Summary: Aemond wants a son to dote on along with his daughter. Basically Aemond being the perfect dad.
Notes: MDNI, breeding kink, using dagger to cut panties (briefly mentioned), creampies, a lot of fluff and longing tbh
trying to get back into writing so ignore any mistakes x
2.6k
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A gorgeous, perfect daughter. With white hair and purple eyes. Little Jaehaera was perfect, in every way. When she was born, Aemond had checked her little fingers and toes thrice, making sure she was whole. And then he’d smiled, his gorgeous wife, you, having given him a perfect daughter. Not an heir, which should have annoyed him. But one look at the crying babe and his exhausted lady, and he felt his heart imploding in the strangest way.
Love, he knew. Fierce love. And pride.
He kissed your forehead, mumbling sweet words and praises, because you had just given him a daughter.
She grew up quickly, first crawling, then walking, then her babbling turned into some words.
Little Jaehaera. His beautiful daughter. Your beautiful daughter.
Aemond looked up from his paperwork when he heard the familiar sound of his daughter’s giggles. Jaehaera, now one year old, had entered a phase where she giggled about everything and anything.
And you and him loved it, of course. You adored hearing your daughter’s giggles, seeing those brilliant eyes light up.
You had Jaehaera on your hip, walking closer to the study of your husband. Aemond heard his daughter’s giggles grow closer, and closer, and… a knock on his door.
Aemond smiled as he heard the knock, his heart already knowing who stood on the other side. “Come in,” he called out, setting down his quill and leaning back in his chair. The door opened, and you walked inside, your little princess Jaehaera bouncing on your hip, her giggles filling the room like the sweetest music.
Rising to his feet, Aemond crossed the study to meet you, his eyes drinking in the vision of his beautiful wife and daughter. “There are my two favorite ladies,” he said warmly, reaching out to stroke Jaehaera's soft cheek with his thumb. “What brings you both to my study? I thought I heard a certain little princess giggling loud enough to wake the dead.”
He turned his gaze to you, his smile softening into an adoring look. “And how are you, my love? Keeping busy with our little one?”
You closed your eyes when he pressed a soft kiss to your cheek, Jaehaera’s small hand reaching out to touch her father’s chin. “I am well,” you murmured, your daughter wriggling enough to make it clear she wanted to be held by her father. You sighed, handing her to Aemond. Jaehaera giggled again when he grabbed her, a content smile on his face.
He cradled her small form against his chest as she nestled into the crook of his neck, her giggles fading into contented coos. “There's my sweet little princess,” he murmured, pressing a gentle kiss to the top of her downy head.
“I was about to give her a bath and get her ready for bed,” you told your husband, stretching your arms tiredly above your head. For how much you adored her, she was definitely a handful.
“Bath time already, is it? Well, Papa will help with that.” He turned back to you, his free arm sliding around your waist to pull you close. “You look tired, my love,” Aemond murmured, concern etched on his face. “Allow me to help you with her bath tonight. You can sit and supervise, of course. But let me do the heavy lifting.”
You wanted to roll your eyes at his words, but the thought of not having to bathe a wiggly child sounded too good to be true. Together you walked to the nursery, the bath already having been prepared for the little princess.
Aemond's hand drifted down to the small of your back, his fingers tracing the gentle curve. “After her bath, I thought we could have a quiet evening together, just the two of us,” he suggested, his voice lowering to an intimate murmur. “I could run you a bath of your own, and we could relax, unwind… reconnect.”
You smiled at his words, a soft blush forming on your cheeks. “I would like that very much,” you murmured, “though I might fall asleep during.”
Aemond laughed at your words, squeezing your waist. “If my wife is that tired, I will make sure to allow you your rest.”
As you added a touch of sweet-smelling lavender oil, Aemond began to undress your squirming daughter. “Bath time, little one,” he cooed, tickling her tummy gently. “You love bath time, don't you sweetheart? You get to splash and play in the water!”
Aemond carefully lowered her into the tub, holding her steady as she kicked and flailed her little legs, sending water splashing in every direction. “Easy there, princess,” he laughed, using the cloth to gently wash the remnants of her mealtime from her face and body.
As he bathed Jaehaera, Aemond talked sweetly to his little girl. “Your Papa is the best at bath time, isn't he sweetheart?” he murmured, booping her on the nose playfully. “He'll make sure you're all clean and fresh and smelling like a sweet little rose.”
You smiled indulgently as you watched your husband and your daughter. Jaehaera was squealing and splashing in the water, though her energy levels were growing less and less. She really was ready for bed.
