Canât Bring Myself To Hate Youâ Series Masterlist
a/n: itâs been over a yearâitâs about time I gave this series a page of its own instead of lumping all the parts on Azrielâs masterlist
Read on AO3

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Philippines

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Greece
seen from Yemen
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Singapore

seen from Malaysia

seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Ireland

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Philippines
Canât Bring Myself To Hate Youâ Series Masterlist
a/n: itâs been over a yearâitâs about time I gave this series a page of its own instead of lumping all the parts on Azrielâs masterlist
Read on AO3
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 7.5
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 14.5
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26 (to be written)

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Canât Bring Myself To Wake You (Azriel)
Synopsis: Alice in Wonderland x The Hobbit sort of dream
A/N: kind of happy with the timing for this đ
Click here to read
Music: Tim Burton Playlist
Youâd been anticipating the lack of light, so it wasnât much of a bother. The scent was damp, but nothing putrid. It was the weight that had caught you off guard. The bizarre heaviness that pressed down upon your shoulders with every step forward, as if attempting to drive you off-course.
Hours have passed since you last saw the wolves, yet they feel worlds away. Separated by the barrier of consciousness, left entirely to yourself. Confined to solitude. Spend your time counting cocoa coloured conkers, though theyâre few and far between.
A large fox peers from between the trees, snow-soft paws prowling silently as he slowly stalks forward, tall as a horse. Sharp, beady eyes glint with cunning, razor-sharp canines pronounced from his upper lip, snout protruding elegantly from his features. Distinctly vulpine. Six wire-like whiskers stick from his nose, sleek and gracious.
Breath catches as a shadow emerges from the darkness, heavier than the rest. Begins to take shape, morphing into four, greatly powerful paws, midnight fur thick and silky. Leading up to create the tremendous torso of the beast, corded with muscle, fully grown and thrumming with lethal, sinister power. Leathery wings flare from its back, each peak tipped with a single talon, sharper than any blade youâve seen. His head is smooth and elegant, distinctly feline, with piercing fangs pushing from his upper lip.
Canât Bring Myself To Hate You â Part 24
Azriel x third-oldest-Archeron-sibling!reader
a/n: As an extra warning: by my own standards this got very dark in the second part, and was very draining to write. You may find this a walk in the park, but if you feel like anything in this chapter is getting to you please obviously feel free to take a break, or put on some happy instrumental music :)
Also, this was written as one partâTumblr forced me to split it into two, hence the posting of two chapters in one night
warnings (mostly for part two): angst, death, some blood/gore unfortunately, slight hurt/comfort but itâs complicated, prison-related plot, general misery for reader
word count for part one: 9,448
total word count:Â 19,262
-Part 23-
The plan, as far as you understand it, is to winnow up northeast to the coastal town, Bornemere, then to fly the rest of the way to locate the few traders willing to barter for Illyrian steel, among other things only accessibly through specific trade routes. Like the oxen hide Azriel had mentioned.Â
You canât lie, the idea of having a dagger strapped to your body or tied to an inner pocket has your insides twisting. It seems overkill, to give you a blade when youâd imagine Azriel to have an abundance of his own hidden away. He needs you to navigate the jungle and differentiate between lethal and harmless invertebrate, while you need him to handle any creatures with antagonistic or aggressive tendencies. In other words, you canât imagine one of you leaving the otherâs side.Â
It could easily be your imagination that convinces you of the salt in the air, that tangles itself into the roots of your tied-back hair and makes it stiff and sticky, but when the sea comes into view and the screech of marine birds cleave along through the winds, youâre reassured. The town seems large, expanding lengthwise along the coastline rather than seeping back inland thatâs filled with dry fields and brown crops where small spots of white graze atop the hills, a few taking shelter in the steep cover of the valleys that seem to zigzag. Although your eyes arenât quite strong enough to pick it out from such a height, you know streams will be running through their centres, fresh-water springs babbling up from holes in the ground before eventually making their way outwards toward the sea, joining forces until they accumulate into creek, gathering into streams before feeding into rivers. Casting your eyes further along the land you can spot an estuary splitting Bornemere in two, where the river opens into the sea, rock scattering the opening.Â
Your ears pop as Azriel begins to descend through the air, keeping his wings spread wide to smooth the long glide down. Air rushes past your cheeks, a single strand of hair stinging your eye as the wind whips it about and you yield half your grip on Azrielâs shoulders to tuck it beneath the scarf wrapped around your head. It had been Elainâs idea, and now, with the wintery coastal air trying to slip its way up your sleeves and beneath the neckline of your dress, or even wrap its way up your legs beneath your skirts, youâre glad you bundled up a little more to combat the harsh winds.Â
The plan, that youâd been trying to revise in your head before youâd become distracted by your senses, is to fly by Bornemere, pick up a couple of supplies for yourselfâand maybe Azriel, but he hasnât mentioned anything so you can only supposeâthen return to Velaris to gather up the cotton canvas backpacks that will see you through the Summer Court jungles. At the though alone a ray of excitement splits through the grey cold of your mood. You wonder how many of the creatures youâve read about, vertebrate and invertebrate alike, that youâll get to see with your own eyes while traveling. The birds and insects are what youâre most looking forward to, having spent considerable time admiring the clean watercoloured illustrations of vibrant feathers, the iridescent shine of beetle shells with the flared sensors on tiny feet. The trip itself should take between two to four days to reach the centre, depending on variables like weather, the safety of the old paths, and whether the map that dates back two centuries is still accurate.Â
Likely the two of you will also be making a subtle stop at one or two of the villages on the outskirts of the jungle, finding appropriate clothing as well as canisters for water and more long-lasting food. A small part of you worries over the attire for the journey. Itâs no secret that Summerâs climate mostly consists of hot, open-skied days, and you imagine the jungle will be testing the line between natural humidity and the inside of a birchin. With the insects around it wouldnât be a good idea to venture in bare-skinned, but the muggy air might quickly change your mind on the compromise. The idea alone has unease settling in the pit of your stomach. You hope the long-sleeved clothing theyâll have will prove breathable enough for suffocation to not be a problem youâll have to struggle with.Â
Azriel drops a few inches down through the air, the circles now not as wide as they once were as his hazel eyes seek out the perfect landing spot to accommodate him. Your stomach lurches with the abrupt decrease in height and your hand that had been tucking hair beneath your scarf quickly shoots back to its original placement around his neck. You do try not let your nails dig into his shoulders, but youâre still so uncomfortable with flying, and the occasional far drop doesnât help with your nerves.Â
His hair ruffles in the wind, like sheâs running her fingers through it though he seems unbothered by the cold, features cool and set as always. Dark brows dip together in the middle of his forehead though you can only see his profile, swirling hazel eyes hidden in the private hollow beneath, cast in partial shadow. Lowering incrementally further, you follow the line of his nose, tipping over the curve and falling to his lips. Theyâre sealed shut against the billowing wind but he looks the same as he always does. Calm, collected, and completely unbothered by the harsh elements. Until you reach his eyes, that is. Theyâre far too still to be anything other than focused.Â
Azrielâs eyes donât move like you suspect your own doâflitting about the place as you spy more and more colours and things to name. Where your eyes skitter, his hazel set cut. Slicing to wherever he needs them to be with the directive and aim of what you suppose must be a warrior.Â
If his eyes are weapons, then his mouthâŠ
Pupils cut into your own and you momentarily fumble, enough of a start that Azriel readjusts the grip of his fingers around your ribs, flexing over the slope of your thigh. Beneath your back and legs his arms recalibrate their tension and he inclines the angle to which youâre falling toward him by a fractionâto make up for the angle of the descent.Â
âOnce we land I want you to stay close,â Azriel instructs, not minding to acknowledge that heâd probably caught you staring. âBornemere is a coastal town; the sailorâs here are known to have wandering hands so make sure to keep aware of your surroundings.â You dip your head, breaking the eye contact as you nod once. Even if he hadnât offered the words of caution youâd have stuck tight to his side anyway, unless a special something had caught your eye, but youâll certainly feel more at ease now heâs laid the offer down himself. You wonât have to feel like an intruder when walking beneath his shadow.Â
âHave you encountered this trader before?â You ask once Azrielâs attention has returned to his mental checkpoint, curiosity perking in your chest. Azriel had mentioned before leaving that you would both be visiting someone in particular he knew dealt with Illyrian goods. In your periphery, he nods. âA few times. When I havenât wanted to deal with the Illyrians,â he glances down to you and again you quickly look elsewhere. âIn that regard, heâs been incredibly valuable.âÂ
âYou donât like Illyria?â You ask, though itâs quiet enough you worry the words will be swept away by the wind before they get a chance to reach his achingly familiarly curved ears.Â
Azrielâs expression hardly shifts, but the features that do contort tell you a story of cruel barbarity, and a hate that runs deeper than the pure icy waters that carve stone in two, far below the earthâs surface.Â
âNo,â he tells you, âI do not.âÂ
You swallow, sensing youâve approached a conversation he isnât welcoming you to. So instead you nod your head vaguely, trying to create a noise of mild understanding in your chest, âIt is quite cold up there. The wind blows right through you.â Your eyes flitter about, eventually settling on a warm part of his chest that youâre held against. âI bet the snow is pretty, though,â you murmur, not fully committing to speaking the words aloud, leaving it up to chance to bring your voice to him or whip it away.Â
Hazel eyes cut toward you again but it takes a few moments for his mouth to make the reply, pausing in a way that makes you believe it wasnât his first choice of comment. âHold tighter. Weâre going to drop.âÂ
You blink. âDropâŠ?âÂ
Your insides clench as his wings fold in, arms strangling themselves around his broad shoulders as his body lowers. Azrielâs wings flap twice moreâfirm, powerful strokes that send the surrounding grass whipping outward in a circle before his boots touch down. Your legs nearly buckle when he sets you down, adrenaline from having been so high in the sky making them weak and custard-like. It takes a few minutes before youâre confident enough in your strength to tuck your arms inward and nestle them deep in the warm pockets of your dress, concealed beneath a heavy cloak now youâre more certain you wonât need to catch yourself in case you trip over your own feet.Â
The walk to the centre of the town isnât too long, affording you the pleasant chance to take in the streets as their own beauty. Granted, some of the paint is peeling, but more than a couple of houses have been painted happy, uplifting colours, surprisingly fitting for the coast: a pale coral pink; starfish yellow with window sills the colour of crab legs; a house with a roof as dark as the sea beneath a new moon, its door painted an aquamarine blue with a knocker in the shape of a Gold-Gilled Lobster. A few homes have pointed, swirling shells scattered about their front steps and you imagine they must be the homes with children inside.Â
For a town Azriel has warned you contains sailors with greedy fingers, youâre surprised by how many homes seem to leave such pretty treasures out. A particularly beautiful shell catches your eye, its spines covered in mother of pearl, the edges turning an oxidised blue-green before giving way to the prawn-pink of the rest of the carapace.
âUp here.â Azriel nods to a narrow alley that cuts between two housesâsuspiciously out of the wayâbut before you can make the turn, Azriel pauses. You peer up at him, curious.Â
âHe might seem intimidating to you, at first,â Azriel begins. âHe isnât one for small talk, or talk at all, for that matter.â You shift on your feet, nerves beginning to squirm in your thighs and arms, making your body restless and anxious. You nod your head. Azriel nods, but pauses again. Then seems to think better, and turns, letting you quietly follow him down between the houses to a new street and through the darkened door of a low-ceilinged shop.Â
The inside smells of leather and a kind of polish or preservative that makes your nostrils sting for the first moments after entering. Tunics and boots and hats and gloves are categorised on separate displays within the wide room, a table in the centre containing the leather pre-craft, and discomfort slithers through your gut as you wrap the skinned leather back up around the animal it once was.Â
Azriel turns to you, âWait here.â Then heâs silently moving behind the desk and through the doorway behind it. Disappearing from view.
With little to do until he returns, you take your time to peer more closely around the shop. More specifically following Azrielâs footsteps to the desk but pausing before passing the invisible threshold where youâre allowed to tread. Mounted on the wall are rows and rows of blades. Most possess only one honed edge of steel but a few are duel pronged and you have to wonder what they could be used for. The blades vary in size, some as long as your little finger, others the length of your leg. One in particular catches your eye, leaned up against one corner of the wall behind the desk, though at first you hadnât realised it was a blade due to its size. The steel edge has to be at least the height of your body, if not more, and the handle seems like it might be as thick as both your forearms bound together. You allow your gaze to curiously wander over the clean edge, the small notches made along the hilt before returning the selection on the wall.Â
Itâs strange, when you think about it. Maybe itâs because creatures in Prythian are inherently intertwined with magic, but weight and mass seem to have no affect on them, unlike humans. Youâd be able to hear someone walking up behind you, even if they were trying to be quiet. Fae, or rather faeries, seem to be able to silence even their heartbeat if they wish to as you donât even hear the door go or the creak of floorboards until a gruff voice asks from behind you, âCan I help?âÂ
You jump, spinning around as your heart pounds, only to be forced to yield enough steps to have the ledge of the desk digging into your shoulder blades so you can crane your neck high enough to find the top of the creature before you. The Ogreâs skin is a dark, forest green mixed with traces of grey over the powerful circles of his shoulders, the soft curls of hair that crawl across the two halves of his upper chest cut off by the linen shirt. His brows are thick and heavy above yellow eyes that are sliced through with horizontal-laying pupilsânot unlike the eyes of a goat, or sheep. Long, thick tusks jut out from his lower jaw, pressing into the soft flesh of his upper lip, revealing the slightest hint of pink beneath. Forearms thicker than your thighs are folded over a wide chest, his brows carved downwards in unmistakeable displeasure that borders on aggression.Â
Your lips part, his large silhouette entirely eclipsing the limited light, his shadows swallowing your body completely as he looms before you, removing the possibility of escape. You thought the Illyrianâs were built like natureâs supreme beasts, but the Ogre before you would make even Cassian appear the size of an average human man. Frighteningly large for a shop so small.Â
âI-âŠâ You stammer, trying quickly to get your bearings. âAre you- Youâre the trader?â The Ogreâs brows narrow further and his response comes in the form of a single, rough-edged grunt. You swallowâAzriel should have given you more warnings. Intimidating doesnât do the mountain of a male before you even an ounce of justice. âMy- friend,â you manage, âhe brought me hereâŠâ You swallow again, finding your lips sticky from the sea air and crisp. âI believe weâre looking for leather coverings? For myself.â Yellow eyes donât so much as shift before he answers, âYouâll find nothing here.âÂ
âNothingâŠ?â You repeat, trying now to lean less of your weight on the desk, its ledge uncomfortably digging into your shouldersâthe height makes sense now. âThen, a blade?âÂ
âDo you know how to hold one?âÂ
You blink at his harsh reply, then frown. âI require one, and wish to purchase one.â Then you push a little away from the counter, straightening your spine. âDo you have one?âÂ
The Ogreâs eyes narrow and you try to fight the urge to cower and crawl behind the desk. He tilts his head, âWhereâs your friend?â It takes you a few seconds to remember youâd given Azriel that title, but by the time you remember the Ogreâs speaking again. âAre you making the purchase yourself?âÂ
âI-âŠI donât think soâŠâ That was something you hadnât discussed with him. Itâs a logical assumption to guess Azriel will be paying for whatever you need, since heâs the one insisting on a weapon for your person, but it feels wrong to jump to that conclusion.Â
The Ogreâs eyes donât stray from yours, and the need to crawl away beneath the table increases, his gaze piercing into you, âI donât see your friend anywhere.â An embarrassed flush creeps up your neckâhe thinks youâre lying. âHe went upstairs. I think to look for you.âÂ
âCustomers arenât allowed upstairs.â The Ogreâs tone has shifted away from displeasure, having dived deep now into blatant aggression, violence simmering in his eyes. Gleaming too eagerly, despite the glacial fury twisting his mouth. He walks past you, gripping the hilt of the blade that had been leant up against the wall. It looks almost small in his hands.Â
âHe wouldnât-â You fumble when the Ogre effortlessly lifts the blade from its standing, palms wrapping comfortably around the thick hilt. You swallow, heart jumping. âIâm sure he wouldnât go up without reason. He said heâd met you before? Illyrian.âÂ
The Ogre pauses, ire doused though not entirelyânot enough for the pulse of your heart to calm. âHis name?âÂ
You wring your hands. âAzrielâŠ? He said heâd visited you before, soâŠâ The Ogre blows out a sharp huff of breath, the blade returning to its place in the cornerâunused. âYou should have said so to begin with,â he growls, his glare piercing straight through your flesh right down to the marrow of your bones.Â
Your brows narrow uncharacteristically, lip curling faintly. âQuite a temper,â you mutter under your breath, scowl forming above your eyes as you pick out the faint footfalls descending the staircase, a beat quicker than their usual pace. Azriel really should have made it clear just how foul this maleâs mood could be.
A heavy growl rumbles through the Ogreâs chest, hairs at the nape of your neck prickling as those yellow eyes glare ire into your skull. Your features twist in the slightest twitch of a snarl, before swiftly mellowing out once Azriel returns from the upper floor, hazel eyes sweeping once across the room, leaving only a second of pause to adjust his surprise before continuing forward to keep at your side.Â
âMalachite. Itâs good to see you again,â Azriel greets, each male grasping the othersâ hand firmly. Azrielâs palm looks the size of your own in the Ogreâs grip who grunts his reply, moving to stand behind the counter while you equally move opposite, circling Azriel whoâs left between the two of you. âWhat can I get for you?â Asks Malachite, attention abandoning you completely, shifting instead to the Shadowsinger who will be putting in the request.Â
But Azrielâs attention cuts sidewards to you, and you falter. Shifting beneath his gaze.Â
âDo you have anything in her size?â Azriel asks, eyes scanning over your body in a way that makes warmth flow to your cheeks, toes tensing in your shoes, head dipping a dozen degrees. You want him to like what he sees, but thatâs probably not even the last thing on his mind.Â
Malachite turns his attention back to you, yellow eyes glaring into your own set and you stiffen, bristling beneath the look. Heavy brows narrow over his gaze, casting his irises partially in shadow. âNothing that wouldnât hang off her. She has no muscle.â Azriel nods, apparently having thought the same. âThen how long will it take for you to make something?âÂ
The Ogre grunts, folding thick arms over his full chest. âThat depends.â
Hazel eyes narrow by a fraction of an increment. âTwenty. Gold. Thirty if it fits perfectly.âÂ
âDone.âÂ
You blink, having expected it to go on for longer. Yellow eyes pin you to the floor, and Malachite nods his head to the back room heâd gotten so aggressive about earlier. âBack there.âÂ
Azriel goes first, and you hurry yourself to keep close behind him, sharing a glare as you pass by the Ogre, who grunts.Â
Passing through another low-ceilinged corridor, Azriel leads you to a room on the right that opens up to reveal a scene you would not have expected an Ogre to enjoy. Threads are displayed neatly on one portion of the far wall, a large pin cushion with bauble-ended needles prickling out. Fabrics and leathers are rolled carefully on the far right side of the room, beneath a window, and on the left is a large mirror. A spinning wheel sits in a darkened corner, made larger specially to handle Malachiteâs size. You canât keep the surprise from your mouth.Â
âOver here,â Azriel murmurs to you, pausing in front of the large mirror. You come to a stop just shy of his side, a little more at ease now the room is less cramped. And because Malachite seems to have gone elsewhere for a while.Â
You shift on your feet, arms folding around your waist, one hand holding your side while the other sets itself just above your elbow. âTheâŠbartering went quickly,â you say, peering around the floorâitâs surprisingly clean. Save for a few threads scattered between the floorboards. A single sequin glittering up at you. A nail not too far off from that.Â
âIllyrian leather is high quality,â Azriel tells you, watching the door patiently, âWe both know that.â Teeth squeeze the curve of your lower lip, eyes darting about the room as you once more shift on your feet. âSoâŠyou come here when you donât want to go to Illyria?â You ask, wondering if youâre pushing too far. You canât help wanting to know, though. You crave education about the world around you instinctively, searching avidly for every drop of information available, sinking into the wonders of an unfamiliar world with insatiable ferocity. Itâs undoubtedly whatâs helped keep you sane and relatively grounded.
But the way you want to know about the world is different from the way you want to know about Azriel.Â
You read everything you can about Prythian because itâs there, and available. Flora, fauna, fashion, and historyâthere are plenty of tomes to read detailing the recent eras, the fluctuations in Court distinctions. You canât recall ever desiring knowledge on something so unavailable and you try not to think about it too much.Â
How intensely you crave him.Â
Itâs not good to dwell on.Â
âItâs closer,â Azriel reasons, âand time is dwindling.â You shift, glancing sidewards at him, though not lifting you gaze high enough to meet his eyes. âHave you decided on a route for Summer?â You ask, pulling the map into mind. Despite not looking at him directly, you know his eyes are studying you now, turned away from the empty hallway. âIâve been considering,â he relents, with a slowness that has you guessing at his internal indecision. Until his choice is made. âWhat do you think?âÂ
You blink, unable to help from staring at him questioningly.Â
âMe?â You blurt out, confused. But Azriel nods as if it makes complete sense. Waiting expectantly. You swallow; lick your lips; swallow again. âIâŠwell, I suppose in the interest of saving time it might better to enter the rainforest via the Winter CourtâŠâ You look up at him for approval.Â
As if heâs ever given you any for yourself.Â
Azrielâs expression is unreadable, and you look away, peering at the floor again. âFrom the looks of it though, the climb would be much steeper, and Iâm not sureâŠâ You trail off, wringing your hands together. Youâre not sure you would even be able to cope with a hike like that at full health. Even with the safety of someone competent accompanying you. You clear your throat, âit might honestly take longer⊠I suppose unless we flew down to the peek of a mountain, then walked the distance to the Temple from aboveâŠbut with the altitude, and thunderstorms, it probably wouldnât be safeâŠâ You look at him, ââCan siphons protect from lightening strikes?âÂ
Azriel nods.Â
âThenâŠwould the temperature be a problem? I imagine even packing lightly will still overall be heavy, and youâll be carrying me, too, plus potentially a few flasks of water, which will swiftly increase the weightâŠâ You pause, thinking. âThat plus how thin the air might get, storms, lightening, heat, creaturesâŠ.â You sigh to yourself. âI donât think descending from above is a good planâŠâÂ
Your shoulders slope, disgruntled. It had seemed a promising plan at firstâa way to halve the time and avoid significant risk.
âKeep going,â Azriel tells you, making you peer at him. âFlying would be impossible, so what next?âÂ
âWell, we could either pass through Winter, which would be steeper and therefore have a heightened risk, but would probably be fasterâŠâÂ
âOr?âÂ
âOr we could start at the foot of the mountains, right on the outskirts of the rainforest, and enter that way? But it would take much longer.âÂ
âHow much longer, do you think?âÂ
You contemplate, recalling the geography, what the terrain had looked like according to that centuries out-of-date map. âIf everything goes smoothlyâŠmaybe a day and a half through Winter?âÂ
âAnd through Summer?â You nip at your lower lip. Pulling the uppermost layer of skin from your tongue. âCloser to three days. Maybe four. But that would be if everything goes smoothly, which it undoubtedly wonât.âÂ
Azrielâs brow furrows. âWhat makes you think that.âÂ
You peer up at him, surprised. A little caught off guard by the question.Â
âWellâŠâ you begin, soft and hesitant. âThatâs just how things go, donât they?âÂ
Heavy foot thuds draw you from conversation, and your lips dip down at the edges as Malachite pushes into the room, carrying a small crate that proportionally would be the size of three stacked square pillows in your arms.Â
He walks to the centre of the room, pausing in front of the mirror, and sets the box down with a rumbling thud, a gust of wind teasing your ankles, the crate hitting the floor with enough weight your foot would have surely been crushed had it been caught underneath. Though the Ogre doesnât appear the least bit bothered by the heavy weight. He isnât even breathless.Â
âUp on here.â Malachite orders, nodding to the crate heâs placed in the centre of the room. Examining it now, in the context of the room and not his arms, itâs about half your heightânot something you can easily step onto. You blink, sizing up the crate. You could crawl onto it, if you got your knee up first, but⊠You flush, glancing down at the length of your dress. Youâll have to hike it up, to make sure you donât trip on the fabric. You clear your throat, a touch awkwardly. âWill you look away, while I climb up?â
Malachiteâs piercing yellow eyes narrow, ire igniting once more and you can almost see the aggravated huff of breath he exhales from those round nostrils, thick brows furrowing. Azriel steps forward from your right, palms open as he reaches for you. âI can lift you up,â he tells you gently. But your own brows furrow, stepping out of his reach. âWhat? No. All Iâm asking is for you to look elsewhere for a bit.â You say, turning back to Malachite.
His lips curl, teeth flashing. âGet up there or Iâll put you there myself,â he growls.Â
Itâs been a long time since ire has taken a hold of you so thoroughly.Â
âTry.â You hiss, features twisting in a snarl. âSee what happens.âÂ
The room is completely silent. Golden eyes locked with your own, the third presence holding his breath, likely preparing to cool whatever outburst next ignites.Â
You know your hands are glowing. Can feel that tingle glistening at your fingertips.Â
Malachite grinds his jaw, then sighs roughly. âQuickly.â He growls, boots thumping as he turns his back.Â
You swallow, tension releasing from your spine and shoulders, muscles softening as you hesitantly turn back to Azriel, glancing up to him quietly. His brows are raised by a fraction, a pause of something passing through the air, but then heâs turning away too.Â
You donât waste any time in lifting your skirts and climbing onto the crate, Malachite already having turned back by the time the hem brushes your ankles again.Â
âHold still,â the Ogre orders, unrolling a measuring tape from one of his leather pockets. He takes down the length of your spine, the distance of your nape to your ankles; wrist to your shoulder; one hip to the other; the circumference of your upper- and fore-arm. You tense instinctively when he reaches round your middle, his large forearms brushing your ribcage, forcing you to raise your arms just so he has enough space. The measuring tape constricts sharply around your waist, making you jolt, already prepared to snap something else at him.Â
âCareful.â Azriel mutters from the side, so quiet you nearly miss it. âSheâs a fraction of your size, Malachite.â
âShe can handle it,â the Ogre returns, tone disagreeable and stern, but the bite around your waist loosens, allowing you space to breathe properly as he takes down that last measurement.Â
ââââ
Malachite had said your custom clothing would be finished by the end of the dayâmuch to your surprise. You suppose Azriel is paying him well. And the two did seem relatively friendly. Or as friendly as either could get with another like them. And Malachite had seemed a competent craftsmale.Â
But now you have a day to spend in this coastal town, and little idea what to do.Â
Little more than wanting to make the most of it, if itâs to be spent conveniently close to Azrielâs side.
