a home.
They fall together, like fresh snow off the mountaintop: first, in measured, patient, cultivating reunion after an extended dinner at their inn. Then, with passion. Then, syrupy and slow, with morning. In a rare, turn, after bathing, Lan Wangji denies himself the rigors and discipline of morning and coaxes them back abed, to hold his lover throughout his rest near sunrise, until halfway to midday.
He stirs them, inevitably, when the blinding bright white of the day overwhelms, and they must set for the road to make good pace to Cloud Recesses while still enjoying their stroll. They arrive, meandering, in the depths of a trickling, golden afternoon, when much of the clan is distracted with the latest lecture of a visiting hermit — they say, an aspiring immortal — and neither Uncle nor Sizhui can be politely parted from his wisdom. First, a brief stop with Liang. Secondly, for Lan Wangji, yet slowed by his fading wounds and bruises, to test the recovery of his disciples.
Lastly, facing the dregs of an afternoon together with no duties, no assignments, no occupation — curiosity wins over. With the packed necessities of a quick meal in his qiankun pouch, he steers Wei Ying to walk the winding, if peaceful path toward the peripheral territories, past the liminal, isolated quietude of the jingshi and into the periphery of Lan Wangji's inherited grounds.
A short walk, yet they may have breached the threshold of a brave new world. He had chosen the space for its proximity to river water, cunning, lively spikes of rice stabbing the field, alongside feral flowers. Already, the builders and architects have marked a path to make a road, but they have yet to set down wood or stone for steps. These, he knows, are still young days for their home, Wei Ying's house, rising on strong, sprawling bones that stretch out over a considerable territory: a number of rooms, some superfluous, including an isolated study for Wei Ying's pleasure and a music chamber. A large kitchen, for all much of the house yet misses its roof. A segment for the archery post Lan Wangji had bidden. The house, designed to host an inner garden, even boasts the allocated space for a pond men had been digging until mere hours prior, when their toil ended.
"To grow lotus," he murmurs, nodding ahead where the pond is yet to glisten and crest, where its waters are short of rising. And he does not ask, Do you like it, what it can be? But his gaze flickers between Wei Ying's face and the home in desperate, hungry study.

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Half-turning so he can still face his husband, he looks out at the patch of land he’ll be in charge of. “You think any light suits me,” he teases, bumping the back of his wrist against Lan Zhan’s arm. “The light suits you, too.” It’s not just empty words. The way the golden light halos around the edges of his husband’s face, softening the sharper angles gives him a youthful glow. He can almost see the surly teenager he’d first met.
His eyes dip back down to the ground outside the window when Lan Zhan asks about Jiang Cheng. “Not yet,” he answers, chewing on the inside of his bottom lip. “But he’s still in Lanling. He’s probably too busy to write.” Or too angry. Or maybe he’s just not ready to reach out to him yet. “If he writes, he writes. If he doesn’t, then he doesn’t.”
He tugs lightly on Lan Zhan’s sleeve, then crawls his fingers down to his hand. “I’ll be okay with whatever he decides, so don’t you start worrying about me.”
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Silence envelops them, enshrines them. For a heartbeat, Wei Ying seems beautifully statuesque, isolated from this world — lost, never again to be found. Disparate. Lan Wangji's breath stutters, and he reaches in, on instinct, just as Wei Ying casts his glance aside, to fit his nose in the crook of his husband's bared shoulder. To breathe.
How is it they comfort each other, when their hurts are so private, so forlorn? When Wei Ying mourns his living with the same sweet aptitude with which Lan Wangji once begged relief from his one, presumed dead?
"They host too long in Lanling." With unrivaled enthusiasm, as if failure to drown a guest in extravagance injures every ancestor, down to the bitter last. Even Lan Wangji and Wei Ying, barely tolerated and tenuous relations, were welcomed as kings and torrentially overwhelmed with a series of fetes, banquets, introductions and receptions. "The days are busy."
And in this one breath, he steels himself silently to also write to Jiang Wanyin.
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“He’s handling something big and political, I think. Jin Ling didn’t know to expect Jiang Cheng until he was a day away or he would have warned me sooner. I tried to pry some information out of them, but Jiang Cheng kept telling me that it wasn’t my problem to worry about,” he confesses. “I was going to work him down until he told me, but I didn’t get a chance to.”
