#acotar as p&p
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addicted-to-nothing · 8 months ago
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Ok but hear me out ... Pride and Prejudice X Feysand ft.
Cassian as Mr. Bingley
Nesta as Jane (ik ik but like ... Complicated Jane?)
Tamlin as Mr. Wickham
Elain as Lydia
Lucien as Fitzrhysand's friend who rescues Elain from a most undesirable scandal
Azriel as Colonel Fitzwilliams
Alice(???) as Charlotte Lucas
Isak (???) as Mr. Collins
The Weaver as Lady De Bourgh
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azrielsfavoriteshadow · 1 month ago
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Jane Austen would ship Elucien and that’s a fact.
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washmchineheart · 7 months ago
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cassian after realizing that maybe nesta doesn’t want to train in front of males that think less of females and literally abuse them for centuries
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feyres-divorce-lawyer · 4 months ago
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hey remember when feyre was able to tell when nesta wasn’t being mean, just blunt? can we like go back to that. pls
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jollyinmadness · 4 months ago
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Of Canopies and Twines: Chapter 1, Solas | Azriel x OFC
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Pairing: Azriel x Original Female Character
Word Count: 8.3k
Warnings: Minor Azriel x Elain. References to sexual thoughts. Very vague references to a genocide. Cursing.
Summary:
When an unknown curse starts spreading through the Night Court's lands, the Inner Circle is forced to seek help in the wisdom of Day's vast libraries. Among the dusty tomes, they are met with a mysterious female who wields magic that may yet be the key to their problem.
Kira, one of the few surviving Purifiers, will have to leave her reclusiveness on the shores of the Continent and learn what her ancestor's vow really means.
Azriel will be forced to reconcile his follies, step out from his shadows and push against his shortcoming with nothing but the scarred skin of his hands.
After years of lucky breaks, will the Inner Circle succeed one last time? Or will their fate rest in the hands of an outsider who has more to lose than gain in helping them?
Then again, the Cauldron is forever being stirred by the Mother and no one escapes the yarn on the embroidery of their lives.
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Azriel’s hands were hidden under his armpits as he walked the empty streets of Velaris. The faelights in the Palace of Thread and Jewels still shone brightly, though many of the shops had their doors shut and signs turned to say ‘closed.’ 
He had just left a seamstress’s shop and regretted not accepting a jacket for the suit Rhysand ordered on his behalf. Despite having many in his closet, Rhysand noted that he only owned outdated ones and needed to, quote, freshen up. After a few adjustments, the seamstress had ushered him into the cold street with a smile, saying she was celebrating tonight and needed to get ready too. 
During the longest night of the year, even this part of the town closed down, its habitants retiring to dining rooms with their families. As Azriel passed by houses that hadn’t closed their blinds, he dared to peek in if even for the smallest moment. More often than not, he saw children running around a table while the adults prepared utensils and plates, scolding the little ones for not being careful enough. It caused the corners of his mouth to lift, seeing these people so free of worry that they didn’t even care to draw their curtains. 
His feet moved on their own accord, walking the familiar paths. Something unsettled and grew restless inside his bones as he thought of the estate he was heading to. This year, his own family was meeting in the River House to celebrate the Winter Solstice and the attendance was bound to be plentiful. 
He had already helped Feyre decorate, while Rhysand looked after little Nyx. This year would mark his first Solstice and everyone was eager to make it the most memorable one. Nyx put up the first decoration on the tree but when he was handed a garland from paper, he had torn it in half which elicited a laugh from Azriel and a gentle scolding from both his parents.
Considering he was Rhysand’s son, he was surely going to be a handful once he learned how to talk back and run away.
During it all, Azriel had noted Cassian’s lack of presence, though his brother was most likely hunting down some last-minute gifts before the shops closed for the evening. And last he heard, his mate was up in the House of Wind, preparing with Emerie and Gwyn. Emerie had been spending the last few days with her and Azriel could tell the Illyrian female felt out of place here even after months of daily training. The priestess, on the other hand, had promised Nesta she would spend the dinner with her, before returning to the Library for the evening service. 
Gwyn had shown so much growth since her arrival to Velaris and after the Rite, after she cut the ribbon, Azriel noted how she looked to the sky with a renowned longing. Some of the fear and reluctance had fallen off and in its place had grown courage and curiosity. Perhaps her trip to the River House was a stepping stone.
His mind shifted to the rest that were bound to be present and Azriel wondered what Elain was up to. Whether she was trying on dresses and picking out the ones Azriel would love to see on the ground of his private quarters. 
He hadn’t seen her since a few days ago when he had walked past the kitchen in the River House and beared witness to her gentle chuckles. Her hands were covered in flour and his two trusted shadow wraiths talked in hushed voices to her. Not even his shadows were quick enough to catch onto what was being said because when the three had noticed him, their words died down just like their laughter. 
Cerridwen and Nuala had sketched a quick bow to Azriel, much to his dismay but Elain only stared at him with those wide, doe-like eyes. It had made the air in the kitchen warmer and as she offered him a soft smile. He had disappeared into the shadows after nodding at her. Nodding. 
What a fool he was, pining after a female who was mated to another male, let alone allowing himself such a visceral reaction to simple things like smiles. Foolish, indeed. 
Feyre had mentioned in passing that Lucien was bound to make an appearance during the night. He didn’t let himself feel insulted. The voice inside his head was telling him that Feyre could see right through him and thought him fragile. He didn’t need to be notified of guests, especially Lucien.
Azriel sighed, blowing a white cloud into the biting air and hoped Rhysand had enough chairs for everyone. 
A shiver ran through him when, at last, the front gate to the River House appeared at the far end of the street. He quickened his pace, hands pushing the gate open. His dress shoes clicked against the stone walkway leading to the front door and before he reached for the knob, he pulled at his suit. His scarred hand ran through his hair, fixing and making sure he looked presentable before tackling the entirety of the Inner Circle. 
The shadows curled around his ear, telling him that everyone was already somewhere in the house except for Amren and Varian, who were Mother-knew where and doing Mother-knew what. Azriel didn’t care enough to know. 
With one last inhale, he braced himself for an eventful evening and opened the door. He followed the sound of chatter and bottles clinging to the decorated family room where everyone was gathered. 
The first person to notice his entrance was Cassian. “Az, brother, there you are!”
He came up to Azriel, stuffing a crystal glass full of aged rum into his hand and wrapping a shoulder around him. Cassian was already inebriated, Azriel could tell as their wings brushed on accident. Nesta sent subtle stares their way from the corner of the room while nursing a cup of grape juice and making sure he was still standing upright. She made some comment to the two Valkyries near her, making them giggle while watching.
Cassian and Nesta were still considered to be newly mated and Azriel avoided the House of Wind with fervor. Especially after Feyre and Rhysand had given it to them as a mating gift. He had been planning on vacating his room and moving to the Townhouse way before that but he dreaded packing all of the trinkets decorating his shelves. He would have missed the silence too hadn’t it been replaced by sounds of rabid fucking. Even the dining table wasn’t safe from their ministrations and a small part of Azriel grew jealous at it.
“You should stop with the drinks if you plan on participating tomorrow,” muttered Azriel, still cheering his glass with Cassian’s.
