Same anon who asked for the yan!wrio hcs. I wanted to thank you for it! I loved it. And youâre absolurely right! I think you hit the nail on the head regarding how he will act as a yandere. I loved it so much I might as well ask for another fic, hehe đ¤
I wanted to ask if you take requests that include reader with x or y traits. If yes, I wanted to ask for this specific scenario: (if you dont mind, Iâve asked other genshin yandere writers to write this as well and Iâm asking you too because Iâm really curious on how youâd write this!) Yan!Wriothesley with an oblivious reader. Basically everyone knows wriothesley is infatuated with her, including the guards and inmates, and everyone knows heâs killed for her, except she herself. I wanted to see what you think Yan!Wriothesley would do if he was met with such a reader. It can be a HC or a fic, anything youâre comfortable with!
Thank you for your timeeđ
A/N: Hello again anon! Thank you so much for this ask. I love Yandere!Wriothesley and Wriothesley in general, so writing for him is such a treat. I think I may have gone a little bit off-track but I hope this will suffice! Thank you again for your ask!
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CW: Yandere Themes, Murder
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Though the weather was far from fair, this was certainly the most beautiful day Wriothesley had spent on the surface for a multitude of reasons. Rain pattered against stone in a wonderful little waltz, providing a soothing ambiance to the dayâs activityâyou had invited him on the surface to go shopping in Rue dâArpont, an enchanting street in the Court of Fontaine full of little boutiques and bistros.Â
Being that Wriothesley lived in Meropide and didnât deal with the fickle Fontainian weather on a regular basis, he didnât have an umbrella, providing him with a convenient excuse to loop an arm around your shoulder and keep you slotted against his side. It was a certainty that by that evening, at least three tabloids would be printed regarding the mysterious Duke of Meropideâs unexpected relationship with one of Fontaineâs premier pianists. Neither you nor he seemed to mind the thought of that muchâthough, Wriothesley knew you had hardly thought of that happening when you happily offered to shelter him beneath your umbrella. You simply wanted to help a friend, and Wriothesly had taken the opportunity to mark you as property of Meropide in the process.
âIâm glad you invited me to join you.â Wriothesleyâs voice broke through the quiet precipitation, the sound of every droplet of water bending to accompany the melody of his words. In the distance, murmurs lent another texture to the quiet building symphony. Just as Wriothesley took a breath, thunder called in the distance and lightning responded, smashing apart the tender composition. A line of electricity arced across the sky, fingers curling down from the clouds to try to grip Fontaine in its gnarled hand.Â
This wouldnât do. With so little time together, Wriothesley longed to keep your attention firmly focused on him. Neither weather nor your naive whims would disrupt the tempo of life he had set for you, now and forever. âSeems like itâs getting really bad.â Wriothesleyâs arm dropped from your shoulder, sliding down your side to grasp your waist. By the way your head turned back to himâeyes widening with such innocent surprise and your cheeks ripening to a gentle, flushed pinkâhe had your attention again, a fact that made his heart flourish. âMaybe we should find some place to get lunch? My treat.â His free hand pointed towards a small restaurant with what appeared to be a greenhouse by its side. Through the drenched window panes, rows of trellises full of little cream-colored flowers seemed to cover the walls. It almost seemed like something only a dendro vision holder could create, so ethereal and elegant.
A bashful smile shone across your face, as soft as the sunâs first kiss of light at dawn. âThatâs very kind of you, Monsieur Wriothesley, but-â
âAh-ah-ah, no âbutâs. I insist.â Though your voice was as enchanting as a sirenâs song, Wriothesley knew better than to indulge in your innocence. Your virtues became vices with how sharp they were, and Wriothesley knew that if he didnât exploit them, someone with much more wicked schemes would. âConsider it a congratulations for your performance in Meropide.â As he steered you over to the entrance of the bistro, his mind meandered down streams of memories, tracing back to the roots of this desire to protect you.
A letter. One wedged between manila folders stuffed with forms and transcripts that was brought to his desk as part of his daily work. About two hours after beginning paperwork, his hand weary and barely grasping his penâhis preferred weapon of choice when battling the bureaucratic beasts the Maison Gestion conjuredâhe found his fingers lifting up a letter that was blissfully light. Upon opening it up though, he quickly realized he was in for a different sort of battle: every word on the page was written in cursive and wild and wispy as wind and waves, to the point where it was almost indecipherable. Fifteen minutes passed by as Wriothesley tried to decipher exactly what each letter meant. Eventually, he understood the message: a famous Fontainian pianist was requesting permission to come to Meropide to perform for the prisoners.
