The Hereafter
Nessian one-shot [post-acowar, pre-acofas]
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A/N:Â Some post-war, pre-acosf Nessian angst/ longingâ because that's what called to me, okay? We got hints of the strained relations during that Nessian era, but we didn't get the full visibility. This was an attempt at a glimpse into one of those interactionsâ where the pull is there, but the barriers are, too. Nesta doesn't quite understand everything that comes with her new existence and is still trying to find her place in it all. Cassian attempts to stay out of her way and give her space, but their draw to the other has a mind all its own. Nesta is also very unfamiliar with Fae norms and customs, and that only adds to the unresolved tension between the two of them.
This is an angsty one-shot written for my wonderful and patient friend who made zero complaints about getting her Secret Santa gift in March đ
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For a species considered to be superior in every wayâ proclaimed largely by their own, unsurprisinglyâ the Fae left a lot to be desired in their romance literature.
Different preternatural ability, same load of bullshit.
Nesta scoffed internally. It wasnât as if she held any notion that these fictitious relationships were meant for her, or anyone else, really. And if she truly abandoned what remained of her prim, high-collar upbringing, she could admit to reading them for the more physical connections as of late. She held higher hopes for those experiences than the more wholesome ones. The thought was so bleak that it should have depressed her, but she would have needed to be anything other than numb for that to happen.
It was ironic, this new existence. All her senses firing beyond any reasonable ability, yet complete and total apathy for anything else. An almost painful sensitivity paired with the need for extremes to evoke any care at all.
The forced choice between emptiness and the pain that accompanied experiencing anything to its fullest.
The war had changed Nesta in many ways. Her general perspective and approach to life had been challenged by the low odds of her survival, and they were changed altogether when sheâd managed it. Of course, she hadnât been alone in achieving it, but that was another road entirely to travel.
A booming laugh sounded down the hall, and the abrupt lapse of silence made Nesta flinch. She was seated in a bay window off the side of her sisterâs home, tucked among a few plush pillows and with a blanket draped over her lap. The quiet had made it the perfect spot to sit and read, and she scowled in the general direction of the offending noise.
It was his laugh, and she cringed at the realization that she knew it so well. Their interactions had been minimal before, but since the war, they had been nearly nonexistent. It seemed that neither of them had managed to figure out how to broach any casual interaction after Cassianâs words had settled into her bones during, what theyâd assumed was, their final moments.
I regret nothing in my life but this.
Nesta snapped her book shut and leaned her head against the window. The way his words haunted her jabbed at a long-dormant buzz beneath her skin, down to her bone marrow. The subtle warmth came first, only enough to attempt to seduce her into leaning into it. But Nesta wasnât one to give in so easily.
Discipline and strategic distraction had been her allies in tamping down what sheâd stolen. Anytime her vigilance dropped, even for a moment, that warmth escalated to a sharp, bone-melting heat that left her feeling like her only option was to erupt. The alternative was implosion, she imagined.
Her will kept her safe. Everyone hinted at trying to understand the power and learning to wield it so that it didnât control her or drive her to madness. Her response was always the sameâ cold indifference, perhaps a quick retort to mind their own business depending on the day. Either one was preferable to the truth.
The potential, both positive and negative, terrified her.
Laughter sounded again. Nesta wished it would have served as kindling to a lighter version of herself, one where her chest didnât feel so heavy and her shoulders werenât perched so high. All it did was point out how she didnât fit, how everyone had seemed to heal in immeasurable ways in the months since the war. Ways that eluded her time and time again.
Amren had offered plenty of unsolicited advice. Feyre probably would have done the same if Nesta had given a shred of hope that her sisterâs help would have been well-received.
While their High Ladyâ gods, would that title ever feel commonplace?â was keen to allow Nesta to set her own pace, Amren hadnât been. Tough love didnât begin to describe her approach in supporting Nesta, and frankly, some days it felt less like support and more like a begrudged job.
Apparently, merely existing wasnât an acceptable way to pass the infinite time. Amren had challenged her to do something with it, and since the days after the war held fewer opportunities for an emissary, Nesta had been left to figure out what the hell she cared to do with her days.
Elain had her gardening, and while Nesta appreciated the dedication and focus her sister poured into it, it wasnât something she was interested in practicing herself. Feyre had whatever High Ladies were tasked with doing, although she guessed Feyre was setting the standards as the first in Prythianâs history.
