Pairing: Maekar Targaryen x Wife!Reader (no use of y/n)
Content: 18+ MDNI, Slight misogyny (calling you woman), swearing. Implied nsfw | Reader is ovulating | okay maybe the writer is too
Not proofread!
A/N: Literally just wrote this because this is how I feel thinking about Maekar while I'm browsing on Twitter and Tumblr while I'm supposed to be working.
Also started writing this while I was working lmao 😩
Word count: 622
Please bear with me, English isn't my first language and it's been 5 years since I wrote any fanfiction (mainly ATLA and Haikyuu). A character made an impact to me this much that it pulled me out of Love and Deepspace. I wish I was kidding, I could've saved so much money from gacha if this grouchy peepaw came into my life a little earlier.
It was mid afternoon when you heard the door to your study creak after your lord husband decided to visit first after sparring with knights and his master at arms in the training grounds.
“Leave us.” The steward and other handmaidens took some of their work with them, leaving their prince and his lady wife be.
The sudden intrusion caused your attention to shift from your ledgers to Maekar grumbling as he removed the remaining equipment until his doublet remained, setting them aside next to your settee.
You eyed him hungrily, the stench of leather and sweat be damned. The dragon himself felt your attention shift to him, noting the biting of your lip piquing his intrigue.
“Why do you look at me like that, woman?” Maekar scowled while adjusting his jerkin.
“Is it peculiar of me to be attracted to my husband?” He triggers your gaze to move up and down, ending it with a subtle sigh. There was not a hint of jest in your words.
He blinked for a second upon hearing the words that came out of your mouth, a tinge of red starting to creep in on Maekar’s face.
“You know flattery isn’t going to lead you anywhere.” It usually doesn’t.
“Husband, you are attractive to the point that you’re distracting me from my ledgers.” You dipped your quill and tried getting back to work on the discrepancies of the grains all morning, fighting off the urge to comment further. You knew well what happens after exchanging banters with a husband fresh off adrenaline from handling weaponry.
Maekar’s steps grew louder the closer he got behind your seat, leaning down close to the left of your face. The redness on his face was gone, now in the mood to try and turn the tides to his favor. His hot breath sent tingles to your neck, feeling vengeful enough from the blush you almost conquered him with earlier. This was clearly not helping at all.
He lowered his voice into that tone that would make you melt in an instant. “You’re short a few numbers there.” His right arm caged you when he pointed a random figure on your page while the other was placed on the back of your chair.
“Fuck me.” You grumbled as you felt your face heat up with a tint of rose, sensing the grin on your husband’s face.
“Out.”
“Hmm?”
You stood up from your chair and grabbed your man, pulling him towards the door of your study. You felt his muscles tense, pushing his weight down towards the ground in order for you to struggle dragging him out.
“OUT!”
He chuckled at your weak attempt of a hard push, but decided to comply anyway.
“See you at supper, love!” You slammed the door behind you, letting your body sink and for a moment before returning to your desk. Your lord husband was definitely stronger than he looks.
Maekar would be lying if he wasn’t caught by surprise, still processing what just happened. “I’ll get her for that later.” The prince mumbled, knowing his wife was thinking the same after the antic he just pulled. He straightened his tunic, still lingering on your touch earlier. He was about to make way to the baths until he noticed the steward about to knock on your door, probably witnessing the moment with his wife earlier.
“My prince-”
“A word of this and I’ll cut your tongue.” The dragon has returned to his usual stoic demeanor causing the steward to flinch despite Maekar only walking away back to his business. The handmaidens and other servants that probably saw what happened giggled to themselves, knowing the walls of Summerhall was not having a quiet night.
Your splayed, oiled palms ran down the hard planes of Baelor’s back, his muscles rippling and tensing beneath your touch as you massaged the knots that had formed over the past several weeks with reverence.
You were seated atop his backside, knees pressing into the bedding below while your calves hugged the sides of his waist.
“How’s that?” you murmured, admiring the way his tan skin glistened in the candlelight.
The tops of your fingers would occasionally trace over one of the many scars that had been etched into his body; the sizes and colours of the faded lesions varied, some the length of your forearm and a lighter hue, while others were as small as a quill tip and similar in tone to the surrounding skin.
Baelor hummed in reply before a muffled, “perfect,” left his parted lips.
The right side of his face was pressed into a cushion below, providing you with the alluring image of his open mouth, flushed left cheekbone, and fluttering, dark lashes.
He made a content rumbling every time you worked out a stubborn lump, the hand he had resting around your calf tightening in appreciation of your efforts.
A raspy, dizzying moan left his throat in a long exhale when your hands kneaded at a particularly sensitive wound–one that, despite being eleven years old, would periodically still flare up and throb.
The sound made your legs constrict around him and eyelids flicker as arousal settled thickly at the base of your spine. You lingered around the edges of the aged laceration, evoking another low, unconstrained noise from deep within his chest.
Slowly, your fingers dragged upwards, leaving a trail of long, red welts that took their time to vanish, along the length of his shoulder blades.
The dark grey and silvery hair that rested around the nape of his neck and ear was sleek from a coating of oil, darkened from when you had earlier threaded through the strands in a besotted manner. They had looked enticingly cute; their naturally curled shape too tempting for you to not reach up and twirl them around a single, slick digit.
“Turn around,” you commanded once you had managed to get all of the painful nodules out of his shoulders, your hips rising to provide him with room to flip over.
Once Baelor was comfortably facing you, you sat back down over his pelvis, legs tightening around his body once more when he peered up at you with a knowing smile.
This part wasn’t for him as much as it was for you.
He had gained a thickness over his muscles as the years passed, a supple, malleable layer of meat that easily surrendered to your ministrations.
You poured more lotion over your palms, rubbing them together until the liquid was warm, and then placed them atop his torso.
The hair that was scattered over the stretch of his chest immediately darkened as the balm coated his skin; the glossy sheen that enhanced the bulkiness of his upper body caused heat to unfurl within your lower abdomen, drift up, and settle in blotchy, tingly patches over your throat and face.
Baelor’s own hands were resting over the upper part of your thighs, his new position supplying him more access to you.
His body jolted forward when one of your nails accidentally scraped his dusky nipple, eliciting a startled intake of air from the older man. You bit the inside of your cheek to refrain from remarking on how sensitive he was, despite knowing that he would never retaliate even if you were to do it again.
“Enjoying yourself?” Baelor inquired after several minutes of being thoroughly prodded, scraped, and tugged at.
His scarred brow rose in response to the engrossed, fixated look on your face.
You hadn’t noticed how drastically your breathing had changed; immersed with the way his short, coarse hairs felt when you combed through them, and how every sinewy ridge of his flesh pliantly absorbed each stroke and squeeze you delivered.
“No,” you lied, fingers following the silvery-dark trail of hair that led downwards, to the top of his linen breeches, “but I will be soon enough.”
I want Baelor spiraling about the mere concept of lady in waiting!reader getting marriage propositions. I need him having 27 panic attacks.
This request was totally sending me— 😭 my poor man would've loved a xanax
done considering
Pairing: Baelor Targaryen x f!lady in waiting!reader
Warning(s): Baelor has anxiety (prob), but it has a happy ending!!
The first proposal arrived on a Tuesday.
Baelor knew this because he had been in his mother's solar when the messenger came — had been in the middle of a sentence about grain yields in the Reach, which was not a subject that had ever previously caused him difficulty — when Myriah had accepted the sealed letter, read it with the pleasantly neutral expression she deployed when delivering information she intended to observe him receiving, and said: "Lord Ambrose Celtigar has written to your father regarding a match."
Baelor had finished his sentence about grain yields. He had said I see with the composure that had served him in war councils and throne rooms and every demanding context his life had presented him with. He had excused himself at a reasonable hour and walked back to his solar and sat down and looked at the wall.
Lord Ambrose Celtigar was thirty four years old. Not unpleasant looking, by general report. He held a respectable seat, had no significant character defects that Baelor was aware of, and was by every measurable standard a perfectly suitable match for a young woman of good family and accomplishment.
Baelor sat with this information for some time. He thought about it with the same thorough attention he brought to tactical assessments and pieces of legislation that required careful consideration. He thought about Lord Celtigar's seat and Lord Celtigar's reported appearance and Lord Celtigar's presumably functional absence of character defects. Then, against his better judgement and with the inevitability of a man who has been trying not to think about something for several moons and has finally encountered a reason he cannot maintain the effort, he thought about you. He thought about the particular way you laughed when something actually struck you as funny rather than merely requiring a polite response. He thought about all the moons of carrying something carefully that he had been meaning to do something about and had not yet done something about, and he sat with the full uncomfortable weight of that gap until the candles had burned considerably lower than when he sat down. Then he went to bed and did not sleep particularly well.
The second proposal arrived on a Thursday. Ser Willam Waxley — twenty eight, well regarded, good family, reportedly personable in the specific way that made Baelor briefly and irrationally consider what reportedly personable actually meant in practice and whether it was a quality you would find appealing, which was not a line of thinking he pursued to its conclusion because he had more self-respect than that. He received the information from his mother over correspondence review, said I see, finished his tea, and continued with the correspondence. It took longer than usual. He kept losing his place.
The third proposal arrived the following Monday, and Baelor heard it from one of his mother's ladies who mentioned it to another in passing while crossing the training yard without any awareness that he was within earshot. Lord Patrek Mallister — young, wealthy, the kind of man described by other men as having prospects, which was a phrase Baelor had always found vague and now found specifically aggravating. He held his sword incorrectly for the remainder of the session. His master at arms observed this with the expression of a man who had seen many things in training yards and had made a professional decision to comment on none of them today.
By the second week Myriah had stopped pretending she was telling him incidentally.
She told him directly now, with the pleasant composure of a woman delivering information she had every right to deliver, and watched his face with the specific attentiveness she had been applying to him since he was approximately four years old and had not, in the intervening decades, become any less accurate. "Lord Rowan," she said one Wednesday morning, in the same tone she might use to note the weather. "He sent a very thoughtful letter. Apparently he is an articulate man — the letter suggested genuine consideration of the match. He mentioned his gardens specifically. Considerable, by his account."
"How nice for him," said Baelor, examining his correspondence with the focused attention of a man who was absolutely reading every word and not at all conducting a parallel and involuntary assessment of whether considerable gardens were a meaningful advantage in the context of a marriage proposal.
"They are in the Reach," Myriah offered. "Lovely climate."
"I am aware where the Reach is, Mother."
"I am simply noting that Lord Rowan appears to be a man of—"
"I am aware," he said, with the measured evenness that cost him slightly more than it usually did, "of Lord Rowan's considerable attributes."
Myriah looked at him over the rim of her tea with the serenity of a woman who had already drawn her conclusions and was simply allowing the conversation to confirm them at its own pace. Across the room you turned a page of correspondence with your habitual focused attention, entirely unaware that a man three feet from your queen was conducting his seventeenth silent assessment of the morning of whether the Reach's climate was in any way a disqualifying characteristic in a prospective husband and arriving, frustratingly, at no useful conclusion.
The problem — and he had examined this problem with the thoroughness it deserved, sitting with it in his solar across several evenings while the candles burned and the city went about its business outside his window — was not that the proposals were coming. Of course they were coming. You were accomplished and intelligent and the kind of person who made rooms better by being in them, and proposals were the entirely predictable result of other people having eyes and using them. The problem was that he had been meaning to do something about a feeling he had been carrying for far too many moons and had not done something about it, and now other men were doing something about it, and the window in which doing something felt like a considered and deliberate choice was rapidly becoming a window in which doing something felt like a response to a crisis. He did not want to do something as a response to a crisis. He wanted to do something because it was right and honest and because he meant it entirely, not because Lord Rowan had considerable gardens and the Reach had a lovely climate. The distinction mattered to him. The distinction was, currently, making his life significantly more difficult than it needed to be.
The fifth proposal was from a lord whose name he forgot immediately upon hearing it, which concerned him more than anything else that had happened so far. He had a good memory. He did not forget names. He went back to his solar and sat with the wall for an hour before acknowledging that the wall had never once been helpful and he should probably stop consulting it.
Maekar found him on the battlements on a Thursday evening, which was not unusual — Maekar found him in various places occasionally and delivered his opinions without invitation, which was simply a feature of having a brother that Baelor had long since accepted. "You look terrible," Maekar said, by way of greeting, leaning against the stone beside him with the air of a man who had come here with a specific purpose and was not going to be deflected from it by pleasantries. Baelor thanked him with the composure of someone receiving a compliment and returned his attention to the city. The city, like the wall, was not particularly helpful.
