imagine after hundreds of years you find your lover, dansleif!
at first, he pushed you away and yelled at you, thinking that you were either an imposter or an illusion of his imagination. this continues until the second week; he cries and begs for forgiveness. of course, you forgive him and once again, you make love under the stars.
he's so gentle, afraid even. after so many years of being alone and full of inner resentment, he finally feeling something. . comfort? home? something like that, especially when he listens to your heartbeat. he kisses your chest where your heart is over and over again, thankful that you made it out alive five hundred years ago.
dansleif is so worried about you, even after you reassure him that making love is still normal--acceptable. after all, the two of you were 'married' as described by the villagers of liyue. he is your's and you are his.
the way his hips roll so tenderly against yours, lips promising to give you a child like you imagined before everything happened. would your child be like him or you? he kept placing his hand over your stomach, begging for the universe to allow this one thing to come into fruition.
would the child cover their right eye too? maybe. what about star shaped pupils? or what about their personality? archons, he couldn't wait to see you with child and milk leaking from your breasts.
with one last heave, he spilled into you and locked lips, thanking you for returning to him. he promises that you'll be intertwined with him until the bitter end. .
A/N: For the Fleurette zine! My second favourite ship in Genshin, just the sheer angst of Dainsleif and Lumine (either with her as the traveler or as the abyss twin ahhh). It’s interesting to see how definitely I write Lumine now compared to here. Or maybe that’s because this is Abyss Lumine as opposed to Traveler Lumine?
Btw, leftover sales are happening right now! check @genshinflowers on twitter!
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i. Lilies
The first time, Dainsleif was caught unawares. His mind had been preoccupied, considering his new travelling companion Lumine, considering why he was even journeying with her in the first place. Home was far behind, their destination unknown, and for a man who liked facts and control, this was an unusual situation for him.
He had never been a man of passion, let alone one that followed his gut instincts.
He still didn’t know what possessed him to take her hand and follow her across the world.
“Watch out!” Lumine barked, her small hand wrapping around his arm. Despite her short stature, her grip was firm, and she jerked him back.
It was the suddenness of it more than anything else that halted Dainsleif’s steps. He glanced at her white-knuckled grip, at her slowly relaxing expression, and then at their surroundings. They were walking through a field, the sky as clear as can be. Dainsleif could see for leagues and there wasn’t so much as a hilichurl here, let alone an actual danger. Certainly nothing to provoke such a panicked response.
“What is it?” he asked, perplexed.
Ignoring him, Lumine let go and crouched down. Her white skirt trailed on the ground, collecting dirt, but she didn’t seem to mind. “Oh, that was a close one,” she sighed, her expression softening.
“Close?” Her response made even less sense. Dainsleif lowered his gaze, following her line of sight until he spotted a small, white lily blooming on the road. “The lily?”
Lumine rolled her eyes and wrinkled her nose at him. “Don’t act like it’s worthless.” She reached out, running a finger across its petals. “Isn’t it cute?”
That wasn’t a word he would have used. “It’s a sturdy plant. It would have survived.”
“Or it might not have. Better safe than sorry, right?” She smiled softly, getting up. Lumine swiped her skirt, shaking off the dust. “Aether would have agreed with me. When he wakes up, I’ll show him, and you’ll see.”
He didn’t doubt that. From what little he had seen of her brother, they had seemed like two peas in a pod. They were both far too naive for this world at war. Even this place, as untouched as it was, would see the battle fires. The idea of this place surviving as is was preposterous.
Dainsleif scoffed, “It might die before then.”
Lumine pinched his arm and glared. Her nails dug into his skin. “Don’t be such a downer. It’ll have kids. Just you wait, next time we come here, there’ll be a field of flowers.”
He shook her off. “We’ll see.”
ii. Cyclamens
The second time, Dainsleif was prepared. You couldn’t travel with someone for months without learning their idiosyncrasies and what he had learned about Lumine was she had a penchant for spotting and protecting flowers. Despite how sharp her tongue was, her heart was soft.
“Careful,” Lumine warned, her hand resting on his arm. The fact that she didn’t yank him meant she had learned something about him too.
It was an oddly pleasant feeling.
Dainsleif had already noticed the red cyclamens on the path. They swayed in the breeze, their blooms reaching for the sun. In this forest, the sunlit path was the only place for them to do so, the massive trees lining the dirt road barring the sky from small plants otherwise.
That didn’t make it any less of an annoyance. “They shouldn’t grow on paths.”
“Plants grow where they want,” Lumine chided. Despite her playful tone and mocking smile, her eyes were distant. She had barely looked at the plant, her eyes already on the faraway exit and, further than that, the distant horizon.
