and this faith is gettinâ heavy (but you know it carries me)
Me, a simple fool: what if I wrote heavy angst (with a happy ending!) with Teomitl MIA/presumed dead & Acatl only realizing heâs been in love this whole time while he mourns?
Me, crying at 2 AM over my own words: that would be fun!!
ANYWAY, here there be lots of grief, Acatl lashing out in anger (itâs at Quenami, though, so like...he deserves it), Mihm trying to help, a very tense family dinner, and significant dreams. Oh, and reunion makeouts. Also on AO3!
-
Acatl grimaced as he stepped from the coolness of his home into the dayâs bright, punishing sunlight. Today was the day the army was due to return from their campaign in Mixtec lands, and so he was forced to don his skull mask and owl-trimmed cloak on a day that was far too hot for it. Not for the first time, he was thankful that priests of Lord Death werenât required to paint their faces and bodies for special occasions; the thought of anything else touching his skin made him shudder.
Heâd barely made it out of his courtyard when Acamapichtli strode up to him, face grave underneath his blue and black paint. âAh, Acatl. Iâm glad I could catch you.â
âCome to tell me that the army is at our gates again?â They would never be friends, he and Acamapichtli, but they had achieved something like a truce in the year since the plague. Still, Acatl couldnât help but be on his guard. There was something...off about the expression on the other manâs face, and it took him a moment to realize what it was. Heâd borne the same look when delivering the news of a death to a grieving family. Ah. A loss, then.
Heâd expected Acamapichtli to spread his hands, a wordless statement of there having been nothing he could have done. He didnât expect him to take a deep breath and slide his sightless eyes away. âI have. The runners all say it is a great victory; Tizoc-tzin has brought back several hundred prisoners.â
It should have pleased him. Instead, a cold chill slid down his spine. âWhat are you not telling me? Iâve no time for games.â
Acamapichtli let out a long sigh. âThere were losses. A flood swept across the plain, carrying away several of our best warriors. Among them...the Master of the House of Darts. They lookedâIâm assured that they looked!âbut his body was not found.â
No. No. No. A yawning chasm cracked open beneath his ribs. He knew he was still breathing, but he couldnât feel the air in his lungs. Even as he wanted, desperately, to grab Acamapichtli by the shoulders and shake him, to scream at him for being a liar, he knew the man was telling the truth. That his face and mannerisms, the careful movements of a man who knew he brought horrible news, showed his words to be honest. That Teomitlâwho had left four months before with a kiss for Mihmatini and an affectionate clasp for Acatlâs armâwould not return.
It took real effort to focus on Acamapichtliâs next words. The manâs eyes were full of a horrible sympathy, and he wanted to scream. âI thought you should know in advance. Beforeâbefore they arrived.â
âThank you,â he forced out through numb lips.
Acamapichtli turned away. â...Iâm sorry, Acatl.â
After a long, long moment, he made himself start walking again. There was the rest of the army to greet, after all. Even if Teomitl wouldnât be among them.
Even if heâd never return from war again.
Greeting the army was a ceremony, one he usually took some joy inâit had meant that Teomitl would be home, would be safe, and his sister would be happy. Now it passed in a blue, and he registered absolutely none of it. Someone must have already given the news to Mihmatini when he arrived; she was an utterly silent presence at his side, face pale and lips thin. She wouldnât cry in public, but he saw the way her eyes glimmered when she blinked. He knew he should offer her comfort, but he couldnât bring himself to lay a sympathetic hand on her shoulder. If he touched her, if he felt the fabric of her cloak beneath his hand, that meant it was real.
It couldnât be real. Jade Skirt was Teomitlâs patron goddess, She wouldnât let him simply drown. But there was an empty space to Tizocâs left where Teomitl should have been, and no sign of his white-and-red regalia. Acatlâs eyes burned as he blinked.
Tizoc was still speaking, but Acatl heard none of his words. It was all too still, too quiet; everything was muffled, as though he was hearing it through water. If there was justice, came the first spinning thought, every wall would be crumbling. No...if there was justice, Teomitl would be...
He drew in a long breath, feeling chilled to the bone even as he sweated under his cloak. Now that his mind had chosen to rouse itself, its eye was relentless. He barely saw the plaza around him, packed with proud warriors and colorful nobles; it was too easy to imagine a far-flung province to the south, a jungle thick with trees and blood. A river bursting its banks, carrying Teomitl straight into his enemiesâ arms. They would capture him, of course; he was a valiant fighter and heâd taken very well to the magic of living blood, but even he couldnât hold off an army alone.
And once they had him, they would sacrifice him.
Somewhere behind the army, Acatl knew, were lines of captured warriors whose hearts would be removed to feed the Sun, whose bodies would be flung down the Temple steps to feed the beasts in the House of Animals, whose heads would hang on the skull-rack. It was necessary, and their deaths would serve a greater purpose. Heâd seen it thousands of times. There was no use mourning them. It was simply the way nearly all captured warriors went.
It was what Teomitl would want. An honorable death on the sacrifice stone. It was better to die than to be a slave all your life. But at least he would have a lifeâall unbidden, the alternative rose clear in Acatlâs mind. Teomitl, face whitened with chalk. Teomitl, laying down on the stone. Teomitl, teeth clenched, meeting his death with open eyes. Teomitlâs blood on the priestsâ hands.