âDo youâŠhave anything else to do?â You ask, once youâre back out into the salty air, walking leisurely down a main street with the grey-blue sea occasionally visible between coloured houses. Youâve never had a chance to see the sea before. Itâs slightly frightening, even from a distance. Azriel shakes his head, and you glance somewhere away, teeth pulling at your lower lip while in thought.Â
âCan we see the sea, then?â You ask, looking at him hesitantly.Â
Azriel nods, and steers you down an alley, leading between a wooden-made shack with netting strung along its exterior, and a cream-painted house with weathered window panes and a small back garden. You gaze across the flat horizon line, greyish skies meeting blue-grey water, thick and heavy. Bluer than the rivers youâd grown up by, and certainly cleaner looking than the brown-black lakes and ponds of your childhood.Â
Stepping foot on the pebbled beach, a gust of wind blows briny air up your nostrils, smelling of something damp and stagnant, and distinctly salty. With the uneven ground beneath your feet, youâre forced to remove your arms from their warm huddle at your sides, stepping further into the beach as you make your way cautiously over to a cluster of black rocks, rich green algae sleeked across the seastone.Â
The rock is jagged beneath your fingers, piercing even through your gloves and numbed flesh, but the mild discomfort is worth the treasure of the small pools gathered in smoothed-out hollows. Your lips part, an exited huff of breath puffing from your lungs and you clamber a little higher, careful of your footing. At the beds of the miniature pools is a thick layer of sand and softened shell fragments, spots of brown-pink and orange smudging the pale crusts. In the corner of your chosen pool sits an intact shell, and your lips curve into an exhilarated smile, fingers dipping into the icy water to trace the scalloped edge, grazing the ridges with your nail.Â
A startled gasp escapes your mouth as little, armoured legs shoot out from the openings, tiny red pincers cautiously extended as legs scuttle sidewards into the sand, swiftly burying itself deeper and safer. A young crab. Youâve never seen one alive before. Or one so small.Â
Gazing further about you recognise all kinds of shapes and globsâa dark maroon jelly clinging to the rock face, a smattering of barnacles with flecks of pearly white glazing their rough exteriors, slimy looking folds that appear like a long-forgotten cousin of landmoss. Even the algae finds ways to be intriguing, coming apart like cotton-based yarn on your fingers, sinewy and stringy. Pale yellow and lush green. It looks soft and cloud-like underwater, but limp and clutching once taken into the open air.Â
You decide to leave the remaining creatures unbothered, and tentatively lift yourself from the chosen perch, not too bothered by the darkened hem of fabric thatâs become damp and sodden in places. Azriel waits patiently at the foot of the seastone formation, hazel eyes tracking your footing as you descend the jagged rocks, leaving once youâve reached the small pebbles again.Â
Instead of asking, as soon as your eyes land on a flat outcropping of rock, where the pebbles doze away, your feet are moving. Dazedly walking over to peer down into the gatherings of water in the dips and crevices, spotting pops of coloured shells, small creatures skittering about from hollow to hollow. A wave froths over the lower portion of the vast rock surface, and even so far away the water ripples upward. Your curiosity flows with the departing wave, pulled nearer to the sea itself, until youâre forced to pause in order to keep dry.Â
Although the sheer mass of water in incomprehensible to your mind, whatâs obvious to your eyes alone is enough to have your breath deepening. Mind quietening as the waves spill onto the beach, hushing and shushing as foam clushes over pebbles and stones. You wonder what it might be like to be a creature of the sea. Whether the tides in the deep ocean are at all similar to roads across the country, or currents in the air. Whether the sea-life knows what pull to follow in accordance with the space around them.Â
Time must be so different below the surface.Â
Pebbles shuffle somewhere in the background of your mind, thousands of tiny stones rinsed with water rubbing against one another as a pressure steps onto them, yielding space to slot together better to accommodate the added weight. A wind roars across the beach, trying to whip the scarf free from your hair, luring strands free to sting and slice when they cut against your cheeks.Â
âWe should go inland to the market,â Azriel says, pausing at your side. You stand upright, but heâs still taller despite being on a lower plane of the beach. His dark head tips toward the open sea, where the horizon line has come blurred, the sky and water mixing as swollen clouds lethargically glide forward, peppering the smooth water surface with miniature raindrops, hitting the sea like stones. âThereâll be shelter further in, and it will be warmer.âÂ
You look out to the sea again, lips parting at how swiftly the storm is approaching. How thick the rainfall seems, even from such a far distance. Dense and near-opaque. Your pulse spikes.Â
To feel all those raindrops hitting your skinâŠsoaking your clothes and hairâŠtrickling down your spine, behind the curve of your ears, crying down your cheeks and hanging from your lashes like teardropsâŠÂ
âCan we stayâŠ?âÂ
The question comes out of its own accord, but youâre too busy feeling to retract it.
Azriel pauses, hesitance being an interesting texture on him.
âSure.âÂ
ââââ
He had been wary when she asked to remain on the beach, not sure she grasped how uncomfortable she would become with rain-drenched clothes paired with ice-cold winds, but the expression that had been on her face had beenâŠcompelling. A refusal had been on the tip of his tongue, but when he had looked at her she had been looking back, with her full attention.Â
Azriel hasnât ever seen her look at him completelyâlikely because a part of her mind has always been straying over him to fully gather her focus in one place. To look at him without another thought in her head.Â
When the rain had come he had been able to hear her heart racing. Could pick out the rise and fall of her throat, chin tilted upright to watch the clouds fill the skies. Could see the gradient of her clothes darken, and the pattern of her hair where the thin, pale scarf was suctioned to it.Â
He had waited at the beachâs top while she meandered down to the shoreline again, moving over the pebbles like the floor was made of springy moss. Once more scaling the jagged rocks and dipping her then-bare fingers into the filling pools, stirring up sand and life, having left her gloves behind. And this time, keeping dry hadnât been a worry on her mind.Â
Azrielâs stomach had tensed when sheâd waded into the water until it was lapping at her calves, had been prepared to help her upright when she inevitably was tipped over by a wave she hadnât anticipated, or had her footing undermined when stepping on a rock she hadnât realised was there. And when she reaches down into the water, heâs certain the wind will carry across a yelp when the glacial water touches her stomach, startled enough by the cold that she will tip, or fall, or splash, or become submerged entirely.Â
Instead her eyes become wide enough his attention on her narrows, both her arms elbow-deep in the waters, cupping something beneath the waves. Even through the thick curtains of rain she finds him, brows risen as she tips her head toward the sea. Come over here!
With a sigh, Azriel lifts himself from the cobbled wall heâd been stood before, separating the beach from the street, and walks down to the edge of the shore, the bottoms of his leather-bound boots inching into the shallows. Her back is hunched, sea up to her thighs, and when she sees heâs near enough, she lifts her cupped palms from the water.Â
Laying flat across her hands is a grey seastone, but gripping to the stone is a dark purple starfish.Â
Her eyes sparkle, already having left him to return to the sea creature.Â
Thatâs rightâsheâs never seen these things before.Â
And then he spots the darkness shooting just below the waterâs surface. Concealed by the storm.Â
ââââ
A series of steadily increasing sizes of bumps run up the starfishâs five limbs, its skin littered in tiny speckles of mauve, blue, and maroon. Theyâre like the scales on a snake, with threads of soft, grey-pink flesh visible between them. Beautiful, and magical, in their own way. You have to wonder if the fish and animals in the upper parts of Prythian are especially designed, or whether some life is just more beautiful than others, magic having little to do with it.Â
Just the luck of the draw.Â
Azriel moves suddenly in your periphery, but his shout is muffled by the thundering rain. You startle as the clouds rumble overhead, starfish falling from your palms and splashing into the icy sea, hitting the bed and stirring up sediment.
You know it splashes, because something snatches at your ankle, and water sprays as youâre tipped over.Â
You know itâs icy, because the breath is shocked from your lungs the second it snares around your throat.Â
You know once itâs in the sea, it hits the ground, because your skull pounds with pain as you hit the rocky bed.Â
Searing scratches bleed their way up your calf, claws crawling up your body. Salt water stings at your eyes and nostrils, burning your nose and the back of your throat as itâs swallowed down in a panicked gulp for air. The sea fizzes with tight air bubbles, sound muffled and thick, arms encased in freezing syrup as you try to find something to take hold of, feet thrashing as the bones around your ankle tighten, rocks grazing at your back as youâre dragged along the sea bed, hauled further out to sea, further from the shore. Pressure squeezing your already pounding skull as you go deeper, deeper, deeper.Â
You lash out, nails catching on something and more water fills your lungs as you scream, something coming away cold and soft beneath your nails. Clumpy and flesh-like.Â
Whateverâs grabbing you recoils briefly, before surging forward with threefold its original strength, claws digging into the flesh of your thighs, scratching at your hips as it climbs higher, a single nail running down the centre of your throat before strong arms are hooking beneath your own, a sudden searing heat blazing just in front of you, and you swear a flash like lightening hits the water. Cold, and blue, despite the brief burn of the water as it came to a boil.Â
Water shoots from your nostrils, gurgling in your throat as you try to gasp for air, wind roaring and whipping, rain lashing down into your eyes as youâre hauled back to the surface, Azrielâs arms keeping you clutched tight to his body, wading through the sea to return to the safety of the shore. Your arms spasm, lungs coughing as your stomach clenches and roils, retching as water spills from your lips, spat out upon the slick pebbles of the beach.Â
Your eyes are burning, panting and gasping and crying as stinging pain bleeds across your body, able to smell the copper even in the rain-soaked air.Â
Through the blinking blur of your vision, you can see Azriel crouched beside you but the wind is too loud to hear what heâs saying. Thunder rumbles through the skies and you try to dig your knuckles into the spongey hollows of your eye sockets, desperate to see, to dry away the salt.Â
A hot palm burns your cheek, warm fingers guiding away your pestering hands, pressing dry fabric gently to the inner parts of your eyes. You sniffle, lungs heaving, chest trembling, but slowly the blur subsides, enough for you to pick out the dry finger of a glove trailing carefully beneath your lash-line.Â
Your arms tighten themselves on your ribcage, squeezing your sides as you keep your knees close to your chest, shaking violently.Â
The raging storm is blotted away as a dark panel slides across the smudged horizon, a hand curving on your shoulder to bring you closer, and terror has paralysed your capacity for shame.Â
Eyes burning anew; stinging as tears roll away, your forehead falls to Azrielâs shoulder, huddling into his warmth. Legs crossed at the ankle, hands tucked into your armpits, you can feel the pulse of his jugular against your temple, the line of his jaw grazing the crown of your head. His palm squeezes, your stomach spasming as hot blood recoils from your surface, steadily sinking inwards and slowly draining down your legs where that creature raked its claws.Â
Lighting flashes overhead, thunder rumbling only a second later, and you curl yourself tighter, uncaring for the heat itâs wringing from your body. Dripping onto the cobbles below.Â
âYou have magic,â Azriel whispers, exasperated and strained. âWhy didnât you use it?âÂ
Your lips tremble, tears mixing with the rain, head hanging as you try to press closer to his warmth to keep away the whipping winds. Hot breath puffs along the length of your throat, and his palm settles over your skull, thumb trailing the perimeter of the wound you know is there. Youâre grateful heâs holding you tight enough thereâs nearly no room to shake and shudder.Â
ââââ
Azriel is convinced itâs one of the escaped immortals.Â
His features had been strained when heâd carried you back inland to the town, finding a temporary spot for you to rest, indoors and warm, hot food and drink brought out, and given a quiet backroom to huddle in. The temperature is warm, but your left shoulder and hip and cold without Azriel around. Tingling palm-sized pressures on your ribs and thigh.Â
Azrielâs jaw is tight, wings laced with tension, and you wrap yourself tighter, shifting closer to the crackling fireplace. Itâs common sense youâll warm up quicker with the removal of your clothes, but you both know that isnât an option for you. So you settle for one-sided heat of the fire instead, alternating every now and then to give the opposite side of you a chance to dry. The only item of clothing discarded being your head scarf, hair hanging in clumpy strands from the sea salt. A tangling mess, sticky and sodden.Â
Azriel glances to the clock on the wall again, and you reach for your tea, sipping tentatively, wary but not really caring about the scalding burn as it streams down your throat, heating your stomach. Your legs sting if the fire faces them for too long, but other than that, the pain is more than bearable.Â
âCan you speak with Rhysand from here?â You ask softly, wrapping your fingers around the mug, peering into the sweetened, stirring liquid. Azriel shakes his head. âToo great a distance,â he replies in your same volume. âIt will have to wait until weâre back in Velaris.âÂ
âWould it be good to leave now, then?â You ask, gaze shifting to the fireplace, already mourning its heat. But Azriel shakes his head again. âThereâs still your armour to collect from Malachite. We will fly back once itâs collected.â
âYou donât know when it will be doneâŠâ You think aloud, shifting your hold on the mug. âWouldnât it be better to return now, than to waste more time waiting for something we arenât sure will be finished?âÂ
âI know him. Heâll have it done.âÂ
Azriel sighs, for the first time since youâve been given this quiet room in the back of a busy store leaning back in the too-small chair. Flames dance in his glowing eyes, and you wonder if heâs even seeing the fire at all, or if heâs learned to block it out. If such things even affect him anymore.Â
The warmth leaves them as they cut to you, no longer reflecting the heat, and it takes a second for you to look away, cradling the mug. âCan you walk?âÂ
You blink, pausing. Mentally feeling down your body. Thinking how your flesh tingles and stings in different areas. The dull throb at the back of your head. âI think so,â you reply, looking to him, âif Iâm fine to?â A phantom sting thrums through your thighs as his eyes cut over you, shins flickering with the grazing itch of a needle, threads of starlight glowing where his eyes trace.Â
Azriel contemplates for a pause, eyes glazing as you imagine him once more attempting to reach out to Rhysand. âYouâll live,â he settles on, hazel clear again, âbut say if you hurt. Weâll find a place to pause, and we can wait in one of Malachiteâs rooms if you need space to rest.âÂ
You swallow but nod, not mentioning your aversion for the male. Youâd prefer to walk on openly bleeding legs than willingly rest under the Ogreâs roof. Disagreeable and unpleasant as he was.Â
Azriel gets to his feet, nodding to the mug in your lap. âFinish your tea then, and weâll head out.â Upon noticing the questioning look in your eyes before you can hide it, he elaborates. âYou havenât seen the market yet, and it might take your mind off the events of the day. And it will allow me time to think on what to do next.â He adds at the end.Â
Teeth chew your lip. You suppose if it will also help himâŠyou donât have to feel bad about dragging him around a town heâs probably seen anywhere from a few dozen to a few hundred times. Maybe more.Â
So you finish your tea, wrap the now-dry scarf around your neck, and follow behind him as you trail back into the damp streets, thanking the owner sincerely on the way out. Grateful for the cozy shelter.Â
ââââ
The storm has passed by the time you return to open air, but has left its mark on the town.Â
Cobbles are black and gleaming, puddles accumulated in between; crystal clear drops of water falling from iron lanterns, dripping from rooftops or the oxidised copper of gate rungs. The smell of the sea is temporarily overpowered by the damp scent of rain and wet brick, earthy with a twinge of brine.Â
Still, the market itself is lively, tarpaulin strung atop heavily laden tables to protect from lashing rainfall, the slats that could hang down from the tops like curtains now once more rolled and tied, allowing passersby a better chance to browse the wares on sale.Â
There are a few stalls that catch your eye, a surprising amount of variety for what youâd thought was just a coastal town, but that appears to be a centre for trading. The keepers of the stalls each gathering their wares then moving further throughout Prythian, carting special items between courts to sell elsewhere, exchanging where they canât afford stock in gold.Â
Itâs strange to think about this world, almost similar to your fatherâs.Â
Some tables are laden with thickly padded blankets, sheets with embroidered corners and tasseled edges, pillow coverings with matching floral motifs, outlined in golden thread. Others hold crockery and cutlery, and a smile tingles just beneath the surface of you lips when you spot a set you imagine came from the Winter CourtâBasâ home court. You swallow thickly, pausing to take in the distantly familiar details, blue ink glazed to the white ceramic, small figures that canât be any larger than a single knuckle from your fifth finger pickaxing at frozen land. Itâs both warming and aching to look upon, the faint taste of regret in your mouth.Â
When your vision blurs at the edges, you force yourself to swiftly move on, shifting your attention to the next stall while Azriel keeps to himself, just remaining close enough to keep an eye on you without being invasive. Itâs just what you need at the moment, space enough to walk on your own while having the comfort of strength within reach. Having the space to subtly dry your prickling eyes without having to feel the discomfort of shame.Â
You pass by a few stalls before another takes your interest, smaller tables displaying knitted quilts and jumpers, thick scarves and three sizes of mittensâall too large for yourself. One table displays silverware: from rings, to locks, to hinges and tools. A box the size of your forearm filled with a variety of iron nails, some sharp as stingers while others twist and swirl, as small as a tooth or as long as one of your fingers.Â
The male who watches over the stool has a sibling to this display, a table two thirds the size of the first entirely dedicated to jewelleryâthe silver and iron pieces made by hand while the ones forged in gold are the result of trade. Youâre reminded of the blacksmith youâd spoken with in the Autumn market, whoâd had the gruff exterior. For a moment your fingers itch to graze the lobes of your ears, but worry Azriel will somehow put all the pieces together, as impossible as that would be. Unfortunately the skill levels drastically differ here, most of the rings merely plain bands of silver, lacking the flourish youâd found so beautiful in Autumn. Much more practical looking, verging on banality, the exception being the pieces the blacksmith had traded for.Â
Gazing over the twinkling gold you have to admit youâre clueless to how he managed to get his hands on jewellery like this. Compared to the iron and silver pieces, theyâre stunning. More than a few engraved with small patterns, tiny coloured jewels encrusted in the centres of floral designs. Youâre fortunate most of them seem made for male handsâthereâs no way you could afford or trade your way into having possession of one of them, and you imagine they might now feel strange around your mostly numb digits.Â
Azriel had mentioned some of the sailors having wondering handsâŠÂ
You cautiously depart form the stool, as beautiful as it had been, content to continue perusing.Â
While the sting in your legs is very much present, you find more enjoyment in the exploration of the market, getting to see such a range of craftsmanship displayed all in one place.Â
The next table you pause at is one thatâs showing off more variety than any of the others, seemingly a collection of bits and bobs spat out in a disorganised pattern across the stretching table. Other fae bustle around in the space between rows, and you manage to slide into a space that will allow you to better look at the intriguing variety.Â
After a while observing on your own, Azriel fills the empty slot beside you, receiving a wary glance from the stall-owner who migrates a little further down the table from where heâd been previously conversing with a customer.Â
âSee anything you like?â Azriel asks.Â
Thankfully his proximity is enough to battle the shifting and shuffling of feet; the general bustle of the market. Your gaze roams across the long table, drawn to the splashes of colour gleaming before you. âThose are pretty,â you reply, nodding to the squares of coloured glass displayed upon pillow-stuffing in a tilted wooden crate. They look like they might be tea coasters, or lovely things to hang from the ceiling near a window, so the light refracts and spills beauty across a previously plain room. Your eyes stray to the other glass pieces, that smile again tingling at your lips when you see a few monocles filled with tinted glass, a pair of spectacles with circular, coloured lenses.Â
Theyâre so ridiculously excessive they make your heart hurt.Â
Azriel nods to the pair you were looking at, tinted indigo. âWhy not try them on?âÂ
You look to him, lips parted. Brow furrowing, âIs that allowed?âÂ
Azriel shrugs, glancing to where the stall-owner is obviously eavesdropping. He blushes at having been caught, folding his arms over a puffed up chest, but gives a curt nod. You look back at the glasses, now in reach. With tentative fingers you pluck them from the display, sliding them over the point of your ears, letting them settle delicately on the bridge of your nose.Â
Theyâre a bit large, but they fit.Â
Unthinking, you look up at Azriel, curious for an expression to establish your own thoughts upon, and a beat passes. You swallow. âHow do they look?â You ask, feeling heat creeping up your neck. Azriel watches you quietly for a few seconds. âBlue.âÂ
You nod your head, âtheyâre a bit too large, I thinkâŠâ Carefully removing them, you fold back the legs, putting the lovely set back where they came from. âThose are pretty, though,â you say, gesturing to the arrangement of wooden goblets and other small carvings further down the table. Everythingâs reminding you of him though.Â
With a tightened throat, you lift one of the goblets, examining it in closer detail. The lovely colour of burnt wood, smelling smokey and familiar. Miniature circles ring the top, with eight arches etched into the sides topping two rings holding a series of squares inside. Skilled carvings. âIsnât it nice?â You ask distantly, not sure whether youâre offering the question to Azriel or just thinking aloud. He nods anyway. âDo you like it?âÂ
You blink, lowering the goblet and looking to him, having not expected a question in return. You blink again, realising you shouldnât be so surprised, clearing your throat and returning the carving to its place. âI- guess?â You stammer, not wanting to bring up Bas. Itâs too ugly a bruise. âMy father did things like this, though not-âŠpracticalâŠthingsâŠâÂ
Azriel hums, and you feel your throat closing up.Â
Maybe you should have asked to help visit in the Winter Court, even if it would have meant travelling with Mor. You could have tried to patch things up with her, and maybe while you were there you could visit the statue Bas had once told you about.Â
Maybe you should have insisted on seeing him once more, before he left.Â
Just in case you didnât live to say goodbye.Â
Canât Bring Myself To Hate You â Part 25
Azriel x third-oldest-archeron-sibling!reader
warnings: grief, mentions of past death, Wanting To Die
word count: 4,210
-Part 24-
~~~~
One side of your body is warm.Â
Heat pushing up into your stomach, circulating around your thighs, rising through your chest and blooming into one tingling cheek.Â
Sticky sleep glues your eyes shut and thereâs nothing that could tempt you to break the seal and return. Nothing worth the inconvenience of cracking them open. Not with the way your heart sinks the second it dawns on you that youâre here again. That there will be hours ahead of you before you can rest again, and be blessedly released from the pain turning your heart to an open wound.Â
Even the chill thatâs resting on your back, seeping into the underside of your armsâitâs not worth pulling your flesh back together. Muscles are soft and sodden, formless as you float elsewhere.Â
A weight you canât place has been lifted from your back, but instead of feeling free and featherlight it seems to have clamped its teeth around your nape, cramping the tendon that stretches across your shoulders and partway down your spine; stiffened.
If only the blade had been true.Â
His heart beats beneath your ear, a low pulse pushing against the bone of your cheek, blood rushing in pace with his. The realisation shifts your breaths, lungs expanding once before pushing air out that will not be allowed to penetrate so deep until the following night. Light breaths are for peaceâthey have no place once dawn has passed.Â
He lied.Â
His arms lie dispassionately at his sides, no reason to hold you together after offering to unify the fractures.
When his kindest touches have been the product of dutyâŠÂ
You should have forgotten how to swim, when you were pushed into the cauldron.Â
His arms stir at his side, pressure shifting beneath your cheek as a muscle tightens, hand lifting from his side to pull hair from your eyes. âAre you ready?âÂ
Guilt is distant, and shame is unfamiliar, so you press further into the warmth, consciously considering the scent that wraps around your mind like thick, poisoning smoke. Fatigue given form, but luscious and soft, with a pillowy structure that cushions your heavy skull.Â
His fingers graze the peak of your ear and your hairs stretch upward, rising as the touch fades but its ghost remains, skin tingling and sensitive in his wake. Pulse quickening.Â
Staying here forever would be preferable to whatâs awaiting youâŠ
âwhat is it again?Â
Memories are foggy and vague, but your body remembers. An ache thatâs stretched open across your chest; a contraction in your heart. Something remembers, and its whispering for you to freeze. Stop, so there will not be more of this, it tells you, but the warning falls on forgetful ears.
Eyes crack open, and the window-filled alcove the far side of the room reveals pale-grey skies, the glass filled with off-white. The grey glow shines on the polished wooden floorboards, curving around table-tops and chair-legs, gleaming on porcelain.
As if sensing your gaze, narrow threads of darkness unspool themselves from a dense coil, looping through a shining ceramic handle, tipping a dark-coloured liquid into a pale teacup, vapour steaming like twinkling dust in the daylight. The darkness reaches for a sugar-cube and your brows lower, eyes blinking slowly. They retreat.Â
Azrielâs palm cups the round curve of your shoulder, thumb sliding into the divot a little below your clavicle, fingers splaying across the top of your right scapula.Â
âHow are you feeling?âÂ
The ache in your chest throbs, breath catching. You donât need to know the cause to recognise the painâsadness weighing from your ribs. Do you want to remember why? Do you want to know the cause? Your eyes once more trace over the porcelain: pale teacups with floral prints around their circumference, their delicate matching plates ringed in gold and gleaming andâ
Gold.Â
Your body tightens, pressure doubling in your throat. Hurt warps and twists like a dying spider, lungs spasming as your arms try to draw tight around his waist, blocked by the cushions beneath his back. The world blurs, and you remember it.Â
Sobs build, swift and merciless. Pulses of pain pounding through your breast, each second processed sending fresh bruises to batter your heart.Â
Heâs gone.Â
Irreplaceably gone.Â
Tears bleed from your eyes, stinging and sore, darkening the fabric beneath you, sinuses burning with every droplet that pushes its way free, hot and salty.Â
You were barely hanging on before.Â
Your heart shudders, throat squeezing as if to spit something out.Â
Is it childish, to feel slighted?Â
The candles he had burned had smelled clean and warmâalways fragranced with herbal scents like thyme or rosemary.Â
Rosemary.Â
Rosemary and freshly tilled earth. Leonine eyes so piercing, and fierce. A smile at once mischievous and loving. Bare palms that had rasped against your skin, coarse hair that had scratched your sternum, firm warmth that had wrapped itself around you on so many nights. Strong arms braced and ready whenever high-pointed heels slipped on rain-soaked cobbles; piping hot food messily slurped and cutlery mixed up through all the picking and stealing from the otherâs plate; grasping hands and the comfort that came from his mouth and mind.
The safety of his presence.
The freedom to become so delicate in his arms.
Azriel will never give you that.Â
The thought flourishes as stray thoughts tend to, coming into creation without cause.Â
Azriel will never make you laugh the way you want him to. He will never remove your clothes and kiss your skin. Will never lay his brow across your sternum and murmur.Â
âŠthe emptiness that's riddled youâhollowed you out over the course of these past yearsâŠyouâll never know if he would have remedied that ache. The wound thatâs found its home in your heart⊠Itâs too tender to accommodate anything else, and too central to risk a replacement.Â
Bas was Bas.Â
Youâll never experience him again.
ââââ
Her body trembles as though itâs her first day alive.Â
Tears flooded from her eyes the moment she woke, and something cold and cruel had twisted inside of him. Does she understand how luxurious her grief is?Â
She cries so freely.
Can he manage her, right now?Â
Her fingers clutch at his sides, full of bones and sorrow, and he fleetingly wonders if he should have pushed the blade in? Having tangled with grief and rage and glacial, roaring winds for so long, has she gone too far?
