened, but he said nothing.Â
The two of you strolled toward the side of the room, the low hum of conversation filling the space between you. For a fleeting moment, it almost felt civilâbut then Rhysand tilted his head slightly, considering you. And you wondered, fleetingly, if he was thinking about you the way he claimed to in that letter. If his mind lingered on the words heâd written, just as yours had.Â
âI have to admit,â he mused, âIâm impressed with how you handled Beron.â
You shot him a sideways glance. âAre you?â
âI know people whoâve sat at this table far longer and wouldnât dare speak to him like that,â he said, pouring wine into both of your glasses. âI suspect you may have even rattled him.â
A slow, satisfied smile curled at your lips. âGood.â
His gaze flicked toward you, unreadable. âGood,â he echoed softly.Â
You took a sip of your drink, then tilted your head. âIâll admit, your advice was⌠helpful. As was your agreement to reroute your Seasonal Court imports through Dusk.â
Rhysand let out a hum of acknowledgement.Â
âBut,â you added, âI donât recall asking for it.â
His lips twitched. âOh, forgive me. I should have realized that underneath all the pitiful complaints about the other Lords, you were just waiting for an excuse to take his head off.â
âPrecisely.â
Rhysand chuckled, shaking his head. Then, after a moment, his tone turned deceptively light. âSpeaking of being offendedâimagine my surprise when I wrote to you and received no reply.â
You merely blinked at him. âA tragedy.â
âIndeed.â He took a slow sip of his wine. âSo, I took it upon myself to move your place card.â
You gave him a look. âThat explains the seating arrangements.â
His smirk was nothing short of wicked. âDid you really expect me to let you sit anywhere else? Besides, you were originally meant to be seated next to Beron. I imagine you wouldnât have spoken quite so freely had you been within armâs reach of his fire.Â
You huffed a quiet laugh, swirling the wine in your glass. âYou assume so much, Rhysand. Maybe I would have enjoyed the warmth.â
His brows raised slightly. âOh? Should I tell him he missed an opportunity?â
You gave him a pointed look before taking a slow sip, letting the dry sweetness of the wine sit on your tongue. Then, with deliberate ease, you murmured, âI prefer a more tempered heat. The kind that lingers, burns slow.â
His grip on his glass tightenedâjust slightly.
But he didnât rise to it. Not yet.
The conversation wove effortlessly between sharp-witted remarks and veiled barbs, the hum of the room growing livelier as tensions fully eased. The air felt lighter, laughter ringing out across the space, and for once, there was no pressing matter to discuss. So you let yourself settle into itâjust a little.Â
Rhysand, too, seemed comfortable, the usual sharp edge of his presence dulled by wine and something more elusive. A sense of ease, perhaps, though it didnât stop him from watching you carefully over the rim of his glass.Â
âI must admit,â you said idly, swirling your wine, âI expected Adriata to be a far greater distraction than it was.â
He hummed. âDid you?â
You nodded, tilting your head ever so slightly. âI thought the festivities would be enough to hold my attention but⌠I was proven wrong.â
The words were casualâinnocent, evenâbut something flickered across Rhysandâs expression, so brief you might have imagined it. He only chuckled, eyes glinting in the light of the setting sun. âTragic. Was it boredom, then, that drove you to linger?â
You leaned against the wall, crossing one ankle in front of the other. âI wouldnât say boredom. More likeââ your fingers trailed along the stem of your glass, ââan unexpected tether.â
That time, you were sure you saw itâthe way his fingers paused against the base of his own glass, how his posture remained utterly poised save for the slight shift of his jaw. But he recovered quickly, that ever-composed mask slipping easily back into place. With a quiet, breathy laugh, he tipped his head slightly, eyes briefly shutting as he exhaled through his noseâthe kind of laugh meant to brush something off.Â
You knew that laugh. You knew it well.Â
It sent a slow thrill curling through your chest.Â
He drained his glass and set it down. âYouâre in rare form tonight, (y/n).â
You feigned innocence. âAm I?â
Rhysand only looked at you, an unreadable half-smile playing at his lips. The silence between you stretched, tension coiling beneath it, but then the conversation carried onâseamless, effortless, that undercurrent still thrumming between you both.Â
It wasnât until later, after another glass of Eastgate Ruby each, when the moment felt right, that you finally struck.
âTell me,â you mused, leaning in slightly. âDo you ever think back to Adriata?â
Rhysand stilledâjust for a fraction of a second.Â
Then, as if nothing had happened, he set his empty glass down with a quiet clink. âFondly,â he said smoothly. âWhy do you ask?â
You only smiled. âOh, I was just wonderingâif you make a habit of spending your nights consumed by thoughts of me.â
That time, he definitely froze. It was brief, but it was thereâthe faintest hitch in his breath, the subtle clench of his jaw.Â
And gods, you could see it, the way his mind must have been racing, trying to determine how you were able to see straight through him.Â
Then, slowly, his smirk returnedâlazy, measured, meant to convey utter indifference. He exhaled, almost pitying. âReally, (y/n), all this just to get my attention? You could have saved yourself the trouble, darling.â
You hummed, unimpressed. âIs that what you think this is?â
âAn obvious bid for my affections? Yes, Iâm afraid so.â
You exhaled, shaking your head. âGods, Rhysand. You must really enjoy the sound of your own voice.â
âSay it, (y/n),â he teased, voice a near-mocking whisper. âGo on. Say it.â
âOh, Iâll say something.â With a flick of your wrist, a small, folded parchment materialized between your middle and forefingers. You held it out to him, watching as his smirk faltered ever so slightly.Â
He eyed the paper, then shot you a dry, unimpressed look. âWhatâs this?â
You didnât take your eyes off his. âRead it.â
He scoffed, plucking it from your fingers with a lazy flick of his own. âIf this is a declaration of your love,â he said, unfolding the paper, âIâm sorry to say Iâll have to decliââ
He went silent.Â
You watched the exact moment realization struck. How his mouth parted just slightly, how his posture stiffened, fingers tightening around the parchment.Â
The letter.Â
His letter.
⌠â â â â ⌠â â â â âŚ
roses      mirabilis
candles Eastgate Ruby!!!
violin serenade?      string quartet.          6 - 2 -2 -1
To the relentless archivist of my supposed delusions, High Lady of the Dusk Court
             (y/n)      Dearest (y/n)      My Dearest (y/n)      My Dearest, (y/n)              My (y/n)
To the relentless scholar of my every flaw, whose thoroughness borders on devotion, High Lady of the Dusk Court,Â
        âburden of leadership clouded your judgment?â
Insufferable, Rhys? Sexist, even? I think so. I thiâwhy the fuck did I send that
 High Lady, do you ever stop scheming?
(y/n) of Dusk.        High Lady (y/n)     (y/n) (y/n) (y/n) (y/n), High Lady of the Night Court    (y/n)   Â
Why canât   I  write (y/n) properlyâŚ. (y/n)...
To the incomparable, unparalleled High Lady of Dusk,Arriving in Adriata, Iâd presumed the festivities would be the distraction. Yet, as usual, you managed to prove me wrong. Your presence, always commanding, kept me tethered to that place far longer than necessary, though I suppose there are worse ways to spend one's time.Â
            Find better excuse to avoid bets with Az⌠You always lose.
           looked godsdamned good today. Fuck that dress.  Â
That dressâfuck. I could hardly believe you had the nerve to wear it. Of course, you couldnât have known how impossible it would be for me to focus on anything but the way it clung to your body. But it was your eyes, the way they met mine with that knowing gleam, that reminded me why I canât entertain these thoughts. And gods, when you leaned forwardâdeliberately, no doubtâI had to force myself to remember that there were other matters at hand. That I had a court to oversee, another war to stave off, and yetâyetâall I could think of was the way your body moved.
 Send Amren report. Or donât. Let her stew.
           Draft something strong for Beron. Or just set him on fire.    37690
And your lips. The way you licked the wine off of them, tempting me to be the one to trace them with my own. I should have been horrified, or at the very least, unnerved enough to turn away, but instead, I found myself imagining what it would be like to kiss you, to pull you close, to feel you press against me, hard, and feel that warmth only you seem to emit.Â
                                        ^What would you taste like, sound like
And then I could not shake the image. That night, in Adriata, it was as if you knew. Every movement of yours, every glance, every gesture, it felt like you were feeding the very thoughts I dared not admit to myself.                          Pen test.. . . .
