( A little elbow. Please. As if Lan Wangji hasn't become intimately aware of the extent to which his title is as nothing to children, who scale, cling and coo on or at him without regret. He is grateful for their keen compassion to forgive his inability to engage them wholly.
Even now, though Yuan largely sleeps, Lan Wangji cannot help the burst of affection within his chest, to think of a creature so at ease in his home that he burrowed in to sleep, without qualm. It means more to him than to most. )
Then, he is invited. ( Better to embrace the inconvenience of a squirming, good-natured, jovial body than to begrudge it. )
[Wei Wuxian laughs softly, standing up to give Lan Zhan a hug in his amusement.]
Such a good father, an excellent father! [He may get jealous that Yuan seems to like Lan Zhan better than him... but his jealousy is nothing compared to Yuan's care. The two love each other, that's plain to see, and Lan Zhan is willing to give him everything he wants. That counts for more than Wei Wuxian's pointless little feelings.
After the hug is done, he leans against Lan Zhan's shoulder and smiles up at him.]
Save some of the spoiling for me, though. I don't want to be the responsible parent and do nothing but scold him. That doesn't suit me!
( Only, somehow, affirmative, accepting. No, the image of the strict, scolding parent does not suit Wei Ying — but Lan Wangji is somehow even less suited. They have managed to come together, two men rendered soft and tremble-lipped by the molten looks of children. And now they think they are equipped to father them. For shame.
Just as he prepares to put the point of their incompetence before Wei Ying, two sets of butterflies rush forward: Zewu-Jun's, then Uncle's, closely after. He receives them, humming his approval and instructing a message returned with thanks, before informing Wei Ying: )
They agree. ( A beat. ) Uncle suggests he is more suitable, having minded children. Zewu-Jun... anticipated the argument and reminds he too raised me.
[Wei Wuxian doesn't cackle, but it's a near thing.]
You know what I think?
We should let them fight. In that funny Lan way, the really passive-aggressive way where people just quote rules at each other or pretend to be really nice. [He loved watching those when he was still a guest disciple for the lectures, any time he wasn't getting up to mischief or being punished for said mischief. It's one of the times that he thinks the Lan rules may have merit, because the Lans make verbal sparring entertaining.
Watching two Lans go at it is better than watching street performers.]
It could keep A-Yuan entertained for a while, and help him figure out if he likes his father's older brother or uncle better.
( He startles, gaze wide, bright, nearly luminous. Staring at Wei Ying with rare conern, as if what he has spoken is — perhaps not untrue, but bordering on blasphemy.
...is this how Wei Ying sees them? Passive-aggressive, quick to resort to the rules as weapons, rather than mutual guidance toward virtue? Does he expect no better of Gusu Lan and its foremost leaders? Of course, Lan Wangji cannot demand he should sport kinder sentiments toward anyone, but to think of his own blood and flesh so reviled is a bitter, jarring thing. )
Hmmm? [Wei Wuxian looks up at him more closely, turning his head so he rests his chin on Lan Zhan's shoulder.]
You think they'll just decide who will take A-Yuan? Or will you decide for them?
Aiyah, all right, all right. [He won't get to see Lan Qiren and Zewu-jun face off! A shame!] I'm sure whoever you pick will do well and adore A-Yuan, anyway.
I believe they would comport themselves with dignity.
( Says he, the second son of a lineage that includes Zewu-Jun, playful and thrumming with laughter. Ah, perhaps he exaggerates. All the same, it is not for Wei Ying to shame his people. )
You married in. Speak well of brother and uncle.
( They are now Wei Ying's own to defend, for all he does not know so. For all he might have wanted to wed Lan Wangji, and he alone. He understands, perhaps better than Wei Ying, the complications of their matrimony — that there are lines that should not be crossed, yet that they have already trampled. )
[Wei Wuxian doesn't puff his cheeks at being scolded, but it's a near thing. He barely even knows why! Did Lan Zhan take offense at Wei Wuxian wanting to see his uncle and brother in a Lan face-off?
Aiya.]
All right. I'm sorry, Lan Zhan. [Then he rubs his cheek against Lan Zhan's shoulder, looking up at him with the biggest eyes he can muster, like a puppy begging for scraps from the table.]
( His Wei Ying, lies this man with his sweet mouth. His. And how can Lan Wangji refuse him? In the end, no harm was done, and what few sensitivities were rustled can still be calmed.