Cassian laughed, the sound joyous and open. “I will end your winning streak this year, spymaster.”
“No, I think it will mark my two hundredth win,” Azriel remarks absentmindedly, elbow shoving itself into Cassian’s ribs. Cassian didn’t take to that lightly and while balancing his almost empty glass, he put Azriel into a chokehold with a boom of laughter. He ruffled his hair while promising utter devastation come tomorrow morning. 
Cassian’s technique wasn’t sloppy despite being drunk but it took one smooth move for Azriel to free himself and knock back the contents of his glass.
“I would save the energy, Cass,” he told him, unfastening the button on his jacket.
Cassian grinned. “Or I can beat you now and eliminate the competition.” 
Before they could begin to play-wrestle, Feyre cleared her throat, staring them down. “No fighting in front of Nyx,” she reminded them. “Besides, Az just arrived and you’re already wrinkling his suit! Get off of him, Cassian.”
“A suit I paid good money for,” whispered Rhys from beside his mate, his ankle resting atop his knee. The tips of Azriel’s ears went red and once he pushed Cassian off, he heard a soft, female chuckle behind him. 
Without a thought, he turned his head, his shadows scattering at the sight in the doorway. Words escaped him like they always did in Elain’s presence and instead, he stared down at her. 
Her hair was done half-up half-down, decorated with little white flowers she was sure were grown by her own gentle hands. Baby breaths, he recalled her saying. As his face traveled from those brown eyes looking at him with mirth, his breath caught somewhere on its way from his lungs and to his mouth. A light pink dress made of the softest fabric adorned her curves, pooling and shimmering around her feet like a waterfall. The color and the design reminded him of that one time he stayed in the Day Court. Sun had just risen and painted the entire sky a brilliant pink and small puffy white clouds dusted the horizon.
At once, he willed his shadows to enshroud him again and stepped from the doorway, his eyes never leaving hers. His only thought was on that necklace in his breast pocket, still undecided on whether he should give it to her or not. Seeing her, he couldn’t help but notice that the little rose pendant would go perfectly with the dress. There and then, his mind was made. He would put the petite box on the pile later once everyone had gone to sleep. 
Somebody behind her cleared their throat and it was the only reason Azriel noticed the fire-haired male. 
Lucien’s stare softened considerably as the golden eye shifted from Azriel the moment their eyes met. The emissary chose to ignore him, instead put a gentle hand on Elain’s upper back that Azriel traced with his eyes. As they crossed over the threshold, it was all he could do once the scent of their unaccepted mating bond filled the room. 
Sometimes, Azriel thought to himself, the Mother had a cruel sense of humor. 
Azriel leaned against the wall, letting the murmur of his shadows take the attention from Elain and Lucien. He listened, ignoring questioning stares from Rhysand and focusing on the sauntering female making her way to the family room. 
He turned his head just in time to be met with Mor’s profile appearing in the doorway. She was holding a bottle of wine and smiling, love filling her eyes as they went over everyone present. The familiar faces and the new. Azriel noticed how she took a while to look at the Illyrian female next to Nesta and he noticed Emerie staring right back. He bit back the small smirk fighting to be shown. Though once she had her fill, the last person whom she graced with her glance was Azriel. 
They shared a knowing look and at last, it was void of any tension or anxiety. “Hey, Az,” she said, a gentle smile on her lips. 
He dipped his chin. “Mor.”
He saw a flurry of brown hair before a muffled “Mor!” was exclaimed into the female’s chest. Mor recoiled due to the impact and suddenly, Feyre was hugging the Morrigan, not caring for propriety in front of guests. 
Rhysand’s cousin had been spending more time in Vallahan than in the Night Court, forging alliances and still not succeeding in convincing the Queen to sign the peace treaty. She tried to visit as much as she could and sent many letters through Azriel’s spies concerning the foreign kingdom. He worried for her, hearing just how proud the people in Vallahan were and the schemes the court was prone to. 
“Feyre, please, don’t crush me before I can make it through the doorway.”
“I’m so glad you could make it for the dinner,” she murmurs into her chest before pulling away and taking in the red gown Mor had put on. It earned a hum of approval from her High Lady and Mor wiggled her eyebrows, whispering something into Feyre’s ear and making her laugh. 
Azriel stepped away, moving further inside the room though the wall was his preferred place. Feyre had handed off Nyx to Elain, who was rocking the baby on her hip while conversing with the Valkyries. Gwyn was wearing her usual priestess robes and cooed at the small Illyrian. The middle Archeron sister was smiling unabashedly, sending something warm trickling down Azriel’s chest. 
“Brother,” Rhysand greeted, breaking him out of the reverie and lifting a bottle to fill his glass. With a cocked brow, Rhysand poured the liquor and walked away from Azriel without another word, leaving the shadowsinger hanging in the air.
Rhysand stopped in front of his mate, kissing her temple without sparing Azriel another second of his attention after filling his glass. It left an unsure feeling behind but he brushed it off, convincing himself to have misread the slippage of his brother’s mask. 
— ✾ —
It was only after an hour filled with Mor’s complaining about being hungry and Cassian’s grunts of approval that Varian and Amren arrived. Azriel knew the moment Rhysand’s second had walked through the front door of the River House and his shadows notified him that Amren’s lipstick was smudged, and Varian was rubbing a handkerchief along his face.
It made Azriel swear up the Cauldron as he began rethinking his decision to come to this particular family dinner. It wasn’t often that he chose to, rather opting for eating by his lonesome in the House of Wind. The smell of people’s scents mixed in the aftermath of sex was something akin to strangulation and Azriel liked to enjoy his meals without the sensation.
Rhysand turned away from Amren and Varian, clasping his hands together and announcing, “It’s time we feast!”
Cassian whooped alongside of Mor, and they were the first ones on Rhysand’s heels. At the left-hand side of the family room were double doors, too, decorated with garlands and ribbons. Rhysand pushed down on each handle, leading the grand entrance to a refurbished dining room. 
Azriel’s shadows skittered around him as they watched everyone enter. In hushed voices, they began counting those walking through the threshold and Azriel fought the urge to roll his eyes. 
As much as everyone assumed he had complete control over his little shadows, they were sentient creatures fascinated by the simplest things. It wasn’t a coincidence that shadowsingers were oftentimes spies, because while the shadows liked talking, they adored observing and reporting everything to their master whose job was to pick out the important information. 
And so, Azriel had to ignore his shadows gushing about a new table that could now fit not ten people but twelve! Once they were sure their master knew of the fact his shadows returned to counting. 
There’s four, five, six. Seven. Eight, nine, ten and eleven, and twelve. 
Amren had taken the head of the table, leading Varian to sit next to her with their intertwined hands.
Mor chose to be the mediator between Lucien and Elain and ignored all the sideways glances the emissary sent her way as she laid a hand on the back of the chair. The little smile she sent Elain did not escape Azriel either. While everyone had chosen their seats, Azriel entered last, closing the door behind him with his back to the group. 
There’s the thirteenth. Such a lucky number. 
In all his years spent in Velaris, Azriel failed to remember a time when a dining room was this full. The new table added two extra seats and dwarfed the room in comparison to how it used to be. Everyone made themselves comfortable, shucking off jackets and laying them across the backs of their chairs. 