I spent the rest of the night consumed by you. By the memory of your body, the way you moved, the way you tensed when our eyes met. I couldnât stop picturing itâyour fingers digging into the sheets, your mouth parted, breathless, wrecked. The way youâd sound with my name on your tongue, desperate, ruined. I fisted my cock for hours that night to the thought of you. But it wasnât enough. It wasnât you. My grip, my own touchâpale imitations of what I craved. I wanted those delicate hands you offered, your body beneath mine, shattering for me. I wanted to hear it, the little sounds youâd make, the way youâd gasp as I buried myself in you.Â
I bit out your name into the dark, over and over, as if saying it aloud might summon you. Might let me taste you, feel you. Might let me have you the way I wanted. Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 985Â Â 87396Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 696543Iâm reminded of a night many years ago, one Iâd rather forget. The war camp. The way the rain had turned dirt to sludge beneath our boots, the way the air reeked of steel and blood and something burnt. Our magic was drained. The battle had gone on too long, had stripped us of our elegance, our strategy. And there was only raw will leftâyours against mine, fury against fury. You struck first. Your blade hissed past my ribs, slicing through my leathers, leaving a gash in my skin. I donât even think you meant to miss.Â
I threw you into the mud, pinned you there. You fought like an animal, snarling, kicking, teeth bared as if you would sink them into my throat given the chance. And for a momentâfor a sickening, electrified momentâI wanted nothing more than to break you. To press you into the dirt until you yielded, until you spat out my name with a curse and finally, finally, it would be over.Â
I hated you then. Hated you.Â
And yetâwhen I lay alone in my tent, it was not the war I relived, not the blood or the near-miss of your blade. No, it was you. The heat of you against me, the way your body had fit against mine even in our struggle. The wild, frenzied way you fought, like a storm given flesh. I thought of you pressed against me in the mud, of the way your breath had mingled with mine, the way my body responded to yours despite everything, despite knowing you would have killed me just as easily as I would have killed you.Â
I dealt with it that night the same way I dealt with it after Adriata. Even then, I couldnât explain it. I should have wanted to hate you.
        You canât fault me for finding familiarity in beautiful
        things? It seems I'm beginning to grow on you.    Â
Infatuated, obsessed, besotted
No, I couldnât help it. Every time you glanced at me, every time you spoke, I could feel that pull. And when you left, I wonât lie, I was relieved. You were leaving before I did something monumentally reckless. But donât for a moment think I wasnât wishing for a different outcome. Â
The matter at hand remains. Perhaps, next time, if you find yourself at my side again, I can be of service to you in a more personal way.Â
Consider it, my lady.Â
Eternally at your feet, if only youâd let me,       Â
Bound to you in ways I have no right to claim,  Â
Yours, in every way I shouldnât be,
Yours,
Rhysand
hair gel
ear plugs
cufflinks
assorted chocolates
an apple (for balancing the chocolate)
⌠â â â â ⌠â â â â âŚ
Rhysand exhaled sharply through his nose, his expression shifting into something between incredulity and resignation. Then, slowly, he looked up at you.Â
You only sipped your wine, waiting.Â
For the first time since youâd known him, Rhysand had nothing to say. It was a rare thing, to see the High Lord of the Night Court like this. Unmasked. Uncomposed.Â
âWhatâs wrong?â you murmured, tilting your head ever so slightly. âYou look as though youâve seen a ghost.â
His jaw worked , muscles tightening, and you swore you saw the flicker of something else. A sliver of vulnerability, gone as quickly as it appeared.Â
Then he exhaled, long and slow, the sound almost amused. âAnd here I thought you lacked a sense of humor.â
You merely hummed, watching him, your patience infinite. You wouldnât grant him an out so easily.Â
Carefully, deliberately, he folded the letter, pocketing it. âHow, exactly, did you come by this?â
âOh, Rhysand,â you purred, feigning sympathy. âWould it wound you further to know that I didnât have to try very hard?â
His gaze darkened, sharp as a blade. âYou couldnât have rifled through my thingsâŚâ
âDonât flatter yourself,â you said smoothly. âIt was sent to me. By accident I assume, considering the look on your face.â
Silence. A long, stretched moment of it.
Then, at last, he smirkedâbut it was different now. Subtler. Wry. âIâm touched,â he murmured. âYou kept it.â
You let your lips curve just slightly. âOf course. Iâd be an idiot not to.â
A quiet hum left him, his violet gaze tracing your face, searching for somethingâperhaps for any sign of what you truly wanted from this. But you gave him nothing.Â
Rhysandâs tongue ran over his teeth, considering you. Then, without warning, he laughed. Low, quiet, a thing of disbelief and wicked amusement all at once. âYouâre enjoying this far too much.â
You leaned in, voice a whisper against the space between you. âI canât help it. Youâre so much more fun when you lose.â
Rhysand exhaled sharply through his nose, shaking his head again as though you were impossible. âYou think this is a loss?â
You only smiled. âI think you should choose your next words carefully.â
He let out a quiet, humorless laugh before pinning you with a look so cutting it nearly stole your breath. But there was no true bite behind it. No sharp edgesâonly something molten, something simmering. His voice, when it came, was soft. Dangerous. âTell me, my ladyâdo you make a habit of inciting war in the middle of a crowded room?â
You only smiled. âI prefer my battles to be fought in private.â
His pupils flared.
It was all you needed.Â
You turned without another word, setting your glass down as you slipped through the crowd. You didnât have to look back to know he would follow. You felt itâthat tether pulling tight, that unrelenting weight of his gaze pressing into your spine as you wove through the bodies, effortless, deliberate.Â
You led him out of the hall, past the open archways leading to the moonlit balcony, past the guards stationed at the entrance. Only when you reached the dimly lit corridor beyond did you glance over your shoulder.Â
Rhysand was already there. Already close.Â
You barely had a second to register it before he was moving. And then⌠gods.
Then you were pressed up against the cool stone wall, his body caging yours in, his hands braced on either side of you. He wasnât touching you. Not yet. But his scent wrapped around you, intoxicating, dark and rich, and when he leaned in just slightly, his breath fanning against your cheek, your entire body tightened.Â
A pause. A deliberate, torturous moment where neither of you moved, where the space between you became razor-thin, humming with something volatile. His head dipped, his lips hovering near the corner of your mouth, as if he could taste your breath, as if he was considering closing that final inch.Â
Then, lower. A shift, a slow drag of heat down the line of your jaw, until his mouth hovered near the hollow of your throat. Not touching. Not yet.Â
His breath was steady, infuriatingly controlled. âWas this your plan all along?â he murmured, so soft it was almost a whisper.Â
Then he lifted his head, the movement slow, measured. When your eyes met, you saw itâthe strand of midnight hair falling across his brow, the way his gaze flicked over your face, dark and searching. The sharp cut of his cheekbones, the slight part of his lips, as if he were only just remembering to breathe.Â
Your fingers twitched at your sides. Gods, this close, he wasâNo. You shoved the thought away, locking onto his stare instead.Â
âIf youâre asking whether I planned for you to humiliate yourself tonight,â you said at last, âthen yes.â
A quiet, dangerous laugh. His body didnât move, but the sound of it wrapped around you, coiling tight in your stomach. âAnd yet,â he mused, âyouâre the one against the wall.â
Your heart was a war drum in your chest. âI led you here, didnât I?â
Something flickered in his expression, something deep and molten that sent a sharp pulse of heat straight to your core. And then, faster than you could react, his hands were no longer braced against the wall. Fingers brushed your hips, featherlight. A test. A warning.