As Wei Ying leans in, he welcomes him with a soft, warm hand to his — husband's cheek, calling him to his chest. Like a second, greater child, for all Lan Wangji's intent is increasingly wanting, shamefully desirous.
He wants, more fool he, to kiss this man. )
Not mine to forgive. ( Only his to have, to hold, to treasure. And to subdue, as Yuan shows fledgling starts of stirring. ) Wei Ying. May I kiss you again?
[Those, he thinks, are among the sweetest words that Lan Zhan has said to him today. Not the sweetest, because Wei Wuxian can think of so much more immediately such as the agreement of sharing a bed, but certainly among them.]
Yes. [Lan Zhan need not ask. He no longer needs to, because Wei Wuxian will always say yes, and he would rather cut out that moment in favor of getting to the good part. But he thinks he understands why Lan Zhan will do it all the same.
He stands up properly, so they're on more even footing and Lan Zhan doesn't have to bend down far just to reach him.]
( I am already here, he needn't say, because Wei Ying sees him, knows him, takes the measure of him and finds him — not wholly wanting. A creature he can deign to tolerate, to welcome close.
This time, when he dips in, the kiss isn't soft, isn't without victims or consequence. It burns, and Lan Wangji's fingers dig into the sides of Wei Ying's face, and he pushes their mouths together — hasty, perhaps clumsy, mean. They kiss, and a young moan shatters their peace, and he tips his forehead into Wei Ying's. They break apart. He kisses him again.
A slow, tidal circuit of breaks and incursions, of intimacy purposed. In the end, a-Yuan gives out the small, curious cry of a young creature finding itself gradually awake in a space he's never fully inhabited — and Lan Wangji pulls back, cheeks flushed. )
[Wei Wuxian's lips twist, biting back some teasing-- oh, so he's my son when he's in need of cuddles?, or some such. But his heart is with their son right now, the soft crying a concern when he never wants to hear A-Yuan cry for whatever reason.
But he's also not the sort of parent to smother their child's genuine expression of feelings, when he knows A-Yuan needed to not be so noisy in order to survive the camp. He's had to find a happy medium between the two.]
More kisses later, husband. [This is not a request or an expectation, but a promise. Punctuated with a brush of his thumb over Lan Zhan's lower lip, before he drops his body in an ungainly manner on the sheets right next to Yuan, startling the tears that they halt.]
Aiya, little one, what are you crying for? Want gege's hugs? Come here, come here--
[He welcomes the child climbing on top of him, rolling onto his back to make himself a more comfortable bed. This does give him a good view of what's up above, and grins at Lan Zhan as he wraps his arms around their son's tiny body.]
( More, later. As if a merchant, promising away his wares, never delivering. Barely luring Lan Wangji close and closer, moth to the flame. Wei Ying's mouth is yet plush, still inviting.
Lan Wangji nearly orbits close again —
...but then there is a-Yuan, rightfully demanding his gege's care, and Lan Wangji only steps back, abashedly, to allow the two their privacy, As they frolic in the bed, Lan Wangji sends out butterflies again, passing on his latest instructions. )
[Wei Wuxian signals he's understood Lan Zhan's message by relaying it in an obnoxious tone for Yuan's benefit, taunting him about having to bathe.
To which the child, obviously, complains about.]
No, no! No dinner for stinky little monsters here! We only serve dinner to good kids who clean themselves up. [He stands, tucking the stinky little monster under his arm like a bag of rice.]
Tell him, Lan Zhan! Surely we don't tolerate grubby imps at the dinner table in this house!
( Only, Wei Ying has asked the cavalry assistance of a man who cannot lie, and who finds himself paralyzed, wide-eyed and staring between Wei Ying and his rambunctious charge. Ah, what can he say?
Perhaps, shamefully, he must simply put himself at the mercy of vagaries. Forgive him, a-Yuan. )
We prefer cleansing before meal-time. ( There are, after all, no explicit rules regarding hygiene before partaking of the dinner dishes. ) Yuan. Cleanliness is comforting.
( ...yes, what child has not taken comfort in that? )
[Ah... Lan Zhan is so bad at being asked to do something so suddenly. He really looked like a startled rabbit for a moment.
Cute.
