#i can just....tack on the WoK one too...
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Guuuuysssss Brandon Sanderson is making me spend money again!
#brandon sanderson#secret project number 5!?!?#WoR leather bound#do i do it?#i can just....tack on the WoK one too...#fuuuuuuuuuuck
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college roommate!Miguel x reader
| gn! reader, masturbation, dildos, voyeurism
College Roommate!Miguel who gets back to your shared apartment after class and is puzzled by the noise complaint tacked to the door.
The fine print describes loud noises during the hours that he’s not at home, meaning it would have to be you. But that’s still odd.
In the handful of months that the two of you have been roommates, he’s never known you to be loud. In actuality, most people would probably consider you the perfect roommate. You’re quiet, clean up after yourself, cook extra food for him, stay on top of chores, and mostly stick to your room. When the two of you do spend time together, it’s never awkward, just… comfortable. Neither of you feel the need to over-exert yourselves with social interaction while in the comforts of your own home.
Miguel likes being around you. He thinks you’re pretty.
He brings up the complaint that night as you cook dinner side-by-side.
“By the way, I came home to a noise complaint today,” he says, chopping up veggies to throw into the noodle dish you’re making. “It said something about loud noises, but it’s only during the hours when I’m not around. Have you heard anything?”
He doesn’t look at your face, but he notices the way you pause.
“Oh, um,” you start, stirring up the noodles in the wok. “I dunno, I must have been playing my music a little too loud while you were at school. My bad,” you reply. “I’ll try to keep it down.”
Miguel shrugs. “Got it. No worries,” he replies. Since he’s never experienced you being loud, he doesn’t really know what else it could be. He lifts the cutting board, and sweeps the veggies into the wok.
It’s not until a week later when his final lecture of the day gets canceled that he figures out what the noise complaint could have been about.
He doesn’t see you when he walks in, but that’s nothing out of the ordinary. It’s only when he takes out his headphones that he hears it.
His first guess is that you’re crying, and it’s technically none of his business to figure out why. As he gets closer, though, he hears it; slick, wet sounds accompanied by your voice, a bit muffled, letting out the most debauched, lecherous wails he’s ever heard.
By some sheer, dumb stroke of fate, your door is open just a crack. His palms are sweating and his pants are tightening as he approaches. He considers turning away when suddenly he hears you, clear as day. You must have pulled away from whatever you had been pressing your face into.
“F-fuh- oh, god- Fuck, Miguel!”
All the blood in his body rushes to his cock, and he’s stepping closer faster than he can think, his eyes trained on that crack in the door. When he sees you, his mind goes blank.
You’re on your knees on the bed, your chest pressed to the sheets and your cheek turned away from him. Your arm is tucked under your torso and between your legs, fucking yourself silly with a flesh tan dildo that for a moment, reminds him of his own cock. Your pretty hole is absolutely soaked, and there's a frothy, white ring gathered at the base of the dildo that he wants to see you lick off.
He stays there, his hand squeezing at his now ridiculously hard cock over his pants as you push yourself up to face the headboard, adjust the dildo underneath you, and start bouncing.
You moan his name again. Then, as if remembering something, you press your hand over your mouth, swallowed by the sleeve of the hoodie that your other hand is tugging up your waist. The bed creaks beneath you, but you keep going.
Arousal lurches hot in his stomach when he realizes the hoodie is one he’s been missing for weeks.
Miguel only lets himself watch for a few more moments, hungrily taking in every inch of you, every noise that escapes your pretty lips and committing it to memory before he turns around and walks back to the door. He opens it wide, then slams it shut, loud enough for you to hear. Your moaning ceases.
His eyes are trained on your bedroom door as you rush over and shut it completely.
#this came to me in a vision as i was washing off my toys in the bathroom sink#winnie writes#miguel o’hara x reader#miguel x reader#atsv x reader#miguel o’hara x y/n#miguel o'hara smut#miguel o'hara x you#atsv x y/n#spider man 2099 x reader#atsv x you#atsv smut
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the idea of going public... sakura shudders at the idea. he knows the students of bofurin are all kind-hearted — too kind-hearted for him — but he knows within their kind heartedness is their good natured teasing. he isn't sure if he could handle that without exploding, nor did he trust himself to not say something stupid that could possibly hurt suo. however he knows they can't keep their relationship secret for long; it was a selfish request by sakura so he could warm up to the emotions and the newness of his first relationship. he's not really sure how to navigate through it all. not to mention still dealing with the trauma of his past...
“i don't know,” sakura mutters honestly, cheeks still read while knowing suo was lightly teasing him. his eyes furtively glances at suo toiling over the question. “d-does it bother you? keeping us a secret... you just went along with it, but i guess you might not want to anymore?” it wouldn't hurt to talk about it, right? he can rely and trust suo beyond just being his vice-captain.
sakura tilts his head slightly. he knows only bits and pieces of suo's past, considering the other talks next to nothing about himself. sakura couldn't really say much or judge, considering he isn't open about his past either, however it's interesting, the bits of suo he does get beyond that playful smile. “the hell is a wok? iun got one of those,” sakura frowns slightly. he wonders if that girl, tachibana, would have one since she works a kitchen all the time. he probably wouldn't be able to ask for it without embarrassing himself or being asked a million and one questions why he needed one since sakura often eats there instead.
he groans softly, with a roll of his eyes; suo is back to teasing him again. “give the guys these sweets and shit. i can't eat it all by myself.” he scowls at the use of -chan tacked onto the end of his name. suo has a habit of doing that to make him sound cute. whatever; sakura thinks to himself opening the door to his empty apartment. he hasn't had time to properly do dishes or throw junk away, since he only comes home — if one could call it that — when he's ready to sleep. he moves some trash aside, onto the floor mostly, uncaring where it falls to, to make room for the new groceries.
“if i'da known you were comin' i would've cleaned up some,” he mutters, but he's not at all embarrassed by the mess. suo and nirei had seen his place in such a state before after all. he grabs a large trash bag to start sorting some of his junk, it's the least he could do to get rid of the copious amounts of water bottles and bread wrappers he has littered around. “find a place to sit, i'll have this cleaned up soon. then we can cook... after the dishes.”
HE IS A TRICKSTER IN NATURE FROM THE WAY HIS SMILE FRAMES HIS LIPS & THE WAY HE AIMS TO DEAL WITH THREATS. it's a not a surprise that he tends to joke around with sakura, but he is serious about showing sakura the tender side of things. suo can only speculate upon sakura's reactions, the way he tends to encase his heart in a safebox that he's been deeply hurt. however, suo knows it is not in his style to force sakura to open up, he will not take a crowbar & reveal his scars. this takes a greater finesse, a kind of art that reminds him of tea ceremonies. his lips curl even further when sakura's lips finds his & he relishes in wanting to kiss him a little longer.
❛ still too shy? what happens when we decide to go public? are you going to freak out when i hold your hand? ❜ he muses with the playful intonation in his voice. it is sakura's purity towards any form of affections that make it so endearing to suo. there are many things he doesn't reveal, but it is for the sake of the violence that breathes in these streets. he is mostly careful about what he puts out there considering nirei's notebook is a walking data book. ❛ i do. my master taught me quite a lot. with the ingredients you listed, i should be able to make a nice chicken fried rice. by chance, has the townspeople gifted you a wok? ❜
the stroll to sakura's apartment was nice, in a way this is what youth & highschool life should be about. there are snapshots that a teenager must experience & despite everything all of them should be able to live a life such as this. ❛ oh ? what would you like to do with it? sakura-chan, i can't read minds. ❜ even if he can read the other boy pretty well he would like to see the other use his voice more. it was nothing a little bit more goading wouldn't do. suo would be every step of the way for him, a crutch for him to lean on when times were bleak. ❛ one of these days, i'd like to invite you over my place. ❜
#suuhous#⋞ 〈 ❀ 〉 ⋟ sakura . in character#we wrote a lot today my boy said he missed his mans hella#also he is a little bit (a lot) of a slob#only cleans when he absolutely has to#also this kid doesnt lock doors bc if someone tries to rob him theyll leave extra broke#(he will make sure they are in medical debt)
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[wip] 凤凰涅槃; phoenix rising
incomplete wip. 9034 words, rated t.
wangxian court intrigue + wuxia + wingfic au, in which wwx is the lost phoenix and lwj is royal scholar. this is actually a collection of scattered scenes through the first act of the fic!
dwell too long in the fire and even the phoenix will burn.
