gwayne my pretty princess my skittish horse my frightened gazelle nobody's doing the medieval romantic knight renaissance painting serve like you are i love you
Some people in this fandom will never understand these characters. I can’t believe people are saying that Daemon is going to be happy about Jace’s death. He was about to go to King’s Landing with Rhaenys last season to take down Vhagar and Aemond after he killed Lucerys at Storm’s End. In Season 1, he’s the one who plead with Viserys to testify for Lucerys’ inheritance during the petition for Driftmark. He took Vaemond’s head partially for calling the Velaryon boys bastards. He ordered the Queensguard to kneel for Rhaenyra AND Jacaerys. He yelled at Rhaenys for not burning the Greens because if she had, then “Luke would still be alive.” His favorite daughter is betrothed to Jace and set to become the queen. Are they blind? Daemon doesn’t even want the throne himself. This has been clarified time and time again in this show.
pairing: aerion targaryen x wife!oc , daeron targaryen x oc
Chapter I: The dynamics of love
Clarice cleared her throat. “I can’t reach my feet,” she said simply.
Aerion stared at her. He looked at her feet, then at her face. His expression flickered between irritation, disgust, and then something else. Something swift and sharp and much too vulnerable that he buried before it could settle into his features.
Aerion let out a short, humorless breath. “Pathetic,”
He dropped to one knee.
a/n: just a small drabble of something that's been on my mind for a while
masterlist here
The heat in the Reach wasn’t anything like the heat of King’s Landing. In the capital, the summer air smelled of shit and old fish; it was a dry, baking oven that trapped the city against the Blackwater. Here at Ashford, the heat was contrastingly green. It rose from the meadow damp and heavy —distinctively too heavy— smelling of crushed grass, horse sweat, and the river. It clung to the skin like a second layer of silk, inescapable and suffocating.
Clarice Arryn sat on the edge of the camp bed, her blonde hair crimping at the ends, her hands resting on the swell of her stomach. The child was kicking again; a frantic, rhythmic drumming against her ribs that felt less like a baby and more like a trapped bird throwing itself against the bars of a cage in an idle attempt to escape.
A dragon, she thought, the notion tired and familiar.
She was six months pregnant, heavy enough that her balance had shifted, and that daily activities had become nothing short of grueling exercise. She stared defeated at the leather straps lying limp on the rug, then at her swollen ankles. The once simple act of fastening her sandals felt impossible now.
The tent flap swept open.
It didn’t flutter; it was shoved aside with the sharp snap of brute force. Aerion entered. He brought the day’s violence in with him; the metallic tang of fresh oil on armor, the smell of a cheap wine and ale, and that peculiar, electric tension that seemed to crackle around him whenever he was bored.
And Aerion Targaryen was currently very, very bored.
He stopped in the center of the pavilion. He was wearing a doublet of red velvet that looked far too heavy for such suffocating weather, slashed with black satin, the three-headed dragon embroidered in golden thread upon his chest. His silver hair sat short, glaringly too short, over his skull, and his violet eyes were bright, restless, and cruel. He was undeniably magnificent to look upon, in the way wildfire or a venomous viper are magnificent.
He looked at her. He didn’t smile. He never smiled when he looked at her; he merely assessed, his gaze traveling from her face to the mound of her belly, then back up to her eyes. He curled his nose.
“You look ghastly,” he said. His voice was melodic and clear, cultured in a way that made every sentence sound like it was carved in judgment.
“And you, husband,” Clarice replied, her voice dry and cool, “look like a summer mummer who has raided a brothel’s wardrobe. Did you steal from a street juggler?”
Aerion’s lips quirked into a smile that didn’t quite reach his eyes. It was a smile that usually promised violence to everyone else, but for her, it was simply the opening move in their daily game. He crossed the room, stripping off his riding gloves in a gesture of uncalled exasperation. “The humidity is a plague. I should have the river dammed. Or boiled.”
“I’m sure the river is trembling at the threat, dearest.”
“It should.” He tossed the gloves onto a table cluttered with wine cups and maps. He began to pace, a prowling back and forth that made the large tent feel impossibly smaller. “The commons are already swarming. Hedge knights. Squalid little men riding dying horses, thinking they can joust against princes. It smells of unwashed bodies and desperation out there.”
“You invited yourself to their tourney, Aerion,” Clarice reminded him. “If you dislike the smell of hedge knights, you could have stayed in Summerhall.”
“And miss the chance to remind them what a true knight looks like?” He stopped in front of her, his shadow falling over her lap. He tilted his head. “Why are you half dressed? Baelor, may he choke on his own name, expects us at the evening meal. If you are late, he will look at me with that disappointed heavy lidded stare, and I shall be forced to set the table on fire.”
Clarice cleared her throat. “I can’t reach my feet,” she said simply.
Aerion stared at her. He looked at her feet, then at her face. His expression flickered between irritation, disgust, and then something else. Something swift and sharp and much too vulnerable that he buried before it could settle into his features.
Aerion let out a short, humorless breath. “Pathetic,”
He dropped to one knee.
Clarice didn’t move. She didn’t flinch, and she certainly didn’t thank him. She watched the top of his head as he took her left foot with his hand. His fingers were long and pale, yet surprisingly strong. He didn’t do it gently, Aerion didn’t do gently. He jerked the strap tight, winding the leather around her ankle with a precision that bordered on aggressive.
“You are an Arryn,” he said to her foot, his voice dropping to a scornful murmur. “Mountain stock. Supposed to be hardy. And yet, one half-formed dragon whelp and you are rendered invalid.”
“The dragon takes up a lot of room,” Clarice said, watching his hands. “It has your ego.”
Aerion pulled the knot tight —too tight, just for a second, a spiteful and vicious pinch of warning— before loosening it to a perfect fit. He switched to the other foot.
“Does it hurt?” he asked. He didn’t look up.
“The strap?”
“The child.”
Clarice thought about it. “Yes.”
He paused, his thumb tracing the bone of her ankle. It was a touch that lasted a fraction of a second too long to be accidental, but he withdrew his hand instantly, as if the contact burned him. “Good. Pain clarifies the mind. You’ve been too quiet lately.”
“I am conserving my energy. One of us has to have the temperament of an adult.”
He finished the second sandal and stood up in a single, fluid motion, towering over her again. He dusted his knees, though the rug was clean. “Get up. Wear the blue silk. The dark one that matches your eyes. I won’t have you looking pale and sickly next to Valarr’s wife. Kiera always looks like she’s just eaten a basket of plums.”
Clarice reached out a hand.
It was a test, it was always a test with them. They were common currency in their marriage.
Aerion looked at her hand. He sneered, a bitter curling of the lip that showed his teeth. “Can you do nothing yourself, you feckless woman?”
But he took her hand. His grip was hard, pulling her up with a force that was almost rough, but the moment she was on her feet and slightly swayed, his other hand snapped out, seizing her waist to steady her.
He held her there for a heartbeat. His palm was hot against her side, burning through the thin linen of her shift. He was close enough that she could smell the cloves he had chewed on to sweeten his breath, and the faint, blazing scent of his skin.
He looked into her eyes, searching for fear. He always searched for fear.
Clarice gave him none. She looked back, her dark blue eyes, the colour of the moonlit sea, calm and unblinking.
He released her abruptly and turned away, pouring himself a cup of wine. “My father is in a foul mood,” Aerion muttered. “Daeron has lost Aegon. The drunkard can’t even keep track of a child.”
Clarice remained quiet, placing her hands over her stomach. “Aegon is resourceful,” She then said, after taking a long breath. “He probably went to find a cooler place to sleep. Or to look at the knights.”
Aerion brought the cup towards his lips, not taking a sip, as if weighing her words. He then walked to the entrance of the tent. “Dress yourself. And hide the blade you like to hide in your sleeve. This is a tourney, not a back alley brawl.”
“It’s a small knife, Aerion. For fruit.”
“It’s an Essosi stiletto, Clarice. And you use it to clean your nails when you think I’m not looking.” He took a long drink, and dropped the goblet into the rug. “Hurry up.”
He vanished into the heat.
Clarice was left alone in the tent, but the air still felt charged with his presence. It was exhausting, being Aerion Targaryen’s wife. It was a constant dance on the edge of a cliff, waiting to see if he would push her or pull her back.
*********
The pavilion of House Targaryen was a sprawling construct of black and red fabric, a temporary palace erected on the trampled, suffering grass of the meadow.
Dinner was an exercise in theatre.
Prince Baelor Breakspear sat at the head of the table, dark haired and broken nosed, looking most handsome in a simple, black doublet; radiating the kind of effortless authority that made Aerion grind his teeth. Next to him sat his son, Valarr, small and slim and brown haired, lacking the Targaryen look but possessing a quiet decency that Clarice had always found soothing.
Aerion hated them both. He hated them for their dark hair, and for the way the realm looked at them with hope, while they looked at him with wary, panicked caution.
Clarice sat at Aerion’s right hand. She wore the blue silk, as he had commanded. She usually wouldn’t do as such, as she enjoyed the confrontation, but today she chose caution.
Aerion was restless. She knew the signs well enough. He was yearning for conflict, for a reason to unleash the fire that so viciously burned under his skin. He felt slighted by his father, annoyed by his brothers, and bored by the peace.
Clarice ate small bites of roasted duck, acutely aware of Aerion’s leg pressing against hers under the table.
“The lists are in acceptable condition,” Baelor was saying, his voice a low, steady rumble. “Though the ground is soft near the river end. I’ve warned the master of games to lay down more straw.”
“Straw,” Aerion scoffed, stabbing a fig with his knife. “We are putting knights on horses, Uncle, not bedding down pigs. If a man cannot ride through a bit of mud, he has no business holding a lance.”
“A horse slipping can break a man’s neck, cousin,” Valarr said sharply. “Even a good rider.”
“Then the horse was weak, or the man was clumsy,” Aerion retorted. He sliced the fig in half, its purple flesh tearing open. “Natural selection. We coddle them too much. This is meant to be combat, not a dance.”
“It is a celebration,” Baelor said, his eyes now resting heavily on his nephew. “Not a war.”
“Is there a difference?” Aerion asked, smiling that bright, terrible smile.
Clarice felt the tension spike in the air, sharp as a needle. She reached for her goblet, her movement slow and deliberate.