"The proposals," Maekar said.
"I am not discussing this."
"You have been discussing it with yourself for two weeks. Loudly, in the sense that everyone can see you doing it even though you have not said a word." Maekar paused, with the brief patience of a man making a concession to tact before abandoning it. "She does not know. She has no idea — she sorts the correspondence and answers the proposals politely and has absolutely no indication that you are standing on battlements losing your ability to remember lords' names because of it."
"I did not forget his name."
"You called Lord Fossoway Lord Forrest twice in council," Maekar said flatly, "and his name is Fossoway and you never forget names. Do something about it."
"It is not that simple."
"It is exactly that simple. You consider things until other men act and then you consider the consequences of other men acting. Do something about it." He let that sit for a moment, then pushed off the wall and left with the decisive efficiency of a man who had said what he came to say and had no interest in discussing it further.
Baelor stood on the battlements for a while longer. He thought about Lord Fossoway, whose name he had apparently been calling wrong. He thought about Lord Rowan's gardens and Lord Lyonel Tyrell, who had not yet written but whose existence as a potential candidate Myriah had mentioned with the casual precision of someone planting a seed and fully expecting it to grow. He thought about you sorting correspondence with your focused attention entirely unaware that he was up here mangling names. Then he went inside, because the battlements were cold and the wall had already established it was not going to be helpful and Maekar was right, which was an irritating thing to have to acknowledge even internally.
The sixth proposal arrived on a Friday morning and was, by his mother's assessment delivered with a serenity that he found specifically challenging, the most serious one yet. Lord Lyonel Tyrell. Young. Wealthy. The heir to Highgarden.
He sat in his habitual chair and looked at the correspondence he was not reading and thought about Highgarden with the sustained focus of a man attempting to locate a flaw and being unable to find one. Highgarden had gardens that made Lord Rowan's look modest. It had resources and position and climate that were objectively difficult to argue with. Lord Lyonel Tyrell was, by every measurable standard, an excellent prospect, and Baelor was a fair enough man to acknowledge this even when the acknowledgment was deeply inconvenient.
You were at the correspondence table. You were wearing the blue dress — you always concentrated better in the blue dress, he had noticed this some time ago, something in the colour seemed to settle something in you. You had a small ink stain on your left forefinger from where the pen had slipped earlier and you had not noticed and he had noticed and had said nothing, because saying you have ink on your finger would have been a reasonable and unremarkable thing to say and for some reason this morning reasonable and unremarkable things felt slightly beyond him. He was going to lose you to Highgarden. Lord Lyonel Tyrell was going to take you to his considerable gardens and his considerable resources and you were going to sort his correspondence and make his rooms better by being in them and—
"Your grace."
He looked up. You were looking at him from the correspondence table with an expression of mild concern, which meant the expression on his face had apparently communicated something he had not intended to communicate. "Are you well?" you asked, and he said yes, and you looked at him with that observational patience that had always seen more than he planned for, and said he had been quiet, a different kind of quiet, and he told you he was perfectly well with the composure he had left and you returned to the correspondence and he looked at the window and thought, very clearly and very finally, that he was done thinking about Highgarden.
He stood up.
He crossed the room.
He stopped beside the correspondence table and you looked up and he looked at you — at the ink on your left forefinger and the blue dress and the expression that was currently hovering between curious and concerned — and he thought about Maekar saying do something about it with the bluntness of someone who had run entirely out of patience for watching things not happen. He thought about Lord Fossoway, whose name he had been mangling. He thought about Lord Lyonel Tyrell's gardens, which he was done thinking about.
"There is something," he said, "that I should have said some time ago."
You put down your pen.
"Alright," you said quietly, a light frown appearing on your face.
He looked at you — at your face, which was giving him its full attentive consideration the way it always did — and he thought about how he had wanted to do this properly. Considered rather than reactive. Chosen rather than pressured. He had wanted the moment to be right and he had been waiting for the moment to be right and the moment had apparently decided not to wait for him and had gone ahead and arrived anyway in the middle of a Friday morning over a correspondence table with an ink stain on your finger, and he found, standing here, that he did not mind this even slightly.
"I love you," he said. Quietly. Plainly. With the full weight of the words and several proposals in his mind and one brother's bluntness behind it. "I have loved you for some time. I had wanted to tell you when the moment felt properly considered rather than — I had wanted it to be right rather than reactive, and in attempting to ensure that I have apparently been calling lords by the wrong names and holding my sword incorrectly and consulting walls, none of which has been productive. It has been brought to my attention, with some force, that I consider things at the expense of doing them. I am attempting to correct this."
The solar was very quiet.
You looked at him for a long moment, something moving across your face through several registers — the attentive reading quality, and then something warmer and more wondering beneath it, and then something that was almost but not quite a laugh — and you said: "Lord Tyrell."
"Has excellent gardens," he said. "Yes."
"And Lord Rowan."
"Lovely climate."
"And Ser Willam Waxley and Lord Celtigar and—"
"Yes," he said. "All of them. I am aware of all of them in considerable detail, I have been aware of all of them in considerable detail for two weeks, and I would like, if it is at all possible, to stop being aware of them."
The almost-laugh became something more definite, and he stood beside the correspondence table and watched you laugh softly and found that the moons of careful management had nowhere left to go except simply — out. Released. Like something that had been held very tightly finally being allowed to exist without the holding.
"I was not going to accept any of them," you said, when the laugh had settled into something quieter and warmer. "I had no intention of accepting any of them. For reasons that I think are probably apparent."
He went still. "How long," he said.
"Longer than two weeks," you said softly.
The solar was warm and golden and entirely, completely quiet. He reached across the correspondence table and covered your hand with his — the one with the ink on the finger, the one he had noticed and said nothing about, the one he was done saying nothing about — and felt you turn your palm and close your fingers around his with the ease of something that had always been going to happen and had simply required a Tuesday and too many proposals for his liking and one correctly remembered name to arrive.
"I would like," he said, "to have a conversation that is considerably overdue."
You looked up at him with that real smile — the one underneath all the others — and said: "Are you going to consider it first, or simply have it?"
He looked at you for a moment. "Simply have it," he said.
Outside the solar a Friday morning in spring continued with cheerful indifference to the fact that Prince Baelor Targaryen had just resolved moons of careful management in approximately four minutes. Somewhere in the castle Myriah Martell set down her tea with the expression of a woman who had been waiting for this particular Friday since approximately the third moon and found it entirely satisfactory. In the adjoining corridor Maekar, who had absolutely not been listening at the door, walked away with the expression of a man who had said do something about it and had been correct and intended to bring this up at the earliest opportunity and every opportunity thereafter.
You were still holding his hand across the correspondence table. Baelor looked at that for a moment — at your fingers closed around his and the ink stain and the blue dress and the smile that was still present in the corners of your mouth — and thought that he intended to do something about that too. Properly this time. Without the walls and the battlements and the involuntary memorisation of other men's garden statistics. Simply and directly and without further delay, in the manner Maekar had recommended and that he was now prepared to fully endorse.
He was, after all, done considering.
A.N.: I have been sitting with this request for some time. Sorry for being this late, I have not been as inspired as I would have wanted to. Some people have noted that the AKOTSK is kinda dying (or dozing off) and I think I have the same feeling, idk. Guess I need to take it easy for a minute or two. Thank you all for your constant support, you are all champs <3
Summary: Maekar is trying to provide a good life for his new wife by removing himself from her company and offering alternatives. He fails. Warnings: a bit of angst because of pining, a bit of smut.
The morning light cut through the high, narrow windows of Summerhall with a pale, wintry insistence, and Maekar Targaryen, prince of the Seven Kingdoms, found himself staring at the ceiling of a room that was not his own. It was decorated with painted vines, a delicate feminine touch he had never bothered to notice before. The bed linens smelled of lavender and something else, something sweet and warm. The weight on his arm was the source of the latter.
You were curled against him like a dormouse seeking warmth, both your hands wrapped around the corded muscle of his forearm as if he were a lifeline in a storm. Your cheek was pressed to his shoulder, lips slightly parted in the ease of deep, trusting sleep. A strand of your hair had escaped your night braid and lay across his tunic.
Maekar did not move.
He was a prince, a warrior, a man who had crushed rebellions beneath his mace and watched men die without flinching. But this, the soft, contented curve of your mouth, the way your breath puffed in tiny, even waves against his sleeve, paralyzed him. He cast his mind back, desperately trying to remember when exactly his careful, honorable plan had crumbled to dust. It was the previous night. It had been a fool's errand, a mission of pure and unparalleled idiocy disguised as magnanimity.
For months, he had constructed a cage for you, gilded and sprawling, and called it a marriage. After the death of his first wife, the mother of his children, the very concept of a new bride had felt like a betrayal, a picking at a wound that had barely scarred over after years. His brother, King Aerys, had insisted. The match was politically sound. You were from a fine lineage, a daughter of a loyal house, and your dowry was a collection of trade agreements and land rights that made the court accountants rub their hands with joy.
And you. You were a pretty thing: young, sweet, blinking up at him at the Sept with your big eyes, he had noted absently, and a slight pout on your mouth. He recognized that pout now, not as petulance, but as a sign of deep concentration, an unconscious expression you wore when you were trying very, very hard to be brave.
At the wedding feast, you had tried to engage him in conversation, your voice a soft, hopeful melody against the droning noise of the hall. He had grunted in response, complaining about the seasoning on the boar. You had blinked, then smiled, a small, tentative thing, and said, "Perhaps the kitchens will do better with the lemon cakes, my prince. Would you like me to ask them to bring some?" Deflecting his rudeness with a kindness so artless and sweet it had made his teeth ache.
He had taken you to Summerhall, the seat of his power and the monument to his own complicated legacy. He gave you servants who curtsied low, spacious rooms filled with sunlight and tapestries you seemed to admire, and a generous allowance that could have purchased a small fleet of ships. He had daughters, Daella and Rhae, who were delighted with you, finding in you a new playmate, a doll who could speak and laugh and teach them new embroidery stitches. His sons were a different matter. Aerion was a burning star of chaos somewhere in Essos, Aemon was at the Citadel, chaining himself to books, and Daeron…Daeron was usually never counted. The thought of his eldest, a dissipated dreamer, brought a familiar, leaden weariness to his gut. But the girls were happy, and you were occupied.
He thought he had it all handled.
Everything was provided, he had reasoned, watching you from across the courtyard one afternoon as you and Rhae chased a butterfly. You were a young maiden. His idea of a comfortable existence was good service, a sturdy roof, a well-stocked armory, and a couple of silent, efficient friends with whom to share a flask of strongwine. He had assumed, in his colossal, self-absorbed ignorance, that your needs were the same.
Until he started to see it. The quiet sigh you suppressed when he answered your sweet inquiry about his wellbeing with a noncommittal grunt at the dinner table. The way your eyes, those big, expressive eyes, would track a young knight in the yard as he laughed with his comrades, not with lust, but with a kind of wistful, academic curiosity. You were studying a creature you had never encountered. Daella, his sweet daughter, was already starting to enter that phase of mooning over singers and sighing at sunsets, a phase he dreaded with every fiber of his being. And you, his wife, a lively girl not much older than his own children, were saddled with a grumpy man whose range of communication with her was limited to tactical assessments of mutton and grunts about the weather. You were drowning in comfort and starved of life.
He could commission solutions. Jewelry? A cascade of sapphires appeared on your vanity. New dresses? Bolts of lace and silks in hues of deep green and amethyst filled your wardrobes. Rare books? He had a first-edition history of the Rhoynar, bound in pale leather, delivered to your solar. You had been effusive in your thanks, your pout melting into a radiant smile, but the smile never quite reached your eyes. The problem, he realized with a cold, hard jolt, was not resources.
The problem was romance. He couldn't morph himself into a handsome young knight with a carefree disposition and light humor, the kind of man who would compose a song for you, who would bring you a wildflower he’d picked on a reckless morning ride, who would whisper sweet, foolish nothings in your ear. He was Maekar Targaryen, a blunt instrument, a man of duty and gristle and a simmering, constant irritation at the world.
His poor wife. You were left to smile and giggle quietly at his dry, caustic remarks about a visiting lord’s speech. And you seemed genuinely amused by them, your laughter a soft, surprised ripple of sound that made him pause, mid-chew, in confusion. You were so deprived of pleasant company that you took what you could get from him, poor sweet thing. The realization had made him want to kick himself.
