You Can Have The Best of Me

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you can have the best of me, baby

Posted originally on the Archive of Our Own at http://archiveofourown.org/works/39742875.

Rating: Teen And Up Audiences


Archive Warning: No Archive Warnings Apply
Category: M/M
Fandoms: 陈情令 | The Untamed (TV), 魔道祖师 - 墨香铜臭 | Módào Zǔshī -
Mòxiāng Tóngxiù
Relationships: Lan Zhan | Lan Wangji/Wei Ying | Wei Wuxian, Jiang Cheng | Jiang
Wanyin & Jiang Yanli & Wei Ying | Wei Wuxian, Lan Huan | Lan
Xichen/Nie Mingjue, Jiang Yanli/Jin Zixuan
Characters: Wei Ying | Wei Wuxian, Lan Zhan | Lan Wangji, Lan Yuan | Lan Sizhui,
Jiang Cheng | Jiang Wanyin, Jiang Yanli, Lan Huan | Lan Xichen, Nie
Mingjue, Nie Huaisang
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Pre-Relationship, or that one
where wangxian are trapped in the xuanwu's cave and use dual
cultivation to get out, Dual Cultivation, Accidental Baby Acquisition,
Sunshot Campaign (Módào Zǔshī), Getting Together, a-yuan is
wangxian's baby, Happy Ending, Prompt Fic
Language: English
Stats: Published: 2022-06-19 Completed: 2024-02-10 Words: 17,522 Chapters:
16/16
you can have the best of me, baby
by stiltonbasket

Summary

Twelve hours after Jiang Cheng and the others escape from Mount Muxi, Wei Wuxian
risks wading into the lake and discovers that the underwater passage to the stream in the
maple wood has been blocked behind the tortoise’s body.

“It’s sleeping right beside the opening,” he whispers, when he and Lan Zhan are safe in
a tunnel of rock too narrow for the Xuanwu’s neck and head. “Judging by the current in
the water, that passage was the only way out.”

Trapped in the Xuanwu's cave with no means of escape, Lan Wangji suggests a surprising
course of action to strengthen himself and Wei Wuxian for battle: dual cultivation.

The session proves successful, but despite their best efforts, Wei Wuxian's golden core yields
unexpected consequences for them both.

Notes

everyone knows where I'm going with this, right?

excellent.

See the end of the work for more notes


Chapter 1
Chapter Notes
See the end of the chapter for notes

Twelve hours after Jiang Cheng and the others escape from Mount Muxi, Wei Wuxian risks
wading into the lake and discovers that the underwater passage to the stream in the maple
wood has been blocked behind the tortoise’s body.

“It’s sleeping right beside the opening,” he whispers, when he and Lan Zhan are safe in a
tunnel of rock too narrow for the Xuanwu’s neck and head. “Judging by the current in the
water, that passage was the only way out.”

Lan Zhan’s white face turns three shades whiter. Wei Wuxian bites back a curse at the sight
of him, spattered with blood from the puncture wounds the Xuanwu had left in his calf, and
hurries to his side with outstretched arms and assurances already bubbling on his lips.

“We’ll find a way out,” he says, in the soft, soothing tones he uses on the baby disciples at
Lotus Pier. “And if we can’t, Jiang Cheng will be back before we’re in any danger of
starving. He might even bring Jiang-shushu with him, and since Jin Zixuan must be heading
for Lanling—”

“No one will be coming for me,” Lan Zhan chokes. “The Cloud Recesses have burned, and
my brother is missing. I do not know if he and Shufu are still alive.”

He bows his head, thoroughly defeated, and lets out a wretched sob.

“If we survive this—and we must, for I do not doubt you—there might be nothing left for me
to return to.”

Wei Wuxian wraps an arm around his waist.

“Then you’ll come home with me,” he vows. “If your clan is lost, you can be part of mine.
I’ll never leave you, Lan Zhan. I swear it.”

Lan Zhan cries a little more, and then, thankfully, he sleeps: as peacefully and deep as a child
at rest, though he has nothing to lie on but Wei Wuxian’s thigh tucked beneath his head. For
his part, Wei Wuxian sits against an outcrop of rock and nibbles on some of the food he
squirreled into his girdle the day before yesterday; Jiang-shushu advised him and Jiang
Cheng to keep their supplies in their qiankun bags at all times, and there should be enough
water and preserved meals for two or three days.

“Are you hungry?” he asks gently, when Lan Zhan wakes. “I have food and water, but we’ll
have to be careful with it.”

His friend shakes his head. “I will drink a little, if you can spare it. But I have no stomach for
food.”
So Lan Zhan drinks, and rests again. Six hours later, he rouses himself completely and waits
for another half-shichen before waking Wei Wuxian, who was dozing in a pile of old maple
leaves by the fire.

“We must kill the Xuanwu before we can escape, or it will smell my blood in the water,” Lan
Zhan says grimly. “I could act as bait to help you escape alone, but there is no guarantee that
the Xuanwu would let you go after it finished with me. That branding iron Wang Lingjiao
used was cursed.”

“Was it? Oh,” Wei Wuxian mutters, wincing as he puts his fingers to his bosom and draws
them away bloody. “You’re right. This isn’t going to heal for days.”

“I cannot fight in this state.” Lan Zhan gestures to the wound in his leg. “Nor can I leave you
to face the beast alone. We are hurt and hungry and thirsty, and the Xuanwu would have been
a deadly foe in the best of circumstances.”

Wei Wuxian shrugs. “Then we’ll have to wait until your leg heals over.”

“Yes, but—” and here Lan Zhan hesitates, with his next words weighing so heavily on his
tongue that Wei Wuxian can almost see them. “There is no telling how long it might take.
The sooner we leave, the better, and I know a way we can bolster our lingli enough to heal
within the next three or four hours.”

“You do? What is it?”

Lan Zhan swallows and drops his gaze to his lap.

“Dual cultivation.”

Wei Wuxian’s jaw drops open. He stares at Lan Zhan with the blood draining from his face,
half-convinced that he had not heard his friend correctly, and pales all over again at the
realization that he had.

“Dual cultivation? You mean-”

“Not as marital congress,” Lan Zhan says hurriedly. “With a sufficiently strong golden core,
two people can engage in dual cultivation chastely, as long as they bring their meridians into
close contact.”

“And it would heal you?” Wei Wuxian has done his fair share of research into dual
cultivation, mostly because of Pan Gaolin’s concern that Shijie’s golden core would not be
compatible with Jin Zixuan’s, but most of the cultivation texts in the library at Lotus Pier
assumed that the parties involved would be husband and wife. “Do you know how to do it?”

“I would have to circulate my lingli through my spiritual veins for ten minutes without
interruption, and then combine it with yours. My golden core must be weaker than yours just
now, so…”

According to Wei Wuxian’s textbooks, the act of dual cultivation was only ever easy when
both partners were equally matched; if one was weakened by illness or injury, like Lan Zhan
is now, their diminished spiritual energy would serve as a metaphorical spark to ignite the
other’s golden core and bring the first one back into balance, beginning the process of true
dual cultivation.

“So you’ll have to start first,” Wei Wuxian surmises, shifting a little closer to the dying
embers of the fire. “All right, then. Let’s do it.”

In later years, long after the Sunshot Campaign was over, Wei Wuxian would recall that night
as a kind of blur—an uncomfortable blur, since he spent two hours sprawled on his bed of
dried leaves with the backs of his hands pressed against the stone floor of the cave, while Lan
Zhan lay on his side at Wei Wuxian’s left to spare his wounded leg.

Accepting Lan Zhan’s spiritual energy into his own golden core was perhaps the strangest
thing Wei Wuxian had ever felt. It was a foreign feeling, like plunging into a cold bath in the
middle of summer—but then something clicked into place deep within his dantian, and Wei
Wuxian ignited.

He was still the man lying on the icy rock of the Xuanwu’s cavern with Lan Zhan’s cheek
burning against his—still tired and hungry and thirsty, though his discomfort was starting to
fade by then—but all of a sudden, he found himself standing on a wall painted white,
carrying two jugs of Gusu’s tianzi xiao on his arm and looking at Lan Zhan for the very first
time.

Lan Zhan looked back, his fine lips parted in awe, and Wei Wuxian saw himself reflected in
his friend’s gaze and gasped.

Was I really this beautiful when you first saw me? he asked wordlessly, as one of Lan Zhan’s
hands slid beneath his head to cushion it from the hard ground. I had just flown twenty miles
to Caiyi and back, and my robes were more sweat than cotton, and you—

Zhiyin, heart’s ease, Lan Zhan’s thoughts sang back at him. The only one who knew me,
recognized in an instant.

What was it that the books at Lotus Pier said?

Once someone has taken a partner in cultivation, whether within marriage or outside it, it is
almost certain that they will never have another.

That should have held him back when Lan Zhan proposed it, Wei Wuxian thought to himself,
in the minute corner of his mind that Lan Zhan could not touch in the midst of their
cultivation. He was always a romantic, he dreamed about marrying a dashing maiden and
being a father some day, and yet…

And yet—

Oh, he realized, and the knowledge burned inside him like the liquid fire of Lan Zhan’s lingli
in his veins.

What else could it have been?


I love him.

_______

Chapter End Notes

come say hi on tumblr @stiltonbasket, or leave a comment to feed your local wangxian
stan today! <^-^>
Chapter 2
Chapter Summary

In which Wei Wuxian and A-Yuan escape from the Burial Mounds.

Chapter Notes
See the end of the chapter for notes

When he fell into the Burial Mounds, Wei Wuxian hadn’t known there would be a child.

And how could he have? He was all of eighteen, coreless and grieving and more dead than
alive. There was barely enough strength left in him to bind his body and spirit together, let
alone furnish a second soul with the energy it needed to manifest a body of its own; but Wei
Wuxian lived, and when he staggered out of Yiling three months later, he had a week-old
baby tucked under his arm.

“It’s lucky that you don’t need to eat,” Wei Wuxian muttered to himself, after he broke into a
tailor’s shop and relieved its half-empty storeroom of anything he thought might fit him.
“What do you think, A-Yuan? Do you want to wear something cheerful, or should I just dress
you in black?”

The baby lay quietly against his chest, moving his small lips as if he wanted to speak, so Wei
Wuxian took it as agreement and chose black clothes with red trimmings for both A-Yuan
and himself. His thieving done, he threw away the clothes he brought from the Burial
Mounds and seized a few blankets for A-Yuan; and after that, he took some fresh milk and
fruit from a local temple and tried to feed his son with it.

“Good baobao, my good baby,” he praised, dashing tears from his eyes as A-Yuan drank the
milk a little at a time, sucking weakly at a clean rag dipped into the milk bowl until the bowl
was empty. “I don’t know how we made it all this time without milk for you, but it’s good
that we have some now.“

He wolfed down the fruit after A-Yuan refused to try nibbling at it, which Wei Wuxian should
have foreseen—after all, the baby was so little that he didn’t have any teeth yet—but at long
last, Wei Wuxian was no longer hungry, and A-Yuan had a little pink in his cheeks for the
first time in the eight days since his birth.

“Now for Wen Chao,” he sighed, strapping A-Yuan to his back in a sling before rushing out
into the night.

Wei Wuxian did not find Wen Chao for another three weeks, during which both he and A-
Yuan grew stronger day by day. A-Yuan ate everything and thrived on it, as long as Wei
Wuxian ground up his food and mixed it with milk or water first, and Wei Wuxian no longer
had to eat or sleep at all. He stopped growing thinner, as long as he managed a meager meal
every other day or so, and his command of resentful energy sharpened every time he used it.
Now, Chenqing could bring corpses to do his bidding from over ten miles away, and Wei
Wuxian could manipulate them so well that he required no more than seven minutes to
dispatch a hundred cultivators.

“I shouldn’t be killing in front of you,” he frowns, after one battle leaves him and A-Yuan
covered in a fine mist of blood. “You’re just a baby, and all I did was blindfold you and put
clay in your ears. You must have heard something, right?”

The baby squeals and licks at the blood on Wei Wuxian’s cheek. He seems happy, warm and
satisfied and thoroughly unbothered by his sudden bloodbath, and the sight of his little red
smile smites Wei Wuxian so deeply that he goes to his knees and weeps over his son’s head.

