we are all walking each other home
Did anyone order plotless summer family fluff by the pool with snow cones? No? Too bad, thatâs all I got. In which Acatl and Teomitl and their family have a good day.
Also on AO3!
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If the young and devastatingly attractive Revered Speaker of Tenochtitlan wanted to invite his Imperial Consortâs close family to the palace to stave off the heat of the rainy season in his gardens and pools, none of them were going to gainsay himâespecially not Acatl. Though his obligations nagged at him, he could set them down for a few hours to spend time with his brother and sisters. It would be nice to simply rest for once; Teomitl insisted it was the least he deserved.
Though Iâm not sure how restful this is going to be, he thought. The gardens Teomitl had inherited from his predecessors were certainly lovely enough, all lush greenery and tiled fountains, even if they couldnât measure up to his loverâs dreams for his own under-construction palace across the Sacred Precinct from Acatlâs temple. If theyâd been left alone to walk the paths and stretch out under the trees, Acatl imagined heâd find it comfortable enough. But they werenât alone, and that made all the difference. He was glad to have mended his relationship with his other sisters, he loved his nieces and nephews to distraction, but all of them together in the same space was...
âOllin, stop running by the water! Youâll fall!â
âSo then I said to Citlalli, I said...â
âAnd nobodyâs offered for you yet, Coaxoch? Why, when I was your ageââ
âAuntie!â
...Well. It was a lot.
Heâd claimed a seat at the farthest end of one of the intricately dyed reed mats Teomitl had had spread out, watching the chaos unfold from under the shade of a sprawling tree. Ollin had not stopped running; he and a few of his similarly aged cousins had all gotten into what appeared to be an impromptu game of tag with Acatlâs dog Miton, who was yipping up a delighted storm and wagging his tail so fast it was an orange-tipped blur. His sisters Nelli and Icnoyotl had shown up gossiping about something someoneâs brother had done and hadnât so much as paused for breath since, with their husbands providing increasingly colorfulâand increasingly loudâcommentary. Mihmatini, enormously pregnant, had lowered herself into the waist-deep pool nearby and kept dropping down to dunk her entire body underwater in a way that suggested she was trying to either muffle her nephewsâ shrieking or grow gills, whichever happened first. And Teomitl?
Teomitl was in his element. Heâd shed all his finery save for the emerald piercing his septumâstill too new to be removed so soon in the healing processâbut he didnât need any, not with the way he was crouched down and beaming at Nelliâs fourth daughter showing him a bug sheâd caught. It could have melted a stone; Acatlâs heart didnât stand a chance. He knew he was smiling helplessly, knew his adoration would be clear to anyone so much as sparing him a passing glance, but just then he didnât care. I love you. I love you. Youâre going to be a wonderful father.
âMy lords!â
A few of his family members twitched. Nobody except Teomitl seemed to think that the servants carrying trays loaded with bowls of compacted mountain snow and pitchers of fruit juice were talking to them; he, meanwhile, sprang up and announced, âIces for everyone! Excellent, set them down just there.â
âWe get ice?!â That was Nelliâs daughter, her voice rising in a delighted shriek.
âYou get ice,â Mihmatini informed her, accepting Teomitlâs arm to heave herself out of the pool with a grunt. âEat it before it melts.â
Nobody quite swarmed the traysâthey were all too polite or too overawed by the match their Mihmatini had madeâbut there was a general purposeful drift in that direction. Even Teomitlâs gray-and-white hound Ehecatzin slunk over hopefully to try to steal some; when one of Acatlâs brothers-in-law nudged him away, he settled for being scratched behind the ears. Miton, more singleminded, had to be ordered to sit. Acatl watched, finding himself disinclined to move. It was true that snow carried down from the mountains was a treat reserved for those of imperial blood or imperial alliances, especially on such a hot day, but he didnât really feel like inserting himself into the crowd when everyone was debating fruit toppings.
Eventually, Teomitl padded over with a bowl in each hand, stretching out his long legs as he sat down. It was closer than he ought to be with so many eyes around them, but once again Acatl found he couldnât really mind. Not when Teomitl was quirking up a smile as he set down a bowl of pineapple-drenched ice for him.
âBrought you some,â he said quietly. Not that he needed to keep his voice down; there was no way to put two dogs and over a dozen people in one space and not have it be loud enough to drown out any conversation they might have. Still, Acatl appreciated the discretion.