Wei Wuxian holds a rotting mango in his hand.
Pungent, slippery as an oiled wok and twice as dangerous, it’s just a few days too old for optimal flavor—but he does not plan to eat it. No, he’s going to throw it.
A well-aimed piece of fruit and the right audience and a stomach just empty enough that the metallic edge of hunger has begun to bite makes for a good show. Wei Wuxian teeters like a gargoyle on the upturn of a roof, all his weight balanced in a crouch, waiting for the fishmonger to pass by beneath him. The market teems with citizens who have come early to buy the freshest kills and produce that the morning has to offer, the smell of frying jianbing wafts in thick curls up to Wei Wuxian’s perch. His belly rumbles. His last meal had been during sunrise the day before.
“Fresh fish!” shouts the fishmonger. His mule’s head bobs dark and feisty as it tugs his cart along. Behind them, their wagon is crammed with quivering tubs full of water and writhing fish. “Fresh from the docks this morning! Fresh caught! Carp and eel and shrimp! Killed and scaled and gutted if you ask! Fresh fish!”
Wei Wuxian rocks up onto the knobs of his knees. The tiled roof digs into his skin--what are you doing here, flightless bird? His weapon of choice bleeds a thin, honeyed line of juice from his wrist to his elbow. He takes aim.
A little commotion in a crowded market goes a long way. One spooked mule, one fishmonger, and a wagon full of uncovered tubs of live catches? What could go wrong? The sun hammers on his back, asking him what he’s waiting for. The mule’s flanks are exposed around its saddle and harness. Wei Wuxian screws one eye shut and sticks the tip of his tongue between his lips as he raises his mango, and--
“I’ll bet my daughter!”
A disturbance rises above the cheerful twang of the market below. It comes from the gambler’s stall, tucked away by the liquor stand. What a smart, slimy placement.
“Is this man crazy?”
“What kind of father are you?”
“How disgusting, to gamble with your daughter’s life!”
Wei Wuxian frowns. Below him, the fishmonger passes, and the crowd molds around his wagon like ants around a snail. A pustule of a man hunches over the gambler’s stall with a girl of no more than nine or ten in his grip as he snarls in the proprietor’s face. His clothes are stained and dirty, and his eyes are yellow with jaundice. Anger flares hot as a kicked hornet’s nest in Wei Wuxian’s belly, muting the hunger, when the drunkard yanks on his daughter so hard that she trips into the table.
Without thinking, Wei Wuxian shouts, “Hey, you, ugly dog at the gambler’s table!”
Dozens of heads turn to stare.
Wei Wuxian lobs the mango with all his might.
It whistles over the street like a lumpy, bulbous pigeon, dripping as it goes. The man is too drunk, or too hungover to move out of the way--he simply watches, jaw slack, not seeming to realize that he’s in the way until it splatters him square in the face and explodes in a shower of golden muck. He howls, clawing at his skin, and in the process lets his daughter go. She falls because she’d been unbalanced, hard into the street on her elbows. Some of the mango carnage had splattered onto her. Orange-brown bits drip off her chin like fat, gummy tears.
The drunkard points a trembling, furious finger at Wei Wuxian. “You--!”
“Me? What about me? Worry about yourself first. Worry about your daughter!”
A small crowd has gathered to watch the spectacle--this man, covered in sticky mango goo and attracting flies, and this vagrant shaking with laughter on the roof. He is so close to the edge, yet balances in place without any unsteadiness, with the surety of someone who is always in high places.
“You are a coward, staying on the roof! Get down here and fight me with your fists, like a man!” shouts the drunk. His daughter tugs on his sleeve behind him as the crowd thickens.
“A-die, A-die, let’s go--”
“Let go of me, you useless girl.” He shakes her off. “Good for nothing, waste of space. Not even good enough for gambling money.”
Wei Wuxian frowns. A hushed gasp races through the bodies below as he stands and tips from his perch on the roof, tumbling once before alighting in the street. His shoes stick to the pavement from the tack of juice. The man barely makes it up to his chin, and his skin is splotchy from alcoholism; his clothes are patches which means he had family members whose kindness he did not deserve at home.
“What,” says Wei Wuxian, tucking his hands behind his back. He’s not above mango-throwing, but he’s not going to fight a man in front of his young daughter. Now that’s just bad manners. “You really want to fight me? Just take my advice, sir. Go home. Take your daughter and your money and buy some food, and go home. Don’t make me throw another mango at you. That was going to be my lunch.”
“I’m not scared of men like you. Arrogant and scornful, just looking for a fight! I ought to break your--”
Wei Wuxian intercepts the man’s fist before it can connect with his face.
He fights like a commoner would, crude and unpolished, with his thumb tucked inside his fingers. Rookie mistake. His eyes bulge like a frog stepped on as he tries to force his way through Wei Wuxian’s grip, face turning the color of puce as he fails comically. Wei Wuxian digs his nails into the back of the man’s hand, trembling with the effort of holding him in place, and then he shoves him back.
The man goes sprawling in the street, and the crowd shuffles back, as if to avoid a particularly filthy swine.
“A-die,” says his daughter, trying to help him up, but he swats at her. “A-die.”
“Go.”
Not without spitting at Wei Wuxian’s feet. He simply laughs, because it’s such a silly, juvenile thing, and then, like an infection clearing, the citizens around him scatter back into the day.
Wei Wuxian claps his hands together, then wipes his palms on the seat of his robes. “You really ought not to entertain patrons who have clearly started to lose their control,” he says to the proprietor of the gambling stall. They wipe down the edges of their table with a dusty rag where the carnage of fruit clings. “Soon he will trade his whole family away for nothing but a nugget of gold.”
The proprietor scoffs. “And who are you?”
“Someone nice enough to clean his mess up. Sorry for this, by the way,” says Wei Wuxian. He starts straightening sacks full of supplies--coin bags, a set of rings, vases clinking fluted and musical against each other. They must run a games stall elsewhere in the city; Wei Wuxian has seen these prizes before.
“Who asked you to be a vigilante, anyway.” The proprietor shakes his head. “You look for trouble, boy.”
“The only thing sweeter than trouble is justice,” says Wei Wuxian, laughing at the distaste the proprietor levels at him. He chases a few escaped scrolls that have tumbled from their sack. “Ah, don’t be like that. I really am sorry, I didn’t mean to interfere with business, okay? I just don’t like to see--”
One of the scrolls has unfurled enough for Wei Wuxian to catch a glimpse of the ink painting. Beneath the glimmer of midday sun the paper is so buttery that Wei Wuxian expects for his fingers to come away slick when he picks it up, letting the scroll’s weight pull the painting the rest of the way open.
The brushwork is unfamiliar. Mountains studded with frosted clouds, a lake, a tiny figure of a man at the silver waterline. A spray of peonies cradles the scene in its petals, done with a brush so fine that the artist could have drawn it with a single human hair. Wei Wuxian doesn’t recognize it--not the art. He hadn’t opened it for the art.
A red seal dots the corner of the painting like a button of blood. Wei Wuxian would recognize it anywhere--anyone should recognize it anywhere. Being in possession of something with a seal like this, without explanation, could earn an axe to the neck.
