Repost Wicklow's Odyssey arranged marriage/historical AU
(This is not a story. It's basically just me screaming ideas at people)
But what do people want out of this? Wicklow deliberately taking his place in Rhoades’ bed? Using those precise, foul little Wicklow words to describe what it does to him when his husband touches him? How he thinks about his kisses? How much he can’t think when Rhoades fucks him? How, when he was alone, after the first time, he tried to use his fingers and it wasn’t the same, and he was furious for wanting it so much? Rhoades isn’t a warrior, but he takes Wicklow. Even when he is gentle, he *whispers, in near shame* conquers him.
And Rhoades just. More turned on then he has ever been in his life. IN HIS LIFE.
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Gods, just, he would do anything for this little barbarian. His small, blue-eyed heathen killer. He would vow into his skin, and against his mouth, and Wicklow would bruise him he’d be holding him so tight, although Rhoades isn’t going anywhere. Conquer you? Rhoades is nearly snarling, or is it purring? Wicklow can’t tell anymore, with his blood on fire. You think I’ve conquered you? And he’d promise it again, and again, anything, anything for his husband.
And yeah, Rhoades would be exactly as emotionally compromised by his new husband as his enemies think–only stronger too, because (being Roman-ish) they didn’t anticipate that Rhoades’ devotion to Wicklow would earn the devotion of Wicklow’s people too. –And they probably also assumed Wicklow was a mindless soldier and nothing more.
This is a mistake.
Rhoades knew the traitors will make their move soon, so he made plans. He has to lure them out to destroy them, and that’s risky, but he and Wicklow cannot fight their common enemy (idk, some other country) until they deal with the betrayal among Rhoades’ men. So he spends a (final) night with his husband, and then invents a problem that needs to be dealt with and sends Wicklow away.
His enemies will think him alone, weaker. He stays in his room, letting them think he is pining for his absent husband. Wicklow is his weakness and his enemies know it. He will use that too, and trust that Wicklow is truly gone when they come for him.
Of course, they might just kill him. Rhoades hadn’t mentioned that very likely possibility to anyone.It would make more sense to keep Wicklow close, and find some other way to draw his enemies to him. But he can’t bring himself to do it.
He doesn’t anticipate his crafty little warrior leaving two of his friends behind to ensure Rhoades’ survival. Or that the attempted coup doesn’t net *all* his enemies. Injured, exhausted, but triumphant, Rhoades makes examples of the ones discovered, and then realizes (as each other talks, because let’s not pretend there is no torture here. Like let’s say it’s fairly obvious Wicklow was intended to die along with him, so yeah, there is torture here. I mean, *Rhoades*) that the plan went higher than he wanted to think, and wherever he sent Wicklow, he did it with the last conspirator at Wicklow;s back.
So Rhoades (and Pilar and Anthony, obviously…although Anthony should really be a “Roman” as well) would ride out to save Wicklow.
(This is so cheesy and I don’t care.) and they wind up in the hands of the other enemy. The original one. The one Wicklow and Rhoades got married to symbolically unite their nations against etc.
Wicklow (and Amelia and Louis, probably) just a) does not need special protection from one traitorous “Roman” dog. And b) is furious when he realizes what Rhoades did, (and also sort of proud, because wow. It did take care of the problem and also his husband is a powerful man).
And just. I need all the wounded but desperate Wicklow going eerily calm when something practical needs to be done. But making himself be sneaky, to think like Rhoades to accomplish this with only the three of them. (Maybe four, like, Mariama, right?) And that thing is to find the enemy’s camp, retake his husband, and then raze the camp to the ground. And then you get berserker mode Wicklow rescuing his soft, clever husband, and the two of them getting like, legendary status. Like love poems and everything.Rhoades knew the traitors will make their move soon, so he made plans. He has to lure them out to destroy them, and that’s risky, but he and Wicklow cannot fight their common enemy (idk, some other country) until they deal with the betrayal among Rhoades’ men. So he spends a (final) night with his husband, and then invents a problem that needs to be dealt with and sends Wicklow away.