Nesta rested her book on the bench nearby and began folding the blanket sheâd used. More commotion came from down the hall, and as the voices grew louder, she realized sheâd spent more time than she intended lost in her thoughts.
That we did not have time. That I did not have time with you, Nesta.
Her eyes squeezed shut against the intrusion of the memory. It was always unwelcome and particularly ill-timed. And wasnât that the fatal flaw in all of itâ time?
She fluffed the throw pillows and tucked her novel beneath her arm. On silent feet, she padded to the stairs nearby and followed them down through one of the houseâs several living areas, smoothing her skirts and making her way to the kitchen. A relieved breath whooshed out of her at hearing those same voices descending the stairs, and she thanked the Cauldron that sheâd managed to avoid them.
A scoff escaped her. Since when had she started thanking that glorified pot for anything?
Cynicism greeted her like an old friend, albeit not a very good one. The reprieves were always too brief and lackluster in contrast, but Nesta's very essence clung to them all the same. All for naught, usually.
Sitting idle was guaranteed to allow for rumination over the previous months and the infinite ones sheâd yet to live. Something had to compete with her thoughts, lest she lean too heavily into them and stoke that aversive thrumming in her veins.
She hadnât put much thought into heading toward the kitchen, especially since her appetite was nonexistent most of the time, and she had yet to allow herself to indulge in much of the Fae cuisine.
The inspiration didnât reveal itself until she crossed the threshold of the spacious area. The merry group indulging in each othersâ obnoxious company would likely carry their festivities into dinner, and one thing was for absolute certain.
Nesta would not be subjecting herself to that.
The invitations always came, usually from Feyre. Sometimes, Rhysand offered, but he seemed as enthusiastic about Nestaâs company as she felt about his.
It was a double-edged sword. Accepting the invitation came with a myriad of inevitable, uncomfortable moments. Declining it was a sin all its own, as evidenced by Feyreâs disappointment and compounded by Rhysandâs disapproval of the decision. All it did was perpetuate Nesta as the cold, callused bitchâ no matter what she chose.
Preparing her own dinner seemed like a creative solution that was tolerable enough, and it allowed her to eat alone to avoid the questioning gazes as she picked at her meal. She had little interest in the task and even less interest in the product, but she would have an out for any invitations. Cooking was a small price.
Choosing what to make wasnât difficult since Nesta cared for so few things. The only dish sheâd managed to tolerate in recent memory was a chicken and bean stew sheâd been gifted from a Fae vendor along the Sidra. She had taken a short stroll through Velaris in the middle of the day, and sheer curiosity had made her browse the vendorâs cart. Before sheâd blinked, they had recognized her as their High Ladyâs sister, and theyâd insisted on sending Nesta away with lunchâ their treat. A gesture of thanks, theyâd said.
The stew had been rich and flavorful, and despite herself, Nesta had enjoyed it. And since her appetite had been pitiful in recent weeks, she was grateful that it hadnât sat too heavily in her empty stomach. The bar was low with regard to what she considered a win in her new life, and the lack of nausea had made the list until some other facet of existence brought it upon her anyway.
Nesta shook her head against the thought and retrieved the handwritten recipe sheâd tucked into a rarely used drawer. The vendor had been enthusiastic in sharing it with her, insisting it was âtoo simpleâ not to try herself, but they had clearly overestimated Nestaâs domestic abilities.
Looking back, sheâd questioned the vendorâs business sense in offering one of his dishes to her so openly, so they hadnât been the only one leaning into their bias. He had explained it away somehow; something about doubting Nesta would have much time to return and the fact that she would have no reason to start her own food cart as competition with her other duties.
If only she could have explained how undefined her role felt each day, how meaningless her presence seemed to the longevity of the Night Court. Maybe she could have shared how she remained in a perpetual, personal battle between relief that they didnât need her and the sheer emptiness left where purpose should have been. Before the thought could discourage her, her reasons for cooking in the first place propelled her into action.
Her nose wrinkled against the smell of the raw chicken. Her movements had never been as efficient as in preparing it for boiling, nevermind her clumsiness along the way. She heaved a breath once she lowered it into the rolling water and turned her attention to chopping the onions and carrots, as well as the fresh herbs from Elainâs garden. Admittedly, the fresh thyme and rosemary offered a pleasant scent to combat the earlier one, and after some time, Nesta found temporary comfort in the redundancy of preparation.