“Sir,” he asks, staring at the painting, “how did you come across a painting done by the imperial family?”
The proprietor’s eyes widen, and they make a wild lunge for it. Wei Wuxian is taller, though, and jerks it out of reach, rolling the scroll back up so the paper won’t tear. “Give it back!”
“Aha! What is it? Tell me. How did you come across a treasure like this?”
“It’s nothing.”
“Hmm. So if I simply walk away with it, you will also simply shrug, and let me be on my way?” Wei Wuxian raises his eyebrows when the proprietor glowers. “Ah, so it mustn’t be nothing. Not with a look like that. Do tell.”
“It’s none of your business.”
Wei Wuxian chews on his lip, smiles. His stomach rumbles, already two cartwheels ahead, but he needs to slow down and think. “Can I pawn it from you?”
“I’d like to see you try, boy. Give it here!”
Wei Wuxian sighs. “I would not try. I would give it back to you, if you asked nicely, but oh--oh, the danger of another person knowing that you have a painting with an imperial stamp on it, with no way to explain how. Unless you’d like to tell me. But you’ve made it clear as day that you’re not interested in letting me know, so you’ll just have to let a stranger go, knowing he carries this secret, not knowing who he is, not knowing what he’ll do.” He holds the scroll out now. “But of course, I cannot take what’s mine. Shame. Here you are.”
The proprietor had listened to him speak with a vague, mounting fear in his eyes, and when Wei Wuxian shakes the scroll at them, they shrink back as if he’s shaking a dismembered arm at them.
“What, don’t want it now? Didn’t you want me to hand it over?”
“What are you playing at,” the proprietor asks. “Are you a palace spy? What do you want?”
Laughter leaps from Wei Wuxian’s mouth. “Me, a palace spy? Oh, no, no, no. I’m afraid not. Palace spies have much more important things to do than to sniff out thieving proprietors. Tell you what. I take this off your hands and you don’t have to worry about your neck, or your family’s necks, and in return, I won’t tell them where I found it. Hm?”
“You plan to give it back to the imperial family?”
“Of course,” says Wei Wuxian. “All things return to where they belong in the end.”
So as it goes, Wei Wuxian is one mango poorer, but one imperial painting richer, and he cannot tell if he is better off for it. He tucks the scroll into his knapsack and the key that hangs around his neck back into his collars and scans the market for weak spots, opportunities to win more food than he has money for. The rotten mango had been stupid luck, and luck is a finite resource which Wei Wuxian does not have much of to begin with, so he’s going to have to work for the rest of his food today.
A surreptitious scrap of pink peeks out from behind the liquor stall and Wei Wuxian only catches a glimpse of the girl before she tucks herself behind the wooden beams again. Oh--the drunk’s daughter. She’s alone now. Irritation bubbles in the pit of Wei Wuxian’s stomach when he pictures the man shaking her off, lumbering towards another gambling stall that will entertain his time, and he has half a mind to--
“Fresh meat buns! Made this morning. Pork and chicken and mushroom!”
Wei Wuxian catches up to the bun cart, falling into step with the vendor. “Shifu, how much for one?”
“One bronze piece for three.”
“Can I get five for one bronze piece?”
“Are you deaf or just stupid? No. Get lost.”
“Please, shifu,” Wei Wuxian says, he gestures behind himself in the direction he’d seen the little girl, “my daughter, she hasn’t eaten in days, and we’re here to see the doctor and he turned her away on account of the fact that we have no money, and she’ll only get sicker if she doesn’t have any food in her system, our family is still waiting at home, please have mercy--”
“Heavens! Good heavens, fine, here! Take these misshapen ones, they’re an eyesore, anyway.”
“Thank you!” Wei Wuxian fishes the bronze piece out of his money pouch, fingertips poking through the holes in the bottom like eyes, and collects his spoils. “Thank you, Shifu!”
“Get outta my sight.”
Wei Wuxian holds his armful of buns to his chest, and their heat warms him through his clothes down to his bones. It’s a relatively cool day, even for autumn. When he turns around again, the girl scrunches herself back into the safety of the shadows, and he chuckles to himself. The liquorist eyes Wei Wuxin warily when he approaches, but he simply seats himself on the other end of the stall and opens his carrying cloth full of lopsided buns. Ugly, unwhole, but still good for hunger. Still good.
“Could I interest you in a bottle of rice wine?”
“Ah, no, it’s fine,” Wei Wuxian flaps his hand. “I am not wont for liquor, but perhaps some company to share these buns with. I have far too many to finish on my own. But I don’t know who’d want these ugly buns. Certainly not you, Shifu, I’m sure?”
The girl peeks out from behind the stall, and Wei Wuxian smiles. “Want one?”
She scampers to sit down in front of him, reaching out with sooty hands for a bun at the top of the bile. The skin of it is pearly in the noon sun, giving under touch, the way only fresh steamed buns are. Then she hesitates, looking into Wei Wuxian’s face as if expecting to be struck.
“Go ahead,” he says, holds the bun out. “Eat.”
She snatches it and crams half of it into her mouth, and Wei Wuxian chuckles again. He knows hunger like this, and takes his own portion to tear into. The sweet smell of pork and mushroom and oil floats up into his eyes, and for a moment the meat sears on his tongue before it settles into a taste.
“Is it good?” he asks.
She nods.
So it’s good.
“Where have you been? Wei Wuxian, I ought to cut you off at the kneecaps! A-Jie’s been worried sick, you were supposed to be back over a shichen ago.”
“I ran into a friend, Jiang Cheng. Lighten up, will you? Here, I got buns.”
“Keep your stupid buns. Where’s the fish you were going to get?”
Wei Wuxian scratches at the back of his neck. “Ha. Well, about that.”
“Seriously? I can’t believe you. If it weren’t your birthday, I really would cut you off at the legs.”
“But it is, so instead, you need to be nice!” Wei Wuxian crows triumphantly.
Jiang Cheng sighs, a gust of hot summer wind that picks up stinging sands. A wisp of his hair flits with his breath. He’s wearing his nice clothes, no doubt because A-Jie made him, with a polished belt tucked around his waist like the coil of a sleeping snake. It’s a formality that they hardly ever bother with anymore, not in such a provincial town as this, leading a life as threadbare as theirs. The shine of the buckle comes off of him in bright flashes.
“Whatever. Come on, A-jie made noodles. Where’d you get buns?”
“Oh, so you do want one. Here, I know you like chicken.”
“Don’t tell me you managed to snatch all of these,” Jiang Cheng asks, but he takes the one Wei Wuxian offers anyway. “Who likes chicken,” he mutters, mostly to himself.
“I just harnessed a talent that you have never quite mastered, Jiang Cheng,” Wei Wuxian says. “Charm.”
“I ought to smack you.”
“There was a hungry kid. I didn’t want her to go hungry.”
Jiang Cheng is quiet. “We all are, why go help a stranger?”
“Wouldn’t you have wanted someone to help us back then?”
At this, a grunt. Which, coming from Jiang Cheng, is as enthusiastic a yes he’ll give, so Wei Wuxian smiles to himself and slings his sack of food over his shoulder. He’s down to two now, and he figures he’ll just give both of them to A-Jie who deserves much more than two pork buns, but it’s the best he has. One day he’ll get her expensive candied mangoes and hawthorn berries that the baker makes in the market in the next city over--the one that glitters.
“A-Cheng, A-Xian! You’re back!”
“Found him scaling the wall back into the hutong,” Jiang Cheng grumbles. “Punk.”