“Lumine?” he broached tentatively, not sure how to handle her new, pensive mood. It came and went, these days, and Dainsleif had yet to figure out the right words to say. Or if there even were any—it was hard to wipe away the things they’d seen.
Her eyes flicked to him, then the flower. There was something bitter, something exhausted about her expression. Quietly, she asked, “How long do you think we’ll be travelling?”
Dainsleif frowned. What response would relax her? What would make her smile? He felt as tongue-tied around her as he had when they’d first met, though for the opposite reason. Before, he hadn’t wanted to talk. Now he did but had no idea what to say. “As long as you want to.”
Her head bowed slightly, and he knew that wasn’t the answer she was looking for. “That’s not what I meant…It’s just…” Lumine gripped her dress, wrinkling the cotton fabric. Her knuckles turned white. “Aether hasn’t woken up and we haven’t found a potion or a spell to do it. Instead, we’ve…”
She trailed off, curling into herself. Something in him ached at the sight. With every step they’d taken away from her slumbering twin, with every Archon and secret of the world they’d uncovered, Lumine’s smile had dimmed. Dainsleif could barely remember how she’d smiled when they’d encountered that lily long ago, the bright innocence of it.
“There’s still a few places left to check,” Dainsleif murmured reassuringly, his hand curling at his side into a tight fist. “You never know.”
“We’ve looked a lot,” she mumbled, sounding defeated.
He had never been one for false hopes, but they crowded his throat, almost choking him. Hesitantly, he reached out to touch her. “Maybe he’s awake now.”
“Maybe. It’d be funny if he kept waking up when I was gone, only to fall asleep when I got back.” Despite her words, Lumine didn’t laugh.
Dainsleif didn’t know what to say. His hand fell to his side, limp and useless. Glancing down at the plant, he said, “I’ll transplant it.”
That caught her attention. She jerked her head up, staring at him confused. “What?”
He gestured at the red blooms. “The flower. You want Aether to see it, right?”
“Oh.” She smiled weakly. “Thanks.”
iii. Purple hyacinths
The next time, Dainsleif waited for Lumine to say something. A purple hyacinth sprouted tall in the center of the road, dozens of flowers curling into one another until it looked like an elaborate hair bun, the kind royalty used to wear. It was impossible to miss.
Lumine said nothing. She didn’t even show any sign of stopping. Before she could step on it, Dainsleif shot out his arm, barring her from going forward. It was a jarring reversal. “There’s a flower.”
“Oh.” Lumine looked down blankly. Her expression remained flat. “There is.”
He didn’t like her response. He hadn’t liked it for a while now. There were many things Dainsleif had expected on their journey, but Lumine changing or his feelings on that matter hadn’t been one of them. They should have stopped journeying a long time ago. They should have turned back when the darkness crept in.
And now it was too late. They would see this to its end, whatever it might be.
Still, just like those flowers reaching hopelessly for the sun, he couldn’t help but try one last time to bring back her smile. “I’ll transplant it.”
“Is there any need?” she asked bluntly, watching him with tired, dark eyes.
He couldn’t read her. Not anymore, not for a while. Had he ever been able to understand her? Sometimes, Dainsleif wasn’t certain they’d ever connected, if they weren’t just two ships in the night, passing each other by.
The ache in his chest spread. He pushed the feeling down, smothering it. Dainsleif had never been one for false hopes, but he clung to them now like a lifeline. If they saved her brother, she’d smile again. If they finished their journey, they could rest.
If. If. If.
Quietly, he tried again. “For Aether.”
“For Aether.” Lumine laughed, a jagged thing.
And then she stepped on the flower and walked on.
iv. Lilies
The last time, Dainsleif had been caught unawares. There was a familiar hand around his arm, a familiar tug to keep him in place. It was sunny, the sky above them clear, and the field was as broad as the eye could see. If he closed his eyes, he’d be at the beginning of his journey, still confused and uncertain, still naive and hopeful.
Yet, reality beckoned, forcing him to put away those childish thoughts. The hand on his arm was masculine and broad. The voice calling him was deep and excited.
“Look!” Aether chirped, his eyes bright as he pointed at the path in front of them.
The only thing he shared with his sister was the innocence in his expression.
Dainsleif looked down. A small flower poked its way out of the dirt. Even without seeing its leaves, he knew it was a lily. Even without seeing the bud, he knew it was white.
History, he found, had a way of repeating itself. There were only circles, repetitive and unending.
“That was close!” Aether sighed, relieved. He didn’t seem to notice Dainsleif’s silence. “You almost stepped on it!”
“What’s it doing all the way out here?” Paimon chirped, hovering low on the ground as she studied the tiny plant. “Doesn’t it know it’ll get stepped on?”
