Their bare hands, exchanging the reins, brushed.
It was only ever Esen who thought Ouyang deserving of reward. Who refused to see what everyone else saw.
- Ouyang could no more be jealous of Esen than he could be of the sun.
Ouyang was so much a fixture in his life that he seemed devoid of any past other than the one he shared with Esen.
Esen’s grief and anger were unbearable: they gave Ouyang a gnawing pain that was like having sharkskin rubbed over every tender place of his body.
In that respect, killing Chaghan hadn’t been a sin. But breaking Esen felt like one.
Ouyang’s heart ached. Why can’t you make it easier for me to hate you?
- For a moment he had a sense-flash of Esen—not one particular memory, but something stitched together from every moment they had spent together: the feel of his body, his particular smell, his presence. It was intimate and completely false, and it was all Ouyang would ever have.
Choose me, he thought, his eyes fixed on Esen’s face, and felt sick.
When he finally tore his eyes away from Esen, it felt like ripping out a piece of himself.
-A study of comradeship and homoeroticism in She Who Became the Sun (by Shelley Parker-Chan)