#EXCEPT for some reason neither LXC nor MY has told NMJ about that (which is even MORE deranged if LXC personally suggested MY seek him out)
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Hey, novel people who can come with citations!
The timeline is busted, but what chronology is given for Sunshot generally and for Meng Yaoâs trajectory after getting kicked down the stairs more specifically?
Because! Given that heâs from Yunping and joins up with the Nie clan to fight during Sunshot⌠what led to Meng Yao, born and raised in Yunmeng, to join up with an isolated northern sect (whose peculiar cultivation practice means they are less likely to welcome him as an inner disciple) and NOT with the local sect with ties to Lanling Jin that is currently desperate for new inner disciples and will take and advance anyone who can prove themselves?
Was Meng Yao living near Qinghe already? Was Sunshot already in full swing for a REALLY long time before Lotus Pierâs destruction? Was it a quirk of timing, and he joined up with Nie Mingjue in the little sliver of time when Jiang Cheng is still recovering/in hiding? Is it unstated because timelines and geography are fake and theyâre even more fake if you arenât one of the storyâs two leads?
#the obvious explanation would be âoh he joined NMJ because LXC spoke so highly of himâ#EXCEPT for some reason neither LXC nor MY has told NMJ about that (which is even MORE deranged if LXC personally suggested MY seek him out)#(actually come to think of it why didnât MY just⌠stay with LXC? why did they separate in Novel Canon instead of MY serving with the Lan?)#(man I know the CQL order of events had a lot of haters but I have to give it the W on this one)#(bc I cannot fathom why either MY or LXC are where they WHEN they are in novel canon prior to MY getting his job rec from NMJ)
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LXC is the legal guardian and adopter for LSZ or LJY, and NMJ has questions.
part 2 of the LJY-adopted-by-LQR fic (now also on ao3)
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âSo, did I knock you up before I went to war or something?â Nie Mingjue asked. âBecause I feel like you shouldâve mentioned it if that was the case. Possibly in a letter.â
Lan Xichen was so tired that it took him a solid minute to parse what was wrong with that sentence and how to respond, and it was not by following his first instinct to apologize that he shouldâve written better letters.
âStop making fun of me,â he said instead, groping towards some measure of dignity.
Sadly, dignity was in very short supply when you were taking care of babies. Multiple babies. Well, one baby and one toddler, which was somehow worse?
Lan Xichen was pretty sure theyâd figured out how to time their crying off each other.
âI would never,â Nie Mingjue said, like a liar, and then he picked up little Jingyi and â Lan Xichen simply cannot find another way to put it â shook him, in a manner not unlike testing a melon for freshness.
For some reason, this made Lan Jingyi stop crying and start making snuffling little giggles instead.
âHow did you do that?â Lan Xichen asked, eyes wide.
âDo what?â Nie Mingjue tucked the baby into the crook of his arm and scooped up some food off the table, offering it to him, and Lan Jingy actually ate it. âXichen, are you feeling all right?â
âShhh!â Lan Xichen hissed, eyes fixed on the baby, which was neither spitting up everything nor wailing as if his heart was broken. âNo unnecessary noise during meals.â
Nie Mingjue snorted in amusement. âSure,â he said amiably, in the tone Lan Xichen had long ago learned meant ânice rules youâve got there, itâd be an awful shame if someone found a loophole in themâ. âThis isnât a meal, though; itâs just a snack.â
Lan Xichen eyed the still-not-crying Lan Jingyi and decided that now was not the time for a spirited debate on the virtues of discipline and fulfilling the merits rather than the word of a rule.
âWhereâs monster number one gone?â Nie Mingjue asked abruptly. âHe must be very good at hiding, because I looked away for a blink of an eye and he was gone.â
Lan Xichenâs eyes slowly dropped down to where a cloth-covered lump was not-so-sneakily edging towards Nie Mingjueâs foot.