“I’ll be better, Yuan'er. I’ll get better, I promise,” he sobs. “I’ll give you all the milk you can
drink and new clothes made just for you, and after we take back Yunmeng, I’ll build you a
crib with a warding charm so you can take naps by the water in the summertime. Doesn’t that
sound nice, sweetheart?”

A-Yuan snuggles closer, cooing into his ear like a pet bird, and Wei Wuxian kisses him and
dries his small face before looting the dead and moving on. Unseemly though it is, he can’t
do without money, and stealing from corpses is easier than robbing the living.

He buys himself beef stew that night and savors every bite of it, saving half the broth and
some vegetables for A-Yuan; and when he finally lies down to sleep, on a soft, thick mattress
with a woolen blanket to keep out the cold, his memories of the Burial Mounds seem so far
away that he can scarcely believe they were real.

But the Burial Mounds are not so easily left behind, as Wei Wuxian discovers when he and
A-Yuan both begin having nightmares. A-Yuan fares better during these episodes, because his
crying usually summons up a kind ghoul or ghost to comfort him; but Wei Wuxian suffers
until he wakes and sometimes for hours after, except at the three tiny backroad inns where he
had to share his bed with A-Yuan instead of borrowing a cradle.

“You help keep the nightmares away,” he realizes at last, while he feeds A-Yuan a dollop of
gruel from his own battered spoon. “Yuanyuan, do you mind sleeping in your A-Niang’s bed
from now on?”

A-Yuan is only too happy to cuddle down beside him at night, and the nightmares vanish as
quickly as they came; or at least they did until the fourth week after Wei Wuxian’s escape
from Luanzung Gang, which is when he finally sees Wang Lingjiao slipping into a rouge
shop near the Qishan border.

Suddenly, he can think of nothing but the scent of wood and lotus flowers going up in smoke,
and little Liu-shidi lying dead in Lotus Pier's training courtyard with a jeweled dagger buried
between his ribs.

Wei Wuxian reaches into his girdle and pulls out the length of ivory silk he took from Wen
Qing’s office.
“Go back to sleep, A-Yuan,” he whispers, pressing his cheek to the top of his son's head. “A-
Niang is going hunting.”

Chapter End Notes

Hi everyone! Two pieces of news: firstly, the MXTX Food Zine is running again this
year! You can sign up for the event and claim your recipe at @mxtxfoodzine on tumblr;
but please note that this is not a charity zine. PDF and print-ready versions of the zine
will be available for free.

To check out the 2022 release, click here.

Secondly, I will be leaving Twitter permanently after December 31. If you'd like to
archive/save any of my tweets or threadfics, it's probably best to do so before January
31, 2023. By March, I plan to delete most of my tweets and all threadfics that have
already been crossposted to AO3.

Finally: I'm still on Tumblr, so come say hi with or without an account @stiltonbasket!
<^-^>
Chapter 3
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: so, how does lwj find out/react to to finding out that wwx has a
wangxian cultivation baby. and that wwx is taking a-yuan around on his murder spree?

Chapter Notes

Brief note to AO3 readers that this is NOT a continuous fic; each chapter consists of a
single scene written to fill a prompt. The chapters will be posted in chronological order,
but there will be many "missing" scenes, and large portions of the MDZS timeline will
simply be skipped.

When Lan Wangji and Jiang Wanyin finally reunite with Wei Ying, they find him resting in
the Yiling courier station with the corpse of a child playing at his feet.

Wen Chao’s corpse has been torn into pieces, strewn around the room like so much rubbish,
and Wen Zhuliu’s cooling body is hanging from the rafters; but Lan Wangji is most
frightened by the sight of his beloved, lounging on a luohan bed with his eyes closed and half
his flesh shrunken away into nothing.

He would have run to Wei Ying’s side the moment he crossed the threshold, or called out to
him, like Jiang Wanyin did. But then Lan Wangji looks at the ghost child, and the
dismembered hand lying at its side with the imprints of a tiny set of teeth in its palm—and
realizes that the ghoul is crouching over a living baby, a snuffling red bundle with fat cheeks
and round eyes that look a little like Wei Ying’s.

“Wei Ying!” he cries, as his zhiji’s eyes drift slowly open. “That ghoul—Wei Ying, I dare not
move, the child—”

“Oh,” Wei Ying murmurs, sounding so lost and far away that even Jiang-zongzhu stops in his
tracks, bewildered. “Gui Gui, you’re frightening Lan Zhan. Are you still hungry, baobei?”

Lan Wangji freezes, horrified into silence, and watches as Wei Ying takes the baby from the
ghoul’s arms and pats the creature on the head. A second later, the ghost child is gone,
dispelled by two soft notes from the dizi tucked into Wei Ying’s belt, and only Wei Ying and
the living child remain: quiet and pale as a pair of corpses themselves, and uncannily similar
in their lack of unease with the dead.
“Wei Ying,” Lan Wangji pleads. “Wei Ying, what are you doing?”

“What does it look like I’m doing?” Wei Ying retorts, with a gentle smile that feels like a slap
in the face. “Aiyah, Lan Zhan, you look so serious. Two wicked souls have come to a pair of
wicked ends, and now I am going to sleep. Do you and Jiang Cheng have a camp nearby?”

“Stop talking like that,” Jiang Cheng orders. “We do have a camp nearby, and I have your
sword, so…so put that weird flute away, and come back with us.”

Wei Ying takes Suibian, sliding it into his qiankun bag without a second glance, and shifts the
baby up onto his chest. “All right,” he says. “I’m ready. Let’s go.”

Jiang Cheng nods, and shakes a few drops of blood off his shoes before giving Wen Chao’s
body a vicious kick. “Yes, let’s. Whose baby is that, by the way?”

“Mine,” shrugs Wei Ying. “He’s my son.”

For a moment, Lan Wangji feels as if the world had fallen out from under him.

“What?” he croaks, looking between the baby’s face and Wei Ying’s. There is a definite
resemblance there, in the child's tiny lips and his long-lashed eyes, but Lan Wangji cannot
believe that Wei Ying would have dallied with a woman he did not love; such congress
without deep feeling would abhorrent to him, as it would be to Lan Wangji. And Wei Ying
had chosen to perform dual cultivation with him, a venture that could never have worked in
the absence of great trust and affection between the two parties involved; so how, then, did
Wei Ying manage to have a child with someone else?

“How could you have a child this young?" Lan Wangji says aloud, trying to swallow the bile
rising in his throat. "You were in Gusu until the autumn, and you spent most of that time with
me, so who—”

His beloved only shrugs again.

“He’s my son,” he repeats, carefully avoiding Lan Wangji’s eyes. “I didn’t dishonor some girl
at the Cloud Recesses, if that’s what you’re worried about. I found him when I was in Yiling,
and he's been with me ever since."

And with that, he turns on his heel and departs, whispering soothing words to the babbling
child in his arms.

Wei Ying does not look back at Lan Wangji as he goes, and perhaps it is this fact that grips
his heart and shatters it once and for all.

"He didn't, you know," a voice says from behind Lan Wangji. "That child can't be his son by
blood."

He turns to find Jiang Wanyin standing at his elbow, staring after his shige with a deep furrow
between his brows. "What?"
"He told me what you two did in the Xuanwu cave," Jiang Wanyin says bluntly. "And despite
his flirting, my shixiong is a complete innocent, so you musn't let him push you away. Until
all this is over, he'll need you more than ever."
Chapter 4
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: Cultivation baby a-yuan au and like. I am freaking screaming
omg. Its either LQR or LXC and both of them are gonna be so horrified. A baby! In the
burial mounds!

Lan Xichen arrives at the Unclean Realm nearly four months after the burning of the Cloud
Recesses, and finds the stronghold in the midst of preparing for war.

From what he heard on his way through the villages between Runan and Qinghe, Mingjue-
xiong’s forces have already met Wen Xu in battle and defeated him; and when he passes
under the stone gate around the Bujingshi, the first thing that greets him is a drying head
staked in the main courtyard, with its hair still bound with the gold and red jade commonly
worn by high-ranking nobles in the Nightless City.

Oddly enough, Lan Xichen feels no pity at the sight of it. Wen Xu laid waste to the Cloud
Recesses and killed the women and children from nine of the ten minor clans accompanying
Xichen now, and whatever end Mingjue-xiong devised for him, it could not be any harsher
than the ones Wen Xu dealt out himself.

“Xichen!” someone calls, loud and breathless and impossibly close, and then—after so long
that it feels like a lifetime of separation—Nie Mingjue takes his hand, leading Lan Xichen
down a convenient hallway before pushing him back against the cold stone of the wall.

“Mingjue-xiong?” he whispers, lifting his hands to Mingjue’s shoulders. “Are you well, my
friend? Do you need me to play Cleansing for you?”

“Cleansing, he says, when I have had nothing but spies’ messages to know if you were alive
or dead since the Cloud Recesses burned,” Mingjue mutters, pressing his nose to Lan
Xichen’s brow and breathing in deeply, as if he could draw the proof of his zhiyin’s life into
his own body and guard it there, instead of watching his heart walk about outside him in the
midst of wartime. “Four months, Lan Huan. If I had to hear news of your passing thus,
without ever seeing you again—it would have been the death of me.”

“I am here now,” Xichen soothes him. “I am by your side, and I will not leave you until duty
compels me to go. But before we go to your chambers, I have three hundred men from the
minor clans around Qishan waiting on your doorstep, and they will need food and rest by
tonight. Do you have room for them?”

Nie Mingjue frowns. “I’ll have to ask Huaisang. We have more than enough supplies, but the
sleeping space will be tight.”
“That won’t be any trouble. All they need is room to lay their bedrolls, and none of them
wish to be parted from each other just now.”

Mingjue nods, stepping a little closer; and then, before Lan Xichen can ask him what the
matter is, he finds himself sandwiched between the wall and his friend’s broad chest, with no
room to move either forward or backward or sidewise.

“What are you doing?” he ventures, a few minutes later. “Are you ill, A-Jue?”

“If someone were to attack you, right now,” Nie Mingjue says raggedly, “they would have to
run me through first. Either that, or raze the whole Bujingshi to the ground before striking at
you from behind.”

Lan Xichen feels himself go weak in the knees. It has been a long trip, he realizes, even for a
cultivator as strong as he is, and some rest—preferably a long, sound sleep in Mingjue-
xiong’s bed, with Mingjue himself close at hand to keep any nightmares away—if he could
only rest for a little while, perhaps then the two of them could—

“A-Jue,” he says, wrapping his arms around Mingjue’s neck. “Mingjue-xiong, I…”

“Am I interrupting something?” a cheerful voice calls, before Xichen can make up his mind
about what he was about to do. “I’m sorry, Nie-zongzhu. I thought this wing was empty.”

Mingjue laughs and shields Lan Xichen’s face from the intruder. “No. But what in heaven’s
name are you doing down here? Is that little one giving you trouble again?”

“Well, no, but—”

“Wei-gongzi!” Lan Xichen cries, springing out of Nie Mingjue’s arms. “You’re here! Have
you seen Wangji?”

Wei Wuxian nods. “I have. He and Jiang Cheng met up with me in Yiling, and we’ve been
riding out to battle together ever since.”

He turns his attention to Mingjue-xiong, explaining something about a Wen camp quartered a
few leagues away from Lake Qiandao, but Lan Xichen is no longer listening. Wei Wuxian
entered the corridor with a bundle of cloth in his arms, and Xichen assumed he was carrying
spare robes, or laundry; but then the grubby bundle moves, and reveals a tiny, curious face
that Lan Xichen saw nearly every day during his early childhood.

“Wangji?” he croaks. “Young Master Wei, that child…he looks exactly like my didi did when
he was young. Whose is he?”

Wei Wuxian blanches, staring down at the baby in open shock, and Lan Xichen doesn’t need
to look at Mingjue-xiong to know that he must have stopped breathing upon noticing the
resemblance between the little Wangji of the past and the gurgling child in Wei Wuxian's
arms.

“He isn’t one of my clan,” Lan Xichen says hastily. “The children from the Cloud Recesses
are all accounted for, both dead and living. I was only remarking on the resemblance.”
Young Master Wei shakes his head.

“It doesn’t make any sense for him to look like Lan Zhan,” Wei Wuxian says at last, looking
anxiously up at Lan Xichen as if he feared that someone might try to take the child away
from him.

“He can’t look like Lan Zhan, Zewu-jun. He’s mine.”


