Tumgik
#probably to put more effort in the lonely mountains ep :’)
GUESS WHOS THE LAZIEST MV FAN ANd just watched the lonely mountain ep for the first timeee!’!!! :’D
4 notes · View notes
shijiujun · 3 years
Text
Lonely Dream | 孤梦
Summary: And when all is done and dusted, sometimes Lao Wen still gets those headaches of his, and the spots where Ah Xu had the nails driven in stil throb in pain on a cold, rainy day.
Some slice of life and domesticity for WenZhou as they enjoy more years than they expected to have initially, together.
Notes: OKAY so there are too many theories going out there for special ep ending, and nah not going there! So the concept of this is SOMEHOW Zhou Zishu saves Wen Kexing at the end of Ep 36, and they need to head into icy mountain cave for a WHILE but not forever. They head back down to Four Seasons Manor once Wen Kexing recovers.
Basically SHL ver. WenZhou, but with TYK ending (where WenZhou fight in the icy mountains for a bit after Wu Xi cures him and then head back down into the world of the living). No immortal lifespan, but hey, they get the rest of their normal lives together! So yeah, they can still eat normally, no snow and ice diet please.
Word Count: 4,500+ 
✨✨ Link on AO3 ✨✨
******
They visit Ah Xiang and Cao Weining’s graves once Wen Kexing’s year-long recovery in the frigid cold of the mountains is complete.
Zhou Zishu says that it is for Lao Wen’s recuperation, but he suspects Wen Kexing, the heartless bastard, knows that he has taken this year too, to finally stop hurting, to stop going through the bone-deep, heart-wrenching terror at the prospect of losing him.
Opening his eyes in the armoury a year ago, his five senses were returned to him, but at what price? Feeling Lao Wen’s cold hands against his, his stark, blinding white hair a horrifying contrast against his beautiful face, and the man almost leaving him.
Leaving him, once again.
Horror turned into anger, the words stuck in his throat, his chest so tight and heart slamming against the bones caging it, Zhou Zishu had regained all that he had lost-
-and then lost the most important thing, person, to him.
Someone he values above his own life, who had lied to him, who had so stupidly, stupidly gave himself up for him.
Zhou Zishu does not want to remember how he survived that day, how he spent minutes, hours, and days after, making sure Lao Wen continued to hang on to his very last breath.
In the past year, the cold he was constantly plagued with had nothing to do with the wintry landscape.
He knows he is pushing it a little — his eyes have rarely left Wen Kexing since they were moved to the mountains at Wu Xi and Senior Ye’s suggestions. Initially, Lao Wen slept and Zhou Zishu had no idea if he would ever wake up.
Before he would even open his eyes, the panic typically set in just like that, gripping him by the throat the moment he woke. Zhou Zishu would have to reach out for Lao Wen across him on the bed, the fear receding only when he heard and felt Lao Wen’s breaths under his fingertips.
For a long time, Zhou Zishu thought that he would be with Lao Wen in this state for the rest of his life. It was not all bad — as long as Lao Wen was alive, who cared if he spent the rest of his years guarding a sleeping Wen Kexing?
Who’s the lazy one now, Lao Wen, he thought plenty of times in the months after, his hands caressing at Wen Kexing’s cheek bones and pale face, which was of the same colour as his white hair.
Fortunately, fortunately… he managed to keep the person he wanted in the end.
They have been so focused on recuperating, stuck in the mountains and in that isolated environment, it was easy to distance themselves from everything that had and was happening outside.
Even though Wen Kexing did not mention a thing, Zhou Zishu knows that he spends some nights awake, looking out into a sky full of stars, quiet and pensive. He knows it, because he does the same.
For Jiu Xiao, for Han Ying, for Qing Luan.
For a young woman who called him Zishu-ge and Sickly Ghost, who threatened to fight him if he left Wen Kexing all alone. A beautiful young woman who should have gotten her happy ending on that tragic afternoon.
For a young man, who had a smile that could light up even the darkest of corners in a place like the Ghost Valley, who would have protected his to-be wife with everything he had.
The pain and grief that comes with losing Ah Xiang and Cao Weining is no easier to bear a year on.
===
Wen Kexing recalls the way she looked that day, all beautiful in her green and red bridal robes, finally able to live a life basking under the sunshine without anything holding her back. That was what he always wanted for her.