Azriel hadn’t had the chance to pick where he wanted to sit and as he turned to the room, he had come to realize with an odd mix of relief and disdain that his seat was between Nesta and Varian. Pick of the litter, then. 
The seats have been specially altered to accommodate winged individuals and while Azriel settled into his chair, he was at least grateful that his closest companions lacked any membranous monstrosities protruding from their backs. Were he sat next to inebriated Cassian, he’d have to focus his attention there and leave his shadows with filling up the blanks. 
As food started appearing one plate after another, Azriel took in where the rest of the people were sat. He was facing Feyre and Rhysand, Nyx placed into a tiny chair between theirs. Cassian was occupying the other head of the table and already spoke to Elain in hushed tones to the best of his abilities. To the General’s other side was Gwyn, then Emerie and Nesta. One of his newer shadows notified him that Emerie couldn’t take her eyes from Rhysand’s cousin and that she blushed when their eyes met. 
A table of this size offered a lot of variety and where there was space between statement pieces, candelabras and flowers, there was food or drink. Once the sound of cutlery filled the room, the conversation fell off and comments about the food were exchanged. The feast, as Rhysand called it, was truly one for the books. 
Oh, the beef. It’s delicious. 
Could you hand me more of the potatoes, Lucien? 
Is there any more wine on your end of the table?
We should do this more often. 
The exchanges appeared awkward to Azriel and the small talk he had to endure from Varian made him want to retreat further into his shadows. All throughout the main course he felt Rhysand’s eyes on him but when he went to meet his High Lord’s stare, he had already turned away. 
As the food dwindled and the fae lights dimmed down to a comfortable glow, many different conversations were going on. Feyre talked to Lucien while letting Rhysand feed their son and the Valkyries were explaining their training to Mor, who had been unaware of all the progress the priestesses had made. 
Gwyn was in the middle of explaining the new technique that she discovered while helping Merill with her research when she offhandedly mentioned a thing that elicited a groan from Nesta and Emerie.
Cassian, dragged out from his conversation with Elain, drew back. “What? What happened?” he questioned, brows drawn together in confusion. 
“It’s the long-lost kingdom again,” explained Nesta and Cassian ah’d with some recognition, nodding along.
Gwyn blushed a deep crimson. "I promised Nesta not to talk about it," she sent a glare to the mentioned female over Emerie's head. "So I won't."
Nesta rolled her eyes but it couldn't be taken seriously because as she looked down, one corner of her mouth was lifted up.
"To talk about what?" asked Feyre from the other end of the table, cutting her conversation with Lucien short. The male was already tilting his body towards the priestess, eyes straying to his mate before focusing wholeheartedly back on Gwyn. 
Gwyn met Feyre's kind gaze. "I've finally started my own research and these three hear too much about it."
Something struck Azriel's chest on the left-hand side as he realized he was not included in the explanation. His shadows stilled and watched Gwyn. 
"Oh?" mused Feyre back. She settled her chin on the heel of her palm, smiling gently at the priestess. “What is it about?"
Almost taken aback by the attention she was getting from her High Lady, it had taken her a moment to get the words out. "It's this extinct nation– or at least many think it's extinct. They just about fell off the face of this world five hundred years ago."
There were more blank faces around the table as even Amren drew her unsettling gaze to Gwyn. Now, everyone was listening to her and even Elain let her gentle and encouraging eyes rest on her small form.
What a kindness she thinks she’s offering, one shadow hissed and coiled around his ear. 
Gwyn’s hand reached up to play with a strand of coppery hair, continuing, "Truly, there are barely any records on its fall, some books on its existence and even less on their emergence."
"You do love a challenge, Gwyn," muttered Nesta, earning a gleaming smile from Gwyn. 
"That I do," she responded, almost sheepish. "The last scriptures go back to a few decades before the War. It's unheard of that a kingdom from the continent is not mentioned in writing."
Mor shuffled in her seat, holding the glass of wine in front of her with both hands and offering an inquisitive look to Gwyn. "Is it Severín, by any chance?" 
"Yes," she breathed out, the realization that many of them are as old as five hundred dawning over her. "You fought in the War, didn't you?" she asked, this time with more gentleness. She looked to Cassian who was pushing his food around and nodding lightly, the tone of the conversation still easygoing, edging on clinical.
"We all did," stated Mor, her mood growing more serious with each sip she took. "I went there once but decades after it had fallen to aid an old friend."
"You were there for the liberation of Black Land?" she inquired, earning a nod and a small smile from Mor. She had connected the dots fast enough that it pleased her. 
"I offered my help to Drakon and Myriam, yes. I would not be wrong to suggest you know who they were." 
The use of past tense didn’t escape Azriel.
"Could I—" she started but faltered before she got too ahead of herself. But before she could find better words or consider a better timing, Mor lifted a gentle hand. 
"You can ask any questions you want. I'll come to the library tomorrow for a few hours and I'll make sure to find you."
For a moment, Gwyn was left speechless before she stammered out a quick, "Thank you."
"You're welcome," she uttered, before looking around the table. "We wouldn't want to bore these people with the recounting of ancient history."
"I, for one," said Feyre pointedly while fixing Nyx's clothes, "would love to hear more about this fallen kingdom. I don't get to read as much anymore."
Nesta bit back a grin, turning to her sister with a goodhearted smile. "Anymore? You were illiterate a few years ago."
A few reluctant giggles escaped the present and even Azriel had to hide his smile. Feyre gasped, resting her palms on the table and looking in feigned disbelief at her oldest sister. Rhysand looked to his wife, a smile splitting his face in half. "And whose fault is that?"
This broke the hesitance, light laughter echoing around the room and even Amren cracked a smirk.
Feyre hummed, letting her chin rest against her palm again. "But about the Black Land... Is it not the same as what Mor said? Severing, or something?"
"Severín, my lady," corrected gently Gwyn, letting Feyre copy the hard r's in her own time. She gave her an encouraging smile once she got it right. "But they're not the same, though they existed in the same place within Rask."
“I think I've seen it on one of the older maps, near where the Wall would be," wondered aloud Feyre and her mate gave her a nod, confirming her guess. "Is it close to that mountain range with a river? The northern one."
"Yes, the Vistula River,” she nodded at Feyre. “There’s a legend involving the Severínians and the river delta. Supposedly, before they ever settled in Rask’s territory, the region was surrounded by a desert and there was no vegetation unless you were close to the seashore. And even then it was only rocky ridges, not fit for cultivating crops.”
“But something changed,” muttered Feyre playfully, enchanted by the story Gwyn was gladly unraveling for her. 
“Something did change. ‘When the Severínians finally decided to settle, rivers sprang from the mountains and created a cradle for a new kingdom to rise from.’ It’s a quote from a diary of a Raskan traveler. The name ‘Vistula’ actually means to flow slowly and its roots are in the Severínian language.”
Feyre smiled at the little tidbit of information. “Do we know what urged them to settle there? If there was no life there, it must have been a hard decision to make.”
“I asked myself the same thing! We do know that they were a nomadic people, that their archetypal features were feathered wings. Individuals with pale hair were denoted to have powers. That actually created a new branching in the classification of magic. I saw some scholars give them the title of ‘purifiers.’”
Mor nodded along with the explanation as if everything that came out of Gwyn’s mouth was just confirmation of something she had already known.