With a sigh, he buries his face against Lan Zhan’s shoulder again. There’s a little voice in his head and that reminds him that if it were truly serious, Jiang Cheng’s first day there wouldn’t have been open to spend it with him. He takes some comfort in that.
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Facing the window, Wei Ying's back is exposed to the draft and the elements, his faint and thin limbs vulnerable and sweet as they latch onto Lan Wangji's waist. He feels the sudden, primitive need to blend in with his husband, to envelop and protect him from himself, from his thoughts, from the world. To safeguard him. His grip tightens around Wei Ying's waist, pulling him inward so as to not upset his balance and tip him over.
"Perhaps, work him still." A slow, methodical, strategic manipulation, the likes of which Lan Wangji should not encourage. All the same. "Purchase him a gift. Write your thoughts. Be... brotherly."
Even Lan Wangji, consumed by perpetual urgency to rejoin or rekindle his communication with Wei Ying, remembers to check in with Xichen, to devote him moments of his day. All relationships require attention, care and thought.
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“Maybe you’re right. I know I said it would be our last chance, but I was upset,” he concedes, “I’ll just write to him every day until he has no choice but to write me back. If nothing else, he’d have to write to tell me to knock it off.” It’s more his style, but it still feels awkward because of everything that’s happened between them. And he’s not sure if he deserves to be forgiven and accepted in the way he wants to be.
“I love you,” he says, breathing in his husband’s comforting scent again. “I know it’s hard for you to encourage me to keep trying with Jiang Cheng. I appreciate it.”
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He cannot say so. Cannot say anything, the moment slowly, but surely descending into a syrupy melancholy that threatens to drown out their starting exuberance. Wei Ying had been so enchanted before, so at ease — and now?
Uninvited, he dips forward, once more collecting Wei Ying in his arms, only this time lingering long enough so that his lover might settle against him and perch comfortably, while Lan Wangji's hands contort to cradle his lower back and rump. Then, he starts to walk the room, signaling various nooks and corners with possibility.
"Where do you wish your buried wine stashed? We shall set a hatch door."
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With the topic of Jiang Cheng dropped, his mind wanders back to the house and the plethora of decisions he gets to make. They can’t implement most of those decisions until the construction is complete, but it’s still fun thinking about.
“We’ll put a lock on it so A-Liang won’t get into it,” he suggests, looking around the room. “Spin around slowly so I can get a look at the layout of the room again. Hmm, we can put the bed over there. Maybe at the foot of the bed? Actually, how about between the windows closer to the wall. That way it won’t get too much direct sunlight in the summer.”
He squeezes his arms around Lan Wangji briefly, feeling so grateful for all of this. In mere months, they’ll be putting furniture in and moving their possessions. “You were suggesting hiring someone from Yunmeng for the furniture earlier. Maybe we can get a carpenter from Gusu too and see what they come up with working together.”
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In truth, only part of Lan Wangji heeds him, eyes slanted and gaze soft as he nods along, permitting his husband's lilting voice to mellow and soothe him. He has no opinion, no priorities, scant preferences. Cloud Recesses raises its sons obedient and grateful for whatever it is that the Heavens ordain and their ancestors choose. But this is of relevance to Wei Ying, and so, he must try harder.
"The styles will not harmonize. Perhaps one quarter in one style, another in a second. We need not force. Only accommodate. Put at balance."
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He cups Lan Zhan’s cheeks with both of his hands and steals a slow kiss. A pretty long one, at that. By the time he’s had his fill, his heart is beating a little faster and his cheeks are slightly pink. He wants to kiss him more, until they’re both lost in the moment, but he rests their foreheads together instead.
“Take me to the library, Lan Zhan, and then I want to see where the banquet hall will be,” he requests, foot wiggling a little behind Lan Zhan’s back. “After that, we should start placing the talisman before we run out of daylight.” Which wouldn’t be the end of the world. They have the means to light their way.
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No one asks.
The library is a close destination, consigned in a generous enclave where master carpenters have already begun to fit in the loose entombments of wooden cases, absent shelves. A room eclipsed of strong light, its windows narrow — all the better to preserve the quality of their scrolls.
"Will this suffice you?" For Lan Wangji, a library is a matter of inheritance, of study and storage, perhaps of correspondence. For Sizhui's perusal, if he chooses to relocate here, or the instruction of their other children, once they have grown. But for Wei Ying, learning is a greedy, constant pursuit, something to both occupy and amuse him. This room must him, above all. "Speak your ambitions."