What a huge mistake that wedding was.
His whole life, aside from Ah Xu, has been a cycle of repeated mistakes, over and over again. If he had just put his foot down and insisted on not letting Mo Huaiyi in, if he had not just walked away in anger and instead stayed there, they would have stopped Xiao Cao’s death, and Ah Xiang’s after.
Why had he walked off? How did beautiful Ah Xiang, an Ah Xiang he was ready to give away, end up taking her last breath in his arms?
A sting on his right ear pulls him violently out of his depressed reverie, and he yells, “Ow- Ow, ow, ow, Ah Xu!”
“Don’t think that I don’t know what you’re thinking,” Zhou Zishu says, pulling Wen Kexing’s face close to him by the ear. “There is no point dwelling in the past. Life and death… when the time comes, no one can escape from it.”
Wen Kexing’s eyes sober a little, bitterness flashing across his face. Remnants of his hatred and resentment from more than a year ago, before he met Ah Xu.
“If I had just kept her with me-“
“We all make our choices,” Zhou Zishu says, his voice gentling as he lets Wen Kexing go, but the man does not move away.
“If she had to choose again, she would probably have chosen the same.”
In the cold, their hands find their way to each other, clasping warmly under their thick sleeves, the rims lined with fur.
They stare at the graves for a little longer. And while Wen Kexing has never believed in some higher power up there or the heavens-
-this time, with every ounce of his being, he prays and wishes that Ah Xiang and that pig will find their ways back to each other in the next life, no matter what.
Zhou Zishu’s hand squeezes around his, and Wen Kexing turns to see his Ah Xu’s warm smile and gaze.
“Shall we go home?”
Home. The place where they can live out the rest of their natural lives together.
“Let’s go home,” Wen Kexing agrees.
===
“Ah Xu, that is not the way you-“
Hearing Wen Kexing nag for the thousandth time, Zhou Zishu has finally had enough. Slamming the broad vegetable knife onto the wooden chopping board loudly, he turns and looks at the man next to him.
“I’m not the one who begged me to do this,” Zhou Zishu says, turning to walk away, “You make dinner. I told you it was a waste of time-“
Before he can finish his sentence, warmth engulfs his back, and something sharp snuggles into his shoulder bone. A familiar scent — jasmine, from the incense that Wen Kexing likes to use — wraps around him, hands trapping him in between the counter and the limpet attached to him.
Wen Kexing’s palms close over his hands, then guides them to pick up the knife again. Zhou Zishu stiffens, but does not move away. He lets Wen Kexing curl his own fingers properly over the cabbage, and chop at it neatly, over and over.
They have not yet spoken about this between them, despite laying in the same bed right next to each other night after night. The cave was hardly a luxurious abode and to save effort and space, Zhou Zishu fell asleep next to a comatose Wen Kexing for several months, wanting to ascertain that he was alive and breathing at any given moment.
After Wen Kexing woke, Zhou Zishu continued to sleep next to him, and Lao Wen never once brought it up in conversation.
Coming back to Four Seasons Manor, Wen Kexing naturally turned up in his room instead of the one he was staying at before, already asleep when Zhou Zishu returned to turn in.
This man is his soulmate, the person he would give everything up for no matter what it was. His lost shidi, but even before that, this man was someone who was willing to do everything he could for him. Who cared for him like no one else ever would again.
Beyond that? Zhou Zishu knows of his feelings, and is rather certain of Wen Kexing’s. He supposes that after pledging to save each other’s lives at the expense of their own repeatedly, some things just do not have to be articulated.
Zhou Zishu leans into the hold, relaxing entirely.
At this, it is Wen Kexing’s turn to be stunned at the reciprocation where he was expecting none before, but the man recovers quickly. He snuggles in even closer, the side of his face pressed right up against Zhou Zishu’s. 
His Ah Xu remains still, as if unbothered, and Wen Kexing decides to try his luck.
“Ah Xu,” he angles his head slightly, his mouth brushing lightly over Zhou Zishu’s cheek as he murmurs straight into his ear.
Ah, there it is. Zhou Zishu freezes against him, now making to move his ear out of Wen Kexing’s reach.
“What?”
Wen Kexing smiles, amused and so, so fond.