Nausea rose hot and bitter in his throat, and he shut his eyes and focused on his breathing. In for a count of three, out for a count of five. Repeat. It didnât hurt to breathe, but he felt as if it should. He felt as if everything should hurt. He felt a sudden, vicious urge to draw thorns through his earlobes until the pain erased all thoughts, but he made his hands still. If he started, he wasnât sure if he would be able to stop.
Still, it seemed to take an eternity for the speeches and the dances to be over and done with. By the time they finished, he was light-headed with the strain of remaining upright, and Mihmatini had slipped a hand into his elbow. Even that single point of contact burned through his veins. They still hadnât spoken. He wondered if she, too, couldnât quite find her own voice under the screaming chasm of grief.
And then, after all that, when all he yearned for was to go home and lay down until the world felt right againâmaybe until the Sixth Sun rose, that would probably be enough timeâthere was a banquet, and he was forced to attend.
Of course thereâs a banquet, he thought dully. This is a victory, after all. Tizoc had wasted no time in promoting a new Master of the House of Darts to replace his fallen brother, with many empty platitudes about how Teomitl would surely be missed and how heâd not want them to linger in their grief, but to move on and keep earning glory for the Mexica. Moctezuma, his replacement, was seventeen and haughty; where Teomitlâs arrogance had begun to settle into firm, well-considered authority and the flames of his impatience had burnt down to embers, Moctezumaâs gaze swept the room and visibly dismissed everyone in it as not worth his concern. It reminded Acatl horribly of Quenami.
Mihmatini sat on the same mat she always did, but now there was a space beside her like a missing tooth. She still wore her hair in the twisted horn-braids of married women, and against all rules of mourning she had painted her face with the blue of the Duality. Underneath it, her face was set in an emotionless mask. She did not eat.
Neither did Acatl. He wasnât sure he could stomach food. So instead his gaze flickered around the room, unable to settle, and he gradually realized that he and Mihmatini werenât alone in the crowd. The assembled lords and warriors should have been celebrating, but there was a subdued air that hung over every stilted laugh and negligent bite of fine food. Neighbors avoided each otherâs eyes; Neutemoc, sitting with his fellow Jaguar Warriors, was staring at his empty plate as though it held the secrets of the heavens. He looked well, until Acatl saw the expression on his face. It was a mirror of his own.
At least his fellow High Priests didnât try to engage him in conversation, for which he was grateful. Acamapichtli kept glancing at him almost warily, but he hadnât voiced any more empty platitudesâand when Quenami had opened his mouth to say something, heâd taken the unprecedented step of leaning around Acatl and glaring him into silence.
If theyâd been friends, Acatl would have been touched; as it was, it made a burning ember of rage lodge itself in his throat. Donât you pity me. Donât you dare pity me. He ground his teeth until his jaw hurt, clenched his fists until his nails cut into his palms, and didnât speak. If he spoke, he would scream.
Somehow, he held it together until after the final course had been cleared away. He rose jerkily to his feet, legs trembling, and fixed his mind firmly on getting home in one piece.
Quenamiâs voice stopped him in the next hallway. âAh, Acatl. A lovely banquet, wasnât it?â
He didnât turn around. âMn.â Go away.
Quenami didnât. In fact he took a step closer, as though they were friends, as though heâd never tried to have Acatl killed. His voice was like a mosquito in his ear. âYou must not be feeling well; you hardly touched your food. Some might see that as an insult. Iâm sure Tizoc-tzin would.â
âMm.â
âOr is it worry over Teomitl thatâs affecting you? You shouldnât fret so, Acatl. You know, I wouldnât be surprised if heâs not dead after all; there are plenty of cenotes in the southlands, and a determined man could easily hide out there for the rest of his life. He probably just took the cowardâs way out, sick of his responsibilitiesââ
He whirled around, sucking in a breath that scorched his lungs. It was the last thing he felt before he let Mictlanâs chill spill through his veins and overflow. His suddenly-numb skin loosened on his neck; his fingers burned with the cold that came only from the underworld. He knew that his skin was black glass, his muscles smoke, his bones moonlight on ice, his eyes burning voids. All around him was the howling lament of the dead, the stench of decay and the dry, acrid scent of dust and dry bones. When he spoke, his voice echoed like a bell rung in a tomb.
âSilence.â
You do not call him a coward. You do not even speak his name. I could have your tongue for that. He stepped forward, gaze locked with Quenamiâs. It would be easy, too. He could do it without even blinkingâcould take his tongue for slander, his eyes for that sneering gaze, could reach inside his skin and debone him like a turkeyâall it would take would be a single wrong wordâ
Quenami recoiled, jaw going slack in terror. Silentlyâblessedly, mercifully, infuriatingly silentlyâhe turned on his heel and left.
Acatl took one breath, two, and let the magic drain out of his shaking limbs. He hadnât meant to do that. He made it to the next courtyard, blessedly empty of party guests, and collapsed on the nearest bench like a dead man. I could have killed him. Gods, I wanted to kill him. I donât think Iâve ever been so angry in my life. All because...all because he said his name...