From a look alone, itâs clear she would fail to get up on her own.Â
Ignoring the betrayal it would have beenâshould he have done it? Wouldnât it have been kinder to put her down?Â
As soon as the thought forms itself, Azriel is resolved in his decision.Â
Yes. It would have been kinder.Â
Heâs not the kind to enjoy her suffering, but neither is he the kind to help.
ââââ
âNo one would blame you if you chose to stay with your sisters.â Azriel speaks.
Your heart pulses, an ache thrumming through your breast.
His hand squeezes your shoulder. âTheyâd want to be with you, if they knew.âÂ
Itâs unfair how soothed your body becomes beneath the mild dosage of his voice. Not deep exactly, but like refined grains. Soft brown sugar, sticky and syrupy.Â
Your heart pulses again, and another tear squeezes out. âDonât pretend like you understand,â you whisper, wishing you werenât so feeble.Â
Fresh aches rise and fall one after the other, pulsing like crescendos through your chest. Pushing tears from your eyes in time with the rhythm.
Youâre flayed pink. Peeled back and poked at.Â
Thereâs something raw in your chest thatâs burrowing deeper than anything previousâa want thatâs only been growing the more it was denied. Fingers wrapping around a dungeon cell in the damp underground. Fingers that should have had the fight sapped out of them. Fingers that can still crave touch and warmth and comfort.
But if you open any further, your stomach threatens to spit out your heart.Â
The silence draws on, save for the muffled thump beating through his chest. Seconds stretch into blended time, and a minute becomes immeasurable.Â
His thumb shifts.Â
âMira listened to things I could never tell my brothers.â Azriel murmurs. His voice is like a gauze pad placed over wounds. Powdered, bandaged, and hidden under clothes to disguise the tender, open flesh.Â
Thuh-thump.Â
He shifts, leaning back into the support of the lengthy sofa.Â
âI was near your age when I spoke with her the first time. We all lived together so it wasnât difficult to find her, though the hut felt at times cramped for the five of us.â He releases a breath, your head sinking as the air leaves his lungs. âShe wasnât much older than us.â
Thereâs something he might be trying to say, but thereâs no interest in reading between his lines. So long has been wasted on trying to gauge his intentions, and youâve been wrong so many times.Â
Azrielâs thumb twitches. âYouâve grown close with Madja,â he says, remaining still on the sofa. âShe works privately, and lives west of the Sidra, between the temple and the clock tower. Go to her if you need.âÂ
âWhy would I need to?â You mumble, eyes wanting to close. âI thought you said I could speak with you.â A beat passes, and you shift your head, ear rightfully returning to measure the beat of his heart, fingers clutching the shirt fabric at his sides. âAre you going back on that?âÂ
Thereâs nothing assuring you he wonât turn to dust beneath your touch.Â
Not that your touch could prevent him from disintegrating, if that was his path.Â
Nails cut into the fabric anyway.Â
âYou can speak whenever you like. But Madja might provide better care than I can.âÂ
âBetter?â You question from somewhere far off.
âShe might understand you in a way I cannot.âÂ
A flicker of gold in your chest. Hurt sparking into malice. You shift, bruises blossoming from beneath your skin, aches blooming as you lift from his chest. âFive hundred years and youâve never thought you should die?â Your voice quietens, throat raw and pained. âThat you might deserve to die?â
âIâm not saying Madja has that experience,â Azriel diverts, unaffected. âBut I think you enjoy her company, and she enjoys yours.â Which I donât.
âWhy did you use me to find out about her?â The question rises. The question you can never understand. The question you keep circling back to.
âBecause I was so desperate to help?â You ask. âBecause I was so conveniently placed?â
You stare at him, a cavern opening up in your chest thatâs usually swiftly flooded with tears, but youâre all out this morning.Â
Why did you hurt me?Â
Why did you damage me?Â
Why wasnât I worth any care?
Bas.
Grief finds you once again, and the urge to crumble sweeps through your body like a coastal wind whipping through a wreckage. You manage to support yourself, if only to keep from collapsing back on top of him. Your head falls, and your brows bunch as agony clenches your throat. The sobs rise like tidal waves, pain pulsing like a fog wrapping around your mind. Dizzying and disorientating.Â
With a heavy breath you shift yourself to one side of the sofa, pushing off across the floor, dragging your rock-filled body to the alcove on the far side of the room. The floor-to-ceiling windows reveal a thick grey sky, and a dark forest to the east.
You take the seat facing the west.Â
Minuscule droplets have gathered around the base of the window pane, the heat wards in need of a touch-up, but you donât care. Heat would only encourage your lethargy, the slight bite thatâs nipping through the cotton of your socks keeping you awake and present. Leather rustles, then feet touch the floor, whispering across the rug before the space of the seat opposite you is swallowed, shadows swirling like mist beneath the circular table. âTea?âÂ
Azriel waits three, long beats before leaning forward, lifting the teapot from the table to top up the steaming liquid in the mug.Â
Looking out into the world, across the grey sky and the silently billowing grasslandâŠthe landscape adopts a painting-like distance. The wood of the windowsill framing the view as a drawing, becoming somehow still and imitative of a three-dimensional world. Greasy oil pastels of gusting wind blowing through the light, feathering grass, almost chalky in its weightless freedom.Â
Form seems far-off and foreign. Objects blurring together, their seams disintegrating until itâs one body of landscape; a great, roiling ocean before the untrained eye.Â
Now youâre here once more, and the temporary distraction of conversation has circled the drain and slipped awayâŠ
âWhat would you like for breakfast?âÂ
Youâre practically on separate landmasses. Opposite sides of a globe. Golden and rotating.Â
Pain cripples your shoulders from within, that splashing droplet of molten gold at once taking on the shape of a mechanical solar system now blasted to bits, and the lifeless sheen of fierce irises that in the past had burned with more life and ferocity than the sun himself.Â
You force your eyes to see, to peer outwards even as youâre being sucked inward.
âIâm not hungry.â You canât stomach the thought of food.
He waits a pauseâin no hurry to convince you. Itâs not as though heâs ever had to exert any kind of effort to get you to believe his words, or heel to a command.Â
Youâve always been lumbering and stupid around him, so heâs no need to seek to convince you to eat.
âYou need to eat something,â Azriel tries.Â
He sounds gentle, but⊠Youâd once thought there was a possibility you might be tied to him. That you were lucky enough to be good enough for him.Â
You teeter on the ledge of that thought. Weave golden string between skeletal fingers.Â
If only.Â
If onlyâŠÂ
A new wave breaks against your back, and your head is shoved beneath the water. Thereâs no sense of nausea; just a knowledge to depart from the table and head for the washroom.Â
Burning liquid streams from your throat, legs shaken and weak as mud.
Dew drops gather along your hairline, perspiration collecting on your temples as a foul flavour stains your mouth.Â
The solidity of the wall finds your back, and the beams are impossibly flat. A figure is filling the doorway, allowing the outside to enter, and fatigue crumbles your skull, head falling to your hands, arms wrapped around your knees. How timeless itâs become.
You need sleep.Â
But sleep is so far off.Â
Tears prickle at the darkness behind closed lids, head flushed with heat as aches blossom behind your eyes. Itâs all so pointless.Â
Why continue to drag yourself through this swamp? You surrendered so long ago.
That feel collects around your bones again. Goading your skin to become weightless. Tiresome flesh giving way to allow something purer to lift to the surface. Something aching to escape. Something aching to travel further.Â
You donât belong here.Â
Havenât for a while.Â
The black surrounds you, shadow threading around your limbs. Weaving between ankles, looping over shoulders; brushing up against your nape.Â
You fall further, collapsing into the void.Â
Deeper; deeper.Â
Spiralling further. Further.Â
Is it time for you to go, yet?Â
ââââ
Azriel remains still, keeping to his side of the threshold.Â
They should be leaving by now, preparing to return to Velaris, but even at a glance anyone could tell she isnât fit for Summer.
She might kilter herself off a cliff the first chance she gets, and he canât manage travelling through the dense forestry, navigating the woodlandâs inhabitants, while forcefully sustaining a life.
Heâll drop her off once they return home.Â
Sheâll be too worn out to protest and recognise itâs much better for her to be with her sisters than with himâtheyâre capable of care.
Though she wonât react well to finding out sheâs been left behind.Â
Azriel studies her, quivering on the floor, hunched into a ball.
If she were better, thenâŠ
Thereâs no point in entertaining it. Â
Her shoulders tremble, and he can guess her body will be starving by now. After having expelled so much magic, so much grief, and regurgitated whatever fluid was left in her stomach, she must be beyond ravenous.Â
And yet sheâs sitting on the floor, dried flecks of saliva chapping her lips and chin, and making no move to recover.Â
Azriel glances to the table on the far side of the room, then back.
Slowly, he allows his shadows to unspool, gliding in swirls across the wooden floor to wrap themselves around her figure. If he can lift her from the floor, he can at least clean her up.Â
Dignity is precious, in this world.
ââââ
Azriel wets the cloth in the ceramic teacup he filled with water after having set her atop the sofa, finding the damp corner and swiping carefully against the crease of her mouth. He can smell her stomach from hereâtangy; acidicâbut itâs a mild discomfort.Â
Tears well in her eyes, dripping down still features. That distinctly-mournful vacancy unyielding even as salty water rolls down her cheeks, collecting beneath her jaw.Â
Azriel takes a section of the cloth and dries the wetness. Tracing the pathways from her lashes to the curve of her jaw. Then he returns to cleansing her lips; the stained skin around her mouth. Her nose runs, but he dries that too.
Thereâs a cloth bag in one of the bathroom cabinets, small enough to fit in his palm, and takes one of the teeth chalks. He changes the water in the teacup. He walks back to the sofa sheâs sat on, shadows still mopping up her tears.Â
Azriel offers the chalk.
It takes her a few moments, but she lifts her hand, collecting the tablet and putting it in her mouth. It crunches beneath her teeth, minty tar cleansing as the chalky texture mixes with saliva, forming a paste.Â
He offers the teacup, and she takes it from his hand, taking in a drink of water to swish away the paste. He doesnât have to tell her to spit, but something inside him twinges when she raises her hand to cover her mouth, so he wonât see.Â
Heâs never forgotten sheâs only twenty-two, but that small gesture of dignity is a grim reminder of how small a fraction she is of himself.
ââââ
The flight back is quiet, for the most part.Â
Thereâs a silent spiral in her eyes, one that grows louder the deeper one looksâwhich he doesnât. Â
Sheâs pressing into him more than she has in the pastâat times itâs felt like she was trying to tip herself out of his arms.
He readjusts his hold on her.Â
The tears have stopped, but sheâs far too still. A silence the product of hollow absence.
Maybe she feels a fraction of his attention, because her head lowers, face turned toward his chest. Her eyes have shut to protect against the chill of the upper skies, and her brow rests against the junction of his neck and shoulder.Â
Thinking on her lethargy, her nature has always been seemingly subdued. Even before he turned away from her. She would smile, but it was slow and measured. Even a full smile would be directed elsewhere, peering at the floor with a wide grin and round cheeks.
She and her older sister have that smile in common.Â
Elain will likely have set off with Lucien to begin searching through Spring by now.Â
ââââ
Tha-thump. Tha-thump.Â
Tha-thump. Tha-thump.
The rushing of the air is tuned out, the leathery beat of his wings fading to quiet. Only the thump of his heart remains, reverberating through your skull.
So strange.Â
A heartbeat has always been indicative of truth. Something that would never lie. And as the dust settles from these past months, you crave it.
Crave it in the way thatâs only possible for something you canât have.
ââââ
When the familiar landscape surrounding Velaris comes into view, Azriel considers. Is it worth informing her of his decision?
She shifts in his arms, looking outward as she recognises the landscape. Her ankles cross, huddling herself a small bit closer. âWeâre leaving today?âÂ
Azriel glances to her but sheâs vacantly watching the running lands below.Â
âYou should rest a while,â Azriel replies. âLeave time for Madja to give an assessment.âÂ
âIâve done nothing but rest.âÂ
Azriel almost misses it, words being snatched away by the wind as he begins the descent. He says nothing.Â
Sheâs quiet for a long time, long enough he returns his attention to the circling descent.Â
âYouâre going by yourself.â Arenât you?, She murmurs.
Sheâs returned to her huddle, staring into her lap. âDo you think itâs your fault?â She whispers.Â
ââââ
Youâre not ready to move. You need to be reclined on a sofa in the late afternoon, lazy heat pouring in through the windows and a frilled cushion beneath your head. A state of permanent inebriation.Â
You need rest.Â
Endless rest.Â
And yet, âI want to see Summer.â You hum, growing quiet. ââŠI want to see Summer.âÂ
Somehow tears can still prickle at your eyes.
You arenât ready to face the oncoming winter.Â
Winter holds too much grief. Every snowflake will be a reminder of him, every fractured puddle a shard worth sliding beneath your skin.
The shame will cripple you.Â
You should have paid attention.Â
The frozen stump of his arm passes through your mindâthe prolonged pain he endured, with no capability to end himself.Â
âTake me with you,â you mumble, half to yourself. Hating your dependence. All you can do is ask, and plead, and hope heâll find you pitiful enough to oblige.Â
Heâs no other motive to listen.
Not for you.Â
âIt would be irresponsible.â Azriel says. Â
âWhy?âÂ
âYou know why.â He replies. A muscle tightens in your jaw, teeth gritting together. âWhy is now the time you choose to be responsible for me.âÂ
Just come out and say it, Azriel. Say you donât want me there. Say you want to be relieved of me. To leave and return and find me gone.Â
Heâs silent for more than a considering pause, allowing you to continue.Â
You peer up at him, gazing intently at the jugular vein in his throat. âMaybe Iâll die off in Summer,â you whisper, verging on a hiss, âthen Iâll be out of your hair.â
He shifts you in his arms, âI donât want you to die.âÂ
Liar.Â
âIâm not lying.âÂ
âHow can you not?â How could you not want me dead? How can you not lie?
Itâs all youâve ever done.
Your question had been backed with malice, but as the thought repeats the viciousness bleeds dry, dissipating into desperation. Spiralling despair. Your lower lip crumbles, and you look to the ground so far below, watching it whiz by. Hot tears soothe the dry itch of your eyes.Â
Is it even Azriel at the centre of your problems anymore?
Thinking of him brings pain to your heart, but itâs spread so much further now. A swift consumption, starting with a seed and swiftly splitting. Youâd need to purge your mind as a whole to be rid of it.
Dash the matter on the rocks, so your skull is blessedly mindless.Â
ââââ
Nesta greets you in the hallway.
You canât bear the sight of her.
âWhat happened?âÂ
Her words arenât inquisitive, nor curious. Theyâre stern and soft.. Solemn and angry, with no target to yet fire upon.Â
Youâd kept your head lowered, gaze trained on the floor as youâd slid out of your boots and climbed the stairs that lead to your room. The prickling sense of her frozen ire had been searing as youâd passed, and humiliation burns from within knowing it was directed at the male left behind in the front hall.
How pitiful that Nesta still intervenes like this, even after everything.
Floorboards creak beneath your feet, and you practically fall into your room, the door giving way and clicking shut at your back, legs shaking and so, so weak you hardly reach the bed.Â
Bones hit the floor, pain stroking your knees as you lay stiff on the ground, curled in a spiral, staring at the grain in the floorboards.Â
Silence reigns, still and soft within your room.Â
Itâs oppressive; overwhelming.Â
Thereâs a disconnect inside. A distance between your mind and body.Â
Why is it never-ending?
The heels of your palms press against closed eyes, sealing away the light to provide the reprieve of darkness. Sweet, plain blank, surrounding you entirely.Â
It seeps backward into your skull, rooting through your mind and cleansing the interior. The gentle pressure of the base of your thumbs pressing to the hollow beneath your brows, either side the bridge of your nose.Â
If you could prevent adoration from having ever left your mouth, from having filled your eyes with every glanceâŠ
( if I
If I could leave you behind )
~
Is it that you love him, or that he knows?Â
~
why suggest going together?
~
(us.)
~
~
How long has it been?
~~~~~~~~
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Canât Bring Myself To Hate You â Chapter 22
Azriel x Third-Oldest-Archeron-Sibling!Reader
a/n:Â there might be some spelling errors here and there which Iâm sorry aboutâIâll try and remember to check through in the morning <3
word count:Â 7,866
-Part 21- -Part 23-
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
More than once, you find your feet leading you in the direction of Basâ house, but you always turn before you can reach his street.Â
A few days ago youâd thought it would take a fortnight for the transition between autumn and winter to truly become apparent. You were wrong.Â
Thereâs no way you could mistake it for anything else, with the way breath now huffs from chapped, rosey mouths like ancient, angry beasts prowling across an early morning moor; how now when you step outside and leave the warmth of the heating enchantments the cold nips at your throat, splashing ice into your lungs, encasing your arched ears in snow-kissed winds; how even without much sense left in your hands you can feel as your blood recoils from the temperature, scrambling back to be closer inside your body and abandoning your limbs for the sake of comfort. Useless body. If you were instead one of the massive bears kept in the Winter Court with thick coats and dense, padded bodies this would be much more bearable.Â
As it is, you have to settle for keeping a brisk pace and wrapping yourself in an uncomfortable amount of layers. Layers that wrinkle too easily beneath one another and store sweat in their fibres. Itâs always a relief to be once again indoors so you can shed the many skins. Especially when so much of the cosier cloaks are inlined with fur. You try not to let it bother you but as soon as that particular smell of leather creeps in, or meat with a little too much preserving saltâŠ
Winterâs gotten a little easier. You can appreciate some of its beauty now itâs less likely to kill you. Its glittering exquisite.Â
âWhat about this?â Elain gestures to a folded quilt thatâs laid out amongst other similar items: bedsheets, pillowcases, towels, flannels, cloths. The quilt is a patchwork of small squares about the size of your open palm, each one different in pattern but similar in colourâpinks, pale pinks, whites, creams, oranges, pale oranges, a glitter of egg-yolk yellow. Around the hem hangs a slight frill made up of white lace. On its underside shows the padding designed for comfort, perfect for maintaining heat and being a cozy blanket to nestle under.Â
An image passes through your mind then of all four of your crammed into that tiny bed, stuffed beneath a blanket like this in the depths of winter. Fingers so cold they felt like ice, cold enough to wake you from your sleep if a bare foot grazed your calf. Nesta and Feyre would usually be on the outside during the colder months, rarely taking place in the cozy, warm centre. You and Elain ever the middle children.Â
A second image forms soon after, except instead of being set in an alternate past seems to fit more with a branch of the future: all four of you stuffed on the long sofa in the River Houseâs living room, the fire crackling behind its muffler but Nesta still on the furthest side. Some of you would be reading, Nyx might be cuddled beneath the quilt, close to Feyreâs chest, and maybe you might be stitching something together or sewing a pattern onto the sleeve of Elainâs top. Nyx would probably be briefly fascinated by the lace frill. Then if it was interesting enough he might try to eat it.Â
You zone back in when you realise Elainâs looking to you for an answer. You wince, wanting to pull back into yourself and hide in your skeleton, sit on one of your own ribs, arms hung over an upper one. âI really⊠Itâs lovely, but the bedroom I have is fine. We donât need to find replacement stuff.âÂ
Elain seems a little crestfallen but quickly blinks it away, already turning her head to scour for something else that might take your interest. âAre you sure? It looks so warm,â Feyre pipes up, inspecting the little patterns of the squares. âI can imagine you all wrapped up in this, tucked away into a chair with a book heavy enough to break someoneâs foot.âÂ
âIâm sure,â you assure her. âReally, the bedroom in your house is more than enough. Iâm not sure I even wear half the clothes in the wardrobeâIâm fine.âÂ
After the news had been announced, tears had been shed, and youâd all spent the night on that sofa too afraid to let go of one another, Nesta had been the one to suggest fixing up the House of Wind again. It had been patched up after the initial explosion, but Nesta had suggested making it somewhere nice, reasoning all of the furniture had been destroyed anyway, so your room would be in need of some redecorating anyway. âBesides,â Nesta had pointed out the following morning, âItâs mine. I can do what I like with it.â And spend Rhysâ money while doing it, had gone unsaid, but after Nyxâs birth at least some of their aggression seemed to have boiled off.Â
âThis just seems like too much,â you admit while walking at Feyreâs side, Nesta strolling along the far side of the street while Elainâs already begun appraising a new set of pale green pillowcases. âYou donât have long,â Feyre murmurs in reply, her voice straining toward the end, âsix months will fly by.âÂ
âI donât mind,â you whisper absently. âMy roomâs fine as it is. We donât need to redecorate the entire House of Wind.âÂ
Feyre falls silent, feet tapping in time together along the icy cobbles. Then her arm is tentatively slipping beneath your own, gently linking at the elbow, careful not to cause any aches in your flesh. You squeeze her faintly, bodies pressing closer in the cold, arms locked to try and keep up warmth while walking through the city.Â
You glance up at the clock tower constructed at one end of the main square. It reads midday. Elain will be leaving for the human lands in a little under an hour and none of you have yet had lunch. Feyre follows your gaze, reading the time. âShe wonât be gone for long, remember?â Feyre assures quietly. âSheâll be back before night.âÂ
You blink, turning to face your younger sister, âOh, no, I wasnât thinkingâŠâ You flush, averting your eyes as you pull your arm from Feyreâs, âIâm not that clingy.â It comes out sounding more defensive than youâd thought it would, the tug of your arm rougher than youâd anticipated, but you speed your pace regardless, crossing the street to instead join Nesta. Sheâs looking into the window of a large bookshop, her sharp eyes picking out titles even through the warped and rippling glass panes.Â
Nesta reads even more than you do, which is saying something. Youâre not sure you could even read a romance book anymore. Not without a piercing sense of loss pinned through your heart.Â
âIâve been thinking,â Nesta muses, pulling from your thoughts, standing straighter as if sheâs considering entering the shop, âof having a meal up at the House of Wind. Would you come?â You blink, looking over to her inquisitively, âJustâŠa meal?âÂ
âI was thinking of bringing Emerie and Gwyn to it, too. None of you have met one another.â Nesta turns back to the window, though she doesnât seem to be looking at the books anymore. âElain and Feyre would be there, too.âÂ
âFor sometime near solecist?âÂ
âThat could work.âÂ
You pull a part of your lower lip into your mouth, nipping at the interior. âHave you thought of a present for Feyre this year?â You ask, still being without a gift. Itâs still about two months away, butâŠtime has a habit of slipping through your fingers. Silverish eyes slide sidewards to you, and you glance at her questioningly. Nesta looks back into the window, âI think the plan is to all do something together. Elain seems to think thatâs what Feyre wants.â
âDo you think she does?âÂ
âProbably,â Nesta replies. âWhy donât you ask her?â
âWonât that ruin the surprise?â
âWouldnât it be better to know what she wants so we donât do something she wonât enjoy?âÂ
You purse your lips. âElain can ask.âÂ
Nesta seems to decide sheâs done with the bookshop, turning her body to move on ahead and you follow quietly. âSo, about the meal?â She reminds, and you swallow but manage a short nod of your head. âIt sounds nice.â Your lips part, throat flexing in preparation to add on, Iâd like to meet them, but something stops you and then the moment has passed. Nesta seems satisfied enough with your answer.Â
Had she also mentioned Elain and Feyre intentionally when bringing up the dinner?Â
You worry your lower lip. Itâs been nice spending time with them again. Being on the sofa. Feeling bones press together. Hair sliding over shoulders. But has it been too much for them? Feyre has a husband and a baby and a court. Nesta has Cassian and her own life. ElainâŠis who youâd usually spend time with, but sheâs leaving to visit Lucien.Â
Bas is leaving too, soon.Â
Maybe you should be returning to the House of Wind on your own instead of making them take you there and pad the way. Youâre not ready to go back. Maybe you should just lock yourself up in the Prison. But thatâs a stupid thought, one thatâs not going to help you. Why try and make things worse for yourself?Â
Your stomach grumbles and you flush, putting your hand over it in attempts to quiet the noise.Â
Itâs about time for lunch, anyway.Â
ââââ
âYou havenât been up to the House since, right?âÂ
You startle, spinning around as your hand recoils from the door handle, chest rising and falling so rapidly that saliva gets caught in your throat and you have to cough into the crook of your arm. At least you didnât eat too much over supper, or you might have been worried about being sick.