He picked up the bowl, noting that Teomitlâs own was the violently pink shade only pitaya fruit juice could give. The runners were fast and the ice had been stored well; it was still cold enough to chill his fingers through the clay. âI would have gotten up.â
âYou looked comfortable.â There was another of those soft, sunny smiles, and he couldnât help smiling in return.
âMm. So did you.â His lover was always at his best in a friendly crowd, laughing and joking until his family saw past the jade and turquoise to the man beneath. All that energy needed a purpose. Rather like our dogs, he mused, but he knew better than to ever say that out loud even if they did all share a tendency to snore.
Teomitl shifted a little closer, so that they almost touched. The fingers of his free hand twitched as though he wanted to twine them with Acatlâs own. âIâm more comfortable here.â
Then he licked at his half-melted cup of snow, erasing all chances of Acatl managing to reply. The fruit juice was staining his lips and tongue; though he was graceful as he usually was when eating, a drop clung to the corner of his mouth and Acatl itched to brush it away. He didnât. He wasnât sure he could move. Teomitl made a soft noise of pure pleasure that sent a lightning surge of want through his veins, and he couldnât look away. âNgh.â
Teomitl cast a glance at him from under lowered lashes, lips curving in a wicked smile. âHm?â
They couldnât possibly be any more in public. Taking a deep breath, he wrenched his mind away from memories of what that tongue could do. âNothing.â
Teomitl hummed, smugly pleased with himself, and motioned to their bowls. âHave some. Itâs good.â
He studied his bowl for a moment before trying it; there were chunks of fruit as well as juice, cold and sweet enough to make his teeth hurt. The pain was well worth it, because it was delicious. He let his eyes slide closed as he ate, focusing on the sensations around himâthe warmth of the sun through dappled shade, the chill of the ice on his tongue, the tingling awareness of Teomitlâs body next to his, the happy chatter of his nieces and nephews and siblings. He caught slivers of conversation too, Necalliâs first campaign and Nelliâs recipe for washing blood from dyed cotton mingling in his ears. His heart felt like a tiny sun.
This is what makes life living. He inhaled, breathing in the scents of fruit and crushed grass and warm water. The flowers, the jade. Mihmatini was right.
Eventually, all the ice was gone. He was aware of his siblingsâ conversations around him; two of his brothers-in-law were discussing the weather with the grave importance it deserved, while his sisters were discussing Mihmatiniâs pregnancy with a frankness that was turning Icnoyotlâs always-squeamish husband Chimalli slightly green. The children, unsurprisingly, were the first to throw themselves back into the water; Neutemoc and Chimalli were next, theoretically to keep an eye on them but actually to tow the smallest ones around in the water while they screeched with joy. Teomitl, still eyeing the remains of his ice as though there might possibly be some fruit left, actually set the bowl down and perked up at the sight.
Acatl nudged him. âGo on, help them corral the flock. Itâll be good practice for you.â
Teomitlâs smile was a little crooked, a little helpless, and terribly endearing. âI hope the baby gets along with its cousins.â
âTheyâll certainly have plenty of options,â he replied dryly. Between Neutemocâs five and all his sistersâ spawn, Teomitlâs child would have over a dozen cousins to play with by the time it was born. As always when he thought of it, he sent a brief mental prayer to the gods for Mihmatiniâs continued health. Sheâs the Guardian of the Sacred Precinct. The Imperial Consort of the Revered Speaker. And sheâd have my head for fretting over her.
â...They will.â Now the smile was wistful. âYour family is wonderful.â
He nudged him a little harder. âOur family. Or did you forget you chose this?â
Mihmatini was sliding back into the pool, and Teomitlâs eyes followed her for a moment. His fingers just barely grazed the back of Acatlâs hand. âHmm. I did choose this, didnât I?â
Then Teomitl left his side and plunged into the water, and he realized that he had perhaps miscalculated.
His lover was always beautiful, whether he was in a warriorâs armor or all the gold and feathers of his office. Even in the plainest clothing, the curve of his cheekbones and the brightness of his smile could take Acatlâs breath away. Heâd thought, with the years theyâd been together, that nothing could surprise him anymore.
Duality preserve him, he was wrong. Heâd never seen Teomitl like thisâall rippling water and rippling muscle, laughing and shaking water from his hair as Mihmatini splashed him playfully and Ollin clung whooping to his arm. Droplets hung sparkling in the sunlight like stars, running in rivulets down the well-sculpted lines of his chest and stomach. Surrounded by waterâsurrounded by family, head flung back in brilliant careless joyâhe was more magnificent than heâd been at his coronation. Acatl had just eaten, but he felt as hungry as Toci. I love you. The words beat in tune with his heart. I want you.