So, he had formed a plan, a scheme that, at the time, had seemed the pinnacle of rational, self-sacrificing genius. He went through his guards the next day under the guise of a brutal, unforgiving drill. He had them running siege patterns, sparring until their padded armor was dark with sweat, watching them like a hawk. He found the one he was looking for: Ser Elyas, a bastard from the Reach. He was honorable, sharp as a blade, and handsome in that sun-kissed, broad-shouldered way that maidens were supposed to swoon over. His laugh was easy, his temperament unruffled.
"Ser Elyas," Maekar had rumbled, his voice a low thunder. "You are being reassigned. You are now the personal guard to my wife, the princess. You will see to her safety at all times. You will accompany her on walks, attend her in the gardens, and ensure no harm befalls her."
He had made it clear to you on your wedding night that he had no intention of bedding you. It was a cold, blunt statement of fact, delivered not out of cruelty but out of a misguided sense of honesty. He had seen the flash of hurt in your eyes, quickly masked by a composed, brittle acceptance. So, naturally, he reasoned, after some time spent in the company of the charming Ser Elyas, you would come to love him. It was a natural, tragic story. A handsome knight and a neglected princess. He had practically gift-wrapped a discreet, passionate affair for you. It was the least he could give it to you, a substitute for the husband you had probably imagined, a way to satisfy that aching, youthful urge for romance that he, a man carved from stone, could never fulfill.
Yet, from what he observed over the following weeks, the plan had failed with spectacular precision. He would watch from a high balcony as Ser Elyas, in his gleaming plate, offered you his hand to help you over a damp patch of grass. You took it with polite, distant courtesy. You would exchange a few words, an occasional jest that made the knight chuckle, but your expression remained serene, unmoved. Maekar, a veteran of countless campaigns, knew the look of a soldier performing a duty. And your nights, as the quiet reports from your maids confirmed, were spent solely in your rooms. No secret knocks, no furtive shadows slipping from your door at dawn.
He was at his wits’ end. What did you want then? He had given you everything your station and age could desire. What would wipe off that pretty, unconscious pout off your face? Perhaps, he had finally conceded, if he talked to you. A novel concept for a marriage, he knew. He would go to you, and perhaps, in a moment of unguarded frustration, you would let your grievances slip.
The previous night, he had gone to your chamber. Your maid, a timid wisp of a girl, nearly dropped her mending box when she saw him at the threshold. "Leave us," he had commanded, and she fled. You had been seated by the fire, a book open on your lap, and you looked like a startled doe at his unexpected presence, your body going rigid, your eyes wide.
"My prince," you had said, your voice a breathless question.
He had felt like an intruder in his own wife's space. "I…I came to see how you were faring," he had managed, the words feeling foreign and clumsy on his tongue.
You recovered quickly, your innate grace taking over. You poured his wine yourself, and offered him a plate of fruit and honey cake. "I am well, my prince. Truly. The book you sent is fascinating. The accounts of the Rhoynish are almost unbelievable." You were making conversation. You were making it easy for him. And so you spoke for a while. It was surprisingly pleasant and easy.
He found himself relaxing into a chair, debating the tactical blunders of the Valyrian conquest of the Rhoyne, and you had listened with rapt attention, asking pointed, intelligent questions that surprised him. You had a mind, he realized with a start. A sharp, curious mind hidden beneath the pout and the big eyes.
But he didn’t catch any clues. No lamenting a lack of knights, no forlorn sighs about the gardens, no veiled complaints about his absence. Just you, being…pleasant. So, eventually, he rose to leave. "It is late. You should rest."
The change was instantaneous. The spark of animation in your eyes died, replaced by a stricken, hollow look, as if you were wondering what you had done wrong. Your fingers tightened imperceptibly on the spine of your book. "Of course, my prince. Thank you for your company."
He hesitated. He was a man of military precision, and the sudden, palpable drop in your mood was a tactical variable he hadn't accounted for. He was already in your bed chambers. What kind of husband left his wife's bed chamber right before going to bed himself? A churlish one. A neglectful one. The servants would talk, of that he was certain. The walls of Summerhall had ears and mouths. But he did not care what servants would see or say. Their gossip was the chaff of court life. The thought that stopped him cold, that made his feet feel nailed to the floor, was simpler. He owed you basic courtesy, did he not? He had denied you everything else. He could not deny you the simple, public dignity of a husband who shared your bed for a night.
Before he could overthink himself out of it, he gestured to the bed. "Move over, then."
Your eyes, if possible, grew even wider. "My prince?"
"I will not sleep in my boots," he said gruffly, sitting on the edge of a chaise and beginning to unlace them. "I will stay. Just to sleep." He made a promise to himself then, a sacred oath. He would lie down with you, and he would speak to you until you fell asleep, so you would not be insulted by a silent, rigid vigil. Then, he would leave. He had been insulting you for months by refusing to do his duties as a husband, and this small act of presence would at least be a temporary salve on a wound he had no intention of healing.
He lay down atop the covers, fully clothed in his tunic and breeches, a stiff, awkward pillar of a man. You slipped under the furs with a rustle of linen, lying rigidly on your back. The silence was deafening. Maekar cast about for something, anything, to say. "Tell me more about the Rhoynar," he commanded, his voice a little too loud in the quiet room.
And so you did, your voice soft and hesitant at first, then gaining strength. You spoke of the legends, the songs of the Mother Rhoyne, the giant turtles that were said to be gods. He listened, inserting a dry comment now and again that made you giggle, that beautiful, rippling sound he was growing dangerously accustomed to. He stayed, and continued speaking to you about the defensive layout of river cities, the logistical challenges of moving a legion through marshland, until your words began to slur, your breathing deepened, and your face went slack with peace. He had done it. He thought he would leave when he was sure you were deep in sleep. He would just wait one more minute. Just to be certain. The fire had burned down to embers. The room was warm. The scent of lavender was soporific. And that was the last thing he remembered.
Now, it was morning. The maid’s insistent knocking on the door was a relentless, chipper assault on his senses. He was still fully clothed, his tunic creased. And you were curled up next to him, clutching his arm as if it were the most natural, obvious thing in the world. The knocking roused you. You stirred, a small hum of contentment escaping your lips before your eyes fluttered open. Your gaze, hazy with sleep, traveled up his arm, over his chest, and settled on his face. The reaction was not one of surprise, or at least not the kind he expected. It was pleasure. A deep, luminous, bone-deep pleasure that transformed your features. You were smiling. A shy, pleased smile, as if you had just woken from a beautiful dream and found it still real.
"Good morning, my prince," you murmured, your voice thick and honeyed with sleep. There was a newfound confidence in it, a possessiveness that hadn't been there before. "Are you to have a busy day? I thought I might join you, if it were permitted. Perhaps I could assist you with your letters?"
Maekar found himself staring. The words were simple, but the meaning behind them was not. His plan, the handsome guard, the neglected lady, the grand affair, it all crashed down around his ears in a shower of broken, idiotic pottery. He realized his mistake with the force of a warhammer to the chest. You thought your husband was finally coming around. The gift, the miraculous, improbable gift you had wanted all along, was not a surrogate. It was him.
You wanted this. Him. His presence. His attention. His dry, sarcastic remarks. His tactical critiques of ancient river warfare. His grumpy, unyielding, solid self.
All this time, you had wanted him.
He felt a strange, tight sensation in his chest, a feeling he hadn't allowed himself to entertain for many, many years. It was a seed of warmth, cracking through the cold, hard stone he had meticulously built around his heart. He cleared his throat, his voice emerging as a low, rusty rumble.
"You can join me," he said, the words a surrender. "If you wish."
The pout was completely gone now. The smile that remained in its place was brilliant, a sun emerging from behind a lifetime of clouds. It was a smile just for him. And for the first time since he had been forced to take a new wife, Maekar Targaryen didn't feel saddled. He felt, with a terrifying, exhilarating certainty, that he was about to be completely, irrevocably unhorsed.
The days that followed that first, accidental night established a new rhythm in Summerhall, one Maekar found himself falling into with a disquieting ease he refused to examine too closely.
You had asked to assist him, and Maekar, a man who had never refused a direct request from a lady in his life out of sheer, blunt propriety, could find no reasonable grounds to deny you. You appeared in his solar the next morning, freshly dressed in a gown of pale yellow that made you look like a spring daffodil, and settled yourself in the chair across from his great oaken desk. He expected you to be a distraction. Instead, you proved infuriatingly useful. Your handwriting was elegant where his was a cramped, soldierly scrawl.
You sorted his correspondence into neat piles: urgent, routine, and the one you tactfully labeled "probably insincere flattery from lords who want something." He had let out a surprised bark of laughter at that, and you had beamed at him as if he'd just crowned you Queen of Love and Beauty.
This became your habit. Mornings in his solar, you with your neat piles and your quiet, intelligent questions about the running of the lands. Afternoons, you would walk with him along the battlements, your hand resting lightly on his arm as he pointed out the defensive improvements he was making to the eastern wall. You listened with genuine interest, asking about murder holes and arrow slits with a curiosity that was wholly unfeigned. Evenings, you dined together, and your sweet inquiries about his wellbeing were no longer met with grunts. He found himself actually answering you, describing the frustrations of a dispute between two minor landed knights or the irritating news from court. You would nod, your brow furrowed in thought, and offer observations that were often startlingly perceptive.
And every night, the same delicate, unspoken negotiation occurred.
The first time it happened outside of your own chambers, you had been in his rooms. It was late, the fire burning low, and you had been reading aloud to him from a treatise on dragonlore while he sharpened his dagger. Your voice had grown hoarse, and he noticed the way you rubbed at your eyes with the back of your hand. He could not, in good conscience, send you shuffling down cold corridors to your own chambers. The very idea was absurd. What kind of husband kicked his own wife out into the night like a stray cat?
"The hour is late," he had said, sheathing his dagger with a decisive click. "You will stay here."
You had looked at him with that expression again, the one that was half hope and half caution, as if you were afraid of misinterpreting his words. "Here, my prince?"
"In my bed," he clarified, the words coming out more gruffly than he intended. "I will take the chaise."
But you had looked so stricken at that suggestion, your face falling in that way he was growing to dread, that he had found himself amending the plan. "Or I will join you. The bed is large enough. It is not seemly for a prince to sleep on a chaise in his own chambers."
It was a flimsy justification, and he knew it. But the way your expression brightened, the shy, pleased smile that curved your lips, was worth the internal grumbling. He lay beside you that night, a careful distance between your bodies, and spoke to you about the properties of Valyrian steel until your breathing evened out into the soft rhythm of sleep. He awoke to find you pressed against his side, your head on his shoulder, one of your hands resting over his heart as if counting the beats.
This, too, became your habit. You clinging to him in sleep like a limpet to a rock, and Maekar waking each morning to the scent of your hair and the warm, trusting weight of your body against his. He told himself it was for your dignity. He told himself it was a small kindness, a basic courtesy. He told himself many things, and believed none of them.
Then there was the incident with the lamprey pie.
A lord from the coastal holdings had sent a gift of lampreys, and the kitchens had prepared them in a rich, heavily spiced pie. You had eaten only a small portion, politely complimenting the flavor, but within hours you were taken ill. Maekar was in the yard overseeing a drill when your maid came running, her face pale as milk.
"My prince, it is the princess. She is unwell. The maester says it is the lamprey, that it has irritated her stomach something fierce."
He did not remember crossing the castle. He only remembered the cold spike of fear that had lanced through him, the way his heart had hammered against his ribs with a violence that had nothing to do with exertion. He found you in your chambers, curled on your side in the great bed, your face waxen and beaded with sweat. The maester was there, a fussy old man who was doing far too much hand-wringing for Maekar's liking.
"She will recover, my prince. It is a mere gastric disturbance. But she must eat to keep her strength up, and she refuses. The princess will not touch the porridge."
Maekar looked at the tray on the bedside table. A bowl of plain, unappetizing porridge sat there, cooling and congealing. You were facing away from it, your eyes closed, your pout firmly in place.
"Leave us," Maekar commanded. The maester and the maids scurried out like mice before a dragon.
He sat on the edge of the bed, the mattress dipping under his weight. Your eyes fluttered open, and you looked at him with such a mix of misery and embarrassment that it made something twist painfully in his chest.
"I am sorry," you whispered, your voice thin and reedy. "I am being foolish. It will pass."
"You will eat," he said, reaching for the bowl.
"My prince, I cannot. The very thought..."
"You will eat," he repeated, and this time his voice was gentler, an unfamiliar softness creeping in despite his best efforts. He scooped a small portion of the porridge onto the spoon. "Open your mouth."
You stared at him, those big eyes glassy with discomfort, and for a moment he thought you would refuse him. But then you parted your lips, a tiny, obedient gesture, and he carefully slid the spoon into your mouth. You swallowed with visible effort, your face scrunching up, and he immediately had another spoonful ready.
"Good," he said, the praise awkward on his tongue. "Again."
He fed you the entire bowl that way, spoonful by painstaking spoonful, his large, calloused hands surprisingly steady. He did not rush you. He waited between each bite, murmuring gruff words of encouragement that felt foreign and strange, like a language he had never been taught. When the bowl was empty, he set it aside and reached for a cloth, dabbing gently at the corner of your mouth.
Your eyes were wet, but you were smiling. That smile. The one that made him feel like a hero from a song, when all he had done was feed you porridge.
"Thank you, Maekar," you breathed, using his name without his title for the first time. It hit him somewhere deep, a blow he had no armor for.
"Rest now," he ordered, his voice rougher than he intended. "I will stay."
He stayed. He lay beside you, fully clothed, and let you curl into his side. He stayed until your breathing steadied and the color slowly returned to your cheeks. He stayed even after that, watching the firelight play across the ceiling, feeling the steady rise and fall of your chest against his, and wondered what in the seven hells he was doing.
But still, still, he put off the matter of bedding you.
It was not that he did not want to. The realization had crept up on him with the slow, inevitable force of a rising tide. He wanted to. Gods help him, he wanted to. The sight of you in your thin nightdress, the way your hair spilled across the pillows, the warmth of your body pressed against his each morning, it was testing the limits of his resolve, which had never been particularly strong where matters of the heart were concerned. He had simply never had his heart involved before.
But to bed you would be to open a door he was not certain he could close again. He had built his life around duty, around the cold, hard certainties of obligation and honor. He had loved once, and loss had carved a hollow in him that he had believed was permanent. You were filling that hollow, day by day, smile by smile, and the sensation was as terrifying as it was intoxicating.
He was a coward. Maekar Targaryen, who had faced down rebel lords and laughed at the prospect of single combat, was a coward when it came to his own wife.
Then came the night of the kiss.
It was an evening like any other. You had spent the day in his solar, helping him draft responses to a particularly tedious batch of petitions. Dinner had been a quiet affair, just the two of you, and you had made him laugh, actually laugh, a deep, surprised rumble of sound, with a wicked impression of a pompous lord who had visited the previous week. You had retired to his chambers, as had become your custom, and he had told you about the Dragonknight's campaigns in Dorne until your eyes grew heavy.
"Goodnight, Maekar," you said, your voice soft and drowsy.
And then you kissed him.
It was not a forceful kiss, not a demand or an invitation. It was a brief, gentle press of your lips against his, as natural and unthinking as a breath. A goodbye. An act of simple, uncomplicated affection. You pulled back, your eyes already closing, and nestled into your pillow with a contented sigh, as if you had done nothing of any particular note.
Maekar lay frozen, staring at the canopy above him, his heart thundering in his ears.
You had kissed him.
This was his fault. The thought careened through his skull like a loose cannon on a ship's deck. This was entirely, unequivocally his fault. He had done this. He had planted this notion in your head, watered it with his attentions, and now it had bloomed into something he could no longer ignore.
A fortnight ago, you had been helping him remove his heavy outer tunic after a long day of inspections, your small fingers working deftly at the clasps. It had been such a wifely gesture, so intimate and so natural, that before he had known what he was doing, he had leaned down and pressed his lips to your brow. A brief, chaste kiss. A thank you. He had not even realized he had done it until he saw the way you had frozen, your eyes wide. He had cleared his throat and muttered something about the fire needing more wood, and the moment had passed.
But you had taken that kiss, that single, thoughtless gesture, and drawn a conclusion from it. You had decided, in your sweet, hopeful way, that your husband wanted you to initiate affection as well. That he was too reserved, too gruff, too locked within his own silences to ask for what he wanted. And so, with that gentle, trusting kiss, you had reached across the chasm he had placed between you and offered him a bridge.
Did he want you to? The question burned in his mind, insistent and demanding. Did he want you to kiss him goodnight, as if it were the most normal thing in the world? As if you were truly husband and wife in every sense?
He certainly was not complaining. The ghost of your lips still tingled on his, and his body was reacting in ways that were entirely inappropriate for a man who was supposed to be letting his wife sleep. He was not complaining at all. That was the problem.
He should be complaining. He should be panicking. Because this, this sweetness, this trust, this quiet, domestic intimacy, led inexorably to one conclusion. You would expect children now. The thought hit him like a splash of ice water. Of course you would expect children. A princess, a wife, a woman who had been raised to understand that the bearing of heirs was a fundamental part of her duty. And you would want them, he realized with a jolt. You would want his children. Not out of duty, but out of genuine desire. You would want a babe with his silver-gold hair and your eyes, a child you could hold and nurture and love.
Gods be good.
He turned his head on the pillow to look at you. You were already asleep, your face peaceful, your lips still curved in that small, contented smile. You had no idea of the earthquake you had just set off in his chest. You had kissed him and promptly fallen asleep, trusting him completely, utterly unaware of the crisis you had left in your wake.
Maekar stared at you for a long time, watching the steady rise and fall of your breath, the way your lashes cast delicate shadows on your cheeks. His mind was a whirlwind of duty and desire, fear and longing, the cold echoes of past grief and the warm, insistent pulse of something new.
He could not keep putting this off. The realization settled over him with the weight of inevitability. He could not keep lying beside you, night after night, pretending that this was a mere courtesy. He could not keep telling himself that he was doing this for your dignity, when in truth, your dignity was the last thing on his mind when he felt the press of your body against his in the dark.
But not tonight. Tonight, you were asleep, and he was a coward still. Tonight, he would lie here and listen to you breathe and feel the warmth of your kiss still burning on his lips.
Tomorrow, perhaps, he would be braver.
Or perhaps, he thought grimly, you would kiss him again, and the choice would be taken out of his hands entirely. The thought was not as unwelcome as it should have been.
The kisses continued.
Every night, without fail, you would bid him goodnight with that same gentle, fleeting press of your lips against his. It was never demanding, never lingering. It was a question posed in the softest possible terms, a door left slightly ajar, an invitation he could accept or decline as he saw fit. And every night, for the first several nights, Maekar accepted it the same way: by remaining perfectly, rigidly still, a statue of a man enduring a pleasant but bewildering assault.
He felt you withdraw each time, felt the tiny, almost imperceptible slump of your shoulders as you settled back onto your pillow. You never said anything. You never complained. But he knew. He was a dull rock, an unresponsive lump of granite, and he was hurting you with his passivity. The knowledge gnawed at him, a persistent, guilty ache that followed him through his days and haunted his waking hours.
The fifth night, something in him snapped. Simply, as you leaned in to press your customary kiss to his lips, he found himself moving. His hand came up, rough and calloused, to cup the back of your head. And he kissed you back.
It was not a passionate kiss. It was not the kiss of a man swept away by desire. It was a careful response, a returning of pressure, a silent acknowledgment. He felt your startled inhale against his mouth, the way your body went taut with surprise. When he pulled back, your eyes were wide, your lips parted, and there was a look on your face that made his chest constrict.
Expectation. Hope. A question that had been waiting, patient and trembling, for an answer.
Maekar looked at you, at your big eyes shining in the firelight, at your kiss-swollen mouth, at the delicate line of your collarbone visible above the lace of your nightdress. He thought of all the nights he had lain beside you, rigid with restraint. He thought of the way you smiled at him, the way you laughed at his dry remarks, the way you clung to his arm in sleep as if he were the only safe harbor in a storm.
He resigned himself. The decision came not with a sense of defeat, but with a strange, liberating clarity. He did not want to become the object of your resentment. He could not bear the thought of those eyes looking at him with bitterness, with the slow, corrosive realization that your husband was a man who denied you not only his affection but the most basic experiences of womanhood. You were young and full of life, and he had been keeping you in a gilded cage, feeding you porridge and kissing your forehead as if you were a child rather than a wife.
"You deserve pleasure," he said, his voice low and rough, the words feeling as if they were being dragged from some deep, hidden place within him. "I have been remiss in my duties."
Your breath caught. "Maekar..."
He moved before he could lose his nerve. His hands found your waist, and he lifted you as if you weighed nothing, settling you onto his lap with a decisive, careful motion. You were warm through the thin fabric of your nightdress, your body soft and pliant against the hard planes of his chest. He could feel the rapid flutter of your heart.
"I will not take what I have no right to claim," he said, the words a rough murmur against your temple. "But I can give you this. Let me give you this."
His fingers found the hem of your nightdress, and he pushed it up slowly, giving you time to object. You did not object. You only watched him with those enormous eyes, your hands resting on his shoulders as if you did not quite know what to do with them. He touched you gently, so gently, his battle-roughened hands moving with a delicacy that surprised even himself. He explored the soft skin of your thighs, the curve of your hip, the dip of your waist. He learned the shape of you by touch alone, his gaze fixed on your face, cataloguing every flicker of expression.
When his fingers found the center of your heat, you gasped, your head falling back, your fingers digging into his shoulders. He moved with slow, patient circles, learning what made you sigh, what made you shudder, what made your hips buck involuntarily against his hand. He was methodical in his attentions, as he was in all things, and he brought you to the peak with the same focused determination he might apply to a siege.
You shattered against him with a cry that was half surprise and half relief, your body arching, your hands fisting in the fabric of his tunic. He held you through it, his free arm wrapped securely around your waist, anchoring you against the storm of sensation. When the tremors subsided, you slumped against his chest, breathing hard, your face buried in the crook of his neck.
He gave you a moment. Then, with the same gentle efficiency, he rearranged your nightdress, lifted you from his lap, and placed you back onto the bed. He drew the furs up to your chin and pressed a kiss to your forehead.
"Sleep now," he commanded, his voice a low rumble.
You blinked up at him, your expression dazed and soft and so full of something that looked terrifyingly like adoration. "But you..."
"This was for you," he said, cutting you off with a firmness that brooked no argument. "Rest."
You slept. He did not. He lay beside you in the darkness, his body aching with unfulfilled need, and told himself that this was enough. He had done his duty. He had given you pleasure without complicating matters with his own involvement. It was a tidy solution, a clean, surgical strike. You were satisfied. There was no need to get himself fully involved.
This, too, became a habit.
Every few nights, when the expectant look in your eyes grew too pronounced to ignore, he would pull you onto his lap and touch you until you came apart in his arms. He learned the rhythms of your body. He knew the spot just below your ear that made you whimper when he pressed his lips to it. He knew the pace that made you clutch at him desperately, the slower, teasing touches that made you gasp his name like a prayer. He gave you pleasure as a general might distribute supplies to a besieged city: regularly, efficiently, and with a steadfast refusal to partake himself.
He thought you accepted this. He thought you understood the unspoken terms of this arrangement. He was a fool.
It was a quiet evening, the fire burning low in the hearth, the castle settling into the deep hush of night. He had just returned from a grueling inspection of the eastern watchtowers, his muscles aching, his mood as dark as the storm clouds gathering over the mountains. You were waiting for him in his chambers, a book open on your lap, a cup of warmed wine already poured and waiting on his desk.
You were always waiting for him now. The thought should not have warmed him as it did.
The night's ritual had been completed. You were nestled against him, your body still humming with the aftermath of pleasure, your breathing slowly returning to normal. He was preparing to settle you back onto your pillow, to pull up the furs and press his customary kiss to your forehead, when you spoke.
"Maekar." Your voice was soft, hesitant, but there was a thread of steel beneath it that he had learned to recognize. "May I ask you something?"
"You may," he said, his guard instinctively rising.
You were silent for a moment, your fingers tracing idle patterns on the fabric of his tunic. Then, you lifted your head to look at him, and the expression in your eyes made his heart stutter.
"Why do you not want anything for yourself?"
The question hung in the air between them, simple and devastating. He opened his mouth to deflect, to offer some gruff platitude about duty and obligation, but you did not give him the chance.
"Every night," you continued, your voice still soft but gaining strength, "you give me such pleasure. You are so gentle, so careful, so attentive. But you never…" You hesitated, a flush creeping up your cheeks, but you pressed on with the same determined courage you had shown since the day you arrived at Summerhall. "You never let me touch you. You never seek your own release. It is as if you believe you do not deserve it, or as if you think I am not capable of giving it."
"You are capable," he said, the words escaping before he could cage them.