“They had a so-called affinity for ‘life’ and it was sought after by many rulers at that time. They could grow crops within a few hours which would otherwise take months under normal circumstances. They made for very good healers and menders and no one had ever described them as violent. Actually, they were quite a docile people. One of their saying was something along the lines of ‘to live is to be gifted and to serve is to protect.’”
“Do you think they had never settled before because someone would have come to take their freedom away—simply because of what they possessed?” asked Feyre again with a thoughtful expression. 
“Perhaps,” agreed Gwyn calmly and judging by her change of expression, the silence around the table came to her with a force of a thousand bricks. Alarmed, she looked around at the present and realized that everyone, including Amren, was fully focused on what she was saying. Shadows notified Azriel that Varian on his right had sent Gwyn a smile before saying that he had never known anything about this kingdom. 
“Rask had never taken lightly to someone encroaching on their territory.  They might be the reason why this kingdom has been ‘wiped’ from the collective memory,” offered Rhysand. 
Mor scoffed, agreeing with her cousin. “Especially if they offered refuge to humans who could have been a workforce in their salt mines instead.”
“Refuge?” Feyre turned her attention to Mor, brows furrowed. “What do you mean by refuge?”
The blonde female looked to her High Lady, skillfully avoiding Lucien’s whirring gold eye. “Before their fall and before Rask had turned it into Black Land, they allowed humans to live side by side with them and even earn their keep. It was unheard of at that time since most of the Courts even in Prythian considered humans slaves.”
“The talks of human rights were nothing but murmurs within chosen circles,” concluded Rhysand, swirling the wine in his cup. “Shame, Severín could have made for good allies during the War.”
“They would not have fought,” spoke up Amren all of a sudden, surprising even Rhysand into stumped silence. 
He frowned, facing his second and declared, “You are right. They wouldn’t have but they were the only example of Fae and mortals living in peace together. That could have made a difference.”
“The fools were so in love with peace, they wouldn’t have sided with foreigners even if it cost them their lives. Which it did anyway.”
Azriel thought to himself that it was perhaps the biggest reaction Amren had given in the past year and since the day she crawled out of the Cauldron. It wasn’t often that this ancient female chose to speak her mind but something had grated against her at the mention of this long-lost kingdom. 
“Rask is a nation of conquerors,” said Amren, her hand playing with a ruby necklace adorning her collarbone. It twinkled in the candlelight of the table and the danger of her eyes. “They wouldn’t have given in where they didn’t have to.”
Mor sucked on the inside of her cheek before responding, “So they chose to sack a peaceful people?”
“Their feud wasn’t just some baseless thing, dusted over by centuries of anger. Those Severínians,” she had spat out the name like spoiled food, “had settled in Raskan territory, knowing damn well where they were.”
“They were the ones who created life there, not Rask,” argued Mor.
Amren’s ageless gaze moved sideways. “So the legend goes.”
“And what do you mean by that?”
She sat up, leaning on her elbows and zeroing in on Mor with a poise of a predator. “What I mean, Morrigan, is that not everything written in those books and scriptures is fact. It takes one desperate generation to rewrite what has truly happened.”
“Are you insinuating that those people deserved getting slaughtered?”
Amren bared her teeth. “All I’m saying is that I wouldn’t let someone with that magic anywhere near me. It’s not of this world and trust my word, I would know.”
Azriel’s shadows had stilled with the exchange, murmurs of questions and curiosity filling his ears. He just watched on as Mor and Amren exchanged heated glances, bared their teeth. Between them, Feyre massaged the space between her brows and when Rhysand laid a comforting hand on her shoulder, she had shook it off. 
“Please,” said Feyre, gaze still downturned. “Don’t argue. Not tonight and not over something meaningless.” 
Within the plead was hiding something more. It wasn’t often that Feyre could just sit down and dine with all of her close friends. She had a child to take care of, she taught children in the city how to paint and see the beauty of the world through the medium of the brush and when she came home, she was still a mother and a High Lady with obligations. The last thing she wished for was an argument—on her birthday, nonetheless.
On her other side, even Lucien had sent worrying glances her way. 
“I’m sorry, Feyre,” murmured Mor, though Amren remained silent. Azriel supposed that it was the biggest apology they would get from her, considering she had never once explained herself to anyone. All she deigned herself to do was meet Feyre’s eyes and nod as if she was heeding a command from her High Lady.
The Inner Circles and the rest had grown quiet, their eyes as if stuck to their plates. Only Azriel was still looking up and around, noticing how awkward it had gotten and wishing it was socially acceptable to winnow from this room. 
From the other end of the table, Cassian cleared his throat and said, “Varian, do you think I could visit this summer? I swear not to shatter another building.”
The laugh from Varian was a little choked and aware of the diversion Cassian had tried to make. “I don’t know if my cousin has lifted your ban.”
“Not even after everything?”
“I’m afraid not,” he sighed. “But Cresseida and I will put in good word for you.”
With a wink from Varian, Cassian laughed, exclaiming, “Atta boy!”
Elain, from Cassian’s side, leaned in and asked with a small voice meant for him only, “How did you get banned from the Summer Court?”
Those who already knew laughed along as Cassian dived into a dramatized retelling of that fateful day in Adriata. 
— ✾ —
The River House had finally fallen quiet after the eventful Winter Solstice dinner and the following party. The faelights had been dimmed to cast little pools of gold amid the deep shadows of the longest night of the year. 
Amren, Mor and Varian had finally gone to bed but Azriel found himself still lingering downstairs. 
He knew he should get some sleep. He would need it come dawn for the snowball battle at the cabin. After everyone had retired back to the family room, Cassian had mentioned no less than six times that he had a secret plan regarding his so-called impending victory. Azriel had let his brother boast, especially since he had been planning his own win for a year now.
Cassian wouldn’t know what was coming for him. And Azriel planned on capitalizing on the fact that Nesta likely wouldn’t let Cassian sleep much tonight. 
Azriel snickered to himself and the ever-restless shadows around him stirred, gazing out to the family room. 
Sleep, they had whispered in his ear and a sense of deep-set exhaustion crawled over his bones again. 
I wish I could, he comforted them silently. But sleep rarely found him these days. 
Too many razor-sharp thoughts sliced any time he grew still long enough for them to strike. Too many wants and needs left his skin overheated as it pulled taut over his muscles. And so he chose to sleep only when his body gave out, and even then only for a few hours.
Azriel surveyed the empty room from the hallway, the presents under the tree and the ribbons littering the furniture. There were two dirty glasses on the mantel of the fireplace, smeared lipstick on one and nothing on the other. 
Nesta and Cassian hadn’t reappeared in the house, though that came as no surprise. They were among the first ones to leave and Azriel’s shadows had notified him of his brother carrying Nesta to the House of Wind mere minutes after Rhysand had winnowed her friends out. 
He was elated for him and yet Azriel was never able to stop it—the green envy in his chest of Cassian, of Rhys. Cauldron, even of Amren. He knew he would be swallowed by that never-ending despair if he went to his bedroom, and so he chose to remain down here by the dying light in the fireplace. 
The room lacked the bustle and laughter it had enshrined for the last couple of hours. Now the silence grew heavy and the stillness of his bedroom began crawling between the walls and into the family room. He clutched his fingers around the jacket on his forearm, letting it dissolve into shadows.
