achickenformylove: (mdzs 30)
Lan WangJi / Lan Zhan ([personal profile] achickenformylove) wrote in [community profile] voidtreckernet2021-04-03 11:29 pm

Kazoo 16 - Video Post

[The video opens with a very somber-looking WangJi. Even more so than he normally looked for those who were actually able to tell. Even from the angle of the video, a very obvious pair of white ears from a rabbit kept bouncing into frame for a moment as WangJi made the post while holding Little Radish]

For those that knew him, Wei Ying... my husband... is no longer on the train. There are others still here, but he has departed the train.

[It was as simple as that.

For those that wish to find him, he can - predictably - be found in the Greenhouse with his two rabbits, Little Radish now snuggled in his arms and being a good comfort bunny while Little Carrot played with a random leaf that had been on the ground]
weifinder: (mmmno | and you know the safest)

here's the kicker WHO SAID WE WERE DONE, SOBS

[personal profile] weifinder 2021-04-14 06:37 am (UTC)(link)
( He chuckles, no doubt felt as much as heard, shaking his head the once; humming a note of conflict. )

We're not done yet, but it is a good story, isn't it? Little Radish and Little Carrot both think so.

( He glances toward the rabbits in question one after another, and Little Carrot only looks like they're responding because of lifting paws to try and crawl into Lan Zhan's lap from the front, avoiding Wei Wuxian's legs as much as possible. )

The princess and the rabbit watched during the day, when they could hear nothing, and searched the lands, listening closely at night to all the sounds and whispers, trying to find the rabbit's family by the sounds of their dreams. They asked the owls, who were confusing and not so helpful; they asked the foxes, who helped them find rabbit warren after rabbit warren, some empty, some overfull, but not the missing family. They laughed, they cried, the composed poetry together, and every day and night, they searched.

Then one spring, nestled in the middle of a meadow far from the villages, where only deer and birds and bear would tread, the little rabbit heard a song on a moonbeam, and said, "Princess, princess, I know this song. It's the song my mother would sing to us, I know it! I remember it from my long, long ears to the depth of my small, strong bones!"

The princess smiled, and rare for her, traveled with the rabbit on a moonbeam to the meadow, stepping down on earth that was not the moon for the first time in centuries. She knelt down, and let the little rabbit, who was no longer quite so little, hop forth, calling out to the singing rabbit.

"I know that song," the not so little rabbit said, and the singing rabbit sat up and twitched their nose and lifted their ears and cried out, "I know you!" And so the princess watched as all the rabbits poured out of the burrow, sleepy and yawning, only to laugh and talk and gather around the rabbit who had come back home, overwhelming him.

He talked, and he laughed, and he cried, and all his family talked and laughed and cried, and then he told them, "Let me introduce you to her, the princess who helped me find you," and he turned to find... the princess was gone. She'd returned to the moon while his family had surrounded him, saying not a word.

Indeed, the princess had left, not wanting to interrupt, and wondering at the ache she felt. As she returned on her moonbeam to her home on the moon, she pressed her hands to her heart, and said, "Why does this hurt?"

She sat down, and she considered as she watched the rest of the rabbit family reunion, then glanced away, if this wasn't what being alone felt like. The princess had learned, at last, what it meant to feel lonely.

The not so little rabbit, however, had not forgotten her. The next night, he sat in the moonbeams, and he sang up to her, a song of his own making. One he'd come up with in all their days and nights of searching, one that reminded him of his family then, and reminds him of her now. He sang, and he sang, and he sang each night for days, until the princess called back down to him.

"Little rabbit! I hear you singing, and it's very lovely, but your whole family is asleep. Why are you singing now? The insects and the owls aren't so fond of listening as to be a good audience." Her voice was fond, and the rabbit shivered, so pleased she'd finally spoken.

"I'm not singing for the insects or the owls or even my family," he said, sitting up even taller, his soft nose twitching. "I'm singing for you."

The princess smiled, her heart hurting again, in yet a different way. "That's very kind," she said. "Thank you for sharing your song with me. You should go in and rest now, it's not good for rabbits to be up late at night. It's not safe."

He shook his head, his ears falling down to rest against his back as he stared up the moonbeam toward the moon. "Princess, I won't go to sleep. Why did you leave that night? I was going to introduce you to my family, so they knew who heard a sad and lonely little rabbit, and who helped him find them again. When I turned back, you weren't there."