Chapter 5

After Lan Xichen hears the full story of what happened between Lan Zhan and Wei Wuxian
at Mount Muxi, nearly two weeks pass before he asks Wei Wuxian to consider the possibility
that Lan Zhan is A-Yuan's father.

Wei Wuxian resists at first, terrified that A-Yuan's origins might become known. But Lan
Xichen persists, going so far as to show him a portrait miniature of a baby Lan Zhan that Lan
Qiren gifted to Nie-zongzhu's late father; and at this, Wei Wuxian relents, for Lan Zhan's
baby self looked almost exactly like Yuan'er save for the shape of his eyes.

“It’s an easy thing to determine,” Lan Xichen says at last, after Wei Wuxian returns the little
portrait and admits that the night he spent dual-cultivating with Lan Zhan might have had
some role in A-Yuan's birth. “Wei-gongzi, no matter the result, neither I nor my sect would
ever try to take the child from you. Most clans have private methods of detecting blood
resonance in cases of disputed parentage, and if you wish to keep it a secret, nothing the test
reveals will leave this room.”

“Except for Lan Zhan?”

“Except for Wangji,” Zewu-jun nods. “Unless the spell shows that A-Yuan and I are not
blood relatives, in which case you need not tell him anything.”

"But, if the two of you are related—"

"It would change nothing, save for the fact that Wangji would have to be informed," Lan
Xichen says steadily. "By the laws of our sect, any child born to unmarried parents is
considered a member of the mother's natal family, unless she wishes the child's father to take
part in its upbringing. The situation is different with you and Wangji, for that law is meant to
protect maidens from men who did not treat them with due respect; but it would still apply in
your case, since A-Yuan was born to you. I hope that you will let A-Yuan know Wangji as his
father, of course—but if you are opposed to it, there truly is nothing we could—"

“Wait,” Wei Wuxian blurts out, clinging to A-Yuan for dear life. “Can you perform the blood
resonance spell twice?”

Lan Xichen raises an eyebrow at him.

“Why?”

“Once with you, as you suggested,” he clarifies, “and once with me.”

Lan-zongzhu frowns, probably wondering why Wei Wuxian would need a blood resonance
spell for a child he bore himself; but Lan Xichen told him that cultivated children were
dependent on their parents’ golden cores, and Wei Wuxian lost his three months before A-
Yuan was born. Furthermore, Lan Xichen mentioned that such babies are almost
indistinguishable from born children, different only in the ease with which they developed
jindans later in life, and the fact that some of them were larger than normal at birth—but A-
Yuan could go for days without sleeping or eating, even after he and Wei Wuxian left the
Burial Mounds, and he can eat any kind of food made soft enough for him to swallow.

For all Wei Wuxian knows, his son might be a benevolent demon who crawled out of the
Luanzang Gang to keep him company, and not a human infant at all.

“Zewu-jun,” Wei Wuxian begs, pressing his cheek to the baby’s fuzzy head. “Please.”

Zewu-jun nods and unclips the jade tassel from his belt. “I’ll do yours first. Twist a strand of
your hair around one of A-Yuan’s, and give them both to me.”

Wei Wuxian gathers the hairs as bidden, coiling his thick strand of hair around A-Yuan’s little
soft one, and watches as Zewu-jun lays them flat across the surface of his yaopei. The
pendant flashes silver, and then red; and when Zewu-jun lifts it away, both of the strands of
hair have turned white.

“The hairs of close relatives change color upon exposure to the clan yaopei. White signifies
the blood bond between a mother and child, or a pair of siblings,” Lan Xichen explains,
plucking a fine hair from his temple. “Forgive me, Wei-gongzi, but the spell requires fresh
hairs each time. I need another one from A-Yuan.”

So Wei Wuxian cuts another strand of hair, and closes his eyes while Zewu-jun performs the
test again.

When he looks back at the pendant, the two strands of hair wound around it have changed
from black to a clear, pearlescent gray.

Wei Wuxian feels his blood run cold.

“Do you mind if I send for him now?” Zewu-jun says gently. “He will not ask for custody of
the child, I swear it. A-Yuan is yours, regardless of whose blood runs in his veins, and that
will never change.”

He nods, hardly daring to breathe while Zewu-jun activates a message talisman and sends it
off to the Bujingshi’s training courtyard.

Ten minutes later, Nie Mingjue leads Lan Zhan into the little strategy room and tilts his head
at the flailing bundle clutched in Wei Wuxian’s arms.

“Congratulations,” he says, before Wei Wuxian can take Lan Zhan aside and explain
everything to him in private.

“A-Huan was right, Wangji. Wei-gongzi’s child is your son.”


Chapter 6

“May I hold him?” is the first thing Lan Wangji asks, after he and Wei Ying are left alone
together with A-Yuan.

A-Yuan, his son. His son with Wei Ying, a child conceived from mutual devotion and
nurtured by Lan Wangji’s beloved until he was ready to enter the world.

He never even dreamed such a child could exist, and now the proof of his love for Wei Ying
is here, sleepily drinking a bottle of milk in Wei Ying’s arms, and Lan Wangji adores them
both so deeply that it feels as if he could die from it.

“Sure, if you like. I don’t see why not,” Wei Ying answers, with a feeble shadow of his old
smile playing across his haggard face. “He’s not as delicate as he looks, you know. Little
babies are supposed to be too weak to hold their heads up, but Yuanyuan can already sit on
his own.”

“Mn. He is strong,” Lan Wangji says. “Like his A-Niang.”

Wei Ying laughs, a true laugh this time, and transfers A-Yuan into Lan Wangji’s lap. The
baby makes a soft sound of complaint, wriggling in his little nest of blankets; and then he
looks up, and meets Lan Wangji’s gaze with his own.

Lan Wangji bursts into tears.

“Hello, A-Yuan,” he croaks, wonderstruck by the soft baby scent clinging to his son’s fluffy
hair. “Sweetheart, hello. I’m your father.”

“Lan Zhan, he knows you,” Wei Ying gasps, when A-Yuan pushes his bottle away and
snuggles into Lan Wangji’s side. “He didn’t even take to Jiang Cheng this well, and Jiang
Cheng…”

But whatever quality Jiang Wanyin might have that makes him attractive to babies, Lan
Wangji is his father. He delights in the knowledge like a child, examining every tiny finger
and toe before asking Wei Ying to tell him all about the baby’s habits, and what he likes and
dislikes, and everything Wei Ying has already planned for their son’s future.

“May I be a part of it?” Lan Wangji says humbly. He would have knelt and begged his
beloved to accept him, as either his partner or A-Yuan’s father or both; but he would disturb
his son if he moves now, so all Lan Wangji can do is ask, and pray that his own change of
heart has not come too late.

Wei Ying has been cold to him ever since they were reunited, most likely because Lan
Wangji was so often cold to him at the Cloud Recesses, or because he abandoned Wei Ying at
Mount Muxi without a word of comfort after what passed between them in the Xuanwu's
cave. But now they have a child, a newborn baby that needs them both, and Lan Wangji must
care for his mingding zhiren and their son. He needs to, as he needs water to drink and air to
breathe—they are his, both of them, and he cannot bear to leave them now that he knows the
truth.

“Please,” he entreats, reaching out to hold Wei Ying’s hand. “I will do anything you wish, be
anything you wish, so only—only permit me to stand by you, and help you raise our little
one. Please.”

Wei Ying stares at him, his beautiful mouth falling open in surprise.

“I don't understand," he confesses, reaching out to touch A-Yuan’s small kicking feet.
“You’re young, and you’ll probably want to get married someday. Won’t your wife mind not
being the mother to your first child, Lan Zhan?”

Lan Wangji frowns. “Wife? I will never wed any woman. I will never so much as look at a
woman, if that is what you meant. How could I? A-Yuan is here, and you are here, and…”

He looks up at Wei Ying, overwhelmed, and nearly succumbs to a the impulse to cling to his
zhiyin and cry.

“I want us to be a family. A whole family,” he whispers at last. “Wei Ying, we are at war, and
so much is at stake—there is no certainty that either of us will live through it. Every time we
go forth to battle, we go with the knowledge that we might never return. But we already have
a son, and he is the most precious thing I have ever beheld. And you are dearer to me than I
know how to say, just yet—but I know that I could spend the rest of my life at your side,
aiding you in all things and helping you bring up A-Yuan, and die without a single regret as
long as you both were well. Please.”

Please accept me, he wants to say. Wei Ying, dearheart, please love me as I love you.

Has he lost Wei Ying already? Did Wei Ying love him once, perhaps, and decide that he
would be better off loving someone else?

Lan Wangji can hardly blame him, if so. After all, he could never have fallen in love with
someone like himself if he were given a thousand years to try.

“Am I too late?” Lan Wangji says numbly, clenching his hand so that Wei Ying cannot see it
trembling. “If I have displeased you, then I…Wei Ying, I will do anything to atone for it,
anything at all—!”

“No! No, nothing of the sort,” wheezes Wei Ying. “You, ah. You sounded as if you wanted to
be more than A-Yuan’s father, you know, and it surprised me! You’re too serious, Lan Zhan.
Of course you can be his father, if you want to.”

“I do want to,” Lan Wangji persists. “But I want to be more to you than that.”

All he receives for his pains is another uncomprehending stare. “I want you, too,” he clarifies.
“I wish to be wedded to you properly, and claim A-Yuan as my son by you before the entire
jianghu.”
“You want to marry me because of A-Yuan? Aiyah, Lan Zhan, isn’t that going a little too
far?”

Lan Wangji shakes his head.

“Not only because of him,” he confesses. “In truth, I…I would kneel to you now and ask for
your hand even without A-Yuan, Wei Ying—”

Suddenly, A-Yuan bursts into tears. He works his tiny fists into Lan Wangji’s robes, wailing
so loudly that he brings Xichen and Chifeng-zun running back into the room; and when Wei
Ying leaves to calm the baby down and give him a bath, Lan Wangji forces himself to accept
that his proposal has been rejected.

But he is certain that it was not due to any lack of feeling on Wei Ying’s part, or fear that he
might try to part Wei Ying from A-Yuan.

Wei Ying is hiding something from him, something that might reasonably prevent their
marriage, and Lan Wangji has no idea what it could be.
Chapter 7
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: spiritual baby yuan needs snuggles? All the snuggles? nmj is
good at baby snugges (not surprising). Jiang cheng is a bit :( because he's usually a
literal baby-magnet but a-yuan is a bit ??? about him. lxc is playing music and a-yuan
is !!!!

“A-Cheng!” A-Jie calls out, when Jiang Cheng catches her in the hallway outside the
kitchens. “Can you watch A-Yuan for a while? He was napping when the last scouting party
left, so A-Xian didn’t take him along.”

Jiang Cheng nods. “Where is he?”

“In A-Xian’s room,” his sister replies. “Yuanyuan’s not due for a feeding until two hours
from now, but if he gets hungry before then—”

“Feed him strained congee boiled with broth and thinned out with milk,” Jiang Cheng recites
obediently. “As thin as I can make it.”

Yanli pats his cheek and slips past him into the kitchen, and Jiang Cheng turns around and
marches upstairs to his brother’s room, where he finds his nephew surrounded by a wall of
round pillows in the middle of the bed. A-Yuan is awake, blinking in confusion as he tries to
look around for his father; and one of Wei Wuxian’s ghosts is sitting near his head, stroking
his fine baby hair with inch-long nails that send a quiver of fear up Jiang Cheng’s spine.

She melts into thin air when he crosses the threshold, vanishing to wherever she goes when
Wei Wuxian has no need of her, and Jiang Cheng waits to make sure the ghost is gone before
hurrying over to A-Yuan.

“You don’t need a diaper change,” he frowns, lifting the baby onto his lap. “Is Wei Wuxian
keeping track of how often he changes you? I don’t think it’s often enough.”

A-Yuan squeals and launches himself toward the blue frog on Sandu’s hilt. He seems healthy,
from what Jiang Cheng remembers about the babies he and Wei Wuxian used to play with
when they were little, but there’s no denying that A-Yuan is different from other children. He
rarely cries, and the one healer who was allowed to look him over noted that he was either
very small for his age, or reaching his milestones several weeks ahead of time.

Wei Wuxian told the old doctor that he found the baby in Yiling, not far from the cursed
Burial Mounds, and asked if exposure to resentful energy could have sped up the baby’s
development; but the healer threw him out of her office, horrified, and said that the child’s
beginnings were no excuse for Wei Wuxian to use his guidao in A-Yuan’s presence.
A-Yuan hasn’t seen a single healer since, not even after the battles Wei Wuxian keep bringing
him to, and Yanli has given up pleading with their brother to leave the child behind when he
rides to war.

