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WELCOME TO YOUR PRIVATE CHANNEL, XIAO.XINGCHEN. FOR SECURE COMMUNICATION, USE 018.07.154.55 *** XIAO.XINGCHEN has joined 018.07.154.55 <XIAO.XINGCHEN> You have reached Xiao Xingchen. <XIAO.XINGCHEN> I am often away from my laptop, but I will do my best to answer as soon as I'm able. | ||||
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he's led to an area he hasn't yet visited, one which (by the scent of it) sees very little use. it's a raised sort of spot with a ceiling at the very least, but the breeze catching xingchen's hair suggests that most of the walls are still open to the lakefront, if it has any walls at all.
for now, xingchen hovers just inside the area, waiting for any cue on where to proceed from here - on whether they're to stand in this new place instead, or to sit somewhere (if his friend seems to sit, xingchen does the same, occupying the adjacent seat). regardless of whether they sit or stand, though, he listens to the half-apology, the quiet confession which follows. and as much as xingchen would like to think he has things sorted well enough in his own mind, the two lives seem to blur a bit more than he realizes - before he can think to stop himself, he reaches out to set light fingertips on the back of jiang wanyin's hand. ) Give yourself time, ( he says, his tone a bit closer to the expected steadfast assurance than before, though he can't quite shake the note of emotional fatigue. ) Whether or not it was real, your memories claim that you lived this other life for just as long as you've lived your own. That's something you'll be sorting through for quite a few days yet, at the very least.
( which, he recognizes, could be the opposite of reassuring - at least until he clarifies his point. ) Your Lotus Pier will return to you. Forcing the matter now only stands to frustrate you. ( here xingchen allows a few moments to pass, a pause to let his words sink in. then he finally caves to the quiet but persistent 'this isn't how things are, in this life' nagging at the back of his mind and reluctantly retracts his fingertips, folding one hand around the other in his lap. )
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I know it will return. But I hate the uncertainty. I don't like being in a place that should be familiar and comforting and instead... [ He cuts himself off, jaw clenched tight. Instead of yearning to go home to a place and a life that doesn't exist anymore, at least not for him. Maybe there is some other, more fortunate Jiang Cheng out there whom this life belongs to but it isn't this one. For him, there is only this pale imitation of another Lotus Pier, empty and lifeless, a monument to how utterly cut off from his sect he is here in this place.
He heaves a heavy sigh and shakes his head, irritated with himself and his own glum mood. ] I warned you that I wouldn't be good company.
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and though he himself isn't in the best of moods, xingchen 'looks' to the man beside him now to ask, ) You'll tell me if I might help somehow? ( because regardless of his own state of mind, he's more than prepared to do anything in his power to make this at least a little bit easier on jiang wanyin. )
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He can still enjoy the lakeside view but in this body of his, the wind that ruffles his hair doesn't feel as it should on his skin. It's far from perfect but Xiao Xingchen's presence makes it better. ]
You help by being here [ he says simply, pointedly keeping his eyes focused on the lake and not the man sitting next to him. ] Just stay.
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his attention shifts off over the lake as well now, voice softening now to just above a murmur. ) I'll stay as long as you'd like. ( in case he hasn't quite made it clear. not 'as long as you need', because jiang wanyin hardly needs him, and xingchen certainly isn't here out to dutifully meet an ailing man's needs or anything of that sort. this benefits the both of them - or at least, he hopes it does. and he'll stay for as long as his company pleases wanyin. )
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What he does instead is scoot a little closer towards Xiao Xingchen and nudge him with his shoulder, then simply remain right there in his space, shoulder to shoulder. ] This is good. You could tell me another story. Like the ones from your books. [ He swallows hard. ] In the other world. [ The first tentative acknowledgment of just how close they were there. ]
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'you could tell me another story, like the ones from your books.' it's a suggestion he didn't quite expect, and were he capable, he'd be blinking as he adjusts to the reality in which he'll have to follow it through. (of course he will. how could he possibly not?) xingchen's next exhale carries a quiet, bracing sort of chuckle. ) I could, ( he says - slow, bracing here as well, but his voice is a bit more resolute when he says, ) I will.
I'll just need a moment to come up with one. ( xingchen has never been especially creative, and right now he's drawing a bit of a blank on possible stories that aren't just thinly-veiled retellings of all of that which is on his mind right now. tales of a man to whom the world feeds lie after lie about who he truly is. the one he treasures most prefers him that way - prefers the lie. but he has never been good at lying, only ever at believing them, just as he's never been good at crafting up make-believe stories to tell. )
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[ This is not strictly true. It's just that his stories are all of the educational, cautionary sorts to be told to juniors who need to be schooled on the dangers of night hunts. Plus the noble history of Yunmeng Jiang, who to be passed on to younger generations the best he can, since there are no elders to share them. ]
I'm a sect leader. I don't tell stories to entertain. [ But if Xiao Xingchen wants to hear about the founding of Yunmeng Jiang or all the gruesome ways foolish young juniors will get themselves eaten in the woods if they don't listen better, he can do that. ]