laura (
appliances) wrote in
dumbshow2018-11-24 10:16 pm
highly new, slightly improved open post

assorted morons
optional prompts/ideas
☆ caught in the rain meme ☆ little steps meme ☆ affectionate physical contact meme ☆ picture prompt also acceptable but link them so it's tidy ☆ AU ideas: soulmates AU, reincarnation AU, Bad End AU, canon divergent/roleswap AU, dorky college AU, crossover AU, super indulgent high fantasy AU ☆ melodrama is ultimate tier ★ SHIPPING AND FUCC: ☆ non-fluffy relationship types I'm down for: codependent, master/servant power imbalance type ships, "we're bad for each other but worse for anyone else," other things I am failing to think of tbh ☆ things I am not into: noncon (includes "dubcon"), incest, tsundere shit if your tsundere is just verbally abusive, gratuitous torture porn, you'll probably have to ask me about harder kinks and they will vary by character ☆ I don't have a kink list so pitch me an idea if u thirsty ☆ if you would prefer a locked post I can also make that happen |

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[Easy! Stop making that face before he immortalizes it in ink! Huaisang reaches up absentmindedly, like he might touch Jiang Cheng's face and adjust this pose he's chosen, but ah- ah, no, he loses his nerve and just flicks some of his hair out of the way, instead. Haha...
Time to get to it! Casually! It takes him longer than the stick did, of course, and he winds up focusing on Jiang Cheng's head and shoulders. He's no professional at drawing people, so there's definitely some stylistic liberties taken here, but the face that he puts to paper is recognizably Jiang Cheng, at least. Huaisang has put enough time into looking at him on his own time to know the slope of his jaw and the shape of his mouth, and the rest follows easily enough. No one needs to point out that he starts mouth-first, no one needs to even notice that, shut up.
He takes only one liberty and that is in the expression, softening the line of his mouth so he looks, well, less insecure. It's fine, this is totally accurate. Please rate and review?]
What do you think? You can move now.
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He's a little sorry when it's done with, but the result is . . .
Oh, and thank god he doesn't blush. It's the first bit of luck he's had all day.]
Oh.
[Oh, that sounds stupid.]
You're-- wow.
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You're a pretty good model, Jiang-xiong.
[All the stern staring he does usually finally came in handy, who knew.]
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[Oh! A straightforward compliment! That happens about once a year, savor it. He glances away a moment later, exhaling sharply, his ears reddened.]
You should throw it out before we leave. Just--
[It'd be weird for him to keep a fan with his face on it, right?]
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You can have it!
[—actually that's kind of weird too, on second thought. But he blurts it out without thinking, so now it's out there in the world. Keep it... Jiang Cheng... ahem.]
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Oh. I--
[What's the normal response here? What does someone who doesn't have a massive crush on Huaisang say? Briefly he tries to think of what Wei Wuxian would say, then promptly realizes how stupid of a thought that is. So--]
Okay.
[He does want to keep it, after all. He reaches for it, moving carefully just in case the ink hasn't dried--
--and then there's footsteps outside, and Jiang Cheng hisses sharply, snapping it shut and shoving it in his robes. Does he make it back to his table before the door opens? He does not, and that's another day in detention, so fantastic.
Maybe stories would have it that he confessed his feelings soon, but Jiang Cheng doesn't. Of course he doesn't; he'd rather die before revealing such a weakness. Spring turns into summer; by fall's end, Lotus Pier has burned to the ground and nothing is as it once was.
There's no time for grief; rage propels him through those first few months, though for the life of him, he can barely remember one day from the next. His life becomes framed around an exhausting pattern of small attacks and frequent retreats, but at least that's better than fleeing was.
That rage is why he doesn't really think about what's going to happen when he rides into the Unclean Realm. He's not stupid, he knows Huaisang must be around, but he's really mostly just thinking about what's left to do, what he's forgotten, on and on and on, and he's not watching where he's going, which is why he nearly runs right into the man before stopping short just in time.]
Hey--!
[He grips the man's shoulders, focusing down on--
Oh.
Hm.]
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And so it passes like that; Huaisang stays home, too incompetent with cultivation or a sword to be of use in his brother's army, and it's all he can do to wander around the grounds and wonder when his brother will come home, each time he leaves. Mingjue is home right now, waiting for other cultivators to gather, to discuss their resistance and what it means for all the sects. Huaisang doesn't get in the way; he minds his own business, which here means some new arrival to the Unclean Realm nearly crashes into him and then grabs at him like that was his fault, unreal—
Oh.
Huaisang blinks, brow furrowed. Jiang Cheng looks, ah, let's say... rough? Huaisang knows he's been looking more tired these days himself, but he's fresh as the morning dew compared to the circles under Jiang Cheng's eyes and the careless severity of his grip. Ow, bud—]
Ah— welcome to Qinghe.