“Plants like to grow wherever they want to.” Aether chuckled, crouching on the ground. His cape trailed in the dirt, but he didn’t seem to mind. “It’s so cute. I wish Lumine could see it, she really likes flowers.”
Dainsleif could only stare. Truly, he was too much like Lumine. Even worse, he was following her footsteps across Teyvat, meeting Archon after Archon as he searched for her.
How long would it be till he lost his smile?
How long would it be before he broke too?
Was there any point to it all?
“I wonder what stories it could tell us.” Aether patted the top of the plant, smiling happily. “Staying here by the road, watching people travel…”
“Plants can’t see,” Paimon pointed out, scoffing at the entire idea. She threw her hands in the air. “Next you’ll be asking about its grandparents!”
“I wouldn’t go that far!” Aether held his hands up in defence. Finally noticing Dainsleif’s silence, he turned to him worriedly. “Dainsleif?”
The words were the same. The eyes were the same. A familiar ache spread across his chest. Dainsleif forced himself to speak. “It’s nothing.”
“If you say so…” Aether bounced to his feet, interlacing his hands behind his head. “I wonder how it got here.”
Your sister, Dainsleif didn’t say. Would Lumine laugh or cry that her wish came true?
The path ahead led to tragedy. He knew that, had already gone through it before. Still, there was one final act before their story ended, one final play he had to make. A last try to fix everything.
And maybe next time, Lumine and Aether would both be tugging him, reprimanding him for the flowers crushed in his wake.
Abyss mom!reader? Absolutely! Yes please! Would love to read!
What would the twins reactions be?
✉ ⋮ late response *sad face* my schedule is absolutely STACKED, and I hate math so bad, I don't have much time to relax so me answering the rest of your asks would be more... late
angst.
hmm... let's see it as this, yeah? the twins travel worlds right? so in this universe, you'll also be joining them soon... basically a whole cute family traveling together, living their lives happily until the unknown god stuck you down and took you away from the twins. forced to make the journey the twins will soon embark upon.
in this case, lumine and aether always felt a lingering prescence. familiar with a touch of cold, they can't explain it but the presence was always.... there, in the horizon, in the shadows, wherever it was. it looked after them anonymously.
dansleif was unusual to them. and it only made him all the more suspicious in their eyes. at random times, no matter how composed he was. he always seemed to daze off with a foreign glint in his eyes. paimion might have never noticed it, but they certainly have.
imagine their shock when you stepped out of that portal, lightly gripping the handle your weapon while staring them down as they shook with happiness.
both of them rejoiced, shouting out along the lines of 'let's go home!'. with their initial goal at reach, there was no more need to stay in tevyat any longer. they were grateful to the companions they met, really. but they were only there for you, not to mingle and solve problems that weren't theirs.
but their joy was replaced with confusion when you glanced at dansleif's way and hardened your gaze.
"why are you with that man? you shouldn't mingle with the likes of him." your icy tone made instantly silenced them, they gazed at you with confusion but you merely disregarded them coldly. it was like looking at a hollow shell of what used to be.
lumine took a step forward, the herald behind you tensed. ready to attack and protect. "mom.. we've been separated for so long! why are you asking about something that doesn't matter?" she mumbled and shook her head.
she stretched an inviting hand forward, reaching out but it froze in mid air as the words of dansleif rang through her ears.
"[name] we meet again."
your eyes narrowed sharply. "I'll say this again, my darling's. you shouldn't associate yourself with him." it was as clear as a day, you were with the abyss order, you were with their enemy but maybe trying to force the thought out of their minds would switch the true reality. "he is my enemy, you know what that means. don't you?"
aether furrowed his brows, similar to when you heard a price that clearly was a scam. lumine reminisced. "wait.. what are you talking about? you don't make sense, mom.. stop this, please."
you sighed. "I've taught you better than this. tsk... don't try to stop me nor the abyss. I will strike you down, I'm sorry but I will."
what?
the truth was horrifying, even when you explained it all.
after that they'd be devastated, all their hard work. saving nations only to find out you're with the 'enemy'? honestly, lumine is so done. unlike aether who harbors a compassionate heart she's more of a realist. now that she knows you're really here in this world, the only goal she has in mind is to convince you to go home with them.
she does have a point when she says that the only reason they were in tevyat was because of you. they weren't here to become some hero that'll be written on books of history, they didn't want to fight a dragon nor blood thirsty harbingers. aether admits that you're growing more and more far as they venture more in their journey.
freinds or not, blood is always thicker. you've been with them from the day they were born, countless days and years were spent together with you while they've only been acquainted with their tevyat freinds for a measly month or two.
soon, the fate destiny has already planned will be inlaid for the world to see...