[ Dragon Dance ]
Few sights in Teyvat could rival this view, where the sun threatens to dip beyond rising waves and the whole of the city is bathed in the soft orange aftermath. The festival’s decorations only seem more stunning, each performance dotting the harbor’s edge better than the last.
Very little could compare to the mastery of the artists that gather in Liyue, he thinks, the pride welling in his chest warm and persistent.
That didn’t mean things couldn’t go wrong. Missing two performers for the dragon dance is no small obstacle, the dragon itself required skilled hands and strength for maneuvering the handcrafted decoration and lights that adorned it. He scans the crowd now, having agreed to help find someone who could pass for the part.
The person he finds…gives him pause, eyes glimmering once before his steps decide his course. “Lady Furina,” He inclines his head to the tempo of his greeting, leaving a respectable distance between them. “Truly a pleasure that you have decided to attend another Lantern Rite. Your favor may explain the number of Fontainian citizens enjoying the celebration.” The assumption is fondly said, though he moves quickly. While he hadn’t explicitly promised to help find two people with the skill to stand in…
He had been looking forward to seeing the performance…its absence would certainly dampen the rest of the festivities.
“Apologies if I speak too directly. Our dragon dance appears to need two more to stand in the spotlight.” Already, he can see the troupe marching on with their preparations. He faces her fully, expectant. “As your reputation proceeds you…do you have anyone in your company who can rise to the occasion?”
WHEN IN LIYUE, DO AS THE LIYUEANS DO. or so the adage is said to go. fontainean through and through in more ways than one, she supposes this has always been a little difficult for her to take in stride, all things considered. she might be renowned for her dab hand at any part upon the stage, but conforming to a different set of social rules altogether was another thing——on the smallest level, for instance, she still has yet to understand how to even hold a pair of chopsticks, or cease to marvel at how the people here seemed to do everything with them so effortlessly, from cutting food⠀(⠀this didn't require a knife??⠀)⠀to stirring pots.
but she is eager to experience it all. and that begins and ends with the thrilling series of performances upon the lantern-lit stage afloat on the harbor's bay by sunset. it's said to be a inimitable sight: the waters of the endless bay aglow with fire of the sun, said to emulate the golden rays of stone hewn by the ancient rex lapis himself ; and before them, a parade of dance, theatre, acrobatics, and martial demonstrations, with the apex of them all——the dragon dance——taking place right as the sun lowered to the perfect angle over the water's surface, casting all of liyue in long shadows.
how romantic! she could absolutely not afford to miss it.
but furina is an eager tourist second ; before that, perhaps before she has ever in her long life been anything else, she is a master of stagecraft first. and she has walked enough of them, tread the wings behind the performance endlessly by rote, to sense when there is something not quite right rippling beneath as the minutes draw closer to the curtain rise. it's impossible to say where it comes from, only that there must be some difficulty that'd arisen, some snag in the proceedings. perhaps it's in the hurried stride she catches from one of the half-dressed performers far below, moving over to his troupe ; perhaps something else.
either way, she is distracted enough that when a low voice addresses her name close beside, she nearly starts——managing her catch herself before it's noticeable by force of habit.
"oh, monsieur zhongli." her face breaks into a cordial smile. what a coincidence to run into him again, that lantern rite should be their milieu once more, though many miles from qiaoying this time. as she remembers, his speech is measured and refined, full with an erudition that makes her feel at once small and in awe. his praise, delivered with such thought, is so much more difficult to accept as the well-meant flattery she is used to ; it makes her cheeks color almost bashfully even as she smiles and curtsies with the pleasure to hear it. "you really speak of me too highly. fontaine. . . can't always follow the same stars ; popularity is always coming and going." she swallows, the only indication of some falter in her eloquence. but before she can finish the pleasantries with an acknowledgement, he pivots to some greater issue——and here she'd thought he really had just come to say hello.
". . . so that wasn't just my imagination, then," she muses, attention turning back to the troupe on the decks far below——gone now ; dispersed, perhaps, to a last-minute emergency. she can imagine——no, she knows keenly the panic they must be feeling.
a sigh ; arms uncross with the burden of purpose. as a once la gloire of the performing arts, she feels somewhat beholden to extend a hand, particularly now that she's been asked.⠀(⠀or perhaps it's just relief that he wasn't, as she'd feared, intending to ask her to stand in for the dragon's dancers——athletic feats of that caliber were hardly her forte.⠀)⠀"my company. . . though i don't quite know what you mean by that," surely he . . . hadn't also read and believed the tabloids. . . ?? "i can think of a few in mind that i might ask." a quick turn on polished heels with a flutter of taffeta ; "i'll see if i can find them at such short notice. if this is as urgent as it seems, then time is surely of the essence."