“The difference,” Clarice interjected, her voice cutting through the silence, “is that in a war, the enemy is trying to kill you. In a tourney, they are only trying to knock you down. It bruises the pride more than the body. Perhaps that is what worries you so terribly, husband?”
The table went still. Valarr looked down at his plate, hiding a grin. Baelor watched them, his expression unreadable.
Aerion turned his head slowly to look at her. His eyes were wide, violet irises that seemed too large swimming in white.
“My pride,” he said softly, “is not so easily bruised as a peach, sweet wife.”
“No,” she agreed, meeting his gaze over the rim of her cup. “It is more like glass. Hard, sharp, and spectacular when it shatters.”
Aerion stared at her. For a second, she saw the violence rise in him, a dark tide behind his eyes. He wanted to strike her. She knew it, and he knew she knew it. The air between them buzzed with the electric desire for conflict.
Then, the corner of his mouth twitched.
“Eat your duck, Clarice,” he said, his attention back to his plate. “Before you faint, and I have to drag you out by your hair.”
Baelor cleared his throat, unimpressed by his nephew’s threats. “Clarice, how is the heat treating you? You look flushed.”
Clarice smiled. “I am well, Your Grace,” she lied politely. “Aerion ensures I am... comfortable.”
“I ensure she is kept in the shade,” Aerion corrected, his hand dropping under the table to grip her knee. His fingers dug in, marking her skin. “Like a mushroom.”
The meal continued, a strained affair of pleasantries stretched thin over the rocky road that was Aerion’s temperament. Clarice played her part: the dutiful wife, the Arryn beauty. She smiled at Valarr’s jokes and nodded at Baelor’s wisdom.
But she was tethered to the storm beside her. Every time she laughed at something Valarr said, Aerion’s grip on her knee tightened. Every time she looked away, he shifted so his shoulder bumped hers. He was constantly checking, constantly verifying that she was there, that she was his, that she was paying attention to him and him alone.
When the meal ended, Aerion stood abruptly.
“Come,” he said to Clarice. “The air in here is stale. I want to walk the grounds.”
“Aerion,” Baelor warned, his eyes serious. “Do not antagonize the people tonight.”
“I only wish to see the stars, Uncle,” Aerion said, his voice dripping with false innocence. “Clarice is fond of astronomy. Aren’t you, my love?”
Clarice pursed her lips. “Immensely,” she said dryly.
Outside, the night had brought little relief from the heat. The air was thick with the smoke of a thousand campfires, the smell of roasting meat, and the raucous laughter of people.
Aerion walked with a swagger, his hand resting on the pommel of his sword, his eyes scanning the crowd with open, flaring contempt. He was looking for a fight, she knew. He always was.
He walked fast, his stride eating up the ground, forcing Clarice to keep pace. He didn’t offer her his arm. He walked slightly ahead of her, cutting a path through the crowds, expecting them to part for him. And they did. The sight of the silver-gold hair and the arrogant set of his shoulders was enough to make the smallfolk scramble into the mud.
“Look at them,” he sneered, gesturing vaguely at a group of squires gambling with dice near a crinkling fire. “Insects. They breed and they die and they leave nothing behind but dirt.”
“They grow the food you eat,” Clarice argued, keeping her hand on her stomach to dampen the jostling of her stride. “And they sew the velvet you wear.”
“And worms aerate the soil” he scoffed, “I don’t invite them to dinner.”
He stopped suddenly near the edge of the merchant’s row. A troupe of puppeteers were painting a wooden booth. There were bright dragons painted on the side, in an attempt to be crude and comical.
Aerion stared at the booth. His body went rigid.
“Mockery,” he whispered.
Clarice stepped up beside him. “It’s a puppet show, Aerion. It’s for children.”
“It’s a caricature,” he hissed, in a viperous gesture. “Look at the dragon. It looks like a lizard with the pox. Is that how they see us? Is that what they think we are?”
“They think you are powerful,” Clarice said, her voice firm. She stepped closer, invading his personal space, forcing him to look at her instead of the painted wood. “They fear you. And because they fear you, they make small jokes to make the fear manageable. If you burn down their booth, you only prove that you are exactly the monster they tell stories about.”
Aerion looked down at her. His face was pale in the torchlight, his eyes gleaminng. “I am the monster, Clarice. Haven’t you learned that yet?”
“You are a prince who is currently throwing a tantrum over some plywood,” she argued. “It is beneath you.”
He stared at her, his chest heaving slightly. The violence was right there, bubbling under the skin, searching for a release. He wanted to hurt something.
“You have a sharp tongue,” he murmured, stepping in close. He reached out and took her chin in his hand, tilting her face up. His fingers were cold now. “One day I will have to cut it out.”
“Then who would tell you when you’re being an idiot?” she asked.
His eyes narrowed. For a long, terrifying moment, he didn’t move. She glared at him, her hand instinctively drifting to the small, concealed pocket in the folds of her sleeve where her dagger rested.
Aerion saw the movement. His eyes flashed with delight, with almost manic amusement. “Go on,” he whispered. “Draw it. Let the commons see the Lady of the Vale try to gut the blood of the dragon.”
“I don’t need a blade to gut you, Aerion,” she said softly. “I need only wait for your ego to swell large enough to burst your skull.”
For a moment, they just stared at each other amidst the dust and the noise of the camp. To an outsider, the tension between them might have looked like hatred ; like pure, unadulterated loathing. And it was, in a way. But it was also the only language they knew. It was the intimacy of knives, sharpening each other.
Then, he let out a short, barking laugh. It wasn’t a happy sound, but it broke the spell. “I should have had you poisoned at our wedding feast. It would have saved me a great deal of headache.”
“I recall you tried,” Clarice countered, forcing her tone light, conversational. “Or was that just the Arbor Gold? It tasted vile enough to be hemlock.”
“Next time I shall use the Strangler,” Aerion promised, his voice dropping to a seductive whisper. “I’ll watch the light go out of those big, judgment filled, delectable eyes.”
“Do try not to botch it,” she said. “Incompetence is so unbecoming in a prince.”
His thumb brushed over her skin, surprisingly gentle. It was this exact dichotomy that maddened her. He could flay a man’s skin off with a smile, but with her, his touch was often reverent, as if he were handling a rare, dangerous artifact that he didn’t want to break.
Suddenly, the baby kicked. Aerion’s hand flinched on her chin, his eyes darting to her stomach. He hesitated, then reached down, placing his palm flat against the curve of her belly.
The child moved under his hand, a rolling wave of pressure. Aerion’s brow furrowed, in a flicker of genuine confusion crossing his face, as if he couldn’t quite reconcile the biology with the concept.
“He is restless,” Aerion murmured, his voice losing its edge for a fraction of a second. “He senses the tourney. He smells the blood in the air.”
“She,” Clarice was quick to correct him, “and she smells the roast pork from the kitchens, nothing more.”
Aerion’s hand stiffened over her belly. He looked up, his eyes narrowing. “A son. It must be a son. A dragon, Clarice.”
“It will be a girl,” she said, offering him a sweet, venomous smile. “Just to spite you. She will have my nose and she will hate velvet.”
“Do not jest about legacy,” he hissed, though he didn’t remove his hand. He pressed slightly harder, as if he could command her womb to obey him through sheer force of will. “If it is indeed a girl, we will simply have to try again immediately. Until you get it right.”
“I’ll be sure to tell her she was a disappointment before she’s even born,” Clarice said dryly. “It will save you the trouble later.”
He withdrew his hand as if stung, standing up in a single, fluid motion. “Come,” he said, stepping away. “I saw a Dornish merchant selling Myrish lenses earlier. I want to see if they are flawed.”
Aerion turned and walked away.
*********
Clarice lay in bed, clad in a loose shift of ivory cotton. She was reading a tome she had brought from the Eyrie, a history of the Andals, by the light of a single oil lamp.
The tent flap opened, and Aerion entered.
He brought the smell of the night with him, smoke, roasted meat, and wine. He had been drinking, she could tell, but he wasn’t drunk. Aerion didn’t get drunk like Daeron did; the wine only sharpened his edges, making him more vivid.
Aerion stripped off his doublet and threw it onto the floor. He paced the length of the rug, shirtless, his skin pale and smooth; his back all lean muscle moving like water over bone. He was beautiful, in that marble, statue way that Targaryens often were.
Clarice didn’t look up from her book, though she tracked his movements by sound. The rustle of fabric. The thud of boots. The splash of water as he washed his face in the basin.
The mattress dipped as he climbed into the bed beside her.
Clarice started counting the seconds before her peace were broken.
“Still awake,” he said. It wasn’t a question.
She hadn't made it to ten.
“The noise,” she replied absentmindendly, turning a page. “It’s quite loud tonight.”
“They celebrate their own filth,” Aerion said, lying back against the pillows, placing his hands behind his head. He stared up at the red silk ceiling. “I saw a giant today, Clarice. A hedge knight. Huge brute. Thick as a castle wall.”
“Truly?” Clarice asked, feigning disinterest. “Did you insult him?"
“Not yet,” Aerion grinned at the ceiling, in a boyish manner. “But I will. He offended me.”
“How? By existing?”
“Precisely. He looked... presumpuous.” Aerion turned his head on the pillow to look at her. The lamplight cast deep shadows across his face, making his eyes look black, dangerous. He frowned. “Put the book away.”
“I’m reading.”
“You’re ignoring me.”
“I can do both.”
Aerion reached out and snatched the book from her hands. Clarice didn’t fight him; she just sighed, crossing her arms over her chest. He tossed the heavy volume onto the floor with a loud thump.
“Talk to me,” he commanded.
“About what? Your imaginary grievances? The color of your doublet for tomorrow?”
“About us.”
Clarice laughed; it was a short, dry sound. “There is no ‘us’, Aerion. There is you, and there is the person you are currently tormenting.”
He moved fast, shifting so he was hovering over her, bracing his weight on his elbows, careful not to crush her. His head fell forward, breath tickling her face. He smelled of wine and cloves.
“You challenged me tonight,” Aerion said, lowering his face until their noses almost touched. “In front of Baelor.”
“I spoke but the truth.”
“You undermined me.” He countered, “you made me look... managed.”