“I guess he knows what he’s doing,” Jiang Cheng mutters, holding a finger out to A-Yuan. A-
Yuan grabs at it, trying to bring it to his mouth to chew on; but then, without warning, the
baby freezes against Jiang Cheng’s stomach and bursts into piercing wails.

“What’s wrong?” Jiang Cheng says frantically, picking his nephew up properly. “Are you
hungry? Do you miss your A-Die?”

A-Yuan flails in his arms, howling like a wounded animal, and he refuses to drink the milk
Wei Wuxian left out for him. He spits the cloth nipple out of his mouth and screams into
Jiang Cheng’s neck, kicking his feet and writhing as if something was hurting him, so Jiang
Cheng lays him face down on his knee and pats the middle of his back.

“This is colic, right?” he asks the empty room, hoping that Wei Wuxian’s ghost nursemaid is
still within earshot. “There can’t be anything else wrong with him. A-Yuan, tell shushu where
it hurts!”

But A-Yuan, being less than two months old, does nothing but shriek at the top of his lungs.
Jiang Cheng offers him the bottle again, but A-Yuan rejects it and draws his fat legs up to his
chest, sniffling harder than ever while the tears run down onto his blankets.

“I’m taking you to Jie,” Jiang Cheng decides. But someone knocks on the door before he can
open it; and when he calls out for the intruder to come in, it turns out to be Sect Leader Nie.

“I heard him all the way from the second floor,” Chifeng-zun tells him, with his brows
pinched together in concern. “Is he sick?”

“I don’t know. I was going to bring him to a healer, since Wei Wuxian’s away, so—”

Instead of standing aside so that Jiang Cheng can pass, Chifeng-zun only holds out his arms.
“Give the little one here.”

Jiang Cheng does, wondering if Chifeng-zun had remembered something helpful from Nie
Huaisang’s early childhood; but to his astonishment, A-Yuan goes quiet the moment Nie
Mingjue picks him up.

“When a child cries like that, it’s often because something in their environment is troubling
them,” Nie-zongzhu explains. “Huaisang used to cry himself sick when our father brought his
saber around him. Are you carrying any spiritual weapons?”

“Only Sandu and my mother’s Zidian.”

Nie Mingjue narrows his eyes at Zidian. “I’ve seen him trying to put your Sandu’s sword
tassel in his mouth before. Can you hold the ring near his face, Jiang-zongzhu?”

Jiang Cheng lifts his hand and holds it a hairsbreadth away from A-Yuan’s cheek. To his
horror, the baby’s little limbs lock with terror, as if he were afraid Jiang Cheng might use
Zidian on him: and then A-Yuan starts to cry again, beating his small fists on Nie Mingjue’s
shoulder in a desperate attempt to escape.

A second later, the door bangs open again, admitting a panicked Lan Wangji this time. “What
is wrong with my—with A-Yuan?” he demands, striding over to take the baby from Nie
Mingjue’s arms. “Have you two been frightening him?”

“We just found out that he’s afraid of Zidian,” Jiang Cheng grumbles, stuffing the ring into
his pocket before snatching A-Yuan back. “I don’t understand why, though. I’ve never used it
in front of him.”

Lan Wangji blinks.

“You would not have needed to use it in front of him,” he murmurs, holding out his arms
again. “Give him to me? Please?”

Jiang Cheng squints at him. “He’s fine now, Hanguang-jun. Why do you want to hold him?
He’ll probably just spit up on your robes, if you try.”

“Please, Jiang-zongzhu.”

So Jiang Cheng hands the baby over, and tries not to let his displeasure show on his face
when A-Yuan snuggles against the front of Hanguang-jun’s lace overgown and falls asleep in
two seconds flat.

“He will feel better after Xiongzhang plays the qin for him,” Lan Wangji announces. “Do not
worry, Jiang-zongzhu. I will return A-Yuan after he has eaten and finished his nap.”

And with that, he glides out the door, taking Jiang Cheng’s nephew away without a
backwards glance.

“Ah,” Nie Mingjue says awkwardly, after Hanguang-jun departs. “Wei-gongzi hasn’t told you
where A-Yuan came from, did he?”

Nie-zongzhu leaves before Jiang Cheng can question him further, but when Wei Wuxian
comes back to the Unclean Realm after sunset, Jiang Cheng corners him in the infirmary with
A-Jie and demands that he tell them the truth.

All three of them skip dinner that night, because Jiang Cheng is too overwhelmed by the
knowledge that A-Yuan is Wei Wuxian’s own blood son with Lan Wangji to show his face in
public, and A-Jie is too overcome with joy to leave the baby’s side. She sees it as a blessing,
though she weeps all through the supper they share together when she realizes why A-Yuan is
so afraid of Zidian, and how much Wei Wuxian must have suffered before the baby was born.

For his part, Jiang Cheng’s feelings are mixed, especially when Lan Wangji stops by just after
hai shi and insists on kissing A-Yuan goodnight before Wei Wuxian puts him to bed.

His shixiong is going to marry Lan Wangji, or at least leave Yunmeng to raise his son at
Hanguang-jun’s side, and there is nothing Jiang Cheng can do about it.
Chapter 8
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: jzx, seeing yanli carrying around baby a-yuan: oh. Oh. Also, the
idea of A-yuan being surprisingly tolerant of jzx while his a-niang and jiang-shushu
have never felt more Betrayed™

As is the way of things when one happens to be the heir to a sect, no one has ever dared to
hurt Jin Zixuan’s feelings.

Of course, he argued with his mother sometimes; and when he was a child, he tried to quarrel
with his father about the women he brought into Koi Tower. Those arguments never turned in
Zixuan’s favor, but no one but his father has ever tried to insinuate that he was wrong about
something important: and when the first person to do so turns out to be Jiang Yanli, Jin
Zixuan spends the next two weeks in a state of abject shame.

He had misjudged Maiden Jiang, badly. He never knew her to be dishonest in their childhood,
and she had never been proud—but Zixuan was flattered by the notion that someone would
take the trouble to make him soup on a battlefield, and when he saw the girl who delivered
the first bowl, Jiang Yanli seemed weaker and more talentless than ever in comparison. She
could not fight, and she was not beautiful; and her pursuit of Jin Zixuan into battle seemed
poorly done, when there were other women who had come to join the army or elected to
remain at home to defend their sect strongholds.

“Do you have anything in that thick skull of yours? Anything at all?” Wei Wuxian had
demanded, on the day Zixuan insulted Jiang-guniang for bringing him soup. “She has two
brothers at the front, and you think she’s here for you? Do you think you’d even get to see her
face if Nie-zongzhu sent me and Jiang Cheng somewhere else?”

Jin Zixuan had been a fool. He considered Jiang Yanli’s affections as his by rights, even when
he thought he did not want them; and now that he did, it would be shameless to pursue her
considering their broken engagement.

Just the other day, he had seen her walking around camp with Wei Wuxian’s child in her
arms, and the picture she made was so devastatingly beautiful that Zixuan wished he could
strangle the younger version of himself that thought her plain.

“It’s nobody’s fault but your own,” Mianmian said mercilessly, when Jin Zixuan asked for
her advice on the day before they departed for the Nightless City. “No one asked you to treat
her so coldly when we were children, or insult her at the Cloud Recesses. No one forced you
to reject her cooking, either. You’re reaping your own rewards, gongzi, and you won’t get any
sympathy from me.”
“I know I don’t deserve your sympathy. I don’t deserve Jiang-guniang’s love, either,” Jin
Zixuan pleaded. “But surely—surely I could apologize to her? Her feelings must still be
wounded, and I haven’t done anything about it.”

“The time to make apologies was months ago,” she snapped. “Frankly, I don’t see how
marrying you could make Jiang-guniang happy now. Just let it go.”

So Jin Zixuan let it go, knowing that the bitterness of losing Jiang Yanli was nothing
compared to all that she had endured at his hands. But then, a bare twenty-four hours after
Wen Ruohan was finally slain, he meets her in the compound of the Sun Palace reserved for
recovering cultivators, and stops dead in his tracks; for she has Wei Wuxian’s son tied to her
back in a sling, and the baby had seized one of the gold peony chains dangling from Jin
Zixuan’s guan as he passed by.

“Oh!” Jiang Yanli exclaims. “Pardon me, Jin-gongzi. Yuanyuan, let go of his hair.”

The baby—Yuanyuan, Jiang-guniang said—does not let go. Instead, he winds his tiny fists
around the end of the chain and pulls it towards his mouth.

“Bu!” he shrieks, when Jin Zixuan tries to free himself. Unnerved, Zixuan drops his hand and
edges a little close. He hates listening to babies’ cries, and this baby’s crying kept their
regiment from sleep on so many nights that most of the Jin cultivators refuse to go anywhere
near him.

Jiang-guniang reaches up and pries Yuanyuan’s left hand open, shaking the chain of gold
peonies back into place. But the instant she reaches for his right hand, the left one clamps
back down on Jin Zixuan’s hair.

“I’ll just give it to him. I’ve got others,” Jin Zixuan squeaks, his face burning. “It won’t take
long, Lady Jiang.”

He detaches the guan and its six gold chains from his bun, letting his long dark hair fall free,
and then he puts it back up with a spare hairpin and gives his guan to the baby.

“Here,” he says, and then, when she opens her mouth to thank him:

“It was no trouble,” Zixuan blurts out. “It’s just a guan, and he’s only a baby.”

Jiang Yanli gives him a kind smile and steps past him, heading towards the house where Wei
Wuxian is convalescing. But Wei Yuan, apparently unsatisfied with the peony chains now
that they were his and not Zixuan’s, wriggles up and hangs the guan over Jiang Yanli’s ear.

“Pitty,” he coos, rubbing his tiny cheek against hers.

In that very moment, the sun emerges from behind a veil of rosy clouds; and when it falls
upon Jiang Yanli, the light strikes the golden peony blossoms in her hair, and fills her big
eyes with a gentle fire that nearly brings Jin Zixuan to his knees.

“Mianmian,” he gasps, after he staggers back to the Jins’ guest compound and collapses on
the floor by his bed. “Mianmian, I need help. I love Jiang-guniang, I do—even if her
affections for me have faded. I won’t press her—I could never press her, even if I had not
disrespected her so in the past. But if I have the slightest, slimmest chance, then maybe—”

Mianmian looks supremely unimpressed.

“Get up,” she sighs, a little while later. “Very well, I’ll help you.”

Jin Zixuan bolts upright. “Then you think she might accept me?”

“Why do you think I told you to stay away from her?” scolds Mianmian. “If she’d learned her
lesson after that business with the soup, I wouldn’t have bothered. I warned you off for her
sake, Zixuan, because Jiang-guniang still loves you.”

Jin Zixuan gawks at her, wonderstruck, and bursts into tears.


Chapter 9
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: Thank you for the LWJ, now I'm just curious, how will LQR
react, and with the same type of relatives that heaped upon LWJ the advice for a happy
marriage.... That support and want LWJ to get married! And so there's more buns in
CR! Especially best radish bun A-Yuan!

The first time Lan Qiren meets Lan Yuan, he discovers what the poets meant by having
something take one’s breath away.

It wasn’t because of A-Yuan: or at least, not entirely. Lan Qiren set off for Qishan the
moment he heard of Wen Ruohan’s death, for the letter reporting their victory came with the
news of Wangji’s son, born to Wei Wuxian during the first weeks of the war; and then
Chifeng-zun led Lan Qiren to the Nightless City’s main summer palace, where Wangji was
living with Wei Wuxian and their infant son.

In Lan Qiren’s eyes, the day he met A-Yuan was the day his little A-Zhan became a father,
and he withdrew to his own quarters and wept with joy the minute he could excuse himself.

“When will the wedding be?” he asks later that week, while Xichen and the rest of the Lan
delegation are preparing for their return to Gusu. “Wei Ying must marry into our family, of
course, but I suppose it will be some time before Jiang-zongzhu can spare him. If it hastens
their union, Wangji might as well go directly to Lotus Pier and live there until Jiang-zongzhu
signs the betrothal papers.”