Jiang Yanli, too, is wearing her nicest set of robes today, with a hair ornament that Wei Wuxian hasn’t seen her with since the new year. Her face clears of worry when she sees them, and she reaches up, straightens a lock of Wei Wuxian’s hair where it’s caught over his ear. “A-Xian, you’re not--you know that you shouldn’t--”
“Scale walls, climb to great heights, jump off roofs, I know, I know,” Wei Wuxian says, vividly recalling that he has done all of the above and then some today. “Sorry to make you worry, A-Jie, I’m fine! I got you buns. You can have them both.”
“But what about the fish? A-xian, we were going to make one for dinner for you.”
“Ah, fish or no fish, it’s no matter. Noodles are good enough. As long as I can live a long life, luck will always come back around.”
“What if your whole life is plagued with bad luck?” asks Jiang Cheng as they duck back into their hut of clay and brick. The curtains are open, a rare moment of Jiang Yanli letting daylight peek inside, and it lights up their matchbox home in a wash of sunset. Bowls of steaming noodles are set out on the rickety slice of table, with the biggest in front of the seat where Wei Wuxian always sits. His heart swells. He’ll be forcing mouthfuls of noodles into his siblings’ bowls when they sit down, he’s sure, but for now his heart is the pulse of afternoon sun in the window.
“Then my next life,” says Wei Wuxian. “My next one won’t be nearly as bad.”
The Lost Phoenix is lost. I think that’s the point. No one will ever find them. You will die looking for them.
Wei Wuxian is built from broken things.
He sees rubble and thinks, that is a home. He sees blood and thinks, that is a heart. He sees himself reflected in the slow meanders of swamp-green lakes lazy with dragonflies and skeeters and tries to remember, that is a human, that is a human, that is a human.
“You may not be human, but that is what makes you worth loving,” is what A-Jie says.
“You? A human? With an appetite like that? It’s like trying to feed a void with you,” is what Jiang Cheng says, which is basically the same thing.
Wei Wuxian is built from broken things, but the uglier, eyesore-pork-bun truth is that he is born from destruction. He is born from the fire of things, and the ashes of himself; his body waits for the wither.
The Lost Phoenix is dead. His ashes were scattered in mountain, sea, and sky.
The Lost Phoenix is alive! Everyone knows that leaving behind but a single ember can spark a wildfire. Fire has wings.
No human, ghost, or demon has ever seen the Lost Phoenix. If they had, wouldn’t we have heard by now? They are only a legend.
There are scars on his back to prove what he once was and never will be again, and Jiang Yanli tells him, The world was not ready for you. The world, perhaps, will not be ready for the Lost Phoenix to return for as long as we still walk upon it, A-Xian, but maybe when one day when everyone is gone, when A-Cheng and I are gone, you’ll--
He always cuts her off there. Usually he can’t see her face, because she’ll be sitting behind him and rubbing oil into the muscles that can never seem to loosen around his shoulder blades, the ones that line the edges of the scars like mottled mountain peaks. Just two of them, in straight lines as long as a hand, glaring at each other over the expanse of his back, the winding groove of his spine. Phantom pains. Human or not, the body will miss limbs when they are gone.
Tonight, Jiang Yanli does not tell him the world isn’t ready for him. It hurts to listen to her say it, because it’s not a pain that Wei Wuxian can beat away with his fists or even his words. There’s a quiet noise of the bottle being unstoppered, then the cloying scent of liniment oil wreathing around him as he sits with his back bared to her, hair swept over his shoulder.
“A-jie,” he says.
“Hmm?” Her hands are small and warm against his back, and he hisses in pain when her finger catches on a tight knot immediately. “Sorry, Xianxian.”
“It’s okay. Uhm, I have a stupid question.”
“I’m sure it isn’t. Ask.”
“Which birthday did we celebrate tonight?” he asks quietly.
The inside of their hut is a dark, uneven indigo now, the fires of the village filtering in through their window. Jiang Cheng has gone to bathe, so the only answering noise above the sound of a city settling in evening is Jiang Yanli’s soft laughter.
“Your thirty-first, A-xian.”
“How many years have passed in this life?”
Her hands disappear as she dabs more liniment oil onto her fingers. “Since your reincarnation?”
“Yeah.”
“Thirteen.”
“Thirteen,” Wei Wuxian repeats. “Thirteen.” He rolls it over his tongue, trying to figure out how it tastes. Bitter, a little. like medicine. Maybe it’s the liniment. Jiang Yanli runs her thumb down the edge of one of the scars, massaging out a few particularly gnarly knots there.
“Is there something wrong?” she asks.
“Not wrong, exactly.” Wei Wuxian pushes his fingers into his folded robes in his lap, pretends the fabric is sand and silt at the bottom of a lake. He almost expects handfuls of snails when he pulls them back out. “It’s just that, with every passing year, I think maybe this is it--this is the year I’ll remember. This is the year I’ll remember the things about my life before this one. Remember when I tried to teach you and Jiang Cheng how to catch fish with your hands, in the river, A-Jie? You said you could see them beneath the surface, but when you’d reach in to grab it, it was like the fish were never even there.”
“I remember,” says Jiang Yanli. She is quiet, waits for him to go on.
“Trying to recall my first life is like that. I know it happened. I can see it right there, flickering under the water, but. But each year comes and goes, and not only do I not remember anything, it feels like more and more of what I thought I could remember slips away,” says Wei Wuxian. “I was excited in the eighth year of this life. Then I was excited in the twelfth. Thirteen is no good, is it, A-Jie? I’ve run out of lucky numbers to count on.”
“Would it make you happy to remember, Xianxian?”
“I think so. When I think about it--it’s funny, you know. Maybe you know. I can’t recall memories from it, exactly, but when I think about my first life, I think I remember being happy. Like when you roll over and the sun is already up. You can feel the warmth on you even if you don’t see the light.” Then Wei Wuxian snorts. “That doesn’t make any sense. Sorry, ignore me, A-jie.”
“It makes sense. Of course it makes sense. Is that all you remember, a feeling?”
They’ve been over this before. A hazy, murky image of something from Before, dredged up from packed soil. Jiang Cheng will always say, “Who knows? Why do you think I would remember?” waspish, and Jiang Yanli would always give him a soft, “Perhaps it was, A-xian.”
“I remember,” he says, “that we were in a noble family, once.”
This is an easy one. She always says yes to this one. “We were.”
“I remember that the palace walls were lined with bronze, not gold like a lot of the common folk think.”
“Yes, they are.”
“The accident.” The one that has turned him into this.
“I wish you did not,” says Jiang Yanli.
“I don’t--not really. I just remember the pain. My body does, anyway.”
“Muscle has memory,” she says. “But because you are who you are, so does your blood and bones.”
Wei Wuxian fiddles with the gap-toothed key that swings from his neck. It thunks hollowly against his bare chest without the robes to hold it in place, and he tugs the deerskin rope that loops around his neck so that the knot tying it together comes down, down, down, through the hole in the key, up, up, back up again, a miniature comet’s orbit.
“You were a princess,” he says, quiet again.
“Princess is a strong word.”
“But you were.”
“In my own way.”
And then, the most solid memory he has—a figure in white, with hair that fell to their waist, holding a smudge of pink in their hand. Solid, but blurred, like Wei Wuxian is trying to see them through a sheeting waterfall. The lines of their body were straight and crisp, except for the pink. The pink was always soft, parting the mud of his memory.
He doesn’t mention this one, usually. Wei Wuxian holds it close to his heart where it has roots. Year after year, no matter the rains, nothing has flowered. Seasons have passed.
“A person,” Wei Wuxian murmurs.
Jiang Yanli’s hands slow. “Who?”
“I don’t know,” says Wei Wuxian. “Just a person. Their back is to me, so I can’t see their face, but it’s too blurry for me to see them, even if they’d been right in front of me. And they were just standing there--just standing. Nothing else. I don’t even really know if they’re real, but it’s the best memory I have.” He digs his nail into an indent in the key’s teeth. “Do you think they were real, A-Jie?”
