Vivarium
PRP tidal wave - Printable Version

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tidal wave - Hàoránn - 11/14/2025


Thread occurs at the same time as this one: It can be assumed that the two are conversing amongst themselves.




His gaze was molten when it settled on her. He hadn't seen her amidst the ground, hadn't smelled her amidst the company. His wife. His second half. Rìhé. He'd felt her as she approached. Like a shift in the air or a disturbance in the fog, she was the prickle along his spine that had never failed to warn him of her presence. And though he felt tempted to do otherwise, he kept his gaze forward—fixed on some distant land their Emperor spoke of. His ears betrayed him, subtly twitching with that same instinctive pull towards her.

When she stepped into his periphery, he went still. Neither rigid or startled, but still in the way a man might brace for a fresh wound being touched.

Her scent had reached him first, soft and sweet—familiar. He hadn't let himself search for it amidst every turn, convinced himself she belonged to another life he wasn't meant to follow. That she might've still been alive, if it was sure that they were dead in this world.

But it was when her shadow pressed into his, mingling like lost lovers reuniting again, that every carefully built wall inside him tightened like a chain around his ribs. He did not turn to her, did not lean away. But he stood there, existing, waiting for the impact of her presence.

Not long after, her voice had followed. Clear and dutiful, and offered as a pledge to their Emperor. For him. For them. It had not been spoken to him, but it struck him as if she'd placed her hand over his heart.

He swallowed, a movement small and soft but loud in his ears.

It was only when her gaze found his that he finally allowed himself to look back—carefully, as though her gaze was something bright enough to blind him. His amber eyes met hers, stern but burning beneath their surface—fire banked behind iron.

Muted relief fluttered through him but also shame, sharp and buried, because he'd imagined her safe without him. Hoped he'd done enough in their life to warrant her safety in that world, not this one. It is nice... He'd murmur amid the onslaught of conversation around them. To hear your voice. Pride welled but he had not shown it. She was his wife, in the eyes of the world—property. When had it been that he heard her speak as though she was truly nobility?




RE: tidal wave - Rìhé - 11/14/2025

[Image: 109544913_Xoiak4qBTptgE1p.png]
She had seen the way he deliberately looked everywhere but at her. Even as she walked to him, to stand by his side, always the dutiful wife, he looked away. It sparked something inside her. A taunting, dangerous sliver of fire that licked up her ribs and stoked long-sleeping embers. A fire that whispered a demand she could never voice: Look at me.

What would it feel like to be the kind of woman a man could not look away from? To have his eyes follow her every step, ache for her very breath—to see her desire simmer beneath his gaze?

It was a tantalizing wonder. A cruelty, really, because she knew she would never know it. In a dynasty where men ruled, she would never claim birthright as her brother or husband did. She, as just another man’s wife—Hàorán’s wife—would never know it.

To him, she was merely duty. Expectation. A name he was bound to, a shadow that clung to his side because the world demanded it. A burden he did not ask for.

And yet—

When he finally turned his gaze toward her, something shifted. Something broke. Something tightened inside her, a coil begging to snap, electricity whirring to life. Fire met ice, and she felt it. Faint as candle-flame. Sharp as a pulled thread.

He said it was nice to hear her voice, and the words struck her like a blade made of tenderness she did not know how to hold. Nice. A mercy word, but more than she had expected. Her breath left her slow, a hum rumbling in her chest. Controlled—yet not enough. She had to wait for her heartbeat to steady itself before she could bring herself to speak.

And here I thought you preferred my silence, she murmured, voice low—too soft for anyone but him. Her pale eyes cut toward him, a flicker of dawn behind stormclouds. Her lips curled upward, a breath of air leaving her nose.

Hàorán—I do think that that is a first for you, she continued, thoughtful, her voice still barely a whisper. Airy, light, deceptively calm, though her heartbeat betrayed her entirely. A compliment? All I did was speak.

