weifinder: (Default)
Wei Ying (魏婴) | Wei Wuxian (魏无羡) ([personal profile] weifinder) wrote2021-06-28 12:08 pm

Eastbound Contact

Wei Wuxian
missives | encounters
downswing: (shoot out)

seavine

[personal profile] downswing 2022-07-06 11:30 pm (UTC)(link)
The ripe cherry of Wei Ying's lip stretches its skins, blooms under Lan Wangji's eyes, all soft wonder. He hesitates — breathes in the animal tension of the hunt, the stale, electric complicity of air circulated too intimately between two mouths, like mid-summer swelter and burned dust. Suspense sticks his fingertips stiff.

A heartbeat more, and the pressure gives. Fractures him like porcelain, in a rustle of abyssally flinched striations. He hesitates — and steps, and steps again, and does not advance on Wei Ying, as much as he summons the binds of his body from their stupor, calls his joints warm and his hands alive, and braces his feet down when the ship's next tremble nearly tumbles them over.

Later, he will ask, why instinct didn't propel him to stay Wei Ying's balance at his own expense. Later, it will dawn on him like copper mornings, that he trusts Wei Ying to fend for himself. (And when did that paradigm shift?)

This isn't that: the first betrayal between them. It's that he slithers his headband off like a winter snake's skin and wraps it around the span of each fingers' brigade and keeps the length taut. That he punishes himself and stretches the ribbon a barrier before Wei Ying's mouth, and leans in, to hear nothing, and everything, only the glut of his heartbeat like gallop on his temple. That he kisses the vagabond frailty of Wei Ying's mouth through the cloth —

sultry and sweet and nothing, no one, only shapes of wet and quiet devastation, is it so different, one patiently permissive body from another, a whore from a destined lover, when eyes fetter shut and hearts stall to a grind, what is the essence of having after decades of want, how do poets discriminate?

— and removes himself, one step back. Like a star traversing a low sky, at once natural and impermissible. They are married. He loves, is loved. It is right. It should not happen, have happened. It will happen. He cannot breathe.

He licks his lips and tastes the sandalwood afternotes of his silks. The room is thieved. The invitation. The opportunity.

Lan Wangji stole nothing. All is bones and splintered marrow and honesty between them, all is freely given. So often, silver spills between his fingertips like rain. He is too liberal, too hungry. Covets. Craves now, and clutches the headband still a straight line at the level of Wei Ying's mouth between them, and he regrets —

...the hour, not the deed. Not the person. What will it be, to kiss as lovers do? A man and not his memory?

"Your mouth had ripened red when you fell." Only, this was the Wei Ying of his feverish dreams, the ghost of his nightmares. "You kissed death first."

In the dead of winter, Lan Wangji would burn hot. Apologise. He wants to. Wants to speak words, and wants to ask them. The ship sways long. He thinks, gracelessly, to fall.
downswing: (Default)

marrieddit

[personal profile] downswing 2022-07-08 12:10 am (UTC)(link)
There is the caress of a bird-bone finger on his ribbon, weight so ephemeral he thinks, pettily, to deny it dip — to resist against it, his body so often a fortress against Wei Ying's evils, now turned jail.

But then, Wei Ying's eyes glisten dark like the backbone of a candle's wick just as flame consumes it, and austerity invites a farce of forms. In Wangji's hands, the ribbon is a learned instrument, snake-charmed — he weaponises it neatly, taking advantage of Wei Ying's exposed finger to wrap each end of silk around where root meets knuckle, then cross them over, and bring the headband up to bind the sharp hills of Wei Ying's wrist. Once, around bone. Twice, like a cascading moan, unfinished.

He knots it down — a rustic arrangement, to complement the sea that hurls insults at their ship, the timed cadence of the Pariah's creaks and wooden screeches that swallow them like maws unhinged. A vessel is a loud thing, an organism breathing. It does not sleep.

"Chase off the spirits of this ship, and you win the rest," he gives with his gift, and there's a moment of blessed pale nothing, when he knows all too clearly he has won a hand — that Wei Ying will have anticipated easy concessions or greed or rejection, but not playful bargain, not a game.

"If I complete first, you yield the match."

Lovers are flimsy creatures, scared of the shadow of predictability. And where is Wei Ying, if he is not entertained?