Then his grip tightened. A firm, possessive press as he pinned you, properly now, his body a wall of heat against yours. His hands dragged up until his thumbs skimmed the barest sliver of exposed skin between the fabric of your dress and the curve of your waist.Â
Your breath hitched, but you didnât let it slip, didnât let him see how the warmth of his hands against your skin sent heat curling low in your stomach. But he felt the way your ribs expanded with a sharp inhale you couldnât quite control. And he liked it. You could see it in the way his smirk softened into something lazier and edged with indulgence. Like he was savoring this. Savoring you.Â
Your fingers twitched at your sides, itching to move.Â
So you did.Â
You let your hands drift upward, skimming over the muscle of his forearms, his shoulders. You werenât gentle. Your nails scraped against the fabric of his jacket, dragging just hard enough to make him feel it. You werenât going to stand there and let him have the upper hand.Â
Rhysand stilled, just for a second, a breath caught between his teeth. âCareful, (y/n). Youâre starting to seem a little desperate.â
You looked up at him through your lashes. âThatâs rich, coming from a male whoâs been standing here breathing down my neck instead of doing something about it.â
A flicker of something dark in his eyes. His fingers flexed against your waist, his thumbs pressing in, dragging ever so slightly along the curve of your hips. Not enough, never enough. And you wanted to see how far heâd let you go before he snapped.Â
You rolled your neck with a sigh, all patience and unbothered amusement. âSurely you donât need me to spell it out for you,â you mused, voice just shy of mocking. âNot when you so generously did so for me.â
Rhysand exhaled sharply through his nose, something between a laugh and a warning. âYouâre insufferable.â
âAnd youâre predictable.â You dragged your hands down, fingers skimming the hard places of his chest, settling just at the lapels of his jacket. Your nails caught the fabric, a teasing little pull. âAlways talking. Always circling. But when it comes down to it, youââ
A sharp inhale from you, which made his hands tighten.Â
You smiled, slow and wicked. âYou hesitate.â
And whatever tenuous thread of restraint was holding him together snapped.Â
It happened too fast for you to do anything but gasp as Rhysand surged forward at the same time you yanked him down. A collision of heat and breath and hands grasping, dragging, pulling. His mouth was on yours, fierce, consuming, and you met him with equal fire, teeth clashing, nails digging in, every ounce of restraint gone.Â
His hands were everywhereâon your hips, at your back, tangling in your hair as he pressed you further into the stone. His lips moved against yours like he meant to ruin you, and you let him, let him take because you were taking just as much, matching every rough kiss, every sharp inhale, every fevered touch.Â
Your hands fisted in the front of his jacket, yanking him closer even as you arched against the press of his body. His answering growl sent a sharp thrill down your spine.Â
âSee?â you breathed against his lips. âThat wasnât so hard, was it?â
His teeth scraped against your bottom lip before he bit down, just enough to make you gasp. âHard,â he growled, âisnât the problem.â
Heat flooded your cheeksânot from embarrassment, never that, but from the way he pressed against you in proof of his words.Â
You dragged your fingers down his chest, slow, teasing, until you reached the buckle of his belt. A light touch, the barest flick of your fingers against the leather. âI almost feel sorry for you.â
Rhysand dipped his head with a low chuckle, pressing his mouth to the curve of your throat. âAnd here I thought we were past pretending.â His hands were doing their own exploration, fingers tracing the curves of your waist and hips before skimming lower, his grip firm, insistent, like he was committing the shape of you to memory.Â
You sighed, letting your head fall back against the wall, only to jerk it forward a moment later when you heard footsteps echoing down the corridor. But Rhysand didnât move. He didnât even lift his head, only kept pressing slow kisses along your throat.Â
You scowled, pressing your palm against his chest. âSomeoneâs coming.â
âMm.â His lips brushed the shell of your ear. âSo will you, if youâd stop interrupting me.â
You shoved him, but he barely budged, only laughing quietly as he nipped at your jaw. âRhysand,â you hissed, your breath uneven. âTheyâll hear us.â
He pressed his hips against yours. âLet them.â
You almost choked. âYouâre insufferable.â
He grinned, all wicked teeth. âAnd youâre loud. But lucky for youâŚâ His fingers skimmed your spine, sending a shiver straight through you. âI have a solution for that.â
And before you could say another word, darkness curled around you both, swallowing the hallway, the stone wall, the distant sound of footstepsâ
And then, you were somewhere else. The air was warmer here, laced with the scent of citrus and jasmine.Â
You looked at your surroundings. Velvet sheets, intricately carved furniture, and an unmistakable large, luxurious bed. From beyond the balcony, the distant murmur of the Day Courtâs nightlife carried through the air.Â
Your lips parted as you took it all in, realization creeping over you.Â
Heâd winnowed you straight into his bedroom.Â
You turned your head sharply, meeting his gaze. âThis,â you said, voice rich with disbelief, âwas your solution?â
He only grinned, unrepentant. âWould you have preferred I left you there? So you could step out, all flushed and breathless, and explain to whoever came wandering that your hair isnât a mess, your lipstick isnât smudged, and that your dress has absolutely been this rumpled all day?â
Your glare was sharp enough to cut. âI wouldâve managed.â
Rhysand hummed, clearly unconvinced. âI donât doubt it. You always do. Though I canât say Iâm not enjoying this alternative.â
You exhaled sharply through your nose. âWhat, dragging me into your room so you can avoid being caught acting like a depraved bastard in a public corridor?â
He clicked his tongue. âAnd here I thought you appreciated efficiency.â
You rolled your eyes, but the effect was somewhat ruined when he reached for you again, his fingers gripping the curve of your waist. âBesides,â he murmured, dipping his head, âif you were truly so scandalized, you wouldnât still be standing here.â
Your lips parted, a sharp retort formingâonly for it to dissolve as he kissed you again, stealing the words straight from your tongue.Â
It was different now. Less reckless, more intent. Like he was savoring the feel of you, like he knew how to dismantle every bit of your composure. His hands dragged down your back, gathering the fabric of your dress, pulling you flush against him. Clothes vanished between desperate, grasping hands. His jacket went just fine, the thud of it hitting the floor soon followed by the quiet, unmistakable sound of your tiara slipping from your hair, landing in a delicate clatter of metal against stone. His shirt had been the first casualty, though. Your fingers tore at the buttons, sending a few flying before you shoved the ruined thing from his shoulders. His hands werenât much kinder to your dress, the delicate clasps at your back coming undone with infuriating ease, the fabric pooling at your feet.Â
You found yourself pressed down onto the edge of the bed, his body still caging yours in. You propped yourself up on your elbows, watching him through heavy-lidded eyes. He stood before you now, bare-chested, his hands moving to the fastening of your heels.Â
Your breath caught, though youâd die before admitting why. The way his fingers brushed against your ankle, the slowness with which he undid the first claspâit was infuriating. And the entire time, he held your gaze, eyes dark and intent.Â
You exhaled, leveling him with a look. âStrange, for a male so fond of his dramatics to feign chivalry.â
The corner of his mouth lifted, but he didnât take the bait. Instead, he finished undoing the strap and slid the shoe from your foot, his fingers pressing into your calf as he set it aside. âCanât a male show some courtesy?â He shifted his attention to the other.Â
You arched a brow. âIs that what weâre calling it?â
âI could always leave them on, if youâd prefer.â
Your eyes flicked to the heel still dangling from your foot, then back to him. Slowly, you lifted your leg, pressing the pointed toe just beneath his ribs, applying the barest hint of pressure.Â
âI think,â you mused, âyou just want an excuse to be on your knees for me.â
His pupils flared. âOh, darling,â he purred, fingers wrapping around your ankle as he tugged the shoe free, tossing it carelessly behind him. âIf you wanted me on my knees, all you had to do was ask.â Then his grip shifted as he pushed your legs apart.Â
The sight of him there, settled between your legs, dark and utterly unrepentant, sent a sharp pulse of arousal straight through you. You barely had time to work through the implications of that before his mouth was on you.Â
A sharp gasp tore from your lips as he mouthed over the thin scrap of lace still covering you, heat and pressure teasing, tormenting. His tongue pressed against the damp fabric, moving in slow, devastating circles, tasting you through it, his grip keeping your thighs spread as you instinctively tried to move.Â
âFuck,â you breathed, fingers curling into the sheets beneath you.Â
âSo soon?â he murmured, pressing another kiss to the soft heat of you through your underwear. âI know Iâm irresistible, but I thought youâd at least try to play hard to get.â
A retort formed on your tongue, something sharp and scathing, but it died the moment he hooked his fingers beneath the waistband of your underwear and pulled them down. His mouth followed the movement, his breath hot against your skin, and you shivered, unable to stop the anticipation that spiraled low in your stomach. The soft drag of his lips against your inner thigh had you clenching the sheets, the heat building inside you before heâd even touched you properly.
He took his time, his teeth grazing the sensitive skin of your thigh, making your breath catch. The lace of your underwear was dragged down the rest of the way, and your body tensed, the slow movement of his hands almost maddening in its gentleness. Your eyes fluttered shut, and before you could make a sound to make your frustration known, he was thereâhis monmouth, warm and wet, pressing against your skin, tasting you slowly.Â
A breathless gasp escaped you, your hips instinctively trying to press closer to him as his tongue moved over you, teasing and tender at first. He wasnât in a rush. Each flick of his tongue, each press of his lips, felt like it stretched on for eternity, drawing out the pleasure until it became a slow, aching burn. His grip on your hips tightened as he angled himself better, his movements becoming firmer, more purposeful.Â
The heat in you intensified, the building pressure almost unbearable as his tongue worked you, flicking and teasing at just the right moments, just the right way. You could feel your body growing more desperate, each brush of his lips drawing out a soft moan from deep within you. His hands dug into your hips, holding you steady as he devoured you like a male starved.Â
You fisted the sheets beneath you, your fingers tangling in his hair, pulling him closer as if you could bring him even deeper into you. The pressure was tight and unyielding, but still, he took his time, savoring you as if he had all the time in the world.
âGods,â Rhysand groaned against you, the sound vibrating through your body and sending a shudder down your spine. âI could get drunk off you.â His voice was thick, dark with something near reverence as he pressed another slow, deep kiss to you.
A sharp tug to his hair was the only response you could manage, desperate now. His only response was a low hum, the sound reverberating against you as he doubled his effortsâhis tongue pressing deeper, more insistent.Â
The pleasure was unbearable now. Every movement, every stroke of his tongue, pulled you closer and closer to the edge. You were trembling beneath him, your fingers scraping at the sheets, your body writhing. Â
His voice was a dark whisper against your skin. âCome for me,â he said, and it wasnât a request.Â
And when he sucked that sensitive, aching part of you into his mouth, it was like the world exploded. The coil inside you snapped, and you shattered, your back arching off the bed, a strangled cry escaping your lips as wave after wave of intense pleasure crashed over you. You felt like you were drowning in it, unable to breathe, unable to thinkâjust lost in the feeling of him.Â
Because he didnât pull away immediately. No, he lingered, his mouth working slowly, indulgently over you as you trembled beneath him, trying to ride out the aftershocks. His lips glistened with you as he finally pulled away, his pupils blown, a wicked satisfaction playing across his features.Â
He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, but his gaze never left you, taking in the way your body still trembled, the way your breath came in ragged gasps. âYou taste like heaven,â he murmured as he leaned down to press lingering kisses to your inner thigh, as though savoring the aftermath of what heâd just done.Â
Your breath still came fast, chest rising and falling in uneven bursts, but as the haze of pleasure began to clear, your focus settled elsewhere. You propped yourself up on your elbows, the movement slow and shaky as your gaze tracked lower, and you couldnât tear your eyes away. Rhysand was still kneeling between your legs, his hands braced against your thighs, but your attention dropped to the front of his pantsâwhere he was still painfully, achingly hard, the outline of him straining against the fabric.Â
Your lips parted slightly, and the barest flicker of amusement crossed his face as he followed your gaze.Â
âOh?â he murmured, voice thick with satisfaction. âAre you finally taking pity on me?â
You said nothing, just arched a brow and let your eyes drift back down again, pointed.Â
A low sound slipped from his throat, rough at the edges, as he stood to toe off his shoes, then his socks, before finally working the buttons of his pants. His fingers were deft, practiced, and within moments, he was shoving the fabric down his hips, taking his underwear with it.Â
And gods.