That was the seed that you had planted in his mind. The people of Fontaine held such revulsion for Meropide and its inhabitants, it seemed startling that someoneâmuch less a figure as cultured as a musicianâwould want to come to Meropide on their own free will.
He wrote back, not accepting your request just yet, but feigning suspicion. Further details would be required before he could approve of such an event, including the answers to several questions. Among them, a simple, unadorned âWhy?â.
Your response came quick, written in the same mesmerizing slanted script. The way you wrote was conversational, as though you were simply talking to a well-known friend and not an imposing, powerful stranger like Wriothesley. The answers to Wriothesleyâs more logistical questions were thorough and cooperative, though he could hardly care. He was willing to handle everything, from the moving of the piano to the security of the concert. If anything, your answers only confounded him more and more. Trust seemed to bloom from every sentence, the very paper reeking of benevolence. Since he had been a child, Wriothesley had never allowed such flowers to grow in the garden of his heart; instead, they withered into ash, leaving his body barren of such tenderness.
A warmth pooled in his chest, trickling steadily into each of his limbs. Briefly, Wriothesley wondered if this is what it would feel like to drink Sinthe.
His next letter was simple: a time, date, and place.Â
You arrived in Meropide minutes before his letter requested you come, not that Wriothesley minded. Preparations had been made well in advance so the day would proceed smoothly, and Wriothesley had spent many sleepless nights pouring over the list of procedures to make sure you wouldnât have a bad time in Meropide. Wriothesley escorted you to his office, made you a cup of tea, and offered you a pastry before you went out to perform. While you sat, he noticed in your lap was a small burlap sack that one might use as a Mora pouch.Â
âYou donât need to tip me for letting you perform here, you know.â He elected to frame his question as a joke, adding in a teasing smile to make the picture he painted look more convincing.Â
Despite your career in the arts, you seemed to be no actor by the way that you squirmed in your seat. âA-aha, I wasâŚshopping earlier.â As you spoke, your eyes seemed to ricochet in their sockets as they glanced at every corner of his office.Â
Wriothesley was ready to press further. By this point, he had ruminated on your letter for far too long, as though examining every stroke of every letter to glean some new facet to your intentions. The few minutes he had spent talking to you only confirmed many of his thoughts, reinforcing the budding desire to shield you from any potential criminals that could have done you harm. Even though he had a question ready on his lips, he decided to stay quiet. He planned to keep a close eye on you as you stayed in Meropide, so any suspicious behavior would be easy to observe. Plus, he trusted you. Not fully, but the seed you had planted in Wriothesleyâs heart had taken root and sprouted.
When the clock in Wriothesleyâs office struck noon, he escorted you out and towards the makeshift venue the prisoners and staff of Meropide had prepared for your performance. It was nothing extravagant, just a simple metal platform with a well-used baby grand piano, but the shoddy backdrop only made you stand out more as you took the stage and sat down. Your fingers slipped up towards the keyboard. As you began to play, Wriothesley had to lean in just to hear the faintest whispers of harmonies. Each note seemed to evaporate, congealing into airy clouds of sound that slowly moved across the room. The music crept towards a crescendo, your hands occasionally dropping into the lower registers of the piano as the auditory sky began to darken and rumble with thunder.Â
And then, just as it seemed you were ready to send lightning shooting across the crowd, you released the tension with a torrent of rain. Your hands fell up and down the keys in a blur, glissandoing one way before arpeggiating the other. Finally, as quick as the tempest began, it stopped. Birdsong filled the air, a gentle gust of wind tickling newborn leaves and making them rustle with laughter.Â
You hadnât even released the keys, but Wriothesley wanted to ensure he was the first to congratulate you for your performance. After he began clapping, a rapturous applause echoed throughout the room. You may not have been a vision holder, but you were still capable of such otherworldly feats, conjuring images simply from the vibrations of strings.
While Wriothesley wished to congratulate you for your playing, many other prisoners had the same idea, rushing up to you eagerly. Some leaned in too close, others clapped a hand on your shoulders, all of them seemed to stoke some fervent flame deep in Wriothesley. He kept his lips shut and simply waited, though. None of them were breaking the rules of Meropide, after all.