Azriel stands silently in the hallway a little distance away, his eyes vaguely alarmed at your abrupt reaction. He clears his throat. âSorry. I thought youâd heard me.âÂ
âItâs fine,â you excuse, coughing once more before lowering your arm, going to straighten your skirts before a rush of something shy flutters through your chest and your hands instead join at your front. âYouâre justâŠvery quiet.âÂ
Azriel hums, and you shift on your feet. Youâve been spending so much of your free time with your sisters that you havenât really seen anyone but them over the past two days. Well, aside from Madja, who youâre still seeing every morning at ten oâclock, much to your relief. You lick your lips, finding them chapped and dry. âSoâŠwas there something you wanted?âÂ
Azriel nods his head once. âNot exactly. I was thinking it would be a good idea for you to readjust yourself to the dimensions of the House, since Nestaâs told me youâre redecorating.â You flush, eyes dipping away, once again shifting on your feet. âWell, itâs more her ideaâŠâ you hedge, âsinceâŠyou know, itâs hers nowâŠ?âÂ
âI know. But youâll be wanting new furniture,â he reasons. âThe walls had to be realigned so your room will be wider once itâs complete.âÂ
âOnce itâs complete?âÂ
He nods his head. âYou blew it up, remember?â
The flush deepens and you take a subconscious step back towards your room. You hadnât meant to wreck the House, even if it was only your room that was really ruined. âI just meantâŠyou mentioned walls needing to be realigned, so I was wondering whether theyâve yet beenâŠâÂ
Azriel nods his head. âThey have.âÂ
A beat passes. âSo, are you coming?âÂ
You look up, surprised. âHm? Where?â
His eyes narrow. âTo the House. Is your head okay?âÂ
âFine.â Your brows furrow. âFine.âÂ
âNo headaches?â He pushes, hazel eyes scanning swiftly over your body in a painfully analytic fashion. âNo bouts of forgetfulness? Brain fog?âÂ
âNo. No, Iâm fine. None of that,â you assure, glancing down to the hardwood floor, a small part of you still stumbling at his attention. But itâs all good and fine noticing a problem once itâs obvious. âBesides,â you add, âIâm sure Madja would have picked that out by nowâŠâ Right? Madjaâs been nothing but dependant as company. Competent and kind, so gentle with your skin and flesh and mind.Â
Azriel seems to disagree, his head tilting slightly and you wonder if itâs a movement heâs showing intentionally or whether itâs simply something heâs learned to do when around other people after having every reaction trained out of him. âYouâre only seeing her for about twenty minutes each day. Itâs easy to miss some things.âÂ
âYes, but isnât sheâŠ? Itâs Madja. Isnât she supposed to beâŠI donât know, one of the best healers in Velaris?â Isnât she? Arrogance aside, wouldnât it make sense Rhys would only want someone he could trust around during Feyreâs birthing? Madja must have proven herself to be reliable hundreds of times to be trusted enough to work so high up. Azriel nods his head, confirming your inner thoughts, âProbably in all of the Night Court.âÂ
âSo, she would know if something was wrong.â
âThereâs no harm in double checking.âÂ
You swallow, eyes awkwardly scanning him and the hallway, too nervous to look at him properly. âWell,â you say, once more clearing your throat, âI think Iâm fine.âÂ
Azriel nods his head. âShall we go?âÂ
You brows furrow deeply. âWhere?âÂ
âTo the House of Wind,â he says, stepping forward as if to reach for you, âDid you forget already?â
Your nostrils flare, lips curving at their edges. âIâm messing with you, Azriel.âÂ
His hand pauses in mid air, then it retracts and he stands straighter again, a look of faint displeasure held between his brows, âYou shouldnât joke like that.â Tension coils in your chest, and you look away from him, lips pursing, âlifeâs dismal enough as it is. Iâll joke about what I want to.â Azriel sighs, taking a step back to where heâd originally been standing, reinstating that cold distance between you that has your heart stretching thin.Â
âJoke about what you like, but keep that humour away from your sisters. Theyâll be going through a lot, right now.âÂ
You look at him then, arms lightly folded across your chest. âWill they?â You ask, tension coiling tighter. âYes. Iâm sure theyâll be finding it the most difficult right now.â Azrielâs chest expands, then heâs blowing out a harsh breath, âyou know I didnât mean it like that.â
âYou know you could have said it better.âÂ
Quiet hangs in the air, then your throat is rolling, fight disintegrating when he makes no move to respond, shame at your snappiness creeping to your surface; disappointment he didnât attempt to amend the exchange. Just one sentence would have been okay. Youâre past pretending like youâd demand a lot from him. A few words and forgiveness would fall from your lips in a desperate spill, hungry for his care.Â
Your lips press together. âShall we go, then?âÂ
Azriel had flown you upâhe hadnât wanted you to winnow. You hadnât thought much of the House since youâd been staying in Feyreâs home, but now youâre back and the smell is wrapping around you and it feels like you never left. Itâs after a family dinner, youâre not yet obviously ill, warmth from Basâ palms lingers on your hips and youâre still on good terms, Morâs offered to take you out into Velaris and you never wrote back to Eris. You never told Azriel how you felt, and you still speak regularly in the library, your heart fluttering every time your eyes would meet, and you still think youâre in with a chance of keeping his attention.Â
They hadnât felt good at the timeâthey hadnât felt enoughâbut youâd take them back in a heartbeat if you could.Â
The two of you walk in silence down the hallways that lead to your old room, but when you reach for the handle you almost pause, able to feel the weight of Azrielâs attention on you and for a truly awful moment you worry theyâre all inside, your room already done up, money already wasted on you, and youâll have to pretend some kind of gratitude for the debt. But you cast the thought away, because thatâs ridiculousâyouâd been out with your sisters just this morning.Â
Youâd been unfair to Feyre. Short-tempered. Intentionally choosing to keep misunderstanding her. And then youâd done the same with Nesta, pushing your emotions onto them.Â
Maybe it would be better for you to return up here again, so youâre away from them. Isolated, so your foul moods donât bleed onto them. So they can stay happy, and you can deteriorate without having to feel bad about your inner necrosis. So they donât see the way youâll fall apart over these last six months.Â
The handle twists in your palm and the door swings open.Â
Azriel was right about the wallsâtheyâre further apart than they used to be, your room suddenly a few inches wider, enough to disorientate you. But thatâs not it.Â
Your hand falls away from the handle, breathing shallow and deathly as you step back into the room. A small bed has been pushed where the old one used to lie, a similar looking desk up against the wall, a wardrobe near the windows, all resembling their previous pieces but so clearly different. Emptier.Â
Your stomach drops, and the ground falls out from beneath your feet.Â
âWhere-â Your throat strangles the words in your mouth. Warping them to a hoarse rasp. âWhere are my things?âÂ
You hadnât thought about it. Youâd put it out of your mind. Made sure to lock it up tight in a box along with the rest of the mess because youâd fall apart time and time again if you could think about it. But if the furniture was obliterated, and the walls destroyedâŠÂ
âThey were blown apart, too.âÂ
The far end of the room stretches, distancing itself further and further from you as the walls either side become narrower, the floor beneath your feet groaning as if itâll give any second. All of itâs gone? Everything? Everything?
You walk over to the desk, fingers tracing the surface, lips stitched shut. A painting had once sat thereâŠgreens, and golds, and falling stars. A romance book sat in solitary on an upper shelf. A bookmark with silver thread. A pendant with a small map contained inside.Â
Your feet carry you to the wardrobe. Thereâs no smile drawn into the dust on the mirror. No lipstick, nor nail polish. The jigsaw you never touched, still wrapped in its bow. All of it? All of itâs gone?Â
Scared eyes turn to the bed, glancing once to the empty bedside before youâre faintly walking over, lowering to your knees to peer beneath the mattress. Staring into the empty space beneath. Dark and hollow. No box holding your golden solar system. No bags from a shopping trip with Mor. No comfy slippers, and that dress that youâd only worn once, in the shop. The one that had looked nice, and youâd never worn it, too ashamed of yourself.Â
âDid the-â The words are sticky, drying your throat together, tongue stuck too the roof of your mouth. âMy orreryâŠ?âÂ
Your heart is pounding and thereâs a delicate fire beneath your skin, a cool sweat glossing your flesh. A soft roaring around your ears. You canât have lost all of it.Â
âA couple of things made it,â Azriel says from the doorway. You turn to look at him, the air around him warping and spinning faintly. Shallow and shimmering. Azriel shifts, something about his expression changing that you canât quite pick out. âAre you feeling alright? You lookâŠâÂ
âIâm fine,â you whisper, staring at him because it seems too much effort to really move your eyes elsewhere, lids pinned to your brows. A couple of things made it. A couple of things survived.Â
Azriel nods his head. âWait here,â he says, âIâll get them.â He looks like he might says something else, hazel eyes flicking over you, but he keeps his mouth shut and turns, disappearing from the doorframe.Â
In his absence a wave of dizziness overcomes you. Itâs without nausea, but the room is shifting, your head unable to find a balance to keep your body upright and you end up settling lower to the ground, lying on your side, knees curled to your chest. The room is so empty without any of yourself in it. Is this what Basâ home will look like once heâs gone?Â
Is this what your room will look like, once youâre gone?Â
You picture it, the raised bed with the thick duvets, the desk pushed up against the wall to lie beneath the window, the bathroom connected with its cool, pale tiles. The room you and your sisters spent an afternoon and evening contained in, chatting and drinking tea; the room Madjaâs tried to heal you in; the room you found out you were going to die in. Will it stop being your room once youâre gone? Will Feyre repurpose it? Keep it as it is?Â
A floorboard creaks in the hallway, but you just donât have the energy to move. Choosing to instead curl tighter, allowing your eyes to close in order to try and contain the hot pressure thatâs building behind them. You donât want to cry.Â
Can death come any quicker?Â
Footsteps pause on the threshold, and shame tugs on your gut, wanting to scuttle away and hide beneath the dark hollow of the bed. To crawl away to some dark space and be out of everyoneâs way, keeping to your own corner far from anyone else. Safe and alone in the darkness. Like a small spider lurking on the top shelf in a wardrobe, just trying to keep out of someoneâs way. You could get so far if you had eight legs. If you were as small and nimble as a spider you could go anywhere.Â
The mattress stretches as a weight is delivered to it, then a presence is gathering at your back.Â
A few seconds pass, then heâs asking quietly, âWhat are you thinking about?âÂ
You take time evening your breaths before you answer. âSpiders.âÂ
âIs there one under there?â Azriel asks, still keeping to that soft, low voice. Your lips tremble, but you open your eyes enough to look into the darkness, peering about for any eight-legged creatures. You shake your head faintly. âWhat got you thinking about spiders?â He asks next, and you realise his voice is close enough heâs probably sitting behind you. On the floor with you. You try to shrug your shoulders, not wanting to answer, but the movement is stunted from lying on your side.Â
âDo you mind them?â He asks.Â
âNo,â you reply, voice creaking through the quiet. Theyâd made you uncomfortable at first, when theyâd started creeping into your house all those years ago. Spinning their webs on bookshelves and between table legs, down the hinges of doorframes, where the breeze brings in smaller bugs for them to catch. âTheyâre small.âÂ
âEven the big ones?â Azriel replies.Â
âThey donât hurt anyone.âÂ
âThey look creepy.âÂ
Your brow furrows, then youâre rolling over on the floor to face him. Sure enough heâs sat a little distance back, arms around his parted knees. âAre you scared of spiders?âÂ
Azrielâs eyes twinkle. âNot the small ones.âÂ
You blink, unsure what to make of that. âThen, the big ones?â He hums in a way that might be a yes. Itâs hard to pick out what he means by that one, smooth noise. âWhich ones?â You ask, watching him quietly. âI know there are large ones in the Summer Court jungles? Arachnids as big as your torso.âÂ
Azriel smiles. âThose are fine.âÂ
âBut their venom can paralyse you,â you argue softly, brows furrowing. Small ones are fine, small ones canât hurt you. But the larger ones, those can bite. Those ones can be dangerous. âTheyâre easy enough to avoid,â Azriel reasons.Â
A look of concentration knits itself between your brows, and you push yourself up from the floor, shifting back to lean against the bed. âWhat court do they come from?â Azrielâs lips curve faintlyâheâs not going to tell you. âThe continent?â You ask, trying to work around it, but this time he shakes his head. âOn Prythian?â He nods. Your eyes narrow, inclining your chin by a singular degree, âhow big are they?âÂ
Azriel pauses, thinking. âCurled upâŠprobably as large as that bed,â he answers, nodding to the bed youâre leaning against. âSplayed outâŠeach joint in a leg was probably around your height.â Your eyes widen in fascination. Then they narrow again, suspicion rising in your mind, âis this creature magical?â His lips donât smile, but his eyes do, and he nods his head. Your mouth parts, âthatâs cheating.âÂ
âHowâs it cheating?â Your mouth opens again but you canât give an answer, eyes darting about as you think. âYouâve done most of your learning while youâve been here, havenât you? We have books on the creatures here. Iâm sure you know some of them.âÂ
âI donât know of any spiders that big,â you reply with your brows furrowed, frustrated you donât know the species heâs talking about. Azriel laughs and you avert your eyes, scowling into the floorboards.Â
âSheâs locked up in the Prison now, anyway,â he says casually, as if that makes it better. You look at him again, ââsheâ?âÂ
He nods. âCan you guess?â
Your brow tightens again. âI donât want to.â You pull your knees up to your chest, readjusting your skirts so theyâre covering your ankles. Leaning your chin into the dip of your palm, a downward tug to your displeased lips. Azriel raises a brow, âI didnât know you were a sore loser.âÂ
âWe werenât competing.â You mutter.Â
âAre you really upset?â He asks, sounding perplexed. You sigh, shifting on the floor now the bed is beginning to dig into your spine. âNo,â you mumble, âIâm used to it.âÂ
He smiles, eyes twinkling, âused to what?âÂ
You donât smile back. âYou.âÂ
Azrielâs features mellow out, light winking away in his eyes and you watch the warmth sift down and out from his expression. âYou arenât entitled to my affections, just because of your situation,â he says softly, but sternly. No leniency afforded to you. No padding or gentleness to muffle the hurt. An ashamed blush creeps up your neck, spreading through your cheeks as you lower your head. âIâm not talking about that,â you mumble. Gloved fingers wring together and you pull your legs tighter to your body, âIâm talking about how needlessly cold you were. How clearly you cared for Elain without thought for me.âÂ
âYou needed a clear answer. I was helping.âÂ
âYou used me,â you whisper.Â
Across the floor, you can feel it as Azriel stiffens. Almost freezes.Â
âYou used me,â you repeat, this time looking at him, âyou knew how I felt about you. Thereâs no way you couldnât have, Azriel. You-â
âYou kissed me back.â Hazel eyes pierce into you, the shadows at his back stirring as though raising from their sleep. âYou-â
âIâm talking about before.â The whisper rushes out of you on a swift exhale, hurrying to get the words past your lips so he doesnât remind you any further. You swallow, a familiar feeling of shame coating your skin. âWhen I would speak with you in the library. And you would only speak with me to learn more of Elain. You were using me.â Azrielâs brows narrow and your heartbeat quickens unpleasantly. âYou know I was making sure she was okay,â he claims softly, âthe Mother knows you were too preoccupied.âÂ
âStop lying to me.â A hot pressure is building behind your eyes again, staring at him in this room with the walls that feel like theyâre closing in. âI know you love Elain. I know that, so stop trying to pretend like Iâm imagining it. You wanted to know more about her so you spoke with me to learn more. You must have known how lonely I was, how hard it was for all of us after being ripped from our home, from our lives, and shoved into a world we had never wanted to be a part of. Itâs like youâre just trying to get me to hate you.âÂ
As soon as the words leave your lips you freeze, staring at him with widened eyes.Â
âIs that-?â You cover your mouth, toes curling in your socks as you huddle your limbs together. âIs that why you were so cold afterwards? Was it so horrible to deal with? Was it really so disgusting to you thatâŠ?âÂ
Azriel says nothing and you feel at that moment like the earth might split open and swallow you whole, suctioning you down far below the ground for discovering such a horrible secret, snatching you away before you can tell anyone and sealing you a thousand times in jagged stone beneath cold, damp earth.Â
ââââ
Her eyes are wide and her chest is heaving, knees pressing tight together as if to hide her body from him. He should lower his head to respect her dignity, look away to offer her privacy but that in itself would be yielding too much information. Doing anything other than watching her crumble would be exposing a part of himself and no matter how much sheâs hurting, he cannot. He will not.Â
Azriel doesnât care if she hit the nail on the head. He hadnât meant any of it. But had he really been expected to simply accept her tenderness for him? Even if he wasnât the spymaster heâd be able to see how much she thinks of him, how she listens to him and hangs on his words as if they heal wounds. If she thinks she loves him, she should know how awful he is.Â
ââââ
You shake your head, still staring at him. Then you try to push yourself to your feet.Â
You need air. Need fresh air, and to get out of a room as cramped as this one. But when you stand you spot the things heâd laid on the bed. The things that had survived the blast, and you freeze.Â
On top of the bare mattress, weighing into the bed is a thickly bound volume. The spine reads: Prythian: An Anthology Of Discoveries, in golden lettering. Sitting small atop the book however, is a familiar silver band, its narrow edges smooth and shiny. Itâs the ring Eris gifted you on that last day in Autumn. The one heâd told you would help keeping your magic in check. The one youâd left discarded then nearly killed Azriel by being unable to control yourself.Â
âThisâŠ? This is all that made it?â Your fingers trace the title, and you consider for a moment raking your nails down its surface, scalping its smooth leather and ripping the pages from the spine. The silver is cold against your fingers, and you imagine casting the window wide and throwing it out to the winds. Throwing it far, far away, somewhere youâll never have to see it again, where youâll never be reminded of the poor choices you made that brought such an unbearable amount of shame into your life.Â
You can feel it begin to crush into you again, and your knees shake like they might buckle. Why is this all that lasted?Â
âThe book was enchanted, as many are nowadays.â Azrielâs voice is far off in your head, the world tipping beneath you. âThe magic protecting it was ripped apart, but the bookâs still intact. The ring seems to have its own magic warding it, though itâs been damaged.âÂ
âIs this-?â You turn to face him, arm banding across your stomach, able to feel as the shame and hurt squeezes you insides. âIs this your way of punishing me for what I did? By showing me this?â Azrielâs brow furrows, and he takes a step forward, âNo.â Youâre not sure you believe him. He takes another step forward, so heâs stood before you and you have to tilt your head slightly to look at him. âI thought youâd be happy. I thought it would make you feel better. That you had something to keep.âÂ
âThat reminds me of why you all hate me,â you say, hot tears spilling from your lashes, scalding your cheeks. âYou canât be expecting me to believe that youâre showing me these things because youâve forgiven them. That youâve so suddenly had a change of heart about what happened. Not this.â You sniff, trying to hide your face. âNot you.âÂ
Silence hangs in the air, stretched and painful until, âYou think we hate you?âÂ
âI know you do,â you whisper, âand Iâm sorry. I didnât mean toâŠâÂ
Scarred fingers collect around your wrists, and you try to cover yourself as he gently pulls your palms from your tear-stained face. âLook at me.â Look at me.Â
Does he know what heâs doing? Or are you joining dots that have no business being joined? You open your eyes but look away, staring at the floor, at a section of wooden panelling that must have been redone when- âLook at me.âÂ
His shadows cooly gather beneath your chin, lifting your head but you stubbornly refuse, instead casting your gaze to the right where the door is. Just anywhere but him. Anywhere but his eyes, eyes that will make your heart splinter. You look at the threshold, the handle of the door-Â
Azrielâs wings open, and then youâre ensconced in night.Â
His shadows gather between your feet, circling overhead so thereâs nowhere for you to look anymore but him, everything else inked out to be bland and uninteresting. Only a very small amount of light is allowed through the darkness, like a dozen black veils of silk have been thrown over you to keep you together. Slowly your breaths begin to settle, transported away from the demanding present and instead somewhere else entirely, where time has been paused and you have no pressure of worry beating down on you.Â
Your nostrils flare, but your breathing has become even. Chest slowly rising up and down, calmed and quietened.Â
Your throat trembles, but you look at him.Â
His hazel eyes are normal. No disgust or revulsion to be found. No ice, either. At first glance you might have called the look indifferent, butâŠcalm. Quiet.Â
Hands release your wrists, one lifting to the circle of your shoulder, but the other moves for your chest. You inhale softly as his fingers graze across the fabric of your top, his touch featherlight and careful. They pause, coming to a stop in a place youâre certain heâll be able to feel the pounding of your heart. But he makes no remark on the wild rhythm, instead pressing the pads of his fingers down so theyâre resting atop your breast. âYou have a scar here, donât you?âÂ
Something tugs from beneath your ribs, an alertness jerking awake beneath his touch.Â
âItâs small, isnât it? Barely there. Less than a scratch, but itâs scarred.âÂ
What? How does heâŠ?Â
His hand finds yours and he guides you a step closer to him, then lifts your palm to the side of his stomach, his ribs. âI donât hate you,â he says quietly, but in the shared silence you have no need to strain your ears; you can hear him perfectly. âNone of them hate you either.âÂ
âYouâre lying,â you whisper.Â
âIâm not,â he replies, pressing your palm flat to where that matching scar lies, embedded deep in his flesh. Where heâd stolen the arrow you had meant for yourself.Â
Your head hangs in defeat, and your forehead meets his chest. His hand releases your shoulders, scarred fingers skimming the small hairs sprouting from the top of your nape.Â
ââââ
Night has fallen by the time you return to the River House.Â
Itâs dark and you wrap your arms tight over your chest, wind playing with your hair, kissing ice up your neck. At your side, Azriel seems unbothered by the descending winter, appearing as stoic as ever.Â
Coming up the pathway that leads past the front lawn you can see the lights in the House are one, letting you see in to the living room and kitchen, each separated by the hallway that connects to the door before you. No oneâs in the living room, but you can easily make out the figures of two of your sisters in the kitchenâFeyre and Elain. You wonder what they could be speaking about when Elain soundlessly slams her hand down on the table.Â
You pause, and you know Azrielâs watching too.Â
Elainâs teeth flash in the faelight and your brows narrow, pulse spikingâthey look like theyâre arguing. You hurry a step forward, hand falling to the handle but Azriel places his palm atop your shoulder, pausing you. You look back at him. âWe should give them space. Let them sort it out on their own.âÂ
You consider, glancing between him and the front door. Teeth nip at the interior of your lipâyouâve not seen Elain like that in a long time. Sheâs not one to become easily agitated. âNo,â you say, âtheyâre my sisters. I want to know whatâs wrong.âÂ
âIt looks private. You should wait-âÂ
But you turn the handle, giving him a strange look, âTheyâre my sisters.âÂ
As soon as the door opens, Elainâs voice rings through the halls, bouncing off the walls with crystal clarity, âI want to know why I had to hear it through Lucien, Feyre. Who, I might add, didnât even hear it from one of you.âÂ
Quiet settles, tense and taut and you halt, blinking. What have you just walked in on?Â
With as little noise as possible you push the cloak from your shoulders, hanging it on one of the hooks in the entryway. Elainâs voice carries on, unaware of the new listeners. âAre you going to explain it?â She asks, voice softened from its previous cut, still bearing a nasty edge. âI didnât want to worry you,â comes Feyreâs quietened reply. âI didnât mean to hide it, Elain, but the timing was never right, and youâre bothâŠâÂ
âWeâre both what?â Elain asks sternly, her voice tight. âUntrustworthy because we arenât as tightly knit with others in your circle?â
âYouâre putting words in my mouth,â Feyre replies, with soft steel. âThatâs got nothing to do with it.âÂ
âThen tell me why you didnât think to mention it.âÂ
Silence falls, and you feel guilt gather in your chest for eavesdropping. You turn to glance at Azriel but he seems to have vanished into shadow at some point. Maybe he actually had intended to give them privacy, but youâre in too deep now. Instead of hiding you straighten your skirts, quietly stepping further along the hallway until you reach the kitchen, peeking your head around the doorway, âis everything okay?âÂ
Cocoa coloured irises flick to you and Feyre turns in the kitchen, spotting you in the hallway. âFine,â Feyre saysâtoo quickly. You look over to Elain, but sheâs watching Feyre instead, coca eyes simmering. You swallow, and step decisively into the room, steadying your voice, âWhatâs wrong?â Because somethingâs clearly amiss.Â
A tense silence passes and you can feel your insides trembling, as if the quiet is a living, breathing creature, gently but increasingly firmly pushing against you, weighing on your shoulders, pulling on your back, an invisibly current slowly trying to drag you from the room. You stand still.Â
Feyreâs shoulders sag in a way you havenât seen before, her can lowering in a way that casts heavy shadow beneath her eyes and into the downturned corners of her mouth. âWeâd thought to keep you out of it,â she says, much too softly for High Lady. âYouâre bothâŠâ But she trails off, landing her face in her hands and rubbing along the narrow lengths of her curved brows. Her hands fall to her sides and she leans back against the table, arms moving to fold over her chest. âI know what itâs like, to be kept out of somethingâŠâ She looks at both of you in turn, blue-grey eyes anguished and distraught, showing a turmoil sheâs been battling with for quite some time. And what sheâs said is trueâshe knows what thatâs like. How she almost died without knowing the circumstances of her own child. She knows better than anyone what it means.Â
So what could have made her decideâŠ?Â
You release the tension of your stance, settling back against the wall since this seems like something important.Â
âYou may have seen us to be more on edge than usualâŠâ Feyre confesses, casting a glance to Elain. Your older sisterâs expression doesnât give, but acknowledgement passes through her eyes and Feyre continues. âNestaâs been practicing with Ataraxia more frequently, despite how little we know about its nature; Amrenâs been trying her efforts at furthering her understanding of The Old Language; then the trip Nesta and Cassian went on to the Day CourtâŠto visit Helionâs libraries.â She swallows thickly, shadows accentuating the roll of her throat. âHelion, Spell-Cleaver.âÂ
âNesta mentioned a binding spell,â you now recall from that supper all that time ago. Amren had bitten her off. Nesta had Ataraxia out on the table when youâd gone to visit her. What Eris had been talking about during your visit to Autumn. It must have something to do with why he was surprised you werenât learning to fight.Â
But why would you need to?
âWeâŠâ Feyre starts but swallows her own words. Besides her, Elain shifts on her feet, her attention casting skittishly around the dimly lit kitchen, only small yellow lights lighting the large room. Your younger sister sighs harshly, rubbing her face once before looking at you fully, hands again to her sides. âWe think the Prison is collapsing.âÂ
Her words settle into the quiet of the kitchen and seem to disappear in the external world while they ring endlessly within your mind, repeating in a space away from the linear passage of time and instead growing louder and louder with every hurried repeat. We think the Prison is collapsing.Â
What are you supposed to say to that?Â
You can feel your eyes stretch, throat turning dry from breathing through your mouth, lips open while you stare.Â
âWhy?â You manage to gasp out, throat closing up on itself. Why would the Prison be collapsing? Why now? Why?
âWhen Nesta fought Lanthys,â Feyre begins solemnly, âperhaps even when she first retrieved the harpâŠwhether it was Ataraxia, one of the Dread Trove, or Lanthys exploiting a worn fibre of the spellâs fabricsâŠmaybe a combination of the threeâŠwe donât know for certain.âÂ
âYou donât know why the Prison is breaking?â Elain asks, staring at Feyre.Â
âWe know the wards are weakened,â she corrects, as if savouring the small grace that they seem to still be holding. But for how much longer? âWe think itâs in relation to a magical object imbued with Cauldron-made power being in close proximity to such an ancient antiquityâŠthat their magic might have abraded the spells of the Prison⊠But no. We donât know for certain.âÂ
The walls tilt, shadows stretching and youâre thankful youâre leaning against the wall. Feyre meets your gaze with a look you could call grieving. âPlease letâs discuss this further in the morning. Iâm sorry it was keptâŠthat I helped keep it from youâboth of youâbut for a conversation like thisâŠâ Feyre looks to Elain, a bit of that strength being forced to her surface. âWe can speak in the morning.âÂ
Elain watches Feyre silently, and for a few moments you think you might see anger in her eyes, but itâs turned calm and quiet. âI imagine itâs difficult, in some respects,â Elain says, âto play the role of High Lady.âÂ
You canât tell whether itâs meant as consolation or a jab, but Elainâs already departed from the room, leaving just you and Feyre.Â
âHow long have you known?â You ask in the quiet. Feyre shifts but doesnât look away from you, âLong enough that weâre running out of options.âÂ
You nod your head, more than just fatigue now weighing on your lids. âIâll see you in the morning. Sleep well.âÂ
ââââ
Itâs strange how you find yourself meandering the opposite way from your bedroom when you reach the top of the stairs. Seeking out a room youâve never once tried to approach without explicit permission beforehand. But the whole night had been strange, and your head is swimming slightly, paddling in the shallow part of a clear river.Â
Your hand lifts, but at the last second, and for no discernible reason, you change your mind, opening the door quietly without knocking.Â
Azriel is sat at his desk, a low light atop the surface, a lampshade tinting the colour a pale yellow. Ink scratches over parchment, and you pause on the threshold, leaning against the doorframe. You could understand the pleasure of spying, if it means seeing people like this.Â
He looks up after a moment, seemingly finished with his task as he sets the paper aside and lowers his quill.Â
âIt was Blue Annis, wasnât it?â You speak before he has a chance to. âThe spider you were telling me about.âÂ
âYes.â Azriel inclines his head. âIt was.â
Something big enough, cruel enough, powerful enough to strike a chord of unease into Azriel. And the container holding her and countless others is fraying?Â
You lean a little more of your weight into the doorframe. âHow long do you think is left before the wards are sparse enough for one of them to slip through?âÂ
âProbably another month,â Azriel replies. His expression doesnât falter as he adds, âone mightâve already managed.âÂ
âWhat do you mean by that?â You ask, fear twisting in your stomach. He must be able to smell it on you. Azriel leans back into his chair, âWeâre checking each cell to make sure. So far everythingâs been where it should, but itâs a slow process. By the time we happen across an empty oneâŠâ He raises a brow as if to say: Who knows how far itâll have gotten?