Your breath hitched at the sight of himâthick and heavy, the flushed head already leaking, the sheer size of him reigniting the heat in your core. Your mouth went dry, then immediately watered.Â
He must have noticed, because his lips curvedâlazy, smug, as if he could already hear the thoughts racing through your head. But he didnât comment on it. Instead, he wrapped a hand around himself, gave himself a few slow pumps, and exhaled roughly through his nose.Â
âStrange,â he mused, voice like silk. âI donât recall you ever being this quiet.â
You dragged your gaze back up to his, leveling him with a look even as warmth licked at your skin.Â
âSavor it while you can,â you muttered.
âOh, Iâd actually prefer you be loud.â
His hand left himself, and in the next breath, he was reaching for you. His touch was firm but unhurried as he guided you further up the bed, his palms skating over your skin, coaxing you into the pillows. The mattress sipped as he followed, settling between your legs, his body radiating heat against yours. Then his fingers found the clasp of your bra, undoing it with one deft flick. The straps slipped down your arms, the fabric falling away, but he didnât move to touch. Just looked. Took his time. The hunger in his eyes was palpable, the weight of it pressing heat into your skin. The intensity of it made warmth crawl up your throat, but you held his gaze, refusing to be the first to break.Â
But as the seconds stretched, a thought coiled through you, unbidden. The words from his letter ghosted through your mind, teasing, taunting. Heâd imagined this before. Imagined you.Â
Your heart stuttered as the realization settled fully in your bones.Â
Because when he looked at you now, he wasnât just seeing you. He was seeing every thought heâd already hadâevery fantasy heâd already spun in that scheming, insufferable mind of his. You could almost feel it in the way his gaze traced over you, in the way his chest rose and fell, in the way his fingers flexed as if resisting the urge to reach for you.Â
What you would taste like, sound likeâ
The way youâd sound with my name on your tongue, desperate, ruined.Â
A slow, satisfied smile curled your lips. You wondered if you were anything like what heâd imagined. If you matched the image heâd conjured those nights alone, all those moments heâd spent thinking of you when he shouldnât have.Â
Then his grip tightened on his cock, just slightly. He gave one more slow pump before lining himself up against you. And then, barely above a whisperâ
âTell me to stop.â His eyes bore into yours.Â
You could.Â
You should.Â
But instead, your hips tilted ever so slightly forwardâan invitation, a challenge.Â
And Rhysand, the bastard, took it.Â
A sharp inhale left him as he pushed forward, sinking into you with a reverence that sent a shiver down your spine. His head tipped back slightly, lips parting on a groan, and godsâjust the sight of it, the way his chest heaved, the way his fingers dug into your hips as if grounding himself, sent a slow, molten ache unfurling through you.Â
He stretched you in a way that had your nails biting into his arms. His gaze snapped to yours as if he felt it tooâthat unbearable, perfect tension wound so tight between you. He bottomed out, holding there for a moment, his jaw clenched, the muscle feathering in restraint.Â
Then his grip tightened. And he moved.Â
A slow, dragging pull before thrusting back in, stealing the breath from your lungs. Your body arched into him, a choked sound escaping before you could swallow it down. The answering smirk that flickered across his face was nearly as infuriating as it was devastating.Â
âOh, you can do better than that,â he murmured, punctuating the words with another deep thrust, the movement sending a delicious shockwave through you. Your fingers found purchase in his shoulders, nails raking down his back, but it only made him groan, his pace quickening as he leaned in, his breath ghosting over your lips.Â
âMuch better,â he praised, voice rough. âBut I want to hear you.â
As if to prove his point, his hand skated down your thigh, hitching it higher around his waist, angling you just rightâand stars exploded behind your eyes as his cock slid deeper, filling you completely. The pleasure was almost too much, each thrust dragging a gasp from your mouth, each move of his relentless.
Your fingers dug into his back, nails scraping over his skin as you pressed yourself up into him, matching the rhythm, desperate for more. âRhysandâŚâ The name escaped in a broken gasp, barely audible over the sound of your breaths and skin slapping on skin.Â
His eyes glittered with satisfaction, his pace steady but unyielding as he watched you. âTell me what you need,â he demanded, his thrusts pushing harder, deeper, each one making your breath stutter in your chest.Â
You swallowed, barely able to think straight with the overwhelming pleasure flooding your senses, but the words came anyway, whispered, breathless. âDonât stop.â A particularly hard thrust had you gasping, your fingers digging into his shoulders, nails leaving marks on his skin. Rhysandâs pace was relentless, pushing you higher and higher, but you needed more.Â
âTell me,â you gasped, âhow often did you think about me like this?â
His breath hitched, but he didnât slow. His hand tightened on your thigh, pushing you even further into him, and the tension in the room seemed to snap tighter. âYouâll have to be more specific.â
You smirked, feeling emboldened. âHow many nights did you spend alone, imagining me underneath you? How many times did you get off to the thought of me?â Your voice dropped low, a teasing edge creeping into your tone. âAnd that night in the tent⌠did you picture me like this then too?â
His cock slammed deeper into you at your words, and you could feel him shudder, his control faltering for a moment. He leaned down, lips grazing the curve of your neck, his hand sliding up to palm at your breast, fingers teasing over your skin.Â
âIâve thought about you more than I should,â he confessed, his voice a growl. âYour body, your voiceâgods, the way you look at me, like you know exactly what Iâm thinking. Every letter youâve sent, every word you've written has been etched into my mind. Youâve kept me awake more nights than I care to count. So many nights Iâve imagined you⌠ached for you.â
The words came fast, like he couldnât stop them, like theyâd been building up. âEvery damn letter you wroteâI read them more times than Iâll admit. Iâd catch myself thinking about you when I shouldnât, remembering your words when I tried to forget. And Iâd get lost in it⌠lost in the thought of you. That night in the tentâŚâ He growled, pulling you closer, slamming into you harder. âI couldnât forget how you moved, how you fought, how you looked at me like you wanted to tear me apart. And I hated itâhated how badly I wanted you.â
His hands tightened on your hips, controlling the pace as his thrusts grew more demanding. âI would lie there, late at night, thinking about your fingers on my skin, your mouthâthinking about how youâd taste. How youâd feel under me, desperate, ruined for me. I pictured it allâwhat youâd look like when I finally had you, when I could take you in every way that I wanted.â
His voice dropped to a whisper as his lips brushed against your ear, his breath hot against your skin. âI couldnât stop it. Couldnât stop thinking about you, even when I wanted to. Every time we wrote, it only made it worse. Iâd catch myself craving moreâmore words, more of youâbefore I even realized what I was doing.â
Another thrust forced a moan from your lips. His mouth curved against your skin, savoring the sound, reveling in the way your body clenched around him. His grip on your thigh was bruising as he angled your hips just right, dragging another helpless cry from you.
âFuck,â he murmured, his breath hitching as he felt you tighten around him. His forehead dropped to yours, his thrusts growing rougher, more insistent, as if he were chasing the very thoughts that had plagued him for so long. âYou feel better than I ever could have dreamed.â
âGods, Rhysââ
A sharp gasp tore from your throat as his hand slipped between your bodies, fingers pressing where you needed him most. Your head fell back against the pillow, pleasure cresting so fiercely it left you dizzy.Â
His breath caught. Just for a second.Â
Not at the way you shuddered beneath him, not at the way you tightened around himâbut at the way his name had slipped from your lips, unfinished, softened.Â
Rhys.Â
You barely registered it, too lost in the pleasure as his pace faltered for the briefest moment, a sharp inhale through his nose before he recovered, his free hand grabbing your waist, pulling you impossibly closer. But you felt the shift, the way his lips brushed over your jawâsofter now, lingering.Â
And then, quieter, rougher: âSay it again.â
Not a command. Just⌠a request.Â
It took a moment for your mind to catch up, to realize what he meant. Heat curled in your stomachânot just from the way he was moving inside you, but from the way he wanted it. The way he needed it.Â
You turned your head, breath mingling with his. âRhys,â you whispered.Â
A wrecked primal sound from his throat as he shifted suddenly, rolling and pulling you with him until your thighs framed his hips. The world tilted, pleasure still rippling through you as your palms found his chest, heat meeting the inked whorls of black that curved over muscle. He leaned back against the pillows, gaze dark, ravenous, drinking you in like heâd never get enough.Â
âFuck,â he breathed, his grip firm on your waist, fingers pressing into heated skin as if to memorize the way you felt in his hands. âLook at you.â
Your cheeks burned under his gaze, but it wasnât embarrassmentâit was the way he was looking at you, like he wanted to devour every inch of you, like he was worshipping the sight of you above him.Â
A slow roll of your hips had him swearing again, jaw tightening, his head pressing into the pillow for a brief moment before he lifted it again, eyes locked onto the way your body moved above him. The way you trembled. The way your chest rose and fell, glistening in the dim light, every bounce, every shift of your body against his making his hold on you tighten.