Something flickered in her eyes and she stepped a breath closer, leaning in just slightly. Their sides nearly brushed, the tips of their fur touching. Careful. I might start talking more—are you certain you wished to give me that power, husband? Her tone was a careful blend of obedience and challenge. A wife’s softness laced with a woman’s defiance, a dagger hidden behind her back.

She knew she ought to apologize, but Rihe could bring herself to do so.Her gaze drifted back forward again, posture smoothing into serene, the picture of dutiful composure, ever the perfect wife—except for the way her tail brushed his hock. Accidental, light and fleeting, something she pretended not to notice.

It’s nice to hear yours too— she began, but the words tangled in her throat as her attention shifted back toward her cousin and his wife. A perfect pair at the fore. A dynasty-bound match, woven by duty, not desire. She wondered, as she always did, whether Yuè wished for passion too. No one was blind to her cousin’s concubines, nor to the soft affections he shared elsewhere. Did she ever want more than the role carved for her? Did she wish her husband would kneel for her alone, carrying his devotion like a blood-stained blade drawn in her name? Or was she, too, simply just another woman, kept beside a man whose heart wandered everywhere duty required, rarely home long enough to rest?

Your voice, I mean, she finished, softer now. I had… I had thought you were—

She forced her jaw still when it wanted to tremble.

Gone.

The word slipped out like a secret she had no right to speak, and suddenly she wished she had forgotten she had a voice.



RE: tidal wave - Hàoránn - 11/15/2025




For too long, Hàorán didn't move.

Like a blade slipping past armor, her words slid beneath his skin—not deadly, but sharp enough to make him draw a careful breath and bite his tongue. His wife spoke softly, keeping her tone light enough for them alone, but every syllable landed with precision. A trained strike that wove through every crack he tried so desperately to keep sealed.

She stepped closer, her fur brushing his, and his muscles locked before he forced them still. His gaze remained forward, attention feigning interest elsewhere. He refused to let the riot behind them betray his calm. The calm he'd carefully manufactured even before he'd met her.

But her nearness was heat, and Hàorán never could trust himself with fire.

Careful. I might start talking more—are you certain you wished to give me that power, husband?

His throat felt dry, rough. He didn't answer—couldn't. Silence had always been his shield, his armor, his language. But Rìhé—she wielded it against him with a terrifying gentleness. In a way only a wife knew they could. And for the first time in a long while, he felt unarmed. Helpless.

Her tail brushed his hock. Accidental, she pretended but Hàorán knew better. Even so, his ears flicked back—too fast, too telling. He kept his gaze forward, but the sharp edges of his composure began to soften almost imperceptibly.

And it was only a whisper—Gone.—that split right through him. Not a blade, not a dagger coated in sweetness, but truth.

He turned to her fully then, slow and deliberate like every move of hers prior had been. As though moving too quick might give away too much, more than he was ready for. His amber eyes found her pale ones, and there was no mistaking it now—something broke within him.

Maybe a grief he hadn't named, a relief he hadn't—and wouldn't—express. A fear he had locked behind duty, behind restraint, behind righteousness. Gone.

His control wavered and he exhaled shakily. He did not say her name but it was there, broken on the tip of his tongue. Something he wasn't ready to confront.

And for the first time, he looked at her—he really looked at her. His gaze roved over everything, every detail carving itself into him with a painful clarity. Completely branding him.

I would not have left you... Not a vow or a declaration. But truth.

He did not reach for her, or step closer. But his tail had brushed hers, instinctive and unthinking, the movement gone before he'd even realized he'd done it. His gaze dropped for half a heartbeat, the barest glimpse of vulnerability he'd ever let slip.

If you thought I was gone... He spoke, his voice barely more than a breath. Then perhaps it is I who has been silent too long. He forced his posture steady, eyes forcing themselves back to Shēnléi.

But the air between them had changed—suddenly alive, taut, burning with something indescribable.

Without looking at her, he added,

—I hear you, Rìhé. A promise concealed by a simple sentence.

A man who never gave an inch, —giving her that.