notaturnip: (Default)
[personal profile] notaturnip
In his dreams, Yuan remembers.

He dreams of kind faces, playful teasing and being buried in the radish patch. He dreams of being poor but happy, of people who love him, of a cousin who shares soup and a visiting man in blue who buys him paper butterflies. He dreams of a life he barely recalls when he's awake.

When he's awake, he doesn't want to remember, because it's hard to think of paper butterflies and people who love you when you're just trying to get through the day - and the night.

It's only been a few months since the Madame of the Golden Hare saw his face and encouraged him to swap begging for something more profitable - he'd been reluctant at first, but two miserable, hungry nights in the rain later he decided he really would do anything for a good meal and a night in a warm bed.

At first, he really had appreciated it - he'd been given a bath, combed his hair for the first time in months (or more), eaten well and slept. The next day Madame gave him fine robes and he finally felt like a human being.

The feeling hadn't lasted, of course it hadn't. Madame's offer had been the essence of be careful what you wish for...

The day everything changes, Yuan wakes the same as he always does, he breakfasts with the other boys and girls of the house as usual, and the only hint that anything is going to be different is the briefest of conversations over the breakfast table.

"Ay, Yuan, is it true your surname's Wen?"

No matter how many years have passed since the Sunshot campaign and still he has to be careful about letting that information get out. He hates it. He was just a child at the time, how can anybody hold a grudge against him just because he is, however distantly, related to the Qishan Wen sect?

"Who told you that?" he answers with a question of his own.

"Doesn't matter, is it true?"

"Of course it is, or he would have just said no!"

"I want to hear hi-"

"Enough." Madame interrupts in a firm tone and Yuan feels himself breathe a sigh of relief. He knows that probably won't be the end of it, but it's the end for now, and that's enough. They all fall silent as they continue their meal, though some of the others still shoot furtive glances his way, which he ignores.

He doesn't think anything of the servants who had overheard the conversation as well, or the way they might gossip amongst themselves, the way that gossip might travel through people until, that afternoon, two men in a wine house across town happen to share a crucial piece of information out loud, where just anyone might overhear-

"I heard the new boy over at the Golden Hare is a Wen"
notaturnip: (Default)
[personal profile] notaturnip
Lan Sizhui has known who his soulmate was since he was six years old.
He used to lie awake tracing his fingers over the characters on his inner arm, amazed at how it came to pass that a foundling boy like him could have a soulmate in the great and influential Jin clan. He vowed, back then, that he would try and become the very best disciple of the Lan clan he could possibly be in order to be worthy of his soulmate. He worked hard to follow all of Hanguang Jun's instructions, to learn as much as he could. It wasn't just about his soulmate, of course, he was grateful to Lan Zhan for taking him in when he had nobody else, and he wanted to do well for his sake as well, but he'd be lying if he said the name on his arm didn't motivate him even more.

When he met Jin Ling, back then, accompanying Lan Zhan on a visit to Carp Tower, he hadn't gotten on very well with him. Sizhui was serious and thoughtful and remembered his manners, and Jin Ling... well, he was a little volatile. Sizhui decided he must not have gotten his mark yet, and he didn't want to embarrass him by bringing it up, so he patiently waited for Jin Ling to be the first to mention it.

The years went by and it became more and more likely that the lack of mention was deliberate. In fact, when Sizhui tried to bring up soul marks as a gentle way of getting to that point, Jin Ling would shut him down - angrily, too. He did that with everybody, and soon they all learned not to bring it up around him.

Eventually, Sizhui was forced to come to the heartbreaking conclusion that Jin Ling was disappointed. That he didn't want him.

He threw himself into his studies again, this time to try and forget. If he couldn't have the happiness of true love in his life, he could at least be someone his father and his sect could be proud of.

Mostly, he was glad that one of the many Lan principles forbade discussion of soulmarks, it meant people were less likely to bring them up around him, too, and that he had a reason to change the subject when they did. Even Jingyi didn't know what his mark said - though not for lack of trying, certainly.

Still, he became friends with Jin Ling - he couldn't bring himself to stay away, and the other boy certainly didn't seem to mind him being around either - and they often went on Nighthunts together, along with Jingyi and Zizhen, and they were getting pretty good at it, they worked well together.

This one was proving a little more difficult than usual, though, and the four had become separated.

"Jin Ling?" Sizhui called, moving carefully through the forest "Jingyi? Zizhen?"

Profile

dollymixtures: (Default)
Dolly Mixtures Musebox

April 2025

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789 101112
131415 16171819
20212223242526
27282930   

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 4th, 2025 04:34 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios