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#kanej babies
ruins-and-rewritez · 2 months
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Kanej babies being so good at hide-and-seek they have to put a family wide ban on it so they can avoid the mini heart attacks they all get when they can't find them
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aneiria-writes · 2 years
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Sleepover
Written for @kanejweek 2022 day 7. Theme: growth, prompts: memories, and sharing & secrets. Read now on AO3 or right here:
A fragile, quiet whimpering sound crept into Kaz Brekker’s dreams, pulling him from sleep. By the time he blinked his eyes open, Inej was already sitting up in bed, bleary-eyed and messy-haired, their two-day-old daughter in her arms as she lowered her nightgown to feed her.
Kaz let his head fall back on his pillow, sleepily watching the impossible picture before him, mother and child, happy, safe and secure in the cushion of the night. Inej smiled at him, leaning back on the pillows as the baby began to suckle hungrily. 
From beyond their half-closed bedroom door, another cry, louder and stronger, started to emerge from another room.
Inej groaned good-naturedly, and Kaz couldn’t resist pressing a gentle kiss to her hair before he shuffled out of bed, standing carefully on his stiff leg. He made his way to the hallway, treading the familiar boards of the farmhouse in the dark. 
The cry was coming from the room of their two-year-old son, Micah. Kaz’s gaze landed on him immediately, noting, with a pang of his heart, Micah’s crumpled little face, the silvery streaks of tears on his chubby cheeks. He was standing at the side of his cot, fat fists clutched unhappily around the bars, and hiccuped as he looked up at his father.
‘You had a nightmare, bud?’ Kaz asked sympathetically. Micah sniffled and pathetically held out his hands. Kaz leaned over and pulled his son into his arms, holding him close to his chest and stroking his feather-soft black hair. ‘It’s all right, darling,’ he soothed him. ‘You’re safe.’ 
Kaz rocked him for several long minutes, until it seemed Micah would settle back down, but every time he tried to place him back in his cot, Micah awoke with a start, the cries starting afresh each time. 
With a sigh of resignation, Kaz decided he might as well bring Micah back to bed with him and Inej for a while. He turned to the door, Micah’s head tucked into the crook of Kaz’s neck as he sucked on his thumb, and raised an eyebrow at the little shadow peering around the doorframe.
‘You’re supposed to be in bed,’ Kaz said sternly.
Five-year-old Mila, the spitting image of her mother, was not swayed. She crossed her arms, stubborn as her father, and pouted. ‘Micah’s not in bed,’ she pointed out, ‘and I heard the baby wake up again.’ 
Kaz stifled his sigh, and levered his very best ‘I’m in charge here’ expression at his oldest daughter. ‘Yes, and remember what your mother and I told you? As the big sister, you’re supposed to be showing them both how well to behave.’ 
Mila blinked her big, brown eyes at him, unmoved. ‘But Da,’ she whined, her eyes starting to glisten with unshed tears (how had his daughter learned such dramatics? Kaz wondered in despair). ‘I don’t want to be left alone, you’re taking Micah to your room! Why don’t you love me as much as him and the baby?’ A fat, slow tear fell from her oil-black eyelashes and rolled down her bronze skin, and Kaz’s foolish heart melted completely. He shifted Micah into one arm — when had he gotten so heavy? — and held out his spare hand to Mila. She grabbed it in delight, all trace of tears disappeared, and led Kaz and Micah towards the master bedroom.
Inej looked up when they walked through the door, the baby still feeding, although slower now. She just raised a knowing eyebrow at Kaz, and he shrugged helplessly as Mila released his hand, scrambling up onto the bed to snuggle up to Inej and gently poke the baby’s cheek. 
‘Are we having a family sleepover night?’ Inej whispered like a conspirator to Mila, and Mila giggled and nodded. Kaz carefully got back into bed, settling back on the pillows with Micah heavy and warm in his arms. His son was asleep now, black lashes closed over chubby cheeks, and Kaz could feel Micah’s heartbeat, strong against his own chest. Inej sighed happily and leaned her head on Kaz’s shoulder, Mila tucked between them. Kaz kissed his wife’s hair, and leaned his head against hers. 
Back when he and Inej were traumatised teenagers, struggling to hold hands or even speak their feelings for one another, this would have been a dream so far beyond possibility that Kaz wouldn’t have even thought of it. But now, a decade and a half later, those old lives far behind them, they shared a life so perfect it hurt Kaz’s heart to contemplate.
‘Da,’ Mila murmured quietly, as the baby finished feeding and Inej straightened her nightgown. ‘Tell us a story?’
Kaz hid his grin, but he gave Mila a little nudge of his shoulder. ‘Which one, sweetheart?’
‘The one where you took Mama on the first date and the kitchen caught fire.’
Kaz grinned ruefully as Inej giggled beside him. The memory of that fated night was still vivid in his mind, and it was one of Mila’s favourite bedtime stories. Kaz took a deep breath, and began:
‘Once upon a time, the cleverest, most beautiful acrobat in the world lived in a place called Ketterdam, and her name was Inej Ghafa…’ 
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charl3ss · 4 months
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Kaz and Inej obviously get married one day because she’s religious and Kaz wants the tax benefits + he wants to make her happy, and I just know when that day comes Kaz takes HER last name
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kazscrows · 1 year
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I keep seeing people say things like “Why would we want a SoC spin-off they’ve already used the entire plot” and I’m like?? Did we read the same books???
What about The Ice Court Heist? Kuwei? Van Eck? “I’m going to get my money, Kaz vowed. And I’m going to get my girl.”??? The sugar fiasco? The auction at the exchange??
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honeyxmonkey · 8 months
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No Mourners, No Funerals
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amandinemoon · 6 months
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Some six of crows fanart (aquarelle) for my kanej audience (lol what audience ?)
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grishaxverse · 1 year
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so they’re going on a heist and falling through the ceiling together? THEM?!
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bookmarvelfox · 1 year
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kadazzle · 1 year
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Day 3 of Kanej Appreciation Week 2023 - Parallel
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agent-tempest · 6 months
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My Kanej heart <3
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ghostofchaos-past · 1 year
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Like Real People Do by Hozier represents all of the six of crows canon couples in a way i can't exactly put into words but just makes sense
specifically the lines
I will not ask you where you came from
I will not ask and neither would you
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ruins-and-rewritez · 6 months
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Inej would NOT be one of those moms who screams "how could you do this to me" to Kaz when she's in labor. Kaz on the other hand would definitely be one of those fathers that the nurse has to constantly send out of the delivery room to get ice chips so he wouldn't pass out and cause even more trouble
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whosthatfunkyrat · 6 months
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*Inej holding Kanej baby*
Baby: *reaches for Kaz’s cane*
Kaz: “you like the birdy?” *starts wiggling the cane around in front of baby’s face*
Inej: *gently pushes the cane away* “that’s….sharp…”
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fandomestuff · 1 year
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"What do you want then?"
"To die, buried under the weight of my own gold."
KAZ BREKKER I SWEAR TO GOD TURN OFF YOUR STUPID SASS AND YOUR STUPID ANGST AND KISS THAT BEAUTIFUL LADY
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darklesmylove · 2 years
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some of you haven’t been stupidly in love yet decided call your soulmate an investment to pretend you’re cold and heartless and it shows
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Daughter of the Rain and Snow
Concept: Around ten years after the events of Crooked Kingdom, 25-year-old Captain Inej Ghafa frees Maya Olsen from a pleasure house in Ketterdam. Maya is looking for revenge against the man who put her in her position, a man who she knows nothing about except his name: Kaz Brekker.
Tags: @wraith--2 @lunarthecorvus @just2bubbly @real-fragments7 @cartoon-clifford @origami-butterfly @lady-a-stuff @thelibraryofalexandriastillburns @inej-ghafa-deserves-the-world @thatdelusionalnerd
If anyone wants to be added let me know :)
Content Warnings: in more general terms I want to remind people to be aware of the nature of Kaz and Inej's experiences and relationship since even if I'm not directly addressing these things they tend to be implicit in any writing about them, but specifically to this chapter there's ptsd references, anxiety, violence references, blood, wounds, and fear of losing loved ones
Note: Oh my goodness we only have the epilogue left to go... this is insane I can't believe we've reached the end
AO3 link: Daughter of the Rain and Snow - Chapter 145 - She_posts_nerdy_stuff - Six of Crows Series - Leigh Bardugo [Archive of Our Own]
Chapter 144 - Kaz
At least the Crow Club was back in working order. Beyond that things weren’t looking at their best. Kaz knew from Anika and Pim’s reports that the damage was mostly repaired and they’d reopened the closed wing a few months ago, but he also knew from the income reports Yara had been sending him  that they’d taken a hit. Her projections looked sunnier for next month, but Kaz wasn’t feeling particularly confident. There was a nervous energy about the Slat when he walked in, still as rowdy as it usually was in these early hours of the morning but with a slightly frantic edge. Kaz had known his extended absence would take a toll, but he’d tried to keep in control of what he could. 