His fingers slid lower, curving over the swell of your ass as he pulled you down hard, meeting you with a sharp thrust that sent you keening.Â
âOh, fuckâRhysââ The words left you in a breathless gasp, pleasure knocking through you, but he only smirked, his grip flexing.Â
âYeah?â His voice was teasing, but there was an edge to it, something unraveling.Â
You wanted to reply, something sharp on your tongue, but the words never made it outâlost the second he drove into you again, harder, faster.Â
His smirk told you everythingâhe knew exactly what he was oding to you. Dark satisfaction gleamed in his eyes as he thrust into you, each movement sharper, more insistent.Â
âIâshitââ You barely knew what you were trying to say, only that your body felt like it was on fire, that you could hardly breathe, that he was fucking you so good you couldnât think. âRhys, Iââ
He wasnât letting you work for it, wasnât letting you do anything but take it. His hands gripped you tighter, fingers pressing into your skinâjust shy of bruising, just enough to make you shudder, to make the ache feel just as good as everything else. He dragged you over him like he couldnât get enough, guiding you exactly where he wanted. His chest heaved beneath your palms, every breath ragged, every sound punched from his lungs with each thrust.Â
Your head tipped back, pleasure cresting, every nerve in your body alight. But he wasnât done.Â
One moment you were gasping, hands bracing against his chest as he drove into you with deep, relentless thrusts, and the nextâhis arms wrapped around you, dragging you down, pressing you flush against him as he buried his face in your neck.Â
And then he fucked you like he meant it.Â
Hard, deep, his grip unyielding as he drove into you, hips slamming against yours with a pace that stole the air from your lungs.Â
âFuck, Rhysââ You werenât even sure if you were saying his name or just gasping it, like it was the only thing you could cling to in the onslaught of pleasure.Â
âThatâs it,â he rasped against your ear, voice wrecked, sending shivers skittering down your spine. âJust like that, just take it. Feels good, doesnât it?â
Your fingers tangled in his hair, nails raking against his scalp as a broken moan tore from your lips.Â
âFeelsâtoo good,â you gasped, a half-delirious laugh slipping out before another sharp thrust stole it from you. âFuckâyouâre soââ
âSo what?â he teased, his lips dragging over your jaw, your neck, anywhere he could reach. âSay it.â
You swallowed hard, trying to force the words through the haze clouding your mind, through the pleasure threatening to consume you whole. âSoâfuck, Rhysâso deepââ
A groan rumbled in his chest, low and satisfied, before his grip on you tightened. âYeah? You like that?â His voice dropped, rough, nearly smug. âLike the way I feel inside you?â
Pleasure surged through you, coiling hot and deep, making every nerve in your body tighten in anticipation.Â
Your hands clutched at his shoulders, at his hair, desperate to ground yourself against the intensity of it all. âYouââ Your breath caught as he snapped his hips up, hard and precise. âYou already know.â
âMaybe.â He smirked against your skin, then his voice dipped, quieter, raspierââSay my name again.â
Rhys. Rhys. Rhys.Â
Your breath tangled with his, and for a moment, everything felt different. More than just pleasure. More than just bodies moving together.Â
âRhys,â you gasped, the word slipping out without a second thought. âFuck, youâreâyouâre so deep. Soâso fucking perfect.â
He moaned at that, a low rumble of a sound, his chest rising and falling against yours as his hips snapped up to meet yours with relentless rhythm. You could feel every inch of him, the way he filled you, the way his movements were both precise and utterly frantic. The pleasure had your head spinning, but the way his name tasted on your tongueâhow it felt to say it again and againâwas a drug in itself.
His eyes locked onto yours, something wild in them now, a primal hunger that only grew as you spoke. âYou feel so good,â you breathed, your nails digging into his shoulders as you moved against him, feeling every flex of his muscles beneath your fingertips. âI canâtâI canât get enough of you, Rhys.â
The words spilled from you now, breathless and unfiltered. âYouâre everything I need,â you whispered, voice a little desperate. âSo fucking deep, so good, Rhys. You make me feelâgods, you make me feel so good, so full of you.â
His body responded to your words like a switch had been flipped. His fingers dug into your flesh as he pulled you down against him again and again, each thrust now more forceful, as if he couldnât get enough either. His lips found your throat, kissing and biting his way down your collarbone.Â
âDonât stop,â he muttered, his voice a rasp in your ear. âTell me how I make you feel.â
âLike Iâm falling apart, Rhys, like I canât take itâcanât thinkâfuck, Rhysâ Your breath caught as his thrusts deepened, hitting the perfect spot, and your head fell back, your eyes fluttering shut for a moment as the sensation overwhelmed you. âI never want to stop feeling thisânever want you to stop. Iâm so fucking close. Iââ
His groan cut off your words, a sharp sound of pleasure as his hands moved to your ass, pulling you down harder, faster. You could feel his body tightening beneath you, and it sent a shockwave of heat through your own, pushing you to the edge.Â
âGods, (y/n),â he gritted out, his voice raw, strained, and low. âYou feel so fucking good. Donât stop, please, donât stop.â
Your chest heaved, your body trembling as you struggled to keep yourself steady, meeting his thrusts with everything you had left. The intensity of it all had your head spinning, the pleasure so overwhelming that you barely noticed the words slipping from your mouth until they were out.Â
âIâm on the tonic,â you gasped, your voice unsteady as you focused on the way his body moved against yours. âI donât want you to pull outâplease.â
A rough, breathless curse left him, his hips snapping into you with a new urgency. Your body responded instantly, your thoughts dissolving into sensation. The tension in your body was at the breaking point, every inch of you coiled so tightly that you felt like you might snap. You could feel him losing control, each thrust harder, faster, the desperation mirrored in his eyes.Â
Then his hips jerked up into you one last time, and as you heard the low, guttural sound of his releaseâhis breath hitching, his hands gripping you like a lifelineâyou couldnât hold back anymore. The sensation of him finishing inside you was all it took. You exploded, the orgasm rushing over you in waves so intense you couldnât breathe, couldnât think, could only feel him, feel his body trembling beneath you.Â
âRhys,â you gasped, your voice raw as you rode out the waves of your release, still trembling in his arms.Â
He groaned your name, holding you against him as your body shuddered with the aftershocks. He kept you close, his chest rising and falling in sync with yours, as if he couldnât bear to let go of you just yet.Â
âYouâre fucking perfect,â he whispered, his voice rough with satisfaction. âGods, you drive me insane, (y/n).â
You huffed out a laugh, your fingers lightly tracing the lines of his chest, still catching your breath. âI should drive you insane more often.â
Rhysand let out a low chuckle, fingers brushing lazily along your spine. âOh, you already do enough for a lifetime.â Then, after a beatââYouâre a handful.â
You raised an eyebrow as you propped yourself up just enough to meet his gaze. âI thought you liked it.â
His gaze locked onto yours, no trace of humor in it now. âI do.â
âThen maybe youâd do well to stop your incessant talking.â
He smirked, but it was soft, almost like he was holding back somethingâsomething he knew better than to say right then. âFine.â
You rolled your eyes, shifting to climb off him, only for his arms to tighten around your waist.
âStay,â he murmured, a little too smooth, a little too comfortable.Â
You hesitated. The air between you was heavy, charged, but the moment was already slipping away, back into something more familiar, something edged with unspoken things neither of you dared put a name to.Â
âFine,â you muttered, feigning exasperation as you let yourself settle against him once more. âBut if you start snoring in my ear, Iâm gone.â
His laugh rumbled beneath you. âNoted.â
⌠. ăâş ă . ⌠. ăâş ă . âŚ
(Y/n),
I trust youâve arrived safely back in Velaris. The final terms of the agreement regarding the Seasonal Courtsâ trade routes through Dusk have been sent with this letter for your review. Barring any objections, we should be ready to move forward by next month. I assume youâll have thoughts on the restructuring of the second clauseâif only to disagree with me on principleâso let me know where youâd like to make your changes.Â
On a separate note, I expect my bed will feel unusually empty tonight. A tragedy, really. Letâs hope I can bear the suffering.Â
Do try not to miss me too much.Â
Rhys
⌠. ăâş ă . ⌠. ăâş ă . âŚ
You let the letter fall to your desk, lips pressing together as you read the last few lines again.Â
Despite yourself, a quiet scoff escaped you. Typical.Â
Shaking your head, you reached for a fresh sheet of parchment. Whether he deserved a response was another matter entirely.Â
summary: You're in the Spring Court, playing the dutiful emissary while navigating its fractured politics. But when your mentor's gaze lingers too long, when his touch strays past propriety, resisting him becomes a far more dangerous game.
word count: 3.5k
content: [ explicit sexual content, explicit language, alcohol use/mention, power imbalance ]
author's note: ohhh lucien vanserra how i need you... let me go learn how to be an emissary ill be like,, a teacher's pet, OH ITLL BE LIKE MILLERS GIRL COME ON LUCIEN LET ME HITTTT-UHH :((((
⌠. 1k Celebration Apothecary . âŚ
foxfire tonic
infused with a dash of blaze
enhanced with glimmer dust
shaken
thank you @keeryhours for the request!! i really hope you like it :")
The Spring Court was beautiful. That was what everyone said. Lush, golden fields stretching into endless forests. A palace of marble and ivy, perched like a jewel among the trees.