Your eyes drifted to your husband, who was wearing his white tunic. He had the sleeves rolled up, and you watched the muscles in his forearms move as he worked.
And his hands.
Aemond carefully lifted the now drowsy Jaehaera from the tub, wrapping her in a soft, fluffy towel. “There we go, sweetling, all clean and fresh,” he murmured, cradling her against his chest as he carried her to the changing table. “Now it's time for your bedtime story and a goodnight kiss from your papa and mama.”
Once Jaehaera was diapered and dressed in a soft linen nightgown, Aemond sat down in the rocking chair, settling her on his lap as he began to read from a well-loved Valyrian storybook.
Gods, he was perfect. The perfect father, the perfect prince. The perfect husband.
Once Jaehaera had fallen asleep, which was quite quickly, he put her in her cradle, tucking her in, before walking back to where you were sitting. He held out his hand to you, helping you stand upright.
After you pressed a final kiss to your daughter’s cheek, you allowed Aemond to lead you out of the nursery, back towards your own chambers.
He moved with a gentle grace, his hand never leaving your lower back. “A bath?” he asked you, his eye meeting yours. “Or shall we go to sleep?”
He was so sweet. And kind. And hot.
“Make love to me,” you murmured, catching him off guard slightly. “Please.”
You added the last word almost shyly, his suppressed reaction making you scared you might have overstepped. But he recovered quickly, one of his hands staying on your waist while the other one tangled in your hair. He did not even say anything, simply pressing his lips to yours, claiming you.
“I wish to,” he breathed out, kissing you again, and again. He was growing more and more impatient, tugging at the laces of your dress until you were completely undressed. His lips never left yours as he slid his fingers between your legs, working his fingers quickly over your clit until he could not take it any longer. He backed you up towards your bed, watching as you fell down on it.
He settled between your thighs, teasing you for barely a second with his tip before pressing inside. He set a relentless pace, the bed creaking and shaking beneath you as he took you with a force that spoke of months of pent-up desire and longing. One hand gripped your hip, holding you steady as he drove into you, while the other slid between your sweat-slicked bodies to find your clit, rubbing the sensitive nub in tight, teasing circles.
Leaning down, Aemond captured one of your nipples in his mouth, his tongue laving over the tender flesh. “I can't get enough of you,” he murmured against your breast, his hips never stilling their relentless rhythm. “I'll never get enough of you, my princess. I'll fuck you for the rest of my days, and it still won't be enough.”
You whimpered, eyes rolling back as his words and actions made you cum. So quickly.
He groaned, burying his face in the crook of your neck as he filled you up, his thick cum coating your insides.
Aemond held you close, his strong arms wrapped around you, keeping you pressed against his chest. He could feel your heartbeat, steady and strong, matching the rhythm of his own. The warmth of your skin seeped into him, chasing away the last of the chill.
His hand drifted down your back, tracing the elegant curve of your spine, before coming to rest on your hip.
Leaning down, Aemond pressed a soft, lingering kiss to your temple, his lips brushing against your skin. “I've missed this,” he murmured, his voice low and gentle. “Missed holding you like this, missed feeling you in my arms, missed... loving you, in every way a husband can love his wife.”
You titled your head up, catching his lips in a sweet, adoring kiss. “I love you,” you whispered, a small smile forming on Aemond’s lips, his nose nuzzling against yours.
“Sleep,” he gently commanded. He shifted both of your bodies to lay more comfortably, his arms never letting you go.
-----
Just two days later, your husband started longing again. He was sitting at his desk in the bedchamber, watching you as you applied oil to your skin. He watched the way you were so gentle with yourself, your skin shining and glowing. Just the way like your stomach had shone when you were with child, applying oil each night to your growing belly-
“We still need an heir,” he said, looking down at his paperwork when you looked up at him.
A small smile formed on your lips. “An heir,” you repeated as you stood up. You walked towards him, resting your hands on his shoulders. “A little brother for little Jaehaera?”
Aemond leaned back in his chair, his purple eye meeting your gaze as he set down his paperwork. A small smile tugged at the corner of his mouth, and he reached up to cover one of your hands with his own, his fingers brushing against your soft skin.
"Aye, a prince to secure the line of succession," he murmured, his thumb stroking along your wrist. "Jaehaera is perfect, but she is a girl... We need a strong son to carry on our name."
He pulled you into the space between his legs, his other hand came up to rest on the small of your back, holding you close. Aemond's gaze drifted over your face, taking in the delicate lines and curves he knew so well. The way your long lashes fluttered against your cheeks, the way your eyes seemed to see right through him.
"I want a boy," he said, his voice quiet. "A son to teach the ways of dragons and swordplay. A son who will be as strong and smart as his father."