“You need managing, Aerion. You were ready to draw steel on a puppeteer.”
“He insulted the blood of the dragon!”
“He painted a lizard!” Clarice snapped, her own temper finally giving in. “Not everything is about you. Not every shadow is an assassin, and not every laugh is mockery.”
Aerion suddenly seized her arms over her head, slamming her hands against the mattress; small wrists caught in between his burning fingers.
“You don’t know what it’s like,” he whispered, his face inches from hers. His voice had lost its mocking edge, replaced by strange, almost feverish wonder. “To hear the buzzing. To feel the heat under your skin. I am a dragon in human skin, Clarice. I am not like them. And I am not like you.”
“No,” she said, holding his gaze, refusing to lean back. “You are worse. You are a child who thinks the world owes him its obedience.”
His face twisted. “I could kill you,” he breathed. “Right now. I could crush your throat. No one would stop me. I am a Prince of the Blood.”
“Do it, then,” she challenged him. Her heart was hammering against her ribs, but she kept her voice steady. “Stop talking about it and do it. Make yourself a widower.”
“You push too far,” he whispered. His eyes were wide, dilated, dancing with that familiar, manic heat. “You forget what I am.”
“I never forget,” Clarice said, holding his gaze, refusing to lean back. “You take great pains to remind me every hour.”
His face twisted into a sneer, a beautiful, cruel expression that he wore like armor. He lowered his head until his lips were brushing her ear.
“I should have had you killed months ago, woman,” he murmured, the threat dripping with dark, twisted affection. “Smothered in your sleep. Or pushed down a very long flight of stairs.”
“And yet, here I am,” Clarice replied, turning her head in the slightest so she could look him in the eye. She didn’t flinch; she offered him a small, challenging smile. “Why is that, do you think? Were you too busy staring into your own reflection?”
Aerion stared at her. He made a sound in his throat that was half growl, half laugh. “Because you are entertaining. And because watching you try to waddle in those sandals is the only amusement I have in this miserable bog.”
“Liar,” she whispered. Clarice knew him. He viewed her as a prize, a piece of himself that he allowed no one else to touch, but in the quiet, dark hours of the night, she knew it was more than that. He was a man who saw enemies in every shadow, yet he slept with his back to her, certain she would never strike while he was vulnerable.
Clarice stared into his eyes. They were burning with a twist of emotions he would not dare name. She kissed him then. It was hard, demanding, a collision of teeth and lips. He kissed her back like he wanted to consume her breath, to own the air in her lungs.
Aerion licked his lips, tongue whirling around in an all too majestic reptilian gesture, his breathing ragged and hot. “Perhaps.”
The cruelty drained out of his face, replaced by a sudden, stark vulnerability that was painful to witness. He looked young, and he looked lost.
He didn’t hit her, he never hit her. He simply lost the strength to hold himself up. He slumped forward, burying his face in the crook of her neck. His weight pressed her back against the pillows.
Clarice didn’t push him away, she never pushed him away.
She lay there, staring up at the silk roof of the tent. She could feel his breathing against her collarbone, ragged and fast, slowly, but surely, evening out. His hand reached up to rest on her stomach, fingers splayed wide over their unborn child. Their unborn, whelp of a dragon.
“You are unbearable,” he mumbled into her skin.
“I know,” she whispered.
She reached up, her hand hovering for a moment before settling on the back of his head. She ran her fingers through his hair, scratching lightly at the scalp. It was the way one calmed a nervous dog, she had learnt.
He sighed, a long, tension, releasing sound, and pressed closer to her.
“You had a knife in your sleeve tonight,” he recalled, his voice muffled by her skin.
“Yes.”
“Were you planning to use it on me?”
Clarice paused. “No.”
He shifted slightly, lifting his head just enough to look at her. His eyes were heavy now, the madness condensing into a dull simmer. A strange, twisted amusement curled his lips.
“I liked you better on our wedding night,” he murmured, his thumb stroking the curve of her belly. “When you were plotting to kill me.”
Clarice let out a breath that was almost a laugh. “I wasn’t plotting, Aerion. I was deciding.”
“And?”
“And I decided that you were too loud to kill quietly.”
He smirked. It was a real smile, fleeting and uneven. “You’re a wicked creature.”
He laid his head back down on her shoulder. The fight had gone out of him, leaving only the exhaustion.
“Don’t leave,” he whispered. It was so quiet she almost didn’t hear it. It wasn’t a command. It was a plea, wrung out of him against his will.
“I’m not going anywhere,” Clarice reassured him, her hand still in his hair. “I can’t reach my sandals, remember?”
Aerion let out a soft huff. Within moments, his breathing deepened. He fell asleep like that, draped over her like a shield, or a shackle.
Clarice lay awake in the green scented darkness. She felt the weight of the dragon prince on her chest and the kick of the dragon child in her womb. She reached toward the bedside table, her fingers brushing the cold hilt of the fruit knife. She didn’t pick it up. She just touched it, confirming it was there.
Then she moved her hand back to her husband’s hair, and held him while he slept.
George R. R. Martin and his commitment to brown-haired firstborn pretty boys who exist purely to suffer emotionally, briefly thrive, and then meet an absolutely unceremonious tragedy.
◟ content ! ୧ babbling to your husband when he's trying to sleep
𝒪ver the year you've shared a bed with him , you have learned every habit that helps Jacaerys sleep.
The slow circles against the nape of his neck. The absentminded twirling of the short curls hidden beneath his hair. The gentle weight of your hand resting there until the tension finally leaves his shoulders.
And tonight is no different. His breathing deepens , the lines of responsibility easing from his face as sleep gradually claims him.
Beyond the narrow windows , the sea rolls endlessly against Dragonstone's black cliffs. Every wave breaks with the same patient rhythm , the sound carrying through ancient stone until it becomes part of the castle itself. Salt lingers in the air despite the shuttered windows , mingling with melted wax and smoke from the dying candles.
A great foundation to get lulled to sleep.
But no , unfortunately for your husband , you are still awake.
"Jace." A noise that is half agreement and half sleep follows the call of his name , and so you continue , "i think i would greatly miss the sea."
The sheets shuffle beside you as Jacaerys rolls onto his back , smacking his lips as if to will the lingering drowsiness away. To properly engage in a conversation (even if he wants nothing less than find rest) , as his wife deserve nothing less. Yet , he keeps his eyes close. And your hand doesn't slip from his neck as he does , lingering in a way that is familiar , and warm.
"You say that every time we're away from Dragonstone ," he finally notes. He doesn’t understand where your longing words for the sea are coming from , and he doesn’t pry. Perhaps it is merely sleepy delusion. Because you are at Dragonstone , you are at the sea , as it is right outside these walls.
There is nothing to be missed here.
You are home , you're with him.
So instead , he melts back into the pillows , comforted by your gentle touch and surrendering to finally let the dragging day come to an end , so that one will start anew with more duty , more war … , but also more you.
Yet every crash against the cliffs tugged strangely at your chest , as though the sea was calling from somewhere much farther away than Dragonstone's shore.
"I know." Silence settles again.
This time , it lasts almost a full minute. Enough to make his breath even out , to let him believe that you finally found sleep as well. He curls around you like a Dragon , nose brushing against the side of your face to keep close , and warm…
Then — "Jace ?"
Oh , how he adores you. Even when you steal his rare moments of rest just to converse with him a bit longer. "Hm ?"
"Have you ever been scared of the sea ?"
Ah , again with the sea. This time your question is enough to have him blink open his eyes , glazed with sleep and searching yours with a bit of confusion.
"...Not really ," he answers lightly , and this time his hand shifts to cradle the back of your neck too , mindlessly twirling the short hairs like you do him. He hopes it soothes you to finally let conversation fall away , and to let sleep win.
"Not even in storms ?"
This one he considers a bit longer. Then , he shrugs , huffing a sleepy laugh , barely more than an exhale.
"If I ever end up in the sea, it'll be because I've done something spectacularly stupid."
You consider his answer for a moment , and yet it doesn't comfort you at all.
Because it's such a Jace answer. Your Jace , firstborn son of Rhaenyra , fierce , kind , and spectacularly stupid when it comes to protecting what's his. You know him well enough to understand that it's a lingering fear of loosing someone close to him. Like Lucerys. And that he'd rather it was him in that storm than his little brother.
"I would jump in after you," you say , fierce gaze meeting his , "I would bring you home."
"No, you won't." 'Won't' , not 'wouldn't'.
"I absolutely will."
A soft patient sigh as he cradles your jaw , thumb brushing your cheekbone with so much devotion you almost yield. Almost.
"If I'm in the water , my love , the sensible thing is to stay on the ship ," he hums , readjusting himself yet again , trying to gently direct you deeper into soft sheets. His eyes close again when you don't fight him , and you're both just tangled limbs and lingering warmth , "t' stay alive ."
You wrinkle your nose.
He knows you do , even when he can't see. Because he knows you.
"I'd still come after you ," you mutter , much softer this time , and he hopes that it's a sign you're slowly surrendering to his warmth, "i wouldn't just leave you , Jace."
"I know ," he hums , and you feel his hand curl the locks at the back of your neck again , gently breathing you in as he also becomes more silent , "i know you would."
Then , "but we're not at the sea , my love. We're home , and we're safe..."
Another wave struck the cliffs below. Far enough away to sound gentle. Close enough to shake the silence.
And this time you don't fight him , and his attempt to get you to sleep. You press your forehead against his arm , and he rests his chin on top of your head with a satisfied sigh.
It's warm , and it's safe , and suddenly you're much sleepier than moments before.
A few seconds pass.
"...Jace ?"
He doesn't answer this time. He's finally asleep.
You smile into the darkness , listening to the sea outside , and letting it finally lull you to sleep , surrounded by the warmth of your husband. In which neither of you imagine there would come a day when its waves would carry away more than lost boots ...
summary — while combing the beach for treasures, you stumble upon the unconscious, grievously injured body of a soldier. you decide to help him, but in doing so find love in a man that may never be able to return it. (11.4k)
featured — jacaerys velaryon / fem!reader
content — spoilers! tread carefully, fluff and ANGST, angst w/ a happy ending, hurt/comfort, canon divergent, jace lives, light medical descriptions, reader cares a lot for jace, dual pov!!!, inexplicit mental health struggles (reader’s deceased father), dead vermax ☹, 18+ MDNI implied sexual content/fade-to-black, tw there is a baby
a/n — am i anywhere near caught up with hotd? no. did i write this in spite of that? yes. i'm sorry if things don't make sense or are not in line with canon. the wiki and i did our best!
(cross-posted on ao3)
The cerulean waves lap at the silver beach, ebbing and flowing with the morrow’s breeze. Quiet has finally settled on the shores after a night of war and destruction. A battle beyond these argent sands occurred out in the gullet. All night, the savagery had kept you awake. This morrow, you collect treasures from your fish nets.
You step carefully across the sands, adjusting your silk scarf tighter around your mouth and nose. You bend the knee at the first net.
You heave it onto the shore. Nothing except too-small pieces of fabric and inedible shelled fish are in this one. You empty it and release the fish back to the embrace of the sea.
You stand again, taking a few more steps down. Your mind drifts as you fall into a rhythm of checking these nets, pocketing pretty shells and scraps of metal. Wonder pricks at the back of your neck as you imagine the war. As the lone tenant of this pier, you had never had to consider the rites of the Targaryen rulers. Most of your neighbors had already chosen their sides, even if it did not really matter in the scheme of things—neither of those fighting for the throne cared for their subjects, especially not those at the bottom, like you.
Rulers like these bled the common man dry while claiming it to be an act of love.
You move a little rougher with the next net. Nothing but rocks and debris in this one. You imagine it will be a while until you find a worthy treat. The Gods are usually not as generous on solemn days like these. War makes monsters out of men, and the Gods scorn those who partake.
When you stand again, your eyes drift a little further down the bank. At the edge of the shore, a clump of trees catch your gaze. The water is darker there, cloaked in shadow. The shrubbery bends so far, it almost touches the water. You draw closer, eyebrows furrowed.
A dark lump sits entangled by brush, barely concealed by the cluster of foliage. You draw closer, hesitantly. As your eyes adjust, you realize it is not a lump of debris, but a body. Your breaths quicken.
If the person is alive, would it hurt you? Never trust a soldier, your father had once told you.
You bend your knee just as if you are checking a fish net. Your hands unfurl from your sides, reaching out hesitantly. You can only see his body. It is clothed in thick leather, a quality of which you’ve never seen before. Several arrows stick out of his torso. A pool of blood stains the sand maroon beneath him.
You pull back the shrubbery to see his face. You startle at the sight, falling back onto your bum.
His eyes—they were open—albeit, he did not seem to see much of anything. His skin was not grey and placid like the bodies that you had seen before. Worse, you’d heard something when you held yourself over him. A breath, shuddering through his parted lips.
“Alive,” you whisper in awe. To survive so many arrows, then the tumultuous sea… it would take more than just courage. It would take something otherworldly. You know then that your decision has been made.
A huge piece of driftwood sits beneath him in the sand. You push it aside to straddle him. Gently, you grab his arm and sling it around your neck.
The rest of your journey back to the cabin passes in a frenzied blur. You move quickly, trying to spend as little time as possible forcing the grievously hurt man onto his feet. He lets out little grumbles as you move, head lolling this way and that like a puppet cut from its strings. You make it inside and push open the door that your father used to live, laying him onto his back on the bed.
Blood immediately infiltrates the off-white of the duvet, crimson floating before your vision. He groans continuously as you break the ends off of the arrows—serving as a reminder to the heart that still valiantly pumped beneath his ribs. Once they are off, you are able to slide the armor off.
The tunic comes easily. It seems to be made of a material that deflects water, so when you drop it onto the floor, a puddle of liquid forms in its spot. You struggle a little with his breeches—though, those too come easily with a little pull.
After he is naked, you stare at his body in silence for a moment. You have helped men with injuries before. Arrow injuries just like these, even. But you’d never helped a man with this many.
You reach out to touch his cold cheek. He is so young—had to be your own age. Too young for the cruel, unflinching hold of war. Gently, you close his eyelids, shutting away the dark brown of his unseeing gaze. He did not need to be witness to this.
You steel your nerves and clench your fists a few times to breathe life back into your numb fingers. Reaching into the bedside table, you grab your supplies—bandages, a bottle of rum, a couple cloths, and several blunt blades.
“I’m sorry, if you are awake,” you tell him, poising the knife along the edge of one of the arrow heads. “This will hurt a lot.”
Hours pass quickly under your blade. Each of the five arrows is cut away, sewn with fishing line, disinfected with rum, and bandaged tightly. Sweat falls into your eyes as you step away triumphantly, and you lift a hand to brush it off. As they are levelled with your eyes, you realize your hands are a bloody mess. Your stomach churns and you force the appendages away.
You hover over him a moment longer. You study the shallow rise and fall of his chest, the fluttering of his eyelids. He had a strong nose and jaw, thick dark eyelashes and a head of water-matted brunet hair. By all appearances, he was quite common-looking. He had the complexion and hair of any man you’d pass on the way to town. But something about him—the quality of his armor, the blemishlessness of his skin, it screamed something ethereal.
But even Gods can be killed.
Your mystery man is not out of the woods yet. The chances of any of those arrows not nicking anything inside him is next to none. He’s also lost a lot of blood. The sheets are covered in it, not to mention the amount he was sure to have lost at sea.
You draw the hair sea-slicked to his head away from his forehead. Your hand slides to cup his cheek. He might never wake again. Your kind hand may be the last he knows. You wonder how many people missed him—if they were sitting with baited breaths, waiting for him to write. If only you could ease their worries.
You pull away and leave the room before your eyes can fill with traitorous saltwater tears.
There are few certainties in life. Ever since you were but a child, you had recognized this. Life is tumultuous and unfair. It takes and it takes, until you can give no longer.
The sea is a comfort. She does not take, she gives. Usually, she gives you more valuable things than a body, but you try not to question her motives.
It’s been a day since you patched him and he still has not woken. His chest continues to move despite this disconcerting sign, and that remains your only comfort. You stood near-vigil at his beside for most of the hours following. Anticipatory nerves fill your every waking second, even at night when you lay awake trying to sleep.
You recognize that the danger has not fully passed for him. He had not had water in who knows how long. Eventually, his organs would fail due to dehydration and blood loss. That is, if the internal bleeding didn’t kill him first.
You also cannot help the hope that blooms in your chest as you gaze upon his face. Perhaps it is the fact that his skin seems more alive as of late. The fact that you have seen his eyes move behind his eyelids more and more often. The fact that you were quite insufferably lonely, and therefore latched onto any individual who came your way—alive or barely, as in the case of this man in your cabin.
You want him to survive because you want to know him. It is a thought that scares you as much as it invigorates you.
By his bedside, after a long morrow of scavenging by the tide, you dump your satchel of goodies on the now-clean duvet. (Now that had been annoying to do—having to move his admittedly quite heavy body over to remove the sheets). You begin to sort through them, cataloging them.
The silence is unsettling, so you begin to speak.
“The sea has been kind this morrow,” you say softly. You pick up a smooth rainbow shell, twisting it this way and that in the light. “These will sell for a couple of silvers.”
You put the shell down and then grab your cloth, gently stroking away sand and debris.
“My father taught me to do this,” you tell the man, “he taught me everything I know.”
Satisfied with its shimmer, you trade the shell for a clam. You pop it open forcefully—apologizing profusely to the creature as you did—and stick your fingers into the dark crevice you created.
“No pearl,” you report when your fingers come up empty. You bring the clam up to your eyes, stroking its now-broken shell. “I’m sorry, friend.”
The last piece had been one you were excited for. You grab the shrapnel of metal gently in your palms, categorizing the weight and feel of it with your hands.
“Probably off a shield,” you decide. “I’m sure a blacksmith would like this.”
You put the metal down and let out a heavy sigh. You stare at the man, worrying your lip between your teeth. Perhaps some foolish part of you had hoped he would wake up to the sound of your voice, like the stories you had read as a girl.
But life is no story, as you had to continually remind yourself. Things like that just didn’t happen.
You go through a few other bits and bobs in silence, mood dampened by reality. A couple of small shells, a nail, and a scrap of maroon fabric. You aren’t sure why you grabbed the fabric—perhaps you’d wanted to try and sew something. It is quite pretty, you decide. It had belonged to someone once.
Once you finish polishing the items, you lift your head up to look at the man. Thoughts and images flash through your mind. What was he like? You wonder. He seems strong, based on his broad shoulders and defined stomach. But he also didn’t have the worn skin of a common man. He didn’t have callouses on his hands or fading scars upon his torso. He had to be a prince, you decide. A prince of a faraway land, hoping to bargain peace between the two feuding Targaryen houses.
You nod, satisfied with that recreation of events. Yes, a prince. A just, altruistic one. Perhaps he knew of the war and wished to come and save the small-folk.
You look down at his pale hand resting lifelessly upon the duvet. You swallow thickly.
“You must wake soon,” you whisper, “the kingdom needs you.”
He does not stir. You sigh and gather your things into your satchel. If he is still not awake by the morrow, you decide, you will return his body to the sea.
That evening, you sit at the table with a plate of roasted fish and a glass of water. The fish is one of two meals you eat regularly. The other was for special occasions, depending on if you were able to procure bread and potatoes at the markets.
You always eat the eye of the fish first. You do not like it looking at you as you eat its flesh. It feels wrong. The eye is not very tasty, though. The odd texture always makes you vaguely nauseous–the gooey, chewy ball. Your father had always laughed at you when you ate fish. He was not of an imaginative mind. He did not see the fish as being once alive, like you did. He did not imagine it swimming beneath the tide, with all its other fishy friends–before it was snared by ruthless hands and suffocated by the open air.
You stare at the vacant chair across from you with an empty feeling in your chest. It had been so long since you had a companion at supper time. Your father had not spoken much, but his presence alone was always enough to keep you happy. He is gone now, like with the ebbing of the tide, and all that is left is the shadow of the person he used to be.
His fishing pole, next to the door. His journal, where he kept extensive notes about what he found out on the sea during the day. His bed that now had a new, warm body sleeping in it.