But Wei Wuxian got what he wanted, and he sets Yuan down to finish up the lecture about washing before dinner. And shoos the child off with the excuse of making him pick out his later outfit.
When he straightens up and Yuan digs through their meager traveling pack, he shoots Lan Zhan a smile.]
Just every day with children. Lan Zhan, if you truly want more, you'll have to get used to this kind of conversation.
( Good, somehow, with children. Some part of Lan Wangji had anticipated this, given his friends customary patience with the other disciples of Yunmeng. Once, he led and trained him. Of course he should now extend the same grace to this beautiful infant, clinging obediently to his silks.
Even Lan Wangji, nearly a stranger, has found himself shamefully requesting additional luxuries alongside dinner. When it is inevitably brought, by disciples who know better than to stare but cannot help exchanging glances, the meal encompasses more than the habitual three bowls per person — by several degrees. Alongside Lan fare, they have sneaked in a thick stew in the style of Caiyi, which the kitchen only produces on explicit request, for hosted guests.
These goods find their way to Lan Wangji's small table, and buckets of heated bathing water and a tub follow shortly after. An entire battalion of youthful Lan, all bowing expediently and excusing themselves, their task met.
[Knowing that once he's seen and smelled food, Yuan will be focused on just that unless he's playing at the moment, Wei Wuxian assists him through the washing process. He spares a kiss on Lan Zhan's cheek for the cute comment about Wei Wuxian'smother hen tendencies, and whisks their child off towards the tub and the water.
Minutes later, Yuan is clean, skin a little flushed from the scrubbing, and dressed in clean greys, charging through the house to finally partake in the meal. Wei Wuxian follows behind him, hair damp in places and his overcoat left behind.
He sits heavily at the little table with an oof.]
My motherly duty is done! Now he's your son, Lan Zhan.
( His son. The lone he may hope for, if he has wedded. Unlike Wei Ying, he cannot cast a side a spouse, once humor and enthusiasm have both worn down. He will remain at the mercy of this single arrangement.
One offspring, still: he will make the most of it. There is no beginning, no end to Lan Wangji's affection. He may wash them all over this single child, who watches him unwaveringly, who tugs his sleeve and draws him, too, toward the low table. At least here, slipping down, he can try to curry favor with a-Yuan, starting to gently reveal each dish and pour down spoonfuls of it in his bowl.
He may test out each flavor. )
Sit with us. ( This to Wei Ying, unfailingly. ) He will not feed, if you do not.
Aiya, all right. Have mercy, wrangling a naughty radish patch child is tiring.
[Despite his grousing, he sits readily on a side adjacent to Lan Zhan, mirroring their placement on the day they married.
Ah... family dinner. At the very least, he has had this in the Burial Grounds when they had the resources to spare. They're just missing Uncle Four's wine-- but Lan Zhan is right next to him, Lans are forbidden alcohol.
Ah, Lan Zhan, Lan Zhan. This is the first family dinner he has with the man, his husband no less.
The thought still makes him giddy.
As Lan Zhan busies himself with Yuan's bowl, Wei Wuxian piles food into Lan Zhan's, rice then vegetables, taking care to skirt around the meat, and tries to arrange them in a manner pleasing to the eye.]
( Family dinner, certainly. At least, between the additional servings and his own scant appetite, Lan Wangji can afford to be generous, pouring further morsels before a-Yuan for his tender consideration.
Now and then, he offers out a few pieces to Wei Ying, also, interested in keeping both of his charges sated. Truly, they deserve no less, and neither has had the opportunity to enjoy much care or consideration
In the end, they have fed each other, and their — son has benefitted from the largesse of both caretakers. As he should. Lan Wangji cannot begin to eat and still converse, therefore delaying his meal. )
Yes, husband. [Though Wei Wuxian can't yet, not until he sees Yuan begin to eat for himself. His hold on the chopsticks is clumsy, but his hands are still small, he'll grow into the proper form with time. Only when Yuan has managed to feed himself successfully three times does Wei Wuxian pick up his own chopsticks and accept what Lan Wangji is offering him.
Rice first, even if his stomach is demanding the stew. He knows what would happen if he took too much at once. Yuan got all of his food during the trip, so he will be fine.]