â...Acatl?â
Mihmatiniâs voice, admirably controlled. He made himself lift his head and answer. âIn here.â
She padded into the courtyard and took a seat on the opposite end of the bench, skirt swishing around her feet as she walked. Gold ornaments had been sewn into its hem, and he wondered if theyâd been gifts from Teomitl. âI saw Quenami running like all the beasts of the underworld were on his tail. What did you do?â
â...He saidâŠâ He swallowed past a lump in his throat. âHe said that Teomitl might have deserted. He dared to say thatââ The idea choked him, and he couldnât finish the words. That Teomitl was a coward. That he would run from his responsibilities, from his destiny, at the first opportunityâŠ
She tensed immediately, eyes going cold in a way that suggested Quenami had better be a very fast runner indeed. âHe would never. You know that.â
Air seemed to be coming a bit easier now. âI do. ButâŠâ
Of course, she pounced on his hesitation. âBut?â
I want him so badly to not be dead. âNothing.â
Mihmatini was silent for a while, wringing her hands together. Finally, she spoke. âHe would never have deserted. But...AcatlâŠâ
âWhat?â
âI donât know if heâs dead.â She set a hand on her chest. âThe magic that connects usâI can still feel it in here. Itâs faint, really faint, but itâs there. He mightâŠâ She took a breath, and tears welled up in her eyes. âHe might still be alive.â
Alive. The word was a conch shell in his head, sounding to wake the dawn. For an instant, he let himself imagine it. Teomitl alive, maybe in hiding, maybe trying to find his way home.
Maybe held captive by the Mixteca, until such time as they can tear out his heart. He closed his eyes, shutting out everything but the sound of his own breathing. It didnât help. He hated how pathetic his own voice sounded as he asked, âYou think so?â
âItâsââ She scrubbed ineffectually at her eyes with the back of a hand. âItâs possible. Isnât it?â
â...I suppose.â He took a breath. âI think itâs time for me to get some sleep. Iâll...see you tomorrow.â
He knew he wouldnât sleepâknew, in fact, that heâd be lucky if he even managed to close his eyesâbut he needed to get home. He refused to disgrace himself by weeping in public.
&
The first dream came a week later.
Heâd managed to avoid them until then; heâd thrown himself headlong into his work, not stopping until he was so tired that his âsleepâ was really more like âpassing out.â But it seemed his body could adapt to the conditions he subjected it to much easier than heâd thought, because he woke with tears on his face and the scraps of a nightmare scattering in the dawn light.
The next night was worse.
He was walking through a jungle made of shadows, trees shedding gray dust from their leaves as he passed under them. His legs ached and his lungs burned, but he couldnât stop. Ahead of him, someone was making their way through the undergrowth, and it was a stride heâd know anywhere.
Teomitl. He thought he called out to him, but no sound escaped his mouth even though his throat hurt as though heâd been screaming. He tried again. Teomitl! This time, he managed a tiny squeak, something even an owl wouldnât have heard.
Teomitl didnât slow down, but somehow the distance between them shortened. Now Acatl could make out the tattered remains of his feather suit, singed and bloodstained, and the way his bare feet had been cut to ribbons. He still wasnât looking behind him. It was like Acatl wasnât there at all. Ahead of them, the trees were thinning out.
And then they were on a flat plain strewn with corpses, bright crimson blood the only color Acatl could see. Teomitl was standing still in front of him as water slowly seeped out of the ground, covering his feet and lapping gently at his ankles. There were thin threads of red in it.
âTeomitl,â he said, and this time his voice obeyed him.
Teomitl turned to him, smiling as though heâd just noticed he was there. His chest was a red ruin, the bones of his ribcage snapped wide open to pull out his beating heart. A tiny ahuizotl curled in the space where it had been.
He took one step back. Another.
Teomitlâs smile grew sad, and he reached for him with a bloody hand. âAcatl, Iâm sorry.â
He awoke suddenly and all at once, curling in on himself with a ragged sob. It was still dark out; the sun hadnât made its appearance yet. There was no one to see when he shook himself to pieces around the space in his heart. It was a dream, he told himself sternly. Just a dream. My soul is only wandering through my own grief. It doesnât mean anything.
But then it returned the next night, and the next. While the details differedâsometimes Teomitl was swimming a river that suddenly turned to blood and dissolved his flesh, sometimes one of his own ahuizotls turned into a jaguar and sprang for his faceâthe end was always the same. Teomitl dead and still walking, reaching for him with an apology on his lips. Sometimes it even lingered afterwards, clinging stubbornly such that, just for a moment, he thought Teomitl was truly by his side and had a momentâs joy before reality reasserted itself. Those ones were the worst.
He started timing his treks across the Sacred Precinct to avoid the Great Templeâs sacrifices to Huitzilpochtli. Sleep grew more and more difficult to achieve, and even when he caught a few hoursâ rest it never seemed to help. He even thought, fleetingly, of asking the priests of Patecatl if anything they had would be useful, only to dismiss it the next day. He would survive this. It wasnât worth baring his soul to anyone elseâs prying eyes or clumsy but well-meaning words.