A shudder spider-walks down your spine. âAre they all as scary as she is? As Blue Annis?âÂ
âYouâll work yourself up into a panic like that,â Azriel tells you, his face remaining serious. âYouâre already imagining the worst possible creature you can think of, arenât you?âÂ
âIs she less scary than Iâm imagining?â You ask dryly, forcing a wry curve of your lips.Â
Azrielâs eyes seem to twinkle, but maybe itâs the light.Â
âWhatâs she like?â You force yourself to ask, voice lowered beneath the night. But Azriel shakes his head, âAsk me another time.âÂ
His lips curve, but the light in his eyes has winked out. âYou donât want her to be the last thing on your mind before night.â
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
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Canât Bring Myself To Hate You â Part 19
Azriel x Third-Oldest-Archeron-Sister!Reader
a/n: so frustrated with tumblrâthis didnât save anything the first time so ultimately I had to spend forty five minutes re-editing everything
warning: a lot of head nodding
word count:Â 7,723
-Part 18- -Part 20-
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
Tentatively, you raise your hand to knock on the door.Â
And pause.Â
Your fingers are trembling faintly, a cool shiver sweeping down the length of your spine, a cold sweat beginning to prickle up from beneath your skin.Â
You knock, lightly.Â
Shadows dip at the handle, bringing the door open.
Hazel eyes glance away from the partially opened window, a cool morning breeze circulating through the room while watery autumn sunlight warms the floorboards. Thereâs a smell of dew in the air, along with something vaguely smokey and fresh, and it nips at your throat. You tug your sleeves a little lower over your glovesâmade to conceal your skin, not keep them warm.Â
âAre youâŠare you free to talk?â You ask, stood hesitantly on the threshold.Â
âSure.â He nods. âHave a seat.âÂ
You give only a small delay, space enough for a breath to pass in between moments, one that would have gone unnoticed by human minds and eyes. Then youâre covering the distance between you, taking a seat in the armchair thatâs been pushed to accommodate longer visits to his bed. You try to take your time in organising yourself in the seat, making sure your skirts are flat and unwrinkled; sat evenly on the chair; split between facing directly forward as the seat would have you, or angling yourself to face him; but itâs all belied with that sense of hurry you get around him that causes your fingers to fumble and shake, for your heart to start a butterfly-flutter in your chest, throat tightening from being in his presence.Â
Your tongue darts out to wet your lips, hands settling in your lap, pinching lightly at the fabric to give yourself something to hold on to. You struggle to look at him, keeping your gaze averted.Â
ââŠhow are you?â You ask.Â
Sheets rustle and you can hear the quiet shift of the wooden beams before he answers. âGood.âÂ
Toes cross in your socks, teeth tugging at the interior of your lip. âHowâŠâ âyou swallow past the shudder in your chestâ âWill you be up again, soon?â You ask, shifting in the chair. Eyes glance to the bedside table, peering at it for the sake of looking somewhere.Â
âA few more days,â he replies, sounding as if heâs uncommitted to the time frame given. A fresh breeze rolls in through the open window, curtains wafting with the wind, and you hold down a shiver, pulling yourself tighter to keep warm. Fresh airâs probably good, right?Â
âHow are you?â He asks.Â
âGood. Good,â you reply, nodding your head gently. âUp and about.âÂ
Another breeze enters, and the curtains swish against the wallpaper, scraping faintly against the vaguely abrasive texture. A book rests on the table, the edges faded yellow and for a second it strikes you how strange it is that there might not be a spell to prevent ageing. Perhaps he prefers the worn edges, though. You can imagine how theyâd rasp against your fingertips. Like thousands of tiny cuts.Â
âFeyre mentioned you were sick a lot, when you first woke up,â you say into your lap.Â
âA bit.â
âBut itâs over now?â You ask.
âItâs over.â
âGood. Good.â You nod your head faintly. âThat'sâ Iâm glad.âÂ
A glass of water is beside his bed, along with a candle thatâs dripped wax over its silver holder, carefully welded vines making up the handle, small flowers flourishing around the rim. Lilies.
A leather-bound notebook rests beside the novel, a pencil set straight atop it, the tip worn down and blunt.Â
âI heard your conversation with Mor,â he says, and your eyes flit away from the table, peering at your lap. You nod.Â
âFrom a few days ago?â He prompts, and you nod again. He sighs. âIt was good that you took initiative. Maybe a bit too soon, but sheâll need some time to process what happened.âÂ
You nod, accepting each slice across your skin. Heâs known her for much longer than he has you, and heâs loved her. The blessed moments when you forget those unreachable likes of his only make the moments youâre reminded more staggeringly painful. Of course heâll be on her side. But would it be so difficult toâŠ
Donât I deserve a little affection?Â
âWhy did youâŠâ you falter over save, disagreeing with its narrative. Lick your lips.
Just a small bit of care?Â
âWhy?â You ask, looking at him. Tone rising at the end.
âŠpleaseâŠ
The bandages are clean across his middle torso, obscuring fractions of the ink on his chest where they curl beneath the wrappings. You know exactly where the wound lies, despite not having had the time to really study it when it happened. Just knowing it sits opposite the tiny scratch over your heart, formed into a scar. So tiny nobody would spot it unless they knew to look.Â
âInstinct, I suppose,â he answers after the quiet passes.Â
âInstinct,â you repeat, a touch faintly. You donât know what youâd been expecting, but that makes enough sense. Maybe youâd at least been wondering if it was something more emotional than that. At least an, I couldnât let you die. But instinct will do. Blind, indifferent instinct.
âHave you spoken with Rhys?â He asks after a pause.Â
âWe spoke in the kitchen a couple of days ago. âŠhe said I should speak with youâŠ?âÂ
âOkay,â he nods, waiting patiently. You blink, unsure where to put your eyes. You donât know what Rhys had wanted you to visit him for. No idea if it was to try and clear up the mess thatâs tangled itself between you and the male on the bed; whether he just wanted you to take the first step in improving something, to clear the air, to get things on the mend?Â
âWould it help if I asked you some questions?â He prompts tentatively.Â
You flush, lips parting slightly as you peer down into your lap, fingers pinching your skirts to keep out their tremble. Youâre notâŠspeaking about what happened; the arrow; the deep darkness thatâs been cloying at your mind for the past few months⊠YearsâŠÂ
But if itâs going to be anyone, itâs going to be him.Â
Your lip is pulled between your teeth, blunt enamel prodding at the full flesh of the interior of your mouth. The idea of speaking about itâŠwhy you aimed the arrow at yourselfâŠa lot of it wraps around him in a way. So if youâre going to share that with anyone⊠Â
Lungs shake when you inhale quietly, but you manage to sit a little straighter, steadying yourself. You have to learn to take the first step.
All you have to do is answer. And be honest.
âYeah.â You nod, swallowing. âOkay.â
âAlright.â He nods. âWe can go slowly, to start off. I would appreciate answers, but if you arenât ready, tell me so and we can move on.âÂ
Your heart thunders in your chest, but you agree, gloved fingers twining together in your lap, legs crossing themselves apprehensively. But slow, and easy breaths. Keeping calm, and steady. Answering as truthfully as you can bear.
âOkay,â he says, âwhat can you do with your magic now?âÂ
You nod a little to yourself, swallowing, ââŠI think, sometimes, I canâŠI mean, I think I can bring it out by myself sometimes now?â He nods encouragingly. ââŠit didnât hurt the last time it came out. I hardly even noticed it, actually, compared with how it was before.âÂ
âAnd when was the last time it came out?âÂ
âOhâŠâ you falter, quieting. âYesterday. With Mor.âÂ
âWith Mor?âÂ
âWe had aâŠan argument, I think,â you answer, wanting to shrink into the floor.
âWhat happened?âÂ
You fumble, there. âCan weâŠcan you ask something else?âÂ
âOkay.â He nods. âI can ask Mor, if that would be easier?â Your lips part, glancing at him in surprise before your eyes flit away again. âIâŠwe just bumped into each other after dinner, and sheâŠshe asked why I went toâŠâ You trail off, shifting uneasily in your seat.Â
âDid you tell her?âÂ
âWe spoke about itâŠyes,â you hedge, peering into your lap.Â
âThatâs great,â he says, voice sounding softer than before, and you look at him hesitantly. âYou should have mentioned that to start with. I can speak with her about it, when she comes round. If you come back tomorrow we can clear up anything left out. Will you be okay with that?âÂ
You nod, unable to do much else as you attempt to digest and process whatâs happening.Â
Please ask.
Hazel eyes glimmer faintly and his mouth softens, as if trying to show heâs proud with you for managing the conversation. âWas that fine for you?â He asks, watching you quietly while thousands of tiny eruptions occur beneath your skin. You manage a nod.Â
He glances at the clock mounted on the dresser pushed against the far wall. âI think Feyre mentioned youâve been seeing Madja around ten, havenât you?â He asks, and again you manage a nod, not really thinking about the occurrences.Â
Please donât leave it here.Â
âSheâs been keeping an eye on me, yes. Making sure everythingâs working right.â Your voice is distant to your ears, feeling as though youâre being pulled back into your skull, watching from somewhere further away.Â
Ask me. Please.
âAh. Have they been okay for you?â He asks, and you nod your head. âFine.âÂ
He nods. âThen I wonât keep you any longer.âÂ
You stare at him through the surreal moment.Â
Show me you care. Even a little bit.Â
But he doesnât, so you stand, watching distantly as your skirts swish over the floor, and you turn to leave, feet carrying you to the door, obeying the dismissal. Heart feeling as though itâs being squeezed. A heavy pressure crushing down on your chest. Itâs only when you reach the threshold that you pause, something making it impossible to leave withoutâŠ
You turn.Â
âIs it a deliberate choice?â You ask, voice shaking, hands curling in your skirts. He looks at you patiently, waiting for you to elaborate. âAre youâ⊠Are you choosing not to ask me why I want to die, or has the thought plainly not crossed your mind?â You try to hold his gaze, but your heart fumbles, and you look away before you can even count to two. A hot wetness drips down your cheek.Â
âI hadnât though youâd want to tell me,â he answers.Â
âWhy wouldnât I?â You ask before you can think. âYou were the only one who was there. Who saw how it happened. Why wouldnât you be perfect to speak to?âÂ
He pauses, but you canât bring yourself to be embarrassed over the vulnerable wording. âI donât think you should make me the person you go to for that kind of solace,â he answers at last. âI donât wish to give you reason to believe me the best choice for that.âÂ
âWho else?â You ask, staring at him. âWho else can I go to?âÂ
âYour sisters will always be there. Iâm sure they want you to go to them. So donât share with me that part of yourself. Theyâre the ones who have been there for you.âÂ
âHow can I expect them to understand? They werenât there.âÂ
âAnd you think that Iâll understand? That I do understand?âÂ
âYes.âÂ
He shakes his head; is the first one to look away. âYou canât expect them to know what you feel if you havenât even tried speaking with them about it. Youâre cutting them off before youâve even given them a chance.â Hurt aches across your chestâyou want to speak with him. Want more than anything to have that shared moment between the both of you.Â
You open your mouth, but he looks at you again, beating you to it. âSpeak with them first,â he says firmly, his features set. âIf you try honestly speaking with them, giving them the chance to look after youâŠand if that doesnât work, if you feel they havenât understood you as you need them to,â he continues, making it impossible for you to look away from him, caught up in the connection. âThen I will speak with you. You may tell me about whatever you like, what youâre reading; how your day was; anything that has taken or caught your interest, be it from the Night Court, the Autumn Court, or anywhere else in our realm. But give them a chance first.âÂ
Your jaw is trembling lightly, a delicate heat simmering in your flesh as a cool sweat slides down your spine, overwhelmed and quietly trying to keep up.Â
Again you open your mouth, but again he speaks before you do. âAnd I know youâll instinctively want to speak with Elain, but you always pick her first. Nesta has been through what you are going through, or at least something similar,â he says, watching you with an expression you can only call imploring. âSpeak with her.âÂ
Youâre too stunned to reply, left staring at him silently.Â
Itâs probably the most youâve heard him say. The most the two of you have spoken so intently without the conversation taking a sharp plummet.Â
You barely manage a nod of your head before you acquiesce, then youâre turning from him, carefully bringing the door to a close, heading for your room while the conversation circles through your mind.Â
ââââ
Slim, pale fingers latch through the delicate ceramic of the teacupâs handle, thin and elegant, easily broken with an application of force, requiring careful handling. Itâs a temptation Feyre resists every time she picks one up, refusing the urge to press her fingers together and snap the thin bone-like curve. How many things had she accidentally shattered after first turning? How many spoons had she inadvertently bent?Â
She supposes it doesnât matter now, but the urge is still there, stronger than usual.Â
The two females are sat in the parlour, a fine silver tray perched between them on a dark-wood table with ornate swirls carved into its edges and swirling up its legs. A few pastries sit untouched on a finely decorated plate, a carafe of cool cream at the edge, three flavours of jam contained to glass pots that fit nicely to the dip of oneâs palm. The sugar pot remains undisturbed upon the tray, its short, golden shovel tucked deep within the sweetened grains, nestled beneath and awaiting use.Â
âWere you aware of it?â Feyre asks, raising the teacup to her lips, basking in the wet heat thatâs rising from the steamy liquid. Across from her, Mor is cupping her own drink, heated and steaming like Feyreâs, idly swirling the thin spoon to stir in the milk.Â
âNo,â Mor answers honestly, gazing down at the swirl of her tea, clasped between her hands. Red nails squeaking faintly across the porcelain.Â
âYou had no right to tell her any of that,â Feyre says quietly, watching her friend from over the rim of her cup, before glancing down, and taking a sip, testing out the heat. Too hot. She takes another sip, feeling the tingling singe of pain as the scalding liquid trickles down.Â
âI know,â Mor agrees, also looking at her tea. âI didnât mean to.âÂ
âDidnât you?âÂ
Blue-grey eyes are watching keenly, a sharp wildness glinting just at their edge, one thatâs been surfacing more and more as of late. Everything seems to have such unfortunate timing. A damn filling up to its maximum capacity, before breaking. Mor meets her High Ladyâs gaze steadily, unwavering. âI didnât.âÂ
The connection remains unfaltering, each not wanting to look away, one for the sake of appearing mistrustful, and the other for the sake of appearing too forgiving.Â
âWhat do you think it is?â Feyre asks at last, and the two mutually avert their eyes.Â
âI donât know,â Mor answers quietly. âIt doesnât feel good, though.âÂ
Feyre sends a sharp glare in Morâs direction, but her red lips purse. âYou felt it, too,â Mor points out.Â
âBriefly.âÂ
âAnd it set you on edge, too.âÂ
âI also only came into contact with magic a few years ago. Donât give me excuses.âÂ
âIâm telling you the truth,â Mor grits out, raising amber eyes from her pale mug. âI hardly noticed it having an affect until you appeared.âÂ
âBecause you were too caught up in all the emotions you wanted to unload onto my sister.â
âIâm not trying to make you pick sides,â Mor says carefully.Â
âGood. Then donât.âÂ
âYou know itâs a tender wound,â she whispers, lowering her mug. âIt shouldnât have come out like it did, but it hurts.â
âYou know what else hurts, Mor?âÂ
The rest of that sentence lies unspoken between them.Â
Feyre knows sheâs being unfair, that she clearly is picking a side. But sheâs speaking as Morâs friend, and also a sister. Not as High Lady.Â
Mor once again raises her eyes to Feyreâs blue-grey set, putting every ounce of sincerity, and truth she can find within herself behind her amber eyes. âI wasnât myself,â Mor whispers, fingers paling from their grip on the cup. âI donât know what happens with her magic, but itâs influential, even on me.âÂ
âYou want me to let this slide, then?â Feyre questions, her jaw set but thereâs an obvious conflict in her eyes. Neither of them are enjoying this fallout.Â
âNo,â Mor concedes, looking away. âMy actions are my own, and I agree I went too far. But you felt it, too. You know what Iâm talking about, Feyre.â The two females share a look. âMadjaâs going to be here to check up on her soon, isnât she?â Mor asks, earnestly.Â
âEvery day, at ten oâclock.âÂ
âAsk her to give her own opinion. What it feels like,â Mor urges. âI know my anger, I know how I hurt, and I donât lose myself like that.âÂ
Feyreâs lips are pursed, her brow pinched. Fatigue lines beneath her eyes, the stress of a newborn unavoidable, even with all the support being offered. Itâs not easy for her. For anyone.Â
Not easy to deal with everything else, either. Not to mention a sister who apparently wants to die, on top of all that.
Thereâs so much to think aboutâŠitâs inevitable a mistake will be made.Â
âIâll mention it to Madja.â Feyre relents, drinking deeply from her tea, savouring the hot liquid on her tongue. âMaybe she can offer some insight to whatâs going on.âÂ
Insight. If only it were available for the mountain pile of other problems plaguing their lives. That might crumble into an avalanche, if they arenât careful.Â
ââââ
âItâs good to see you again,â Madja greets, her round face smiling as she enters your chambers. âHow have you been?âÂ
You manage a reciprocating smile, hands tucking together in your lap as you shift on the bed. âIâm good, for the most part anyway.âÂ
âFor the most part?â She questions, taking a seat, and you toe off your slippers to settle properly against the pillows. âIâŠmy magic flared up a little yesterday,â you admit, glancing at your toughened, flaky skin. âIt didnât hurt like it usually does; I hardly felt it. Though I was a little carried awayâŠâÂ
Madja nods gently. âYes, Feyre mentioned something about that.â You look up at the healer with raised brows. ââŠshe did?âÂ
âShe requested I look into it, if I could; itâs something I would like to discuss with you, before we start with the checkup,â she tells you clearly, that gentle look in her eyes that helps keep you at ease.Â
Your tongue flicks over your lips, but you agree.Â
âYour sister spoke of your magic feeling deathly,â Madja begins. âIâd like to see if there are any abnormalities that appear while it is in useâif you think you can manage that?âÂ
âYouâd like me to⊠You want me to intentionally use it?â You question, a hint of fear creeping into your voice. âI donât knowâŠIâŠâÂ
âIf youâre worried about it getting out of control, or that you might injure me, I will remind you that I am a healer,â she says solemnly. âAnd if you are still concerned, I can tell you that your sister and I agreed it might be better if the High Lord were present, should anything get out of hand. He is available should you wish for that reassurance.âÂ
Something sinks in your chestâyouâd forgotten Madja is their healer, that she is theirs more than she is yours. Sheâs just doing her job.Â
âIâŠI should be able to do it on my own,â you hedge, looking at your palms. Nobody else can see how ugly your skin is. Your sistersâŠMadjaâŠtechnically Azriel too, though he hasnât seen it now that itâs crawled up your armsâŠyou donât want to have that humiliation with anyone else than you must. âIf thatâs okay with you?â You check, looking at her.Â
Madja smiles, nodding her head. âThat is fine by me. Whenever youâre ready.âÂ
Teeth worry the interior of your lip, but you splay your hands out, palms tipped upward as you recall their tingle, gathering what you can remember and bringing it to the tips of your fingers. Thereâs no more than a slight itch beneath your skin.Â
It comes easier to you that it has done before, and you canât help the breath of ease that slips into your lungs. Before it had felt stunted, like it was trying to squeeze a full, fleshy body through a windowpane of jagged glass, slicing itself as it attempted to crawl out. But now⊠âThereâs no painâŠâÂ
You stare down at the faint green glow, the golden shine at the edge of your skin. You could simply push, andâ The light brightens, filling your flesh and shining from your knuckles, hands encompassed in the strong light.Â
Madja opens her hands, fingers splayed as she approaches you gently, before you feel a slight company. Something else joining you. You try to push toward it, in the direction of her magic so she can examine it better, like you do when offering your hands, shifting yourself so she can better access them.Â
Madja nods, and you let the magic recede back into your body, curling itself up into a peaceful rest. âIâm going to check your torso now, please hold still.â Her hands open over your body, palm settling firmly over your rib cage, that tingling warmth sinking into your skin. Her brows narrow. âYouâre going to feel a brief surge of heatâŠâ she murmurs, eyes closed in concentration.Â
Sure enough, thereâs a small spike in temperature, and a slight sting in the aftermath but it fades swiftly enough. Her palms inch over a bit, slowly making their way across your stomach, fingertips still faintly hot with power as she continues with the checkup. You keep yourself as relaxed as possible but your heart is beating faster than usual at the discovery.
âAnother quick surge,â she murmurs, and you nod despite her eyes being closed. You feel a small ball of tension popping along with a careful, targeted burst of heat. You ease a full breath into your lungs.Â
Her brows furrow as she settles her palms over the base of your sternum. âWill you activate your magic again?â She requests, voice faint while she concentrates. You do as she says, unspooling it again, and the heat of her palms intensifies in response to your own. âCan you bring it into your body? Away from your hands?â She asks, and your brows furrow. Youâve never tried to manipulate its centre beforeâŠbut you can try now.Â
Your eyes flutter shut, easing back incrementally into the bed, allowing the power to prickle up your arms, crawling between the bones, wrapping around your shouldersâŠthe two of you recoil at the same time, though you flinch from the sting of pain that splits down your spine; lacerating across your chest; through your lungs, while Madjaâs retreat is from shock. The corners of her mouth are slack. Her eyes dark.Â
âIâm sorry,â you say frantically, trying to sit upright, âI didnât meanâ Are you okay? Did it get you?âÂ
Madja looks at your torso, then at her hands. Then sheâs settling her palms back atop your ribs. âWill you repeat that?âÂ
You pause, looking at her as she gently guides you to lay back in the bed. âMadjaâŠIâm not sureâŠare you okay?âÂ
âIâm very well,â she replies with a smile, voice as soft and smooth as it usually is. Carefully curated to put you at ease. âI saw something that I should examine in more detail, if thatâs possible. Will you repeat it?âÂ
You look at her, lost. Concerned. Helpless. You swallow. âOkayâŠâÂ
Your lids slide shut, and you reach for the power again, feeling as Madjaâs warmth begins seeping into your torso, filtering through your vessel as heat begins rising in a steeper intensity to your surface, as if being called to one place by her magic. Again, you own power sprawls itself across your palms, dragging itself higher, slinking between bone and muscle, threading itself through sinew and cartilage until it reaches your shoulders, andâŠ
âTry and hold it steady,â Madja tells you, the heat from her hands amplifying at the peak, just as you power curls itself to strike down from your shoulders.Â
Your throat shuts, eyes squeezed closed as you attempt to grapple with it, hands balled into fists as perspiration breaks on your brow. Trying to keep it from lashing at your internals, causing that familiar, piercing pain.Â
âI want you to try pushing it back to your hands now,â she instructs, but youâre struggling enough as it is. Barely keeping it contained. You need to breathe.Â
Madja releases her magic over your torso, and the weight of your power increases, your body straining beneath the tension when she removes that blanket that had been between you and this blazing magic. But then both her hands are firmly gripping your own, and you can feel as it filters through you, prying the pain away, dragging it back down into your forearms, then your palms, and eventually your fingertips, until itâs dissipated entirely.Â
You inhale heavily, breathing ragged as you try to calm yourself. âWhatâŠwhat was thatâŠ?âÂ
Madjaâs quiet, thumbs stroking carefully over your knuckles, keeping her magic to a faint pulse so she doesnât upset your skin. âWill you breathe with me?â She asks. âDeep breath inâŠholdâŠone, two, threeâŠslowly exhaleâŠâ She makes you repeat the process thrice before deeming your pulse to be relatively calmed. She offers you the glass of water thatâs always sat by your bed, never draining, and you take a few sips to appease her, then a few more. A couple of small gulps, before handing it back to her.Â
You lick your lips, finding them hot and crisp.Â
She looks at you solemnly. âI would like to ask you a few questions about your magic, if you feel right enough to manage,â she tells you calmly. âI would like you to answer with as much clarity as you can. Itâs imperative youâre truthful and donât hide anything. Are you alright with that?âÂ
You stare at her, bewilderedâwhere has this come from? Is it serious? Are you going to die? Is it going to be painful? Will you know when it happens? Or will you have no warning. Is it happening now? About to?
