drownedkrcken:
THE SMELL OF THE shit in the streets of King’s Landing made it impossible to catch a breath of salt air, even so close to the streets, and imposing silhouette of the Sept rising out of the mess of the city from all angles made Aeron’s stomach twist in hatred. This was the dwelling place of false gods, and nonbelievers - it was no place for a man so pious as Aeron the Damphair. The Drowned God’s concerns were the Iron Island’s concerns, and thus he deigned to endure this place in order to scope out the kind of foes they were going to have to face.
This dragon king, first and foremost, seemed to pose a problem, if he were as mad as they said in whispers, was Aeron’s concern - especially now that his brother and his niece had made the rightful decision to oppose him. The larger problem, however, entered the keep’s letter quarters, as Aeron was scrawling a hasty letter to Balon, notifying him of his findings in this terrible, terrible place. A chill fell over him as Euron spoke, and it was like he was a child again, small and ever in fear of his brother who had always been unhinged and forged from the roughest of iron. If they had been children again, and Aeron had felt brave, he might have made some haughty joke about how his older brother was an illiterate fool, but as a man grown he knew better, and had been soured by life’s experiences. “You don’t fool me, brother.” He said, leaving the letter hovering between them as eyes that matched Euron’s held his gaze in challenge. “I have no time for your tricks.”
— “MY TRICKS, BROTHER”, Euron began, and his tone was leveled with the dark between them, “are time itself.” He clicked his tongue against the roof of his mouth. This pretense at busyness that Aeron insisted to entertain, years after dreary years, while Pyke rotted and was picked apart like carrion by the inlanders, galled on him. It was always Aeron with his head bowed, terribly assured he was working his way towards (or against) some divinity or other. Long before he became Damphair, the younger man had been consumed with this need to appear busy, useful, worthy. He had only been to weak to take it for himself. A God had had to step in, and not even one of the big ones, at that.
“What about the way of the world, Damphair? You crack letters and I crack skulls? You read, translate, intermingle, while I state my claim?” Euron leaned over the row of stooped desks that separated the two of them, his jerkin brushing aside papers and inkwells. He could hear the gulls scratching on the palisades out in the port, the crummy, decaying wood softening under men’s footsteps. He thought he could hear the very filth that ate away at King’s Landing, much as it had, in their own days, at the Iron Islands. The corsair pondered that maybe every city is doomed to fall - he flipped this thought in between his fingertips, turned it aside as he would a woman’s hairlock. If all cities crumble, then what empire did he truly want to build? His eyes seized back on his brother. “Would you deny this sacred order, this agreement of ours on how things are supposed to work? Read it. Out loud.”