Still, when one of Neutemocâs slaves came to his door asking whether he would come to dinner at his house that night, he didnât waste time in accepting. Dinner with Neutemocâs family had become...normal. He needed normal, even if it still felt like walking on broken glass.
Up until the second course was served, he even thought heâd get it. Neutemoc had been nearly silent when heâd arrived, but heâd unbent enough to start a conversation about his daughtersâ studies. Necalli and Mazatl were more subdued than they normally were, but theyâd heard what happened to their newest uncle-by-marriage and were no doubt mourning in their own ways. Mihmatiniâs face was as pale and set as white jade, but as the meal wore on he thought he saw her smile.
âMore fish?â
Neutemocâs voice was too careful for his liking, but he nodded. Fish was duly set onto his plate, and he ate without really tasting it.
Mihmatini picked at her own dish, and Neutemoc frowned at her. âYouâre not hungry?â
She shook her head.
Silence descended again, but It didnât reign for long before Neutemoc said, âAcatl. Any interesting cases lately?â With a quick glance at his children, he added, âThat we can talk about in front of the kids?â
âAww, Dad...â
Neutemoc gave his eldest the same look his father had once given him. âWhen you go off to war, Necalli, I will let you listen to all the awful details.â
It was almost enough to make Acatl smile. âWell,â he began, âweâve been trying to figure out whatâs been strangling merchants in the featherworkersâ districtâŠâ
Laying out the facts of a suspicious death or two was always calming. He could forget the ache in his heart, even if only briefly. But even when he was done, when heâd started to relax, Neutemoc was still talking to him as though he expected to see his younger brother shatter any minute. The slaves, too, were unusually solicitous of himârushing to fill up his cup, to heap delicacies on his plate. At any other time he might have suspected the whole thing to be a bribe or an awkward apology; now, he just felt uneasy.
When the meal was done, he declined Neutemocâs offer of a pipe and got to his feet. âI think Iâll get some air.â
The courtyard outside was empty. He lifted his eyes to the heavens, charting the path of the four hundred stars above. Ceyaxochitlâs death hadnât hit him anywhere near as hard as this, but gods, he thought he could recover if only the people around him stopped coddling him. Everywhere he went there were sympathetic glances and soft words, and even the priests of his own temple were stepping gingerly around him. As though he needed to be treated like...like...
Like a new widow. Like Mihmatini. He sat down hard, feeling like his legs had been cut out from under him. Air seemed to be in short supply, and the gulf in his chest yawned wide.
But Iâm not. I care for Teomitl, of course, but itâs not like that. Itâs notâ
He thought about Teomitl sacrificed as a war captive or drowned in a river far from home, and nearly choked at the fist of grief that tightened around his heart. No. He shook his head as though that would clear it. He wouldnât want me to grieve over him. He wouldnât want me to think of him dead, drowned, sacrificedâheâd want me to remember him happy. I can do that much for him, at least.
He could. It was easy. He closed his eyes and remembered.
Remembered the smile that lit up rooms and outshone the Sun, the one that could pull an answering burst of happiness out of the depths of his soul. Remembered the way Teomitl had laughed and rolled around the floor with Mazatl, the way heâd helped Ollin to walk holding onto his hands, the way he sparred with Necalli and asked about Ohtliâs lessons in the calmecac, and how all of those moment strung together like pearls on a string into something that made Acatlâs heart warm as well. Remembered impatient haggling in the marketplace, haphazard rowing on the lake, strong arms flexing such that he couldnât look away, the touch of a warm hand lingering even after Teomitl had withdrawnâ
He remembered how it had felt, in that space between dreams and waking, where heâd thought Teomitl was by his side even in Mictlan. Where, for the span of a heartbeat, heâd been happy.
There was a soundâa soft, miserable whine. It took him a moment to realize it was coming from his own throat, that heâd drawn his knees up to his chest and buried his face in them. That he was shaking again, and had been for some time. As nausea oozed up in his throat, he regretted having eaten.
It was like that, after all.
And heâd realized too late. Even if heâd ever been able to do anything about itâwhich he never would anyway, the man was married to his sisterâthere was no chance of it now, because Teomitl was gone.
He forced his burning eyes to stay open. If he blinked, if he let his eyes close even for an instant, the tears would fall.
Approaching footsteps made him raise his head. Mihmatini was walking quietly and carefully, towards him, as though she didnât want to disturb him. As though Iâm fragile. You too, Mihmatini?
âAh. There you are.â Even her voice was soft.
He uncurled himself and arranged his limbs into a more dignified position, keeping his fists clenched to stop his hands from trembling. At least when he finally blinked, his eyes were dry. âHm.â
She sat next to him, not touching. There was something calming about her company, but gods, he prayed she couldnât see the thoughts written on his face. She stretched out a hand and he thought sheâd lay it soothingly on his shoulder, but instead she traced a meaningless pattern in the dirt. â...Itâs hard, isnât it?â
His dry throat made a clicking noise when he swallowed. âIt is.â
âAt least weâre both in the same boat,â she murmured.