"Then why?" Your pout was there, that unconscious, pretty pout that he had come to know so well. But it was accompanied by a look so loving, so open and earnest and full of desperate hope, that it struck him like a blow. "I could learn. I could learn how to please you, if you are willing to teach me. I am not afraid. I want to be a true wife to you, in every sense."
He felt something cracking inside him, the carefully constructed walls he had built around his heart beginning to crumble. "It is not a matter of teaching," he said, his voice strained. "There are…consequences. You are young. You should not be burdened with..."
"Children," you finished for him, and he was stunned into silence. "You are worried about children."
It was not the only thing, but it was the easiest to admit. He nodded stiffly.
You took a deep breath, and he watched as you gathered your courage, your hands clasping together in your lap. "If you do not wish for children," you said, your voice steady despite the tremor he could see in your fingers, "I can drink moon tea. We can postpone the idea. I have spoken to the maester, and he has assured me it is safe when used sparingly."
Maekar stared at you. You had spoken to the maester. You, his sweet wife, had gone to the old man and asked about moon tea. The image was so absurd, so unexpectedly bold, that he almost laughed.
But you were not finished. "I would like to have a child someday," you continued, and now your voice grew softer, more wistful. "One child of my own. No matter a boy or a girl. And I would raise it with the best of my ability, with all the love I have to give. But…" You reached out, your small hand coming to rest on his cheek, your thumb brushing the line of his jaw. "I would like to have a life first. A marriage. A husband who does not treat me like a delicate piece of glass that might shatter at his touch."
Your eyes were wet, but you were smiling. That smile. The one that had undone him from the very beginning.
"I want you, Maekar," you whispered. "I want my husband."
The walls crumbled. The last defenses fell. Maekar Targaryen, prince of Summerhall, breaker of rebellions and terror of his enemies, looked at his young wife and realized he was only a man. A man who had been fighting a losing battle against his own heart for longer than he cared to admit. A man who loved his wife.
He loved you The truth of it was a physical thing, a weight in his chest, a fire in his blood. He loved your laugh, your pout, your clever mind and your gentle hands and your infuriating, wonderful habit of clinging to him in sleep. He loved your courage, standing before him now and baring your soul with nothing but hope to shield you. He loved you.
"Gods be good," he breathed, and then he was moving.
His hands found your waist, and this time there was nothing careful or clinical about the touch. He pulled you against him, crushing you to his chest, and his mouth descended on yours in a kiss that was nothing like the chaste, hesitant presses of lips you had shared before. This was a surrender. A desperate, hungry admission of everything he had been too stubborn to say.
You gasped against his mouth, and then your arms were around his neck, your fingers tangling in his hair, and you were kissing him back with an enthusiasm that made his head spin. When he finally pulled back, you were both breathing hard, your faces inches apart.
"You foolish, stubborn man," you whispered, but your voice was thick with tears and joy. "I have been waiting for you to understand."
"I understand now," he said, his voice a low, wrecked rasp. "Forgive me. For all of it. For the neglect, for the distance, for the guard I foisted upon you like a fool..."
"You gave me Ser Elyas?" Your eyes widened, and then a surprised laugh bubbled up from your throat. "Oh, Maekar. I thought he was just a very attentive guard. I wondered why he kept trying to recite poetry at me."
Maekar groaned, dropping his forehead to yours. "I am an idiot."
"You are my idiot," you corrected, and the possessive warmth in your voice was his final undoing. "My husband. And I believe you owe me a proper wedding night."
He looked at you, at the mischievous glint in your eyes, at the loving curve of your smile, and he felt something he had not felt in many, many years. Hope. Joy. A future unfolding before him that was not merely duty and endurance, but something bright and warm and achingly beautiful.
"I owe you much more than that," he murmured, and he lowered his mouth to yours once more.
a/n: Liked the fic? You can donate on Ko-fi, your support helps me write more: https://ko-fi.com/catbayunthestoryteller <3
Can we get a dragon princes wife drabble if she arrived before or during the trial?
of course, my love. we will do slightly before ish purely for the drama.
As you dismounted your horse you instantly noticed Yorkell's wide eyes, "Why are you looking at me like that?" you questioned, brows coming together.
He opened his mouth before it clamp shut.You let out a sigh, pinching the bridge of your nose, "Where the fuck are they?" you finally.
He led you down to the field. You burst onto the muddy ground causing everyone to turn to you. Maekar, Baelor and an unknown man stood in the middle of the field.
Lord Ashford reached out trying to stop you, but you swatted his hand away hissing something into his face that caused him to visibly flinch.
"Oh, fuck," Maekar muttered.
Baelor and Maekar both turned sharing a look at the other as you stormed over to the pair of them, "What is the fucking meaning of this nosense?" you asked.
"There is to be a Trial of Seven," Baelor told you, calmly, "Aerion has accused Ser Duncan," he gestured to the large man next to him, "Of treason."
"Well, did he commit treason against my son?"
"Yes," Maekar replied.
"No," Baelor answered, glancing at his brother. "Aerion attacked an innocent puppeteer and Ser Duncan stepped in defending the innocent like every true knight must."
"Seven fucks," you muttered pinching your nose. "How did you manage to be King if this is how you decide to allow things to be handled."
You turned toward the field noticing the Kingsguard and two familiar faces of your sons.
"Why the fuck is Daeron in armour on a tourney field?" you asked, blinky slightly as your second son waved to you. You shook your head, before moving toward the third, but he rode towards you.
"Withdraw your accusation, and we will handle this alone," you instructed him.
He blinked at you a for a moment, "But–"
"Aerion," you warned, causing him to sigh.
He stared at you a moment, as you raised a brow, "I wish to withdraw my accusation!" he declared holding your gaze, causing the crowd to mummer.
"Now go back to Castle, and we can all have a nice discussion with the overly large man."
hello! here with a request. i'd love to see something about overstimulating maekar if that's alright! like making him whimper and squirm and tear up. i just want to dom that big anvil lol
is it possible make an anvil yield?? let's find out (yo these requests are getting freakier by the minute and i LOVE it)
what breaks an anvil
Summary: you tie Maekar to the bedpost with silk and edge him until he is a whimpering mess before finally letting him come apart completely under your hand
Pairing: Maekar x sister-wife!reader
Warning(s): +18 MDNI, explicit sexual content, smut, bondage, edging, orgasm denial, overstimulation, hand job, praise kink, soft dom/sub dynamics, consensual kink, negotiated consent, established relationship, brief emotional vulnerability, dacryphilia (a little if you squint), reader insert (no use of y/n)
It had started as a negotiation, as most things with Maekar did.
"Do not touch me," you had said. "That is the only rule. Whatever I do — you will not reach for me."
He had looked at you with those violet eyes doing their assessment and said, with the particular flatness of a man delivering an honest appraisal: "I will not be able to do that."
"You could try."
"I am telling you in advance that I will fail." A pause. "I will reach for you. It is not a question of discipline. It is a question of—" he stopped, the honesty costing him slightly— "you. Specifically. I cannot keep my hands off you when you are doing—" he gestured, briefly, at the general situation— "anything."
You looked at him for a moment.
Then you reached for the box on the table beside the bed.
He watched you remove the silk — two pieces, the deep blue of the ones Baelor had used, and the specific recognition that moved through his expression at the sight of them was extraordinary. Not apprehension. Something considerably warmer than apprehension.
"Not the blindfold," you said. "I want you to see everything."
His throat moved.
"Agreed?" you said.
The word took a moment to arrive. "Agreed."
He held still while you tied his wrists — or held still in the way that Maekar held still, which was with the specific controlled quality of a large man exercising considerable discipline, every line of him radiating the effort of not simply taking over the proceedings. You tied the right wrist first, then the left, the silk making two soft loops around the bedpost that would hold without damaging, and you ran your thumb beneath each knot the way Baelor had shown you and watched Maekar watch your hands with those dark violet eyes.
When you finished you sat back and looked at him.
The sight of it — all that contained authority, the broad scarred chest, the white hair against the pillow, those eyes fixed on your face with an intensity that had not diminished one fraction for being tied to a bedpost — did something immediate to your composure that you declined to show.
"Pull against them," you said.
He did. The silk held. Something moved through his expression.
"Comfortable?"
"No," he said. Truthfully. "But not — no. It is fine."
"Tell me if it starts being too much."
"I will." A beat. "Are you going to do something, or are you going to sit there and—"
You put your hand on him.
The sentence ended.
You had not rushed to get here. You had taken your time with his throat and his chest and the old scars that mapped his history — tracing them with your fingers and your mouth while he breathed carefully above you and kept his hands precisely where they were and occasionally made sounds that suggested the keeping was not without cost. By the time your hand wrapped around his cock he was already hard and had been for some time, the evidence of it insistent against your thigh for the last several minutes.
You took your time with this too.
A slow stroke from base to tip — learning him, or performing learning him, because you knew this as well as you knew anything, but the relearning had its own value and you watched his face while you did it and collected every response. His jaw tightening. The slight lift of his hips that he suppressed immediately with the discipline of a soldier. The breath that left him at the twist of your wrist at the top of the stroke, where you knew — had always known — he was most sensitive.
"Look at me," you said.
He was already looking at you. He had not stopped looking at you.
"Good," you said, and tightened your grip slightly, and began to move in earnest.
The rhythm you set was not merciful. Not fast — that wasn't the point — but consistent, the steady purposeful pace of someone who knew exactly what they were doing and intended to do it for as long as it suited them. Your thumb tracing the underside on the upstroke, the pressure varying just enough to keep him from settling into the rhythm, to keep every stroke slightly surprising. His cock hot and heavy in your hand, the evidence of wanting him slick at the tip, and you used it, spreading it with your thumb in a way that made his head press back against the pillow and a sound leave him that had no composure in it.
"Tell me what you want," you said.
"You know what I—"
"Tell me."
His jaw worked. The flush was climbing his throat, his ears, the tips of them vivid. "Faster."
"Not yet."
A sound of frustration that was also, unmistakably, something else. His wrists pulling once against the silk — not to escape, you understood, but because he needed somewhere for it to go and had nothing else. "Then— harder—"
You loosened your grip slightly.
The sound he made was extraordinary.
"You were saying?" you said pleasantly.
"You are doing this deliberately."
"Yes." You restored the grip. Resumed the pace. His hips lifting toward your hand and you let them, let him have the friction of it without increasing anything, and watched his face — the specific agony of a controlled man losing his control by degrees, Maekar who held everything tightly finding that this particular grip was stronger than his. "You are doing beautifully," you said.
He made a sound at that — the praise landing somewhere it always landed with him, beneath the severity and the pride, in the place that didn't know what to do with being told he was doing well and wanted it anyway.
"More of that," he said, roughly. Not the physical. "Say — more of that."
"More of what?" you asked, as though you didn't know.
His eyes closed briefly. Opened. "You know what."
"Tell me."
"Tell me I'm — gods — tell me I'm—"
"You are perfect," you said, and tightened your grip, and felt him shudder. "You're doing exactly what I want. You look — Maekar, you have no idea how you look right now."
The sound he made resonated at the base of your spine.
You felt him approaching it the way you felt everything about him — in the specific tension that moved through his thighs, the slight change in his breathing, the way the sounds he was making had gone from frustrated to something with more urgency in them. Close. He was close. The rhythm of your hand and the heat of him and ten years of knowing exactly how to read him — close.
You stopped.
Not slowed. Stopped. Your hand going still, wrapped around him but motionless, and the sound he made at the cessation was nothing like dignified — a broken exhale that was almost a word and did not make it, his hips pushing forward into the grip of your hand and finding nothing moving.
"No—" The word dragged out. His wrists pulling hard against the silk. Those violet eyes finding yours with an expression of genuine anguish. "Don't—"
"Not yet," you said.
"I was almost—"
"I know."
"You knew and you stopped—"
"Yes." You loosened your grip entirely. Just held him, warm and present and entirely motionless, and watched him breathe through it — the particular suffering of a man pulled back from the edge and left there, the flush of him deepened to something that had reached his chest, his jaw set with the effort of not simply demanding.
"Please." The word arrived with difficulty. "Please, just—"
"Just what."
"Move."
"Say it properly."
The expression on his face — desire and frustration in equal devastating measure, the composure entirely gone, Maekar who held everything tightly reduced to this: tied to a bedpost and looking at you with violet eyes that had lost every pretence of management.
"Please move your hand," he said. Each word extracted. "Please. I need—"
You moved your hand. He made a sound that belonged to no public space, but to that chamber specifically.