His voice still low and sultry, he continues, “I think you’re right, you should let me cook instead. You’re murdering the cabbage.”
Zhou Zishu pauses for a good two seconds before turning to glare at Wen Kexing. Wen Kexing recognizes that look, and the warmth on Zhou Zishu’s back vanishes instantly just as he starts waving the knife at him.
“Wen Kexing, don’t you think you’re being ridiculous and childish-“
Laughter fills the kitchen, a sound that is incredibly melodious, immediately soothing all the uneasiness Zhou Zishu feels.
Outside, all twenty disciples try not to peek and look at their shifu and shishu being strange again. One of the younger ones, Xiao Man, cannot help but angle his head in the direction of the kitchen, and then says, “Da-shixiong, shifu is going after shishu with a knife! Is he going to be okay?”
Zhang Chengling sighs inwardly, then smiles and pats the boy on the head.
“That’s shifu’s way of showing how much he cares about shishu.”
Back in the kitchen, having heard that tiny quip from their youngest disciple, Wen Kexing finally stops in his tracks, turning around mid-escape to grab Zhou Zishu around the waist with a hand, and the other going to the hand that is holding onto the knife and stopping his Ah Xu from possibly murdering him.
He sets the knife aside, but his other hand does not move.
“What are you doing,” grumbles Zhou Zishu, looking away, his expression a little stern, as if telling Wen Kexing not to be such a nuisance.
This close, however, Wen Kexing can certainly see the light flush on Ah Xu’s cheekbones. 
If Wen Kexing had to rank all the beautiful bones that Ah Xu has, it would probably be scapulas first, followed by his cheekbones.
Wen Kexing’s eyes dip a little lower.
He thinks collarbones may rank third.
“Ah Xu.”
“What?” sighs Zhou Zishu. “Let me go, the disciples need to finish the last set of practice-“
He is cut off when Wen Kexing swoops downwards, and catches his lips in his.
Zhou Zishu’s eyes go wide, but before he can do anything like move away and out of Wen Kexing’s firm hold, the man circles his waist with both arms, effectively trapping him and bringing him closer.
Wen Kexing’s body temperature tends to run on the colder side these days, a side effect of him having been brought back from the brink of death.
Right now, however, Zhou Zishu can feel nothing else but the scalding heat. His hands move up, intending to push Wen Kexing away, but they end up clutching tight around the man’s broad shoulders.
He does not stop the kiss, letting Wen Kexing’s lips roam as they like.
Outside, an unfortunate Chengling who sees this finds his eyes going wide.
“Erm,” he clears his throat quite loudly, gaining all the disciples’ attention. “Let’s head outside to finish our practice.”
He ushers everyone out, while wondering how the hell he hadn’t seen this coming.
Everything makes so much sense now.
===
Four Seasons Manor grows, and Zhang Chengling along with Bi Xingming end up taking over some classes and teaching of their own.
Wen Kexing does not want to admit it, but it seems that when he asked Ah Xu if he was a servant here, the man actually meant it. His little Chengling, who is not so little anymore, still comes to him to ask for tips or begs him to give some pointers to the other disciples, but most of the time, Wen Kexing is cooking.
He makes breakfast, is involved in lunch, and definitely ends up cooking a feast every dinner. Thankfully, Bi Xingming is unlike his da-shixiong and shifu as he actually has some kitchen sense, but Wen Kexing has truly been demoted to servant in this manor.
A servant that ends up in his master’s bed every night, Wen Kexing thinks then, and feels better about it immediately.
“Shishu, let me help you bring these out,” Bi Xingming says, stepping into the kitchen just as he’s done with the last dish.
“Mnn,” Wen Kexing hums in assent without looking up from his soup, tasting it one last time.
At the very least, these days, Zhou Zishu is able to actually, actually taste the food he lovingly cooks.
“Perfect,” he nods. “Is your shifu not up yet? It’s almost lunch time.”
“Ah…” Bi Xingming blinks, “You said not to disturb him until he wakes up, and he hasn’t left the room since morning.”
Wen Kexing frowns slightly. Sure, he worked Ah Xu over thoroughly last night, but not to the extent that he would need to sleep in for this long. Worry niggling at him, he gets Bi Xingming to start lunch with the other disciples first without waiting for them, and heads in the direction of their room.