The words refused to make sense in his head at firstâbut then they did, and he reared back and stared at her. No. Iâve only just realized it myself, she canât have...she canât be thinking that. âI beg your pardon?â
Her voice lowered even further, so that he had to strain to hear her. There was a faint, sad smile on her face. âYou love him just the same as I do, donât you?â
He drew a long breath. He knew what he should say, what the right and proper words would be. No, like a son. Or like my brother. But he couldnât lie to her, not even to spare what was left of her broken heart, and so what came out instead was, âYes. Gods, yes.â Hate me for it. Tell me I have no right to love him, that youâre the one who has his heart. Tell me Iâm a fool.
She lifted her head, and her faint smile grew to something bright and brittle. âGood.â
Good?! He blinked uselessly at her, gaping like a fish before he could find his voice again. âYouâyou approve?â
âYouâre my favorite brother,â she said simply. âAnd...well.â
She fell silent, her smile fading until it vanished entirely. He waited. Finally, in a much softer voice, she continued, âIf you love him, thereâs no harm in telling you what he swore me to secrecy over.â
Dread gripped him. Of course Teomitl was entitled to his secrets, but he couldnât imagine what would be so horrible that Mihmatini wouldnât tell him. At least, not while he lived. He didnât want to ask, but he had to know. â...What?â
She blinked rapidly, fingers going still. Sheâd traced something that looked, from a certain angle, like a flower glyph. â...He...he loved you, too.â
No.
But Mihmatini was still talking. âHe didnât want me to tell you; he was sure youâd scorn him. But he loved you the same way he loved me...gods, probably more than he loved me.â
It was the last straw. His nails bit into his palms hard enough to draw blood, and he barely recognized his own voice as rage filled it. âWhy are you telling me this?!â
Mihmatini took a shuddering breath; he realized she was fighting tears, and had been since sheâd spilled Teomitlâs heart to the night air. âIn case he comes back. If he does...you should tell him.â
He rose on shaking legs. âI think I need to be alone.â
Without really seeing his surroundings, he walked until he came to the canal outside the house. The familyâs boats were tied up outside, bobbing gently on the water. When he sat down, the stone under him was cold; the water he dipped his fingers in was colder still. Neither revived him. Neither was as cold as the pit cracking open in his gut. Mictlan was worse, true, but all the inexorable pains of Mictlan were dull aches compared to this.
In case he comes back. In case he comes back. I love himâI am in love, thatâs what this pain isâand I will never see him again in this world. Mihmatini says he loves me too, and it doesnât matter, because his bones lie somewhere in the jungle and his flesh feeds the crows and I will never get to tell him.
Between one breath and another, the tears came. They spilled hot and salty down his face; he let them, shoulders shaking, because he no longer had the strength to stop them. And nobody would come to offer unwanted sympathy, anyway. Mihmatini had her own grief, and the hurrying footsteps heâd grown so used to hearing would never run after him again.
Eventually, when he was spent, he wiped his face and left. It was time to go home.
&
The rest of the month ground on slowly, and his dreams began to change.
At first they were minor changesâthe blood was less vibrant, the forests and plains brighter. Teomitl bled less. He woke without tears welling in his eyes. And if that was all, he might have simply thought he was beginning to deal with his sorrow. Such things happened, after all. Eventually the knives scraping away at his chest would lose their edges, and he would face a life without Teomitlâs sunny smile.
But then other things intruded. He dreamed of a sunsoaked forest in the south, and woke feeling like a lizard basking on a rock. He dreamed that Teomitl was fording a fast-flowing riverâone that did not turn to blood this timeâand when dawn broke his legs were wet up to the shins. Teomitl barely bled at all in his dreams, now, and his wounds were only the normal ones a man might get from traversing hostile terrain alone. Despite himself, Acatl started to wake with a faint stirring of hope. Maybe he had only been separated from the army. Maybe he was on his way home. And maybe Iâm delusional, came the inevitable bitter thought when heâd finished his morning rituals. It had become much harder to listen to.
It was almost a surprise when he dreamed about a city he knew. It was a small but bustling place about half a dayâs walk from Tenochtitlan, and as he walked through the streets he realized that the torches had been lit for a funeral. He could hear the chants ahead of him. There was a darker shape in the shadows which spilled down the dusty road, and he knew the manâs stride like he knew his own.
âTeomitl!â He hadnât been mute in his dreams for a while now.
Teomitl didnât turn. He never turned. But he stopped, and by the way his head tilted Acatl just knew he was smiling. Wordlessly, he pointed at the courtyard ahead.
A funeral pyre had been lit, and it was so like the rituals he presided over that he felt a distinct sense of deja vu. There was the priest singing a hymn to Lord Death; there were the weeping family members of the deceased. There were the marigolds and the other offerings, brilliant in the gloom.
âThat could have been me,â Teomitl said, and Acatl heard his voice as though he was standing next to him in the waking world instead of only in a dream. âBut itâs not yet, and it wonât be for a good long while. So you donât need to fear for me. I keep my promises.â
Theyâd never touched before. But this time Teomitl turned to face him, and the hand he held out was free of blood entirely. Slowly, giving him time to pull away, Teomitl pressed his palm to his. Their fingers laced together, warm and strong and almost real.