You built him back up with the same consistency — the same pace, the same pressure, your thumb tracing the places you knew, watching him climb back toward it with the focused attention of someone conducting an experiment and noting the results. Faster this time, slightly, the rhythm more insistent, and his breathing came faster to match it and the sounds he was making had gone past language entirely, just Maekar, stripped of everything, reduced to wanting and the specific mercy of your hand.
Close again. Closer than before.
You stopped.
The sound he made this time was wrecked in a way the first hadn't been — something in it that was almost past frustration into something rawer, the specific quality of a man who has been brought to the edge twice and denied twice and is finding that the third time will be worse still.
"Please." Immediate. No preamble, no pride left to negotiate around. His wrists against the silk. His eyes on yours. "Please, I cannot — you have to — please—"
"Look at you," you said softly.
He looked at you. The expression — open, unguarded, the severity entirely absent, everything he kept managed and contained simply gone, violet eyes dark and wet at the edges with the sheer physical accumulation of it — made something in your chest ache with fondness so specific it had its own weight.
"You are so beautiful," you said. Meaning it completely. "Right now, like this — do you have any idea—"
"Please." Rougher. The word cracking slightly. "I am asking you. I am — please."
You wrapped your hand around him again.
"Alright," you said quietly. "I have you. Come on."
This time you did not stop.
The pace you set was different — faster, the grip firmer, your thumb at the head of his cock on every upstroke with the specific pressure that you knew and had been deliberately withholding and now gave him without reservation. Your other hand at his chest, feeling his heartbeat, the rapid certain thud of it. His hips moving with your hand now, the discipline entirely gone, just Maekar chasing the thing you were finally allowing him to chase.
"That's it," you said. Low. Watching his face. "Come on. I've got you — that's it — you're perfect, you're so—"
He came apart.
The sound he made was not triumphant. It was not the satisfied certainty of Maekar having won something. It was something with no victory in it at all — just release, just the specific devastating relief of a man who has been held at the edge three times and is finally, finally being allowed over it, his whole body shuddering with the force of it, his cock pulsing in your hand, his back arching off the bed as much as the silk would allow.
"Beautiful," you said, and meant it, watching him. "Look at you. You're beautiful — Maekar, look at me—"
He looked at you.
The tear was so quiet you almost missed it. A single line of it from the outer corner of his eye, tracking down his temple and into his hair — the accumulated frustration of three edges and however many days of being Maekar, of holding everything tightly, of being severe and controlled and the man who did not need things, finally finding its single outlet.
You leaned forward.
You pressed your lips to the subtle teary stream and licked it away — the salt of it, the specific tenderness of the gesture, your mouth gentle at his skin while he shuddered through the last of it beneath you.
He was very still when you drew back.
His breathing was uneven. The flush everywhere. Those violet eyes finding yours from close range with an expression that was the most naked thing you had ever seen on his face — exposed in a way that the crawling and the begging had not quite managed, because those had been theatrical, had had the structure of a scene, and this had been simply real. Simply him.
You reached up and worked the knots at his wrists. The silk fell away. You drew his arms down slowly and held his hands in yours and felt the slight tremor in them.
He looked at his own hands for a moment.
"That," he said. His voice had not recovered. "Was."
"Mm," you mumbled. A long silence.
"You licked—" he tried.
"Yes."
"I wasn't—" He stopped. His jaw worked. "I don't—"
"Don't worry, I know," you said.
Another silence. His hands turning in yours, his thumbs tracing across your knuckles in the slow absent way that meant he was processing something he didn't have immediate language for.
"The silk," he said finally.
"Mm?"
"Keep it," he said.
You looked at him with a funny, curious glare.
"Keep it," he said again, with the flat certainty of a man delivering a logistical instruction, and you understood that this was the closest he was going to get tonight to I would like to do that again, and you received it accordingly.
"I'll keep it," you said.
His hand tightened briefly on yours. The smallest thing. The whole of him in one gesture.
Outside, the castle moved through its evening. Inside, Maekar lay in the quiet with the silk warm on the pillow beside him and you holding his hands and the single track of salt already dried at his temple, and he said nothing further, and he did not need to.
You already knew.
P.S.: yeah, it is the same pieces of silk that Baelor used with you ˙ᵕ˙
https://x.com/fysamspruell/status/2062236230297985462?s=46 all I can see is maekar finally snapping and carrying you to your marital chambers after you’ve been teasing him all day
i’m obsessed with this clip you have no idea..
because he really would waste no time at all, snatching you away from everyone else, carrying you over his shoulder like there is no weight to be had. because there isn’t to him, and the fact he’s now fueled on pure adrenaline and desire.
all he had to give is a short, “Come here..” and he’s already halfway to your chambers, and locking that door tightly. 👀
“do they flare when he cums or feels good when he's fucking you? yes. it's instinctual, and it covers you both, almost cocooning you under the width of them. “
ohmygod i stared at this until my screen went dark
dragon hybrid!maekar x wife reader
mdni(18+), monsterfucking!!, p in v, breeding mention, fluff.
all physical descriptions of dragon hybrid!maekar can be found in 1, 2, 3! happy reading! < 3
your dragon husband fucking you, and the closer he gets, the more his wings flare out, casting a shadow over both of you until all you can see is him, him, him. not the ceiling, not the room, nothing else but him.
him and those scaly, phenomenal wings. they twitch when the walls of your cunt squeeze around his cock just right, as if he's preening from the pleasure you're offering him.
maekar's tail curls languidly behind him, the sharp tip of it brushing against your ankles, wrapping around one to maneuver your leg a bit higher, angling you as he wants you so he can reach deeper inside. the touch feels warm and rough, the grip firm but gentle, never enough to hurt you, never enough to leave marks you do not want, or ask for.
"tickles," you breathe against his flushed cheek, nuzzling against the jut of his jaw. maekar's blanketing you from shoulders to knees, and it feels so good, like the warmest hearth you could ask for. the pleasure is truly a bonus.
he huffs, amused, leaning into your touch as he grumbles. "yeah? doesn't hurt, does it, my heart? feels good?" always asking, always making sure he's not too forceful, too rough, too... animal with you.
your sweet dragon.
you shake your head, smiling at him through small, sweet sighs. "never, love," you assure him, and the way his scaly wings twitch and then move to cocoon you more under him tells you all you need to know. he's pleased. so pleased to know that even now, even like this, more beast than man—looking every inch a predator looming over you and rutting so deep you can feel him in your womb—he's protecting you. he's making you feel warm and good and loved.
his eyes make you melt, slitted and wide with heat and affection as they trail down towards where you're connected, blinking slowly, as if in a trance, wordlessly showing you what you already know. that he loves you. that he loves having you like this and knowing he's the only one who can and will ever be in this position.
a groan rumbles from deep within his chest, so akin to a marvelous beast of ancient times, making you shiver and clench around his cock, urging him to parrot the sound, this time lower; more animal. "think this time it'll take?" his hand touches your stomach reverently, talon-tipped fingers scraping down feather light across the skin, just enough to prickle. maekar's eyes blow wider the more he watches, feeling the way his cock moves beneath his palm. "think you'll carry my clutch soon, wife? keep them warm right here until you're full and round."
the words make you whine, hands moving to grasp at his shoulders, thumbs brushing along the rough scales that litter the broad expanse of skin, eliciting a soft sound from your husband. "yes, my sweet dragon," you moan, eager and tender. the way his wings flare wider, almost obscuring your vision of anything but him, the light in the room suddenly dimmed, making more heat curl low in your belly, close enough to burst. "i want a brood of your hatchlings."
a growl, long and so, so deep it seeps into the very marrow of your bones slips past maekar's lips. you can feel his talons scrape at your skin just enough to make you gasp, before he catches himself and eases his grip back to gently cradling your stomach. "you'll have them," he groans, hips snapping against the fat of your ass, rutting faster, deeper. his wings have not stilled once, curling and twitching incessantly as the pleasure mounts, his tail unfurling from your ankle to slither upwards, brushing against your thighs, your hips; greedy and frantic for more contact. the tip of it seeks the swollen clit at the top of your wet pussy, flicking against the nub in time with his thrusts. "i'll fuck you so full of my seed, they'll hatch by winter."
the promise, paired with the stimulation to your clit makes you whine, high and pitiful, clutching at his scaly shoulders, nails scraping over the rough surface, pulling a punched out moan from maekar's chest. "yes, yes, please, husband, please—"
"shh, shh, settle," he croons, leaning down to nose along your neck, forked tongue dipping to taste. "you'll have them, my heart," the words are pressed into your skin, rumbling deep and soothing as he nuzzles and licks at the sweat along your throat. "we'll have them," he corrects. "pretty, soft hatchlings, just like you, wife."
tag list: @eowyns-fantasy @crayonbug @mademoisellepetite @zoctopiii @loveslide @breakspearz
OKAY!! first we talk looks, then behaviour!!!
i thought about what dragon i would associate him with, and while i lean heavily towards vermithor or meleys, since a lot of people have said that, if maekar had a dragon, it would be between those two!
BUT, for my own head canon of dragon hybrid!maekar, I really feel like Drogon's color palette suits him best, especially the tail.
drogon's tail has those thorn-like scales all over the sides, and i feel like those would suit dragon hybrid!maekar SO SO WELL!! and i'm biased because the reddish, darker colors would look SO GOOD on maekar, especially when you pair them with the clothes we've already seen him in!
maekar dressed like this WITH that tail? OUUUGHHHHHHH stay with me, stay with me...
claws (talons) also, obviously! he keeps them as close to non-threatening as possible because he has young kids, and there is no way he would ever accidentally hurt them while handling them or being close. they're still sharp, and they can still probably kill a man if he tried.
they would look close to how drogon's look in this particular shot, only sharper and, of course, at the tips of human-like hands! sadly, i suck at drawing and cannot put it on paper, but i hope you can envision it at least!!
scales!!! along his shoulders, littering his navel, a couple at his temples, a thick line of them from his nape, along his spine, which bleed into his long, strong tail!! maybe some onto his knuckles as well. you can see the scales better here!! the colors will be very similar!
of course we're going to give him slitted pupils!!!
NOW, ON TO HOW HE ACTS!! being a dragon!hybrid, he's stronger, sturdier, thicker!!!!!
behaves like a dragon, too! circles his mate, noses along your neck, bites and nips at your skin, wraps his tail around your waist, wrist, neck etc!! wants his mate to have his scent on them, your clothes, your hair ALL THE TIME!!!
blinks slowly at you to show affection. it's my own little headcanon. when you're talking to him, and he cannot think of anything else but kiss you or mount you, he blinks slowly and lazily, slit pupils blown, not hearing a word you're saying.
he runs as hot as a furnace. loves to curl around you in bed and press you as close to him as possible as he scents you incessantly. if you don't smell enough like him, he will lick you. everywhere.
hoarder. hoards your clothes, jewelry, and shawls when you're away for too long because he misses you and misses your scent. also hoards gifts for you, from small to big trinkets to give you as tokens of his appreciation.
hordes you TO HIMSELF!!! wanting to touch his mate whenever he's close enough to!! manhandling you CLOSER when you're too far!! growls when people get too close to you for his liking, snaps his jaws too!! marks you with his teeth and claws so everyone can see who you belong to. so possessive and protective.
KNOTTING!!!! big, fat knot!!! especially when he is in rut!! mounts you like a beast and maneuvers you how he wants/likes you!! uses his tail to keep you in place or move you around. also uses his tail in multiple other ways to bring you pleasure! he's a very resourceful man and will use everything to his advantage.
his scales are sensitive! so is his tail, but only in certain places.
synopsis: Maekar (and his brother) teaches his Wife how to defend at her own hand, purely for his own peace of mind.
word count: 1,661
warnings: 18+ mdni, female reader, no use of Y/N, readers looks are un-described, suggestive sexual themes, kissing, fighting, play fighting, (real world) inaccurate self defense, woman + wife as terms of endearment. (reader is a legal adult) REMEMBER - YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CONTENT AND MEDIA YOU CHOOSE TO CONSUME
DISCLAIMER: All themes, plot, images used in general and characters from A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms + elsewhere belong to the rightful owners, I hold no rights to the original media - but my writing belongs to me.
✴︎
The chambers you shared in the Redkeep were vast, colder in nature than that of yours in Summerhall in the sense that they did not feel your own. The cavernous space allowed for movement however, and Maekar was taking advantage of this structural change away from prying eyes.