( His turn, certainly. Only, Wei Ying gently forgets the law of the land, however primitive and antiquated he might consider it. And so, tenderly, barely presuming to bring it to attention, tapping the table with his chopsticks — )
We do not speak whilst eating. ( If he begins now, while Wei Ying still plans to inevitably interrogate him, he will be unable to set down his chopsticks until he has finalised his meal. Better than they should take turns, and for Lan Wangji to attend his needs once Wei Ying takes his bath. )
Our habit, not Wei Ying's. ( He may continue, after all, as is. )
[Wei Wuxian makes faces at Lan Zhan when he mentions the rule about not eating, and then at Yuan, who giggles with chopsticks in his mouth, but also doesn't speak. At the very least, Wei Wuxian is not breaking the rule, simply brushing against it like a cat wondering if it should scratch this post today or spare it the claws.
Perhaps he would have used his claws if the rule was enforced on him. Perhaps not.
(He wouldn't have, not with Yuan here needing good role models.)
But after the meal? His mouth starts running again.]
Aiya, Lan Zhan! [He drops onto his back again, which gives their son the opportunity to climb on top of him once more.] I never thought I would be adhering to that rule again, and in the Cloud Recesses too! Who would have thought I'd ever come back here after leaving?
["Leaving", like he hadn't been expelled for fighting like the unruly student that he is.]
I did. ( ...he speaks too rapidly, too forthrightly. They should both know Wei Ying can't help his speculation, his small fictions, his dreams. Lan Wangji should not rise to the occasion of entertaining his questions.
He'll hurt first. He'll hurt worse. He'll never be permitted to forget the day when he showed Wei Ying his underbelly.
And yet, freshly fed and warmed by the blissful sight of Wei Ying accosted by a small child who wants to give him nothing but kindness, not even Lan Wangji could help himself. )
Wei Ying would always be invited as my guest. ( In the end, surely even Hanguang-Jun deserves some manner of privilege for winning a war. )
no subject
Even now, though Yuan largely sleeps, Lan Wangji cannot help the burst of affection within his chest, to think of a creature so at ease in his home that he burrowed in to sleep, without qualm. It means more to him than to most. )
Then, he is invited. ( Better to embrace the inconvenience of a squirming, good-natured, jovial body than to begrudge it. )
no subject
Such a good father, an excellent father! [He may get jealous that Yuan seems to like Lan Zhan better than him... but his jealousy is nothing compared to Yuan's care. The two love each other, that's plain to see, and Lan Zhan is willing to give him everything he wants. That counts for more than Wei Wuxian's pointless little feelings.
After the hug is done, he leans against Lan Zhan's shoulder and smiles up at him.]
Save some of the spoiling for me, though. I don't want to be the responsible parent and do nothing but scold him. That doesn't suit me!
no subject
( Only, somehow, affirmative, accepting. No, the image of the strict, scolding parent does not suit Wei Ying — but Lan Wangji is somehow even less suited. They have managed to come together, two men rendered soft and tremble-lipped by the molten looks of children. And now they think they are equipped to father them. For shame.
Just as he prepares to put the point of their incompetence before Wei Ying, two sets of butterflies rush forward: Zewu-Jun's, then Uncle's, closely after. He receives them, humming his approval and instructing a message returned with thanks, before informing Wei Ying: )
They agree. ( A beat. ) Uncle suggests he is more suitable, having minded children. Zewu-Jun... anticipated the argument and reminds he too raised me.
no subject
You know what I think?
We should let them fight. In that funny Lan way, the really passive-aggressive way where people just quote rules at each other or pretend to be really nice. [He loved watching those when he was still a guest disciple for the lectures, any time he wasn't getting up to mischief or being punished for said mischief. It's one of the times that he thinks the Lan rules may have merit, because the Lans make verbal sparring entertaining.
Watching two Lans go at it is better than watching street performers.]
It could keep A-Yuan entertained for a while, and help him figure out if he likes his father's older brother or uncle better.
no subject
...is this how Wei Ying sees them? Passive-aggressive, quick to resort to the rules as weapons, rather than mutual guidance toward virtue? Does he expect no better of Gusu Lan and its foremost leaders? Of course, Lan Wangji cannot demand he should sport kinder sentiments toward anyone, but to think of his own blood and flesh so reviled is a bitter, jarring thing. )
There will be no fight. None necessary.
no subject
You think they'll just decide who will take A-Yuan? Or will you decide for them?