You smiled at his words, loving the subtle bragging he was doing, and the way he truly wished to have a son to share his knowledge with. “You could teach him a lot,” you agreed softly. “History, and philosophy, and… anything dragon related.”
Aemond's heart ached with a sudden, fierce longing.
"I want to give him everything," he said, his voice rough with emotion. "I want to give him the world. I want to be the father I never had - the kind of man a son could look up to, could learn from, could be proud to call his sire."
He leaned in closer, his forehead coming to rest against your stomach as he closed his eye.
“Well…” you murmured softly, tilting his face up to look at you. You settled carefully on his lap, your arms around his neck. “I believe we are quite good at that, aren’t we?”
You toyed with Aemond’s hair, undoing the braid, and removed his eyepatch for comfort. He shivered, his eye lidded as he looked at you. He held you tightly, arms wrapping around your waist.
“You, deep inside me… spilling load after load in my womb..”
Aemond moaned, closing his eye for a moment to collect himself. He nipped at your throat, his teeth grazing the skin as his hand slid up your thigh, pushing your gown out of the way. He was hard already, his hips bucking impatiently.
“Tell me you want it,” he breathed against your lips, “tell me you-”
“Put a baby in me,” you almost moaned, biting your lower lip. His eye widened, and he moved like a man possessed. He rucked the rest of your skirts up, using his dagger to cut away your smallclothes. “You teasing-” he mumbled, shoving his own breeches down to free his cock. He entered your cunt in one thrust, his dagger clattering to the floor, his head falling back.
His hands gripped your hips, his fingers digging into the soft flesh as he began to move, to thrust, to claim you with deep, powerful strokes that hit your deepest places.
"You feel so fucking good," he rasped, his purple eye blazing with lust and adoration as he fucked into you. "So hot and tight and perfect... like you were made just for me."
Aemond set a relentless pace, his hips driving up to meet yours again and again. The obscene sound of skin slapping against skin filled the room. You were clinging onto him, moaning into his mouth. He kept looking at you, his eye never leaving yours. He wanted to memorise every little detail of bliss on your face.
He could feel his release building, his balls tightening as he neared the edge.
"Come for me,” he moaned out. “Come on my cock, and I'll fill you with my seed. I'll give you the baby you crave. We crave."
He circled your clit, rubbing and stroking and teasing, pushing you closer and closer to the brink of ecstasy with every thrust of his hips. Aemond could feel your walls starting to flutter, higher pitched moans escaping you. He leaned in, capturing your mouth in a searing kiss, swallowing your cries of pleasure as he drove into you one last time, burying himself to the hilt as he found his own release.
Aemond clung to you like a man drowning, his body shuddering and twitching as his release crashed over him in intense, overwhelming waves. A choked sob escaped his throat, tears of joy and relief and all-consuming love stinging his eyes as he spilled himself deep inside you, flooding your womb.
"My love," he gasped, your name falling from his lips like a prayer. "My wife..."
He held you close, his arms wrapped around you like a cage of steel, as if he were afraid you might disappear if he let you go. Aemond buried his face in the crook of your neck, inhaling the scent of your skin, the scent of their lovemaking. He never wanted to let you go, never wanted to be parted from you again.
"I love you," he whispered, his voice raw and hoarse from the force of his release. "Gods, I love you so much.”
You smiled softly, tiredly. “I love you more” you murmured, kissing his forehead and wiping the few stray tears. You placed a gentle hand on your lower stomach, where your womb was. Aemond followed your movements, his larger hand placing over yours. Aemond's thumb brushed gently over your belly button, a smile playing at the corners of his mouth as he imagined it growing round and taut with your child.
"Our baby," he murmured, his voice filled with wonder and awe. He leaned down, pressing a gentle kiss to your forehead. Your eyes closed, savoring the soft contact.
“Maybe the Gods will bless us with a boy,” you said softly, Aemond nodding. “And even if it is another girl…” he added, a small smile on his lips. “Well, they’re not so bad, either.”
Summary: The most precious possessions in Prince Aemond Targaryen's life are his gentle wife and his sweet, beloved daughter, Rhaenys. May the gods have mercy on the poor soul who, even inadvertently, causes them any harm.
WARNING: No age restriction. Unhealthy amounts of cuteness and softness, a tiny bit of pain, mentions of blood and anxiety attacks.