You wonder what your father would have done, had he found the man. You take another bite of the fish, forcing it down with a thick swallow. Would he have left him? You had never thought of him as being cruel, but you also know he loathed unwelcome responsibility. He had enough of an imagination to conjure horrible images of betrayal and hurt, and so you decide he probably wouldn’t have brought him home to you. He had too much to lose to do so. Everyone did.
And so why did you? Perhaps, you think, you have lost everything that matters most to you already.
You stare down at the limp skeleton of the fish on your plate. You had never seen a person die of dehydration. Your father had once told you a story about a man he knew that had, and it sounded awful.
You pick up your dinner knife, a sharp, clean-edged blade, and hold it in the candlelight. The silver edge catches the light, highlighting the sharp point. Your hand trembles as you study it.
Would it be quick, painless—slitting the sleeping prince’s throat? Or would it be messy and painful? Would it draw him out of sleep and would he gaze upon you with hurting eyes as he clutched the gaping hole in his neck?
Regret gnaws at you. As time draws on, you begin to think that the mercy you had granted your prince had been nothing but a farce. That by saving him for one moment had only just prolonged his suffering.
You put the knife in your satchel and stand. It is cruel, keeping a person alive only to die in a violent manner like this–it is inhumane.
You take quick steps to the bedroom.
You have never killed a person before. Your father had plenty. He always said the eyes, you can hear his voice in your mind now, the eyes are always the worst part.
You can’t eat the prince’s eyes like you can the fish’s. No matter what you did, you would have to see those eyes. And with it, the betrayal. You stand over his prone body now.
A sliver of moonlight streams in from the open window behind you, casting cool light across the heaving chest. He remains impassive, completely unaware of what you were about to do. You do not realize you are crying until you bring the knife up to your eyes and catch a glimpse of your face in the silver.
“I…I am sorry, friend,” you repeat the same mantra you had told so many clams before as you pried your fingers in their mouths, looking for a pearl. “But this is a mercy.”
Your hands tremble like windblown seagrass as you lift the knife against his skin. A moment of hesitation prevents you from acting. And it is just enough for a pale hand to wrap around your own and for dark eyes to snap open.
“Waaa-ter.”
You let out a sharp gasp and yank your hand away. The man watches you, his visage crumpled with pain.
He repeats himself, voice quieter than the first time. “Water, please…”
You move into action. You dart out of the room, hands fumbling with the metal bucket by your door. You run across the moonlit shore to the well that sits on the edge of the woods. Quickly, you fill the bucket. You curse yourself all the while–mind racing in what-ifs and guilt-ridden condemnations.
You heave the bucket back into the house and grab the same goblet you had used with your own water. You take a huge scoop and shuffle back into the bedroom like a child caught with their hand on the sweets plate.
The man is still awake when you re-enter, his eyes wide and eyebrows furrowed. You drop next to him on the bed and angle his head and neck up onto the pillows behind him. Finally, you fulfill his request. He drinks like a man in Essos who has wandered the Red Waste for weeks; heavy, desperate gulps of the liquid. Some fall and drip down his side, which you dab away with a nearby cloth.
When he finally drinks it all, he pulls back, his breaths labored and eyes half-lidded.
“W…Where am I?” he finally says once he has caught his breath. You notice him scanning the room as if trying to find the answer written in the stone.
You decide not to answer honestly. You fear what his reaction will be if he forces himself to recall the battle. Instead you say, “you are safe.”
He stares at you as if only just noticing you. His dark eyes are swallowed almost completely by night, exhausted and ridden with heavy bags. He lifts a hand, as if to touch you, but it falls short. His eyes flutter, and then shut.
He falls unconscious. You touch two hands to his chest to confirm his heart still beats steadily. You let out a breath you had not realized you captured when you find his pulse.
Shame hits you like a tidal wave. You were going to… you were going to kill him. You are shocked at the tears that swim in your eyes. You stand in a hurry–not without remembering to pull the duvet back up to his chest–and stumble out of the room.
The adrenaline has all but worn away now. Tears clog your eyes, slipping down your cheeks. You allow yourself to feel the emotions–all of them. Relief, shame, exhaustion, and fear overwhelm you completely and you can do nothing but sob. On the table in front of you, the skeleton of the fish and the silver knife mock you without having to say a word.
Waking feels like drowning. Fighting against the wave ahead of you, trying to get your head above water. Then when you finally surface, you fall behind the waves again.
Jacaerys wakes to the sun in his eyes and a warmth around his waist. He thinks for a moment, perhaps, he is in a dream. Another barrier between him and wakefulness. Then, the pain hits him. No, dreams don’t feel like this.
The groan stumbles past his lips before he can stop it and his eyes shoot open. Everything is pain. It surrounds him like dragonfire and steals his breath. He trembles as he uses all his strength to cradle his side.
“Gods,” he murmurs. He feels beneath his fingers the familiar texture of a bandage. Someone helped him.
Helped him. Helped him from what? He gasps as memory rolls over him. Drowning. Arrows piercing through skin and muscle. A dragon’s roar of pain. No, not just any dragon—
“Vermax,” he cries out, tears springing to his eyes. No, no, no…
But it was true. His mind had never failed him before. His dragon. His beautiful dragon. Falling to the bottom of the ocean like a ship’s anchor. He tries to move, to jump to his feet, but he can’t. Pain ricochets up his side, and he can literally feel the side of his chest pulling taut.
He stares at the ceiling above him with tears fogging his eyes and coating his tongue in salt. For one long moment, he despairs. Why? Why would he be punished this way? Forced to live without Vermax? The bond between rider and dragon could not—should not be severed. Not by something as futile as war. He can’t breathe, can’t think. Everything is despair.
He should have died. Living is not a gift in this condition. His knuckles go white against the duvet. Anger sweeps over him—hot, potent fury.
He curses everyone who caused this. Aemond, Alicent, Aegon, even fucking Helaena. He doesn’t care. They’ll all pay.
But not like this. He finally shuffles himself into a seated position, cringing at the pain that shoots from every direction. Every small movement feels like another arrow tearing his skin.
His feet are unsteady as he finds his footing. For a second, he fears he might not be able to even walk. Then, he finds himself. He grabs his breeches off the table and slowly, painfully, shrugs them on. He leaves his chest bare—unable to even think about having to lift his arms over his head. He keeps one hand on the wall and the other around his waist as he stumbles across the room.
The place he is in is frighteningly humble. There’s nothing unnecessary here. Everything has a purpose, a function. No gilded armoires, tall candlesticks, or commissioned portraits. Bare, cobblestone walls, sparse furniture (all glaringly handmade and rustic), and cobwebs hanging in every corner.
Jacaerys moves slowly from the room he started in to the short hallway that opens into a tiny living area. A large fireplace is the only comfort to him. A pot of a molten, unappetizing glob bubbles above the waning fire.
There are very few personal effects here. Nothing to propose any kind of hint or insight. Out the window of the front of the ramshackle building, he sees amber light flickering across a wide sea.
His breath shudders out of his lips. He doesn't recognize this place at all. He’s hurt. He has no dragon. He’s never felt worse in his entire life.
All of what energy he summoned flees him in that moment. He practically collapses into a nearby chair and it creaks pathetically under his weight. He hangs his head and a soft sob escapes his lips.
Tears tremble down his cheeks and onto the wood table beneath his hand. His mind races, memory and pain and fury collide in a war of its very own. Vermax, his mind strays. The perfect dragon. Gone. He digs his nails into the grain of the table beneath his hands, trying to recapture something to ground him. Short, hyperventilating breaths escape his lips—his vision fogs.
Then, everything clears. His hands unclench and he leans back in the chair. He stares at the ceiling, measuring his breaths. You are still alive, he tells himself. Therefore you are still useful.
Because perhaps that was his real fear. That he would no longer be of use—that he would no longer be worth fighting for. He’d always measured his worth in terms of what he could provide to his mother. Perhaps the truth is that his worth stretches beyond that.
He hears the sound of crunching footsteps outside. He sits up in the chair, eyes flickering toward the door. Ahead of him, he notices with a jolt, a knife lay discarded on the table. He grabs it before he can think the better of it, brandishing it like he actually could fight his way out of this mess.
He ignores the pain throbbing in his side and pushes himself to stand again. He won’t die now. He can’t.
The door creaks open slowly, and he angles the knife in front of himself protectively.
But the figure that crosses the threshold isn’t what he’d been expecting. Wide eyes and a mouth fallen open into an oval. Hands clutching a satchel of… is that a seashell?
She drops the satchel with immediacy, hands flying into the air. Jacaerys thinks he hears something break inside.
He keeps the arm holding the knife up despite the involuntary tremble that has begun in his arm. A cool sweat travels down his temple. His vision wanes. Despite her… figure (she hadn’t brandished a weapon a day in her life, he thinks), he knows looks can be deceiving.
“You’re up.” She does not immediately acknowledge the weapon in his hand. She’s either brave or simply ignorant. Jace is not sure what he’s more afraid of.
“Who—“ he starts to speak, but he breaks into a coughing fit. His throat feels like it is on fire. She takes a step forward, as if to help or harm him, but he freezes her in place when he turns his gaze back onto her warningly. “Who are you?”
She tells him her name. Then she quickly adds, “you washed up on the beach in front of my cabin. I found you.”
He bends over to clutch his side. He notices her eyes widen.
“Please, I’m not sure you should be up. You sustained massive injuries,” she tells him. “Your body needs rest.”
“I cannot—“ he scoffs, then coughs again. “I cannot simply rest. I must leave. I must…”
A pang in his side makes him gasp and hunch over. The knife falls with a clatter against the floor but he can’t seem to bring himself to retrieve it. Everything feels like it is in slow motion, out of his reach and control.
She grabs him around the waist before he tips over. He stays conscious long enough for her to lead him back to bed, but he falls within the waves again the second his head hits the pillow.
Consciousness returns to him in fragments. The sound of footsteps by his head. A burning pain spreading up his chest, to which he thinks he shouts, but cannot prevent. The feeling of a wet cloth soaking his tears and sweat.
When his eyes finally flutter open, it is dark in the room. A candle burns to a nub on the nightstand next to him, wax coating the wood. Sorrow fills his chest again so quickly it nearly steals his breath.
He sees her slip into the room like a wraith come to haunt him. It is ridiculous, he thinks, that she should be the one to stand over him. On any other day, in any other circumstance, she would not put up much of a fight. Now, he is at her mercy.
