The smell of flesh burning away made Monford’s stomach turn, as Viserys screams pitched higher, it took all he had not to avert his eyes from the blackening blisters as his skin split and scorched like a pig on a spit. It was an awful sight, had he not wished for his Lady wife to see him as a craven, he’d have averted his gaze from the horror of it all. The rage that had fueled him, spurred him and begged for the blood owed shrank away. Monford had taken a life before, by the rope and the blade, but nothing like this. The sound, the smell, the vision. Burning hair putrified the room and Viserys screams were no more, though the dragons continued to burn what was left of his carcass. They’d done so at his command. His orders. Viserys had earned his death, ten times over. But this wasn’t an execution, it was a monstrosity. Her fingers clasped at him desperately as he sobered whatever part of him that thought this would be a welcome sight. He’d murdered his King. But more than that, he’d used fire to do it, terrible and slow. He was no dragon, he knew better than to submit to the beast in his belly.
Finally, it ended, his charred bones half-melted on the stone. Daenerys curled into his desperately, his arms instinctively winding around her, burying one of his hands into her curls to cradle her head close. He should’ve slit the skink’s throat, spared her the sound of it all. But he had no way to turn back time, no way to undo the violence she’d witnessed. Balerion and Vhagar squabbled over a bone, hissing and squawking at one another, Merexas turned his burning eyes upon him, clicking and chuffing at his mother. Monford foolishly reached his free hand towards the creature, unsure of what he aimed to accomplish. He skittered back suspiciously, before slinking forward, the heat of his skull indescribable as he momentarily leaned into the touch before ducking from his grasp and brushing against Daenerys legs.
Their solemn peace was interrupted abruptly, the door swinging open with a violent slam against the stone wall. Thoughtlessly, he pulled Daenerys tighter to him, staring over his head with cold eyes. He’d known most of these men since he was a boy, for the first time in his life, Monford felt unrecognisable. Who was he after that word? Robert Baratheon entered as any stag would, loud and furious, a wild accusation in his eyes. Monford cast his eyes down, unable to look at him knowing it was true. His Lady wife stepped forwards, had he been in the right mind, he’d have stopped her. Stepped between her and the horrified eyes of the councilmen. Bleeding and immodest, she was in no state for their imposing eyes.
“Crime?! Crime, girl! He is a King!” Robert’s booming voice brought Monford back to his body, a defiant tilt to his chin. This was not a girl. If Robert meant to keep his tongue he should not be so eager to forget himself.
“Was a King,” Monford corrected venomously. Aerys had raped Rhaella. A now known story, that had come from castle gossip. No one had ever stepped between them, not the Kingsguard, nor her sons. Rhaella had been his wife, thus in the eyes of his subjects, his to torment. Viserys had no claim on Daenerys. No right to her, pleasant or otherwise. Monford by law could kill the man who touched his wife, but what was there to do when the man was a King? What was there to do when his wife was the Princess? What could be done when it wasn’t any knife of Monford to kill him, but a Dragon? What fool would be brave enough to try and take the creatures head?
“I didn’t ask you, Kingslayer!” Monford almost lunged for him, but thought better of it. The Spider interrupted, soothing the men with his unsettling calmness.
“We must give the Princess time to speak, surely she has a reasonable explanation.” Monford loosened his overshirt, passing it with a quiet thoughtfulness to his wife. She’d lost so much already. Even today, even a snake, he was her brother. If he was to be hanged for his crimes, let it be tomorrow.
“Lord Velaryon has been a loyal subject to the crown–– we have no reason to doubt…” Lord Baelish’s unsettling contribution in his favour was interrupted once more.
“Loyal? When he stole away the Princess and married her against the wishes of her King? He’d ought to have had his head mounted on a pike years ago for his insolence,” Stannis clipped. Still, the spider looked to her with prompting eyes, as though he were begging her to save her husbands life.
There was a deep, quenching part inside Daenerys to cuss and slap the eldest Baratheon lord. How dare he called her girl? He was a lord but who was he to call a Targaryen Princess a girl as if she was one of the milkmaids he took to bed and left with a bastard? Her balled up fists in front of her chest turned her knuckles white in anger. But had she learned anything from growing up in the capital, it was that a Targaryen anger never worked well with Baratheon lords. Though it was easy to keep quiet when he called her girl, it was achingly more trying when he branded her husband “Kingslayer.”
Daenerys muttered a word of gratitude to her husband as she took his overshirt and draped it over her exposing body. With much more cover, confidence came to her more willingly. Words were about to come but Varys’ and Baelish’s clever mouths had already run a mile before her. Their swift defenses of her husband, however, did not sit right with Daenerys. She was just a child when Rhaegar would sit her on his laps in his council meeting. Her brother would whispered little advice he thought would never be of sense to the toddler Daenerys: Don’t trust your advisors so easily, Dany! They are always more vultures than falcons -- ready to feast on your dead flesh when you are no more. It was true Daenerys did not take notice of the words as a child but she was in the Great game now and the Great game was dangerous.
They wanted something, Daenerys thought when she saw Varys’ pleading eyes and heard Littlefinger’s reassurance of Monford’s loyalty while the brute and hard-hearted Baratheon brothers were ready to tear her husband apart. Her violet orbs bounced between three targets: the Baratheon brothers who were willing to execute Monford given the slightest chance; the spider and the weasel looking at her as if they could bore their eyes through her figure; and the Lady Arryn who respected her enough to wait for her command. It only took another whiff of burned flesh for Daenerys to finally understand: They were already crowning a new monarch, cunning little bastards.
While the two Baratheon lords still moaned about Monford having committed regicide and kidnapping of a princess, Baelish and Varys had already taken ten steps ahead of their two denser colleagues. They knew Viserys was truly dead and if there were to be a new King, it would be Daenerys as their Queen. And they had every intention of pleasing their new ruler. What would be a more fitting tribute to their Queen than their devotion in making sure she had her ways around? Daenerys never excelled at the game of gambling but this was her chance to see if she could reuse her brother’s advisory men.
“Need I remind you that I am not a mare that could be stolen and forced into submission by a man.” Daenerys began. All the shakiness seemed to have evaporated from her voice. “No man has stolen me and no man can: not even lords of great houses such as yourselves, My Lords.”
“And as the matter of the crown, since you are my brother’s advisors, I do desperately need to ask,” Daenerys continued as she stepped forward with her husband’s shirt over her. “Did you know?”
“Know what, Your Grace?” Lord Robert had had the grace to call her by her rightful title as a baffled look took over his red, meaty face.
“Now, don’t be coy with me, Lord Baratheon.” Daenerys stood tall despite being the shortest in the room. “You all were his advisors after all.”
“Speak plainly.” Daenerys could tell Stannis’ patience was running short but it was exactly what she needed him to do: get impatient. Such drag of conversation intrigued Lord Baelish and Lord Varys enough for them to stay silent. Such a rare occasion!
“Did you know about my brother’s plan to assassinate your true King with the help of our sister in law, the Lannister woman?” Daenerys’ heart was thumping so loudly in her ears as she began laying her cards on the table. She watched and watched and watched and waited for a response. It was an all or nothing move that Daenerys herself could not believe she was playing. But for her husband, she must. Whatever she did, she must protect him.
Stannis’ face was a stark contrast to his brother’s red one. The famed stoic look of his melt into shock as his eyes stared at hers unblinking. “What in Gods’ name is this, Princess?”
“You tell me, My Lord!” Daenerys did not back down. Her feet were rooted in her spot and her head held high. She might be small but she was not going to let them get to her husband. “How come you sit at his council and not know about this? Or is it because you are also knee-deep into this plan? One moment you were Rhaegar’s men and the moment he died, you were willingly following Viserys’ army back to Dragonstone?”
“We would never commit such a heinous crime... That’s-- that’s treason!” Robert had already spat out the words for Daenerys, which she gladly took up.
“And shall I hang you all...” Daenerys glided her eyes over the four lords and Lady Arryn. “... for treason and regicide? You murder one King to crown another. It all make sense now why you wanted my husband’s death so fervently. If he dies, your faux King can finally get his wish of marrying me. It all makes sense now why Viserys was so ready to place his hand on me again.”
Her voice broke as she let the lords and Lady Arryn see the bleeding wounds on her arms and some on her chest. Even the words were nothing but horse shit, it was exactly how Viserys would have wanted things. The moment Monford died, she would become his just like how her mother was trapped by her father. Daenerys turned and walked to her husband again; her hand immediately clasped onto his for now all of her cards were truly on the table. Seeing the Princess in tears and being accused of treason did strike a nerve in Lord Robert. He was about to lash out when Varys came to Daenerys’ side.
“The Princess spoke hardly out of truth, My Lords.” The bald headed man began with his hands stuffed inside his long sleeves. “His Highness had never forgiven his elder brother for denying him his rightful bride, the Princess. Though he and Cersei Lannister have different vision for who to follow Rhaegar’s footsteps, one favoring himself and one favoring her bastard son, the two agreed that King Rhaegar and Crown Prince Jon were to be killed before they can set lions and dragons upon one another.”