Every line of his body felt like a taut bowstring, but he couldnât move. If he moved, he was going to do something stupid.
Neutemocâs voice snapped him out of his trance. His brother leaned on his elbows at the edge of the pool, water dripping off him onto the tiles, and flashed him a tired grin. âIâm sweating just looking at you, Acatl. Join us!â
âNhm,â he managed.
Teomitl lowered Ollin back into the water and gave Acatl a grin of his own. âPlease?â
Well, it was hot. But he was still strangely reluctant to move, and it took a long moment before he could stand up, stretch well enough that something in his back stopped complaining, and amble over to the water. The sun hadnât warmed it as much as he thought; when he slid down into it, he had to clench his teeth at the chill. For a while he simply stood next to his brother, watching their family play.
Neutemoc elbowed him. âSee? Told you it was better in the water.â
He nodded. True, they were surrounded by bright flowers and screaming life, but it was...peaceful, here. It reminded him of his childhood, before their father had died and everything had started to go so wrong. No. He shook his head, banishing that line of thought. Today had been wonderful so far, and that was how it would stay. He was standing in cool, clear water with a belly full of delicious food and his family around him. His nieces had roped Teomitl into some sort of splash-based war that involved a great deal of high-pitched giggling on all sides, whereas his older nephews were skipping the splashing in favor of an impromptu and very messy wrestling match. He was on the sidelines, content to observe.
And then someoneâs errant flailing limb sprayed him with a fine mist, and he jolted out of his reverie.
âSorry!â Teomitl called. It would have sounded much more sincere if he wasnât grinning.
âHrmph,â he grumbled, closing his eyes. He knew he was failing at suppressing his own smile, and Teomitl must be able to see it.
The peace of his immediate surroundings didnât last long. The sounds of splashing water grew louder and closer, and his niecesâ shrieks took on the sort of gleeful pitch he associated with trouble. Oh no.
That was all the warning he got before a gout of water arced down and drenched him completely. He yelped, inhaling water, and as he coughed and spluttered and caught his breath he decided that someone was about to be in deep trouble. Grimacing, he scraped his hair back from his face, blinked water out of his eyes, and looked around for the perpetrator.
The unrepentant perpetrator. âYou looked hot?â
He took a deep breath and leveled a glare at his lover. âTeomitl.â
âAh,â Teomitl began.
And then Acatl taught him one of the benefits of growing up with a brother close in age. Namely, when you had someone who was willing and able to throw you into the nearest body of water at any opportunity, you got very good at fighting back in kind. He pushed off from the wall, wading rapidly towards him; before Teomitl could scramble out of range, Acatlâs arm came up to splash him in the face. âYou asked for this!â
Teomitl danced out of the way, a grin splitting his face, and wasted no time splashing Acatl back. âIs it war, then?!â
It was war. Their nieces and nephews joined in, splashing both of them indiscriminately; Acatl reeled under the onslaught, but managed to stay on his feet no matter the weight of his wet hair. Teomitl was stronger than he was, but unused to fighting such a battle. It was easy to back him against the edge of the pool. And then the dogs, wanting to be a part of the fun, plunged into the water in a cacophony of howls and a storm of wagging tails, and he had to stagger back as Miton all but flopped on top of him.
âBad dogâack!â Opening his mouth was a mistake, for Teomitl took advantage of his distraction to splash his face again. He glared at his lover through the curtain of his dripping hair.
Teomitl took one look at his face and his eyes went wide; Acatl had a moment of satisfaction before his lover ducked sideways, dodging behind a very surprised Necalli. âProtect me!â
Just as quickly, Necalli darted out of the way. âMy lord uncle, you are on your own.â
Teomitl was the furthest thing from a coward, but evidently he had learned when discretion was to be the better part of valor. He turned and waded rapidly for the far edge of the pool.
âGet back here--!â
Teomitl laughed brightly. âYouâll have to catch me first, Acatl!â
Oh, so thatâs how it is. Feeling his face split into an unaccustomed grin, Acatl ran after him. Teomitl was younger, faster, and in better shape; but when he heaved himself out of the water and took off down the path, Acatl wasnât too far behind. As he ran, he realized he didnât have a plan, but he didnât need one; it was a beautiful summer day, his blood was pumping, and he was alive. That was all that mattered. Teomitl swerved around a densely-flowered shrub, and he followed.