“You tore one of your stitches.” Her voice is soft, but it reverberates in his ear drums and skull like a dragon’s final roar. He clenches his jaw and turns his head toward the moon that hangs like a silver noose in the sky. “I had to sew it back while you were resting.”
Jace doesn’t reply. He isn’t sure he would know what to say. How does he encompass all his feelings—or even one of them, into a coherent thought? It isn’t possible.
She draws closer and he tenses. She notices. “Are you going to try and hurt me again?”
He considers her for a moment, then shakes his head.
She pauses, thinking about something, then she settles upon his side of the bed. Jace notices for the first time since she’s entered the room, that she has a bowl of that wretched-looking soup in her hands.
“Here,” she says, outstretching the bowl. He leans back. She pulls away slightly. “Sorry.” She cringes like even she realizes that the soup is nothing to write home about. “It is all I have.”
Jace swallows thickly. He reaches a trembling hand out. She smiles, relieved.
He goes to take the bowl, but his arm feels weak. He pulls back. “Perhaps…” he pauses, clears his throat. “Perhaps you could…”
Asking for help has never come easy to him. Being weak is not something he is accustomed to. His other hand clenches the sheet in his fist.
She nods. He does not have to be explicit. He untenses his hand as she leans forward, a small bit of soup in the wood spoon.
The first bite makes his face twist. She laughs.
“I truly am sorry,” she says. “I know it is probably not what you are used to.”
It takes every bit of his strength to swallow the offending liquid. It is strangely salty. It tastes like the brine that filled his mouth when he—
He cuts the thought short. No need to ruin his own mood again.
“Something happened to you out there,” she says as if she’d read his mind, and although it should be a question, it is not, “something bad.”
He swallows another gulp of the soup. He does not reply.
She must realize he does not want to speak on that, for she does not press the matter. She lifts the spoon again and he forces down another sip.
“The soup has fish and some potatoes—oh, and they had carrots at the market today, so I put those in too. Perhaps those are the disgusting parts. I won’t purchase them again.”
Jace does not have the energy, or perhaps the heart, to tell her it is certainly not the vegetables that have made the soup taste like what sea captains scrape off the bottom of their ships.
She scoops another bit of soup and he forces it down. His mouth had begun to retain that saltiness even when he no longer had the soup in his mouth, like a stain one can’t wash away with soap and water.
She does not speak for a long pause, but Jace suddenly feels a bit antsy. It feels too intimate an act to not be speaking.
He swallows another mouthful, then clears his throat to speak. “Did you catch the fish?” he asks, his voice hoarse.
“Oh, no, no,” she replies to him like it is a preposterous suggestion. Like killing fish is below her standards. “I just buy them.”
He frowns around the spoon in his mouth and hurriedly swallows the liquid. “Then why were you on the shore when you found me?”
She stirs the foul soup around for a moment, thinking hard about something, then she looks up at him. “I collect things. Shells, scrap metal, and fabrics. You would be surprised what comes with the morning tide, and even more what people would pay for them.”
An odd business, Jace can’t help but think. It seems like a hard thing to have to rely solely on the Narrow Sea for food and shelter. The Narrow Sea, he remembers with a sudden clarity. That is near where they fought.
“Are you going to tell your name?” Her head is tilted as she asks this, the soup bowl now empty and forgotten upon her folded legs.
He ponders the question for a moment. He could tell her his full name, but it might backfire, especially if she harbors a grudge against his family. He doesn’t think she has it in her to cause him harm, but he knows that many do not until they are cornered.
“Jace,” he finally tells her. “Just Jace.”
She smiles and her entire face lights up like nothing he’s ever seen before. Something twists in his stomach. “Nice to meet you, Jace.”
One, two, three, four. You count the shells noiselessly as you thread them onto the fishing line. They clink together softly as you pull the line taut around your wrist, measuring the width mentally. You remove the bracelet and add a few more of your little shells.
A few days had passed without much event. Jace drifted in and out of consciousness throughout the day and slept soundlessly through the night. He did not complain, but you had seen his thinly-veiled winces and his shuddering breaths. You know that he is suffering more than he lets on.
It is an odd thing, you think, to be harboring a man in your home that you know next to nothing about, but had inexplicably formed an attachment to. You still know nothing more about Jace than his name and even that had not been an answer easily wrought.
You slide the shells all to one side and swiftly tie a knot at the end of the line, forming a perfect circular bracelet. Putting it to the side, you cut a new piece of fishing line and begin sorting through your shells again.
Just as you go to slide the first shell on, you hear something behind you. The creaking of wood as light footfalls go across.
You turn your head, body tense.
“Jace,” you say, surprised by his appearance. You stand.
He had not been up since he’d ripped that stitch a few days ago, actually heeding your pleas to rest. But a part of you knew even then that the peace would not last long. He is a restless creature, like a bird stuck behind the bars of a cage.
“Do you need something?” You clutch your fingers together across your front, as if doing so could somehow steel your nerves.
He takes a step into the room. You notice his gait seems more steady today. He looks around every bit of the room, his eyes taking in all the pieces that make up your home. You gnaw your lip between your teeth. Did he approve of what he saw?
His voice comes suddenly, a blade cutting through the silence. “What are you doing?”
It is not accusatory nor standoffish, instead it seems almost curious. You grab the bracelet you just finished and hold it out to him.
“A bracelet.”
Jace steps closer, tilting his head. “For what purpose?”
You let out a short laugh. “It has no purpose. It is just pretty.”
“Hm.” He stares at the offending object like he’s never thought about making something just for the sake of making something before. You smile. He averts his eyes to the other side of the room.
“You said you do not fish,” he says, “and yet you have a fishing rod.”
You follow his eyes to where the thing sits near the door. It sits, forgotten, in the corner of the room—there to haunt you and the person you’d never become, you’re sure.
“My father…” you start to say, but something gets caught in your throat. You forcefully swallow past the blockage. “My father used to fish.”
Jace’s accusatory eyes soften around the edges. He hobbles closer and takes the seat across from you at the table. Your father’s seat.
“And your father—“
“He is dead,” you answer curtly, “he has been for two summers now.”
You pick up the bracelet you had only just starteda nd slide a seashell onto the line. Hurt does not fill your chest like a cavity anymore—now all you feel is numbness as it spreads from your lungs to your heart.
Jace turns his head to look out the window at the night sky. “My father is gone too.”
Your eyes leap toward his in a flash. He does not look at you, his hand tracing repetitive shapes on the table. The deep circles beneath his eyes have all but faded now, but the weariness to his expression remains. He possesses the gaze of someone who holds more than they can carry–a gaze your father shared.
Your throat bobs as you force yourself to swallow. You feel hollow, but a bit of warmth has reentered your chest. Two children, you think, without a parent—an awful thing, certainly, but not especially rare in Westeros.
You slide another shell onto the bracelet, fingers trembling. “He went mad.” Telling the truth, those three words, stings like betrayal. “He was a knight before I was born. He never… he never forgot what he had to do. The faces of the men he killed… they haunted him.”
Jace goes pale. His dark eyebrows furrow, the line of his mouth pulling down. “I-I’m sorry. That must have been difficult.”
You nod. Put another two shells on the line. Desperately, you search for a way to change the subject. “He always wanted to teach me,” you say, gesturing to the rod, “but he never did.”
He drags a quick hand through his curly brown hair, then pauses as he gets caught in a tangle. He huffs irritably.
“Perhaps,” he says, onyx eyes catching the amber light of the candle flickering on the table, “if I could summon the strength to get dressed and brush my hair, then I could show you how.”
You swallow thickly. “You do not have to—“
“It is the least I can do,” he murmurs. “You saved my life.”
To smile feels inappropriate, so you avert your eyes and begin to tie a knot in another bracelet.
Jace stares at himself in the mirror that stands in the corner of the bedroom with solemn eyes. His eyes glaze over the bandages that wrap around his chest and lower torso, then the unfamiliar slightness to his shoulders and waist. He feels as though he looks at a person he no longer recognizes, like his mind has been transported into the body of someone much weaker than he used to be.
The old house is quiet in the morrow. Every once in a while, a soft breeze will make the house creak. One may occasionally hear a sea bird calling in the distance. Other than that, everything exists as if completely removed from reality; untouched by the war that rages just beyond the sea’s reaches.
His eyes flick back to the mirror and he sees her standing behind him with a deep green doublet wrapped in her arms.
“It was my father’s,” she says, drawing closer. “It might be a little large on you.”
Jace nods. She hands him the doublet. The material feels like cheap linen, nothing to the quality he had worn before. He does not mind. It would be odd, he thinks, for him to expect anything better.
He lifts the top over his head and she helps guide it over. She seems to be trying not to touch his skin, like she thought he might be made of glass. He clenches his jaw when he feels the familiar tightness in one of his wounds as his arms stretch over his head.
The doublet falls over his body easily, but it does hang on him a bit like the robes a septa might wear.
He hears the sound of muffled laughter from behind him and he turns his head.
“My apologies.” She can barely get it out through her thinly-suppressed amusement. “You do look a bit funny, though.”
Jace feels his lips tug upwards in the first semblance of happiness he’d felt in days. It feels odd and out of place, and so it disappears with his next blink.
“Shall we go?”
Jace nods. He follows her out of the bedroom and into the living area, watching as she bends to grab the fishing pole. He walks behind her as she leads the way outside, too slow to match her pace.
The brush of a briney mist against his skin feels like flying across the humid air on top of Vermax. His chest pangs and he forces the thought away. His eyes brush the swaying grasses that stand cloistered around the sea’s edge, each one caught up in a current of air drifting by. He watches the woman as she strides ahead of him.
She is quite plain. She does not have the dresses of the courts he is used to, nor the manners of a highborn lady. She moves unhindered by corsets and the plumes of expensive dresses. Her soft legs pump quickly across the sands, barefoot, like she has mapped every inch of the shore to near-perfection and knows without looking where she must go.
Seeing her slip ahead, her hair tangled in the sea’s mist, then as she turns over her shoulder with a jovial grin, it feels so different than anything he’s ever known before.