“As real as the Lost Phoenix is.”
Wei Wuxian laughs weakly. “The Lost Phoenix is as good as myth.”
A myth meant to scare people.
A cautionary tale.
“The Lost Phoenix needs to stop squirming, or I will poke the sensitive parts of his scar, and I know he hates it when I do,” Jiang Yanli says.
A story about a monster.
“Maybe it’s better to forget some things, A-Jie.”
“A-Cheng and I only want you to be happy, Xianxian. Whatever that means to you. Whether that means remembering or forgetting.”
“I want to remember, because your happiness is my happiness,” Wei Wuxian insists, turning around. Jiang Yanli lifts her hand away as he rearranges his legs in a half-lotus, one foot stretched out onto the floor. “I want to remember because I know this life isn’t one you and Jiang Cheng would have chosen if you both had a choice. You can’t say I’m wrong about that. No noble family member would choose to live in a rundown hutong if they had a choice.”
“A-Xian--”
“I know you won’t tell me what happened before my reincarnation,” says Wei Wuxian. “I know you want to forget. But if anything ever happens that means we can go back to it--you have to say so, okay? You both are the only family I have left. Let me do something for the people who have somehow kept me alive for thirty-one years. I can’t remember eighteen of them. As if I started reading in the middle of the story. There are things I know without knowing how I know them.”
Whether it be a story, a tale, legend, or myth, one thing was certain: the Lost Phoenix is the last known survivor of the Phoenix Rising, once the most revered noble family of the imperial city, the warrior family that protected the throne.
Forged from the Sacred Fires of Scarlet Mountain, the Phoenix Rising once was so formidable that simply meeting one of them in their true form was a sign of luck and good fortune. They were, as their family name suggested, bewinged humans who lived and died and rose again from their own ashes. They were skilled in combat, nimble in war, with the ability of flight. They harnessed Taoist magic that was only spoken of in books.
A secular world did not have room for magic.
“Our A-xian,” says Jiang Yanli, shaking her head, “always hurts himself trying to make us happy before he remembers he has a heart, too.”
“Ah, what good is a heart if I can’t deal it out in pieces for my didi and my jie?” says Wei Wuxian. “It’s not like anyone else has any use for it.”
“That’s not true,” Jiang Yanli murmurs.
“Hm? What’s that?”
“Nothing, Xianxian.”
“You have my promise, A-Jie,” says Wei Wuxian. “It’s us three until the end. Never apart. If I can bring you and Jiang Cheng back to the glory days before this life, then I’ll do whatever it takes.”
She’s quiet, then dabs a light gauze over his skin to absorb the excess liniment oil. Both of them know it won’t be possible--even if they were a lower noble family, there wasn’t a ticket back into the royal city unless you saved the emperor from death or something equally as momentous. Save the empire, or something. Wei Wuxian dreams big, but he’s realistic.
“Thank you, Xianxian,” she says, finally.
“It smells like old people in here,” Jiang Cheng announces, as absurdly loud as new year firecrackers when he comes back inside. He smells of freshwater and sand, and he tracks an inky line of water where his wet shoes stamp footprints into the floors. “I know you’re another year older now, but you’re really getting started early.”
“If I’m so old, then you better talk to me with respect, punk,” Wei Wuxian says. Jiang Cheng may be loud, may be messy, but he chases away the strange, yearning sadness that tugs like a deep saltwater current on Wei Wuxian every time his birthday comes and goes. He loves his stupid, loud brother for it. “Hey! Where’s my kowtow? Where’s my ‘ge,’ then? Where’s my ‘Wei qianbei,’ huh? I’m so old, Jiang Cheng, pay your respects!”
“Screw you, Wei Wuxian. I’d sooner call you Old Man Wei. You’d have to rip out my tongue first.”
“Okay, come here then, my hands are free.”
“Gross! What’s wrong with you?”
And so night falls on another day, another year, and Wei Wuxian feels a little empty and a lot full, like a planet is breathing inside him. Jiang Yanli tugs on Jiang Cheng’s hair, makes him sit down so she can wrestle the tangles out of his drying frizz, and Wei Wuxian holds the lantern for light.
It’s enough.
So what happened to them, the Phoenix Rising? Why have they disappeared?
Because they had power. Because they were loved, feared, and respected, all things an emperor should be.
In the beginning, it was an honor to be the emperor that controlled the Phoenix Rising, for it took an equally distinguished ruler to command such a family, and for generations, the Phoenix Rising served the throne with grace. For generations, the empire was a glowing, golden city upon which the sun glittered, and the common folk called it the City of Gods.
But at the end of a weak dynasty, the throne was seized by a bloodthirsty family that feared the Phoenix Rising and the power they held. People, monsters, kings, or gods? Did the citizens respect the throne? Or did the loyalty of their hearts lie with the strange, winged family that had for centuries been revered as the beacon of luck and fortune?
Humans fear what they do not understand. Humans seek to destroy what they fear.
And so the Phoenix Rising paid the steepest price.
“Did he mention it to you at all yesterday?”
“No! He never brought it up. That punk. I’m gonna wring his sorry little neck.”
“A-Cheng.” A rustle of wind through paper. Then, “We need to ask him where he found this. He could’ve been caught. He could’ve been killed.”
Wei Wuxian wakes to his siblings whispering. Whispers always come through dreams like shouts, and he’s having a very strange dream about walking through wire, except instead of coals at his feet, there is ash, and in the ash there are hundreds and hundreds of keys glinting red as squirting cherries. His feet are burnt and blistering, but he can’t run, can’t turn back, can only walk forward.
There are no secrets in a single-room shack. No matter how quietly Jiang Yanli whispers, Jiang Cheng speaks loud enough to wake the whole town.
“Nicked it, probably,” says Jiang Cheng now. A grudging respect colors his voice. “That’s probably why he took so long to get back yesterday.”
The bamboo sleep mat crackles beneath him as Wei Wuxian rolls over, then sits up. For a moment the world is a spinning top. Jiang Yanli turns, lowering something, and smiles when she sees him awake. Jiang Cheng, of course, is already swinging.
“You dumbass! Where did you get this? If someone comes looking for it and finds it with us, do you know how dead we are?”
Then Wei Wuxian sees it--the painting that he’d charmed out of the hands of the gambling proprietor at lunch yesterday. Jiang Yanli holds it like a broken bird in her lap, and Wei Wuxian ducks when Jiang Cheng aims another swat at him. Mostly half-hearted, but he leaps to his feet and skips out of reach.
“I was going to surprise you!” he says. “I didn’t even have a chance to tell you what I was planning. You don’t know how much money this could bring in the black market, Jiang Cheng, an imperial painting? Just think about it. I can just disguise myself, go at night--cover my face, you know--and we could stop living here. We could live in a real house, and we wouldn’t have to all share one sleeping mat.”
“A-Xian,” Jiang Yanli gets to her feet, too. Always graceful in a stark contrast to her two brothers, the lantern from which two wild tassels would dance in the wind. She lifts the painting up high so that she can point to the red seal in the corner. “Do you recognize this?”
“The imperial seal, right? Sure. Everyone does.”
“I’m going to puke blood,” says Jiang Cheng.
Jiang Yanli ignores him. “You’re not wrong, A-Xian. But this is an imperial seal of a concubine.”
Wei Wuxian blinks. “Of the emperor?”
“Yes. Judging from the seal design, not just any concubine--she must be a consort, at least.” Jiang Yanli holds the paper closer to her face, trying to discern the characters. “Mo,” she mutters, unsure.
“So we could sell it for even more money,” Wei Wuxian concludes.
“No, we are not going to sell it for money,” says Jiang Cheng. His face has darkened.
“Are you crazy?” Wei Wuxian asks. “You said it yourself, if someone finds us in possession, it’ll be our heads. The faster we get rid of it, the less likely anyone is to know it ever passed through our hands at all.”