âTeomitl,â he said helplessly.
âAcatl.â Teomitlâs smile was like the sun. âIâm sorry I made you worry, but Iâll be home soon.â
And then he woke up, the dream shredded apart by the blasts of the conch-shell horns that heralded the dawn. For a long moment, he stared blankly up at the ceiling. He could still feel Teomitlâs hand in his; each little scar and callus felt etched on his skin. He lives. The slow certainty of it welled up in him like blood. He lives, and he is coming back.
He rose and made his devotions before dressing, but now his hands shook with something that was no longer grief. As soon as he left for his temple, he could feel the change In the air. Scraps of excited conversation whirled past him, but he couldnât focus long enough to pick any out. He concentrated on breathing steadily and walking with the dignity befitting a High Priest. He would not sprint for the temple, would not grab the nearest housewife or warrior or priest and demand answers. They would come soon enough.
They came in the form of Ezamahual, rushing out of the temple complex to meet him. âAcatl-tzin! Acatl-tzin, there is wonderful news!â
Briefly, he thought he should have worn the hated regalia. âWhat news?â
Ezamahualâs words tumbled out in a headlong rush, almost too fast to follow. âThe Master of the House of DartsâTeomitl-tzinâheâs returned! Our warriors met him at the city gates!â
Even though heâd half expected itâeven though the recurring dreams, his soul journeying through the night at Teomitlâs side, had kept alive the flickering flame of hope that now burned within himâhe still briefly felt like fainting. He clenched his fists, the pain of his nails in his palms keeping him upright. âYouâre sure?â
Ezamahual nodded enthusiastically. âThe Revered Speaker has reinstated him to his old position, and thereâs talk of a banquet at the palace to celebrate his safe return. I think heâs at the Duality House now, thoughâtheyâre like an anthill over there.â
Right. He exhaled slowly, forcing down joy and disappointment alike. Of course Teomitl would want to see his wife first above all, to reassure her that he was well, and of course he had no right to intrude. Nor would he even if he didâMihmatini deserved her husband back in her life, deserved all the joy she would wring from it. The things sheâd told him didnâtâcouldnâtâmatter in the face of their union. âI see. I suppose weâll learn more later. Comeâtell me if thereâs been any new developments in those strangling cases.â
Ezamahual looked briefly baffled, but then he nodded. âOf course, Acatl-tzin. Itâs like thisâŠâ
The latest crop of mysterious deaths turned out to be quite straightforward in the end, once they tracked down their newest lead and had him sing like a bird. He nodded at the appropriate times, sent out a double team of priests after the perpetrators, and had it very nearly wrapped up by lunch. He was settling down with the account ledgers to mark payment of two gold-filled quills to the priests of Mixcoatl for their aid when he heard footsteps outside.
Familiar footsteps.
For the first time in what felt like an eternity, the tightness in his chest eased. But he didnât have a chance to revel in it, because he knew the voice calling his name.
âAcatl? Acatl!â
He dropped the ledgers and his pen, getting ink all over his fingers. As the entrance curtain was flung aside, he scrambled to his feet. Had he been tired and listless before? It seemed like it was a thousand years ago now. He thought he might weep for the sheer relief of hearing that beloved voice again. âGodsâTeomitlââ
He had a confused impression of gold jewelry and feather ornaments, but then Teomitl was flinging himself into his arms and the only thing that sunk into his mind was warmth. There were strong arms wrapped around him and a head pressed against his temple, and Teomitlâs voice shook as he breathed, âDuality, I missed you so much.â
Slowly, he raised his shaking hands and set them at Teomitlâs shoulderblades. He could feel his racing heart, feel the way he sucked in each breath as though trying not to sob. It was overwhelming; his eyes burned as he fought to blink back his own tears. He couldnât speak. If he opened his mouth, he knew heâd lose the battleâand there were no words for this, anyway.
Teomitl abruptly released him, turning his face away. His voice was a soft, ragged thing, and his expression was a careful blank. âForgive me. I was...Mihmatini said youâd be glad to see me. I wanted to look less like Iâd been dragged over the mountains backwards, first.â
He swallowed several times until he thought he could risk a response, even as his eyes drank in the sight of Teomitl in front of him. He looks the same, he thought. His skin had been further darkened by the sun and there were new scars looping across his arms and legs, but he had the same face and body and sweet, sweet voice. âItâsâthereâs nothing to forgive. Iâm glad youâve returned.â
âThey told me everyone thought I was dead.â Teomitl bit his lip. âExcept for Mihmatini. And you.â
He steered his mind firmly away from the shoals of crushing grief that still lurked under the joy of seeing Teomitl before him. He is here, and hale, and whole, just as I dreamed. I have nothing to weep over. âI knew you werenât. You wouldnât let something like a flood stop you.â
There was the first glimmer of a smile tugging at Teomitlâs lips. âYou have such faith in me, Acatl.â
âYouâre well deserving of it,â he replied. And I love you, and even in dreams I could not think of any other path than your survival. That, he refused to say.
Especially because Teomitl still wasnât looking at him.