The line shrunk at a snailâs pace, as it seemed that each new person wanted to talk to you longer than the last. By the time there was only one person ahead of Wriothesley in line, impatience flickered imprudently in his mind. When he saw how engaged you were with this prisoner, though, the flame of impatience quickly burnt itself out, and from the ashes rose a fire that burnt stronger. The prisoner was an old man in his forties or fifties from the looks of it. He wore such a dour expression it seemed as though he was a wax statue in a hot room. The words you spoke to him were furtive, your fingers reaching into the pocket of your pants. As deft as a magician, the Mora pouch Wriothesley had seen earlier slipped from your fingers to the prisonerâs, who quickly pocketed the money.
Before the prisoner could even turn around, Wriothesley had begun taking wide steps back to his office. If you called his name, he didnât hear, nor did he care. The guards would escort you out when the time was right and take care of any other matters. His presence wasnât required there. Instead, he had a much more pressing matter at hand. Walking in a ring around the room, Wriothesley flung open cabinet after cabinet in an agitato, ignoring how files shot out and fluttered to the floor. After each one had been revealed, he began to comb through every single form with surgical precision. There was a cancer in Meropide, and it would be removed with no delay.Â
The diagnosis was quick. After three or four cabinets, his hands opened a form and read a name he had memorized with such certainty, he didnât even need to check your signature. As he read the case, his anger ebbed and flowed, constantly changing directions like a river over time. What once was jealousy quickly returned to its original course: protectiveness. Your father was a former merchant with a penchant for gambling. Eventually, he became so mired in debt that he had to turn to less savory business to make money. Namely, selling Sinthe.Â
You werenât the issue. No, far from it. Instead, your father had weaponized your wholesome nature and pointed the tip of the blade at your heart. With how you carried yourself it seemed that it hadnât pierced you yet, but that didnât mean it had other effects. The formâwhich was quickly being crumpled by Wriothesleyâs handsâcontained a photograph of your father, still that same gloomy expression. Beneath the contours of your fatherâs face, Wriothesley saw his own adoptive parents take shape. He felt the familiar stab of betrayal, of trust razed and devastated.
Wriothesley believed in rehabilitation, but he also believed in justice. And in a place such as Meropide, where every rule was of his own design, justice would be enacted in accordance with Wriothesleyâs wishes. When your father was summoned to Wriothesleyâs office one day and never reappeared, everyone in Meropide knew what happened. Weeks later, when you were invited to return to Meropide for tea with Wriothesley, as you walked along the metal promenades of the prison, you noticed how the prisoners cast you strange glances, but couldnât understand why. Week after week, you continued to return, allowing Wriothesley into your world.Â
All those meetings had led him to the surface, to a small bistro on a quaint street. The two of you were brought into the greenhouse, though the sight surprised both you and Wriothesley. Instead of real flowers and trellises, it was an optical illusion; someone had painted the image of a garden lining the walls of the building.Â
âWhy are there no realâŚâ your voice tapered off, but the waiter was quick to pick up on your question.
âWe used to have real flowers, but too many people would pick them. Eventually, the cost of replacing them became too great, so we contacted an artist to paint them.â The waiter shrugged then left.
After pulling out your chair for you, Wriothesley sat down opposite to you and sighed. âWhat a shame. It looked pretty from the outside.â A few seconds of silence passed as you fiddled with the tablecloth. âAnyways. Say, have any performances planned? Iâd love to hear you again.â At the sight of a gentle smile gracing your face, Wriothesley felt himself perk up a little with pride.
âNot at the moment. Sometimes Iâm booked, other times Iâve got nothing, and right nowâŚâÂ
Sensing opportunity, Wriothesley quickly jumped back into the conversation. âWell, if you ever need anything, Iâm here for you.â His hand slithered across the table and brushed against your palm, fingers full of barely-restrained greed. He could offer you an entire world of opulence and comfort, protect you from those that seek to undermine your innocence. A delicate wildflower such as yourself might wilt temporarily after being transplanted, but in the long run, a stable environment will allow you to flourish without all the threats of nature. You may be the musician of the keys, but Wriothesley has mastered the song of your heart. When he takes you for himself, all that will be left of you in this world is the silent echo of your sweet melody.Â
Your cheeks flushed, you smiled bashfully. âThanks Wriothesley.âÂ