Aiyah, all right, all right. [He won't get to see Lan Qiren and Zewu-jun face off! A shame!] I'm sure whoever you pick will do well and adore A-Yuan, anyway.
no subject
( Says he, the second son of a lineage that includes Zewu-Jun, playful and thrumming with laughter. Ah, perhaps he exaggerates. All the same, it is not for Wei Ying to shame his people. )
You married in. Speak well of brother and uncle.
( They are now Wei Ying's own to defend, for all he does not know so. For all he might have wanted to wed Lan Wangji, and he alone. He understands, perhaps better than Wei Ying, the complications of their matrimony — that there are lines that should not be crossed, yet that they have already trampled. )
no subject
Aiya.]
All right. I'm sorry, Lan Zhan. [Then he rubs his cheek against Lan Zhan's shoulder, looking up at him with the biggest eyes he can muster, like a puppy begging for scraps from the table.]
Forgive your Wei Ying?
no subject
As Wei Ying leans in, he welcomes him with a soft, warm hand to his — husband's cheek, calling him to his chest. Like a second, greater child, for all Lan Wangji's intent is increasingly wanting, shamefully desirous.
He wants, more fool he, to kiss this man. )
Not mine to forgive. ( Only his to have, to hold, to treasure. And to subdue, as Yuan shows fledgling starts of stirring. ) Wei Ying. May I kiss you again?
no subject
Yes. [Lan Zhan need not ask. He no longer needs to, because Wei Wuxian will always say yes, and he would rather cut out that moment in favor of getting to the good part. But he thinks he understands why Lan Zhan will do it all the same.
He stands up properly, so they're on more even footing and Lan Zhan doesn't have to bend down far just to reach him.]
Come here, husband, and kiss me.
no subject
This time, when he dips in, the kiss isn't soft, isn't without victims or consequence. It burns, and Lan Wangji's fingers dig into the sides of Wei Ying's face, and he pushes their mouths together — hasty, perhaps clumsy, mean. They kiss, and a young moan shatters their peace, and he tips his forehead into Wei Ying's. They break apart. He kisses him again.
A slow, tidal circuit of breaks and incursions, of intimacy purposed. In the end, a-Yuan gives out the small, curious cry of a young creature finding itself gradually awake in a space he's never fully inhabited — and Lan Wangji pulls back, cheeks flushed. )
...your son wants you.
no subject
But he's also not the sort of parent to smother their child's genuine expression of feelings, when he knows A-Yuan needed to not be so noisy in order to survive the camp. He's had to find a happy medium between the two.]
More kisses later, husband. [This is not a request or an expectation, but a promise. Punctuated with a brush of his thumb over Lan Zhan's lower lip, before he drops his body in an ungainly manner on the sheets right next to Yuan, startling the tears that they halt.]
Aiya, little one, what are you crying for? Want gege's hugs? Come here, come here--
[He welcomes the child climbing on top of him, rolling onto his back to make himself a more comfortable bed. This does give him a good view of what's up above, and grins at Lan Zhan as he wraps his arms around their son's tiny body.]
no subject
Lan Wangji nearly orbits close again —
...but then there is a-Yuan, rightfully demanding his gege's care, and Lan Wangji only steps back, abashedly, to allow the two their privacy, As they frolic in the bed, Lan Wangji sends out butterflies again, passing on his latest instructions. )
Have requested dinner and fresh bathing water.
no subject
To which the child, obviously, complains about.]
No, no! No dinner for stinky little monsters here! We only serve dinner to good kids who clean themselves up. [He stands, tucking the stinky little monster under his arm like a bag of rice.]
Tell him, Lan Zhan! Surely we don't tolerate grubby imps at the dinner table in this house!
no subject
Perhaps, shamefully, he must simply put himself at the mercy of vagaries. Forgive him, a-Yuan. )
We prefer cleansing before meal-time. ( There are, after all, no explicit rules regarding hygiene before partaking of the dinner dishes. ) Yuan. Cleanliness is comforting.
( ...yes, what child has not taken comfort in that? )
no subject
Cute.
But Wei Wuxian got what he wanted, and he sets Yuan down to finish up the lecture about washing before dinner. And shoos the child off with the excuse of making him pick out his later outfit.
When he straightens up and Yuan digs through their meager traveling pack, he shoots Lan Zhan a smile.]