Nie Mingjue was one of the foremost front line fighters of their generation, and possibly the previous one as well. His physical ability was matched only by his incredibly keen senses.
There was no way he was not aware of the lump.
âItâs a real shame, too,â Nie Mingjue continued. âI was planning on doing a test of how far you can throw children, but I think monster two hereâs a bit too small to make the test worthwhile. But I guess it just wasnât meant to be ââ
You canât throw children, Lan Xichen was about to say, except Lan Sizhui was tearing off the tablecloth and jumping up in excitement, shouting, âHere! Here! Iâm here! Iâm big enough! You can throw me!â
âWhy does he want to be thrown,â Lan Xichen murmured, bewildered. Heâd never wanted to be thrown around as a child. Had he?
In fairness, he wasnât sure. No one had ever offered.
Apparently, though, Lan Sizhui did very much want to be thrown around, and Lan Jingyi even condescended to allow Lan Xichen to hold him while he watched.
âHigher! Higher!â Lan Sizhui shouted.
âReally? Is this high enough?â Nie Mingjue held him up at eye level.
âHigher!â
âLike this?â Above his head.
âHigher!â
âYou sure?â
âYes!â
âAll right. How about ââ Baxia slithered out from her place by the door, zipping over until she was right in front of Nie Mingjue, allowing him to step onto her like a stair, and then zipping upwards to about hip-height, lifting Nie Mingjue and Lan Sizhui with her. They very nearly hit a tree branch with their heads. ââ this?â
Lan Sizhui shrieked with laughter. Â
âItâs too early to introduce them to flying,â Lan Xichen objected, because it was. âMingjue-xiongâŚâ
Nie Mingjue hopped down with a laugh. âAll right, one last toss,â he told Lan Sizhui. âThen you nap. Okay?â
âOkay!â Lan Sizhui, who had never once willingly succumbed to naptime in the entirety of the time that Lan Xichen had known him, promised earnestly.
Back into the pile of soft grass he went, giggling the entire time, and amazingly enough he really did fall asleep afterwards. Lan Jingyi, too, had fallen asleep at some point.
âIâve decided that your brother needs more experience running a sect,â Lan Xichen told Nie Mingjue, who raised his eyebrows. âStarting immediately. I promise to allow you to leave when Jingyi is, oh, shall we say five years old..?â
You could reason with a five year old.Â
Nie Mingjue laughed.
It was a type of laugh that suggested that he thought Lan Xichen was making a joke. This was incorrect.
âYouâd be amazed at how serious I am,â Lan Xichen told him threateningly, âIâm sect leader here, this is my territory, I can have you arrested any time ââ but by that point Nie Mingjue was already bundling him off to bed, too, combing out his hair and plying him with snacks and â
This was not helping his argument that Lan Xichen should be allowing him to leave rather than keep him trapped in the Cloud Recesses as a babysitter-slash-love-slave.Â
Well, he wouldnât really do that, of course. Heâd let him go. Eventually.
Itâd probably be good for Nie Mingjueâs stress levels, honestly.
âSeriously, though, how did you do that?â he asked, his head on Nie Mingjueâs lap. âThey didnât cry once.â
âIâm good with kids,â Nie Mingjue said, his fingers digging into Lan Xichenâs scalp in just the right way. âNow can you explain to me how exactly you ended up with them? Two, no less?â
Lan Xichen groaned and covered his eyes with a hand. âSizhuiâs Wangjiâs,â he explained. âNot biologically, but heâs put his name down in the family register under his own. But, you knowâŚâ
âI know.â
Lan Xichen appreciated that he didnât need to go into it. The doctors had estimated that Lan Wangji would regain full mobility within three years, so that was the period the elders had mandated for his so-called âseclusionâ, but with Lan Wangji being locked away like that â even with visitors, even though he was trying his hardest to care for the child from where he was â meant that someone had to care for the childâs day-to-day life until his brother was ready to resume the role.