The aroma came together beautifully once the various herbs, spices, and vegetables simmered with the chicken. Nesta allowed herself a moment to be pleased with her work and returned the lid to the large pot to allow everything time to cook together.
Voices travelled into the space from the other roomâ loud, although not entirely hostileâ and resonated in the hollow area within her chest. Determined not to allow them to sour her satisfaction, Nesta settled into the nearby breakfast nook with her novel. She opened to her most recent page and lost herself in the space between the words, happy to immerse herself in some other life.
â
Fire.
Nesta smelled fire.
Her eyes leaped from the page to scan the immediate area. No smoke, no visible flames. The scent remained; however, and Nesta wondered about temporary madness until its source strode into the kitchen.
Cassian appearedâ sauntered, as he usually didâ around the corner, and the scent intensified. It hijacked Nestaâs senses, eclipsed all the other aromas sheâd enjoyed earlier, until he was the object of her resolute focus. Against her will, to top it off.
He opened several cupboards in search of, only the gods knew what, until his eyes lit up at finding a package of dried meats in the pantry. Tucking it into the crook of his elbow, he opened another cupboard and pulled crackers, what looked like some kind of preserved fruit, and some nuts. Nesta fixed her features into indifference as she watched him move about the space, but it hardly mattered. Cassian didnât seem aware of her presence in the slightest, but after several seconds, his voice traveled through the kitchen and clued her in to her naivety.
âSmells good in here,â he stated, his attention focused on which platter may have met his needs.
Nesta saw it for the olive branch it was, the attempt at casual and friendly conversation. The last thing she needed was his damned charity.
She hummed some semblance of a reply and turned to the next page with a soft snap. Cassian placed his haul on the countertop nearby and wisely withheld any type of retort at her dismissal. Well, he mostly withheld a reply if one ignored the unimpressed huff of a laugh he offered.
Cassian was a social creature in ways Nesta could never be, so ignoring him seemed the best way to have him stalking off to resume his grand time with the others. For the second time in mere minutes, though, he surprised her.
Without a word, he walked over to the large pot and lifted the heavy lid to peer inside. Nestaâs eyes bugged at his audacity to disturb her meal, doubling in size when he took things a step further and gave the stew a slow stir.
The book lay forgotten on the tabletop, and Nestaâs legs carried her over in a handful of long, purposeful strides. Cassian seemed unruffled by her proximity entirely, but Nestaâs bones thrummed in a delicate rhythm she wondered if she could ever understand.
âWhat do you think youâre doing?â she snapped.
Cassian lowered the wooden spoon on the rest and looked sidelong at her. Half of his dark hair was pulled back into a haphazard bun, tendrils dancing around his face as if in step with the amusement in his gaze. Nestaâs breath caught, but she met his stare with equal intensity.
His mouth twitched at the corners, one side curling into a satisfied smirk. âI knew this smelled familiar. Iâve made it myself, more times than I can count.â
Nesta lifted the wooden spoon to stir the stew in some petty show of ownership. Doing so felt transparent, but Cassian needed reminding of boundaries, it seemed. He leaned his palms against the countertop and watched her without an ounce of offense in his posture.
They stood close enough to feel the otherâs body heat, to hear the rhythm of the otherâs breathing. Tension tickled every atom between them and permeated the space. The only saving graces were the erratic sounds of Nestaâs stirring and the occasional raised voice from the other room.
The silence within the kitchen wasnât unwelcome or strained in its purest form, but the side effects of that silence became a beast all its own. Heightened pulse, the action-potential threaded through each cord of her muscles and the shallow breathsâ they grew increasingly difficult to conceal with every passing second.
Cassianâs breath hitched, and since Nesta had already allowed herself the indulgence of his proximity, she lifted a small bit of stew to her mouth for taste testing. If her mouth was otherwise occupied, she didnât have to be as concerned with it creating problems for her future self in a number of waysâ ranging from scathing comment, all the way to something more physically indulgent.
The flavors flooded her tongue and filled her with an odd sense of pride at having produced something edible with no tools other than a slip of paper and social avoidance on her side. Before pure satisfaction could settle in, however, the glide over the back of her tongue fell flat, a little bland, and left her wanting. It was a test of her self-control that she lowered the spoon into the pot with a reasonable amount of force.
She cleared her throat. âSo, youâve made this before?â
The silence felt loaded with Cassianâs lack of response, but from the corner of her eye, she saw his head shake back and forth as if heâd been somewhere else entirely.