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He leans back to look around again. There’s so much room for so many books and scrolls. “More than. Unless you own a lot of books, it’s going to be pretty empty for a while.” He only has a few books to his name, two of which he’d only just received from Jin Ling. He doesn’t know if any of his favorite books survived the massacre and he doesn’t think asking Jiang Cheng about them is a good idea.
He leans in, brushing their cheeks together and stopping when his mouth is suggestively close to Lan Zhan’s ear. “It’s not the same as messing around in the library pavilion, but we can probably have a good time in here.” They’ll more than likely claim most of the rooms in that way over time.
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It is... a different proposition, when they are only inconveniencing their grudging hosts of Lanling, or the staff of Cloud Recesses that Wei Ying needn't encounter more than a number of times, in passing. Lan Wangji's cheek yet bruises in a hard blush, but he can overlook their extravagance then. This is their home, their sanctuary. They must keep it pristine and above reproach.
And so, he removes himself, skin chilled where the print of Wei Ying's mouth has barely gone, as he walks on to their second destination: the reception hall, generous but unimposing, skeletal in construction so far. He anticipated the need to host, but gently shrugged off the possibility of holding banquets. It strikes him that perhaps Wei Ying might require that spark of friendliness and kinship. "You require it bigger?"
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“The best banquets are held primarily outside,” he boasts, because that’s how it was done in Yunmeng. “But this is a good size for indoor gatherings. Anything that requires a full-sized banquet hall can be held in your family’s halls.” It’s not like he’s popular enough to fill a room even this size. Not yet. His reputation is repairing as more time goes by and he interacts with more cultivators, but it will take some time before the damage is fully healed.
“We can fit a few tables in here. All the same size like the Lans do. I’m not a fan of lording over everyone like I’m a Jin,” or a Wen before that.
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It is rare for representatives of Gusu Lan — their likeliest daily visitors — to feel at ease without their musical instruments close by, or to not volunteer or join in performance. Music is paramount in Cloud Recesses, an extension of the being and will of its inhabitants. Houses must be prepared to host it, built to accommodate acoustics.
"All greater banquets outside," he concedes, then carefully, airily studies the previous proposition. "We may consider Wei Ying's other ambitions, if he perfects silencing wards."
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He looks over his shoulder, grin somewhat wicked. “You mean that?” Of course he does. Lan Zhan doesn’t waste words, so if he says something, it’s usually genuine. “I’ve got it mostly worked out, but now I feel inspired to put on the finishing touches.” The only reason he hasn’t already is because he’d accepted it as ‘good enough’ and moved onto the next thing.
“Don’t worry, Lan Zhan, we’ll be careful so we won’t get caught. And if you really don’t want to do it in our library, I’m still open to having a sensual tryst in the library pavilion. Maybe reenact that dream we shared if you’re feeling passionate.”
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Absent of furniture, the room shallowly echoes their voices, the sound losing emotion and character as it ricochets from the gilding ceiling trims and wall edges. A large room, after all. Vast and unending.
He pauses, having only just begun to trail after his beloved, one arm shackled against his lower back. Concern drips venomously at the corners of his words. "...Wei Ying. Is it... too much? Too large?"
Has Lan Wangji perhaps... overdone thingS?
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He reaches one of his arms out towards Lan Wangji, inviting him to take his hand. If he does, he’ll bring Lan Zhan’s hand up to his mouth to kiss; and if he doesn’t, then he’ll lower his hand. Either way, he takes a few steps backwards.
“We’ll make it work! Your uncle will probably stick his nose up at it, but I don’t care what he thinks. The thing that matters most to me is that we’ll have our own house and all of our children - present and future - will get to have their own space that they don’t have to share if they don’t want to.”
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He takes his husband's hand, clutches, squeezes. Relinquishes only when Wei Ying has finished with him, mouth soft on Lan Wangji's knuckles. I ever remember you by way of your footsteps.
They will make it work, says Wei Ying. A consummate optimist. "I asked and decided too much without consultation. This cannot be your home without your say."
A fool. He was a fool, sincere in his kindness but overreaching. The same error, committed again and again and again. And he does not learn.
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“I’m still getting my head around it being mine,” he admits. It’s obviously the most opulent house in the area - and perhaps in all of Cloud Recesses and its territories - but that doesn’t mean it has to be a bad thing. There’s a small worry in the back of his mind that the neighbors around them will stay their distance and treat him differently because of nonsense like class and wealth. But he’ll just have to be more friendly and generous in his invitations.