âJingyi is a cousin, I think,â he continued. âHis parents are dead, and uncle accepted guardianship for himâŚI think heâs going to adopt him, actually.â
âThen why is he with you?â
âI volunteered.â
âXichen, I say this with a full heart of affection and tremendous respect for your capabilities,â Nie Mingjue said. âBut why in the world would you go and do a stupid thing like that?â
Lan Xichen sighed. The worst part was, he couldnât even argue that it wasnât stupid â he was, quite obviously, terrible with children.
âUncleâs still injured from the war,â he admitted. In fact, his injury was probably even older than the war, dating as far back as the burning of the Cloud Recesses â his uncle had never been much of a fighter, his impressive cultivation strength stemming almost entirely from gentler arts like music and learning and meditation, but when his home and his family and his students were at risk, heâd fought, while Lan Xichen ran. Not just fought; heâd kept fighting long past the point that his body allowed. It only made sense for the bill to need to be paid. âHe had a recurrence of an old complaint, not long ago; he started coughing up blood. The doctors insisted that he try to avoid anything that might cause him stress.â
âStress. Like, say, a rowdy infant?â
âExactly like a rowdy infant,â Lan Xichen agreed, glad that Nie Mingjue did not mention that what had happened with Lan Wangji was also likely a source of stress. At least the two of them had slowly started to repair their relationship recently â the heartbreak would kill their uncle sooner than anything else, and Lan Xichen might be weak, but he really couldnât tolerate the idea of suffering any more loss.
And also, if Lan Wangji could see his way to forgiving their uncle, he might one day agree to forgive Lan Xichen, too.
âI see. So you ended up with the little one, too.â
âYes. And they hate me.â Nie Mingjue coughed a little. âNo, donât deny it. They clearly hate me. They always cry and spit and yell -â
âTheyâre children, Xichen,â Nie Mingjue said. âTraumatized children. They do that.â
Lan Xichen didnât need to open his eyes to know that Nie Mingjue was frowning in memory of pain long past. Lan Xichen remembered, with painful clarity, how young Nie Huaisang had been when Lao Nie had died, how badly he had taken it.
Thereâd been a lot of crying and vomiting and yelling there as well.
âYouâre good with kids,â Lan Xichen said instead of commenting, trading delicacy for delicacy; he would not touch Nie Mingjueâs still-bleeding wounds just as Nie Mingjue avoided his own. âVery good.â
âWell, I like to think so, anyway.â
They remained in blissful, comfortable silence for a while.
âHow would it have even worked?â Lan Xichen finally asked. His eyes were still closed, Nie Mingjueâs fingers running through his hair; he never wanted to move again.
âHmm?â
âIf you knocked me up before you went to war. I mean, theyâre not even the same age.â
âWell, one of themâs from the affair, obviously.â
âIâm sorry, am I cheating on you now?â Lan Xichen opened an eye and pinned Nie Mingjue with a fierce look that instructed his lover to reconsider.
âOf course not,â Nie Mingjue said, mock-solemnly. His eyes were dancing. âYou were so distraught after receiving incorrect news of my untimely demise that you conducted a ghost marriage with my spirit, and then went and had a child to continue my name.â
ââŚtheyâre both surnamed Lan.â
âSo what? Are you saying Iâm not good enough to marry into your sect, is that it?â
Lan Xichenâs cheeks were hurting from trying not to laugh. âI wouldnât dream of implying such a thing.â
âThere you go, then.â
âCan I ask why I felt the need to have a child to continue your name if I had one already?â
ââŚwell, fuck,â Nie Mingjue said. âIâve got nothing.â
Lan Xichen burst out laughing.
#mdzs#lan xichen#nie mingjue#nielan#lan sizhui#lan jingyi#my fic#my fics#whistling brook#I know this doesn't quite match the prompt#but it ended up fitting in perfectly with the previous ficlet#walburgablack
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