His enemies will think him alone, weaker. He stays in his room, letting them think he is pining for his absent husband. Wicklow is his weakness and his enemies know it. He will use that too, and trust that Wicklow is truly gone when they come for him.
Of course, they might just kill him. Rhoades hadn’t mentioned that very likely possibility to anyone.It would make more sense to keep Wicklow close, and find some other way to draw his enemies to him. But he can’t bring himself to do it.
He doesn’t anticipate his crafty little warrior leaving two of his friends behind to ensure Rhoades’ survival. Or that the attempted coup doesn’t net *all* his enemies. Injured, exhausted, but triumphant, Rhoades makes examples of the ones discovered, and then realizes (as each other talks, because let’s not pretend there is no torture here. Like let’s say it’s fairly obvious Wicklow was intended to die along with him, so yeah, there is torture here. I mean, *Rhoades*) that the plan went higher than he wanted to think, and wherever he sent Wicklow, he did it with the last conspirator at Wicklow;s back.
So Rhoades (and Pilar and Anthony, obviously…although Anthony should really be a “Roman” as well) would ride out to save Wicklow.
(This is so cheesy and I don’t care.) and they wind up in the hands of the other enemy. The original one. The one Wicklow and Rhoades got married to symbolically unite their nations against etc.
Wicklow (and Amelia and Louis, probably) just a) does not need special protection from one traitorous “Roman” dog. And b) is furious when he realizes what Rhoades did, (and also sort of proud, because wow. It did take care of the problem and also his husband is a powerful man).
And just. I need all the wounded but desperate Wicklow going eerily calm when something practical needs to be done. But making himself be sneaky, to think like Rhoades to accomplish this with only the three of them. (Maybe four, like, Mariama, right?) And that thing is to find the enemy’s camp, retake his husband, and then raze the camp to the ground. And then you get berserker mode Wicklow rescuing his soft, clever husband, and the two of them getting like, legendary status. Like love poems and everything.
*takes deep breath*
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
Of course their team is still around. Of course it is! Around and being sneaky and badass.
Maybe Anthony was a soldier who was part of the retinue to bring Wicklow and his friends back to Rhoades to be married? Or maybe we don’t care that much about logic because hey, arranged marriage AU.
God Rhoades face when Wicklow comes charging in, that alone must have launched a thousand songs. So much intensity in one moment, and they’re both trying for decorum because there are bodies everywhere and friends and allies and enemies alike watching…. I doubt they totally manage, because how could they. And it just fuels the legend.
If one was going to do this properly one would have to start with the epic saga of warriors in love. And then go back and explain how it came about. And end with another version at the end.
I’m weak for this shit, for real.
(via vashti-lives)
If you think being around Rhoades hasn’t taught Wicklow the importance of making a good public impression… But, like, fusing them with the ways of his people.
AHHH WAIT Like, it’s too much but like, also perfect for the ‘time’ and ‘place’. Wicklow saving Rhoades, taking the camp, the regular loyal “roman” soldiers appearing too late, Wicklow standing before Rhoades in the center of the camps, fires lighting the dark sky. Bloodied, injured, but on his feet, and then pulling the knife he gave to Rhoades (and found, with blood on it, in the body of one of those who took Rhoades) and returning it to him before Louis or Amelia draws forward the last traitor.
(And how fucked up is it that they would hold eye contact during a summary execution? Aaaah too much Roman history for me, I can tell!) And then later, weirdly, Wicklow should be angry, but he is almost apologetic, cleaned and bandaged and with his husband, accepting each kiss.Any universe in which Rhoades confuses Wicklow and then gives him all that *pleeeeasurrre*. Aahhh.
Getting little warrior Wicklow in his bed at last and then just bringing him to the edge for a while, and then stopping to kiss him, and then starting all over again, and at this point, it’s less about conquering Wicklow as it is proving to him that Rhoades is his equal in all ways that matter, that Rhoades is his husband, and he wants Wicklow to understand what that means.
…also I just like, dazed, flushed, desperate Wicklow, staring at Rhoades with those bright, pleading eyes, straining up a little for another kiss and frowning until he gets one.