Azriel removed himself from the doorway, entering the hall and walking soundlessly to the foyer. 
Soft steps padded from the stair archway and there she was.
The faelights gilded across Elain’s unbound hair, making her glow like the sun at dawn. Again, the image from the Day Court had appeared before his eyes and as she halted, her breath caught in her throat.
“I…” He watched her swallow. She clutched her fingers around a small box. “I was coming to leave this on your pile of presents. I forgot to put it there earlier.”
A lie. At least the second part was a lie. He didn’t need his shadows to read her tone, the slight tightening of her face. She had waited until everyone was asleep before venturing back down, where she would leave her gift among his other, unopened presents. Subtle and unnoticed, she wanted him to find it in the morning and after the snowball battle. Perhaps she had hoped he would pocket the little box, open it in the privacy of his room and away from the prying eyes of his family.
Elain closed the distance and her breathing quickened as she paused a scant foot away. “No trouble in giving it to you now, I guess. Here.” She extended the wrapped gift, her hand trembling. 
Azriel fought hard not to look at his scarred fingers as they took the gift. She hadn’t bought her mate a present, he recalled. When his shadows went over the gifts, they had divulged this precious detail to him. He hadn’t gotten one this year nor last but she went through the trouble of buying something for him. She had given Azriel a headache powder a year ago which he kept on his nightstand at the House of Wind. Not to use but just to look at. Something he had done every night he had slept there—or rather attempted to sleep there. 
Azriel unwrapped the box, glancing at the card that merely said, You might find these useful at the House these days. -Elain, and then opened the lid. 
Two small, bean-shaped fabric blobs lay within. Elain murmured, "You put them in your ears, and they block any sound. With Nesta and Cassian living there with you..." 
He hadn’t had the heart to tell he was going to move from the House soon and so unable to suppress his impulse, he just chuckled. “You wouldn’t want me to open this in front of everyone.”
Elain’s mouth twitched into a smile. “Nesta wouldn’t appreciate the joke.”
As he closed the box and stuffed it into the pocket of his trousers, he returned her smile. “I wasn’t sure if I should give you your present…” 
He had left the rest unspoken as he reached into his shadows. Her mate was here, sleeping only a level above them and he had been present all throughout the evening, not once leaving the room before Elain had retired for the night. The scent of their mating bond had filled Azriel’s lungs and even if he had positioned himself to a far corner, it would still reach his nostrils, tickling something wicked that called for unfairness. 
Though tonight, here in the dark and silence, there was only the two of them and he supposed it was fair at last to give her this one thing. Despite wanting to give much more.
He pulled the velvet box out, letting his shadows open it for her. Once revealed, they scattered to the back of his neck in a moment’s time. 
Elain sucked in a soft breath that whispered over his skin and his shadow retreated even further, almost completely disappearing. They and their murmurs had always been prone to vanish when she was around and so did his voice of reason. 
The golden chain was unremarkable and the amulet tiny enough to be dismissed as an everyday charm. Weeks ago, he had escaped the House of Wind and found himself walking through the Palace of Thread and Jewel. A vendor had waved him over from the crowd, choosing Azriel to present his newest invention. When he told him to hold it up to the sun, Azriel was rendered speechless once the true depth of colors became visible and it reminded him of her. It was a thing of secret, lovely beauty, just like the female before him. 
“It’s beautiful,” she whispered.
Azriel watched her face tentatively as she lifted the necklace from the box. The fae lights shone through the little glass facets, setting the charm aglow with hues of red, pink, white and green. 
Azriel let his shadow swallow the box as she said softly, “Put it on me?”
The everlasting murmurs in his head slowed to a still. But he took the necklace, opening the clasp as she exposed her back, sweeping her hair up in one hand to bare her neck. 
He knew it was wrong but there he was, sliding the necklace around her. He let his scarred fingers touch her unmarred skin, letting them brush the side of her throat, savoring the velvet-soft texture. Elain shivered, and he took his sweet time fastening the clasp.
Azriel's hand lingered at her nape, atop the first knob of her spine. Slowly, Elain pivoted into his touch, until his palm lay flat against her neck. 
It had never gone this far. They'd exchanged looks, the occasional brush of their fingers but never this. Never blatant, unrestricted touching. 
Wrong—it was so wrong. The murmurs returned with fervor but he didn’t care. 
He needed to know what the skin of her neck felt like. What those lips tasted like, her breasts, her sex. He needed her coming on his tongue—
The fabric of Azriel’s pants began straining against his will. It ached so fiercely he could only pray she didn’t peer down. Pray she didn’t understand the shift in his scent. 
He would only allow himself these thoughts in the dead of night, when everyone had fallen asleep and when no one, not even his shadows, could bear witness to his selfishness. 
Elain bit her lower lip and it took every ounce of Azriel’s restraint not to free it with his own. 
“I should go,” Elain said but made no move to leave. She was still peering up at him with those big eyes.
“Yes,” he said, his thumb sweeping long strokes along the side of her neck. The gentle brush sent a shiver down Elain’s spine and as her arousal drifted up to him, his eyes nearly fell shut. If he could, he would drop to his knees in front of her, asking her to let him worship her body. But Azriel settled for stroking her neck. For now. 
She shuddered, drifting closer. So close, one deep breath would brush up her chest again his upper stomach. She was looking up at him, face so open and unafraid as if he could deliver her to the lands of milk and honey. Azriel wouldn’t put it past himself to try. 
Still, her naivety hadn’t escaped those incessant murmurs of his own. They scratched their talons against his reserve, reminding him that the hand brushing her neck had done unspeakable things. Who was he to touch her like this?
It should be a sacrilege for his rough, scarred fingers to rest on her skin, to taint her with his presence. 
He could have this, right?
Azriel wouldn’t admit it to anyone ever but he was a selfish bastard and he would allow himself to have this one moment of reverie. If only to drive away his curiosity. But afterward, he promised himself to keep a hold on himself, he would go back to restraint. This single occasion would be it for him. Something to keep, something to remember during those long, dark and lonesome hours.
“Yes," Elain breathed like she read the decision. Just this taste in the dead of the longest night of the year, where only the Mother might witness them. 
Azriel's hand slid up her neck, burying in her thick hair. Tilting her face the way he wanted it. Elain's mouth parted slightly, her eyes scanning his before fluttering shut. 
Offer and permission. He nearly sighed in relief as he lowered his head toward hers. 
Azriel.
Rhysand’s voice thundered through him, halting him mere inches from Elain’s sweet and awaiting mouth.
Azriel.
The unrelenting command was an undercurrent to his name and Azriel looked up. Atop the staircase, Rhysand stood with a clenched jaw and a glower pointed at him and only him. 
My office. Now.
Rhysand vanished into thin air and Azriel was left standing there, the prickle of being watched and observed still skipping along his skin. Elain who stood before him was still awaiting his lips on hers. His stomach twisted as he pulled his hand from her hair and stepped back so their breaths would mix no longer. 
He forced himself to say, “This was a mistake.”
Something had his throat in a vice, whether it was a need or the shame at being called on like a dog, he didn’t know. He was only aware of the strained sentence coming out and Elain opening her eyes. They widened, filling with hurt and confusion before she whispered a single, “I’m sorry.”