“Again.” He ordered, his body hovering above your own from where your back lay pressed against one of the many expensive carpets that adorned the place. You couldn’t help the groan that escaped you, trousers and a tunic hanging loosely from your damp frame, sweat sticking hairs to your skin as you grumbled in annoyance. “I am not denying I will be attacked husband, being married to a man with a mouth like yours its bound to happen- however slamming me into a stone floor is not going to make me want to practice with you.” You rolled onto your stomach, throwing a glare in his direction as his hand made contact with your arse, the smack echoing off of the chamber walls as he went from kneeling to standing. “Lose the attitude woman, I’m doing you a favour.” The eye roll he threw you in reciprocation did not escape your gaze as he hauled you to stand. “Hit me, come on.”
You aimed your leg straight between his own all too quickly, however he caught your thigh before it could make any true contact. “I said hit me, not permanently damage my cock.” He shouted, releasing your thigh and pushing you back, forcing you to stumble lightly at the force. “I thought you said any contact is better than none, husband.” He scoffed, “Do not use my words against me. In a genuine attack yes hit wherever necessary, however in this bedchamber when it is your husband and his cock, do not damage what you know you will grieve.” You huffed, crossing your arms over your chest as he ordered again, “turn around, we will do this differently if you cannot hit me as I am asking you.” Complying, you turned to face the door. “Now when you feel me close, do as I have showed you. And if you do it properly I will be on the floor, not you.”
You waited until you felt his breath hot against your neck before throwing your elbow back into his ribs, his bicep coming around your throat you felt the urge to bite him just to teach him a lesson. “I know what you’re thinking, don’t you dare bite me, do this properly.”
“I am!” You yelled, yet he had you on your knees before pressing you chest down into the floor, the muscles of his own chest flushed against your back as he caged you. “An intruder would slam you to the floor, I have lowered you out of kindness. Anyone bold enough to attack a Princess will not have mercy, wife.” Using the leverage of is bicep under your jaw he forced your neck up, tilting your head back until your eyes met his own. He pressed a hungry kiss to your lips as his teeth dug into the lower one, a whimper escaping you from the overwhelming sensation of his entire body overs yours, his possessive nature, his need to teach you. Distracted by the kiss and the sight of your body pliant under his control he seemed to underestimate the power of your legs. You pulled your lips from his own, tucking your mouth and nose into the crook of his elbow and elbowing him, causing his hold to slip entirely. Taking his surprise as advantage you turned onto your back before wrapping your thighs around his waist and flipping him underneath you as you now straddled his hips, wrists pinned to the floor above his head. You could not help the proud smug smirk that encased your plump lips, even Maekar grinned lightly with a nod. “Well played, but you cannot seduce an intruder as you would me.”
“But I still did it.”
“You did.”
The door jolted and swung open, Baelor stood in its wake as he eyed the state of the pair of you on the floor. “Am I interrupting something?” He questioned, watching as you released your husband’s wrists but instead they fell to your hips. “Not at all, brother.” Maekar sat up beneath you as you crawled out of his lap to stand, allowing him to do the same. Maekar shut the door behind his brother, taking the book of legislations from his hands and placing it on the bed. “She won’t take me seriously, attack her as if you were an intruder.”
Baelor raised an eyebrow, eyeing your clearly physically exerted state and Maekar’s withering patience. “You want me to attack your wife?” Baelor asked, as if it were a trap, he knew his brother well and he wouldn’t put it past Maekar to suddenly change his mind and fight his brother for even attempting to lay a finger on you. While Baelor definitely succeeded in combat, he did not take pleasure in it, and he certainly would get no pleasure out of attacking his sister-by-law. “That’s what I said isn’t it? She needs to learn and clearly I am a biased teacher.” You shrugged “I’m doing well!” You protested, “There is no need for you to attack me.”
“Do it.” Maekar ordered again, eyes narrowed solely on his brother. You wouldn’t seduce Baelor, nor attempt to- lest in front of your own husband anyway. Baelor sighed, loosening his doublet and the cuffs at his wrists, “Seven hells you’re not actually going to do it!” Your eyes wide, your brother-by-law was proper, cared far too much for his image yet here he was ready to attack you as if he were an intruder solely because his brother asked him to. “You should learn, I taught Jena. It will be fine. You can hit me.” The groan of frustration that left you seemingly only brought amusement to him. “There are many tourneys coming, if you wish to be allowed the company of your own presence, I would suggest you pay attention. Otherwise it will be back to the company of the Kings Guard trailing you.”
You huffed, readying yourself “But don’t pull my hair, that hurts.”
“If you’re being attacked, wife, it’s going to hurt.”
“Alright, alright I won’t pull your hair. I’ll just grab you.”
And what a liar he was. He had you against the wall in seconds as you writhed “I don’t like this anymore you two don’t even give me the chance!” Baelor just shook his head, “Breathe. Think about what you are doing, where I am touching you. If I am touching your arms use your legs, if I am pressing on your chest and not your neck, consider head butting. It’s about process of elimination and balancing your actions to counteract the attackers.”
“I’d knee you in the cock but Maekar said I can’t do that unless it’s actually an intruder.”
“Will you focus on what you are doing!” Maekar shouted, he was watching the other side of the room. From this outside perspective he could see how truly helpless you looked against Baelor, and it pained him to think of what you would look like in the given situation if it wasn’t his own brother, rather someone with genuine intent to hurt you.
“Here.” Baelor loosened his grip, “bring the back of your ankle to my thigh here. If you use enough force it will make a persons leg feel dead weight. It’s a pressure point. Do as I’ve told you.” Following the instruction you did, causing Baelor’s leg to bend unwillingly as he let go of you entirely, falling to one knee with a wince. “See. One move and now you’re free to attack me in return, or run. Which is what I would advise you to do. Not to mention make noise. Break things, scream, shout. Bang against the walls if you must. Anything to draw attention.” He rose to stand, brushing off his knees. “We had an intruder break into our bedchamber once. Jena was alone. She drew the attention of the Kings Guard by smashing the chamber window. An expensive fix but worth nothing in comparison to her life. In that situation you must do what is necessary.” You sighed, nodding your head lightly. You could understand why Baelor took both his and Jena’s safety so seriously given all they’d been through. Not to mention the attacks from the Blackfyres pre-rebellion. “You’ll get better with time, just take it more seriously. You are well protected, but you should know no hand safer than your own.” He squeezed your shoulder gently before going and retrieving his legislations, “I’ll find you later, brother.”
When the door had swung shut behind him, you turned to watch him go. Now rather it was Maekar who had taken you genuinely by surprise, catching you entirely off guard. You thought, you felt, and he did not win this time. Instead he ended up sort of crumpled on the floor, you would have felt bad had you not been beaming with pride. “Yes! I did it! Now I am going to bathe.” You bragged, yet Maekar reached for your ankle and pulled you to the floor, dragging you underneath him, his beard now tickling your cheek. “I am losing patience with you woman. I just want you to be safe.” He grunted, kissing your cheek to your lips. He suffocated you with his mouth, drawing your breath from within your lungs to his own, consuming you entirely. You pulled away gasping lightly as you pressed your forehead into his own, “I did well. I am learning. But now I am tired, can we not pick this up on the morrow, we’ve been at it for hours.” A kiss to your jaw, then another to your collarbone he travelled, devouring with each fluttering contact made between you.
“Alright, wife. As you wish.”
A/N: guys i tried to incorporate a little bit more of baelor into this maekar fic, in the future what would we think of a baelor x reader x maekar? let me know your thoughts (and whether you’d want reader married to one or the other- or both i’m not fussy). anyways as always: requests open, likes, comments, reblogs and any interactions at all are always always appreciated. take care everyone!!
I am here to beg you (kindly, nicely and with a pretty bow on top) for some somno kink maekar and reader + morning sex? 👉👈 established consent ofc!!! Like him waking up with reader’s mouth on him 🙈
hypnos
Maekar x Wife!Reader drabble
Note: Modern era moodboard, but I'm vague enough that this could be in canon era. Also, I threw my self-imposed word limit to the wind for this one.
You woke when a plinth of light fell across your eyes. Squinting against the sunshine, you stretched slowly, your limbs protesting as they remembered the previous day’s exertions.
A healthy flush stained your cheeks and your gaze fell to the side, where your husband was still fast asleep. His silver hair was tousled – the work of your own hands a few hours ago – and scratches and bruises lingered on his skin. Some of them yours, some his rowdy children, some his training’s.
Sometime during the night, he had wrestled himself from beneath the covers. Maekar always ran hot. As such, his nude form was laid bare as he rested on his back, arms tucked to the side. He sleeps like a dead man on his pyre, you thought. Quiet, breathy snores and the slow rise and fall of his broad chest assured you of the fact that he was very much alive.
Your eyes fell lower. You felt like some kind of cretin – leering at Maekar’s manhood as he slept, unaware. He was not even hard. His cock rested against his thigh, still impressive in size, despite being soft.
When aroused, it sometimes looked angry, aggressive. Like this, there was something vulnerable to it – something you found irresistible.
You began ghosting your fingertips over your husband’s happy trail, following the blonde hairs like a map.
An exhale. You glanced at Maekar’s face sharply, but it remained slack, his frown lines smoothed out. He looked so peaceful like this, so handsome. Unburdened.
Your fingers continued their descent, and reached the thatch of hair at his base. You ran your digits through it lovingly, knowing how good it felt rubbing against you when you fucked each other.
Beneath your hand, his cock jumped. Once, twice. Alarmed, you watched for other signs that Maekar was waking up, but nothing else about him changed. Not his breathing, nor the looseness of his body that was never present while he was conscious.
You knew that your husband would gladly entertain you should he wake, but you found that you did not want him to. The fragility of him as he slept was what you desired, what made your insides throb with need.
Your mouth flooded with saliva, and you swallowed, torturously aware of the rush of wetness between your thighs as you imagined your sleeping husband’s still mostly soft cock between your lips, the velvety texture of his skin, the give of his flesh before blood engorged his shaft.
Maekar liked waking you by burying his head between your legs – and the only reason you had never done the same to him was that he was usually up and about when you were still bleary with sleep.
You leaned down and retraced your path with your lips, ephemeral kisses placed upon his pale skin. You quickly reached his length.
Briefly, you simply nuzzled against it, relishing the soft texture brushing your cheek, your chin tapping against his sack.
You did not tease yourself for long, drawing his rapidly thickening cock into your mouth, tongue running over his veiny, sensitive underside.
Salt and bitter musk exploded on your senses, as well as a faint tang that you realised was what remained of your own juices. A stuttered breath later, you licked at his mushroom-shaped head, pointing the wet muscle of your tongue and flicking it along his weeping slit.
Your cheeks hollowed as he slowly but surely filled out in the snug cavern of your mouth, your jaw working to accommodate his generous girth.
Eager to feel more of him, you bobbed your head, engulfing more of him, only stopping when his length threatened to choke you. Spit dribbled past your lips, down your chin and onto his twitching flesh as you kept your head right at that edge, your nose almost nestled against his groin. You held yourself there for a few heartbeats longer, then began exploring him further.
Like a woman possessed you kissed along his erection, licking and sucking on his ruddy head, lavishing it with attention as though he was the sweetest treat you had ever tasted.
Eyes flickering up at his serene face, you shoved a hand between your legs, sliding easily through your own arousal as you began grinding on the heel of your palm.
Slick sounds echoed lewdly through the silence of your bedroom, and you moaned softly around Maekar’s rigid shaft, his hips instinctively rocking back into your mouth whenever you withdrew to breathe.
A burst of flavour made you grin. Maekar’s cock was leaking across your tongue, his flesh hot and throbbing as you sucked harder. Your free hand pressed lightly on his hip to still him and give you control over the depth as your own hips rolled in time with the motion of your head in Maekar's lap.
By now, his breathing had started coming in quicker, along with your own, and you could not say that you were truly surprised when your husband’s large hand clumsily but firmly settled atop your crown, long fingers threading through your hair. A guiding, familiar weight – a gesture so possessive and comforting that a whine rose inside of you.
“Fuck, that’s good,” he mumbled drowsily, his baritone voice rumbling, rough with sleep, “you’re so good to me.”
He groaned, dislodging your loose grip on his hip effortlessly – probably entirely ignorant of the fact it had even been there, in the haze of his lust – and thrusting into you with abandon. Once, twice, three times. You whimpered, spluttering, fighting to stay relaxed as he tensed with a shudder, buried to the hilt.
Maekar came with a grunt, thick spurts of salty cum flooding your mouth, shooting down your throat as you desperately swallowed around his pulsating cock, trying to keep it all inside. A moment later, you fell apart on your own fingers, the muscles of your cunt fluttering and clenching around nothing.
