I flatly refuse to try and reformat this bullshit. I give up. Life is too short.

-

55 (acatl – narnia crossover pt 2; aslan is not a tame lion & christianity is the religion of conquerors)

Oh giver of life! Who could conquer Tenochtitlan? Who could shake the foundation of heaven?

Acatl is an old, old man. He's seen much in his life—many horrors, yes, but many wonders too. (His nieces' and nephews' births. The dedication of the new Great Temple, shining with blood and light and life. Teomitl's smile, radiant as the dawn.)

When he sees the pale men in their great boats, with their moon-shining armor and their shorn priests in heavy robes, he does not see horrors. He sees only men like other men—foolish, greedy, grasping men, but men that can bleed and die. Men whose hearts will feed the Sun if they dare lift their swords against his city. The beast that stands at Cortes's side, the golden shaggy-maned cat they call a lion (though he has seen miztli, the puma, and they are much sleeker than this one) is only a beast, as their giant dogs and great hornless deer are only beasts.

And then

the Lion

speaks

Acatl goes to one knee, reeling from the pain of it, and reaches for his gods.

Lord and Lady Death do not answer. They are too busy screaming.

Read more... )
Instead of asking Acatl's permission to court Mihmatini at the end of Servant of the Underworld, Teomitl asks for permission to court him.

After some consideration, Acatl gives it. Things carry on from there, and the High Priest for the Dead discovers that love can make you feel alive.

-

“I still have to get your permission to court you, after all.”

Acatl was absolutely sure he could not have heard right. Maybe he’d hit his head in the fighting and was just now realizing it. Maybe he’d fallen asleep and this was a dream. Maybe he was dead. But the city spread out below him was still lit by torches for the funeral vigils, and there was none of the acrid smell of Mictlan in his nose. He stared out at the light reflecting on the canals, felt a breeze ruffle his cloak, and tried to form words. “You want to what,” he managed, through numb lips that didn’t seem to be attached to the rest of him.

Teomitl was still looking at him, and still smiling like the dawn. “You heard me.”

He opened his mouth. He closed his mouth.

Now, it wasn’t unheard of for priests to marry; they were not allowed children, and were still prohibited from unions that could result in them, but for two men or two women to marry was an acknowledged...well, not precisely a loophole in the vows, but certainly a long-established and permissible bending. His own mentor’s husband had died before Acatl had met him, but the man had worn the single red-wrapped braid of a married priest until his own death. Still, it was one thing to know in theory that it could happen, and another for it to be happening to him. He was High Priest of Mictlantecuhtli. He dealt with rituals, and his temple, and the bodies of the dead. He did not—had never even thought he might, no matter his most secret desires—deal with the bodies of the living. And now Teomitl, the bright and beautiful youngest brother of the Revered Speaker, was casually bringing up the idea of courting him as though it didn’t turn his world upside down.

He took a breath. Good, he could still do that and not feel like he might faint. “...Why?!”

Read more... )
Teomitl is away at war, another long campaign for the glory of the Mexica. He should be thinking of strategies, of the supply train, of his troops. Instead, he spends most of it thinking about Acatl.

When he gets back, he tells him.

...yes, this was prompted by me imagining the Mexica army bursting into "A Girl Worth Fighting For" and Teomitl like "ah....heh.....................right.................."

-

It’s official. I liked war much more when I was just a warrior, and not Tizoc’s Master of the House of Darts. Teomitl honestly wasn’t sure which was worse—the campaign itself, which this year was mostly over rocky ground that all seemed to have a personal grudge against his sandals (not to mention his men’s ankles; there had been a score of injuries already), or the pre-battle meetings where they went over their strategies. At least the meetings were under a tent so he wasn’t slowly roasting alive in his regalia, but the fact that he had to deal with the entire war council and his incompetent brother made him boil with rage anyway.

“We can meet them in pitched battle here—”

“Not until the Texcocan forces catch up, we can’t.”

“Are you doubting our valor?”

That was Tizoc, querulous, and Teomitl took a deep breath before he was tempted to jump in with anything stupid. The valor of our army? No one here would doubt that. Yours in particular? I don’t think you ever had any.

Read more... )

Notes:

historical fun fact: moctezuma II was, in fact, known for being Very Snooty as a revered speaker, reversing a lot of his uncle ahuitzotl's political appointments since they uplifted warriors instead of noblemen. ahuitzotl, meanwhile, was known for being very generous and makin' it rain on the people he liked. in the universe of my fics, since i simply Do Not Vibe with teo's death in 1502 and therefore he gets to reign another 20 years, this ABSOLUTELY drives moctezuma up the wall on the regular.

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