“You don’t– Don’t apologize,” he managed to say. “Never apologize, it’s I who should…” He shook his head, unable to stand the bleakness in her face that he was the reason for. “Goodnight.”
Azriel winnowed himself into shadows before he could hear what she had to say if anything. He appeared only a heartbeat later in front of Rhysand’s study. His shadows whispered in his ear that Elain was already retreating upstairs. Shame washed over him and he ran a hand over his face. 
He pushed the dark, heavy door to reveal Rhysand at his desk, fury a moonless night across his face. 
He asked softly and only once, “Are you out of your mind?”
Azriel let the door shut behind him and didn’t even think of sitting down in the chair facing the monstrous desk littered with papers and memos. Azriel thinned his mouth at the question. He was always sparse with words and wasn’t going to stop the habit now. 
His brother looked at him in exasperation, as if not believing what he was seeing. Upon closer inspection, the lines on Rhysand’s face were longer and shadows lingered in the space below his eyes. But even despite the tired appearance, his power rolled around him like a dark cloud in an ominous reminder. 
“I asked you something, Azriel.”
Azriel joined his hands behind his back, saying, “What do you want me to say?”
Rhysand’s frown should have been an answer enough. “I want you to explain why I saw you about to kiss Elain in the middle of a hall where anyone could see you,” he snarled, pointing an accusing finger his way. “Including her mate.”
Azriel scoffed. Of course, he would mention Lucien. It wasn’t often that Azriel’s hackles rose and he allowed them to. But when he met his brother’s eyes with rage, he knew Rhysand could match him a thousand times over. His glare had crossed with its violet twin as the air grew heavier and heavier. The siphon on his chest that he kept glamoured vibrated in answer to the challenge.
Rhysand blinked. “What of Mor, Az?”
“Don’t talk to me about Mor,” he bit out.
“I’m going to talk to you about whatever I damn wish. Especially if you go about your delusions like that.”
Azriel chose to ignore that last bit if only to keep some of his sanity. This male before him had been his friend for over five centuries. They have bled, cried and laughed beside each other. He would never lie to him and never spare his feelings. And Rhysand was right, after all. The little voice in the back of his mind had always been right too and the way Rhysand was scowling at him was all the confirmation he needed.
He glared at his shadowsinger. “If Lucien finds out you’re pursuing her, he has every right to defend the bond as he sees fit. Including the Blood Duel.”
“That’s an Autumn Court tradition.” 
The duel had historically been enacted in rare cases and ended only when the other person was dead. There was no yielding, no three taps and out. There were only two fighters and no titles could help once the Blood Duel had been invoked. Despite being an outsider, Azriel had wanted to invoke it when he had found Mor all those years ago. He had been ready to challenge both Beron and Eris, prepared to kill them or die with them. But it was Mor’s right to claim their heads that had stopped him and he would never do her the dishonor of taking that choice away. 
“Lucien, as Beron’s son, has the right to demand it of you,” reminded him Rhysand. 
“I would win,” he stated, pure conviction lacing every word. 
“I know.” It was a bitter sense of acceptance that dawned on Rhysand’s face. “Your doing so would rip apart any fragile peace and alliances we have, not only with the Autumn Court but also the Spring Court. Jurian and Vassa, too.” Rhys looked up from where his hands were joined in front of his face. “You will leave Elain alone.”
Azriel neared one step closer to Rhysand’s desk. “You can’t order me to do that.”
The High Lord took in that step and thinned his lips. “I can and I will. If not to protect you three from a world of hurt, then to protect this Court. I watched you tonight and half the evening you had your eyes glued to Elain and the other half, you were lost in your thoughts. And if I caught onto it, then Lucien did too. You better mind yourself, brother. You’re losing focus.”
Azriel snarled softly against his best judgment. 
“Snarl all you want.” Rhysand leaned back in his chair. “But if I see you panting after her again, I’ll make you regret it.”
Rhysand had rarely considered punishment, let alone threatened it. It stunned Azriel enough to knock him out of his rage and into incredulity. His brother avoided his gaze, grabbing a pen and focusing on the papers on his desk. Even as he looked down, his eyes weren’t scanning the words written there. His hand with the wedding ring shook slightly when he ran it through his hair.
“Get out, Az,” he said, more gently under his breath but Azriel heard it all right. “I’ll see you in the morning.”
With no further words from Rhysand or himself, Azriel walked out of the study, pushing himself to keep a calm pace, though he wanted to storm out. He tucked in his wings, walked down the stairs and past the spot where his and Elain’s mouth had almost met. His eyes were focused forward, shadows swirling around him and sensing the distress of their master. Once he pushed through the front door and into the frigid air, he let it consume him. 
The white clouds escaping his mouth were the only sign he was alive because as he passed the gate, he stood still. Too still. The River House towered behind him and the light in Rhysand’s study went out. 
How his brothers used to fear being chained down by the ankles. They had joked with Azriel, saying he would be the first to settle and that their fleeing nature would never allow them to stay still for one female. 
But they had grown, changed over time while Azriel stayed behind, hoping that the relationship they shared would remain unchanged. 
As Azriel kept standing in the cold, he let it permeate past his suit. Down through his skin and to the marrow of his bones. There was no jacket to ward off the chill—all by his choice. There was no one to run to and Azriel wondered if that was his choice too.
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Taglist:
this is being crossposted to ao3 so make sure to show some love there too, if you feel so inclined!
omg hi to whomever is reading this work ⸜(。˃ ᵕ ˂ )⸝♡
thank you for taking the time out of your day to sit down with this, be it on your commute, after a long day at school or whatever other downtime you have!! i am very honored and i hope i can entertain.
i'm very pumped to get this out and into the world. this oc has been stuck in my head for like over a year, i swear. maybe even perhaps when the bonus chapter of acosf with azriel first dropped ! the ideas of the plot and scenes just kept coming to me in random moments throughout these last 12 or so months. it felt like i was being shaken by my shoulder and someone was screaming into my face to, "write this one, goddammit!!!!!"
so here i am, appeasing some azriel-obsessed part of me.
since his character is very… open to interpretation due to the utter lack of anything (looking at you, SJM), i'm going to take certain liberties with his personality and motivations. so this might be slightly OOC, but i'll make sure that this is tagged on my ao3.
enjoy, my lovelies. i'll be grateful for any comments, tips or questions. if you think something could have been done differently, don't ever be afraid to comment on it. i am very open to criticism as bettering my craft is one of my biggest goals with this. my inbox is open (i think).
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grandlinedreams · 9 months ago
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|| did i make myself cry a little w this? Yeah
|| warnings: mentions of nightmares and light depiction of a panic attack, vomiting, Cassian is a good beeb, reader was UTM w Rhys
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Cassian is dying. You know because he's in front of you, face down in a puddle of his own blood. There's so much of it, choking you with the copper tang ㅡ and you can do nothing to help him.
She knows it too, because Amarantha's eyes are blazing with cruel, triumphant light at the way your face drains of color. She steps towards Cassian, watches you flinch as she stands in the mess of his blood and bends, hauling him up just enough that you can see his face. "This," she says, "is what happens when you disobey me. I will take everything you love and destroy it in front of you."