They stood in agonizing silence, and he couldnât bring himself to break it. Teomitl was so close, still within armsâ range; if he was brave enough, he could reach out and pull him back into his arms. Could bury his face in his hair and crush the fabric of his cloak in his hands and tell himâwhat? It didnât matter what Mihmatini had said to him. There was simply no space for him in the life Teomitl deserved, nothing beyond that Acatl already occupied. He wouldnât burden him with useless feelings.
But then Teomitl shook himself like an ahuizotl and turned back to him, holding his gaze. âDo you want to know what got me home, Acatl? What sustained me?â
Mutely, he nodded. He still didnât trust his voice.
âYou.â
He felt like heâd been gutted. âI...TeomitlâŠâ
Whatever Teomitl saw in his face made his eyes soften. He took a step forward, hands coming up toâgently, so gentlyârest on Acatlâs waist, and Acatl let him. âI thought about you. IâSouthern Hummingbird blind me, I dreamed about you. Every night! I made myself a promise while I was out there, in the event I ever saw you again. Scorn me for it all youâd like, but Iâm going to keep it now.â
Oh, Teomitl. I could never scorn you. They were very, very close now, and Teomitlâs gaze had fallen to his parted lips. His mouth went dry.
And then Teomitl kissed him.
It started out soft and gentle, lips barely tracing Acatlâs own. Asking permission, he thought with an absurd spike of giddinessâand so, leaning in a little shyly, he gave it.
Teomitl wasted no time. The kiss grew harder, fingers digging into Acatlâs skin as he hauled their bodies together. They were pressed together from chest to hip but it still wasnât enough, they werenât close enough; blood roaring in his ears, he wrapped his arms around Teomitlâs back and clung tightly. His mouth opened with a breathy little whine stolen immediately by Teomitlâs invading tongue, and when he dared to do the same, Teomitl made a noise like a jaguar and let go of his waist in favor of clawing at the back of his cloak, grabbing fistfuls of fabric along with strands of his hair. It pulled too hard, but he didnât care. The pain meant it was real, that this was really happening.
Teomitl only drew away to breathe, âGodsâI love youââ before claiming his mouth again, as though he couldnât bear to be apart.
Acatl twisted in his arms, knowing he was making a probably incoherent and definitely embarrassing noise, but shame wasnât an emotion he was capable of at the moment. He loves me. By the Duality, he loves me. âI didnât thinkâMihmatini told me, but I didnât thinkâŠâ
Teomitl jerked back, brow furrowed. âWait. Mihmatini told you?!â
His grip on the back of Teomitlâs cloak tightened at the memory. âShe was trying to reassure me, I think. Iâd just told her...well.â He couldnât say it, even with Teomitl in his arms, and settled for uncurling one fist and running his hand up the back of Teomitlâs neck in lieu of words.
He was rewarded with a shiver, and the near-panic in Teomitlâs eyes ebbed into something soft. âWhat did you tell her, Acatl?â
Heâd asked. Heâd asked, and Acatl had always been honest with him. Heâd be honest now, even if it made his heart race and his hands tremble. âThat I love you.â
Teomitl made a desperate noise and kissed him again. There was no gentleness now; he kissed like a man possessed, hungry as a jaguar, and Acatl buried a hand in his hair to make sure he didnât stop. Teeth caught at his lower lip, and he moaned out loud. This seemed to spur Teomitl on, because his mouth left Acatlâs to nip at his throat instead; the first sting of teeth sent a wave of arousal through him so strong it nearly swamped him. âAhâ!â
Teomitl soothed the skin with a delicate kiss that didnât help at all, and then he returned his focus to Acathâs mouth. This time he was gentle, a careful little caress that gave Acatl just enough brainpower back to realize that heâd probably been a bit loud. Which is Teomitlâs fault, anyway, so he canât complain. âMmmâŠâ
Even when they eventually pulled apart, they clung to each other for a long while. Acatl stroked up and down Teomitlâs spine, tracing each bump of vertebrae and the trembling muscles of his back. Teomitl dropped his head onto Acatlâs shoulder, breathing slow and deep. Heâd twined locks of long hair through his fingers, gently running his fingers through the strands. Acatl had to close his eyes, overwhelmed. The stone beneath my feet is real. Teomitlâs skin under my hands is real. Thisâthis is real. He is in my arms, and he loves me.
âI donât want to let you go,â Teomitl whispered. âI never want to let you out of my sight again.â
Neither do I. He tilted his head, nosing at the nearest and fluffiest bit of Teomitlâs hair, and let out a long sigh. âYouâll have to eventually.â Even though he hated the thought, he couldnât help but smile. âYouâre the Master of the House of Darts, arenât you? You have an army to help lead. Wars to wage. Glory to bring to the Empire.â
âHrmph.â The arms around him tightened in wordless refusal.
He smiled against Teomitlâs hair. âBut first, why donât we see about lunch?â
Teomitl made an undignified snorting noise. âI have been gone a long time. Youâre remembering to eat for once.â
It was the first time in a month he could remember feeling actually hungry. He decided not to mention that. To his regret, however, lunch meant that they both had to actually let go of each other. Reluctantly, he began the process of disentangling them; after a significant period of hesitation, Teomitl deigned to help. Even when they were no longer wrapped in each otherâs arms, though, he stared at Acatl as though he couldnât get enough of the sight.