The last time Zhou Zishu slept in so late, it was the night he confessed his past to Wen Kexing, of how he caused the deaths of everyone in Four Seasons Manor. He was deathly ill then and emotionally wrung out — things that Wen Kexing loathes to see on Zhou Zishu.
“Ah Xu?” Wen Kexing calls, sliding the door open gently.
The lump under the covers is the same as when he left it this morning. Wen Kexing takes quick strides and goes over, sitting down on the bed next to Ah Xu.
“Ah Xu?” he calls again, his voice soft as he reaches out for Zhou Zishu’s face.
His lips are pale, eyebrows furrowed and perspiring at the forehead.
“Ah Xu, are you ill? What’s wrong?”
Zhou Zishu’s skin is of normal temperature, much to Wen Kexing’s relief. His brain runs through a a million scenarios, none of them good and just as he’s about to yell for Chengling, something clicks in his head.
He does yell for their Chengling in the end, but for a hot bath instead with a pack of herbs and medicine from the stash Wu Xi gave them before he headed back home with Jing Beiyuan.
“Is shifu okay?” he asks, worried.
“He will be,” Wen Kexing says, lifting Zhou Zishu out from under the covers and heading for the bath. “Don’t worry, I’ll watch him. You continue training with the other disciples, otherwise when Ah Xu wakes up he’s going to scold all of you again.”
As Zhou Zishu soaks in the steaming medicinal bath, Wen Kexing sits right next to him, pillowing his head on his arms, which are sitting on the rim of the wooden tub and stares at him.
A few years have passed since the days when Wen Kexing despaired at Zhou Zishu dying in a short few years and the peace they have now makes it easy to not think about the past. He forgets sometimes that despite being healed, despite him giving his life force to Ah Xu, the man’s body has been to hell and back with the nails.
And forcing them out of his body forcefully while he mistakenly believed that Wen Kexing was dead, wanting to take revenge for him-
For the rest of their time together, Wen Kexing knows he will forever be guilt-ridden at this. If only he had just told Ah Xu, if only he didn’t make another stupid decision, there would have been no need for the armoury. No need for self-sacrificial plays, no need for lost time.
That Zhou Zishu would love him still and be with him, that is nothing short of a miracle.
On days like these, when the weather turns just the slightest bit wet and cold, his body starts to hurt, especially the points where he kept the nails in. All seven of them, the stupid man.
Wen Kexing inches forward and presses a kiss to the man’s temple.
For this life and every life after this one, Wen Kexing swears he will always be good to Zhou Zishu.
===
He loves and hates Wen Kexing’s hair, even after several years have passed. They are nearing the ten-year mark since leaving the mountains, and Zhou Zishu has slept next to this man every single day after, but whenever Wen Kexing shows up, Zhou Zishu has to admit that his breath is always taken away.
Wen Kexing looks ethereally gorgeous with those white strands, his features standing out even more clearly, not that Zhou Zishu would ever tell him that lest it goes to his head. However, it is a reminder that his silly, stupid shidi and now husband would dare to sacrifice his own life for his without telling him.
It is a constant reminder that he lost him, even if momentarily.
“Ah Xu, why are you are staring at me like that? You’re going to make me shy. Did you miss me? I was only gone for two days,” Wen Kexing says unabashedly during dinner.
At once, coughs and chokes go around the table, and the clanking of dropped chopsticks on the table echo through the dining hall.
Zhou Zishu takes a deep breath to compose himself and resists the urge to fight with the man over dinner. It would be a waste of food, not to mention a futile argument seeing that Wen Kexing has not changed at all since the first time they met. As long as he does not break out into poetry-
“Ah Xu, I missed you too. It is so fortunate that your heart is akin to mine-“
At that, everyone immediately stands from the table and excuses themselves, stumbling over one another as they parrot that they are full and do not want to have anymore.
It is an open secret that they are together — not because they are hiding it, but simply because they find no need to verbalize what they are to others — and if it was another couple that was stuck in this situation, he would possibly find it amusing, but Wen Kexing is incorrigible and has been for years. 
Zhou Zishu finds that while he loves the man and is utterly devoted to him, is willing to die for him, at times like these maybe they should have both just stayed dead.
“Wen Kexing, have you had enough?”