His nephews exchange somber glances, conducting a silent conversation with their eyes
instead of talking to their uncle. For his part, Lan Qiren is unsurprised. Wangji is in charge of
A-Yuan tonight, because Wei Ying left the city to reclaim the corpses from the battlefield
towards Hejian; so perhaps A-Zhan does not think it meet to discuss the marriage out of his
beloved’s hearing save with A-Huan, who must already know how the arrangements are
faring.

If so, the sentiment is an admirable one. Wangji seems to be a more steadfast fujun at the
tender age of twenty than most men half a century older.

But then Lan Xichen speaks, placing a hand on Wangji’s shoulder, and dashes Lan Qiren’s
hopes so quickly that he nearly goes into shock.

“There will be no wedding, Shufu,” he says quietly. “At least not yet. Wangji has not
successfully won Wei-gongzi’s hand in marriage.”
Wangji glares at him. “There is no need to say it gently, Brother. I have not failed to win his
hand. I asked, and I was rejected.”

Lan Qiren feels his blood run cold. If Wei Wuxian has refused to accept Wangji as his
husband, might he not deny Wangji the chance to be known as A-Yuan’s father?

“Then what about the child?” he ventures, watching A-Yuan crawl across the rug with one of
Wei Wuxian’s red ribbons tied around his middle. “A-Yuan is a Lan. He and his muqin
belong at the Cloud Recesses, with you. Wangji, is Wei Wuxian dissatisfied with you?”

“Nothing is to change with A-Yuan,” Lan Wangji murmurs. “Wei Ying and I will part ways
next week. I shall return to Gusu with you and Brother, and Wei Ying will go back to
Yunmeng with A-Yuan.”

And then, almost under his breath, he says,

“I do not know if A-Yuan’s family name will be Lan. He will live where Wei Ying is, and be
educated where Wei Ying is, and he will know me as his father, but—but father only in the
sense that I had a hand in his creation, not as his mother’s chosen beloved. Wei Ying does not
want me.”

Wei Ying does not want me.

Lan Qiren sits back, stupefied. “Surely not,” he says, stupefied. “You two have a child, a
child Wei Wuxian must raise alone if you two do not wed. What reason could he possibly
have for refusing you?”

“Ah, Shufu,” Xichen interrupts. “For now, let it be. I have tried to reassure Wangji many
times, but both you and he have forgotten that Wei Wuxian is still young. He will not be
twenty until this coming autumn, and he already has a child to care for. Wei-gongzi loves A-
Yuan deeply, and he is unused to being a father; so in time, when he realizes that accepting
Wangji’s suit is the best thing for A-Yuan, he will surely say yes.”

“You are blind,” Lan Qiren snaps, making his nephew draw back in surprise. “Wangji could
coax Wei-gongzi into marriage now if he insisted the union would be good for A-Yuan. But
your brother is in love with that little fool, and he will not settle for a marriage undertaken
out of duty. Am I correct, Wangji?”

Wangji nods. “If our marriage will not bring joy to Wei Ying, then I do not want it,” he says
firmly. “I will be A-Yuan’s father, and honor my zhiji that way. It is already better than
anything I dared to dream of before the war.”

Honor, indeed! Lan Qiren can almost see his nephew’s heart falling to pieces inside him!

“Don’t give up hope,” he urges. “It may very well be as Xichen said: Wei Ying is young. He
is barely more than a child himself, war or no war, and now he has a little one of his own.
What man could act sensibly in a predicament like his?”

“Wei Ying is very sensible. He knows his own mind.”


“Yes, but he has been through a great ordeal,” Lan Qiren points out. “He cultivates the guidao
now, doesn’t he?”

“He cultivates the guidao for A-Yuan!” Wangji says fiercely, rising from his chair and
snatching a confused A-Yuan out of the nest of pillows Xichen built for him that morning.
“Shufu, think! I gave myself to Wei Ying in that cave, when both of us were wounded nearly
unto death—”

“Lan Wangji!”

“Not really, Shufu,” Lan Xichen coughs, turning his face away to hide his grin. “Zhanzhan, if
you keep speaking of it that way, people will misunderstand.”

“—and three months later he had a child, while he was left defenseless and alone in Yiling!”
Wangji continues, narrowing his eyes at his brother. “A-Yuan would never have lived if Wei
Ying had not given him all his lingli, so what choice did my beloved have, save to protect
himself and our child by cultivating the ghost path? A-Yuan owes his life to everything Wei
Ying is, and has done, and the wickedness you would condemn him for is the reason I have
my husband and son safe at my side today!”

“I was not going to condemn him,” Lan Qiren says placidly. “I wanted to remind you that he
needs time to heal. Now that the war is over, he can return to the honorable path and see his
home rebuilt, and then you can ask for his hand again. Properly, this time.”

“I have told you,” Wangji returns, aggrieved, “that Wei Ying does not love me. Am I to press
him into marriage anyway? If that is what you meant, I refuse.”

“Save me from the stubbornness of children in love! Lan Wangji, you utter fool—the two of
you could never have achieved dual cultivation unless Wei Wuxian loved you with all his
heart!” he roars. “Your son is the proof of his feelings, nephew. He loves you so dearly that
there is living evidence of it! Didn’t A-Huan explain it to you?”

Lan Xichen opens his mouth. “I-”

But before he can speak, Wangji tucks A-Yuan under his arm and storms towards the door.
He pauses on the threshold for a moment, stroking A-Yuan’s chubby little face; and then he
turns back to his uncle, and shocks him half to death by saying,

“If you want to see us happily married, look to Xiongzhang first. I would have been forced to
duel Nie-zongzhu for his honor a hundred times over if we were not at war.”

And with that, he disappears into his bedroom, leaving Lan Qiren to lament his uselessness as
a teacher while Xichen makes a valiant effort to smother himself in his robes.

“A-Huan,” Lan Qiren says, resigned. “Is this true?”

Xichen does not answer, but his burning face is answer enough, so Lan Qiren puts his head in
his hands and tries not to scream.
His eldest nephew is engaged the next morning, after Lan Qiren has a long, stern conference
with Chifeng-zun; and as for Wangji, Lan Qiren has a tiny, dimpled accomplice to help the
match along.

All good things come to those who wait, he whispers, when Wei Wuxian leaves Wangji
behind with nothing but a promise to see him next month in Yunmeng.

Hold fast, Wangji. Your heart’s desire is worth waiting for.


Chapter 10
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: Now I desperately need to see a scene where Lan Qiren has that
conversation with NMJ in spiritual baby a-yuan bc PLEASE THE WAY I CHORTLED!
LWJ JUST DROPS A BOMB AND LEAVES *MIC DROP*

If Lan Qiren had ever been asked to guess what his nephews’ future marriages would be like,
he would have said that Lan Xichen would marry first.

Xichen was always brighter and more sociable than Wangji, attracting admirers left and right
throughout his youth, and Lan Qiren often wondered why no young lady with a similar
character ever caught his eye. His nephew was kind, pleasing to the eye, downright reverent
of every woman that crossed his path—he had once protected a maiden from Wen Xu, though
the man was five years A-Huan’s senior, while A-Huan was not yet of age—but no
sweetheart appeared, and Lan Qiren had nearly given up hope by the time Nie Mingjue
entered the scene.

In restrospect, it was obvious why Xichen had chosen him. The two boys grew up together,
spending alternate summers at each other’s homes until Nie Mingjue succeeded his father;
and at some point, Nie Mingjue fell deeply in love with Xichen and became so ill-adept at
hiding it that the whole jianghu knew about his feelings by the time he was twenty.

Be that as it may, I would rather they not know of his sleeping arrangements, Lan Qiren
thinks, as he knocks on the door to Nie Mingjue’s quarters. They are both men, but even so…

The door opens. “Lan-laoshi,” Nie Mingjue blinks, clearly surprised by the sight of
him. “What news? Is all well with the recovery efforts?”

“As well as such things can be, as far as I know,” sighs Lan Qiren. “Will you let me in, Nie-
zongzhu? I must speak with you.”

Nie-zongzhu lets him pass and offers to send an attendant for tea and breakfast, but Lan
Qiren has no desire to draw this conversation out any longer than he must.

“You have been sharing my nephew’s bed throughout the war,” he says bluntly. “For obvious
reasons, that fact concerns me. What do you intend to do about it?”

Nie Mingjue frowns at him. “Lan Huan and I have always shared our living quarters. I sleep
in the Hanshi during my visits to the Cloud Recesses, and A-Huan has a bed of his own in my
chambers. The whole of the Bujingshi knows it.”
“The Bujingshi is loyal to you. Your people would never speak of your doings to outsiders,”
Lan Qiren points out. “But there are no less than a hundred clans present here in Qishan. If
you were simply brothers in arms, no one would think twice, but when paired with the
knowledge of your affections for him…”

Nie Mingjue does not blush. He meets Lan Qiren’s eyes calmly, with no hint of shame: but
Lan Qiren must still ask if he and Xichen behaved honorably behind closed doors, if only to
set his old heart at rest.

“Our sect precepts forbid congress outside of marriage. Has Xichen broken that law in your
presence?”

Nie-zongzhu shakes his head, and Lan Qiren exhales in relief before finding his way to a
chair. “Very well. Since nothing has happened, then-”

“Then I will marry him.”

“You will–what? Why?”

“Truth is nothing in the face of rumor,” Nie Mingjue says hoarsely. “If there are rumors about
us, then I would settle them by making it plain where Xichen and I stand in one another’s
hearts. But I spent this last year not knowing whether each time I bid him goodbye would be
the last, not knowing if the both of us would live to see the end of the war–laoshi, I have
taken more separation from him than I can bear. So I will ask him to be my husband, and
dwell with him until the end of my days.”

Lan Qiren lifts his eyebrows. “Then what of your duties? One of you must marry out, or you
must live apart.”

“It will still be more than what we have had. If Lan Huan wishes to come to me after we are
wed, then wanting will be enough reason to make the journey. He need not invent crowd
night-hunts and banquets to make excuses for meeting like I did when we were children.”

Lan Qiren digests this revelation in silence, marveling at the fact that his fretting had been
wasted upon Wangji. His elder nephew has apparently been courting in secret all this time,
and courting unknowingly until not so very long ago.

“You two have my blessing,” he says. “When should the wedding take place?”

“As soon as Xichen wants it. After he and I speak, I will ask him to choose a date.”

And with that, the matter is settled. Lan Xichen is as good as betrothed, since Lan Qiren
came to visit Nie-zongzhu with his permission, and Nie-zongzhu’s honor is no longer in
question; so Lan Qiren finishes his tea and goes back to Wangji’s guest house, where he finds
Wei Wuxian waiting in the front room with A-Yuan in his arms.

“Where is Wangji?” Lan Qiren asks, when Wei Ying rises to greet him. “You have only just
recovered. Why is he not with you?”
“All of the able-bodied cultivators in residence have been asked to go to the healing wards,”
Wei Wuxian explains, holding a babbling A-Yuan up at arm’s length so Lan Qiren can kiss
the baby’s soft cheek. “The wounded need to be moved by the end of the week, and their
cores are flagging from overuse. They need to heal faster, so Xichen-ge prescribed them all
mass lingli transfusions. He’s been tending the patients in the medical pavilion since dawn.”

“And you are still unwell, so you stayed behind with Yuan’er.”

Wei Wuxian nods, looking strangely relieved that Lan Qiren came to the correct conclusion
on his own; or perhaps he feared being upbraided about his dark cultivation yet again, for
practicing the guidao would likely have rendered him useless as a healer even if he were
well. “There’s no use for me down there. I don’t have enough spiritual energy to give them,
and Shijie is working as a nurse, so there was no one I could leave Yuanyuan with.”

“You should remain here until Wangji returns,” Lan Qiren advises him. “I can assist you if
you need anything, and if you grow tired, I will look after A-Yuan.”

“Then this one will retire to bed,” Wei Wuxian says, with a soft laugh that A-Yuan
immediately tries to imitate. He copies the yawn that follows, too, stretching his tiny pink
mouth so wide that Lan Qiren can count the new teeth coming through his gums; and then the
child falls asleep on his A-Niang’s shoulder, hiding his face behind Wei Wuxian’s hair as he
drifts off to sleep.

Wei Wuxian slips through the door to Wangji’s room, taking the baby with him; and Lan
Qiren slumps down onto the luohan bed near the stove before taking out his little pocket
calendar.