But beauty meant little in politics. In the Spring Court, power wasnât flaunted in grand speeches or open warâit was wielded in silence, in the carefully calculated decisions made in the shadows. Youâd spent months learning the rules of this game, understanding how to negotiate, how to balance the fragile alliances Tamlin depended on, how to survive.
Lucien Vanserra had been your guide through it all.
Sharp-eyed, sharp-tongued, and an impossible mentorâassigned to you from the start. He expected precision, ruthlessness, a keen understanding of when to speak and when silence was the sharpest weapon. He was everything you had imaginedâintelligent, commanding, too observant for comfort.
But there was something else, something beneath the surface that unsettled you.
You felt it in the way his gaze lingered just a moment too long, how it always seemed to track your every movement with quiet calculation. The way his touchâaccidental or notâlasted just a little too long, a subtle reminder that he was always watching, always assessing. And the low, sardonic drawl he used when he spoke to youâlike he was amused, as if he knew something you didnât.Â
You told yourself it was nothing. That Lucien would never cross that line. That you wouldnât.
But tonightâŚ
Lucien leaned back in his chair, fingers tapping lazily against the armrest, his usual glass of wine untouched as papers lay scattered before him. The official documentation of your first months as an emissaryâyour performance review.
âYour instincts are sharp,â Lucien said, skimming through the notes with a detached air before looking up at you. His expression was unreadable, his russet eye narrowing ever so slightly. âYou pick up on power plays faster than most. But youâve been holding back.â
You kept your gaze steady. âIâve been learning,â you said neutrally.Â
Lucien set the papers down with slow, deliberate ease. His gaze sharpened. âNo. Youâve been hesitating. Why?â
You clenched your jaw. âI donât want to overstep.â
Lucien tilted his head, the candlelight casting a faint glow over the scar slashing through his left eye. âA generous interpretation,â he murmured. âBut not the truth.â
Your pulse jumped, but you held your ground. Lucien had always been precise, always measured. And you had learned to be, too.
âThe truth is, youâre afraid,â he said, his voice mild, almost idle. âAfraid of taking that last step, of claiming what youâre capable of. And not just in politics.â A pause. âIn all of it.â
You didnât respond. You couldnât. His wordsâtoo true, too closeâwere dangerous territory.
Lucien rose from his chair slowly, with the kind of ease that suggested he already knew how this conversation would go. That he had already decided.Â
The air between you seemed to shrink as he moved. He reached behind him, plucking a book from its place on his bookshelf with a practiced flick, the binding creaking in protest.Â
âIf you want to last here, you need to understand how power works,â he said, extending it to you with a wry, knowing look. âChapter six. A riveting read.â
You took the book andâdespite yourselfâhesitated before looking up at him.Â
Lucien didnât return to his seat. Instead, he lingered in front of you, closeâtoo close. He leaned against the edge of his desk, arms crossed, one ankle hooked over the other in that relaxed stance that was anything but.
âYou hesitate,â he repeated quietly, as if it was simply an observation. His gaze flicked downwardâjust for a second. A slow smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth.Â
Your heart slammed into your ribs. You stiffened, swallowing against the sudden limp in your throat. But Lucien was still watching you, gaze never straying, ever patient. Always reading you, looking for the cracks.Â
Maybe he had already found them.
âYou overthink,â he murmured, reaching for the book again. His fingers brushed over yours, warm, calloused. A featherlight touch, but deliberate. He slid it effortlessly from your grip, setting it aside as if it had never mattered at all.Â
As if he knew the only thing you were paying attention to was him.Â
The space between you thinned to a breath.Â
His knuckles ghosted along the inside of your wristâbarely there, yet somehow, you felt it everywhere. Your pulse betrayed you, thrumming beneath his fingertips.Â
Lucien hummed, the sound deep, contemplative. His fingers slid higher, tracing up the curve of your arm with unhurried ease.Â
Not hesitant. Never hesitant.Â
âYou think I donât notice?â he mused. âThe way you look at me when you think I wonât see?â
You huffed a quiet, unsteady laugh, tilting your chin up. âYouâre very full of yourself.â
Lucien grinned, slow and lazy, but his fingers curled at the crook of your elbow, just enough for you to feel the heat of his touch.Â
âAnd you,â he uttered, voice dipping into something deeper, something silk-smooth, âare a terrible liar.â
A shiver trailed down your spine.Â
Donât do this.Â
But gods, you wanted to.Â
Your breath came unsteady as his fingers traced up your throat, tilting your face up to his. âTell me to stop,â he said, voice like a hush of wind. âSay youâd like to excuse yourself, and go run off to your room for the night. Tomorrow, weâll carry on as if this never happenedâas if you left right after our discussion.â
Your lips parted. The words were right there. But insteadâ
âI canât.â
Lucien inhaled sharply. Just barely.Â
And then you reached for him.Â
Your fingers curled into the front of his tunic, pulling him in, and that was all it took.Â
His mouth met yours, andâgods. You had spent months trying to ignore this, to push it aside, but nothing could have prepared you for this, for him.Â
The way he kissed youâslow at first, like he was savoring it, like he was committing this moment to memory. But then he unraveled, deepening the kiss, his hands settling on your waist, fingers pressing in as if he couldnât bear the thought of space between you.Â
You moaned into his mouth when he sucked on your tongue, his groan vibrating against your lips in answer. âYouââ He broke away just enough to breathe the words against your lips, voice rough, barely restrained. âYou have no idea how long Iâve wantedââ
âI think I do,â you interrupted, voice unsteady, fingers threading through his hair, pulling at the tie keeping it barely in place.Â
Lucien growled in response, a low, dangerous sound that sent heat curling in your stomach. His hands slide lower, gripping your thighs as he lifted you onto the desk, stepping between your legs with that same easy confidence, that same certainty.Â
You gasped, back arching as his lips traveled down your jaw, your throat.Â
âThis is a bad idea,â you whispered, even as your legs tightened around him.Â
Lucienâs teeth grazed your pulse pointâa sharp scrape, followed by a slow, teasing kiss.Â
âI know,â he admitted, voice low, wicked. But he didnât stop.Â
And neither did you.Â
Lucienâs mouth left a trail of heat down your throat as he kissed his way lower, his breath hot against your skin. You could feel the press of his body against yours, the weight of himâthe undeniable certainty that he knew exactly what he wanted. And right now, that was you.Â
You arched into him, fingers sliding along his chest, tracing the muscles beneath his tunic. His hands were relentless, gripping you with the kind of urgency that left no room for hesitation. But you werenât sure you wanted him to stop. Every touch felt like a spark, igniting something deep within you, something that youâd buried for the sake of duty.Â
Lucienâs lips hovered over your collarbone for a moment, his breath catching as if he were thinking. Thinking about how far this could go, how much further he should let it go.Â
But then he exhaled sharply, and whatever restraint had crept in vanished.Â
His teeth scraped lightly against your skin again, a teasing bite before he soothed the sting with his tongue. A shudder ran through you, your fingers tightening over his shoulder and into his hair. As if you could steady yourself, as if you werenât already too far gone.Â
Lucien laughed against your throat, low and warm. âDidnât think youâd be able to hold off this long.â
You should have shoved him away, should have reminded himâreminded yourselfâof what this was. Of what it could cost you. But when you opened your mouth, the only thing that slipped out was a breathless, âSay another word and Iâll reconsider.â
Lucien grinned, and then his fingers were at the laces of your dress, undoing them with deft precision, one by one, until the fabric loosened, slipping from your shoulders.Â
He drew in a shaky breath.Â
You felt the way he tensed, the way his fingers briefly stilled against your newly exposed skin before he let out a quiet curse. âYou reallyââ He exhaled sharply. âYou really arenât going to make this easy for me, are you?â
You werenât sure if he meant the situation or the temptation of you. Both, likely.Â
Your lips curled slightly, but the smugness of it vanished when he dipped his head, his mouth trailing lower. His hands slid to your hips, thumbs pressing into you through the rumpled fabric of your dress as he pulled you to the edge of the desk, flush against him.Â
It was a mistake.Â
Everything about this was a mistake.Â
And yet, when Lucienâs lips found yours again, you didnât stop him.Â
Didnât stop him when he pushed your sleeves and bodice down, exposing more, his hands mapping every inch of skin he revealed. Didnât stop him when he guided your legs tighter around him, when he lifted you just enough to slip the fabric from your body. Didnât stop him when his own clothes followed, when the warmth of himâof all of himâpressed against you, scorching and solid and real.Â
And gods, when you shifted your hips against him, when his breath hitched and he cursed again, his grip tightening at your waistâ
You knew you were past the point of no return.Â
Still, some part of you clung to reason, even as your fingers tangled in his hair, even as he kissed you deep and slow, like he had all the time in the world.Â
âThis is a terrible idea,â you whispered against his lips, even as your hands roamed lower, tracing the sharp lines of his torso.Â
Lucien hummed, his nose brushing yours. âOne of my worst.â
âIf Tamlin finds outââ
Lucien cut you off with another kiss, deep and bruising, his fingers tightening at your waist. âIf Tamlin finds out,â he sighed, pulling back just enough for his lips to ghost over yours, âIâm just as dead as you are.â