Baela is beautiful. She is poised, and gentle, but with a rough edge that assures him she could—and would—easily hurt him if pushed to it. But his stomach never flipped when she spoke. He never searched for her eyes from across the room. He never grasped her hand and wished he never had to let it go. He had known her for so long, he assumed she was all he’d ever need, that the feeling of content he felt in her presence was love. Now he isn’t so sure.
She reaches the shore and stops when her feet hit the tide.
He meets her gaze as she turns to him. His heart pounds in his ears.
“Is it not wonderful?” She sweeps her arm in a half-arc as she speaks, eyes glimmering beneath the high morrow’s sun.
Jace draws his eyes away from her figure to the open waters. It is wonderful, he thinks. If not wrought with pain and regret.
He forces his gaze away. “Yes.”
“So,” she says, shifting on her heels, “how do we begin?”
Jace steps forward and picks up the rod. He retrieves the little scrap of maroon fabric that she had found a few days back and attaches it to the end of the hook.
“It is always a good idea to have some kind of bait,” he explains, “fish are attracted to movement. If you can find insects or worms, those work even better. But this fabric may do. We will have to see.”
He moves close to the edge of the water and lets the rod scrape the top of the ocean. “Most fish do not swim right by the shore, so you will need to throw the line out a little ways. Make sure that you do not catch your skin with the hook.”
She nods, eyebrows drawn together in deep contemplation. Jace nearly smiles at the way she’s taking this all so seriously, before he catches himself and schools his expression.
Jace steadies his hand and propels the line out into the ocean. One of the wounds on his side complains at the movement, but he ignores it. He watches the line bob in the water with a softened expression. His memory flits between days spent under the sun at Driftmark and Dragonstone, laughing while he chases Lucerys with a wood sword; Laenor showing him how to fish among the tidepools; a fierce burn from the sun that is soothed by his mother’s affectionate hand.
“Who taught you this?” Her voice breaks through the silence that had settled between them. Her eyes keep steady on the line, lashes squinting against the harsh light.
“My father,” he replies after a moment’s hesitation.
Another pause.
He feels her shift to look over at the side of his face. “I’m sure he would be quite proud of the man you have become.”
Jace’s breath halts in his throat. Hands suddenly feel clammy. His heart hiccups and thuds against his skin. He had not thought of Laenor in a long time, Harwin even longer. It feels like decades had passed since he had seen either of them, a forgotten moment in his life overshadowed by tragedy after tragedy.
“Oh, look,” she says suddenly from beside him. “A conch shell.”
She wields the massive thing toward him. Her entire face is bright with delight as she shows him the object that any normal person would completely disregard. She is anything but normal, though.
“These always sell for a few silvers at the markets,” she informs him, “the rich folk think they are good luck.”
He is not able to reply before his arm suddenly jolts and he is pulled a few inches forward. On the end of the line, something stirs in the water.
“Come,” he orders her urgently. “Something is biting.”
She draws close, her eyes wide. The conch shell drops to the sand. “What is it?”
“I don’t know,” he says, “here, you hold the rod.”
“What? I don’t know how to catch a fish!”
He thrusts the rod into her hands. “I am too weak to reel it in. You have to.” It is a lie, but she does not seem to recognize it.
Her hands slip all over the rod as she tries to fight the beast at the end of the line. Jace, pitying her struggle, slides behind her and steadies her hands by placing his on top of hers. She freezes for a moment, then begins to pull. Jace clutches her hands gently within his own and he notices that they tremble like seagrass beneath his own.
“Hold it steady,” he says against the shell of her ear, “pull only when you feel it stop fighting. You do not want–”
Suddenly, the pressure is removed from the end of the line and they are both sent stumbling backwards onto the sand. Jace lands on his bum, but she is able to catch herself as she tumbles beside him. The line must have broken. The fish is long gone now.
“Oh Jace, are you okay?” He looks over at her as she crouches beside him. “You did not reopen your wounds, did you?”
The laugh that tumbles out of his lips makes her jolt back. Distantly, he is not sure why he is laughing. The fish got away, he landed on back on the sand, and now one of his cuts hurts. But he had just felt so alive. So unburdened by responsibility, like any man of ten and eight without the entirety of their mother’s empire resting upon their shoulders ought to feel.
The laughter eventually abates, and all that is left is the open sky atop him and the sun beating down on his skin.
“Do you think that the fish I cooked last night was spoiled?” she asks in response to his exuberant mood. “Once, my father caught ill from bad potatoes…”
Jace feels another chuckle escape his lips. “Sorry,” he tells her. “I have… not felt that free in a long time.”
She lets out a soft ‘oh’ and moves to lay next to him in the sand. Far enough away that there is no chance that they will touch, but close enough that Jace can smell the lavender on her skin.
Jace stares at the clear sky ahead of him until he begins to feel his body ache with exhaustion. He pulls himself into a seated position, but she does not move immediately. She looks at him with soft eyes from where she lays against the sand, a small, affectionate smile upon her lips. Her chest rises and falls slowly, hand absentmindedly drawing pictures in the sand.
His stomach churns as he turns away. He stares out at the rippling current with half-lidded eyes.
“How far is the nearest town?” His words are nearly carried away with the next tide that pulls up the shore. She hears him all the same, sliding to sit up next to him.
“Not far,” she replies, a toothy grin on her breath, “would you like to come and help me pick out a fish for dinner tomorrow?”
Jace does not reply. The hope tinged in her words makes something inside him feel rotten. Like he is corrupting the world wherein she lives. As he takes longer and longer to reply, he notices something settle upon her face. A realization that fades into melancholy.
“Oh.” She looks to the sea in an attempt to hide the dewiness in her eyes, but Jace notices all the same. “You wish to leave.”
“My mother,” he says, “she will be looking for me. She will not stop until she finds me.”
She nods.
Something compels him to continue. “I would stay. I would, truly,” he says, “but this is bigger than me. Bigger than this–”
“I understand, Jace.” But Jace is not sure she does. Her lips purse, her eyebrows drawn to form a small wrinkle between them.
“I would at least stay a couple more days,” he tells her, “I need to make sure I do not simply hurt myself again by leaving too soon.”
She pulls her knees to her chest and rests her head upon them. “It sounds like a good plan,” she agrees quietly. “Perhaps… Perhaps I could pack you some food as well.”
“Yes,” he says this far too enthusiastically, but he notices her brighten at the joy in his voice and so he continues to smile. “That would be wonderful.”
She nods, pulling at a frayed edge of her dress. “Then it will be done.”
The two of them watch for a few more moments as the red sun burns a hole against the sky and as the water ripples with wrath.
“I will leave on the morrow”--That is what he had told you over dinner the previous evening.
In the morrow, the sky opens and floods them with her tears.
You stand by the window of the cabin looking out at the frightful weather. Rain falls like daggers against the darkened, tumultuous sea. Waves crash against the shore. A crack of lightning makes you flinch.
“The Gods are angry,” you say to the still air of the cabin.
Jace sits halfway over his plate of roasted fish as you say this. Then he straightens, his eyes flickering briefly outside. The dark brown of his irises reflect the grey of the clouds swirling above. “Or they do not grant me leave.”
You force yourself to pull away from the window. Turning your head, another flash of brilliant light comes across the floor, painting everything white. You fall into a silence as you step carefully across the cabin.
You knew that from the moment you found him, that it would not be permanent. Just like the rains that fall from above now, this momentary storm in your life will too pass. You had not even wished for him to stay, initially. You recall that first night, sewing his wounds with fishing line, as your eyes stretched across his alien visage. You had told yourself that his presence would be temporary as a comfort then, now you tell it to ground yourself in reality.
Jace had become more friendly in the past few days. Conversation came easily to him and made the thought of him leaving that much harder. Now you were the one that deflated at the sound of his voice across the hall, the one that shrunk from revealing the parts of yourself that had not seen the light in years.
You are selfish. It is a quality that had always lurked behind your eyes, but had sharpened since your father’s death. It is a survival tactic. Every animal, even humans, wish to hold onto the things they hold dear. It does not matter if it is not much. Everything you have is in some way worth keeping–including Jace.
But you could not fight logic. His mother, his family–they had a higher claim to him than you did. You could not keep him like a bird with clipped wings. It is cruel to even think it.
You scrub the dish in your hands until your hands feel raw and achy. The only light comes from behind you in the smoldering fireplace and the flash of light that illuminates the sky. You hear the clatter of the bowl from behind you as Jace finds his footing–the screech of the chair as it rubs harshly against the floor.
You feel his warmth as he comes to stand beside you. He reaches a hand into the soapy mess over the wood bucket and fetches your hand from the fray.
“You have made yourself bleed,” he observes quietly, a finger stroking over the cuts.
You feel your throat bob under the weight of his probing stare. You slip your hand away from his and turn your back to dip the bowl in the bucket of soapless water.
“Have I done something to upset you?” he murmurs. His words are echoed by a rumble of thunder in the distance.
You still your movements for just a second before continuing. Your cuts throb at the feeling of the cool water cleansing the blood from your hands. “No,” you reply simply.
“Then why have you been so quiet as of late?”
You drop the bowl onto the wood surface in front of you and turn, drying your hands with a near cloth. “I just haven’t had much to say, I suppose.”
Another flash of light. Rain as it beats ceaselessly against the metal roof. You face him, clenching the towel in your fist.
“Shall we remove your stitches?” It had been suggested a few days ago as the first thing he would do before departing, so he would not have to bother with finding someone to do it for him on the road.
Jace looks like he might say something. Then he shakes his head. “On the bed?”
You nod. “That would be easiest.”
You slip behind him as he moves toward the bedroom. On your way, you light the spill near the fireplace and bring it with you. Your eyes find his figure as it slinks through the darkness. He’s healed so much better than you had ever expected he might. He should not have survived his injuries—should not have been able to heal so quickly. You think the Gods must favor his survival much more than they favored the own laws they stipulated.
He slides off his doublet and lounges back into the bed. You let the flame on the end of the spill touch the end of the wick of the candlestick and the room is bathed in a soft glow. You suffocate the flame and put the spill onto the table next to the bed.
Jace watches you as you do this quietly. When your eyes move up to his face, you notice his eyes are lidded, the tips of his ears red. You feel a warmth catch hold of your skin at his gaze and you avert your eyes to his chest.