“Wangji’s wedding must take place by this autumn, at the very latest,” he mutters to himself,
as he searches for auspicious dates for his elder nephew's wedding. “Xiongzhang, I can bear
no more of this! Your sons are no better with matters of the heart than you!”
Chapter 11
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: ok so MY guess is that Wangxian dual cultivated hard enough to
end up with a radish in the xuanwu cave, but I wanna read the conversation where these
two idiots are forced to acknowledge it. I feel like at minimum the Lans would
immediately start asking questions. Bonus points if WWX accidentally lets it slip that
they might have accidentally-on-purpose gotten SLIGHTLY engaged in a separate,
prior, gay cave incident involving Lan Yi

“Lan Zhan,” Wei Wuxian says one night, about a week into Lan Zhan’s first month in
Yunmeng, “there’s something you should know about A-Yuan.”

The two of them are sitting on the roof together, partly for tradition’s sake and partly out of
convenience. They met on the roof of the guardhouse at the Cloud Recesses, and settled their
quarrel about Wei Wuxian’s guidao on the roof of Nie Mingjue’s guest chambers—and now,
at Lotus Pier, the pavilions and bridges of the living compound are occupied even in the dead
of night, leaving the roof as the only safe place for lovers to meet and trade secrets.

Wei Wuxian and Lan Zhan can hardly be called lovers, despite being parents to the same
child. But Wei Wuxian loves Lan Zhan dearly all the same; and so, here they are, perched on
the roof over Jiang-shushu’s study like a pair of trysting sweethearts.

“What is it?” Lan Zhan replies, placing his pale hand over the dark one in Wei Wuxian’s lap.
“Are you and Yuan-bao well?”

“En, we are. But Lan Zhan, about your offer of marriage, I—”

Lan Zhan closes his eyes and squeezes Wei Wuxian’s hand a little tighter.

“I will not repeat it. It would distress you, and I would not bring you grief for any price,” he
says quietly. “I understand that you do not love me, though you care for me deeply, and so…
let us put my foolishness to rest, and move on. You have your due rights as A-Yuan’s father
and a member of my clan, which is what I truly wanted for you both.”

Wei Wuxian knew that Lan Zhan proposed to him out of duty and nothing more, but the ache
of hearing him say so is no less keen for it. He takes the blow like a man, refusing to betray
himself with a flinch or the trembling of white lips left unkissed by the father of his child.
Now, he has no need to tell Lan Zhan about his feelings; his beloved does not return them,
and revealing the truth of his heart would likely win him a second offer of marriage, one Wei
Wuxian would never have the strength to refuse.
He would wed Lan Zhan if he asked again, wed him and dwell with him until the end of his
days, because it would be torment to be parted from him and death to imagine Lan Zhan with
another. Once he tried to think of someone else surpassing him in Lan Zhan’s affections,
some high-spirited maiden or gentle xianjun who would love A-Yuan and honor Wei Wuxian
as the father that bore him, and found himself wishing himself married that very instant, so he
could be content in the knowledge that Lan Zhan would never…

“I love you,” he says aloud, so softly that he scarcely hears himself above the rustling of the
wind. “I love you as Zhu Yingtai loved Liang Shanbo, as the Lady Bai She loved her Xu
Xian. When we were still in Qishan, I heard Lan-xiansheng say it was a miracle that you
were well enough to dual cultivate with me after fighting the Xuanwu, let alone that I had the
strength to receive you and bear a child, and so—well!

“It was more than your strength, my Lan Zhan, and more than mine, too. I love you more
than life, qian xin, and so we have our A-Yuan. And that’s why I can’t marry you, because I
would demand much more of my husband than he would be willing to give.”

Lan Zhan’s tongue darts out to wet his mouth. His eyes are wide and bloodshot, like pale
pieces of cracked-glaze jewelry made to show the red enamel below, and all Wei Wuxian can
see in them is his own wavering reflection.

“And have you asked your husband what he is willing to give?” Lan Zhan says fiercely,
dragging Wei Wuxian into his arms and squeezing him until he gasps for breath. “Or did you
break his heart by refusing him, when that heart was yours to take or discard the moment
your eyes met his!”

Wei Wuxian stares at him in disbelief. “But you never spoke,” he pleads, fighting the urge to
lie back in Lan Zhan’s sturdy arms and melt like iced fruit left out in the sun. “If I asked you
to come back to Yunmeng with me once, I must have asked a thousand times—and each time
you refused me!”

“Refused out of fear,” Lan Zhan counters. “I could not—” and here his ears flush redder than
roses, burning hot against Wei Wuxian’s skin— “Nie Huaisang told me that things were
different here, that the cultivators of Yunmeng Jiang were free with their affections, and I was
afraid that being spoiled further with your friendship would force me to betray my love.”

He pulls Wei Wuxian closer, shamefaced, and presses his cold nose into the curve between
Wei Wuxian’s neck and shoulder.

“And I could not bear the thought of you having a lover other than myself,” he whispers. “I
was sure that one such as you would be dearly loved—for how could you not be? From the
way you defended Mianmian and your shijie, and the way you spoke of the beauties you
knew in Yunmeng, I was sure you had made some good guniang a queen among women by
loving her before you ever met me!”

“And so you rejected me whenever I tried to approach you?” Wei Wuxian protests. “Then
what else was I to think, save that-that–”

And then Wei Wuxian can say nothing more, because his heart’s treasure is kissing him.
Marry me, Lan Zhan begs between kisses, even as Wei Wuxian calls his name and weeps at
the finger’s breadth of space keeping them apart. Let me be yours and be for me only, my
love!

And Wei Wuxian yields to him, body and soul, willing as a peach blossom torn by the wind
as he cries out—

“Yes!”
Chapter 12
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: i know they’re currently at war but can we see lxc and jc
competing to be spiritual baby a-yuan’s favourite uncle?

Chapter Notes
See the end of the chapter for notes

“Zewu-jun, seventeen; Jiang-zongzhu, twelve,” Li Shuai whispers in Nie Huaisang’s ear. “I


don’t think Jiang-zongzhu’s going to beat him by the time you leave, Nie-ge.”

Nie Huaisang pulls out his fan and wafts a few strands of hair away from her neck. He would
have dealt with his own sweaty neck first, but Li-guniang is a lady, and Nie Huaisang knows
what chivalry demands of an upright young master, even if his low cultivation prevents him
from being gallant as often as he would like.

“I don’t know about that,” he muses, stroking his chin in a reflexive imitation of Lan Qiren.
“We’ve only been here three days, and Xichen-ge wants to stay for another two weeks.”

“You mean Hanguang-jun wants to stay,” Maiden Li reminds him. “Now be quiet, or they’ll
hear us.”

The two of them are hiding in Lotus Pier’s expansive rose gardens, cultivated by Li-guniang
and Jiang Yanli after the end of the Sunshot Campaign. The rose trees have grown up quickly,
nourished by the abundant lingli in the earth, which means that the place is perfect for
spying: namely, on Zewu-jun and Jiang Cheng, who set up their lunch table a few yards
away. A-Yuan is with them, because Hanguang-jun and Wei-xiong had things to do in town,
and the two uncles have been fighting over A-Yuan’s favor since they left–although it doesn’t
seem to be much of a contest.

“A-Yuan,” Nie Huaisang hears his brother-in-law coo, followed by the tell-tale jingling of A-
Yuan’s little hands playing with Xichen-ge’s ornaments. “Do you like bofu’s necklace? You
can have it when you’re a little older.”

“Isn’t that the necklace Chifeng-zun commissioned for your betrothal?” Jiang-xiong asks.
“You can’t just give it to A-Yuan.”

“My husband will understand,” Xichen-ge says tranquilly. “If I ask, Mingjue-xiong will make
me another.”

“Spoiled,” Li Shuai mutters under her breath. “Tian ah, he’s more bewitching than a huli
jing.”
“He is,” Nie Huaisang agrees. Married life suits Lan Xichen beautifully, and da-ge refuses to
let his new husband leave their chambers without covering him in jewelry: earrings,
necklaces, delicate bracelets, sparkling chains affixed to his hairpins, and even a silver and
white-jade ring which was said to have belonged to the Nie sect founder’s wife.

The trinkets have been Xichen-ge’s greatest weapon in the battle for A-Yuan’s affections,
since babies love playing with shiny things, and Jiang-xiong doesn’t wear any jewelry but his
father’s old guan. In Nie Huaisang’s opinion, Jiang-xiong could easily do better with
Yuanyuan if he borrowed a few of Jiang-guniang’s old zanzi, but Jiang Cheng insists that
resorting to such tactics would be playing dirty: he is the uncle that A-Yuan sees every day,
he says, so Zewu-jun’s use of pretty baubles to win the child over will come to nothing in the
long run.

“Yuan’er,” Jiang Cheng says again, a little closer to Huaisang’s hiding place this time. “Come
here so jiujiu can give you some lotus milk pudding.”

A-Yuan nods and squeals in delight, clapping his little pink hands together before rolling off
Lan Xichen’s lap. “A-Yuan pudding!”

“There!” Jiang-xiong exclaims, dragging A-Yuan into his arms before Xichen-ge can try to
pick him up again. “Good child, Yuanyuan! Jiujiu will put extra sugar in your pudding, just
the way you like it.”

“Sugar will rot his teeth,” Lan Xichen objects. “At his age, he should not be eating anything
sweeter than plain fruit.”

“He barely has any teeth, Zewu-jun. And anyway, Pan-daifu says that lotus pudding is
medicinal. It’s good for him.”

Xichen-ge laughs and bows his head in defeat. “En, very well. I would not lightly contradict
another healer, especially one with so many years’ worth of experience. Good afternoon,
Jiang-zongzhu!”

With that, the two part ways, leaving Nie Huaisang and Li Shuai to extract themselves from
Jiang Yanli’s favorite thornless rosebush. Nie Huaisang got his robes caught in a knot of
roots, so Yu Zhenhong has to be called in to render assistance; and after that, their little band
of schemers retreats to Huaisang’s guest pavilion to discuss the events of the day.

“That brings us to seventeen for Zewu-jun and thirteen for Jiang-zongzhu,” Li Shuai says
triumphantly, while Yu Zhenhong pours her a cup of lotus tea. “We might catch up to him yet,
Brother Nie.”

“Not if I have anything to say on the matter,” Nie Huaisang retorts. “After all, it’ll be difficult
for Jiang-xiong to pull ahead after Wei-xiong and Yuanyuan move to Gusu.”

Li Shuai drops her cup of tea.

“What?” she screeches, driving a flock of blue-crested herons out of the water at their feet.
“Seriously? Da-shixiong’s agreed?”
“According to my sources, yes,” Nie Huaisang drawls, retreating behind his fan. “You see,
Nie Zonghui went out to buy himself a new summer cloak last night, and he heard Wei-xiong
and Wangji-xiong talking on the roof near the training court when he came back. Wangji-
xiong was confessing his feelings, and Wei-xiong accepted them and promised that he and A-
Yuan would move to the Cloud Recesses by Yuanyuan’s second birthday.”

“In the middle of the night? When none of us were around to hear?” Li-guniang says
indignantly. “How can da-shixiong call me his favorite shimei, when he treats me like this?”

Yu Zhenhong laughs. “He’ll have to announce the engagement sometime, A-Shuai. And
since we already know, we can start preparing da-shixiong’s wedding gifts early.”

“With what money?” Li Shuai demands, springing up to her feet. “Oh, I hope shixiong plans
his wedding before Jiang-shijie’s! Jin Zixuan’s been sniffing around lately, and we won’t be
able to afford a fine wedding for Wei-shixiong if Shijie gets married first.”

“Jiang-guniang is older,” Nie Huaisang reminds her. “She should be married first.”

“Well, yes, but Jin Guangshan should cover her expenses. It’s not as if he’s good for anything
else.”

Li Shuai and Yu Zhenhong trade significant looks over Nie Huaisang’s head, too obviously
thinking of Jin Guangshan’s latest message asking Wei Wuxian to surrender the Yinhufu to
Lanling. He doesn’t know that Wangji-xiong is Yuanyuan’s father, or that Gusu Lan holds
stronger ties to Yunmeng than Lanling has to anywhere else; but he clearly believes that he
should be sitting on the throne Wen Ruohan left behind, and Gusu’s new marriage alliance to
Qinghe will only have accelerated his plans to obtain it.