“Yeah, well, you probably should have considered that before you nicked it, genius,” Jiang Cheng snaps. “It doesn’t matter. Now that we have it, we’re going to use it.”
“Use it how, if not for money, then?” Wei Wuxian struggles to keep his voice low. Jiang Cheng is not making any gods damned sense--isn’t he the one who constantly talks about leaving this hutong under the guise of hating how cramped it is, when really, he and Wei Wuxian agree that they should move closer to the imperial city where there would be better houses and perhaps a respectable man for their sister to marry if she so wanted?
“We’re going to use this to return to the imperial city.”
A silence falls like a tree toppled in storm between them.
“A-Cheng,” Jiang Yanli begins.
“We are?” asks Wei Wuxian. “How would that even work?”
“You’re the best at telling lies.”
“Well, yes, I’m glad you have seen the light.”
“Think about it,” says Jiang Cheng. “An emperor's consort. It means she must have been in favor with the sitting emperor, Jin Huangshang. A painting with her seal on it. How would a painting by a favored concubine of the emperor end up out here?”
“Wound up in a gambling stall, no less,” Wei Wuxian says. Now that Jiang Cheng puts it that way--it’s more than a little strange. “Fine, say that we could use it as our golden ticket back into the imperial city. We’ll be lucky if the consort is dead. She won’t be around to ask any questions if there are holes in our story. What if she’s alive? What if she’s not a consort? What if she was hated, what then?”
“A-Xian,” says Jiang Yanli, setting her hand on his shoulder, and the touch is firmer than he’s used to. “Stop. You too, A-Cheng. Returning would be dangerous for us.”
“Dangerous how?” asks Wei Wuxian. There it is--that gap of the first eighteen years of his life rearing its mangled head. Sometimes it’s like trying to read a page of text with half the words blacked out, the ones left behind still beautiful, but without meaning. “A-Jie, I thought we were…”
“We were a lower noble family then, Xianxian. But it does not mean that the court is a safe place for any of us.”
“Jie!” says Jiang Cheng.
“No, A-Cheng. We’re not going back. It’s not just for A-Xian’s safety, it’s for all of us.”
“Would we really be in that much danger?” asks Wei Wuxian. “If no one knows I’m the Lost Phoenix but the three of us, nothing would happen.”
Right?
“Jiejie,” says Jiang Cheng, his voice quieter than Wei Wuxian has ever heard it, “the Crown Prince has never married.”
Jiang Yanli’s face, for a dizzying heartbeat, is stricken. Something like pain and longing flashes through her eyes quick as the swing of an axe in cloudy morning, but then it’s gone, and she sighs.
“What does the Crown Prince have anything to do with A-Jie?” asks Wei Wuxian.
“That isn’t any of our business. Not even yours, A-Cheng,” she says. Wei Wuxian has never seen his sister like this, drawn up tall with her chin held high, and for a moment he sees the princess that she must once have been. Jiang Cheng, who is easily a head taller than her and twice as broad, crumples under the weight of her gaze. “We left because we wanted to. We’ve lived by this choice and we will continue to live by it. Now, both of you listen--A-Xian will do as he planned, sell this painting for whatever sum that traders will offer, and we won’t speak of it again. Understand?”
The tension swells like a fever between them.
Wei Wuxian should be happy that his sister is on his side for this--when is it that she ever picks sides whenever he and Jiang Cheng argue? Any other time, he’d be hooting with laughter, rubbing it in Jiang Cheng’s face, but there is a deeply strange, melancholy expression on his brother’s face that does not suit him at all.
“Fine,” says Jiang Cheng. He takes the scroll from Jiang Yanli, rolling it up with care, then shoves it into Wei Wuxian’s chest with considerably less care. “Get this shit out of my sight. I’m going out.”
Wei Wuxian watches helplessly as Jiang Cheng moves around their hut with jerky movements, jaw set with the pulse of anger. He gathers his knapsack and what meager rations of buns left over from the day before, no doubt stale and hard by now, and loops it around his shoulder.
Then he’s gone, without another word.
Wei Wuxian gnaws on the soft inside of his cheek. “A-Jie--”
“Don’t think too much about what A-Cheng said, Xianxian,” says Jiang Yanli. “He won’t show it, but he worries. You needn’t take what he said to heart.”
Jiang Yanli will say no more, no matter how hard he presses. He’ll press anyone until they give, but not her. She ducks her head when Wei Wuxian turns to her with his confused, hurt silence, as if she is waiting for his anger. He’d never be angry with her.
“I don’t understand, A-Jie.”
“A-Cheng and I simply have different ideas of what it means to keep our family safe. He thinks it means returning. I think it means to stay.”
“But why would we be in danger?” he asks. “Does this have something to do with the Crown Prince? Did he know who I was? I guess so, or else why would Jiang Cheng bring him up? Did you know him? Could he help us?”
“No, he couldn’t.”
Wei Wuxian sets his mouth in a line. “Well, I should be off too,” he says. The sun has already started to burn back the clouds; he needs to find tonight’s dinner for the three of them. Maybe he should go after Jiang Cheng, press him for more details. Their sister, despite what anyone might think, gives far less easily than either of them.
“Be careful, Xianxian,” she says. “Oh, are you taking the painting with you?”
“There’s no way I’m going to leave it here in case anyone finds it and you’re here by yourself. Worst case scenario, I throw it away, and we can pretend none of this ever happened.” He takes Jiang Yanli’s hands in his, squeezes them ruefully. “I’m sorry, A-Jie. I just thought it would help. I didn’t want you to argue with Jiang Cheng.”
“It’s okay.” She tucks his stray hairs over his ear. “Go. Come back safe, A-xian.”
He waves at her once when he steps out, and once more when he makes it to the end of the hutong and she becomes little more than a quilted patch of terrycloth in the distance, as he does every morning when he leaves. Jiang Cheng can’t have gone far in the time that he’s gone, unless he took off at a sprint, so Wei Wuxian lets the scented chill of autumn fill his lungs.
The Crown Prince. What a strange person to bring up. Wei Wuxian rifles through what he remembers hearing in taverns and pubs, filtered through the thick veil of alcohol. The Jin family sits upon the throne now, after staging a coup against the Wens and seizing power just over a decade ago. The Crown Prince would have to be a Jin prince. The Jin Emperor was said to be quite the philanderer and had more than enough sons from too many concubines to choose from. The Crown Prince must be quite a favorite, for an emperor with so many sons would not pay any mind to choosing the Empress’s sons if he so liked one from his concubine better.
And this Crown Prince, according to Jiang Cheng, has never married.
The look on Jiang Yanli’s face--frozen, bruised, a bird shot from the sky before it begins to plummet--was not one Wei Wuxian expected to see when she heard this news. If they’d known this prince, then he must have been around even before Wei Wuxian’s reincarnation. Jiang Yanli must have spoken of him.
But all his memories can offer him are vague smudges of color and a person with pink like a fire in their hands.
It’s too early for the fishmongers just yet, but the market brims with life as it always does. Wei Wuxian narrowly dodges a cart full of fresh flowers, a toothless grandfather with a bamboo hat pulling it along weakly. One of the wheels is crooked, wood squeaking against the stone pavement.
“Shifu, your wheel,” says Wei Wuxian, plucking the canteen of oil tucked low against the cart. It dribbles out in a black splash. “There, that’s better, isn’t it?”
“Thank you, young man,” says the grandfather, and Wei Wuxian waits for him to turn his back to the street before plucking a lotus from the back of his cart and tucking it into his knapsack. For A-Jie, as penance for upsetting her so early in the morning.
Jiang Cheng is not hard to find. He is poor at concealing himself, both in body and in voice, and he really is very bad at haggling. Wei Wuxian sidles up to him at a fruit stall, arguing with the vendor over a particularly ugly dragonfruit that looks more like a leathery handful of meat left too long in the sun than any respectable fruit.