You kept your mouth around him until you were sure he was completely spent, then you withdrew slowly, licking your lips to catch a stray droplet trying to make an escape.
“Seven Hells, woman, you’re insatiable. Did I not tire you out enough last night?” he groused, though his hand began cupping your cheek as you rested it against his belly, staring up at him with a lethargic smile. You hummed.
“You’re just too handsome,” you said hoarsely, blinking slowly and growing tired again in the aftermath of your own orgasm. “Like having you in my mouth.”
What do AKOTSK men do when they’re down or privately struggling? What’s their tells? Like does the laughing storm not eat, is baelor Breakspear fidgeting with his rings obsessively?
How Do They Struggle?
Summary: How do the akotsk men struggle? How do you know? What can you do to help them?
AN: Sometimes I see an ask and it immediately rockets to the top of my list, I was so excited for this one!! I hope you enjoy, please send in more ideas this format is so fun! I have another one on the way soon <3
Warnings: Angst, suggestive stuff, fem(ish) reader a little
2.6k Words
Daeron:
This one is a little obvious of course, Daeron throws himself down the neck of a bottle when his dreaming becomes too much for him. There's no shortage of times where he’s passed out in a ditch, or even the middle of the road, purse stolen and eyes unfocussed as he begs the gods for reprieve. There's another aspect to this that I don’t see people talking about quite so much, and that's the sex. Daeron is a drunk, but he also spends long nights in brothels, intent to stay up as long as possible. He’s addicted to the small joy of having someone close; often he;s drunk enough that he’s not embarrassed to ask the poor girl to stroke his hair or tell him he’s going to be alright.
The immediate tell that he’s fallen into old habits is that he looks awful. Dark, sunken eyes, filthy clothes, stubble grown out, a bruise or two from some drunken brawl he cannot remember. He stumbles, slurring his words and reeking of wine and the incense burned in the pleasure houses. If you’re married or together, it's possible he refrains from his unsavory visits, but it means he tries to seek it with you. Daeron is honestly kind of disgusting when it gets real bad, but it's hard to be angry when you see the tormented look in his eye, and the way he falls to his knees at your feet, clutching your skirts and begging you to touch him.
He needs you to yell at him, honestly. Make him stand, drag him back to his rooms with a firm hand gripping his surcoat roughly and telling him to pull his fucking shit together. It works because he knows that it only comes from a place of love, your fear of losing him pushes him to at least try. You send for a hot bath, the glare in your eye enough to keep him from asking if you’ll join him. He’s perfectly content to listen to you berate him for his behavior; he agrees with what you say, he just doesn’t know how to stop it. The thing that really helps him calm himself is the combination of the harsh reality of your words, and the tenderness in which you help the still half-drunk Daeron wash his hair. Even when you’re finally abed, continuing to chide him for frightening you, for the state you found him in, his eyes are falling shut without complaint for the first time in days. His head on your chest, damp hair seeping into your nightgown, he’s sleeping soundly.
Maekar:
When Maekar is struggling, he becomes a monster. It's a defense mechanism; he’d rather hurt others and push people away than let them see something’s wrong. Yelling, shoving, cutting words said in anger but remembered. The servants know to give him a wide berth, and any lord or knight caught in the crossfire learns quickly how he gained his reputation. Even with you, he’s grumbling, snappy and trite. He won’t insult you, it goes against the oaths he’s sworn, but he’s grinding his teeth and glaring with a fiercer intensity than usual. There’s a coldness to him, when he cannot fix a problem or there's too much work for hours in a day. He needs to get the anger out, that crushing feeling of not being able to meet the mark.
You find him in the training yard, hours after he’d usually be done and sharing a bath with you. Hacking at opponents, squires and trainers who can only gape and try to dodge hits that definitely look like they mean to kill. You can see the sweat trickling down the linen of his shirt and dampening the chest, the fabric clinging to his musculature. His arms shake with a tremor so slight only someone who’s spent hours memorizing his body could recognize. Maekar is fully aware he’s being a dick, that the literal child squiring for him did not mean to drop the shield, but he shouted at him for a good half hour about it anyway. It's not that he feels particularly bad about scaring people (other than you and some of his children), but he thinks it unprincely to go around intentionally rubbing people the wrong way.
When he gets like this, he needs you to (very gently) take his sword arm, lowering the blade. Lead him away from the smell of steel and blood and smoke, up to your chambers. He sighs when you peel the damp material of his shirt away, pushing him down into the chair by the hearth. All he really wants is comfort, someone to listen without thinking him weak for being strained. His groan echoes through the room when you press your fingers to his shoulders, rubbing the hard knots built up around his neck and spine. (He is certainly the most tightly wound man ever like imagine the aching). Slowly you coax him to tell you what happened, listening to him rant. He doesn’t even mind when you disagree with him, listening to your opinions and going back and forth about the problem. Nothing calms him more than ending up in your bed, chin tucked against your bare shoulder with his arms around your waist. He grumbles when you make him apologize to the squire the next day.
Aerion:
There is nothing private about Aerion struggling. He’s bitchy, snide, cruel to a point where it's almost fearsome. We see in the show where he snaps, hurting people because he can, because he’s made up a fault of theirs he must punish. It's not like his father, who’s angry and vicious but still disciplined, the Brightflame is a wild thing, striking anything in his path. It’s an immediate tell that he’s feeling insecure when he proclaims himself blood of the dragon, dragging on about how he’s closer to the creatures than anyone. It's his way of protecting himself, a barrier between his deep feelings of self-doubt, and the people around him he knows don’t respect him. Uncles, cousins, even his own brothers don’t have the love for him most family members would, and if they won’t care for him, they must fear him.
Another tell is him vying for attention, especially from people he looks up to or cares about. Ridiculous armor, taunting words, tricks with the sword or lance; he’ll even try to impress you with his brutality and swagger. Attempting to make you see him for what he thinks he is by showing off his strength or violence. Despite how many times you tell him to stop, that you already care about him, and don’t want to see him hurt anyone, he continues to try and use his power to clear his conscience of any apprehension. He is unsure of his own abilities, so when he starts to show behaviors that he’s trying to impress himself, you know something deeper is getting at him.
What he really needs is a good slap in the face. Seriously though, something that can tether him back into the real world, but contains elements of the barbarism he is so accustomed to. It's not until Dunk beats the shit out of him (and I’ll admit, he does the same back) that he’s begging for mercy, the red-hot dragon gone and only a young Prince in his place. He doesn’t respond well to coddling, immediately thinking it shows that he’s weak, that you think he’s weak for needing it. Instead, meeting him where he is, matching his harshness, his cutting words, his bloodthirstiness, is the only thing that shakes him out of his own head.
Dunk:
Dunk immediately becomes closed off when he’s upset or struggling. Him being capable, strong, and resilient is all he has, and when he cannot complete a task or he fails at something, it creates a moment where he sees himself as a man who cannot provide, who cannot protect the people around him who need it. What is a knight if not one who can keep his loved ones safe? His shoulders round, and he tries to make his extremely large body seem smaller. He does this any time he feels unworthy of being somewhere, or like he’s doing something a poor hedge knight ought not to. We see this when he’s addressing Lyonel for the first time; the Stormlord questions him, and accuses him of breaking into his party. Dunk tries to make himself less of a target (which Lyonel points out of course), and pulls himself close.
He’ll throw himself into working, spending hours chopping wood for fires he won’t build, back slick and teeth clenched as he swings the axe. It would almost be erotic if not for the pained look in his eye, and the air of a kicked puppy that radiates off of him. He has a deep urge to provide, thinking it's the only reason people keep him around.
Sometimes you have to come stop him, telling him something silly like you’re trying to save the tree he’s mercilessly hacking into. To get him to listen, to actually believe your words, you have to be casual about them. You cannot go singing his praises all willy nilly when he’s upset; he won’t actually believe a word, convinced you’re saying things just because you’re kind. Instead, you have to praise him subtly. Instead of saying he’s a good hunter, announcing to him and Egg “Wow, this dinner is lovely,” while seated around the fire. He knows that you know he is responsible for the meal, but his ears go red all the same. You have to work him up to bigger affections throughout the evening; mentioning how strong he looked with an axe in hand, how nice it was of him to teach Egg a new game, how gentle he is with the horses. Eventually you can cover his face in kisses, squeezing his shoulders as he blushes and half-heartedly tells you it's too much. Dunk’s mood finally turns back to his usual self when he laughs heartily at Egg loudly feigning disgust at your affection for his Ser.
Baelor:
As the heir, Baelor can get really, really, really into work. It comes from a place of striving for perfection, needing to live up to the standards of all the great Kings who came before him. In reality, he’s just working himself to the bone in an effort to meet impossible standards he’s made for himself. You won’t see him for days sometimes; he stays tucked away in his solar in the tower of the Hand, scribbling away at messages, ledgers, long lines of numbers that make his head spin after staring for too long. It's not that he doesn’t want to see you, but he becomes so wound up in the affairs of the Realm, he would not want to burden you with the responsibility of knowing the Kingdom's troubles. Instead, he remains locked in council meetings, battle plans, or negotiations, because he believes he must be the one to do it.
He’s stoic, rigid in a way only a Prince is, and the only real tell is the fidgeting.
You can spot it right away.
Twisting his rings around his long fingers, spinning the metal warmed by constant wear. He does it subconsciously now, able to speak with lords and deliver speeches, the only thing betraying his nerves is the careful movement of his fingertips. To most onlookers, it seems like a trivial matter. Boredom, maybe, or a Prince showing off his wealth. Many are too focused on the finery, his handsome face, or his moving words, to even recall he’s wearing them. But you always seem to spot it.
It helps him when you give him something else to fiddle with. You’ll slide into the seat next to him, and immediately he’s tugging at the loose string of your gown or the ribbon tied around your hips. The best remedy is to give him your own hand, sliding your fingers between his to let him squeeze. If you wear rings, rest assured he’s twisting those too. He’s not one to be easily convinced to leave his work aside, but he is always so touched when you insist on joining him while in his solar. Sending for meals so you can eat together, bringing your sketchbook or stitching to take up space near him, reading aloud when he needs a moment of hearing your clear voice echo out through the room. Baelor is well aware that his work can be incredibly boring, and the mere fact that you want to spend time with him warms his heart and invigorates him to continue on. Someone needs to make the Realm a good place for you to live in.
Lyonel:
Oh Lyonel, what a man. When something does get to him, when a problem or fault wiggles down past his carefree, blasé exterior, he throws himself into his entertainments and delights. Hunting and sailing, dancing and drinking, kissing pretty girls and boys alike, there is no end to the pleasures he seeks. He’ll throw lavish parties nights in a row, outdrinking each of his guests and starting fights. It's always, “What’s next?” what new excitement can entice him, distract him enough so that he cannot even form a thought around his responsibilities. If he’s not burning every synapse in his head and taking up every second with carnality, he will spiral. The wilder he gets, the worse he feels after, mentally and physically.
It's kind of gross, similar to Daeron in that he’s so distracted he doesn’t really take care of himself. A lavish feast is prepared for his soirees, but he touches nothing because he’s too busy drinking ale and arm wrestling sell-swords. He won’t change his tunic after he spills a cup of wine down the side, because someone suggested a midnight ride and that sounded more pleasing than spending five minutes alone to switch garments.
He needs someone headstrong enough to make him stop. Someone who will grab him by the face, force him to listen, and order him back to his keep this instant, or there will be hell to pay. The first time you pulled him from his frivolity, tugging at his arm and waving your hands around, he swore he fell in love with you, and popped a pretty sizable boner. You snap him back into reality, without shame. Well, maybe a little shame, but it comes from a good place. He’ll argue for the sake of it as you drag him away, pretending like he doesn’t absolutely adore when you try to shove his large frame up the stairs, or when you tell him he stinks of wine and needs a bath.
Lyonel’s still drunk enough that you can plop him down in a chair and he won’t move, watching you call for a hot meal to be sent. You stand over him while he eats, maybe for the first time in a day or two, with your arms crossed and your brow furrowed. There's a smug satisfaction on your lips when you mention how very ill he will feel come morning, the turning of his stomach and the ache in his head. The ache all over, really, from silly brawling and throwing his body around like it's expendable. He doesn’t fight your berating. After all, deep down he knows you’re right, and he knows you’ll be beside him when he wakes, hand rubbing his back and lips against his forehead as he suffers the fate of his own actions.