[He'd be the polite second young master he's expected to be for these many guests and bow, but well, here they are. How do you tell a boy that the news was incredibly mixed on whether or not he was dead, and it's good to see him alive... He's got nothing.]
My brother is in the main hall, if... [if he would like. An escort? Ah.]
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I'm early, I think . . .
[He's ridiculously early, he shouldn't be here until tomorrow, but wounds were high last fight, and the thought of rest was too tempting to ignore. Besides: he's not even twenty. He can't be blamed for the occasional softness.
(Or, well. He could, once upon a time, but now his mother is dead and--
Whatever).]
Sorry.
[Slightly belatedly, he releases him. Sorry, bruh.]
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Oh- it's alright.
[He's fine... this is awkward, maybe, but it's so good to see Jiang Cheng alive that Huaisang can't even pull his gaze away. Ah-]
Since you're early, you should rest... I can have someone get some tea and food and bring it to you.
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[It's been long enough he honestly almost bows. It's only polite, after all. But on the other hand, it's Huaisang. They might not have been in contact the past year, but it's a bit difficult to look at a man with whom you've caught fish and served detention and think about bowing.]
If I'm keeping you from something--
[That's not what he means. For god's sake.]
. . . come join me, once I've changed. If you want.
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Odd, suddenly, to think of Jiang Cheng as his brother's guest, but the invitation to join him distracts him from that sadly distant thought immediately.]
Oh— I'll come find you!
[Ah, but after he reins it in, a little. It doesn't take long to point Jiang Cheng in the right direction of the guest rooms and then go make his request for tea and food; the refreshments arrive before Huaisang does, but he figures it's at least polite to duck in and inform Mingjue as hastily as possible that yes, the Yunmeng boy is here, and yes, he's handling it. Give him an extra couple minutes. But hmm, what does one say... perhaps he could just look at Jiang Cheng some more...]
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It doesn't matter that it's cold water; at this point, he'll take literally anything if it means he can scrub the dust of the road off his skin. He's not quite as pampered as some people, but he still has standards. That and a set of fresh robes-- in Nie colors, of course, they're guest robes, because all his things are, again, dusty-- plus some time to reorient himself, means he's a lot more comfortable when a knock sounds at the door and he slides it open.
The tea is sweet and warm, and he takes pleasure in it for a few seconds. But what to say indeed, hm.]
There hasn't been any battles near you, right?
[Ah, yes, the war. That's a fun topic.]
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The war. Okay.]
Not yet. My brother leaves disciples behind when he goes out to fight, just in case...
[But uh, hmm. It's still taking a risk, leaving the epicenter of the sect up to Huaisang and a handful of disciples.]
We're in the way here, but my brother is pretty formidable.
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It wasn't just exhaustion that propelled him to the Unclean Realms. Nie Mingjue is fearsome, oh, yes, but more than that: he's clever. There's a reason he was elected leader of this campaign; he has a natural eye for battle. Of course Jiang Cheng wants to see him; he's desperate for anything that might stave off the inevitable wave that feels eternally poised to crash over his head.
And here, now, when he's every excuse to stop thinking about it, he brings it up again. But he can't help it, not when it feels as though stopping will somehow be calamitous.]
Good.
[Good he stays behind; good that nothing dangerous has reached him. Good that his brother sees sense, because the thought of Huaisang on the front lines is . . . nauseating, honestly.]
. . . what was it?
[Before. Just now. It's such a stupid topic, but he'll try anything. Part of his mind may be eternally replaying the blood and the screams and the smell of burnt flesh, the feeling of having his core melted (but it's fine now, it's nothing)-- but at least he can try.]
Before. You stared at me. Do I look so different?
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And ah, here's everything else to rear its unpleasant head again, because it's everything else that left him staring at Jiang Cheng. He glances up, eyebrows raised, almost like he's surprised by the question.]
I— um, no. [He looks exactly how Huaisang remembers him, if not, well--] You look tired.
[He raises the cup to drink, sedately. A year ago he could have teased Jiang Cheng about the Nie robes, or done anything but sedately sip tea, which feels unnatural even to him. But, times being what they are... Hmm.]
It's good to see you. I didn't know— My brother didn't tell me everyone who's supposed to be coming.
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The only thing that's been steady is Huaisang.
Not necessarily to Jiang Cheng, mind you. He hasn't seen him in ages. But at least this, here, now, is the same: Huaisang sitting with a cup of tea, perpetually safe in Qinghe, somehow untouched by the war.