The thrill of it sent heat licking up your spine, and Lucien smirked, sensing it. His hands slid up the smooth skin of your back, pulling you closer, so close there was nothing between you but the heat of your skin and the dangerous thrill of knowing the door wasnât locked, of knowing you should stop. But neither of you would. His breath was uneven, his body taut with restraint. You felt itâthe way he held himself just barely in check, as if giving in meant losing something, as if it would mean something more than just tonight.Â
But you were past pretending.Â
You tilted your hips, urging him closer, your lips brushing his ear as you whispered, âLucien.â
He swore under his breath, low and wrecked, the last thread of control snapping.Â
His hands were rough as they grabbed at you, greedy, desperate. His mouth was everywhereâyour throat, your shoulder, your chestâbiting, sucking, leaving behind proof of this mistake. Proof you werenât sure youâd regret. Then, with a sudden, frustrated sweep of his arm, he sent everything atop the desk crashing to the floor. Papers scattered, the wine glass shattered, dark liquid blooming across the wood. None of it mattered. Not when he was pressing you back against the surface, not when his hands were already spreading your thighs wider.Â
Your head tipped back against the desk as his fingers dragged up the sensitive skin before dipping lower. You gasped at the first touch, your nails digging into his back, and he groaned at the sting. He wasnât gentle, wasnât careful. He touched you like heâd wanted to for months and was making up for all the times heâd held himself back.Â
And you let him. You wanted him to.Â
âYou like this,â he crooned against your skin, his breath hot, his fingers pressing deeper, slipping inside you.Â
You could barely get the words out, your breath hitched, body arching into him. âYouââ A sharp exhale as he curled his fingers just right, âYou already knew that.â
Lucien grinned, sharp and satisfied, before kissing you againâhungry, relentless. His fingers worked you open with practiced ease, and gods, you could barely think, barely breathe.Â
And then, just as your body went taut with anticipation, he stilled, pulling away. A frustrated sound caught in your throat, your eyes flying open to glare at him, but whatever you wouldâve said died on your tongue at the sight before you.Â
Lucienâflushed, eyes burning, chest heavingâstared down at you like you were something he wanted to devour. Like he couldnât believe you were real, spread out beneath him like this.Â
âSay it,â he rasped, his fingers digging into your hips, his own arousal pressing hot and hard against your thigh. âI need you to say you want this.â
You didnât hesitate. âI do. I want this.â
His jaw clenched, a quiet, broken noise slipping from his lips as he guided himself against you, teasing, torturing, until neither of you could stand it any longer. And when he finally thrust into youâdeep, stretching, perfectâyou both gasped, the air between you shattering.Â
Lucienâs forehead dropped to yours, his body taut with restraint as he let you adjust, his breath heavy, uneven. âFuck,â he groaned, fingers gripping your waist so tightly it was almost bruising. âYou feelââ He swallowed hard, unable to finish the thought.Â
You shifted, rolling your hips experimentally, and Lucien sucked in a sharp breath before snapping his hips forward, filling you completely again. You gasped, nails digging into his shoulders, and his answering groan was ragged, breaking on the exhale. Your body moved on instinct, chasing his touch, pulling him deeper with every shift of his hips. You met every one of his thrusts, gasping as heat coiled tighter inside you, as his hands pressed you down, making you take every inch of him.Â
He set a pace that was deep and deliberate, his movements slow at first, teasing, until the need overtook him. Lucienâs hold on you was firm, unrelenting, his movements turning rough, driven by something raw and unchecked. The desk creaked beneath you, papers long forgotten, books discarded on the floor. Nothing else existed beyond this momentâbeyond the sharp drag of teeth over skin, the bruising grip of your hands on his arms, the way he moved inside you like he never wanted to stop.Â
âWe shouldnât be doing this,â you breathed, your fingers fisting in his hair.Â
Lucien let out a quiet, breathless laugh against your throat. âI think you like that we shouldnât.â
Your stomach clenched at the truth of it, at the thrill curling through your veins and the fire licking through your blood. Â
His hand slid between your bodies, fingers finding your clit and rubbing slow, teasing circles that belied his desperation to have you come undone around him. âThatâs it,â he whispered when you whimpered into his shoulder. âLet me hear you.â
You couldnât hold back the sounds that spilled from your lips as the pleasure coiled tighter and tighter inside you. Lucien faltered for just a moment before he drove into you impossibly harder, his name slipping from your lips in a hushed, desperate plea.Â
He was close, you could feel it in the way his body tensed, in the way his thrusts turned erratic. His hand worked you faster, his lips finding yours in a searing kiss, swallowing your moans as you unraveled beneath him.Â
Your release crashed over you in waves, pleasure so sharp and overwhelming it left you trembling in his arms. Lucien groaned, making to drive into you one last time and pull outâonly to jolt when your legs tightened around him, locking him there. His breath caught, his hands tight on your hips as if debating whether to pull away, but then you met his wide-eyed stare with a smirk, tilting your hips just enough to feel him twitch inside you. His exhale was ragged, his fingers flexing, before he finally let himself sink into it, groaning as he followed you over the edge.Â
For a moment, neither of you moved, your bodies tangled, your breaths mingling in the quiet space between you. The weight of him, the lingering pulse of pleasure, the warmth still shared between sweat-slicked skinâit was too much and not enough all at once. If you stayed like this, if you let the moment stretch for just a little longer, maybe it wouldn't have to end.Â
But then Lucien stirred. He slipped from you, the absence of him sudden and cold despite the heat still clinging to your skin. The reality of what had just happened pressed in like a vice, your pulse still racing for an entirely different reason now.Â
You swallowed hard, still perched on the desk, your legs weak, your breath uneven. Your clothes were a mess, scattered across the room in careless abandon, the room still thick with the scent of sweat and sex. You watched as Lucien reached for his pants, tugging them on with a sharp inhale. He straightened his tunic next, then ran a hand through his tousled hair, smoothing it back into place as if that could erase what had just transpired. As if he hadnât just unraveled you with his hands, his mouth, his body.Â
The weight in your chest grew heavier with each passing second.Â
You slid off the desk, your legs protesting as you found your footing. You should say somethingâanythingâto fill the silence crackling between you. But what was there to say? This was a mistake? It shouldnât have happened? You didnât believe either of those things, that was the problem.Â
You moved for the nearest piece of fabric to cover yourself, but before you could gather your clothes, Lucien beat you to it.Â
He crouched, retrieving your dress from the floor before handing it to you, the fabric brushing your fingers in a way that threatened a shiver at the base of your spine. His other hand carried your undergarments, which he offered with a smirk far too satisfied for someone who was supposed to be regretting this.Â
âHere,â he said softly, watching as you hesitated. âIâd hate to see you running through the halls half-dressed. ActuallyâŚâ His lips quirked, eyes flicking over your still-bare form. âI wouldnât hate it. But I imagine Tamlinâs guards would have some questions.â
A flush crawled up your neck, but you rolled your eyes, snatching your clothes from his grasp. âHow considerate of you.â Lucien only grinned.Â
You busied yourself dressing, your mind a tangled mess of what this meantâif it meant anything at all. If it was just a mistake heâd rather forget. But when you glanced up, Lucien was watching you with that same dark, knowing look.Â
He stepped closer, fingers brushing your chin as he tipped your face up to his. âIâm going to glamour your scent,â he murmured, his voice quieter now, more serious. âGo straight to your room and bathe. No one can know about this.â
You swallowed, nodding, though the words still felt like a dismissal. Like you were being sent away now that heâd finally had you.
Lucien sighed, shaking his head slightly. Then, as if reading the very thought from your mind, he leaned in, his lips ghosting over the shell of your ear.Â
âIâm not usually so rude,â he said, his voice dipping into something low and sinful. âNext time, weâll do this in my roomâso I can take care of you properly.â
By the time you managed to gather yourself enough to respond, he was already pulling back, amusement glittering in his gaze as he led you toward the door. âGo on, you little vixen,â he murmured, opening it just enough for you to slip through. âBefore I decide I donât care who knows.â
this is my az đ¤Šcurly wavy azđŽâđ¨thick brows azđ¤¤freckled and even more brown from the sun azđĽ°sharp jaw but soft features besides his eyes azđ¤§
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Lying Is the Most Fun a Girl Can Have Without Taking Her Clothes Off
word count: 1.9k
author's note: i had the idea for this one literally AS i was writing the last one
⌠. Masterlist . âŚ
The venue hums with the kind of energy youâd expect for a band as big as Wings of Illyria, the low chatter and country rock playing in the background almost drowned out by the buzz around the meet-and-greet booth.
Cassian, the life of the party you always imagined him to be, is already surrounded by fans, effortlessly drawing people in with that easy grin of his. But security is quick to move in, ushering people away with practiced calm, the crowd reluctantly shifting to make room for the bandâs massive presence. Rhysand sits beside him, polished and smooth as ever, his gaze flicking between the crowd and the bandâs merch, playing the role of the charming frontman like he was born for it. But AzrielâAzriel looks like heâd rather be anywhere else.