And since Acatl was doing the same thing, cataloging the precise shade of Teomitlâs brown eyes and the exact path each visible scar took, he couldnât blame him. I might have gone my whole life without this. What an idiot I was.
It took longer than Acatl liked for he and Teomitl to be properly alone again. It wasnât until they were finally ensconced in a small receiving room with a plate of fried newts to share and strict orders not to be disturbed that he could do more than look; just when he was getting up the nerve to maybe hold Teomitlâs hand, though, his beloved leaned in and kissed him. It was chaste, but it still made him blush.
Teomitl was smiling when he drew back. âI missed doing that.â
âIt hasnât even been half an hour,â he muttered. âYouâre insatiable.â But there was no heat to it, and he found his hand resting at Teomitlâs waist. The skin under his palm was just so warm.
An eyebrow went up in stunning imitation of Mihmatini. âAnd Iâve waited years for even one kiss, Acatl. Thereâs a backlog to get through, you know.â
The blush had just started to fade, but now it returned with a vengeance. âYears?â
âMm-hmm.â Teomitlâs eyes gleamed. âIâd like to make up for lost time, if you wouldnât mind.â
He swallowed hard. Heâd wanted to know how Teomitl had survived, how heâd managed to make it all the way back home, but his questions suddenly didnât seem that important anymore. â...I would not.â
And so their mouths met. Teomitlâs idea of making up for lost time was long and hungry; Acatlâs lips parted for his tongue almost before he knew what he was doing, and that was a little strange but far from unwelcome. Especially when Teomitl drew back, mouth wet and red, to catch his lower lip between his teeth in another one of those stinging little nips that made his blood sing. A breathy noise escaped him, but this time Teomitl didnât soothe it.
No, this time he lowered his mouth to Acatlâs neck and did it again. It was light and delicate, unlikely to leave marks, but Teomitlâs teeth were sharp enough that he felt each one in a burst of light behind his closed eyelids. He had to bury one hand in Teomitlâs hair and wrap the other around his waist just to keep himself upright; he couldnât entirely muffle his own gasps. âAhhâgodsââ
Teomitl hummed, low and wordless, and slid a hand down his stomach. Acatlâs fevered blood roared in his ears, and all of a sudden it was almost too much. âTeomitl.â
Teomitl lifted his head, eyes bright. âMm?â
âYou.â He sucked in a breath, willing his heartrate to slow down. âYou canât keep doing that here.â
âYou donât like it?â Teomitl grinned at him. âOr do you like it too much, Acatl?â
If by some miracle all the rest of it hadnât already made him blush, hearing Teomitl purr his name like that would definitely have done the trick. He had to turn his face away. âYou know damned well itâs the latter. I canât very well take the rest of the day off toâŠâ Flustered, he gestured between them.
âHrmph,â Teomitl said, and kissed him again. This time it was slow and sweet and came with warm arms sliding around him, and he lingered in it for long, long minutes.
By the time they finally remembered their food, it was stone cold. They ate it anyway; Acatl couldnât bring himself to care about such a mundane thing as cold food when Teomitl was leaning against him as they ate, with one arm still slung loosely around his waist.
When the afternoon light started to turn gold, they reluctantly stood up. They stood without touching for a moment that was just long enough to be awkward, and then Teomitl pulled him into a fierce hug. Acatl knew it was coming this time; he marveled at how they just seemed to fit together, with one hand buried in Teomitlâs hair and the other pressed flat between his shoulderblades to feel the steady beat of his heart.
Teomitl took a long, slow breath. âLunch wasnât long enough.â
âIt wasnât,â he agreed softly. âBut there will be others. Many others.â
Teomitl made no move to let go of him. In fact, he squeezed a little tighter, turning to bury his face in Acatlâs hair. âMrghh...â
He wanted to laugh, and had to bite the inside of his cheek to quell the urge. He made do with stroking Teomitlâs hairâgods, it was so softâand taking a deliberate step back so that Teomitl had to release him or be pulled off-balance. Now Teomitl was glaring at him, but nothing would stop the slow upwell of joy in his veins. âGo on,â he murmured. âIâll see you at the banquet tonight.â
Teomitlâs eyes were fierce as an eagleâs. âAnd afterwards? Will I see you afterwards, Acatl?â
âYes.â It wasnât an answer he even needed to think about, not with the way Teomitlâs lips parted in wonder. For the rest of my life. Whenever you want, for the rest of my life, Iâll be there.
Teomitl didnât reach for himâhe seemed to be deliberately holding himself still, tension ringing through his body like a drawn bowstringâbut he looked like he wanted to. He looked like he wanted to yank Acatl back into his arms and finish what theyâd started earlier, and the thought was exhilarating. âMy chambers in the palace? Theyâre closest.â
Acatl flushed, shaking his head. That was a risk he refused to take. âMy house. IâllâIâll be waiting.â
âIâll be there as soon as I can.â There was a wild, radiant smile.
He smiled back.
Though he honestly hated the idea of separation too, he knew it would be alright. Teomitl had promised, after all.