You inhale sharply, deeply, breaking out of those thoughts. Exhaling heavily, before managing to nod.Â
âHow long have you known youâve had magic?â Madja starts with.Â
ââŠI think maybe two months? I canât remember exactly how long ago it was that I first realised what was happeningâŠâÂ
âPerfect. And can you tell me what made you first realise you had magic?âÂ
âI think it was whenâŠI had an altercation with someone, and felt upset and angry. My hands were glowing.âÂ
âGreat. I believe youâve mentioned a feeling that accompanies your magic?âÂ
âYes. âŠIt used to hurt a lot, but recently hasnât? The past few times, at least. Not while itâs been in my hands, anyway.âÂ
âLovely, youâre doing well,â she smiles. âYou sister mentioned a deathly feeling to those around you, have you ever noticed that?âÂ
âNo. No, not a deathly feeling. I had no idea it felt like that for other people.âÂ
âOkay, can you tell me how it feels for you?âÂ
âItâsâŠit used to be like burning? My fingers and hands would hurt a lot. They would sweat, and I would feel dizzy some nightsâŠI used to get up to drown my hands in water, when it started.âÂ
Madja nods, her brows furrowed faintly as she listens carefullyâbelieving you. Your heart tightens, and you avert your gaze.Â
âAnd all of that has been happening over the past two months or so?â She inquires.Â
âWell, noâŠIâŠâ you pause, trying to grapple with your memory, get it into a coherent, linear form. âIâveâŠI experienced the sweats, and nausea, and dizziness a lot when I firstâŠafter theâŠwhen we came to Prythian,â you answer. Madja nods her head encouragingly, and you wet your lips. âSleeping was difficult, and it lasted for a few months before I could be normal againâŠI think we each had our ownâŠmoments, after the Cauldron.âÂ
âBut you didnât experience any feelings similar to what you now know is your magic?â She asks, offering you the full glass of water, that you sip from again. Hand it back. âNo. Those have only been in the past couple of months.âÂ
Madja pauses in thought, her round face tightened as she thinks, though she doesnât look unkind, or stern. She still looks like Madja. Then she looks up again, her warm brown eyes softened, an intent look on her face. âAnd how have you been feeling?âÂ
âMe? I...â You trail off, unsure how to answer. âIâveâŠbeen reading a lotâŠ?âÂ
She smiles, âthatâs lovely, but I mean how have you been feeling internally?âÂ
Her lips twitch when your brows furrow in question, looking at her strangely. âYouâve been telling me about your physical senses, tell me about how youâve been feeling these past few months. I can imagine it might be scary to go through this?âÂ
âOhâŠI supposeâŠâÂ
âYou sound unsure,â Madja speculates, âdo you not feel fear is an accurate descriptor?âÂ
âI mean, Iâve been scared when it happens, naturally. It hurts, and I donât know what causes it, or how long it will last, so I suppose in those moments it is scary.â
âBut the rest of the time?â Madja prompts. âI understand you were staying up in the House of Wind, by yourself for the most part. Do you like being alone?âÂ
âI guess I do,â you hedge, âI donâtâŠthere wasnât really anywhere else to go. And I liked having my own space up there, so I think it worked well. Plus I could access the libraries, so I enjoyed that part a lot.âÂ
âYouâre a big reader,â she smiles, nodding her head. âWhat do you like to read?âÂ
âMostly whatever I can find, but I like the books that tell me more about the world. Thereâs a lot of information I never would have gotten access to as a human, like the different climates in each of the courts, some small accounts of what itâs like overseas, where the food we eat comes from too which I find particularly intriguing. The plants and flowers are engaging tooâyou can see correlations between the flora and fauna distinct to each court and the characteristics they each exhibit, which I find fascinating.âÂ
Madjaâs smile broadens as she nods her head, eyes twinkling. âI remember first learning about their benefits, how different plants have certain properties too. Often plants endemic to the Dawn Court are the most potent, and itâs where we import a lot of the ingredients for medicine from.âÂ
âYes! I remember reading about that! But that sometimes the riversides and shores struggle with overgrowth, and measures are made to make sure seeds donât spread too far. I remember reading too about the animals thereâthat a lot of them seem more jovial, compared to their relations in other courts.âÂ
Madjaâs smiling so wide you can see her teeth, one of her canines is slightly twisted inward, and the teeth on her lower jaw are a little crooked in places. You canât see anything wrong with themâtheyâre just hers.Â
âAnd who else do you tell all of this?â She asks, âI imagine you would have read a lot over the course of your time here so far, who do you share all of it with?âÂ
âI donâtâŠreally,â you say, trailing off. âI donât mind though. I love reading.âÂ
âElain enjoys botany too, doesnât she?âÂ
âYes, but to the extent that she can have, I suppose. She has a garden that she keeps alive, and she bakes, too. Theyâre similar interests but they ultimately lead in different directions.âÂ
âSo you donât speak with anyone about what you enjoy?â Madja asks, and you blink, fumbling a little.Â
âIâŠI choose not to, so itâs fine,â you assure. âI like reading. And I speak with Azriel aboutâŠâ You wet your lips, voice fading. âI mean when I was up in the House of WindâŠwe spoke a lot more.âÂ
Madjaâs watching you quietly, listening to what you have to say. It feels like sheâs expecting you to continue, and you donât want it to be quiet, for the conversation to halt its flow, so you think of something to say. âWe spoke a lot moreâŠback thenâŠâÂ
âHas something changed?â She asks.Â
You look down into your lap, feeling a little far off. Distant. Not entirely present.Â
âI like his companyâŠâ you say vaguely, âbut heâs busy, and hardworking. âŠand I donât think heâŠâ Your lips curl at the edges like dried leaves tend to beneath the sun, then they seal together. âI think he finds me a bother, at times.âÂ
Madjaâs quiet, but you canât bring yourself to continue. Silence falls.Â
âCan you tell me how long youâve been feeling that way?â She asks gently, allowing pause for you to recollect yourself, should you wish. âI think a few months,â you murmur.Â
âAnd can you tell me why you think he finds you bothersome?â Madja asks.Â
Your lips part by a fraction, a small gap opening between the centre of your upper and lower lip, then youâre closing them again. âIâŠI make bad choices, quite a lot,â you answer quietly. âAnd IâŠI donât make it easy to be around.â
âI think your company is lovely,â Madja says softly, palm resettling over your hand, drawing your attention back outward. âWhat makes you think youâre difficult to be around?âÂ
You open your mouth to give your answer, but your throat tightens sharply, lips forcefully being dragged down in the corners, and you crumple back into the bed. âI am,â you insist, eyes growing hot, then squeezing shut when they blur. âI donât know howâŠI donât know how to be normal around him. I feel like every time we speak I make it so obviousâŠand he doesnât like itâŠand I justâŠâÂ
You pull your hands away from hers to try and hide your face, to push the tears away as they fall heavily. âI wish I hadnât tried to tell him what IâŠhow I felt for him. I never should haveâŠâ
âDoes how youâre feeling right now have any reason to do with why I was tasked with looking after you?â Madja asks, voice softened to a tender effect, and you could weep from how believable she sounds.Â
âHe finds me a nuisance,â you whisper, hot tears dripping down your lowered face, letting them roll down your cheeks to collect at the underside of your jaw, before falling heavily into the crisp linen of the sheets. âIâm always causing him trouble of some kind. All of them.â
Heat wells behind your eyes, wishing you could go back and reorganise events so things wouldnât have ended up like this. So you wouldnât have caused him so much trouble, and given him reason to further distrust you. At least before he trusted you enough to give reliable recollections of your sister. If only you could go back to then.Â
You could at least have a use.Â
Madjaâs thumb gently swipes across your knuckles, magic softly seeping from her fingertips. âYouâre not a nuisance,â she replies solemnly. âYou are not causing them trouble.â
You stare at her with a down-tilted mouth, and tears overflow from your lashes, dripping down your cheeks as your brows bunch, heart aching in your chest as small sobs break through your lungs. âI am,â you cry, head hanging as you try to inhale, but your body takes control of itself when itâs sad, and itâs not giving you chance to breathe. Madja, I am.
âIs this how youâve been feeling these past few months?â She murmurs, stroking your palm, a hand at your shoulder as you curl your knees up to your chest, pulling them from beneath the duvet. You nod.Â
âI thought it might be something like this,â Madja sighs, making you look up questioningly, pushing at the tears so you can better see her. She takes both your hands in her own, and looks into your eyes. âThereâs no quick fix to matters of the heart. The way youâre feeling right now, the way youâve felt in the past, and the lows youâll experience in the futureâI can do very little right now to give ends to those. But whatâs going on with your magic, within your bodyâthat we can work on. We can start somewhere familiar, and take steps from there. How does that sound?âÂ
But despite her good words, you shake your head. âI canât, Madja,â you whisper. âI donât want to.âÂ
âSometimes you have to,â she says, squeezing your hands. âDo you believe I have any reason to lie to you?âÂ
You shake your head.Â
âThen have faith that Iâm telling you the truth: you are not troubling them.â
You watch her, a pained look in your eyes. âI canât believe that.âÂ
âWhy not?â
âBecause, Madja,â you cry. âIt doesnât matter what you say, or what anyone else says. I am convinced. I know it like you know a bone will break under pressure, or that adding sugar to a tea will sweeten it. How I feel is not temporary, or fleeting, it is ceaseless and pervasive; itâs not something you can simply disprove like thatâplease donât try to.â
âBut in the same way I know a bone will snap with too much force, I know you are not as bad as you think you are.â
âPlease, Madja,â you whisper. âIf you canât help me, do me the courtesy of believing me.â
The healer is silent, gripping your hands with her own warm palms, squeezing them gently but firm. âI do believe you,â she says with conviction. âI believe you because I have seen what you are going through, and I know how youâre feeling is as real as a broken bone, or sweetened tea. But the bone will heal, and the tea will coolâcan we both agree on that?âÂ
You cast your head down, eyes falling to your lap. âI chose poor analogies.âÂ
Madja thumbs across your knuckles. You can hear the almost sad smile in her voice. âThen Iâll return tomorrow and you can tell me what youâve come up with.â
âââ
Outside, the wind bites at your throat, stinging at your nostrils with each inhale, burning on the way out.Â
You clasp the scarf tighter around your neck, shoving your hands under your arms as you make the walk down the streets, careful to watch for ice on the cobbles. Winter is a while off yet, but the nights are becoming frigid enough for you to keep an eye out, particularly as the sun hasnât yet gotten to her point in the sky where she could thaw any frost out.Â
Before midday you find blues and purples lurking in the shadows, greens and yellows splashing where the sun spills across the exterior of coloured houses, shop windows shining viciously where the light is hitting just at the right angle to temporarily blind and disorientate. Though an upside of Prythian is the magic thatâs infused into the land, sustaining special plants that thrive in this environment: frost lilies that bloom in the coldest months, taking their water from the dew that freezes on their petals over night; moon drops that have a pale, hanging outer shell of short petals that shrivel up and die if faced with an overdose of pure sunlight; the pale pink sprawl of the lengthened, stretching leaves that creep up from the earth between houses and cobble, settling narrow, capillary-like veins spreading across whatever they can cling onto.Â
The long walk is enjoyable, despite the intrusive and unpleasant cold. Enough to look at, study, and recognise, to preoccupy your mind from the chill nipping at your skin, even beneath the gloves. By the time you reach the house however, your body is freer flowing, less stiff and disjointed though your extremities remain a little on the numb side, fingertips tingling faintly, and you have to remember to keep wiggling your toes in your shoes. But youâre warm enough youâll be happy to discard the scarf once youâre insideâif sheâs inside.Â
Looking where the shadows lie, you would think itâs an hour or so from midday, so Nesta should be in⊠As far as you know for certain, training is the only activity that might be an obstacle, but that should surely be done by now.
Their house is a relatively new build, but finished enough for them to have moved into soon after their mating ceremony. While remaining naturally a little barren from its short-lived existence, thereâre obvious touches already emerging in the patterns and style theyâve opted for, selecting things that catch their eye, taking time to build a home rather than to rush it in a year.Â
A window of stained glass sits in a half-circle atop the wooden door, the panels that make up the imagery mostly clear. Dimples ripple in the crystal clear frames, while the neat cuts of coloured glass are smooth and flat, showing off the sprawling petals of a tuft of milk flowersâyou realise with vague surprise milk flowers are endemic to the Night Court, but perhaps more interestingly are mostly found in Illyria. Exclusively found, rather. Theyâre rare, and symbols of endurance, due to the unforgiving and brutal environment they live in, remaining a small beauty amongst the barren rock of mountain. Compared to the wealth of information available on other plants, thereâs little recorded about milk flowers, likely due to their habitat up in the Illyrian Steppes.Â
You wonder if itâs a subtle way to hold onto Cassianâs history, without brutalising their home with architecture particular to the Illyrians: exhibiting traits expressed as sturdy and practicalâan antithesis of that aspiration caught in the elegance of the stained glass.Â
Maybe thatâs a bit of Nestaâs humour bleeding through.Â
You land three knocks to their door, starting with a hard strike to the wood with your knuckles then a sharp decrease in force when pain bleeds through your carpals, the final knock hardly louder than a soft tap, all but giving out entirely. You cradle your hands beneath your arms, regretting the bout of recklessness.Â
No noise comes from inside, so youâre startled when the door opens, sharp hazel eyes peering at you from within the relative darkness, watching for a second before the door opens wider and a broad smile breaks across his face. âWell arenât you far from home,â Cassian chuckles, shoulder keeping the entrance open, âwhat are you doing all the way out here? On a mission?âÂ
You swallow, managing a smile, understanding heâs joking but too drained to be believably reciprocative. âSomewhat,â you reply, trying to sound humorous, âis Nesta in, too?âÂ
âI should have known youâd be here to visit her,â Cassian remarks, sighing into the frame before gesturing for you to come inside. âCome in, Iâll go pull her from her reading.âÂ
You give an appreciative nod before following in behind him, catching the door as it closes with an oomf, surprised by its heavy weight, knocking you back a step. You gingerly step inside, crouching down to untie the laces of your boots, freeing your socked feet as you push the shoes to the rack before again standing, peering about the entrance hall. The walls are pale, having not yet been painted with whatever colour or wallpaper theyâll eventually settle on. From around the corner you can make out the faint pad of footfalls, and Nesta appears a few seconds later, sharp eyes finding you instantly. She greets you. Asks you why you came.Â
You fumble. How does one begin a conversation like this?
âIâŠhavenât visited in a while,â you end up telling her. âI thought I might come byâif you arenât busy? Itâs not urgent,â you quickly add.
âIâve nothing planned,â she replies, glancing to where the light is falling on the floor. âItâs a little early for lunch, but I suppose we can begin.âÂ
âOh, itâs fine,â you assure, âI donât think itâll take long.â
âWhat will take long?âÂ
âNothing,â you affix, blinking once.Â
Nesta hums, then turns in the hallway. âThen we can go to the sitting room. Itâs still lacking some furniture here and there, just so you know.â Â
You nod, forgetting she canât see you with your head turned, then follow after her as she makes her way down the hallway and to the right, entering through an empty doorway that leads to the living room. She takes a seat in a chair with a dipped pillow, guessing it was where sheâd been before you interrupted. You take a seat adjacent.Â
Ataraxia lays upon the table like a discarded shopping list, except much bigger, and much deadlier.Â
âSo,â Nesta muses, âwhat did you want to speak with me about?âÂ
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
general taglist: @myheartfollower @tcris2020 @mali22 @slut4acotar @sfhsgrad-blog @needylilgal022 @hannzoaks @hnyclover @skyesayshi @nyotamalfoy @decomposing-writer @soph1644 @lilah-asteria @nighttimemoonlover
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Canât Bring Myself To Hate you â Part 21
Azriel x Third-Oldest-Archeron-Sibling!Reader
a/n: please forgive spelling errors, Iâm still coming out of my illness. Iâd also wanted to write more but I suppose itâll help to have a solid starting point for the next chapter! I canât believe itâs been a year since the first part of cbmthy went up.
warnings: likely spelling errors; Deliah; readerâs miserable life
word count: 5,738
-Part 20- -Part 22-
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
âI know itâs difficult, but I urge you to tell your family as soon as you are able.â
Madjaâs round, soft brown eyes are imploring as she looks into you, and you dip your head.
âI will,â you mumble, frowning into your lap. âI just want time to process it. Besides, you donât know that for sureâitâs just a theory.â
âA theory that I wouldnât tell you unless I thought there was a high or definite chance of it happening,â Madja counters, passing you the glass of water. You drink reluctantly. âI know itâs a lot, and itâs sudden⊠How are you coping?â
You set the glass down when youâve had enough. âSilver lining, right?â
ââââ
Madjaâs earlier question has been echoing through the chambers of your mind all morning. Nagging for an answer until youâve no choice but to pause, and think. A bench sits overlooking the Sidra, and you take it, choosing to seat yourself for the duration of the thoughts.
How are you coping?
Because you werenât a while ago. Thatâs what got Azriel bedridden, although he seems to be on the mend. So, how are you coping now? You can barely feel the gloves around your hands, even when your curl them to scrape the fabric against your skin. Thereâs nothing more than a slight pressure.
To have no solution for the pain, that youâre permanently damaged⊠Permanently imperfect, even as a fae. You could have had something. Could have been like Nesta, wielding her Cauldron-Made magic. How stupid of you.
ââââ
His door looms before you, the windows empty and the front garden still. Taking a deep breath you raise your hand to a fist, delivering three muffled knocks to the wood panelling, gloves softening the thuds. You take a step back, and wait. Glance about the small entry, the vines crawling up either side the door, the glass lantern hanging above your head.
The garden is dying, life slowly receding, pulling back in on itself to protect from the descent of winter. Another two weeks and the transition will be clear. Already frost is often crisping leaves and slicking cobbles, ice gleaming over the lip of windowsills and thick rolls of fog floating up from he sidra, basking the city streets in a deep cloud-cover. Sometimes itâs so thick you canât tell where the edge of the canal lies, and you make a point to offer a generous margin of error. Youâre not sure youâd have the will to fight the terrible shock of icy water or the wit to navigate, blind, through the thick mists back to a lowered platform.
Youâll stick behind the guard rails, for now.
Metal scrapes, a latch clicks, the door creaks open. A heavy, golden eye peers out from the relative darkness.
You push a smile to your mouth, weighted, subdued, tentative. âHi, Bas.â
Golden eyes pause, taking you in from an almost passive standing point. His lips donât shift like youâd become accustomed to, no half-amused smile curving his familiar mouth and no sweep of warmth across his face. Rather, his lips tighten, as if regretting having made acquaintance with a creature with needle sharp teeth that hook into skin and cling to flesh as it feeds. Youâll stay out of his life if he wants you gone.
You can manage to give him six months of space.
Bas sighs, his broad chest briefly deflating as his shoulders slope and the ice lessens to frost. The door opens wider and an ember of mild warmth begins to glow faintly somewhere in your chest. You take care not to show the visible reliefâhe hasnât forgiven you, heâs just opening up for conversation. Maybe now heâll tell you to stay away, maybe now heâll tell you not to disappear again, maybe now heâll tell you youâre forgiven, maybe now heâll forgive you but he doesnât want around.
You shake off the thoughts like a sparrow shaking off raindrops from her narrow, nimble wings, fluttering her feathers to rid the dampness from her warm body.
Inside the fire is lit, crackling in the hearth. Dried rosemary and herbs still hang in bunches from the thick wooden beams of the ceiling, patchwork quilts still hang over the back of plush armchairs, small, plump pillows still tucked into either end of the sofa and you sit yourself near one arm, knowing Bas usually takes the armchair to the left of the fireplace. Not directly in the way of the radiating heat but close enough to be warmed by the rolling waves as they spill out into the low-ceilinged living room. You meet his golden eyes. âHowâve you been?â
âGood.â Bas nods his head. âBeen doing some thinking. Sure you have too, yeah?â He takes his seat but doesnât lean back into the cushioning. Instead he braces his forearms on his knees, feet shoulder-width apart and the fire reflects in his strong, golden eyes.
You lick your lips, placing your gloved hands in your lap. âIâm sorry for using you like that.â
Bas cocks a brow. âJust jumping straight into it, huh. No preamble.â
âI understand if youâre angry with me. If youâre upset with me. I feel that youâve been there for me a lotâŠmore that I can say. Through a lot of stuff I havenât been brave enough to talk about, too.â Your eyes are hot on their surface, burning from the heat of the crackling fire but you blink away the heat, swallowing. âI was in a bad space, when I left. And I wasnât thinking right.â
Bas snorts. âYou werenât thinking at all.â
He pushes off from his knees, settling himself at last back into the armchair. Long legs stretch out over the thick, patterned rug, arms crossing behind his head and legs crossing at the ankle.
âIâm sorry, Bas.â You tell him, firmly. Looking into his fierce gaze. Heâs always been more straightforward. Youâve managed to be more straightforward with him, too, and itâs been a perk of yourâŠfriendship. âWill you⊠Can you forgive me?â
Silence hangs in the air, his features unmoving, eyes holding that fierce glint in their golden irises. Seconds tick by and neither of you say anything. The room grows hotter, denser, and you shift in your seat. Itâs sweltering. Itâs been a minute.
Your eyes lower and you nod your head. âOkay.â
You rise from your seat, straightening out your skirts, unsure whether your cheeks are burning from humiliation or the fire. âThank you for hearing me out,â you tell him, nodding your head once before finding your own way out.
âYou arenât going to ask for my side?â Bas calls from his seat, bringing you to a halt. You turn, looking at the outline of the back of his head, the muscles in his arms are tense and his fingers are pushing into his skin. You keep to the entryway, unsure whether heâs being sincere or whether heâs waiting for an argument. Youâve never known him to be manipulative, but heâs always been ready for a brawl in the past. Bas turns his head, and piercing golden eyes bore into you.
âWhatâs your side?â You ask, softly.
Bas snorts and makes a sharp gesture with his hand, telling you to sit. Your lips purse but you follow, returning to the seat but this time discarding an outer layer leaving you in a top and skirts. Youâre here for a conversationânot a brief exchange where nothingâs said.
âDid you even listen to me, last time you were here?â Bas asks. âWhere did you go? Who did you meet? Why did you think it was a good idea to justââ He bites off the ending, his frustration and anger bleeding out. His arms brace themselves back on his knees, body hunching over as his brows narrow, exhaling in a harsh hurry. âTalk to me. You got to talk to me instead of just vomiting up a bland fuckinâ apology like that. âIâm sorry for using you like thatâ? âI was in a bad placeâ?â He stares at you, hard. âAre you kidding me?â
âI- What do you want me to say, Bas? Iâm sorry for upsetting you. Iâm sorry for making you angry. Iâm sorry for not telling you where I was going-â
ââIâm sorry for making you feel like shit, Bas'. âIâm sorry for not only leaving and not telling you anything, but also then coming back and not telling you anything either, Basâ. âIâm sorry for creating something private and safe and then letting everyone in to tear it to shreds, Basâ.â Golden eyes gleam with heat, boring into you. His voice is hoarse when he says, âThose would have been a good fuckinâ start.â
You lick your lips, trying to buy yourself time to comprehend the words heâs spat out. Beats pass, but you have no idea what to say. Youâre sorry. You regret the way things happened. They wonât unfold like that again. It all feels so insufficient when his eyes are so fierce on their surface but the tears are making them glassy. âYou were my fuckinâ treasure,â he rasps. âAnd you fuckin' walked out without a word.â
âBas Iâm sorry,â you whisper. Heat prickles your eyes, âI just needed to get out.â
Bas laughs a wet laugh, âFuck off with that.â His thumb and middle finger span across his eyes, bracing his temples. âYou know I stopped seeing other people?â
Silence hangs in the air. Blood cooling in your veins.
Bas laughs. âStopped drinking after you showed up, stopped sleeping around as much, started getting to bed on time. Started talking with ma again. Started to get better after pa-â He chokes off, a wet droplet breaking on the rug far below. He rubs his eyes shaking his head. Golden eyes gleam in the firelight. âYou were good,â he whispers, âa good thing.â
Sorry doesnât even begin to cover it. You know what itâs like to feel you arenât good enough to be trusted. You know how it hurts.
You stand quietly from the sofa, gathering your cloak and scarf. Pause when you pass himâhe doesnât look up, keeping his head cast down, staring at the rug. Your palm settles over his shoulder and you squeeze once, firmly. Iâm sorry.
Youâre in the doorway, the salty citrusy coastal air mixing with the warm rosemary of his interior when he calls for you once more.
âWeâll be moving to Winter soon,â Bas says through his raw throat. He swallows, hard jaw working. âMa thinks itâll be good for usâto visit paâs Court. Reconnect with the magic there.â In one movement that exudes far too much boyish embarrassment for you to bear, he dries his eyes, rolling his shoulders and standing straighter. âThought Iâd let you know.â
âYouâre leaving?â You can hardly hear your voice. Bas shrugs but the edges of the gesture are too sharp to be natural. âGuess Night Court isnât working for us.â He licks his lips. Nods his head. âI wish you well, from here.â
ââââ
The sunlight is watery, offering an edge of warmth but youâre in a daze. Youâre not even sure you know where you are in the city. Just started walking and didnât stop, feet moving mindlessly over the cobbles, carrying you through streets and alleys, down roads and narrow tracks between shops. With the smell of food youâd guess youâre near a restaurant zone, butâŠ
Heâs moving. All the way south to the Winter Court.
Will you be able to visit? Will he even want you to visit? You can admit youâre not the most well-versed on Court politics, nor the most caught up on current affairs, but it doesnât take much to know the Night Court isnât a Prythian favourite after the fifty years the High Queen ruled with Rhysand at her side.
You look around Velaris, the street youâre on. Did it look like this during her reign? Before? Did it change during the attack that took so many lives, Basâ father among them?
Inside your chest your heart is flittering too fast, fluttering against your ribcage, pulsing in your throat sporadically. Where are you? None of it looks familiar. A breeze blows and you catch the scent of the Sidra, somewhat salty, somewhat briny, but crisp. Dampness dredged up from an open-mouthed estuary far from here. Itâs only a few streets away, and a trail of cold relief slithers down your spine as you recognise the canal. If you follow the water upstream youâll probably find your way back to a spot you knowâyouâve been heading mostly downhill, after all.
ââââ
Ritaâs
Thatâs a name you recognise. Youâre nearby, back in a familiar area at least. Although being lost had been a temporary relief from the tempest tipping and turning inside of your, raging emotion crashing on your banks and youâre unsure what to do with all of it. Even having lost a lot of feeling in your hands you can tell theyâre numb. More numb than usual anyway, and the cold is spreading to the rest of your body. You seem to remember the others having spoken about it in a way to suggest its busiest hours would be after dark but you wonder if they might be open during middayâjust a familiar place to step into and warm up for a bit.
Well, itâs not exactly familiar. Come to think of it, youâve only really heard Mor speak of it as someone whoâs been inside. It didnât seem to be a frequent spot for the others.
You squeeze your eyes shut and pray she isnât inside.
As soon as you step foot within the establishment you feel the warmth on your face, washing over the frozen tip of your nose and the nipped-at skin of your cheeks, lips probably chapped and dry from the cold. The lights are onâstrung up around the ceiling, hanging from wall to wall so they look like hundreds of yellow-bottomed fireflies. Paintings hang from the walls, stacked closely together and rimmed in what looks like gold, carefully crafted to carve into swirls at the corners. Pictures of flowers and bouquets, horses and riders with neat hair and long legs, dappled shade on a pair of shoes. Parted lips painted a dusty rose.
There are a few fae about the placeâthere seems to be a part of the large interior sectioned off for games and socialising, pool tables set up with a piano in the corner and a violin laying on its top, a guitar against the piano stool. Plush settees are dotted about the place, mauve and maroon leather with a healthy sheen beneath the glowing lights.
You make your way over to a counter that looks like a bar, nervously approaching the female behind the stand. âIâm sorryâis it fine for me to stay inside for a little bit? I got lost and-â But sheâs already nodding understandingly and youâre struck dumb by her beauty. Dark brown hair that snarls about her round face, healthy and rich, full lips stretching into a welcoming smile as she clops to your side of the bar, ushering you over to take a seat on one of the sofas.
âWhat can I get you? Hot water? Tea? Whiskey?â Her eyes are full and dark, round and pretty as they watch you. âYouâre such a small thing! What were you doing out in the cold all on your own?â
âI- sorry. I donât have any money on me at the moment⊠Iâm after some warmth is all. Sorry,â you say, holding your hands up and shaking them gently as though metaphorically pushing her away. But her smile doesnât falter for a second, leaning her weight to one hip and folding her arms over her slim chest, âAnd I asked what can I get you? Youâre half-frozen, I should dip you in candle wax!â
âOh, I-â You swallow thickly. âThen, could I have some tea? If itâs not a bother?â
âStay right there and donât wander,â she smiles, nodding her head, âIâll be back in a moment. Hang tight and donât freeze.â Then sheâs clopping away, heeled feet clicking over the polished wooden floors, thuds muffling when she passes over a rug.
You blink away your surprise, adjusting yourself to Ritaâs interior. Itâs nice: warm and welcoming. You lay your hand in your lap, peering at the dark green fabric of your gloves, self-consciously fiddling with the fingers. Maybe if they become frost-bitten theyâll turn stiff and fall off. At least you wouldnât have to deal with their ugliness anymore, but itâd still be all up your arms.