He beckons Lan Zhan over to him with a curled finger. “You just did what we agreed on when you first brought up the house. I really do want to have a big family with you and fill up the rooms and halls. I just feel a little overwhelmed now that I’m seeing it with my own eyes. That doesn’t mean I want to change it or make it smaller.”
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Standing before Wei Ying, disciplined like a waiting pet, he anticipates his husband's next instruction, only offering, "Bide yourself time. This will be house. Our home."
A man of property is one of distinction, a harder breed to kill or ostracize than a lone, tolerated addition — even to one of the major sects. It takes... effort to deprive such a man of his possession, to confiscate it without complex reason and due course.
Far more precious than gold, it is a gift of stability.
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He lets go of Lan Zhan so he can cup both of his cheeks and tilt his face down to look him in the eye. “I love you, Lan Zhan. I love what this house will become.” He leans up and kisses his husband’s mouth. Short, sweet. There’s no overt heat in it, but he does spill his love into it.
“Let’s finish looking around. Oh, before I forget, do you think the carpenter would be open to building a small barn? It would be nice for Little Apple and the goat to have somewhere with a roof for when it rains.”
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Held, then released — blessed, then teased. His chin sits fleetingly over the crown of Wei Ying's head, withdrawing to allow him more room to prance about like a drawling, incandescent firework, enchanting and untamed. Even as he answers, Lan Wangji draws them down the winding path of the main corridor to bypass the various nooks, pantries and crannies — all emptied, some prepared to host arsenal, other provisions — and investigate the kitchen: only the hearth and the start of the heating elements have been built already, but floor has been more tightly marked for where great tables must sit, alongside shelving and cutting posts.
Abandoned in one corner, a lone shelf is already half-stacked with fresh supplies brought from Lan Wangji's stops at various marketplaces, on the way back to Cloud Recesses: spices, some soft, some incendiary, all violently coloured.
"A barn has been commissioned, alongside a tower of pens. For rabbits, when they please." ...truly, Lan Wangji has been nothing if not extravagant. He feels the flush that nearly consumes his cheeks. "Father's home was more affluent, before his confinement."
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The sight of the spice rack steals his attention and he approaches immediately to take a look at each of the jars. He’s not shy to take a whiff of the ground peppers and other things, one of which irritates his nose and makes him sneeze hard into his sleeve. He’d ducked his head down so he wouldn’t spill the spice with the force of his sneeze.
“When did you have time to buy all this?” He asks, impressed. Many of them are things he recognizes, but some are entirely new and ready to be explored. Technically, he’s probably eaten most of them at some point, but he doesn’t spend too much time in the kitchen. He sets the jar he’s holding down and turns to face Lan Wangji again. “I still owe you soup! I completely forgot.”
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"Unnecessary. The matter is ended." There is no urgency to revisit Lan Wangji's collapse into frail, undignified, helpless indulgence. Soup, care, spoiling, making a fool of himself — these are the disgusting marks of a man who ignores his responsibilities to his family. He cannot linger on his private hurts.
And so, he instead joins Wei Ying to take his lover's hand and position it on each of the precious spice pots and jars, showcasing them, one by one: "Chang'an. Caiyi. Yunmeng. Anyang. This, a payment gift from a nameless village in the Unclean Realm. Xidi."
Homes to markets, small or grand, enough to entertain the possibility of an exotic offering for Wei Ying's meals. Perhaps their children, too, might grow to share his appetites.
"I think of you, often." Said, for once, not amorously, not bittersweetly. Only with the quiet, plain civility of fact. "I enjoy bringing gifts from travels."
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He leans close to Lan Zhan as they go through the spices one by one, letting his lover guide the pace and his hand. “Yunmeng, too? You’ve been collecting these for a while.” It feels nice to receive gifts like this just because his husband had been thinking of him while he was out on assignment or for travel. When it comes to that sort of thing, he usually only thinks to buy gifts when Lan Zhan urges him to think of their children and other family members while they’re in a market. Maybe if he buys something for Lan Zhan next time he’s alone in the market, it will make his husband feel nice, too.
“I think of you, too,” he says, tilting his head towards Lan Zhan’s shoulder. “All the time. I’m completely obsessed.” Which is one of the reasons he can’t help but send messages back and forth whenever they’re away from each other for more than a shi or two.
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