“Now I think,” says Wei Wuxian, plucking it out of Jiang Cheng’s hand and ignoring his indignant scoff, “shifu, if you let this fruit sit out in your display, it would ruin the look of all the rest of your fruits. ‘Ah, look at this lovely display of dragonfruit. But what do we have here? A misfit! A miscreant! A monstrosity, really!’ And then you lose business. So really, we’re doing you a favor.”
“A favor?” says the vendor with disbelief. “What gall.”
Wei Wuxian laughs, then tosses the fruit back and forth between his hands and gives a quick jerk of his chin. “What do you say? Half off?”
“I can’t believe you weaseled him into giving it to us for less than half off,” says Jiang Cheng five minutes later. “You could talk your way out of your own--”
Wei Wuxian tosses his dragonfruit from hand to hand. “My own what?” Jiang Cheng’s knapsack hangs flat and sad against his back, crumpled like a dead leaf, so Wei Wuxian holds it open and drops the fruit inside.
“Nothing. Never mind. What are you doing out here with that--thing?”
“Do you think I was going to leave it with A-Jie? No way. Imagine if she were alone and someone found her with it.”
Jiang purses his lips, nods. He tucks his thumb into the strap of his knapsack, a deadknot slung over his shoulder. “Have you thought about any stories?”
“What stories?”
“About what we’d say, if we brought it back to the imperial city.”
Jiang Cheng resolutely does not meet Wei Wuxian’s stare.
“You want to go?”
“I just think that if we have a plan, A-Jie might be more willing to go. To be honest with you, if it were just to the two of us, it wouldn’t matter as much. We could sell the stupid painting, use the money. We could eke out an existence. It would fucking suck, but we could, and I wouldn’t feel guilty about it.”
“Ah, Jiang Cheng. You’re finally talking sense!” Wei Wuxian claps him on the back. When Jiang Cheng doesn’t shake his hand off, his smile falters. He must actually be worried. “Okay. We have to consider multiple scenarios, then, if we want this to be foolproof. We don’t want to make up a story where the concubine is alive when she’s dead. Or vice versa. So the first order of business is to figure that out.”
Jiang Cheng nods. “And what kind of favor she’s in with the emperor. The better, the easier for us.”
So, like peddlers, they spin their stories.
+
The night blooms blue and foggy, the moon dropping light in handfuls of glass through the forest, and Wei Wuxian straightens to see that he is not alone.
Someone else is in the mist with him. It’s thick enough that he cannot see their feet, so they could be floating. A man--just a bit taller than Wei Wuxian himself. His sword is drawn, lowered, as if he’d been pointing it before Wei Wuxian sensed him and stopped. The folded steel blade flashes.
Blood sheets heavily down Wei Wuxian’s leg where the muscle has torn around the arrowhead, and haze sloshes in his skull. His brain is an upended bowl of goldfish. He grasps for words, for his thoughts, but they slip through his fingers. The stranger stares at him a bit in shock, a bit in horror, mostly in surprise. He opens his mouth. He closes it. He is wearing so much white he could be glowing, a star abandoned by its galaxy, and Wei Wuxian is the only one to find him.
They stare at each other in the gloom.
Wei Wuxian’s scattered goldfish thoughts say, Pink.
“Are you here to kill me?” asks Wei Wuxian. His words come out slurred even to his own ears. He needs to find Jiang Cheng. They need to get back to A-Jie. He needs to get out of here.
“No.” The stranger steps towards him. “We mistook you for a prey animal. Are you badly hurt?”
“This? No, no. I’m fine. I need to go.”
“Your leg is injured.”
“It’s fine. I need to get back to--my wards,” Wei Wuxian says, catching himself before he says anything too revealing, pats himself on the back for staying in line even as his thoughts unravel. He picks his favorite story and sticks with it, hopes to any god that is listening it won’t get any of them killed. “My wards. They were with me. I was looking for Jin Bixia.”
The stranger has come so close that Wei Wuxian can make out every stitch of his robe. “What business do you have with the emperor?”
“I have a painting,” he mumbles around the haze. It’s a dark one, now. “My mother’s painting.”
Then darkness kisses his eyelids, and the night pulls him under.
+
The scroll unfurls with the quiet hush of paper that has gone undisturbed too long. Even mounted on fine silk, the edges of the hemp and mulberry fibers have begun to wither, time nibbling as cruel and hungry as moths. The paper stretches on forever, nearly as tall as him fully unfurled. The cherrywood stick clacks upon the floor.
Wei Wuxian’s mouth goes dry. He stares with seeing, then without comprehending, then without believing.
The ink color has faded, like the paper, with age. Once the red might have leapt off the page, the greens so bright that spring grew from the painting itself, but all of it has flattened. It’s a simple composition. Where Mo Fu Ren had let her human subject be lost among the trees and sweeping landscapes, this painting is only one person, draped in textured golds and silk brocade embroidered with dragons.
Simple, perhaps, but done by the hand of someone who held them beloved.
His fingers shake when he reaches out. They hang back, and he pulls away, afraid that touching it might make the entire painting dissolve in his hands.
Smiling serenely back at him is his own face, thirteen years younger, thirteen years less hungry—but it is him. His eyes are downcast, with a rabbit cradled in the crook of his elbow and a bird perched upon his shoulder. Without a doubt it is him. Even if he could not recognize his own face, the characters that march in little terracotta soldiers down the paper leave no room for guessing.
The black ink is fresh, as if someone has run a brush through the strokes every year so that they can never fade.
Wei Wuxian, they say.
This can’t be right. He must be misreading. He blinks hard.
His thoughts trip over each other’s ankles. They come in a clamoring flood, each wanting to be heard first, pored over first. Wei Wuxian. Had there been another before him? It is not a common name. It is not a name that would show up twice in the royal city if every noble family had the names of their descendants planned out for generations, no matter if the Phoenix Rising had been slaughtered by order of the emperor. Why is there a painting of him rolled up and locked away in the private study of Hanguang Gexia, second head of the scholar house to Emperor Jin?
Did they once know each other?
How could it be that a key that Jiang Yanli gave him would unlock this desk?
There are corpses sleeping under their feet. This earth has been burnt and salted.
An old ache starts in his spine.
We were a lower noble family then, Xianxian.
Fire without coals.
There was a person. Just a person.
Do not exhume these bodies.
We left because we wanted to.
Something terrible must have happened to him.
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End of The Year Reading Tag
Thank you, @senadimell for tagging me! I love learning about others' book experiences :)
1) Did you reach your reading goal for this year (if you had one)? I did! I began 2021 with a goal of reading 25 books and I actually (miraculously lol) doubled it. Technically I read 52 books but 23 of them were manga... I haven't quite decided if they should count or not yet.
2) What are your Top 3 books this year? It's always hard to choose favorites, and this past year I read a lot of really good books in my opinion. But I'll take this as a Top 3 New to Me Books and say: Piranesi (Susanna Clark), The Way of Kings (Brandon Sanderson), and The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue (V. E. Schwab). I also read and loved Words of Radiance by Sanderson, so consider that tacked on to WoK.
3) What's a book that you didn't expect to enjoy quite as much going in? The Way of Kings! Okay so you have to imagine. I've spent years hearing about Stormlight. Two good friends of mine talked about them all the time (looking at you, anna and elle). My husband finally read them in 2020 and incessantly raved about them. I had no choice but to pick up WoK in early 2021. I had no idea the beauty that awaited me within those pages. I was hooked so quickly and so deeply. Wow. I'm a changed woman.