“I assume there are rumours going round about -”
“Your mysterious disappearance? Yeah,” said Anika, “We’re treading water trynna cover up for you being missing,”
“Anyone get wise?”
“To the fact you weren’t here or to what you were actually up to?”
Kaz shot her an unamused glare. Clearly he needed to stop telling Anika up to 50% of the truth, because she was getting too good at picking up what the rest of it was. 
“I don’t think so,” she said, “Not with any proof you weren’t around. Few people here and there are convinced you’re dead,”
That didn’t particularly surprise him.
“Any attempts at territory grabs since you last wrote?”
“Liddies are still riled up, but nothing new except a pretty hollow looking threat from Black Tips,”
Kaz sighed. They weren’t staying in Ketterdam for long, he’d have to get through work quickly and make a few choice appearances if he could spare the time.
As far as Kaz and Inej knew, the plan was for them to drop in on Jesper and Wylan for the afternoon, then go to the house overnight whilst Nina stayed on the Geldstradt. They didn’t have the space to have her at the house by the harbour - especially when Alyssa was staying with them too - and anyway she would only be kept up all night by Sadja. But apparently Jesper and Wylan had other plans, as soon as they were through the door it was all but a demand they at least stay there the first night. They’d even set up a room for Alyssa upstairs, so she was close if Inej or Sadja needed her.
“How are you feeling?” Kaz had asked, watching Inej’s hand find the railing on the porch of the Hendriks house.
“I’m fine,”
Kaz shook his head, looking down at Sadja.
“Once you can talk I’m going to teach you to shout at your Mama every time she says that,” he told her, gently readjusting the sling in hopes of helping her settle.
Nina laughed.
Sadja had done well on the boat, Kaz thought, for a stubborn two month old who had never travelled further than the Grand Palace until a couple of weeks ago, but she hadn’t slept well last night and still didn’t seem to be interested in sleeping now.
“Kaz, really,” said Inej, shaking her head, “I’m okay. I’m just tired,”
Kaz nodded, but he and Nina had shared a brief glance. Inej rang the doorbell and Sadja immediately jutted out her bottom lip in indignation; for a moment Kaz thought she was going to cry but she settled again, still looking a little grumpy. He readjusted his cane so that he could remain balanced whilst he offered her his finger, and once she’d acknowledged it he gently rubbed his hand up and down her tiny tummy.
“Do you not like doorbells, Sadja?”
“I think it’s quite normal for babies not to like loud noises, Kaz,” said Nina, peering over the sling, “You’re okay, aren’t you Sadja? You’re a brave little muffin,”
“Brave little muffin?” asked Kaz.
“Hey, that is just about the highest compliment I’ve ever given anyone,”
“Well, you are brave aren’t you Sadja? You’re just like your Mama,”
She wriggled a little in the sling, as though she was trying to look up at him properly, and smiled. Kaz glowed. 
The door had barely been opened when they were met by the practically shouted words:
“Where’s my niece?”
“Well, hello to you too, Jesper,” said Inej, sharing his soft laugh.
She leaned into the arm he offered and he kissed her on the cheek, ushering her over the doorstep. Kaz followed, nodding at Jesper.
“Saints, I’ve missed you,” said Jesper, hugging Inej again.
“Oh, I’ve missed you too,”
Nina cleared her throat, glaring teasingly at Jesper. He threw an arm around her shoulders.
“I’ve missed you too, darling, obviously. And I guess I missed you Kaz,”
“Always with the compliments,”
Where’s Wylan?” asked Inej.
“Couldn’t get out of a meeting,” Jesper replied, shaking his head, “He won’t be long. Now, where’s this little Sadja you’ve been withholding from me?”