Her answer came after a pause. "I'm sorry, little rabbit, I hadn't realised. You were with your family again. You weren't alone. That was good, and right, and I cannot stay on the earth for long, it doesn't suit my nature."

"I wasn't alone before," he said, ears twitching, his paws held up toward the sky. "I wasn't lonely. I was with you."

The princess stared down at him, but didn't understand. "We found your family, and you've gone home."

The rabbit shook his head, extending his paws further upward. "We found my family, but this isn't home. Princess, do you really want to be alone?"

"No," she said, "But I'm not, really. I can see all the world. How can I be alone, when I see all the people and animals and plants like this?"

"Are you lonely?"

She couldn't answer. The rabbit kept reaching upward, as if he could climb the moonbeam on his own, now balancing on his hind legs.

"Princess, I love my family. I told my family, there is this kind princess who lives on the moon. She sees all that passes below her, and hears those voices raised at night, and she is alone in her home, in the vast beauty of its quietness. She does not have a family to curl with in a burrow. She does not have anyone to sing to her at night. She is a kind and wonderful princess, and I don't want her to be lonely. Princess, may I continue on, and live with you?"

She was quiet still, and then her heart, which had been hurting, found one more new way to hurt, and she said, "You wish to do that? Your family... you love them so. How can you bear to leave them?"

"I can visit, princess. But my family is not just the ones down here. You're my family too, and I also love you."

So it was the princess appeared them in the moonbeam, walking down from her home, and reached out to take the rabbits paws in her hands. "I don't know what that is," she said, for all she'd heard it in songs and poetry and the twitters of night-loving birds and bats. "I know that loneliness makes a heart ache, and missing someone does too. Now my heart feels full, and I don't know what that is."

The rabbit stretched out his neck, nose gently pressing against one pale hand. "That's love," he said. "When a heart feels full, and a heart feels aching, and you are lonely, that's all room for love."

And she said, "Oh," and she smiled, and she laughed, and she cried, and she took the rabbit in her arms and walked up the moonbeam to the moon, and she and the rabbit who was not little anymore live there still, loved and not lonely, and he visits his great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-very incredibly great nieces and nephews to this day. That's why they say, if you listen closely in the summer, on a night when the moon shines brightest, you might hear his song as he sings to the rabbits about his princess of the moon.

( By now, even if he's used to talking on at length if he wants to, he's feeling thirsty. He swallows, clearing his throat, and adds: )

That was the end. I think. There might have been other stories, but that was the one they told me.

( Over many nights and in fractured ways. It's his composite fill in the blanks memory version, at least. )
weifinder: (smile | are dishonest men)

[personal profile] weifinder 2021-04-27 10:39 am (UTC)(link)
Mm, I thought so too.

( Sad in part, but about hope and the families gained, not just losses. Both of them have dealt enough with loss, no matter the world.

He shifts, but it's just to end up briefly resting his chin on Lan Zhan's shoulder.
)

You're separated for now, but you'll find your way back to each other. What's remembered, what isn't remembered, it's all in here.

( He actually has no easy way to indicate he means the heart, given how he's chosen to seat himself and that he's hugging Lan Zhan at the same time. It's a strange sort of feeling, but not a bad one, and his sympathy for the loss-that-isn't remains strong.

Thus he ends up giving a squeeze with his arms to indicate: the chest. The heart. The place felt, not logic'd through, which is not his personal strength in muddling through, but he knows that.
)
weifinder: (smile | are dishonest men)

[personal profile] weifinder 2021-04-28 08:10 am (UTC)(link)
Hm?

( He'd been tracking his own thoughts for a moment, and then hums again, saying: )

You're welcome. You, ah... you or the rabbits, these rascals, find me anytime, yeah?
weifinder: (smile | here stands a man)

[personal profile] weifinder 2021-05-03 03:42 am (UTC)(link)
( He does nothing to shake the rabbit off, so he manages his perch. Wei Wuxian smiles at the antics, then sighs, softer and drawn out. )

Yeah, only if I've tied carrots to me, they're always preferring you, you know that. It's sheer animal magnetism!

( That is definitely not what it means, but that's Fine. )