âYeah,â he breathed, easing close enough that their shoulders overlapped. Nesta thought he would elaborate, saving her the awkwardness of fishing for information, but luck hadnât been on her side in some time.
âHow did I do?â she asked, more timid than sheâd care to sound. Her goal had been teasing indifference.
Cassianâs hand shadowed hers on the spoon in permission, and Nesta nodded. The roughness of his skin ghosted over the back of her palm during the transfer, and usually, she would force herself to bristle. Too much time had passed with his body so close, and her commitment to the charade felt minimal at best.
âIt smells great; looks right. Why?â
âSomething isnât right about it.â
He hummed in consideration. Nesta back arched imperceptibly before she righted herself. With her guard down, it was as though her body aimed to betray her in favor of pressing her shoulder blade against Cassianâs broad chest.
Cassian muttered a low curse and dropped the spoon against the side of the pot with a dull thud. Nestaâs gaze whipped over her shoulder, mouth poised around a reprimand or some scathing, rhetorical question, but the look on his face stopped the words short.
His wings flexed over his shoulders, and the effect the movement had on how light scattered through the membrane would have been dazzling if not for the way Cassianâs pupils seemed bottomless. They pulsed around the edges, seeming impossibly darker and devouring any hint of his eyesâ usual color. Nesta couldnât look away, but in some distant corner of her mind, she wondered if she should have been more anxious overall.
Cassianâs hand gripped the edge of the counter, but he didnât move away. That alone surprised her, and something like anticipation skittered up her spine and through her body like confetti.
That familiar, unwelcome warmth pulsed beneath the surface of her skin. Nesta had learned the signs so many times over, had developed numerous ways to cope and keep herself contained. None of them occurred to her, and for all she cared, they could incinerate her mercilessly.
His chin dipped, his eyes squeezing shut in an expression that looked similar to pain. Unbeknownst to Nesta, her head had leaned toward his shoulder by mere inches, but the way his body heat blazed the back of her neck felt like full, uninhibited contact. Cassian blinked, long and lazy, and the hazel of his eyes reappeared in a way that made Nesta wonder if sheâd imagined the whole thing.
Cassian laid his free hand over the curve of her waist with a gentleness that seemed of someone else entirely, but the calluses that snagged the fine fabric of her gown identified him. It made no sense that sheâd know that sensation anywhere, but somehow, it had been one permanently embedded in her memory from that final battle.
âMaybe it needs a little time for everything to come together,â he murmured, his thumb making a too-soft sweep over her waist.
That word againâ time. Nesta had grown so exhausted with it, but she managed to keep that secret hidden.
She gave a curt nod and turned her attention back to the subpar meal, but Cassianâs hand held fast to its position. He occupied nearly all of her senses, and an impossible tightness gripped her ribs from the inside.
As if the shift in the air had thrown him off-kilter in a similar manner, a too-familiar drawl weaved its way into his next words. Their familiar ground, built on loaded silences and provocations, felt less like a foundation and more a slippery slope as of late.
âI wouldnât be hard on yourself, Sweetheart.â His sweet, teasing tone choked her, like trying to breathe through syrup. âNone of us got it on the first try.â
Her temper flared with an eerie sort of quickness, one that left her without balance and too vulnerable to what she spent most minutes of her days choking into submission. Her bones burned white hot, and she narrowly evaded her powerâs proverbial claws. It would have been cause for celebration if the cost wasnât her viperâs tongue and the annihilation of any peace theyâd found.
âYou try it, then,â she snapped, turning quickly enough for his hand to fall from her waist. âYou could use your mouth for something useful rather than drone on as you do.â Without the pressure of his hand against her, perhaps her mental faculties would come back.
Cassian blinked a couple of times, and his gaze leaped from hers to the spoon in her hand. The other was poised beneath to catch any spill, and she held it toward him like something preciousâ anything to absorb some of the intensity flowing through her bloodstream, to keep her hands and focus at a safe distance.
âWhat?â he croaked. His eyes repeated their dance between her own and the spoon she held between them.
âTry it,â she ordered again, but her voice had lost some of its sharpness. âTell me how to fix it, since youâve got it all figured out.â
Cassian blinked again, and it could have been her imagination, but his chest seemed to heave with the effort of breathing. A chill was all that remained when he took two slow, small steps away from her. The change in him was as obvious as it was swift, but Nesta couldnât fathom what had flipped the switch with such effectiveness.