“Withholding-? She’s only been alive two months - and you were in Novyi Zem for one and a half of them,”
“Withholding,” Jesper repeated
Inej laughed. Kaz gently scooped Sadja out of her sling and into his arms, rocking her for a moment before he passed her to Inej so Jesper could lean over and greet her. He looked like he was about to burst with glee.
“Oh my goodness, you two she’s so beautiful. Aren’t you? Yes you are, yes you are,”
Jesper looked up at Kaz and Inej, grinning.
“She’s wonderful,”
“She most certainly is,” Kaz smiled, pushing the door to behind him before they walked together towards the living room, “It’s good to see you, Jes,”
“You too. And honestly you with a baby is quite possibly both the funniest and cutest thing I have ever seen, so thank you for that,”
Nina snorted. Kaz glared at them both. 
“And how are you?” Jesper had asked Inej, as they sat on the sofa together.
It was about twenty minutes later and Wylan had just got back, all apologies for being late and overjoyed to see them all again. He was now sitting in between Inej and Kiada with Sadja in his arms, smiling.
“Well, I haven’t slept in about two months,” Inej smiled, leaning her head onto Jesper’s shoulder, “But other than that I’m doing pretty well. How are you? - How was Novyi Zem?”
“I’m good, we’re all pretty good at the minute, actually. And Novyi Zem was lovely, good to see my Da, and everyone did a very good job,” he squeezed Aimee’s hand lightly, from where she was perching on the arm of the sofa next to him, “There were a few moments where we thought we’d have to come home early - that was always in the plan as an option, if anyone needed it - but we ended up staying the whole time,”
“How’s Colm?” asked Nina, leaning forwards to pick her coffee up from the table.
The conversation floated on, and Kaz had drifted in and out of paying attention to it as he kept his eyes on Sadja. She started wriggling uncomfortably and Wylan passed her back to Inej, then a moment passed before she started crying. 
“Is she alright?” asked Kaz.
“She’s just hungry,” said Inej, looking at Kaz in a way that meant calm down, she’s a baby, she’s going to cry, you do not need to worry as she stood up and gently rocked Sadja against her chest, whispering to her in Suli, “I’ll take her upstairs,”
At some point, Kaz wasn’t exactly sure how long it had been, it was only him, Nina, and Jesper still sitting in the living room. Focus had switched freely: the trip to Novyi Zem - two weeks with Colm followed by a month and a half through in Weddle and Shriftport, then another two weeks with Colm - Kiada had struggled with the boat, Aimee had struggled on the farm, Kiada has struggled in Weddle; news on the Ravkans and their new little prince and princess, twins about three months older than Sadja; Clemmie Boscht had started renting an apartment in the city and came to the house to share roast dinner with the family once a month; updates on something Kaz had forgotten to pay attention to as he was wondering how long Inej and Sadja had been gone and if he should go upstairs to find them. Now Nina was asking about wedding plans - the original date should have been last month, but it hadn’t been set in stone when Kaz and Inej first went to Ravka so Jesper and Wylan had decided to postpone and visit Jesper’s father instead of him coming out to them. 
“Doesn’t matter,” Jesper was saying, “Nothing will ever make up for the fact that Kaz Brekker got married before I did,”
Nina flopped against the back cushions of the sofa.
“Yeah, it’s a real blow to the ego isn’t it?”
“Aren’t you two just the height of comedy?” said Kaz drily.
“To be fair, Jes,” Nina added, “I think we were all surprised you weren’t the first to get married. I mean how long had you two known each other before you moved in, two months?”
“No, well I really only joke,” said Jesper, glancing briefly at the door and lowering his voice, “Wylan told me ages ago he wasn’t sure he’d ever be able to get married, after everything with his parents he just kinda… lost faith in it,”
Jesper had told Kaz about it at the time. It was years ago, around the time of the Van Eck trial, and Wylan was having an unsurprisingly bad time of it. He said he’d burst into tears and told Jesper that it had been evil of him to trap him in a relationship that would never go anywhere, and that he could leave if he wanted to and Wylan would understand. Apparently Jesper had stared at him for almost a full minute, and then said:
“Wy, you’re seventeen,”
“Well, clearly,” Kaz had said, “You handled that well,”
“I helped him afterwards!” Jepser had cried defensively, “That was just my first thought,”
Now Kaz sat behind his desk at the Slat, flicking through the endless pile of papers laying in wait and watching the hands move on his timepiece. Almost five bells. He wanted to be back by six.