You spot him leaning back in his chair, a half-smirk barely visible beneath the dark fringe of his hair, eyes scanning the room with a look that says heâs mentally checked out. The cigarette tucked behind his ear, defying the âNo Smokingâ sign above the booth, is the least surprising thing about him.
You canât help but notice how effortlessly Azriel leans into the atmosphere, the way his posture seems to say heâs both above it all and fully in control of the space around him. The black leather jacket slung over his chair, the way his fingers casually thrum against the table, itâs all effortlessly cool. But before you can linger on him too long, a voice cuts through the room, sharp and high-pitched enough to make your teeth ache.Â
The girl in front of you is practically vibrating, her hands shaking as she clutches her phone to her chest like itâs a lifeline. âOh my God, oh my God,â she whispers to her friend, barely able to hold it together. âWhat if I say something dumb? What if they laugh at me? What if Az doesnât even look at me? I have to tell him how much Iââ
Itâs the way she says Azânot like sheâs just a fan, but like sheâs personally on a nickname basis with himâthat makes your eye twitch. You donât want to judge, but fuck, could people just enjoy things without this level of intensity? Sheâs decked out in enough Wings of Illyria merch to make you wonder if she owns anything that isnât branded. Her denim jacket is practically a billboard for the band, from the patches to the pins to the shirts sheâs stacked under it, all so bright and loud itâs almost cartoonish. She looks exactly like the kind of people youâve seen mocked in those âfan stereotypeâ posts, and it grates on you more than it should.
You bite back a sigh, trying to ignore the discomfort gnawing at your nerves. Itâs not her fault, right? People can like things however they want. But as you stand there, you canât shake the tightness in your chest, the buzz of unease youâve been carrying all day. You hadnât gotten much sleep last nightâtoo busy running through every possible scenario, obsessing over the idea that maybe, just maybe, youâd misinterpreted the song. What if it wasnât about you at all? What if youâd been foolish to even think it was? Youâd spent so much time convincing yourself this was the right thing to do, that you could handle whatever confrontation came with it. But now, with the weight of it all on your shoulders, doubts have started to creep in.Â
To each their own, you remind yourself, trying to shake the jittery feeling in your stomach.Â
The line inches forward, and you shuffle along with it, caught between your own nerves and the chaos around you. Every second stretches and the girl ahead of you is still whispering furiously to her friend about all the reasons this moment is life-changing for her. You try to tune it out, focusing instead on the distant hum of the music overhead, and the faint shuffle of feet, the air heavy with anticipation.
And then, itâs your turn.Â
Cassian is the first to notice you, his smile broad and infectious, like heâs genuinely thrilled to meet every single person who steps up to the booth. âHey!â he greets warmly, his voice loud enough to carry over the din. âYou excited for the show?â
âYeah, definitely,â you reply, shifting your weight awkwardly from one foot to the other. âIâve been looking forward to it for weeks.â
Cassian beams like youâve just made his night. âThatâs what I like to hear! First time seeing us live?â
You shake your head, a small smile tugging at your lips. âSecond. Saw you guys in Orlando last year.â
âNo shit?â he says, leaning forward slightly. âThat was a great crowd. One of the best on that leg of the tour. You catch the whole set?
âMost of it,â you admit. âI got stuck in traffic and missed the first couple of songs.â
Rhysand, whoâs been quietly observing, chuckles at that. âTypical,â he says, his voice smooth and amused. âTraffic in that city is practically a right of passage.â
âRight?â you say, laughing despite yourself. âI swear I left two hours early and still barely made it in time for âBloodlines.ââ
Cassian gives you a mock sympathetic look. âTragic. Thatâs one of my favorites to play live.â
âItâs a good one,â you say, your nerves easing just a little. You glance between the two of them, noting how Rhysâs sharp gaze is fixed on you like he can tell thereâs another reason youâre here.Â
âSo,â Rhys says, tilting his head slightly. âWhatâs your favorite track?â
How the hellâ
âI mean, the whole album is great,â you say, âbut âSear My Skinâ has been on repeat lately.â
Itâs a calculated choice, and you donât miss the quirk of Azrielâs brow in your peripheral.Â
âInteresting pick,â Rhys says, his smirk widening. âThat oneâs been causing a bit of a stir lately.â
Cassian chuckles. âYeah, Az really knocked it out of the park with that one.â
And there it isâthe perfect segue. You glance past them, finally letting your gaze settle on Azriel, whoâs been silent this whole time.Â
Heâs leaned back in his chair, arms crossed over his chest, his expression unreadable as his dark eyes meet yours. For a second, the noise of the room seems to fade, and you realize your heart is pounding in your chest,Â
âAzriel,â you say, his name coming out steadier than you expected. âCan I ask you something?â
He quirks that brow again, the faintest hint of a smirk playing on his lips. âYou just did.â
Cassian groans dramatically, dragging a hand down his face. âCome on, man. Donât make it harder than it needs to be,â he mutters.
Azriel ignores him, his gaze still fixed on you. âWhatâs the question?â
You take a breath, forcing yourself to hold his stare. âThe songââSear My Skin.â Is it about me?â
Rhysand doesnât bother hiding his laughter, leaning back in his chair like heâs settling in for a show. Cassianâs drink nearly slips out of his hand, and he mutters something under his breath that sounds suspiciously like, Oh, shit.
Azriel doesnât react immediately. He just stares at you, his expression unreadable, until the silence stretches so thin you think it might snap.Â
âWho are you?â he asks finally, his tone maddeningly calm.Â
You blink, thrown off by the audacity of the question. âYou seriously donât remember me?â
He leans back, shrugging one shoulder. âI donât remember half the women I sleep with.â
Cassian chokes on his drink, Rhysandâs grin stretching wide enough to show teeth, but youâre not about to let Azriel off that easily.Â
âPressed against the door, your lips trace the ache?â You quote the line pointedly, crossing your arms as you glare at him. The memory rushes backâhow heâd tasted on your tongue, how his hands had threaded through your hair before all hell broke loose. âSound familiar?â
âItâs not that deep,â Azriel replies, his tone dismissive, though his gaze sharpens ever so slightly.Â
âReally?â you counter, your tone dripping with incredulity. âRight before I finish, your bodyâs all I feel, breathed in your ear âyou feel too good to be real.ââ Your voice rises, your chest tightening as the words leave your mouth. âYou literally said that to me while you were balls deep in me against a wall.â
Azriel freezes, his lips parting slightly as a faint flicker of surprise breaks through his carefully guarded expression. For a split second, itâs almost satisfying.Â
Cassianâs reaction is anything but subtle. His chair scrapes loudly against the floor as he doubles over in laughter, nearly spilling his drink again. He gasps, pounding the table. âYo, what the fuck?!â
Rhysand isnât fairing much better, his laughter barely contained as he leans forward, resting his elbows on the table, his amusement still sharp but with a more controlled edge than Cassianâs, to his credit.
Azrielâs jaw tightens, and he finally breaks eye contact, glancing down at the table. âOkay,â he mutters, the word barely audible over the laughter. âMaybe itâs a little about you.â
Cassian claps a hand over his mouth, trying and failing to muffle another loud âYo!â Rhysand smirks, watching the two of you closely.Â
But you shake your head, not about to let him off with just that. âA little? Really? You practically narrated the whole thingâI deserve royalties.â
Azriel raises an eyebrow, clearly not expecting that response. âRoyalties?â he repeats, half-laughing, but still avoiding eye contact.
Before he can properly respond, a security guard steps forward, tilting their head toward the door, a silent gesture that your time is up.Â
You roll your eyes but shoot Azriel a teasing smile. âGuess Iâm out of time for royalties. But Iâll be expecting them in the mail.â
As the security guard ushers you forward, Rhysand speaks up. âWell, nice to meet you, Sear My Skin,â he says, voice dripping with humor.Â
You grin back at him, a little cheeky. âMy nameââ
âItâs (y/n),â Azriel interrupts, dragging a hand over his face as he speaks, his tone casual but something darker in his gaze that wouldâve stopped you in your tracks if not for the man guiding you away.
You blink at him, and canât help the smile blooming on your face. He remembered you. Really remembered you.Â
Just as youâre about to take another step toward the exit, Cassian shouts from behind you, âWait, wait, wait!â His voice is a mix of urgency and excitement.Â
You turn around, confused, as Cassian's already talking to someone behind the merch table. The team member nods, already moving to grab something and hand it over to you. Cassian looks at you with that mischievous grin youâre so used to seeing on video. âWeâll set you up for the show. Donât leave without saying hi to us again, yeah?â
You look at the woman heading your way and take the slip she hands you, your heart stopping when you read the words Backstage Pass. Youâre not sure whatâs happening, but the thrill of it courses through you. âUhâYeah, thank you?â
âAnytime, princess,â Cassian says with a wink, leaning back in his chair as he makes a show of lounging.Â
You glance at Azriel one last time before being nudged along by the guard. He looks back at you for a moment, unreadable as ever, but thereâs something in his eyes. But he says nothing, and itâs enough to make your chest tighten, a mix of anticipation and confusion bubbling in your stomach.Â