âIâ I canât,â he scoffed. âThe others are waiting for me.â
Nesta narrowly resisted a roll of her eyes at his sense of servitude. She watched as he snapped into action, locating a tray and piling his haul on top without taking even a moment to lay them out properly. He drew his bottom lip between his teeth, his brow furrowed, and his attention seemed to bounce all about the space while managing to miss Nestaâs general vicinity entirely. His movements were efficient in locating the last couple of items he needed from the cabinets and cooler nearby, and in seconds, he had the haul balanced in his arms once more.
Shaking her head against such a brutal shift in their conversation, Nesta turned toward her dinner and tapped the spoon lightly on the edge of the pot to return the contents. She tossed it into the trivet nearby with little grace and even less concern, and the loud clang seemed to echo in the too-silent room.
Cassianâs shoulders bunched under the weight of everything he carried; either that, or the abrupt change in their conversation felt uncharacteristically heavy to him, too. The thought that it might feel such a way gave Nesta some ill-placed sense of comfort, but considering she knew very little of it, she allowed the small bandage it applied to what felt like an ancient wound.
She made the way over to her book without any acknowledgement of Cassianâs existence. She had entertained it enough already, and if she settled back into where sheâd left off in the story, she could finish two or more chapters by the time everything was finished. A much more productive use of her time, she thought.
Cassian paused at the threshold, and she hated that she even noticed. Her bodyâ every sense it possessedâ seemed bent on sabotage. Rather than look at him, she trailed her finger down the edge of the pages and turned to the next with delicate precision, but the words all ran together in a chaos she was trying so vehemently to keep private.
âNesta,â he said, his voice low, âitâs sage.â
Her head snapped up before she thought better of it. âWhat?â
âWhat youâre missing, why your meal isnât working. It needs sage.â
Nesta fixed him with an unimpressed glare. âOh?â Her attention dropped to the page in front of her, the portrait of inconvenience. âI hate to offend your superior senses, but I added it already.â
She hadnât. In fact, she cursed internally for the mistake. It was written plain as day in the recipe she followed, but sheâd been so preoccupied with the other prep that it slipped her mind. Giving him the satisfaction, especially without his willingness to try the damned soup in the first place, didnât appeal to Nesta.
Cassian cleared his throat. âI donât thinkââ
âIâll give it time,â she hissed, her eyes betraying her again by flying to his face. âAll the time it needs.â
His dark eyebrows drew together in challenge, and Nesta could nearly see how his brain weighed the different strategies on how to proceed. His mouth opened, shut, and opened again. To her surprise, his lips ticked up at the corner, and she hated the hold that small movement had on her breathing.
âYou can give it all you want,â he drawled, âbut it wonât help.â
Her nostrils flared in irritation, and it was enough to tempt her to finally allow that boiling feeling to take over completely. To incinerate the moment, the two of them, and anything else in its wake, if only because she could. But mostly, it would have saved her the production of these conversations and the ever-present tug she felt toward Cassian, no matter how infuriating.
Nesta took a deep breath, warring with what to say, but he saved her the trouble.
âI helped Elain bring everything inside,â he murmured. The low volume did very little to disguise the satisfaction in his voice. âThe bundle of sage in the cooler is untouched from this morning.â
Her heart leaped to her throat. Whether the rasp of his voice or the way he called her on the blatant lie was to blame, she wasnât sure. She forced her gaze back to her open book and feigned the most casual tone she could conjure under the circumstances.
âThe others are waiting.â
The very excuse heâd made for his intended departure was a safe dismissal. Cassian was many things, but clueless was not one of them. Nesta was confident he would see it for the clear signal it was that their conversation was officially over.
âRight,â he began, adjusting his haul in his arms. âIâll see you around.â
Nesta catalogued each of his steps, annoyed that she knew the cadence so well. Her shoulders relaxed, and she blew out a long, heavy breath. She stared into the negative space of the room, a room that felt too large upon Cassianâs absence, yet too small when they had shared it.
Her gaze bounced from the pot perched over the small flame, to the cooler, and back to the novel in front of her. She was on her third attempt at reading the same paragraph when resolve abandoned her completely. Snapping the book shut, she huffed an undignified breath and stalked over to the cooler.
The sage wasnât going to prep itself.
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