4) Were there any books that didn't live up to your expectations? For better or for worse, I did finish rereading the Inheritance Cycle. I had decent memories of the first three books but had never read Inheritance itself. Underwhelming doesn't even cover it. Inheritance was the antithesis of Way of Kings. (apologies to any lovers of eragon. I do love the idea of the books and the world and the dragons, but woof the end was baaad.)
5) Did you reread any old faves? If so, which one was your favorite? I 'reread' the Lord of the Rings trilogy in audiobook form and it was so good for my soul. There were several little details that I had forgotten over the years that made me fall in love with Tolkien all over again. They brought me hope and joy, two things I definitely needed last year.
If you're interested in listening to the same audiobooks, they are on spotify! They're absolutely delightful and I highly recommend them.
Also, this really was the year of Tolkien, as I read the trilogy and watched the trilogy like five times (a new record, huzzah)
6) Did you DNF (=did not finish) any books? I started Mister Impossible by Maggie Stiefvater but I don't think I was in the right place for it at the time. It is, however, on my list for 2022!
7) Did you read any books outside of your usual preferred genre(s)? Like I mentioned earlier, I read a good bit of manga this year? Brandon and I had watched the second season of The Promised Neverland as it aired earlier this year and it was fairly disappointing, but the tumblr community for the show was ranting about how the manga was so much better and so... I caved. and let me tell you I consumed those 19 volumes so quickly.
I also don't read a non-fiction too often, mostly because undergrad was just so much information and I need a break, but I did read Notes from the Tilt-a-Whirl by N. D. Wilson! It was a wonderful book about life and God, and I highly recommend it to all!
8) What was your predominant format this year? Due to how much I've been knitting and driving, audiobooks from my library have been incredibly valuable! Most of the books I reread were books I already owned.
9) What's the longest book you read this year? I think it was the Way of Kings weighing in at just over 1,000 pages!
10) What are your top 3 anticipated 2022 releases? I used to be super into What's New, but these days I don't keep up with too many authors. The only book I can think of is the eventual release of Cornelia Funke's fourth Inkworld book, which, as far as I'm aware, has no publication date in sight.
That said, three recent books on my personal list I'm looking forward to reading are: The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden, The Theif by Megan Turner (because I see you all talking about it and, curiosity piqued, I asked for it for Christmas), and Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve.
11) What books from your TBR did you not get to this year, but are excited to read in 2022? I didn't have a chance to read Oathbringer or Rhythm of War this year, so they are definitely on my list for 2022! I also had aspirations of reading the second half of the Miss Peregrine's series by Ransom Riggs but didn't quite get there either.
Thank you again for the tag, Poly! As for people to tag... @thatfriendlyanon, @taleweaver-ramblings, @fortes-fortuna-iogurtum , @swinging-stars-from-satellites , @as-dreamers-do, @fairytale-lights, and whoever else would like to talk about books from the last year! The more the merrier ^_^ no pressure though.
#books#oh books my books#I was so excited to see your tag poly!!#the end/very beginning of the year is my favorite season#because everybody's raving about what they loved/didn't like#and I want to hear it all#I want to learn what people are reading#and usually add to my own tbr list haha#anyway last year was the year of epic adventures#this year is going to be the year of fairy-tales#i can feel it in my bones#but we'll see where we end up#haha fun fact you know how i said last year i watched lotr a bunch#well. i can't be stopped. because i'm watching the fellowship right now#my life#2021
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A misty morning at the barn the other day, I went there literally before sunrise, that's crazy for me lol. My plan of hand walking mary did not wok out, mostly because as soon as I tried to put the surgincle on Mary she had a full out meltdown. I’m not entirely sure what prompted that, because the other day when I put it on she wasn't thrilled but didn't really care. All we did was walk for 10 minutes the other day, so it shouldn't have been a super stressful workout that would lead to this much reaction the next time she saw it. I also really don't think its ulcers, because after she had calmed down later, she didn't care about me palpating her, which she normally reacts strongly too even with a mild case. She honestly just lost her mind, and was frankly aggressive any time I tried to go near her side. Basically, I sent her over her threshold, and Mary is very 0 or 100, no in-between, so it took quite a bit for her to relax enough to even let me get it off.
Update: I didn't finish this post before I went out and saw her today, so there are some new developments. So today when I went out there, Mary approached me, but stopped about 30 feet from me, when she normally comes all the way up without prompting. I held up my hand and gave her the touch cue, but I made sure not to move towards her, I wanted her to have control of the situation so we didn't go into high-stress mode immediately and then have no hope of solving whats up. Mary thought about it for a few minutes, but approached me and targeted willingly. We did this a few times, no issue, I held up the surgincle and asked her to target that, again no issues, she did it willingly and eagerly. I took one step back towards her shoulder while holding the surgincle, and she immediately walked away. I put it down, and asked her to target my hand, and she reapproached me and we started over. When I got to the step back part, she again walked away, but much farther this time too. I made sure to put the surgincle completely away at that point, that was obviously the trigger in this case, and it was clear I was trying to rush it and she wasn’t ready for that step yet.
After this it took a long time for her to approach me again, which I understand.. She had told me twice already that she didn't want to do this, and I ignored her, so no kidding it took her a while to decided since I have violated our trust. It was also very tempting to just go up to her, but that really would have completely counteracted the whole exercise. I did move away from the tack shed, so that it was clear it didn’t have the surgincle and wasn’t even close to it. She did eventually decide to approach me again.
Once she came back, I just did some basic targetting to get back into it, and then started our stretching routine. I did this because its easy and clear behaviors she knows, and I know its something she doesn’t find stressful. She did them all very nicely and willingly until we got to the last stretch. So for this stretch, I grab the base of her tail and pull it to the side, and she reaches over to that side to touch my hand at her hip. We do this all the time, no issue, she doesn’t react at all to me grabbing her tail. Today when I brushed by her tail, I didn't even grab it, she walked away. She only went a few steps this time, and immediately came back, but it was still pretty distinct. I asked her for a few different stretches, everything was good, I touch her tail from the other side this time, same reaction.
Working off that, I gently touch and check over the rest of her hind end, and she gave me really mad faces and snaps her teeth when I touched her hocks, stifles, and top of the tail. I made sure to go slowly and work below her threshold so that she saw I was acknowledging her reactions so she didn't escalate them. There was no swelling or heat, so I’m pretty sure it's just stiffness from the cold with her nerve damage issues. I also think that's why she hates her blankets because I bet the back leg straps rub and pull on the muscles there, making it hurt more. As you could tell from the first bit of this, I thought it ulcer issues and I thought the blanket issue was from the belly straps rubbing.
So anyways, its comes down to a communication issue. Mary is very very pain reactive, and while I guessed right that it was a pain response, I was looking in the wrong spot. I ignored her telling me she was uncomfortable for days (I just swatted her face away and strapped her in her blankets anyways) and she felt like she had to escalate it. She tolerated the lunging the other day because she’s a good girl trying to do her best, but after I kept ignoring her it reached a boiling point. She saw the surgincle yesterday, associated that with work that caused her pain, and said fuck no, ain't doing that again today. I will definitely take this as a learning opportunity. I could have just thrown her halter on and put her in the cross ties so she couldn't bite and just slapped the surgincle on anyways, but I’m glad I did it this way so we could get to the root of the issue (cant train pain) and open back up safer communication so she doesn’t feel the need to escalate in the future hopefully.
So whats next? I slathered her entire hind end with lintiment today to try and relive the soreness, and I’ll try the BOT boots tomorrow if she reacts normally. I will also try and have the chiropractor out soon, I’m just nervous that she’s too sore right now for it to be done safely and be a productive session. I’ll try and stretch her out where I can build some strength back up there, but again, its the fine line of how much can I do without souring her and making it too painful.
#mary#training update#I dont really like the terminology consent based training#but i do think giving mary a free choice in this#to leave without me pressuring her to come back#was a critical part in us solving this communication issue today
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