It's dark when you lurch upright, dark enough that for one horrifying moment, you can't tell where you are. But then your senses are settling, registering the glimmer of stars outside the window, the billow of air that cools the sweat beading on your forehead. You lean forward, hand clapped over your mouth as you try to steady your breathing, the uneven jump of your heart.
You aren't there anymore. You're home, back in Velaris, back withㅡ
Weight shifts beside you, a hand that sweeps out to meet your body ㅡ and then Cassian is sitting up too, blinking at you as you stare mutely at him. "[Name]?" His brow furrows, concern tinging his tone. "You okay?"
No, you want to tell him, to laugh at the incredulity of being anything like okay. You haven't been in fifty years ㅡ and you're not sure you ever will be. Amarantha is gone, but you're not sure you'll ever get back what she took from you.
(Cassian's blood, thick and hot and staining everything it touches. The floor, his leathers, your skin because this is your fault, all your faultㅡ)
"[Name]?" Worry makes Cassian's voice sharp, and you flinch when he reaches for you. Your stomach lurches.
"I think I'm going to be sick," you rasp, and then you're on your feet, darting for the sanctuary of the bathroom. Your knees hit cold stone as your stomach empties, the violent twist of it as you gag and choke, eyes stinging with tears as your body forces everything up until there's nothing but spit and bile.
Your forehead meets the cool edge of the basin, chill sliding down your spine as you pant. You can't breathe ㅡ too tight, not enough air as darkness closes in on you, just likeㅡ
A hand meets your back, as warm as the scent that follows as Cassian kneels, reaching to pull you to him. "Breathe," he says softly, "copy me. Can you do that?"
You offer a shuddering gasp and a nod, fingers curling and uncurling as you fight to follow the steady rise and fall of Cassian's chest. He's patient with you, waiting until your breathing has steadied to push sweat-damp hair out of your face.
"Nightmare?" You nod, and he guides your head to his neck, cradling you to him. "Do you want to talk about it?"
You shake your head, and his grip tightens on you protectively as he gets to his feet, guiding you back towards your shared bed. It worries him, the amount of nightmares you've had since coming home ㅡ but neither you nor Rhys will talk about what happened. He doesn't blame you, he can only imagine the horrors you've seen and endured.
Cassian pulls you to him, holding you as tightly as you'll allow, hand at your back and his lips in your hair. He doesn't know if you'll go back to sleep, or if you even can ㅡ so he holds you, for as long as you want him to.
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nestastits · 8 days ago
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If you’re that worried about an age gap (between two adults) books about immortal faeries just aren’t meant for you
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nightzspring · 1 month ago
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i think it's a crime that we only have 71 tamsand works in ao3 when they have so much potential
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wingsdippedingold · 5 months ago
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I think everyone gives SJM too much credit when she says “there’ll be a betrayal”
It’ll probably be ultimately inconsequential because when it happens, the betrayer reforms and repents to the NC and sees the total and utter error of their ways and fixes it, and then get retconned later anyway
Also idk why so many people get mad when people say they think it’s Mor? It doesn’t mean she’ll become anti NC or anything, ur precious IC will stay intact I promise
Why would it be anyone outside of the NC? It wouldn’t have any impact if an outsider did it because they hold no allegiance to the MC’s who would be affected
And it won’t be the batboys, Feyre, or Nesta for sure (unless it’s unintentional, which is still shaky). And that only really leaves Elain, Amren, Mor, and Lucien. Elain and Lucien are tied into romance plots already, and Amren just does whatever + SJM doesn’t give her much anyway. Mor is the only one who has a backstory that’s been called into question and a set of powers we know next to nothing about. I think it’ll be interesting for her, since up until now she’s only played the catty girl to shit talk Nesta and be Feyre’s built in friend🤷‍♀️
Also, like I said I really doubt it’ll amount to much because in ACOTAR SJM never lets anything have lasting consequences (unless you’re Nesta or Tamlin)
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thehighladywrites · 3 months ago
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https://x.com/softiieuwu/status/1667709234924990464?s=46 this is Lucien showing you his head game pt 2!! honestly I think this is the same couple 😭
DAMN THAT MAN IS HUNGRYYYYY (wish that was me fr💔) also omg lucien vibes #needthat
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mrs2224 · 3 months ago
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A Court Of Shadows and Shields
Azriel (ACOTAR)/ Original Female Character, Rhysand (ACOTAR)& Original Female Character
Tags: Fluff, Smut, and Angst, 18+plus
Summary: Milla is a human girl from Virginia. She runs away from her home just to be pulled into Prythian, particularly the Night Court. Milla has to go through her new way of life, after picking up some power on her way through the portal. In her way, this new way of life is a second chance. Even if it was a rocky start. It is up to Milla and the inner circle to take down a new hidden enemy. While she is also battling herself, involving her connection with the Shadowsinger
Chapter 1: The Start of Something New.
TW: TW: Animal Death, Suicidal thoughts, and Panic attack.
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All I could hear in the distance was shouting. My lips clicked for Brayden to ride faster through the woods. My hood over my head. My disgustingly white dress. That was torn up on the edges. I galloped faster and faster. There was a boulder in front of us. Before I could even think. Brayden tripped both of us flying forward. I quickly got up to my feet to rush to Brayden’s side trying to get him to stand. His leg was in bad shape. 
I could hear my father’s words in the distance along with his riders. I had my revolver in my hand. Brayden finally got up, and I petted him quickly. Grabbing the reins as we hurried farther into the woods. The leaves crunching. Brayden was somewhat limping. He trotted next to me. I hopped over rocks and branches on the ground. The pine and oak trees surround us—the Cold musky air of Virginia. 
We kept running till we were met with a ledge. I stopped short, the drop-off was about fifty feet. Down into a rushing river. I looked around to find a way to get across. If there was a bridge or something. I couldn’t go back. I would not go back. I felt my head hurt. My mouth was bloodied and bruised. I felt a sting in my stomach. I looked around. There was no way to get across. My heart sunk to my stomach.
The night sky was silent. As I felt footsteps approaching me. I looked to see my father drunk as can be. A gun in his hand. Two riders on either side. One of them was the man I was to be wedded to. The other was the man’s father. I stood my ground. Brayden was behind me. My dark brown hair was braided up and flying in the air currents from the river and the mixture of the night sky.
“Come back, Milla. It is very rude to run off at your wedding.” My father looked at me. His drunk words stung me deeply. If he was sober, he would have regretted this. But drunk words were considered to be sober thoughts. And He was never sober. Not after my mother’s death last year. 
“No! No! I will not go back. I will not marry someone because you want me to. I will marry someone because I want to. Not for land or wealth!” I shouted at him, My tears streaming down my cheeks. I stepped back moving closer to the edge knowing that the only solution was to jump. 
My father shook his head in a devilish sarcastic way. I had never seen him act this way before. As If I was an object, not a person.
“You are just a woman in my house, you don’t get to choose who you will be with!” He slandered his words as if he was satan himself.
Brayden shifted slightly behind me. My father looked at my horse and before I even could answer. He fired at Brayden. I screamed watching him drop to the ground. I sunk to my knees to see if I could save him. But he was dead already. My father grunted as he signaled his two riders to get me. I sprung back to my feet. The pain inside my stomach was blistering with fire. I stepped back to the edge of the cliff. 