He reaches out, intending to pinch at Wen Kexing as a lesson, but the man catches his hand within his deft fingers and brings it upwards so his hand is cupping one side of his face. Wen Kexing turns his head a little to press his lips to the open palm, a soft smile tugging at his lips.
“I missed you,” Wen Kexing repeats. “It’s strange how it has only been two days, but I miss you like I’ve never missed anything else before.”
The impending reprimand dies on his lips.
Fine, just this once.
Zhou Zishu sighs and pinches at Wen Kexing’s cheek instead.
“Ow, ow! Ah Xu, Ah Xu, this face is a work of the heavens, how can you trample on it like this?!”
Zhou Zishu’s eyes are once again drawn to Wen Kexing’s white locks, and he unconsciously reaches out.
As if knowing what Zhou Zishu is thinking about, Wen Kexing grabs for the hand again, interlacing their fingers together.
“I’m sorry I didn’t tell you before I faked my death, and then not telling you at the end, before I….” Wen Kexing says, swallowing with difficulty. “Ah Xu, if I could change it, I would. But at the end, if I was given the same choice, I would have chosen the same.”
It hurts to think about that morning, seeing Wen Kexing’s hair all white and almost lifeless, his hands dropping from his.
“I know,” Zhou Zishu breathes, hiding his face in Wen Kexing’s shoulder. “I know.”
===
Zhou Zishu hears of the supposed ambush on Four Seasons Manor while he  has half a day’s journey left before he gets home.
The unrest in jianghu truly never ends; their fight with the Scorpions, with Tian Chuang, with Prince Jin and Zhao Jing was rewarded with peace for a few years, but people never say contented for long. Old sects are wiped out and new ones emerge. Most of them know not to mess with Four Seasons Manor as his and Wen Kexing’s reputations indeed precede themselves, but it is unavoidable, perhaps, for some newer and ambitious ones to mistakenly think they can take both of them on.
Well, they must have made sure Zhou Zishu was not in the manor before striking, as if Wen Kexing could not take all of them on himself.
He arrives in the nick of time in the heat of battle, although a quick glance shows that Four Seasons Manor is still holding up pretty well, with Zhang Chengling and Bi Xingming leading the rest of the disciples.
And there he is, Wen Kexing, all regal in his red embroidered robes, and his white hair pinned up neatly. Every movement from his sharp and deadly fan strikes true. His eyebrows are furrowed slightly, his eyes revealing a thirst for blood that Zhou Zishu hasn’t seen in a while.
He shivers at the want that hits him, even though it is not the time and place for it.
Zhou Zishu lands opportunely behind Wen Kexing and parries a blow that was coming straight for Wen Kexing back.
The both of them exchange a glance, and wordlessly, delve right back into the fight.
When the dust settles a few hours later, Zhou Zishu makes sure injured disciples are looked at while others clean up the mess. His attention finally freed up so he can focus solely on Wen Kexing, Zhou Zishu turns, only to see his husband a distance away from him, supporting himself against a wall.
He recognizes the signs of Wen Kexing’s brain-splitting headaches immediately, and rushes over.
“Lao Wen!”
“Shishu!”
Zhou Zishu catches Wen Kexing just as he collapses, his legs giving out under him. His fingers immediately search for Wen Kexing’s pulse.
This is an all-too familiar scene, but Zhou Zishu cannot remember when this last happened. His body growing cold at the implications, all the fears are now suddenly dredged up from the trenches of trauma sustained at a point in time long ago.
“Go get Physician Yao,” Zhou Zishu snaps at whichever disciple is standing closest to them, before picking Wen Kexing up.
Zhang Chengling turns up in their room before the physician does, and whatever fear he is experiencing right now abates slightly.
Before the manor started to grow, there was only the three of them. If anyone understands what he is feeling right now, it would be Chengling.
“Shifu…” he says, trailing off as he kneels down next to the bed and looks at Wen Kexing. “Shishu hasn’t had this in years, what happened?”
“Maybe… I don’t know,” Zhou Zishu exhales heavily. “He could be just.. too tired.”
They watch over him until the physician arrives. Zhou Zishu refuses to be chased out, and the tightness in his chest only disappears once she rolls her eyes at him after testing Wen Kexing’s pulse.
“The both of you are not young anymore,” Physician Yao almost scoffs. “And the injuries and illnesses that the both of you share combined can fill up a list a mile long. He hasn’t exerted himself like this in a long while, suddenly letting it all out in a fight like that, of course there are bound to be side effects. Stop looking at him as if he’s about to die.”