“Da-shixiong will be safer in Gusu, too,” Yu Zhenhong murmurs. “We cannot claim full sway
over our own private affairs while Jiang-shijie hopes to marry Jin Zixuan. And it will happen
sometime, so Wei Wuxian must leave Yunmeng Jiang as soon as possible.”

Nie Huaisang nods. After Wei-xiong marries Lan Wangji, matters concerning Wei Wuxian
will be the Lan sect’s business: and through Da-ge’s marriage to Lan Xichen, the business of
the Nie sect as well. But for now, making demands of Wei-xiong will do nothing but
inconvenience Yunmeng Jiang, and compromise the youngest, weakest zongzhu among the
four great clans.

“Brother Nie,” Yu Zhenhong says gravely. “Now that da-shixiong and Hanguang-jun have
sorted out their feelings, the wedding preparations must be handled with the utmost speed
and discretion. Not one word of this should reach the Jinlintai.”

“That I can do,” Huaisang promises. “We’ll give no more than a month’s notice before the
wedding, and Nie Zonghui and I will handle all the tradesmen’s orders. Now, scram! I can see
Jiang-guniang coming this way.”

So they scatter, sprinting in different directions before Jiang Yanli can turn the corner and
catch them. Li Shuai activates an air-beneath-water talisman and jumps into the lake, while
Yu Zhenhong darts down a side passage leading back to the kitchens; and Nie Huaisang takes
a transportation talisman to Lan Xichen’s guest quarters, where he finds his brother-in-law
eating loquats on a luohan bed with one of Huaisang’s myna birds.

“Well?” Xichen-gege asks, with a sly glint of mischief in his eye. “Do we have a plan,
Huaisang?”

Nie Huaisang opens his fan and covers half of his face with it.

“Oh, Huan-ge,” he smirks, “do we ever.”

Chapter End Notes

Brief note: If you're a writer/artist in any of the three MXTX fandoms and you love to
cook (or eat!), sign-ups for the 2024 MXTX Food Zine are open now and close on
January 4.

Fill out the contributor form at @mxtxfoodzine here if you'd like to join! The project
requires at least 30 contributors to proceed, and we're nowhere near the quota yet. T~T
Chapter 13
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: Post sunshot campaign, Wei Ying leaves his ghost jie jies to
babysit A-yuan while he and LWJ cleanse the battlefields of resentful spirits!

LWJ is still spooked by the ghost maidens but A-yuan is having the time of his life with
them, and since WWX still trusts them more than the Lan nannies, he lets them be. One
night, WWX finds LWJ taking notes from them on how to swaddle babies, make the best
nutritional baby food etc and he’s melting from all sorts of emotions ;;

On a fine, clear night in the middle of Guiyue, Wei Wuxian wakes at the stroke of yin hour to
find his friend’s bed empty.

Lan Zhan moved into Wei Wuxian’s room when he first came to Lotus Pier, determined not
to waste a single moment with A-Yuan, and he was usually still awake when Wei Wuxian
began preparing for bed. Once, Wei Wuxian asked his friend why he kept staying up past hai
hour; and Lan Zhan had only stared at him before explaining that he could not rest until Wei
Wuxian and A-Yuan were tucked away in their warded bed, asleep.

“I spent the entire war fearing that I would lose you both,” he said bluntly, putting a hand on
A-Yuan’s little head to steady himself. “I do not think I will ever cease to fear it. It might
grow easier to bear, in time—but not yet.”

Afterwards, Lan Zhan even gave up his habit of rising at maoshi and started lingering in bed
until Wei Wuxian and A-Yuan woke nearly three hours later; so where could he possibly be at
this time of night?

Puzzled, Wei Wuxian slides out from under the covers and pads out of his bedroom, leaving
A-Yuan fast asleep in his crib. It shouldn’t take long to find him, he thinks, as he wanders
down the lamplit corridors in search of Lan Zhan. Perhaps he went out to get a drink of
water.

But instead, he finds his errant beloved—and how strange it is to think of him as such!—in
the company of one of A-Yuan’s ghost nannies, Meng Leilan.

Meng Leilan was the gentlest of Wei Wuxian’s dead servants during the war. In life, she was
the eldest daughter of a once-wealthy merchant, whose estate was seized by a rival when he
reneged on his debts—and Leilan, then eighteen, was sold into marriage as a magistrate’s
third concubine, while her younger sister entered a flower house as a yiji.
Leilan met her death at the hands of one of the other concubines three years later, after her
first child turned out to be a son—and though she remained peaceful for the first few weeks
after her passing, content to linger in the shadows of the nursery where her baby slept, she
was forced to bear witness to the child’s murder not two months after his full-moon birthday.

It was then that Meng Leilan realized that she had been murdered as well—for she had
previously believed that her death was the result of childbed fever, having died in her sleep
two weeks after her baby’s birth—and arose as a fierce ghost before killing her husband’s
second concubine in as gruesome a manner as her tortured mind could bear.

But she spared the second concubine’s son, unable to do any harm to an infant even in the
depths of her resentment; and after Wei Wuxian brought her into his service and told her that
she might do whatever she pleased to any Wen soldier who had killed a woman or child, she
settled, and asked to remain in the living world as one of A-Yuan’s nannies.

But Lan Zhan cannot rest at ease in the presence of Wei Wuxian’s ghostly servants, even
those who had never shed blood where he could see it, so what could Lan Zhan want with
Meng Leilan at this hour?

Curious, Wei Wuxian makes his way to his beloved’s side.

“What are you doing here, xingan?” he teases, nudging Lan Zhan’s shoulder. “If you and
Leilan were going out to play, you should have invited me!”

“I did not come out to amuse myself,” Lan Zhan replies, looking heart-breakingly solemn.
“But Yuan'er eats solid food now, and I wanted to know which of the dishes we have at the
Cloud Recesses would be best for him. You were asleep, and I was impatient—so I came out
to look for Meng-guniang, though I ought to have waited until morning.”

Ah, Lan Zhan, Wei Wuxian laments to himself. He’s been drinking my blood and eating solid
food since the month after he was born. It’s just that I don’t feed him when you’re in the room
with us.

“Oh?” he says instead. “And what did Leilan tell you, then?”

Lan Zhan’s fine mouth turns downward. “She said that a child born and bred in Yunmeng
would fare poorly upon the fare of my clan,” he says sadly. “It is fortunate that I asked her, or
I might have stunted A-Yuan’s growth. But now that I know better, I shall have to learn to
cook.”

Wei Wuxian’s heart melts on the spot. “Oh, Lan Zhan…”

“But then again, I would have learned to cook for you either way,” Lan Zhan tells him,
rallying at once. “Yuan'er already takes hongyou in his baby food, so we might give him a
milder portion of your food mixed with rice. What do you think, my heart?”

In answer, Wei Wuxian puts his arms about Lan Zhan’s neck and tries not to burst into tears.

“That I can’t wait for our wedding,” he says thickly. “That’s what I think, Lan Zhan.”
At that, Lan Zhan looks so breathtakingly radiant—like a lonely white moonbeam fallen to
earth and shaped into human form by the thrumming lingli in Lake Lianhua—that Wei
Wuxian cannot help but kiss him, and fall back into the cradle of his arms as Lan Zhan tips
Wei Wuxian’s chin up and kisses him fiercely in return.

When Lan Zhan finally releases him, Wei Wuxian staggers backward, gasping—and finds
himself clasped in Lan Zhan’s arms all over again, for his beloved had seized him by the
waist to keep him from falling over the side of the dock and into the lake below.

“Two more months,” he says softly, smoothing his thumb along the line of Wei Wuxian’s eye.
“And then we need never be parted again.”

He turns to bow to Meng Leilan, who inclines her head and vanishes in a cloud of lotus-
scented vapor; and with that, they join their hands and walk back to Wei Wuxian’s room.

Lan Zhan climbs into bed and falls asleep in less than half a ke, leaving Wei Wuxian to stare
up at the ceiling with his fingertips pressed to his mouth in wonder—for somehow, it had not
struck him that he and Lan Zhan will be married by the year’s end until that very moment.

And then—

I’m going to tell him about A-Yuan, he resolves. Right after we get back from the discussion
conference in Lanling. He’ll love A-Yuan just the same, no matter how he came into the world
—and he’ll keep the truth secret for the rest of his life if I ask, even from Laoshi and Zewu-
jun.

And with that, Wei Wuxian closes his eyes, and follows his beloved into slumber.
Chapter 14
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: I think the most anticlimactic end to this whole mess before it
even starts would be LQR accidentally finding out that A-Yuan was made from mostly
resentful energy and he's like, "Well what else did we expect when WC threw you into the
BM when you were pregnant? Get over here boy, I'm not going to drown you!" But alas.
I know you, Stilton, and you're not going to make it that easy for anyone.

Chapter Notes

Happy birthday to our beloved LWJ :3

“Wei Wuxian,” Wen Qing says to Wei Wuxian one day, a fortnight after their arrival in the
Burial Mounds. “Come back to my quarters with me. We must speak.”

Wei Wuxian looks up from his dirty stone table and squints at her. “Can’t you just talk to me
here?” he asks. “I don’t think Wen Ning can hear either of us just yet, if you’re worried about
him listening in.”

“It has nothing to do with A-Ning. I don’t want anyone to overhear us, and Popo and the
uncles are right outside,” his friend scolds. "Put that knife away, and follow me.”

So Wei Wuxian drops his tools and trots after Wen Qing with A-Yuan on his shoulders,
wondering if she had some news about the outside world to relay to him; but when they reach
the little cave she claimed for herself, all she does is take A-Yuan from his perch and hold
him up at arm’s length for Wei Wuxian to look at.

“A-Yuan?” he wonders, puzzled. “Did you bring me here to look at Yuan-bao, Wen Qing?”

“Yes. You haven’t noticed, but he—he was born to you here in the Burial Mounds, wasn’t
he?”

Wei Wuxian grimaces. He has never spoken of that to anyone, even Lan Zhan, and he would
rather have told his zhiji the truth about his three-month exile before mentioning it to Wen
Qing; but now that Wen Qing seems to have guessed, there is little use in denying it.

“He was born less than a hundred yards from where we stand, actually,” Wei Wuxian sighs.
“Under that crooked old plum tree by the stream. I stopped to take a drink of water and
fainted with my legs in the brook, and when I woke, I found A-Yuan lying underneath me.”

“Then he was born of the resentment in this place,” Wen Qing whispers. “It makes sense,
then. Wei Wuxian, how in heaven’s name could you have missed something like this?”

“Missed…what, exactly?”

She looks at him with despairing eyes and gestures down at the baby. Wei Wuxian looks at
his son, and finds nothing amiss; A-Yuan is healthy and properly fed, and dressed in warm
clothes despite their sudden change in circumstances, so what could he have done to upset
Wen Qing so?

“Yuan’er is growing too fast,“ she explains. "Children grow slowly during the second year,
and A-Yuan is barely a year old. He knows over fifty words, I’ve counted, and he’s more than
an inch taller than he was when we got here. You told me he took his first steps a few weeks
before you rescued us, and he ran away from Popo last night when she tried to give him a
bath.

“This place is affecting his body, and it may tamper with the development of his mind. If A-
Yuan remains here, there will be no hiding what he is, or even where he came from.”

Wei Wuxian swallows past the lump in his throat; for young though he is, and unexpected as
his son’s arrival might have been, even the thought of parting from A-Yuan is too painful for
him to bear.

“Then I’ll write to Lan Zhan,” he says hoarsely. “He’ll make the journey alone if I ask him to,
and he won’t tell anyone where we are, so I can meet him down in Yiling and send Yuanyuan
back to Gusu with him.”

Wen Qing frowns. “But what about you?”

“I’ll stay here,” he shrugs, pressing his trembling lips together as A-Yuan reaches up to touch
his cheek. “I need to take care of you and your family, and I promised you that I would bring
Wen Ning back. When he’s a little better, I can sneak off to Gusu and look at Yuan-bao now
and then.”

And Lan Zhan, he thinks, though their engagement was probably rendered void the moment
Lanling received word of the deaths at Qiongqi Dao. Wei Wuxian will never feel remorse for
those men, for even A-Yuan cried out in triumph when the overseers who killed Wen Ning
were left bathing in pools of their own blood and brains—but Wei Wuxian will be known as a
murderer from now unto the world’s ending, and his child and intended will both be better off
without him.