Itâs not long before the server is returning, a pinkish ceramic mug cupped in her palm, taking care not to spill anything as she passes it over to you. âCareful not to burn your tongue, itâs piping hot,â she warns with a smile, âunless youâre frozen stiff. Then drink away!â
You manage a grateful smile, murmuring thank-you after thank-you until sheâs trotted back to her place behind the counter, a new couple of fae having also come in from the cold. You wait impatiently for it to cool, gently blowing on it from time to time but itâs difficult to hold through your gloves and you have to be careful not to spill any on yourself, or worse, any on the lovely rugs. Raising the mug to your lips, you take a small sip but itâs still scalding. How did she even make a cup of tea this hot? Youâve waited for it to cool.
Sighing to yourself, you shift on the sofa, making to lean back against the cushioning then thinking better of it when you remember your layers. It would be nice to remove them, but you wonât be stopping for longâjust waiting to warm up. Until youâre certain blood has returned to your fingers and toes. You try the tea again but only succeed in scorching your upper lip. Youâre so preoccupied with willing your tea to cool that you fail to notice the fae approaching from the far end of the room.
A body fills the space beside you and youâre pulled from your thoughts. The femaleâs lips are a bright slash of blood red, white teeth glittering inside her mouth as she offers a smile. You give a polite smile in return, thinking nothing of it as you return to gently blowing on the steaming liquid.
âYouâre new hereâŠâ
You blink, then turn back to the female. Her eyes are so dark theyâre almost black. Not a suctioning void of darkness, but more like a peaceful midnight or experiencing a restful sleep. Theyâre enlivening, not draining. âYesâŠI heard someone speaking about this place so when I recognised it I thought I might come in to warm up,â you reply, shifting in the seat so youâre facing her a little more.
Black silk trousers cover her lower half, a sheer, silky band hugging her slim waist before flaring into wide, sweeping hips. On her top is a sleeveless, rouge, lace-covered shirt that hugs her full breasts, exposing a sharp but surprisingly deep V of moon-pale skin. Around her collar bones sit pretty pearls, matching the ones pinned to her ears, and you wonder if sheâs the kind whoâs always so finely dressed or whether youâve accidentally stumbled in during a special occasion. Blood red nails delicately clasp a stout, crystal glassful of amber liquid and from the smell of it you can guess the contents.
âYouâll warm up faster if you let the heat touch your skin,â she muses, reclining into the far arm of the seat, her crossed legs pointing in your general direction. A stray curl of rich, chestnut hair escapes over her shoulder, flaring outward in a neat curve. âOh, I donât think Iâll be here for longâŠâ you laugh, gently shifting the mug in your hands.
âWhy not?â The female muses, swirling her glass in deft fingers. âWe wonât be getting busy until at least six; itâs not even three yet.â She sips from her glass slowly, savouring the flavour. A pink tongue swipes at her lips, collecting the remaining taste. âYouâre welcome to stay as long as you like. Itâs what weâre here for.â
âIâm sorryâyou work here?â
âIâm the owner.â
Your brows raise. âYouâre Rita?â
The woman laughs through her lips, eyes twinkling faintly. âNo. Rita was a friend.â She winks as she says it, like itâs some funny secret sheâs decided to share between you. âAnd weâre all friends here, so you donât have to worry about a thing. Stay as long as you like.â
âThank you.â You flush at her warmth. How welcoming she is.
âWho told you about Ritaâs?â The female asks, drawing you again from thought. You pause, unsure how to label your relationship with Mor. Instead you simply settle for giving her name. âMor,â you answer, shifting in your seat before offering an unsure smile, âsheâs aâŠfriend.â
The female nods like sheâs understanding part of a larger puzzle. You suppose it makes sense thoughâyouâve gotten the impression Mor is somewhat a regular, of course the owner would be familiar with her. Anxiety begins to crawl up your spine, bone by bone, piece by piece. What if she knows who you areâwhat youâve done to upset Mor. But instead the femaleâs eyes twinkle, sparked by something.
âA friend of Morriganâs,â she drawls, elegantly settling deeper into the cushioning, finishing off the knuckleâs-depth of her whiskey, knocking it back like itâs nothing. âWell then, you can call me Deliah.â
ââââ
It wasnât until the clock had struck five that youâd realised how long youâd been speaking with her. Sheâs a master of conversation, and you were swiftly swept up and away, almost forgetting your tea entirely, warmed beneath her attentive gaze. When youâd finally gotten up to leave, sheâd wrapped you in a warm embrace, like youâd been friends for much longer than a few hours, and had pressed a departing kiss to your neck before youâd wrapped yourself in a scarf and headed back out into the much colder outdoors.
But still, the icy winds bite at your throat and nip at your cheeks, and you hug your cloak tighter to your body.
ââââ
Night has fallen by the time you reach the River House, carefully hanging your cloak upon one of the iron hooks and removing your shoes. A surge of voices sound from your leftâcoming from the living room with windows overlooking the front lawnâand you quickly slip past into the kitchen searching for something to eat before tiptoeing up the stair to bed.
You donât want to touch what Bas had told youâthat heâs leaving. What if you hadnât visited? What if you had put it off? What if he had decided not to tell you? What ultimately persuaded him to let you know? After all, heâd only mentioned it when youâd been leavingâŠperhaps he hadnât intended to tell you, but something good in him had known the kind of emptiness youâd feel if you went to him one day to find the house packed up and empty? With no trace of him to be found?
The thought alone has a pit opening up in your stomach, eyes pressing together hard to keep tears at bay. He wouldnât have done something like that, surely. Had you hurt him so badly?
For someone you had thought close to leave so abruptly without any noticeâŠno reasons, no goodbyeâŠjust gone. How many methods of torture the mind could create with that. How the unknowing would surely swallow you whole. Regret feeding off every second, wishing to have a second chance.
Guilt weighs in your stomach.
âYouâre back.â
You snap back to reality, ice flooding your veins as you spot Mor stood the other side of the kitchen counter, poised to pop open another bottle of wine. Your throat closes up but you nod, walking further into the roomâit would too childish and obvious to exit as soon as youâd seen her. Her caramel eyes drop back to the cork, skewering the nail through the stopped and twisting. âLooking for something?â
âJust a bite to eat,â you manage, eyeing an apple in the fruit basket. Buttered bread with something on top would have been nice, but an apple will be great, too. Cool, and crisp. Hopefully not too tart.
âThereâs food next door,â Mor tells you, neither of you really looking at the other, and you pluck the apple from the basket. âOlives, bread, cheese, grapes, wine.â She lifts the bottle, gesturing to the second one she has on the table beside her. âProbably apple slices and raisins too-â
Silence beats between you, and then fabric is rustling. You look up to find her almost upon you.
You jump when her hands rip the scarf from your shoulders, staring wide-eyed inâŠshock?
âMor?â You ask, slightly defensively as you take a step back. âWhat-â
She grips your arms tight, pain flickering up through your flesh and your stomach clenches. âStay away from her,â Mor hisses, her nails digging in through the fabric of your gloves. A low moan of discomfort escapes your mouth and her eyes again widen, inhaling sharply as she drops your arms. Mor recovers quickly, a mask sliding into place thatâs cold and icy, not even a fragment of the previous hurt youâd seen to be found. âI donât know how you met her, how you ran into her, and I donât care. Just stay away from her.â
Youâre breathing heavily, a light sweat on your skin but the light painâs vanished as quick as it appeared, leaving you feeling cold and tingly all over. Flesh once again fading to numbness. âI donâtâŠWho?â
A small beauty mirror materialises out of thin air and she flips it open, showing the dark red imprint on your throat, a stamp of a womanâs lips. Deliahâs lipstick must have been pressed into your skin. A flush of regret rises up from your stomach and you slap your palm over the skin, hoping to conceal the blazing proof that youâd visited Ritaâs. Sheâs never claimed it as her space, but itâs Morâs domain.
âIâm sorry,â you splutter, trying to explain. âI was just cold, and I got lost, I didnât mean to intrude, I swear I wonât go there again, I just needed somewhere to-â
âI donât care where you go,â Mor hisses, a tissue appearing out of thin air, tipping your jaw to one side. âStay in Ritaâs all day if you like it. But donât get involved with her. Does she know you know me?â
You nod your head, shame warming your cheeks. Mor sighs, rubbing harshly at your neck to remove the stain. It doesnât take intelligence to tell sheâs frustrated.
After a while Mor pulls away, the tissue a dark rouge colour, blood dried and faded to black. âIâll talk to her. Tell her to stay away from you.â She turns, tossing the tissue in the bin. She shoots you a hard look over her shoulder, âDonât go near her. Do you understand?â
You nod again.
Mor sighs, and you can hear her lips purse. âIâm serious. Sheâs a bloodsucker.â
âI wonât go near her,â you say, reaching for the apple and shifting it between you palms. âI promise I wonât this time.â
Silence hangs in the air, and you think you feel the tension disperse. She nods, once. âI believe you.â
Your lips press together, and you peer at the apple, turning it around in your hand to shift your awareness from the weight of Morâs gaze. At last it lessens, and you look up to see her walking away, heading out of the kitchen and probably for the living room, where it sounds like the others are. She pauses on the threshold. Looks over her shoulder. âYou can join these ones too you know. Itâs not just the dinners people spend time together.â
You look at one another quietly, but before you can reply sheâs vanished off into the hallway, the voices rising a few seconds later when she reaches the living room.
You can join these ones too, you know.
The waxy red of the apple shines beneath the faelights.
Itâs not just the dinners people spend time together.
ââââ
You pause in the doorway. One foot in the room with all of them, the other out in the hallway, already poised to depart. You feel it as attention openly shifts to you, not coming in, but not leaving either. For the first time, youâre openly wanting of their focus.
Your skin prickles as you feel the room quiet, but youâve already taken the first step which you know from having heard so many people say is the hardest. Itâs a lie. You know from experience itâs never the first step thatâs the most difficult, but the one you have to make in the present. The present is always the worst.
You meet the blue-grey eyes of your youngest sister, Nyx held to her front, Rhysand at her side. âWill you sit down, for this?â
Feyre stiffens, and you can feel the room itself grow stagnant. The air that had previously been alive and bubbling growing colder. Even the warm lighting, the fae-lights and the candles seem to have dulled. A nervous laugh rattles her shoulders, âI donât think Iâve ever seen you look so serious.â Your features remain solemn, and the little mirth she had left in her eyes winks out. Feyre settles on the arm of one of the big, cushy armchairs, Rhysand sliding in beside her.
You swallow thickly, fierce, lionlike eyes passing through your head. Your head bows. âMadja believes she knows whatâs wrong with me.â You clear your throat, and correct yourself, âWith my magic.â
Silence hangs in the air, and you have to force yourself to continue, fingers leafing together. âIt is a little serious,â you say, glancing briefly to Feyre with a tired, guilty smile, âso Iâll try to be as concise as possible.â Feyre nods her head, and you last a small breath before starting.
You lift your chin to dress the room.
âI only found out I had magic about two months ago. It caused me a lot of pain, and still does when I try to use it, though not as much as those initial attempts.â Your gloved fingers wring together. âAfter some poor experiences, the side-effects of my magic became apparent. You might have noticed Iâve been wearing gloves a lot latelyâitâs not a new fashion craze.â A half-smile appears on Elainâs mouth and you could kiss her cheek for it. âRather, it began to damage my body physically, externally. My hands became dry, andâŠthere were some other things Iâll leave out, but there was obviously something wrong with them.â
You try to keep your voice steady, try to keep your hands from shaking as you pinch one tip of a finger and begin pulling the glove from your skin. The patchy, discoloured flesh of your arm appears, scabbed and flaky, skin ashen where itâs begun to peel. You remove the other, and fold them over your hands, clasped together at your front.
âAfter IâŠAfter the House Of Wind happened, the dryness spread further to my shoulders. Iâve lost almost all sense of touch in my hands, and most of my arms are numb, but they still hurt a lot if I knock into something.â Are you taking too long? Is this stupid? You try to imagine finding Basâ house empty. âMadjaâs been very attentive, an absolute blessing, and sheâs figured that my magic wasnât existing externally, because it was festering internally.â You pause, lips trembling, but swallow past the lump in your throat. Your voice is hoarse when you add, âFor two years.â
The room itself shiftsâFeyre sitting straighter; Nesta leaning forward, Cassian squeezing her hand tighter; even Morâs shifted in her corner, no longer slouching against the wall; only Elain is frozen still.
âWhat does that mean?â Feyre asks, her voice like a finger dragging through sun-softened butter.
âMadja says she canât reverse the damage; whatâs happened to me. That two years is too long for her to even attempt to undo.â
âSoâŠwhat?â Feyreâs voice is quiet, softer than youâve ever heard it. âItâs going to keep spreading? Thereâs no way to remove the pain?â
âKind of.â You nod, shifting on your feet. You canât help wanting to look into a hazel set of eyes in the far corner of the room. You wonder what heâs making of this big speech. Whether itâs all stuff he already knows, and heâs waiting for it to be over already. Old news.
âMadja says she canât erase the pain. Itâs always going to be there because itâs been able to sink too deep.â
Feyreâs hand is covering her mouth; Nestaâs expression is focussed but her knuckles are white where sheâs gripping Cassianâs hand; Elainâs eyes are wide, and her skin is sickly pale.
You bite your lip, shifting once again in the doorway. Shifting to stand just over the threshold, teetering on the edge of the living room and the dark, empty corridor.
âSheâs given me about six months to live.â
If you didnât know better, youâd think someone, somewhere, had plucked the final string of the harp and frozen time. Itâs unnervingâbeing in a room filled with living statues.
You almost flinch when Mor pushes off from the wall. Itâs not a sudden movement by any means, if anything itâs more subdued than youâve ever seen her, but with a swift look around the room, locking gazes with four pairs of eyes, she takes her drink with her and makes to pass you, exiting the room. Cassian glances at Nesta, squeezing her hand tight before standing; Rhysand remains still, his and the High Ladyâs eyes glazing before heâs pushing a kiss to her temple, scooping up Nyx and following after Azriel and Amren.
You almost crumble now itâs only you and your sisters.
Itâs too much for you to bear.
Youâd thought you were okay with your silver lining.
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
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Canât Bring Myself To Hate You â Part 17
Azriel x Third-Oldest-Archeron-Sibling!Reader
a/n:Â does anyone mind the slightly longer chapters? I feel like I keep accidentally adding scenes in and Iâm not sure if itâs too much? Anyway, regardless of length, I hope you enjoy! đ§Ąđ
word count: 8,024
-Part 16- -Part 18-
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
âWas that necessary, Mor?âÂ
Neatly groomed brows narrow over hard amber eyes, stood at the edge of the room, still cast in shadow before walking to be stood closer to the bed thatâs been pushed so itâs beside the open window.Â
âStay out of it, Az,â Mor murmurs, arms folded over her chest, eyes cast downwards. âYou should be focusing on getting better.âÂ
Azriel is quiet for a bit, his gaze weighing on her but she makes no move to look at him, a hint of anguish in her normally bright expression. He sighs, shifting against the pillows as he glances out the window, inclining his head a little as a light breeze washes over him, sending silky strands of hair fluttering up from his brow.Â
âYou know she didnât do it to hurt you,â he says, watching as the clouds shift in composition in the sky, small dots flying in the distance as they arc and dip with the winds. Hazel eyes flick back across the room, but Morâs head is still lowered, her expression resentful. âYou know you were being cruel.âÂ
âAnd youâre in a position to criticise me?â Mor replies quietly, hard amber piercing into him. âYouâre the reason this became such a mess. You should have said something. Thereâs no way you couldnât have noticed.âÂ
âI made a mistake,â he concedes reluctantly, holding her gaze.Â
âYou made more than a mistake, Az. Now weâre all hurting because youââ
âMor,â Azriel interrupts. She stiffens but doesnât yield, that look of reproach returning to her expression. âYou canât lash out at us whenever you hurt,â he says thickly, still watching her. Silence stretches between them, centuries worth of history pulled taut in the quiet.Â
âWhat does Rhys think?â Mor diverts, successfully switching subjects. Azriel sighs, leaning back into the pillow, âabout which part?â Morâs brows narrow a little, âall of it, I suppose.â Azrielâs jaw works, glancing briefly out the window again to peer up into the sky, the winds calling to him and his wings move subtly at his back, repositioning themselves against the large stack of cushions placed to prop him up.Â
âHeâs furious that it got this far,â he replies, features carefully neutral as he answers the question. Amber eyes observe, offered insight through those years of friendship that others might struggle to pick outâthe guilt he feels for failing. Not just her, or Mor, but Rhys and Feyre. For inadvertently allowing a situation to unfold where his brother would be forced to remember those monthsâŠyears of grief after his family was slaughtered. After his sister was murdered. The whole situation is dredging up unwelcome memories, for all of them. They canât let another one be lost.Â
âHe wants to know how Eris even got to her in the first place,â Azriel admits, glancing warily at Mor to gauge her reaction. âYou donât know?â She asks, pushing past the tightness in her throat at the mere mention. But the Shadowsinger shakes his head. âThere wasnât really time to ask,â he supplies quietly. She wasnât really even in the right mindset to be asked.Â
âWhat about Cassian?â Mor queries, but Azriel shakes his head.Â
âYou know I wonât tell you.â Because to know Cassianâs thoughts on the matter would likely be to know Nestaâs, and that isnât the kind of emotional intimacy any of them would be comfortable with. Itâs strange how emotions intermingle like that, how swiftly things can complicate themselves when new figures are added to the equation.Â
A beat passes, then Morâs shifting on her feet. âYou know, there was a time when we shared everything between us. Wasnât that easier?â She asks neutrally.Â
âMor,â Azriel warns lowly, causing Morâs upper lit to curl slightly.Â
âDonât take that tone with me, Az,â she mutters, resting her full attention on the injured male. âDonât act like youâre completely blameless.âÂ
âAssigning blame wonât fix anything,â he replies shortly, hazel eyes losing a little of their softness. âIâm sure that narrative suits you well,â Mor counters sharply. âI think youâre glad that I said those things to her so that you have a chance to redeem yourself by condemning me. Youâre the one who started this whole mess, soââ
âMor.â
âShut up, Az,â Mor hisses, warmth vanishing from her face, eyes hardening as shields rise. âDonât you dare try and twist what happened. You made mistake after mistake because you were too busy chasing Elain, and too busy ignoring what you didnât want to acknowledge by hiding behind your work instead. At least I had a damn reason. What was yours?âÂ
Azriel gives nothing away, his expression cold and blank.Â
âI tried to help her, I reached out my hand and offered her a chance. And she repaid that by going to Eris,â Mor hisses, unable to help the stark pain that bleeds into her fury. âShe could have come to any of us. Itâs more than we ever had, and yet she ignored it. Then tries to pretend it away? Iâm not immune to that. If she canât even be bothered to care about my pain why should I give a damn about hers?â Mor breathes, eyes feeling hot as the words gush out. âIt is nothing compared to what we endured.âÂ
ââââ
You manage a small smile as Madja enters your room, Elain closing the door behind her as she takes a seat at your bedside.Â
âHow are you feeling this morning?â Madja asks as she settles in the chair provided for these visits, a kind look on her face that you know you should be grateful for, but itâs difficult to summon anything when you know she canât do anything. All this is, is documentation. An observation to see what happens to you. Because itâs undeniable something is happening.Â
You swallow thickly, but nod your head. âGood, for the most part,â you answer, truthfully. âIâm still feeling generally fatigued, but I wouldnât say itâs particularly interfering with my day? Iâve had some pains in my stomach and back though, but I think theyâre justâŠyou knowâŠâ Madja raises her brows in question, silently asking you to continue. Heat rises beneath your skin and you avert your gaze, hands wringing together beneath the duvet.Â
âWould it be more helpful if it were just the two of you?â Elain suggests carefully, and teeth push into your lower lip. Then you give a small dip of your head, too embarrassed to look her in the eye. But she doesnât seem to mind, telling youâll she be a few rooms over, and will return once the examination is done. Madja looks patiently at you, a kind expression on her features that soothes you slightly. Sheâs a healer, surely sheâll have seen and heard worseâŠÂ
You clear your throat, peering into your lap to avoid looking at her. âI think they might just beâŠâ you trail off, glancing at her then gesturing vaguely to your stomach, hand hovering over your abdomen. Thereâs nothing impatient in her smile as she speaks, âyour cycle?â You snap your eyes away, a flush of mortification rising to your skin, shoulders tightening as you stare into your lap but force yourself to nod.Â
âItâs perfectly fine to speak about that with me,â Madja says gently, âitâs a normal occurrence with females, thereâs no need to be embarrassed about your own body. Thereâs nothing wrong with it.â You nod again, just to try and appease her, but in truth youâre desperate to escape the subject. âIâm sorry, I justâ I find it hard to believe you arenâtâŠuncomfortable, discussing such topics.âÂ
âWell, Iâve been a healer for most of my centuries in this realm,â she says calmly, and you can imagine that kind expression on her features, peaceful and infinitely patient. âIâve worked during both wars, not to mention helping with your sisterâs pregnancy. Thereâs very little that could ever cause me discomfort in regards to how the body works, so you donât have to concern yourself.âÂ
You shift again in the bed, but manage to nod your head. Madja seems to be satisfied with the response, smile broadening, and a slight bit of tension is relieved from your shoulders, breath easing into your lungs. âSo youâve been experiencing some abdominal and back pain?â She questions, and you nod again, feeling a little useless. âCan you describe it to me?â She asks, and you swallow thickly. âIâŠitâs like a dull ache in my back, near the base of my spine but a bit to the right. Then itâs quite sharp in myâŠabdomen. It doesnât happen often, but I thought I should mention itâŠâÂ
âI donât think you should be experiencing any pain at all,â Madja replies. âAnd may I ask when youâre next due for your cycle?â You look away briefly before again meeting her gazeânothing to be embarrassed about, sheâd assured. âIn about three months,â you answer quietly.Â
Madja nods in approval, and you begin to relax back into the pillows. âAnd have you noticed any bleeding at all?â She asks gently, and you freeze in the bed.Â
âNo,â you answer hurriedly, without thinking, âno. Not fromâ No.âÂ
âAlright,â she smiles calmingly, âanywhere else? You have some scabs on your hands, isnât that right?â Your throat rolls but you nod, releasing your tight grip on your nightgown, bringing yourself to raise them from beneath the duvet so she can examine them. âAnd these bumps,â she inquires, âcan you tell me how long those have been there for?â You blink, trying to rememberâtheyâve been there for months it feels like, but it canât have been that long, can it? How long has it been since you first told Azriel?
âI thinkâŠâ you hesitate, unsure of yourself, âmaybe a month? Two? They donât hurt, but they do sometimesâŠbleed.âÂ
âOkay, would you mind if I had a look at them?â She requests, and you silently offer her your hands for her to take. That tingling warmth feathers beneath your skin, as if the flesh has fallen asleep, and you watch curiously as she probes along your knuckles, examining your palms, grazing your wrists. âAnd may I look at the area you experienced the pain in?â She asks, and you stiffen but nod. Itâll be the same thing as last time, you hope, and that wasnât too bad since she had managed to work through the fabric of your night gown. The duvet is rolled back and you sit straighter in the cushions so sheâll have better access.Â
âCan you point out where exactly you were feeling the pain?â She requests, and you gesture to a horizontal strip of skin below your middle. âIt was the sharpest here,â you answer, âbut I sometimes get a small ache further to the left or right.â Madja doesnât reply, her expression showing concentration as she moves her hands across your stomach, gently pushing at the parts youâd mentioned as that warmth settles pleasantly into you. You canât help as your attention drifts to your own hands, how flaky and lumpy they are in comparison to her tender set. Itâs so dry, small scabs where blood had leaked fromâŠyou wish at least the bleeding didnât happen. So many pairs of gloves you have to wash repeatedly to make sure there arenât any stains.Â
Itâs become such a normal part of your life it had slipped your mind that pain shouldnât be a normal part of it, nor the bleeding.Â
The bleedingâŠÂ
A cold feeling washes over you, like youâve had ice tipped down your spine as you remember the scare youâd experienced in the Autumn Court.Â
If Madja notices how youâve frozen, she doesnât mention it, but a slow feeling of slippery dread unspools in your stomach as you recall the blood youâd noticed when visiting the washroom one morning. Youâd thought it was your cycleâthe slight pains had added up and the night sweats had made senseâbut then nothing had happened and youâd forgotten about that blood.Â
Nausea churns in your stomach, a district feeling over lightheadedness overcoming you and you force the calm breaths into your lungsâŠdeep, and steady. You choke on saliva and your palm flies over your mouth as you twist your head to the side, coughing.Â
Madja glances up at you, brows slightly pulled together from concentration. âHave some waterâare you remembering to keep yourself hydrated throughout the day?â She asks, handing you the glass that rests by your bedside table. âFor the most part,â you answer after taking a few sips. Madja pauses briefly, a look of consideration passing behind her eyes before speaking, âwould you mind if I checked your lungs? Itâs likely nothing, but might as well be sure since Iâm here, donât you agree?âÂ
You blink at her, looking slightly perplexed but you suppose thereâs no harm in it, so you nod your confirmation, handing her back the glass before settling into the cushion. That familiar warmth tingles in your skin as she tentatively lays her fingers just below your collar bones before pressing down a little firmer and making her way from one side to the other. Her features remain set in an expression of concentration and she returns to the tops of your sternum before going a little lower. You tense, but understand sheâs performing a medical examination.Â
âCan you sit upright a little more? Iâd like to search a little lower, just by your ribs,â she adds, seeing your startled expression. You nod, understanding, sitting more upright independent of the cushions. âNow if you can raise your arm?â She requests gently and again you follow, raising your left arm so she has access to the side of your ribs. The tingling sensation returns and you think you can feel as it searches through your body, though it doesnât feel invasive like you had expected.Â
Madjaâs fingers pause, before sheâs pressing noticeably firmer and you have to steady yourself so she does upset your balance. The sensation becomes more acute, able to feel as the tingling feeling concentrates near the middle left of your lower ribcage. When she retracts her hands she looks a little confused.Â
âIs everything okay?â You ask nervously, uneasy by her expression.Â
âThereâs what feels like a small lump connected to the tissue of your left lung,â Madja explains calmly, and you nod your head. âIf youâll let me, Iâd like to try and purge it. I havenât seen it in any other patients, and thereâs no reason for it to be thereâit isnât a natural part of your body. Would that be okay?âÂ
You nod your headâif sheâs found something wrong with you, that sounds promisingâŠ? And if she thinks she canâŠpurge it, that seems even better.Â
âAlright, if you lean back into the bed to keep your upper body relaxed that would be perfect,â she guides and you settle down. âOkay, Iâm going to apply my magic to the growth. You might feel a sudden heat or a ticklish sensation but if you can avoid coughing that would be helpful,â she explains, and tension rises in your chest as she again puts her hands against the side of your ribcage. Â
Sure enough, a sharp heat fills a spot on your lung, and you press your lips together to prevent from coughing or inhaling suddenly despite the abrupt tickle thatâs manifested in your throat, an intense itchiness in your lungsâŠan itchiness growing in the tips of your fingersâŠgrowing hotterâŠand hotterâŠbeginning to burn, andâŠÂ
Madja pulls away, a gentle smile on her face, âall done. You did well not to start coughing in the middle there, it helped make the process much easier for me.âÂ
âSo, itâs gone?â You ask perplexedly, hand gingerly rising to press into your ribs, testing as you inhale. Sure enough, the tickling feeling has gone, and so has the tightness in your throat, suddenly feeling much clearer. Like when youâd had a cold as a human, feeling the distinct relief once you were able to breathe freely again, having to become reliant on inhaling via your mouth rather than nose. One never appreciates how seamlessly their body works until itâs compromised.