You begin your work in silence. You lift the knot of each stitch and easily slice through it with the sharp edge of your knife. At the end of your first removal, you are happy to see that the wound has faded to a pinkish stripe.
“Who taught you this?”
You startle at the sound of his voice after several long minutes of silence. It is a deep baritone, rough around the edges. Its unexpected richness has you shifting in your place on the edge of the bed. A flash of white light from out the window bathes his face in color.
“My father.” You do not elaborate further. You think it self explanatory. Your father taught you everything.
“Was he hurt often?”
You cut another knot. “There are no maesters in the far reaches,” you tell him. A hint of bitter frustration lines your words. “I have assisted several people who have needed help in the village.”
“I did not know,” he replies softly, “that is quite kind of you.”
“We all share responsibility here, no one is without duty.” You put another piece of the fishing line to the side. “It is how things function when you do not have the entire Seven Kingdoms at your disposal.”
You notice Jace’s eyebrows furrow. His stomach tenses beneath your hand. “How did you…”
“It is obvious,” you say, “your voice, your cadence, the way you were dressed when I found you… you have no scars, no callouses. You did not offer your house’s name, so I can only assume—“
“Jacaerys Velaryon,” he says, “that is my name.”
You still. Your eyes dart to his, alarm filling your chest and stealing your breath. “Velaryon,” you echo, heart racing. “That is the name of…”
“Perhaps you know of Corlys Velaryon,” he offers, “the Sea Snake. He is my grandfather. Or Rhaenyra Targaryen, my mother—“
You stand, breathing panicked. “You must leave,” you say, “why did you stay so long? The realm… your mother… the Seven Kingdoms need you.”
Jace leans forward to grasp your arm. You allow him only because you fear you may topple over without the stability.
“I am of no use to them in this condition,” he scoffs. You notice a faraway look in his eyes. The same look he sometimes got when he stared upon the ocean or recalled stories of his father to you. “My dragon is dead, my body a wreck. There is nothing left of me for them to scavenge.”
“T-That is not true,” you stutter. “You must at least find out if they are safe. You have been healed for days… you could have left—“
“I stayed for you.” You fall silent at the sincerity in his voice. His hand drifts down the bare skin of your wrist to thread between your fingers. He cups your hand between his own.
“You cannot stay,” you tell him.
“It does not matter if I stay one more day. The realm will not fall today,” he replies, “we cannot travel in this ruinous weather, anyway.”
Your eyes drift to the window, where the wind throws its tears against the pane. You nod slowly and find your seat again.
You grasp the knife from where you sat it on the duvet. You slide the other to rest upon his warm stomach. His breaths quicken beneath your hand as you drag it up to the next wound.
“I almost killed you the day after I found you,” you whisper, “I thought it would be a mercy. The fact that you are here at all… alive, breathing. It is a gift from the Gods.”
He leans forward. “What stopped you?”
Your movements pause from where you had started to cut away another knot. “You did.”
His throat bobs. His hand moves from where it clutches the sheets to where your hand rests upon his sternum. He strokes the skin of your hand gently.
You lean forward without realizing what you are doing. He does not allow you to back away. He brings his other hand to the nape of your neck and leans forward to seal your lips with his.
The kiss is languid. His tongue probes the seal of your lips and you allow it to slip inside. You bring your hand up to cup his jaw and he drags the hand cupping your neck to your hair. You let out a soft moan against his lips and he responds to the noise by pulling you forward onto his chest.
You do not lean your weight onto him in fear of hurting him, but you feel his hands crawl to settle upon your heaving ribs. You gently settle your lower half onto his hips, settling your hand down on a part of his chest that had no injuries.
You and Jace continue to kiss for what feels like hours. It is exhilarating. It feels like flying. Your stomach feels warm and fluttery, and your lips are throbbing.
You shift your hips and Jace lets out a groan. You pull away from the kiss, concerned. His hand moves to grab the flesh of your hip, sliding you back some. There is a hardness beneath you that makes a pleasant chill slide down your spine.
“Are you alright, Jace?”
“Unless you wish for us to have sex,” he grumbles, “you should move off my hips.”
You swallow thickly at the insinuation. Sex. A novel thing. A thing that should be saved for marriage. But marriage seems so far from your mind now, drifting away like a current.
“And what do you wish for us to do?” you murmur. You slide forward an inch and he throws his head back onto the pillows. His chest heaves.
“You know what I wish,” he groans. “Is it not obvious?”
You lean forward so that your lips barely brush his own. “Then take it.”
Sunlight streams through the window ahead of you, branding the side of your face with heat, and your eyelids flutter against the intrusion. You fist your fingers in the sheets and twist your legs close to your body. As you shift, you feel an arm pulling you backwards.
You grasp the hand splayed across your stomach between your trembling fingers.
“Stay,” he murmurs against the shell of your ear. Tears bead in your eyes, but you keep them at bay.
Your thumb finds the pulse that thrums beneath his skin and you count his heart beats. The Gods are cruel, you think. They had kept Jace here long enough for you to miss him when he leaves.
You turn your body over to face him. You are not surprised to see him already staring back at you. His dark curls are a mess on the pillow beneath him. His lips pull upwards at the corners, but do not reach his eyes. He brings his hand up to stroke your cheek.
Your chin wobbles and he blinks away a frown.
“It will not be forever,” he tells you softly, reverently,
“I will return to you one day.”
You bring a hand up to wipe away the stubborn tears. “I suppose you do not know when that will be.”
He leans forward to give you a kiss and you know that is the only way he can possibly tell you no.
Pulling away from the kiss feels like saying good-bye.
You stay in bed as he stands, sluggishly dressing himself as if he was still looking for reasons not to leave. You do not think he finds one. He turns his head to look back at you and his expression falters.
A small smile curls at your lips as you mouth the word—go.
He heeds your instruction and leaves your cabin with a satchel of roasted fish, a map to the nearest town, and a bracelet strung with seashells.
ONE YEAR LATER…
The nets are full this morrow. The tide ebbs and flows, slinking across the silver sands. Birds let out cries of rejoice overhead for the plentiful bounty gifted by the sea.
You bend the knee to heave the first net out of the water. You clutch your chest protectively as you search through the things with the other hand.
“Hm,” you murmur, “a rainbow shell.”
You bring the shell up to the light and small reflections bounce across your vision. Tucking it into your satchel, you search some more. A piece of metal, two scraps of fabric, and a clam.
You pocket the metal and one of the ratty pieces of fabric, but allow the clam to slide back under the tide. You bring your dry hand to rest upon the head of the babe swaddled against your breast.
“Shh,” you whisper to him as he begins to stir. “It is alright, my prince.”
He brings his head up slowly to peer at you. A splatter of sea foam settles on the side of his face, but he does not seem to mind. He gives you a gummy smile and you return it lovingly.
He watches with bleary eyes as you sort through the next net of things. You show him each individual item as you retrieve it. Your heart skips when you feel a familiar shape and weight in the palm of your hand.
“A conch shell,” you inform him with a giddy grin, “these sell for several silvers at the market.”
He stares at the shell with wide eyes. The pattern, a dark brown and white mottling, you think, must confuse or enrapture him by the way he looks at it.
The small of your back has begun to hurt. You straighten up and lift a supportive hand to rest underneath the baby’s bum.
“This will be enough for today,” you decide. “The sea has gifted us more than we need.”
The little boy smacks his lips as if agreeing with the statement. You nod and carry your satchel and the boy up the familiar path to the cabin.
However, your footsteps slow as you grow closer until you stop right before the door. Something is not right. You protectively cradle the back of your son’s head as you touch a hand to the door.
It pushes open with little resistance. You slide the knife you kept on you at all times to your hand in one swift movement as you step inside.
You take not but two steps beyond the threshold before you freeze. The knife clatters to the ground and a gasp shudders from your lips at the sight in front of you.
He stands across from you like he never left. He’s dressed in black gilded leathers, his body a tad leaner and steadier. His face looks older, more mature and shaped by circumstance, just as you imagine yours must too. His mop of dark hair curls around his ears, longer than when you saw him last.
His lips with awe. He stares at you and your face as if trying to map something with his mind.
“Jace,” you say breathlessly. “How…”
“I saw you by the shore as I rode in from town,” he murmurs, taking a hesitant step forward. He lets out a soft laugh that sends your stomach aflutter. “I thought I might surprise you. I guess I am lucky to not have received a knife in my throat.”
Your throat bobs. Mistiness clouds your vision. “You came back for us.”
“For us?” Jace echoes, eyebrows furrowed. He comes so close he can reach out to you with his arm and you know that he has seen him then, by the shock that melts his features.
The boy turns his head to the best of his ability in your swaddle, his eyes searching for the unfamiliar voice. Jace’s mouth comes nearly unhinged, a trembling hand lifting as if to stroke his head, but it falls short.
He forces his eyes to look at you. “He… he’s mine?”
You bite your lip to suppress your smile as you nod. You reach around your neck with one arm while the other supports the baby’s bum. You unravel the swaddle easily, and the chubby baby flails his arms with relief. Never one to like a cage.
You outstretch him toward Jace and he takes him eagerly. He holds him with practiced ease. He supports the baby’s head and bum as he gazes down at him, tracing his forehead to the slope of his nose to the flutter of his lashes with only his eyes.
Jace finally breaks away from the baby long enough to look up at you. “And I just… I just left you. You and my son.”
Your heart skips a beat at the name. Son. You bite the inside of your cheek to keep from grinning like a fool.
“You had to,” you say, stepping forward to lay a gentle hand upon his upper arm. “Your family needed you.”
He clenches his jaw. “Nothing we did… nothing we accomplished… equals this.”
He strokes a featherlight touch against the boy’s cheek and he wrinkles his nose.
“Will you…” you pause. You try to steel yourself for the rejection that may very well follow, hands clammy by your sides. “Will you be staying long?”
Jace’s eyes rush to meet yours. He steps forward. The baby whimpers in his arms at the movement.
“I would stay forever if you would have me.”
You feel your heart skip a beat. “What? What of the throne? Of your family?”
He shakes his head. Your stomach drops.
“My brother Aegon will be the next ruler. Wed to his cousin.”
“And you?”
His dark eyes soften as they consider this question carefully. He clutches the lost prince to his chest protectively.