Just every day with children. Lan Zhan, if you truly want more, you'll have to get used to this kind of conversation.
no subject
( Good, somehow, with children. Some part of Lan Wangji had anticipated this, given his friends customary patience with the other disciples of Yunmeng. Once, he led and trained him. Of course he should now extend the same grace to this beautiful infant, clinging obediently to his silks.
Even Lan Wangji, nearly a stranger, has found himself shamefully requesting additional luxuries alongside dinner. When it is inevitably brought, by disciples who know better than to stare but cannot help exchanging glances, the meal encompasses more than the habitual three bowls per person — by several degrees. Alongside Lan fare, they have sneaked in a thick stew in the style of Caiyi, which the kitchen only produces on explicit request, for hosted guests.
These goods find their way to Lan Wangji's small table, and buckets of heated bathing water and a tub follow shortly after. An entire battalion of youthful Lan, all bowing expediently and excusing themselves, their task met.
After them, silence. )
Please. Eat.
no subject
Minutes later, Yuan is clean, skin a little flushed from the scrubbing, and dressed in clean greys, charging through the house to finally partake in the meal. Wei Wuxian follows behind him, hair damp in places and his overcoat left behind.
He sits heavily at the little table with an oof.]
My motherly duty is done! Now he's your son, Lan Zhan.
no subject
One offspring, still: he will make the most of it. There is no beginning, no end to Lan Wangji's affection. He may wash them all over this single child, who watches him unwaveringly, who tugs his sleeve and draws him, too, toward the low table. At least here, slipping down, he can try to curry favor with a-Yuan, starting to gently reveal each dish and pour down spoonfuls of it in his bowl.
He may test out each flavor. )
Sit with us. ( This to Wei Ying, unfailingly. ) He will not feed, if you do not.
no subject
[Despite his grousing, he sits readily on a side adjacent to Lan Zhan, mirroring their placement on the day they married.
Ah... family dinner. At the very least, he has had this in the Burial Grounds when they had the resources to spare. They're just missing Uncle Four's wine-- but Lan Zhan is right next to him, Lans are forbidden alcohol.
Ah, Lan Zhan, Lan Zhan. This is the first family dinner he has with the man, his husband no less.
The thought still makes him giddy.
As Lan Zhan busies himself with Yuan's bowl, Wei Wuxian piles food into Lan Zhan's, rice then vegetables, taking care to skirt around the meat, and tries to arrange them in a manner pleasing to the eye.]
no subject
Now and then, he offers out a few pieces to Wei Ying, also, interested in keeping both of his charges sated. Truly, they deserve no less, and neither has had the opportunity to enjoy much care or consideration
In the end, they have fed each other, and their — son has benefitted from the largesse of both caretakers. As he should. Lan Wangji cannot begin to eat and still converse, therefore delaying his meal. )
You are all bone. Eat. We may spare.
no subject
Rice first, even if his stomach is demanding the stew. He knows what would happen if he took too much at once. Yuan got all of his food during the trip, so he will be fine.]
Now, your turn.
no subject
We do not speak whilst eating. ( If he begins now, while Wei Ying still plans to inevitably interrogate him, he will be unable to set down his chopsticks until he has finalised his meal. Better than they should take turns, and for Lan Wangji to attend his needs once Wei Ying takes his bath. )
Our habit, not Wei Ying's. ( He may continue, after all, as is. )
no subject
Perhaps he would have used his claws if the rule was enforced on him. Perhaps not.
(He wouldn't have, not with Yuan here needing good role models.)
But after the meal? His mouth starts running again.]
Aiya, Lan Zhan! [He drops onto his back again, which gives their son the opportunity to climb on top of him once more.] I never thought I would be adhering to that rule again, and in the Cloud Recesses too! Who would have thought I'd ever come back here after leaving?
["Leaving", like he hadn't been expelled for fighting like the unruly student that he is.]
no subject
He'll hurt first. He'll hurt worse. He'll never be permitted to forget the day when he showed Wei Ying his underbelly.
And yet, freshly fed and warmed by the blissful sight of Wei Ying accosted by a small child who wants to give him nothing but kindness, not even Lan Wangji could help himself. )
Wei Ying would always be invited as my guest. ( In the end, surely even Hanguang-Jun deserves some manner of privilege for winning a war. )
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)