Whoever had planned the layout of the palace gardens had desired privacy; it was darker and quieter here, the chaos of the pool muffled by the greenery. Anything beyond that Acatl didnât have a chance to absorb, however, because Teomitl was grabbing him and pulling him into a hot, hungry kiss.
Oh.
That was the last coherent thought he had for a while. His mind was full of Teomitlâof the heat of his wet skin, the strength of the arms around him, the way he still tasted of pitaya juice and mountain snow. One hand settled at his waist; the other slid up into his hair, burying into the thick strands until a soft growl of pleasure reverberated through them both. His body knew just what to do, arching to press himself even closer, and when he dug his nails into Teomitlâs back he was rewarded with a whine. If he didnât need to breathe, he could have kissed him for hours.
When Teomitl pulled away, mouth red and eyes glittering with desire, he whispered, âI missed you. Iâve been wanting to do that all day.â
He wasnât the only one. But before he could say that, a calloused hand slid down his spine, and Acatl sucked in a hard breath at the way Teomitlâs hips pressed against his own. His blood was still up, but now all that simmering energy was alert to a new purpose. âItâs only been a few hours.â
Teomitlâs expression turned wicked as that hand reached his ass, giving it a lingering squeeze. âAnd? Youâre irresistable.â
Perhaps there was the occasional downside to having such a young and enthusiastic lover, he thought. Out loud, he huffed, âThe children will hear us.â
âTheyâre playing with the dogs.â
The barking, splashing, and cheering ringing through the gardens were loud enough to muffle themâif they were careful. Still, Acatl bit his lip and shook his head. Children were one thing; his nosy sisters were another thing entirely. âMy siblings will hear us.â
Teomitl scowled lightly at that. âAm I Revered Speaker or not?â
âTeomitl!â he hissed.
The scowl vanished as though it had never been. Teomitl lowered his head to nuzzle at Acatlâs throat, voice so soft it was almost inaudible. Any sweetness was tempered by the way he drew his nails lightly up the column of Acatlâs spine, hard enough to sting pleasantly but not enough to leave a mark. As his loverâs lips moved against his skin, Acatl shivered. âWeâll be quiet.â
It was tempting. Gods, it was tempting. Teomitl kissed him again, long and slow, and he felt his resolve weakening. His family could entertain themselves for a few minutes, surely. Half an hour. He would prefer more timeâwould prefer to give Teomitl his full attention all nightâbut he wasnât a fool to turn down what was so freely offered. The breeze was cold in the shade, but that didnât matter when his lover was so warm in his arms, Â the slide of skin on skin setting his blood on fire. âMmm...â
âCome on,â Teomitl breathed, and shifted to press a thigh between his legs. Acatl found himself wishing briefly and desperately that theyâd have the forethought to hide against something solid, but then Teomitl was mouthing at his throat and he wasnât thinking anything at all.
âNngh...â At any other time, he might have been embarrassed at the whine that escaped him, but shame was very far away at the moment. His self-control was hanging only be a few very thin threads, and only the din of his family gathering not nearly far enough away was keeping it in place. We could. Theyâre having fun without us; they wonât be looking for us yet. But...
But they could. Of course Mihmatini knew, and he was almost sure that Neutemoc did as well, though of course theyâd never discussed it beyond the most vague assurances that yes, he was perfectly happyâbut his other sisters were clueless, and the thought of their reactions if they discovered him in Teomitlâs arms was enough to turn his bones to ice. Reluctantly, he panted, âNo. We shouldnât.â
Teomitl sighed and pulled back, but he kept Acatl within the circle of his arms as though he couldnât bear to let him go. âI hate when youâre reasonable.â
âNo, you donât,â he murmured fondly.
When Acatl lifted a hand to cup his cheek, Teomitl tilted his head into it with a faint stirring of a smile. â...No, I donât.â
There was a particularly loud splash from the direction of the pool, and Acatl winced. âLetâs get back before they wonder where weâve gone.â
âMm.â With one final caress, Teomitl let him go. âAlright.â
Later, there would be dinner; later, there would be dancers and musicians to entertain them. Later, he and Teomitl would be properly alone. But for now, they would bask in the warmth of their family and the bonds theyâd made.