So . . . so look at Huaisang, then, he tells himself. Look at him, and don't look away, because everything else in his life is a bloody wreck, everything else in his life is confusing and terrifying and awful, but at least there's this. At least he knows Huaisang still, even if he doesn't know himself anymore.]
Mm.
[It's good to see you, and the words stick in his throat. It is good to see him. It's better than Huaisang can imagine. But instead of saying that-- instead of saying anything-- he ducks his head and sips at his tea and tries not to fall apart.]
They burned Lotus Pier down. Did you know?
[Was that what he meant to say? No. Is it what popped out anyway? Yes. And it's funny, because it happened ages ago, of course Huaisang knows, everyone knows, but--
Everyone knows, and so there's never been any need to say it out loud. He stares at him, slightly lost, eyes darting about his face.]
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It would be easy to sit in Qinghe and block out the world for the rest of this war, but Huaisang can't as long as his brother is involved, and Jiang Cheng— he knows what role he serves. It's not hard to realize that he is the steadying presence, somehow, when he's been so often scolded for being flighty and unreliable before. He is that for Mingjue, and now if he can be that for Jiang Cheng, well...
Mm. Take two.]
I heard. And while Xichen was still missing, too—
[Things were, hm, unhappy in the Nie household for a while there. Skipping that for now...]
I'm sorry, [he says, though he's sure Jiang Cheng doesn't need any more sympathy. Huaisang doesn't think "my parents also died young!" is, like, great material here... err.] You should get some rest, so...
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[Is this better or worse than that awful, awkward stiffness of before? He really doesn't know, but it really doesn't matter: it's coming anyway, words slipping past his lips faster and faster, because Huaisang is steady and safe and easy, so, so easy, unlike anything else. Wei Wuxian is a catastrophe of unanswered questions and Yanli is safe within the Jin clan and there's no one else, there's no one else who could possibly understand right now.]
I don't sleep anymore. I just . . . I lay my head down when I can't stay up any longer, and then I pass out. I can't rest, Huaisang, I can't . . . not until they're all dead.
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He doesn't think to sway Jiang Cheng away from his revenge; that seems stupid, at best. But it would be nice if he could sleep, wouldn't it... Just once.
And maybe that's it, maybe Jiang Cheng's hasty confession that he doesn't even sleep anymore pushes Huaisang to cross a boundary or two. He motions silently for Jiang Cheng to stay right there, he'll be right back, then stands and crosses to the door— which he slides shut. Firmly. Pointedly. They're alone in here, and so— so Jiang Cheng can be something besides the tragically young Sect Leader Jiang now.
Maybe? He still can't think of anything worth saying when he turns back to Jiang Cheng, and so in the absence of any words that sound right, he helplessly holds out his arms. Don't question him, just come here.]
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And then he spreads his arms, and it hits him. His expression doesn't fall so much as crack, his eyes going wide. He's sitting, and thank god for that, because he feels as though his knees might be buckling; there's a roaring in his ears, he feels stupid and numb, his thoughts nothing more than hazy static, and he doesn't know when it happens or how but suddenly he's there, burying his face against Huaisang's neck, fingers gripping the front of his robes.
The tears come hot and fast, but he doesn't make a single noise. Just stands there, shuddering violently, greedily taking anything Huaisang is willing to offer.]
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So they can be a little comfortable while weeping, anyway. He holds Jiang Cheng tight, cheek pressed into his hair, and for a minute or so that's it. Just silence and contact and hopefully, some scrap of comfort.
When he thinks he can move without shattering Jiang Cheng completely he shifts to loosen his grip and rub his hand in a gentle motion over his back. It's cool, snot on his robes, that's what he's here for...]
I... I'm not going anywhere.
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I know.
[He swallows thickly, tries to clear his throat. He doesn't dare look up just yet, he knows his eyes are red and, alas, there is indeed a lot of snot, but at least he can talk.]
I can't . . . I don't know how to make it stop. I keep killing them and it doesn't stop.
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I don't know, either. Jiang-xiong... this won't be you forever.
[Maybe for a while yet, but surely not forever!]
As- as long as I'm here, you can always come to me.
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It's good he's already shattered. It means that those words fall on him like feathers instead of crashing into him, ruining him, because god: what a statement that is.]
That's too tempting.
[Because it is, really: the thought of getting to run back into Huaisang's arms, to the smell of tea and the silence of an empty room, to the two of them contained and separate from all the chaos outside . . . god, he'd always be running back.]
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Well, never mind. He moves his hand up to stroke Jiang Cheng's hair, glad at the very least that he's calming down.]
I mean it. I thought... I might not see you again. This is the best I can do.
[He can't kill all the Wens or change the past or anything, but tea is good, yes? Yes.]
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a fucking NOVEL
delicious. 10/10
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