Madja smiles, âitâs gone.âÂ
A hesitant smile makes its way across your mouth, peering down to where you hand is settled.Â
Maybe it isnât as bad as youâd been telling yourself.Â
ââââ
Golden eyes gleam from within the home, the scent of rosemary so familiar emotion swells in your chest.Â
âHey, Bas.âÂ
He pauses briefly, and you hesitate, waiting to see what heâll do. Then heâs shifting in the doorway, opening it wider cautiously as he take you in, taking up most of the entryway. âYouâre backâŠâ he greets, but the note of caution in his voice has you hesitating again. But you push a small smile to your mouth, remembering yourself. âIâm back,â you agree, nodding your head slightly, âhow⊠How have you been? Everything okay?âÂ
Bas is silent, simply watching you with an indistinguishable look and you resist the urge to move beneath his attention, instead waiting it out, wondering what heâs thinking.Â
âWhere were you?â He asks, catching you a little off-guard with the question. You hadnât really considered he might question where you went. âI was⊠I visited another Court. Temporarily. Just to see more of the world, I guessâŠâ You peer up at himâhe isnât moving from the doorway, remaining blocking it instead of inviting you in like youâd anticipated. Things feel strange, to how you remember them. âIs everythingâŠokay?â You hedge.Â
âIs everything okay?â He repeats softly, as if to himself. His golden eyes regain awareness, pupils tightening as they look at you. âWhy donât you tell me?âÂ
Itâs enough to have you faltering, temporary confidence stumbling as you peer up at him questioningly. âIâŠwhat do you mean?â You ask, unsure what heâs asking after.Â
âI mean, why did you disappear like that, huh? You justâ went. Without telling me where, without telling anyone where, apparently. Do you know how dangerous Prythian can be? Especially for someone like you, and you just decided to leave? What were you thinking?â Bas asks, his patience steadily slipping as he speaks, thoughts pouring from his lips. âSomeone like me?â You repeat faintly, pinning him with a look, âwhatâs that supposed to mean?âÂ
âYouâre smart. Not strong,â he answers succinctly, but bluntly, âyou should know what sort of creatures are out there.âÂ
âThat didnât seem to bother you the night I left,â you counter, a note of disbelief in your voice.Â
âBecause youâre smart,â he repeats as if itâs obvious. âYouâre smart, so I assumed youâd make a smart choice. Not just go out into Prythian on a whim. You donât even know how to fight. Do you understand what could have happened to you?âÂ
âBas, Iâm fine,â you reassure, trying to understand his temper is coming from a place of concern. âIâŠI went to meet someone. I didnât just go out into the wilderness, you donât need to worry,â you explain, knowing itâs best to keep the details vague.Â
âYou know your family came to visit, right?â He asks, again catching you off guard as you stare at him. âNo,â you answer, quietly, âI didnât. Whoâ⊠What happenedâŠ?â Bas shifts in the doorway, settling to lean against the threshold of the entrance, and a small grain of relief passes through you at the distinctly familiar gesture. âAzriel visited first, and I told him he wouldnât get anything out of me because I had decided to trust that you knew what you were doing. And you know what he told me?â Bas asks harshly, shaking his head and not waiting for reply. âHe told me I was interfering with Court affairs, that withholding information might result in the High Lord personally questioning me. And I still didnât tell him anything.âÂ
âIâŠIâm sorry, Bas,â you manage, guilt at last beginning to rise in your chest, head lowering slightly. âIâmâŠthank you. For trusting me.âÂ
âIâm not done,â Bas says quietly, but firmly, causing you to glance up at him questioningly. âHe came back, that time with Mor.â Thereâs no way for you to conceal the pain and conflict that passes through your expression. Even if you could, even if you knew how to hide your emotions like that, you have the distinct impression he knows you well enough heâd be able to see through it, and the thought is surprisingly uncomfortable for you. Knowing someone so well they could see through your liesâŠthat kind of vulnerabilityâŠÂ
âShe was the one who convinced me to admit I had no idea where youâd gone. She was clearly worried, and I had to look at her and tell her how you hadnât trusted me enough to say where youâd be going, but that I had decided to trust you enough that Iâd been fine not knowing.â His voice has lowered, becoming rougher, and your shoulder slope with shame. âCan you understand that? To realise youâve been deceived by someone you cared for like that? To admit that to people who had been smart enough to know better?âÂ
âIâm sorry,â you murmur, raising your eyes to meet his, gloved hands wringing together. âI didnât mean for it to seem like I didnât trust you. I do.âÂ
âThen where were you?âÂ
You raise your head to look at him, then. Heart sinking becauseâyou canât tell him. Youâre in enough trouble as it is, with Rhys, with Mor, with Azriel. Probably with your sisters too, they just havenât shown it yet. You canât cause more problems. More problems for them is more consequences for you, and you have a long list of things to make up for. Dauntingly long. Almost unbearably⊠âBasâŠIâŠâÂ
âCanât tell me?â He finishes, his tone telling you itâs exactly what he anticipated.Â
âItâs not that I donât trust you,â you say softly, holding his gaze imploringly. âYou know I trust you. That Iâve told you things I could neverâ⊠That I could never tell anyone elseâŠâÂ
âThen why canât you tell me, huh?â He asks, a touch more gentle, sounding as helpless as you feel.Â
âJustâŠI need you toâŠâ
âTrust you?â He scoffs, shoulders jerking in an unnaturally sharp movement.Â
âYouâd made it sound like they didnât care about you,â he says quietly, and you look at him wearily. âI thought you were on your own, you know.â Like me, is what he leaves out, but you can hear it clear enough. âI have my ma, and you have your sister, but beyond that I thought you had no one but me.â And I had no one but youâagain, you can hear those words heâs not saying. âThat we were going to be there for each other because we understood what it was like. But they care for you.â A strange sense of shame settles heavily on your shoulders, and your head lowers, but you donât look away.Â
âIt was obvious,â he murmurs, his brows curving almost imperceptibly, a kernel of pain passing behind sharp golden eyes. He sighs, shaking his head, pushing up from the doorframe and you watch silently as he begins to draw the conversation to a close. âI wonât begrudge you of that. Iâm glad you have people. Family. But IâŠâ You lied.Â
âI donâtââ You say abruptly, rushing into speech, hurting without thought, just needing to explain yourself, even if it opens up something you arenât ready for. âThey donât,â you breathe. âIâ⊠It might look like they do, you might know they do. Maybe they really, actually do.â You stare up at him, feeling that emptiness lethargically blink itself awake, mouth yawning open in preparation to begin swallowing you down again. Pulling you into that inescapable state of overwhelming darkness. âBut I canât believe it,â you whisper, feeling as your eyes fill with wetness, and something hot spills down your cheek, another following when you blink to clear it away. âI canâtâŠâ you breathe, trailing off. âIt doesnât matter what happens, Bas. I justââŠI canât believe it.âÂ
âAnd I should believe you?â He asks quietly.Â
You stare at him helplessly. Thereâs nothing else you can say. Youâve tried to convince him, youâve been as honest as you can physically tolerate, and itâŠit just isnât enough. You arenât enough.Â
Your heart doesnât plummet like youâve learned to anticipate. Instead a vague feeling of disappointment calmly soothes your skin, glum pessimism setting in as the high emotions fade into watery greys. Desaturated, and bearable.Â
âI donât know what else to say,â you tell him quietly.Â
âJust tell me the truth,â Bas asks, golden eyes showing his hurt. Another case of betrayal youâve brought upon yourself.Â
Would it be unfair to ask his forgiveness?Â
âIâm sorry,â you give as your answer. Thereâs nothing else you can say.Â
Basâ eyes dull slightly, and you understand how youâve let him down.Â
His jaw works, looking away briefly before returning his attention to you. âIâll see you later.âÂ
ââââ
The wind breezes through you as you walk along the cobbles, the sun long since dipped down beneath the horizon, leaving a chill in the air that manages to sink through the silky orange material of your scarf.Â
You canât bring yourself to try and tackle the emotional conflict with Bas yet. Youâre drained, and tired from the past monthsâmaybe longerâand you donât want to put yourself through more self-inflicted sadness. If you really need to release some bottled up emotion, you know youâll have no choice in escaping it. If you have the option to keep yourself from hurt, youâll take it. At least for the moment.Â
Bas had said heâd see you laterâyou have to trust him. As a friend, as someone whoâs been there for you, and you for himâyou have to believe youâll be able to fix this. Thereâs good in the world, Feyre had told you, you just have to trust that youâll find it. Even if itâs seemingly alluded you until now, in the moments youâve needed it most.Â
A silhouette seems familiar in your peripherals, a distinctly fae sense recognising the shape, orâŠsomething, of the figure, and you glance over.Â
Cassian raises his hand in greeting, his expression clear and untroubled as he walks over to where youâve paused, wings kept neatly tucked at his back to keep them from bumping into things. âYou know, Iâve been told youâre supposed to be staying in bed,â he greets in his deep voice, tone similar to one someone would use when catching another doing something they arenât supposed to, but considering joining in anyway. Itâs very him, in a way.Â
âIâŠâ you begin, about to mention Bas, but then decide otherwise. âIâm feeling okay today. I thought a walk might be nice. Fresh airâs supposed to be good for you, right?â You ask lightly, volume low. Cassianâs quiet for a beat, unnervingly sharp hazel eyes weighing into you calmly. Then he sighs, shrugging his shoulders a little before shifting on his feet, making to turn around, to lead you somewhere. âI suppose I canât fault you for keeping things to yourself.â
You watch as he turns, obviously expecting you to go with him, but the moment caught you off guard. ââŠkeeping things to myselfâŠ?â You hedge, managing to get your feet moving to walk a little behind him, not particularly wanting to go with him but knowing it would be unreasonable to turn away. Especially after all the trouble youâve causedâlike having such poor control of yourâ
You halt abruptly, staring up to the cliff-face that contains the House of Wind. Sure enough, even from so far below, you can spot the large break in the rock-face, able to pick out what had been your bedroom, and the sides of the rooms either side of it. You feel as the blood drains from your face, shock icing your body as youâre unable to look awayâyou caused that. âSomething wrong?â Cassian asks, calling back to you a few steps away.Â
Words have left you, unable to figure out what to say, mind struggling to wrap around all of it. Another thing to make up for, and that oneâs pretty big, tooâŠyour shoulders slope as you stare at the hole blown out of the rock. The damage youâve probably caused the interior too⊠How much will it take to repair that? Isnât the building itself old? Even to fae standards?Â
How can you ever make up for something like that?Â
Cassian walks back over to you when you donât reply, pausing at your side, hands on his hips as he follows the direction of your gaze. âPretty impressive,â he says conversationally, âyouâve got a way to go before you can manage an entire building, though.â Then he pats you lightly on the shoulder, wing curving round your body to get your legs moving as youâre pulled away, view with the House broken.Â
âIââŠâ you choke out, âdidâŠdid I do that?â You manage hoarsely, looking up at him as your feet start moving one in front of the other, subconsciously wary of bumping into his wing. âSure did. Blew right through that noise cancelling ward Feyre put up,â Cassian answers, keeping his attention ahead as he leads you through the city streets, people automatically making way for the familiar face. âI told her sheâd been slacking off in practising her magic,â he murmurs under his breath, but you arenât paying much attention, too overwhelmed with debt to really engage.Â
âIâm sorry,â you breathe, feet hesitating as they move over the cobbles before stopping firmly, shoulders bunched as you glance up at him. âIâm soâ I didnât mean to make such a messâ I justâ I just didnâtâ I didnât know what to do. And I thought he was going toââ
âItâs okay,â Cassian says firmly, standing in front of you so there are less places to look away to. âItâs Rhysâ anyway. You donât need to apologise to me.âÂ
âButâŠit was given to you,â you hedge, staring up at himâand if itâs still Rhysâ, thatâs so much worse. So, so much damage.Â
âWould you feel better if someone was angry with you?â He asks seriously after a moment of pause. You freeze, startled by the question. ââŠwhat?âÂ
âWould it make it easier?â He repeats, watching you solemnly, âif we acted how youâre waiting for us to?âÂ
You stare at him, struggling to pull together a reply, startled from the strange clarity of his questions. Seconds pass and all you can do is look at him, too afraid to answerânot of him, butâŠsomething.Â
Cassian breaks the connection, glancing away, half turning his body to face the direction youâd been walking. âMaybe that question was too much,â he says, almost to himself. He sighs, eyes closing briefly, before heâs glancing at you, wing opening as if to guide you along again. âCome on,â he says, voice having lost that solemnity, back to the familiar timbre, âweâll be late.âÂ
âLate?â You manage as you somehow get your body to fall into step beside him. âWhatâŠwhere are we going?âÂ
He looks at you strangely, as if the answerâs obvious. âDinner, of course,â he replies, returning his attention to the streets ahead, sure enough taking the path that will lead directly back to the River House. âTheyâll start without us if we arenât there on time.âÂ
âDinner?â You ask, feeling lightheaded. Too many new components being dropped on you for you to entirely keep yourself together. You swallow thickly, fumbling for excuses because you canât do a dinner as you areânot after yesterday. âIâm not feeling too great, actually,â you say hoarsely, âbesides, if I eat this late I donât know if Iâll be able to keep itâŠâ you trail off, realising he probably doesnât want to hear about you throwing up meals every now and again.Â
âMadjaâs told us you need to keep your strength up,â Cassian replies, and youâre unsure if heâs intentionally chosen a counter-argument youâd have trouble escaping or whether it was inadvertent. âEat what you canâitâs important during recovery, even if it might feel insignificant, or pointless.â You glance at him again, that strange feeling creeping into your chest at his wordingâis it some kind of intuition thatâs leading him to say these things?Â
ââŠWill everyone be there?â You ask quietly, trying to calm yourself as the River House comes into view, not far away now. âAz will probably want to eat in his room,â Cassian answers neutrally after a temporary pause, âbut everyone else will. Youâll be sitting besides Elain.â There was no reason to add that on.Â
You canât manage it, but you canât figure a way to escape. Thereâs no out you can findâsaying you arenât hungry, or youâre tired wonât get you out of it, heâs already said to just eat what you can meaning you have to have at least a bite or two. But the idea of sitting with all of them, when everything is still so unclearâŠYou canât.Â
The River House looms before you, and you can swear you feel a cold sweat appear on your back, hands turning unnaturally clammy, so accustomed to the skin being dry and flaky that to feel the dampness on your palms has slippery discomfort roiling in your stomach.Â
Cassian walks up the steps, hand settling on the door, and you watch in motion slower than usual as he begins to turn the handle. Â
A slight breeze blows, pulling strands of your hair forward, as if trying to push you into the House, and Cassian pauses, door opened only a few inches. Beats pass, but you keep utterly still, both wanting the moment to end but also desiring nothing more than to run from the oncoming meal.Â
Strangely observant hazel eyes flick over a broad shoulder, meeting your own set and you tense, hairs rising at the nape of your neck, getting that same feeling youâd had when speaking with Rhys, that he can somehow see through you too clearly, like youâre too easy to read. Fearing what heâll be able to find before youâve had the chance to discover it. Watching you fumble in the dark for something that was so easy to locate. Struggling with a problem embarrassingly simple to decipher.Â
âYou donât need to be scared,â he says, holding your gaze. Are you really that easy to see through? But then he continues, and the surrounding world warps a little.Â
âYou have a right to be at that table as much as any of us,â he says, those keen hazel eyes remaining steady. âKeep that in mind, when you go in.âÂ
Then the doorâs opening wider, and the smell of a hot meal wafts out into the night. You trail behind him, latch clicking at your back, following as he makes his way to the dining room. He had believed the words heâd told you, that you were deserving of a seat at their table. You canât really bring yourself to believe it, but his sincerity has shaken your ground a little.Â
His expression shifts when he rounds a corner, brows rising as his lips part in a broad smile, voices rising in greeting and you can see why Feyre treasures his company. Heâs surprisingly gentle, oddly perceptive.Â
They probably all already knew that, though. Itâs your fault for casting roles on them before really even getting to know them, assigning characters after only a handful of proper conversations. If only youâd made the effort to step out of your own little circle, maybe the circumference wouldnât be as strangling as itâs become.Â
If youâd stepped out sooner, could you have been first choice?Â
But, glancing again at Cassian, his profile captured in a look between irritation and affection, turning the corner into the dining room and seeing the scrunch of Feyreâs brow as she replies to whatever heâd saidâŠno. It wouldnât have mattered.Â
But itâs not the end of the world that you werenât made that way.Â
ââââ
Itâs good to see her smiling again, he thinks.Â
With the past months having been so draining, the symptoms of her restlessness only exacerbated in the last few days given the turmoil theyâve all been thrown into, itâs good to see the light in her eyes gleaming again. More than just good, but there isnât quite a word right enough to express the soul-deep relief he feels at seeing her smile. A strange conviction that everything will be okay now that sheâs on the way better.Â
Her ears twitch once before sheâs shooting him a half-glare, having felt his gaze roaming over her. âFamily dinner, Rhys,â she snaps under her breath, but he can see the heat in her eyes, the silent agreement thatâs exchanged in the brief moments their gaze locks, and Rhysâ mouth curves suggestively, his brows rising in feigned ignorance. âIâm sure I have no idea what youâre talking about,â he murmurs, looking down at his mate with an intensity he knows she adores. And yet she lightly smacks his thigh anyway.Â
âIâm serious,â Feyre warns, that heat dissipating as Cassian picks a seat at the table, dragging the feet across the floorboards with a grating noise thatâs thankfully drowned out by chatter while a smaller figure quietly follows after him, taking one of the two remaining open seats. Unlike Cassian, she lifts her chosen seat from the floor, trying to keep as silent as possible and blend into the background as she sits beside Elain. âDonât scare her off,â Feyre murmurs under her breath. Rhys hums compliantly, eyes twinkling as he spends a few extra moments looking at his mate. Moments he thinks he might at long last be beginning to lean into.
âWhereâs Mor?â Cassian interrupts, and Rhys reluctantly shifts his attention to his brother, who has taken the seat opposite Feyre. He sometimes wonders if Cassian choses moves like this intentionally, whether theyâre conscious decisions or whether these actions result from a wish to have his family united. Cassian isnât like himself or Az, wasnât taught to conceal his emotions as they wereâwell, in his own case it was taught. For Az it was a matter of survival.Â
âTaking supper up to Az,â Nestaâs voice cuts through the previously enjoyable atmosphere, the noise similar to recognising the hiss of steel being drawn within a temple. A few centuries ago, his ears might have twitched at the distinctly unpleasant intrusion, but Cassianâs eyes have already left his own to seek out the icy silver of his mateâs, softened at their edges.Â
âMore than just supper,â Amren comments, one space over to Rhysâ right, sat at a corner seat. âShe took an entire bottle of wine with her.â Laughter rises, and Rhys allows his attention to briefly sweep over across the table where the two sisters are involved in conversation, as if thereâs no one else to speak with. He supposes one of them might very well believe that, and with a fraction of a thought swiftly removes the precautionary enchantment of the silverware so they wonât vanish if she reaches for them.Â
At least sheâs there, though heâs fairly confident Cassian has something to do with it. Rhys can picture how the light in Feyreâs eyes might flicker learning she had found a way to shut herself away in a house where avoiding others was almost impossible without intent. No amount of luck or coincidence would keep her entirely hidden. Especially over meals.Â
Violet eyes return to his left, feeling the familiar ease that settles through him at the reminder of Feyreâs presence. A deeply-treasured reprieve from the strain and stress thatâs been thriving amongst them as of late.Â
ââââ
âHow was the check-up with Madja, by the way?â Elain asks, using one of the large wooden spoons to shift a few roast potatoes onto her plate.Â
You nod slightly, lips pressing together in a small smile that you hope is reassuring. âGood, for the most part,â you reply. âI think she still wants to observe what happens for now, but she didâŠdo something, which might have helped?â It reminds you of the lightness in your lungs, the strange openness of your throat and you instinctively take in a deeper breath, basking in that odd clearness. Elain hums in question, silently offering you the spoon for potatoes, but you shake your head politely. âIâm not sureâŠI donât think dinner is the best place to discuss those check-ups,â you say quietly, a half-smile on your mouth. Elainâs lips curve, eyes gleaming as she nods in agreement, âyouâre probably right.â Then she glances across the table before returning her gaze to yours, a new, preempted question already rising to her mouth. âWhat are you going to eat?âÂ
The smile on your lips becomes strained, gloved hands shifting in your lap as you keep the orange, silk scarf pulled over your arms to conceal the wretched skin. You wish youâd at least had the chance to change before coming hereâyour mind will mostly be preoccupied with making sure none of them are forced to see the state beneath the silk. âIf Iâm honest, Iâm not really that hungryâŠâ you hedge, but Elain gives you a look that tells you she wonât stand for it. Although it comes from a place of care and love, you canât help feeling a little suffocated.Â
âJust have a couple of bites, okay?â Elain reasons gently, âMadjaâs told us itâs good for you to eat, itâll help you recover.âÂ
âApparently Madjaâs been saying that a lot,â you mutter under your breath.Â
âMadjaâs a highly respected healer,â Amren cuts in from across the table, her eyes sharp as they pierce into you. âIf sheâs said you should eat, you should eat.âÂ
You arenât sure if you imagine the way the noise level seems to drop at that, but the familiarly dull pain of humiliation flickers across your chest, ashamed to have sounded so ungrateful. Your head lowers a little, unable to think of a reply as your hands wring together beneath the table, tucked away in your lap.Â
âUnless you really feel sick,â Elain interjects a little defensively, her hand subconsciously placing itself on your upper arm in what youâre certain she intends to be a comforting gestureâin truth it causes your flesh to ache, but you keep your mouth shut. âIâm sure I can manage a bite or two,â you get out with a small smile and you hate that you know it wonât reach your eyes, so keep your head slightly ducked as you put a few potatoes on your plate. You can come down later, once everyoneâs gone to bed if youâre still hungry.Â
A beat passes, and Elain shifts at your side, a fresh smile on her face, trying to brighten your moodâyou dip a little lower at that, that she feels responsible, but if you donât pull yourself together sheâll keep doing it. âHow did you and Cassian bump into one another?â She asks, reaching for something else on the table that you donât look at. Cassian doesnât make to answer, so you have to, feeling the distinct weight of the tableâs attention. âJust coincidence, I suppose,â you reply, managing a faint smile, keeping your eyes on your plate as you slice one of the roast potatoes in two, steam wafting up from the hot centre.Â
âWent out for a walk?â Elain asks. Thereâs an almost unnoticeable tone of relief in the questionâyou probably wouldnât have noticed if you werenât as close to her as you are. Is that how easily she can pick out your own thoughts? âFresh airâs probably good for you, right?â She says smiling, causing your own lips to curve at their edges fondly. âI think so,â you murmur in reply.Â
âHave you had a chance to read any more books recently? I havenât seen any in your roomâŠI could get some if you want?â Feyre speaks from across the table, and you bite down on the way you want to shrink into yourself as the conversation is drawn over to you. âI havenât, and itâs fine, thank you. Have you been painting recently?â You ask, swiftly shutting it down and shifting the conversation back to her, hoping youâll be left out of it now.Â
Rhysâs attention flits over her a split second before something passes behind Feyreâs eyes, but she swallows and nods. âThere hasnât been as much time as Iâd like, but Iâm finding moments,â she answers, but goes no further. Youâre glad sheâs still getting time to herself in spite of being High Lady and more importantly, a mother. You canât imagine how difficult it must be if itâs taking up that much of her timeâŠand you probably hadnât helpedâŠsheâs been visiting each day⊠You should have succeeded.Â
The passiveness of the thought catches you a little off guard. Since when had thoughts like that become so habitual? So flippant? You spear a piece of potato with your fork, bringing it to your mouth. It was just a fleeting thought, itâs fine. Weird things happen in the mind anyway, as long as you donât mean it, youâre okay.Â
âWould youâŠâ Feyreâs asking, âbe interested in joining me? We could have an easel set up in your room?âÂ
A part of the potato goes down the wrong way as you hear the question, hand grabbing the napkin as you cover your mouth, coughing. You clear your throat when youâre done, making sure to wipe your lips subtly as you pull the napkin away, sipping on the glass of water to help clear your throat. Once youâve recovered, you remember her question.Â
It would be nice. Really nice, actually, but⊠âitâs fine, please donât worry. Paintingâs your thing, and I thinkâŠpersonal, to you. Besides, I have my books,â you excuse, heart sinking a little, but itâs for the better. Sheâs already short on time anyway, she needs to keep that for herself, even if you canât help but want it.Â
The same look passes behind her eyes, and you now wonder if you canât figure it out becauseâŠbecause you might no longer know her well enough.Â
âItâs probably for the better,â Rhys announces, bringing the moment to a swift end, âFeyreâs nude models would probably upset your delicate sensibilities, anyway.âÂ
Your eyes widen and you nearly choke on air as wild, ferocious heat swarms your features, staring ahead, bewildered.Â
Rhys grins as a fuming Feyre smacks him on the shoulder, indignant rage lighting her eyes. âLies! All lies,â she snaps, before sparing you a somewhat apologetic glance. âHeâs joking, obviously,â she reassures, shooting a glare Rhysâ way at that last part. âHis humourâs apparently a few centuries out of date.â
âSpeaking of things on the old side,â a golden voice calls from the hallway, parading into the dining room in heels tall and thin enough to potentially run someone through. âRhys, is there another case of this stuff? Az wants some more.âÂ
The High Lord rolls his eyes, amusement clear, Feyre settling at his side, feigned anger dissipating as if it were never there, her eyes twinkling again.Â
âWe all know you finished off the bottle before you even reached Azâs room,â Amren snipes, thickly-jewelled fingers sparkling as she nurses her own glass, laughter rising from the table.Â
âOh, like youâre any better Amren. You could polish off bottles of blood in the time it took me to eat an appetiser,â Mor replies, heels clicking across the floor as she sweeps through the room in a flurry of vibrant red and stunning gold, taking her seat opposite Elainâbetween Amren and Rhys.Â
One seat and across from your own position.Â
The meal fully commencing now all able players are assembled at the table.Â
ââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââââ
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