Zhou Zishu is about to thank her, when a weak rasp comes from the bed, “… been there, done that.”
Relief floods him at the sound of Wen Kexing’s voice, and immediately after, anger burns hot through him as the man’s words sink in, “Wen Kexing!”
Physician Yao retreats, knowing by now not to give instructions to them both when they get like this. Instead, speaking to any of their disciples would be much more reliable.
===
Later, after all has quietened down for certain, the stench of blood fading somewhat, Wen Kexing blinks languidly, not wanting to move at all, or do anything.
If he was to die in this position right now, he would have zero complaints.
Zhou Zishu pats at the back of his head gently as Wen Kexing lies almost half on him, his ear pressed over Zhou Zishu’s heart, comforted by the strong beat. Years later, the both of them approaching the big five-o, and Wen Kexing is still like a child sometimes.
Well, he’s making up for lost time.
He is greedy for more years with Ah Xu, in this life and every single life after. A hundred, a thousand years and more. Every little bit, he wants to spend with Ah Xu.
“Ah Xu,” he murmurs, and feels the vibration of the man’s response through his chest, “Before, I could not have what I wanted. I could not play when I wanted to, there was no one to teach me martial arts when I wanted to learn and the things I wanted I could not afford.”
“The person I wanted to keep, I was too late.”
This conversation seems so far away now, but is as clear to the both of them as if it happened just yesterday. That rainy, storming night.
A night of despair and hopelessness.
Zhou Zishu huffs in amusement.
“And now?” he asks.
Wen Kexing looks up, and cheekily responds, “Well, the martial arts part aside, Ah Xu, you pay for everything now, so I can afford everything! And in terms of play… you would know best how well I play now with-“
He’s cut off with a warning look from Zhou Zishu, although the man does not attempt to jostle him, still worried about his earlier headache and injuries sustained from the fight.
Wen Kexing loves this man, to the depths of hell and back.
“And… the person I want to keep, is right here with me.”
Zhou Zishu’s answering smile lights up every fibre of being.
They have forever to look forward to.
***
247 notes · View notes
princessalethea · 4 years
Text
ESSAY: Reaching Out to You
(Previously published on Patreon and Substack)
I’m still having a hard time writing on the laptop. The last few months have been full of actual handwriting as I fill pages in my journal, take copious notes during dharma talks, and write scads and scads of poetry. There’s something about poetry. For me, it just has to be written by hand. 
Every time I open the computer and sit down with it, I am immediately overwhelmed with the need to go do something else. And, in these “uncertain times,” I have been giving myself permission to do that. It’s resulted in better eating habits, more exercise, fewer weeds, and a clean living room, kitchen and foyer. I’m still playing around with German and Portuguese on Duolingo, and I’ve picked up a few words in Croatian. I’m almost finished reading Buddhism for Dummies—Hinduism for Dummies is next. 
There was a brief time this month where I did consider Camp NaNoWriMo. I added all of 1600 words to my indie rock romance. I don’t know if any of it’s useable. I’m still too close to the whole Songwriting thing. (More on that in a sec.) The only other time I sat down to write was when I added 500 or so words to my Green Mountain Girl Christmas romance. A byproduct of having Hallmark’s Christmas in July movies on in the background to keep me calm during the day, I’m sure. 
But these are the days we really need to forgive ourselves. Like…more than usual. 
Pandemic Unemployment Assistance is about to run out, and I’ve stopped signing & selling books from my home because I don’t feel safe going to the post office, but my expenses (apart from food and AC) have been fairly low, so I have a little saved up. I’m not going to be in dire straits because I still don’t have a damn agent yet, or a new book contract. Do I wish I had finished a novel in July? Sure. But even if I had, what would I have done with it? Shove it in the trunk and start on the next one. 
Looking back on the last two months, I feel that my time was more wisely spent. 
I am so glad I wrote that essay back in May, when I was still early in the throes of Saturday Songwrite. I was in love with everything. Rockets in the blue sky. The smell of blooming magnolias as I walked around the neighborhood. Surprise rain showers. Packages from dear friends. Chaos gardening. A mop-headed singer named Gary and the community of strangers all over the world brought together by his antics on Instagram. 