Lan Zhan will protect Yuan'er, no matter what, and so will Lan-laoshi and Zewu-jun; but he
doubts their protection would ever be extended to the Wens. Wei Wuxian will have to be
enough for Wen Qing and Wen Ning, as Lan Zhan will surely be for their son, and someday
the world will be safe enough for him and A-Yuan to meet again.
Lan Zhan, Wei Wuxian writes that evening, with an aching hand that protests the birth of
every new word on the page. Use the blood-talisman in the envelope to meet me next week; it
will carry you straight to my doorstep, and give you clearance to pass the wards.

Bring no one with you, not even your brother. I am only summoning you to fetch A-Yuan.

Faithfully yours, my heart,

Wei Ying.
Chapter 15
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: Cultivation baby A-Yuan... Please let LQR talk to WWX.
Infuriating as WWX might be, LQR should definitely be able to drag the truth out of
him!

“No. No, this is madness,” Lan Qiren groans. “What you ask is impossible. It cannot be
done.”

“I don’t see why not,” Wei Wuxian says obstinately. “You take A-Yuan back to the Cloud
Recesses, never let anyone know he was my son, and have Lan Zhan bring him up as a ward.
I will remain here and look after the Wens. What’s impossible about it?”

Lan Qiren pinches the bridge of his nose and wishes he could pinch Wei Wuxian’s ears
instead. He blames himself for this dismal state of affairs; he was too harsh towards Wei
Wuxian when they first met, and so the child had not thought to ask his marital family for
help when he found Wen Ning slain at Qiongqi Dao. Jiang Wanyin could not be relied upon
—for foolish though a marriage alliance with the Lanling Jin might be, Jiang Yanli was still
in love with Jin Zixuan, and he had very little sway in his clan despite being the trueborn heir
to it—but Lan Xichen has already announced his plans to bring the Wens back to Gusu, and
returned all the gold Jin Guangyao sent to aid in the Cloud Recesses’ reconstruction. Nie
Mingjue inspected the other camps, tallying up the dead and wounded there before
denouncing Jin Guangshan before the whole jianghu; and the survivors are already
recovering in Qinghe, with some already well enough to testify against the prison guards.

In short, Wei Wuxian is in no danger, and it is Lan Qiren’s fault that he ever believed
otherwise.

“Your Wens will be safe. Xichen set four houses aside for them in the Cloud Recesses, and
the Jin clan has been made aware that neither we nor the Nie will treat with them any
further,” Lan Qiren argues. “You have my word, Wei Ying. Now go send word to Wen Qing,
and have the Wens prepare to leave by the end of this week. Wangji and I will provide their
food and medicines until they are ready to go.”

Wei Wuxian flinches. “You won’t send them back to Lanling? Truly?”

“Yes, truly!” roars Lan Qiren. “Look at you, you’re skin and bone! Even if you had come
here with a gang of Wen Ruohan’s lieutenants, I would never let the mother of my nephew’s
child languish on a hill of the dead alone—much less my own great-nephew! Has Wangji not
cared for you well enough, that you would think so poorly of us? Shall I have words with him
on the matter?”
“En. Shufu should,” says Wangji, lowering his head. “Wei Ying, this one has failed you.”

“Lan Zhan, what-no, of course you haven’t!” Wei Wuxian rushes to Wangji’s side and leaps
into his arms, careless of the large black bundle on his back. “You haven’t. If I had known
that you and Zewu-jun would value me this much, well—then I would never have come
here.”

Lan Qiren sniffs at him. “Good. Now spend tonight with us at the inn, and every day hence
until the Wens can be moved.”

“I will,” Wei Wuxian says, wringing his hands. “Now that I’m sure it’s safe, I will. But Lan
Zhan, there’s something you and laoshi should know about first.”

Wangji tilts his head to the side and kisses Wei Wuxian’s nose. “What is it?”

In answer, Wei Wuxian reaches for the shapeless bundle on his back and unravels it,
revealing the tousled black head of a child.

“Look at A-Yuan,” he says quietly, “and then you’ll understand.”

So they look, and at first, Lan Qiren can’t imagine what Wei Wuxian might mean. A-Yuan is
still well-fed and healthy, despite the month he spent living here in the Burial Mounds before
Wangji could finally track his family down, but…

But A-Yuan is bigger than he used to be. Considerably bigger, given the fact that children
grow slowly after passing their first birthdays, and Wei Wuxian has only been gone for five
weeks, if that. His little nails have grown long, too, and thicker than his father’s; and the
pupils of his dark round eyes have contracted down to pinpricks, though the sunlight is weak
for early autumn.

And the two teeth that emerged during his short absence are pointed, though both are in the
wrong place to be eyeteeth.

“Wei Ying?” Wangji pleads. “Trust me, dearheart. I will not leave you, no matter what the
matter is.”

That is how Lan Qiren discovers that his great-nephew was born of the resentment filling the
Burial Mounds, for Wei Wuxian lost his jindan to the Wens before being thrown in to die.
But Wei Wuxian lived, and A-Yuan did not yet have a body, so he used resentful energy to
survive and emerged fully-formed three months after his conception, instead of nine.

“I don’t know what Yuan’er will grow up to be,” Wei Wuxian says at last, “or what he would
have been, even before this last month in the Burial Mounds. Everyone thought he owed his
reflexes to having exceptional parents, but that-that’s not the case, Lan Zhan. If A-Yuan goes
back to the Cloud Recesses, and someone notices how different he is, then…”

“Then we will hide it. No matter what he is, or what he grows to be, he is ours, and he is
precious,” vows Wangji. “You need never speak of his origins, save to say that he is your
child and mine.”
Wei Wuxian gives him a sad, lost look, and pulls the child a little closer to his chest.

“Well, I suppose it can’t be helped,” he sighs. “A-Yuan is a Lan, and he should grow up with
his family. If the world turns against him someday, so be it. We can run off into the wild
again if we must, and find somewhere to live in peace. But until then, sweetheart, we’ll stay
with you.”

He transfers the baby into Wangji’s lap, brushing his lips over his fluffy hair before rising to
his feet; and then he bows to Lan Qiren and points towards the dark path leading back into
the Burial Mounds.

“Stay here, Lan Zhan. Laoshi and I will go talk to the Wens, and then I’ll be back with you by
dusk.”

Lan Qiren clears his throat.

“Very well,” he says gruffly. “Let’s go, then. And Wei Ying, let there be no more of this. We
are your family, and we will stand by you in all things. You are ours.”

And with that, he storms off into the mist, and waits for Wei Wuxian to follow.
Chapter 16
Chapter Summary

Prompt for this chapter: Okay but cultivation babies sizhui and jingyi together must be
chaos incarnate. rip cultivation gentry, you will never be the same

When Nie Mingjue returns to the Cloud Recesses after a hunt in the mountains with Zonghui,
he finds the lamps on the Hanshi’s porch still lit and burning brightly. The sliding doors are
open to let in the night wind, a sure sign that Xichen must have been waiting up for him
despite the late hour, so Nie Mingjue leaves his heavy boots on the steps and hurries in to his
husband.

“Beloved,” he calls softly, looking around darkened office for any sign of Lan Huan. “I am
home. Where are you?”

“In here,” comes the reply. “You will have to come in to me, Mingjue-xiong. I fear I cannot
move from my chair just yet.”

Laughing, Nie Mingjue backs out of the study and makes his way to the bedroom. Xichen is
sitting in his favorite armchair with Jingyi in his arms and A-Yuan asleep in the crib nearby;
but though Lan Yuan has been freshly bathed, Jingyi’s feet are black with dirt, and his
flyaway hair is still full of grass and fine yellow dust from the garden.

“Did A-Yi try to crawl out of the bathtub when you weren’t looking?” Nie Mingjue asks,
kissing Lan Xichen on the forehead. “He’s as dirty as a grub.”

“A dear, dirty grub! I know we never got so dirty when we were children,” his husband
laughs. “I was going to put him in the bath with Yuanyuan after dinner, but he wouldn’t take
his shoes off—and after I put A-Yuan to bed and went back to fetch A-Yi from the nursery,
he crawled into my arms and fell asleep. I couldn’t bear to wake him, he looked so peaceful.”

“We could give him a sponge bath. Shall I go fetch a pail?”

“Not yet. I want to hold him a little while longer,” Xichen murmurs, pressing his lips to the
baby’s soft cheek. “Before he wakes up and tries to start running about the house again.”

“Then I’ll bathe A-Yi’s feet while you hold him. He’s rubbing dust all over your robes, A-
Huan.”

Xichen gives him a grateful nod and cradles their son a little closer. His eyes are closed, as if
out of fear that the child in his arms was too precious to be true; and when he opens them, he
lets out a small, wounded cry and buries his face in Jingyi’s hair.
“A-Huan?” Nie Mingjue frowns, slipping back into the bedroom with clean towels and a
bucket of water. “What’s wrong?”

Lan Huan turns to him with quivering lips and tears sparkling in his eyelashes. “Nothing,” he
sniffles. “I am well. Nothing is the matter, sweetheart.”

So Nie Mingjue wets a pair of towels and washes Jingyi’s feet, rinsing away the mud from
his tiny toes before using a fresh cloth for his hands; and after the child as clean as they can
get him without rousing him from sleep, Xichen heaves himself out of his chair and climbs
onto the bed, though not without first giving A-Yuan a kiss goodnight and retrieving his
dropped butterfly doll.

“Sleep well, my nephew!” he whispers. “Your uncles are here, and we will watch over you
until Wangji and A-Xian return.”

And with that, he settles down under the blankets at Nie Mingjue’s side, and turns so that
Mingjue can drape an arm under his waist.

“You are tired,” Nie Mingjue observes, stroking Lan Xichen’s pale brow. “What did you and
the little ones do today, A-Huan?”

Xichen snorts and squeezes A-Yi around his little belly. “The better question is what we did
not do. A-Yuan ran all over the Cloud Recesses, and A-Yi followed him, and I spent the day
running after them both. And then A-Yuan wanted to make sweet baozi after we returned
home, and Jingyi tried to climb into the bowl of bean paste while I was filling them—and all
of that was before sunset.”

Nie Mingjue leans over to sniff the baby’s hair. “Ah,” he says, trying not to laugh. “So that’s
why he smells like sugar. I thought he must have found the sweets your uncle hides in the
Lanshi.”

“Oh, no. A-Yuan did that.”

And then the two of them laugh together, holding hands under the quilts while Jingyi tries to
make himself more comfortable on Xichen’s chest. Nie Mingjue’s breath stutters at the dear
picture they make, his beloved and child close and at ease like a pair of graven figures carved
out of the same piece of stone; and surrendering to impulse, he leans down to kiss A-Yi’s
button nose, and then his husband’s wind-chapped lips.

I will bring him salve in the morning, he thinks idly, smoothing them over with a gentle
finger. Salve and sweet lotus cakes from Wangji’s kitchen, and tea that aids in healing. The
little ones have worn him out, so tomorrow, he must rest.

“Tomorrow, Wangji will be back home,” Xichen mumbles, lifting his face from his pillow,
“and I will not have to mind both of our babies at the same time. I love them dearly, but my
heart can only take so much fear. A-Yuan tried to unsheathe Shuoyue when my back was
turned, and at that moment, I was more afraid than I’ve ever been on the battlefield! Good
heavens!”
Nie Mingjue draws his husband’s head down onto his shoulder and smiles.

“You need higher shelves, my darling. I’ll go down to the carpenter’s guild tomorrow and
commission some, and then we can keep our weapons there without worrying about the
children.”

Another kiss, and then two more. “Now sleep,” he urges, with a cavernous yawn that echoes
itself a moment later on Xichen‘s face. “We have much to do, and you need your rest.”

So they sleep, hand in hand and side by side, and dream of tiny, mud-splattered disciples
toddling down the neat stone paths of the Cloud Recesses. A-Yuan is in the lead, no longer
toddling, for he looks much older than the three-year-old Yuan’er asleep in the bed next to
Xichen’s; but the child waddling at Jingyi’s heels is so small that she can hardly walk, and
her tiny ears look just like Nie Mingjue’s.

“Perhaps not yet,” the Xichen in his dreams says, hopelessly fond as he leans into Mingjue’s
embrace; but his eyes are damp, shining in the watery sunlight, and Nie Mingjue loves him
so desperately that he thinks he might break from the force of it.

But someday, he suggests, and the answering promise is yes—yes—yes.


End Notes

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