Sadja had woken up not long before three bells, screaming loud enough to bring the entire house down. Kaz fumbled in the dark, searching for his cane, before Inej turned on the gas lights and handed it to him, smiling and shaking her head. They sat next to each other on the side of the mattress as Sadja nursed, and for about half an hour afterwards Kaz was still rocking her slowly whilst Inej lowered the lights and lay back down. Sadja seemed on the verge of settling back to sleep and Kaz stood to return her to the cradle next to the bed, only for her to immediately start wailing again.
“Well I hope you’re not still hungry,” he said softly in Suli, giving her a gente bounce “I think Mama’s asleep,”
She flailed one of her tiny fists into the air and it whacked lightly against Kaz’s chest.
“Not bad form,” he told her, “But you need more strength behind it if you want to do real damage. We’ll work on that when you’re older. What can we do to help you sleep now though, hm?”
Sadja wriggled in his arm and Kaz moved to sit on one of the armchairs so he could set down his cane and support her more comfortably. 
“I don’t have anything new to read to you,” he said, “But I could tell you a story if you’d like,”
There was a pause broken only by Sadja’s impatient cries, before Inej’s soft voice came from the darkness on the other side of the room:
“You know the whole idea of us using one language each with her whilst she's still learning kind of depends on you speaking to her in Kerch, right?”
Kaz looked up.
“Inej? I thought you were asleep,”
“Kaz, if you think anyone could fall asleep through this then I have serious concerns about your hearing. And, again, you’re supposed to speak in Kerch,”
“I’m still not convinced that’s going to work,” he replied, “Isn’t she just going to hear us using both with each other anyway?”
Inej groaned.
“It’s three in the morning, Kaz, can we talk about this later?”
He laughed softly, nodding though he wasn’t sure if she’d see in the dark. He’d known that he needed to go to the Slat - the last word from Anika and Pim had been concerningly vague -  but he could stay here a little while yet, couldn’t he? What harm would it do, just to stay here for a little longer? He sighed.
“You need to go, don’t you?”
He didn’t know how she did that.
“It can wait until tomorrow,”
“You can’t,” said Inej, quietly, “Go on. I’ll get her settled, just don’t be long, okay?”
“Never,”
He really needed to stop watching the clock, or he wouldn’t get anything done and have to bully himself into staying longer. It was a good while past five bells when he left, ignoring the shouts for attention that followed him from the crowd. The Hendriks house was mostly still sleeping, though Wylan was unsurprisingly up and in the kitchen making coffee by the time Kaz arrived at six bells. Inej was awake but she was still upstairs, not long dressed and part way through brushing her hair when Kaz knocked softly on the door. She opened it slowly, pressing a finger to her lips as he slipped inside.
“Sadja’s asleep,”
Kaz stood over the cradle for a moment, watching her. She really was perfect. Inej appeared next to him, her arm slipping around his waist once he’d nodded confirmation. She leaned her head against his shoulder.
“She already looks like you,” she whispered.
Kaz shook his head.
“She’s beautiful. That’s all you,”
Inej shook her head then, her hand finding his and slipping beneath the rim so her fingers brushed his wrist. Kaz’s heart leapt, thinking of holding her on the floor almost a year ago, a knife in her gut and her blood soaking over both of them. He swallowed and she felt him tense, starting to pull away to give him space. His fingers tightened over hers, holding her to him. 
“We’ve not…” she hesitated, “We’ve not talked about a plan for where to live. For what to do next,”
Kaz had been avoiding the conversation, because he didn’t actually know what he was going to say. But it was a year ago when he couldn’t tell her everything he’d thought he should be able to say by now - 
Their happiness, together. In Kerch, in Ravka, they could move to the permafrost in Fjerda for all he cared. He would carve a life for her in the face of a mountain, if that was what she wanted.
- and so much had changed since then. He should be able to tell her that now. And he did.
Inej turned and leaned her face up towards his, glowing in the soft dancing light of dawn leaking through the window, her dark eyes shimmering. She lifted a hand up to cup his cheek, and slowly they leaned into each other. Their foreheads pressed against each other, Kaz’s hand slipped down Inej’s back, and their lips met in the warmth of spring and joy and a family that for so long Kaz had convinced himself he didn’t want, because he never thought he’d be able to find it. 
The entire world was golden.
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