Shortly after I wrote the May essay, I started adding all the Songwriters as friends on Instagram. (It was something I had already done with the folks from Rick Worthy’s chats, because “the friend of my friend is my friend,” you know.) Maybe I would get sick of Snow Patrol, throwing myself into the deep end of the fandom like this, but I hadn’t gotten sick of this band’s songs after over a decade. (“The Lightning Strike” is still my surefire way to calm down during a panic attack.) I was willing to take the risk.
I think I was friends with Camila first, who runs the SnowPatrolNewsBR fan site out of Brazil (thus the desire to learn a bit more Portuguese). She was there for the Songwrite session where Gary saw absolutely none of my lyric ideas. After filling four pages with suggestions, he called an end to it. Frustrated, I typed “Not a damn word ACK!” into the chat. Of course, THAT he saw. What then ensued was a hilarious and frustrating non-conversation where Gary attempted to talk to me, and the Instagram algorithm wouldn’t let him see any of my answers. (I’ll have to write up that whole detailed adventure for you guys one day—suffice it to say, it was incredibly emotional and epic). 
While Gary popped off to work on the song, I went live on Instagram in case any of my fellow Songwriters were still around. After not being heard in such a huge way, I wanted to tell my side of the story. My face was completely red, and I vented to the few lovely souls who stopped in to listen. 
When Gary went live again at the end of the hour he read of a list of the phrases he’d used in the song, including “not a damn word”, which a sweet fellow Songwriter had suggested he add to his list anyway. Gary even showed us where he had written “not a damn word” at the top of his legal pad. My chat erupted with “Alethea!” shouted by my friends from all across the world, and my heart melted. 
Gary probably didn’t see that either. It didn’t matter.
That was week 11 of Saturday Songwrite. Odd numbers are my friends—my lyrics had magically managed to find their way into songs we created on weeks 5, 7a, 9, and now 11. (My ancestors would be proud—odd numbers are Greeky luck thing.)
The protests and riots really picked up after that, and after Blackout Tuesday Gary put Songwrite on pause. I knew I would miss spending time with my friends, so I went live that Saturday at “Gary o’clock” to give any lonely, wandering Songwriter a safe place to hang out. A few showed up. We chatted and commiserated and found solace in each other. 
There was never another Songwrite after that. 
I had unknowingly picked up the Songwrite torch at the exact moment Gary set it down. With it I assumed a great responsibility that I was absolutely prepared for—after all, the last lyric of the last Songwrite had been mine. In a way, I felt like I owed it to the Songwriter community to do what I could to keep us connected. 
Which is why it feels like I’ve lived several lifetimes since that May essay. I’ve been helping to hold a brilliant, compassionate worldwide community together with whatever tape and glue I have at my disposal…while also grieving the loss of Songwrite myself. I mean, we all knew it was going to end sometime. We just didn’t expect it quite so soon. We didn’t exactly have time to prepare. We didn’t have time to say goodbye. We didn’t have closure. But we had each other.
And now we have a song.
“Reaching Out to You,” the first single released by Snow Patrol and the Saturday Songwriters, is now available on Spotify (and a million other places, depending on your level of subscription). I invite you to have a listen. Dance around your living room. Play it on repeat. (Seriously! We need to rack up the number of listens!)
The full five-song EP, The Fireside Sessions, will be out August 21st. The digital album is available for pre-order at Amazon, iTunes, and other venues. Hard copy CDs are available through Snow Patrol’s website. 
Instead of trying to find a way to pay the Songwriters for our work, all proceeds of the album’s sales are going to the Trussell Trust, a charity that supports a network of food banks across the UK. (Because no one should have to go hungry right now, and Snow Patrol is mostly based out of the UK.)
And so it was that Gary Lightbody had a brainwave and used his powers (and Instagram) during lockdown 2020 to save the lives and lighten the heavy hearts of thousands of dedicated fans across the world. And maybe, through our efforts, we can put food in the bellies of thousands of hungry children in the UK…who will be able to grow up and write their own songs and inspire more people. I am honored to have been a part of this cycle. To still be a part. 
Because the story’s not over yet…
[To Be Continued]
The post ESSAY: Reaching Out to You appeared first on Alethea Kontis.
from ESSAY: Reaching Out to You
0 notes