“Get Over Here! Now!” he yelled.
I looked down the drop and back at him. I sighed and threw my revolver to the ground. I knew this was the end. I knew that this was where my story stopped. 
My brother called my name out in the distance, somewhere in the woods. Police sirens screaming as if I knew they were closing in on my father and his men. I took a deep breath. When my eyes blinked. Flames were coming from my irises. My face shed a tear before I grinned at him. 
“I’ll see you in hell” That was went I jumped off the side of the ledge. Fell down the cliff.
“MILLLA!!!” My father screamed my name. Shock in his eyes. He dropped his gun and bottle of alcohol. Sprinting to the edge to watch me fall. He looked away moments after. Not wanting to see all of it. 
I closed my eyes thinking this was it. That I was gone and that this was the end. But then just like that, I felt gravity around me putting me into a blue shield. I felt a power or force inside myself that I had never felt. I felt my fingers and my body started to charge up. Then there was a cyan-blue glow hollowed into my eyes. 
And then I felt nothing. As my body traveled through something before I fell out of the sky, the cyan blue illuminated up to the heavens above me. Like I was Thor tunneling down into battle from Asgard. I was finally met with a hit from a tree and another tree. I was freefalling till my body plummeted into the white fluffy snow. I was in pain lying on the ground. The coldness around me. I turned to my side as I vomited up what appeared to be blood and before I passed out onto the snow. My eyes were still glowing brightly. 
I was out for a couple of hours. I launched myself from the snow. Panting as I looked around to see where I was. It was cold, and the large snowflakes covered my legs and dress. I didn’t know where I was. I slowly got up on my feet. I had a gash on my stomach and a tear in my dress. As I was keeping it closed. 
I stumbled through the snowy ground. Hissing in pain. The crunch of my boots into the knee-high snow was the only sound. I panicked being alone in the night with no one. I started to shiver and then I cried out. 
“HELP ME!! SOMEBODY HELP ME!!!” I screamed, as I was crying holding my stomach. 
I saw lights in the distance before I made my way slowly there. I was wobbling on my feet, trying to walk normally. It took some time to get there. But once I got there. It looked like a training camp. It wasn’t very busy. I Screamed out crying once again.
“SOMEBODY HELP ME!!” I belted out my lungs. I felt them squeeze around me. I couldn’t breathe at all. My eyes were still glowing blue. My hand was on my stomach. I stumbled into the camp. I fell and lay there. I looked up at the sky.
I heard sets of boots heading in my direction. They appeared over me. Three men were looking down at me. They were all wearing devil wings. I knew for a fact that I was dead. Because no human can wear wings. One of the men kneeled, looking over my body, his eyes widened. His voice was rich and deep as he looked behind him. 
“Get the Commander here immediately!” He shouted and looked at everyone around. “Help her, bring her to the healing tent.” The man said. Before another man picked me up with no trouble. He carried me into the camp
I was placed in a small tent. And was set down on a mattress-like stretcher. Something I remember seeing after one of my brothers was being pulled out of a car. My mind was numb. And I felt numb. I was so tired and I was in pain. So much pain. 
“Cassian, she’s in here” a Mumbled voice peaked from behind the tent.
 I must have been dozing off into a slumber because I wasn’t aware of any conversations being played out. All I knew was I had a weird feeling inside me that was batting within itself. Like four different things were fighting each other. I had no idea what was causing it. I fell fifty feet and now I am dead. I hope to believe I am. I heard more mumbling. But all I could get out of it was. 
“We have to tell….” more mumbling. “The High Lord about this..” The voice was serious and concerning. My eyes were still glowing. I don’t know why my eyes were glowing. The Commander looked down at me, I felt his stare behind the illuminating blue glow. Before he left the tent. I was alone once again. 
I fell back asleep in the tent. I dreamed of nightmares and being chained up and beaten by my father with the help of the man I was supposed to be married to. But when I woke. I was no longer in the tent in the camp. 
I was in a bedroom. My eyes were back to their normal color. They treated my stomach with some stitches it looked to be. The pain was somewhat still intense. I was panting out, I rose from the bed. But I was still in this dark room. There was no window or light. It seemed like to me I was in a cell. A cell with an actual bed. There was an iron door in the room. Yep definitely in a cell.
“Is there somebody there!?! I need help!!” I called out. 
But none answered. I panicked. I don’t like being in small places it makes me react and panic. I fell on the floor trying to breathe from being too closed in. My vision was fuzzy and my hands were shaking. I didn’t even notice when someone walked in. Well, two figures were approaching me. I looked at the wall. Before a voice appears to my left. 
“Who are you?!” The voice was deep, raspy, and a little bit elegant. The man approached me. 
I panicked and did backflip. Crouching looking at my hands gripping the stone floor before looking up. 
“Whoever the Hell are you?? Where Am I!?!” I panicked. My eyes were filled with fear. I was looking around the room. I was so fearful that I was going to die in heaven. I guess I was right about seeing someone in hell. 
The man kneeled in front of me, he grabbed my chin forcing me to look up at him. I didn’t see much other than violet eyes. I have never seen anyone back at home with eyes like that. They were hypnotizing me. His eyes were on mine for a while. before he let go and lowered my chin.
He turned away from me before walking to the door. He looked to his right and singled the other guy to bring me out of the cell of a bedroom. 
The man nodded to him before approaching me. He slowly lifted me to my feet. I looked down at his hands. That was now placed on my shoulders. They were scars, no more like burns to be exact. Like the ones on me. On my legs. He had two large wings on his back too. But he was only a silhouette. He has some blue illuminating throughout certain areas. Like a gemstone or a light. I couldn’t figure it out. My black eye was bulging on me. The man nudged my shoulder as I muttered
 “What’s going on? Where am I??” But the man never answered instead he walked with me. One hand on my shoulder. Pushing me forward. Wherever I was, I was not in Virginia anymore.
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cherubofthenight · 13 days ago
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Me exploring every pull towards a fictional character bc like what if that’s my future husband?
im talking about azriel shadowsinger btw
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feyres-divorce-lawyer · 4 months ago
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as much as i wish tamlin had left him to rot, a tamlin that didn’t help save rhysand is a tamlin that did not love feyre, and that is a tamlin that doesn’t exist.
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velidewrites · 2 years ago
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“Sometimes love can be a poison” is such a raw fucking line we don’t talk about it nearly enough. The way we’re first shown a kind of love that utterly destroys you down to your very spirit — only for the rest of the series to go on to prove that one day, you will find a love that’s going to be your salvation. No one talk to me
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emiliosandozsequence · 6 months ago
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unfortunately these books Are like crack so i Will be reading the next one whenever it comes out
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tadpolesonalgae · 1 year ago
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everyone asking bout cbmthy and teeth and talons HUT IM HERE THIRSTIJG FOR THE ASSISTANT FIC LIKE CMON ISNT ANYONE WONDERING WHATS GKNNA HAPPEN IN THE NEXT CHAPTER????? CAUSE I DO!!!
This is so lovely, thank you so much 😭
I hadn’t planned on making His Personal Assistant a proper series? Or rather, I hadn’t anticipated anyone liking it enough to want a part 2?
Either way, I’ll try to squeeze in some time for writing a part 3 :)
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