Word cont: 6.700 k
Author's note: This story can be read on its own or as a continuation of my other one-shot bravery in love with these same characters. For the kind readers who asked me to see more of this family together (especially this suggestion), here it is! 🥰💖
The first rays of sunlight shone through the King's Landing sky, slowly bringing the warmth of a new day. Prince Aemond and his lady wife lay against the pillows, tangled together, talking. She stroked the ends of his silver hair lovingly, and he smiled sideways.
Y/n was wearing the silk nightgown from the night before, and Aemond wore only his comfortable sheepskin pants. They both felt so soft against each other, just talking and occasionally exchanging sweet kisses. The moment was interrupted when the bedroom door opened with a bang, and they could hear soft, hurried footsteps coming toward the bed.
-Kepah! - Rhaenys's sweet, childlike voice sounded from beside the bed as she reached out her arms toward Aemond, hopping lightly on the floor, as she wasn't yet big enough to climb into bed without effort.
-What are you doing barefoot on this cold floor, Byka sõvion? - (Little butterfly) He asked in a soft voice and a crease in his forehead, already lifting her onto the bed by her armpits and placing her under the covers next to him and his wife.
-Ziry'll zīragon aōha byka dekossa raqagon bona. - (You'll freeze your little feet like this.) He placed a kiss on his daughter's soft foot, making her giggle and writhe with tickling as she clung to her mother.
-Muña, Kepa is tickling! - She cried, writhing with laughter.
-Husband! - Y/n scolded playfully as she snuggled Rhaenys close. -You know very well that's no way to treat a young lady. - She said, leaving smacking kisses through her little daughter's silky hair.
-My apologies, my ladies. - He smiled, snuggling into them and pulling his wife and daughter closer, making Rhaenys laugh and hug him.
The door opened again, but this time much more gently, and Rhaenys's nursemaid's voice rang apprehensively through the room.
-A thousand apologies, Your Highness. - She bowed her head as she spoke. - The princess asked me for water and when I turned to get it she had already run.
Before Y/n could answer, Aemond had already taken the lead, his voice firm and serious.
-It's fine, just leave us.
The young woman didn't need to be told twice; she simply turned and walked as quickly as possible out the door.
It wasn't long before Aemond felt the soft tips of Rhaenys's fingers on his cheeks, near his lips, pulling them upward.
-I like it better when you're smiling, Kepa. - She spoke in that sweet voice that had enchanted him since the first time he heard her speak in those same rooms.
-Then I will always smile Byka sõvion. - He smiled at his daughter and kissed the palms of her hands gently, making her smile and hug him.
-Muña, can we go pick flowers in the garden? - She asked, still leaning on her father's shoulder as she looked at Y/n eagerly, her eyes shining with excitement. - I want to look at the butterflies!
-Of course. - Y/n smiled and placed a loving kiss on her daughter's nose. - The flowers are beautiful this season, I'm sure there will be plenty of butterflies for us to watch!
Rhaenys practically screamed with excitement at her mother's answer, standing up on the bed, slipping on the covers in the process with a soft yelp and falling off the bed. But before she could hit the floor, Aemond caught her ankle and pulled her back onto the bed with a hiss of concern. The girl's eyes were wide as she stared at her father.
-You have to be careful, Byka sõvion. - He warned her gently as he pulled her toward him and his wife again, cradling her between them. - Kepa doesn't want you to get hurt.
Rhaenys just nodded, already smiling again after the scare as her messy silver hair fell into her eyes.
-Did Kepa know I saw a blue butterfly as bright as your eye? - She ran her fingers over Aemond's sapphire eye, which always caught her attention, gently caressing the scar that ran down his cheek.
-Truth? - Aemond asked smiling as he pulled his daughter's little hand and left a kiss on her fingertips, making her give a small childish laugh.
-Truth, Kepah! - Rhaenys's eyes sparkled as she spoke, and she turned toward her mother, still smiling. - Isn't that right, Muña? Wasn't she beautiful?
-One of the most beautiful we've ever seen. - Y/n agreed, smiling and stroking her daughter's silver hair.
-Muñaz said I'll be able to have a tiara when I get a little older, Kepa! - (Grandma) Rhaenys smiled excitedly at Aemond, her eyes shining with anticipation. - I said I'd like one with a blue stone! To be just like you!
The girl chattered happily and smiling, completely oblivious to the effect those words had on her father, how his heart instantly warmed with emotion upon hearing those sweet words from his sweet little girl.
Y/n, on the other hand, couldn't help but see the emotion in her husband's eyes, who leaned in and left a soft kiss on his daughter's silver hair, still ruffled from sleep, making her laugh and hide under the blanket.
•●○●•
The day was sunny and warm, perfect for sitting in the garden and perhaps even having a picnic. As much as Aemond longed to spend the whole day with his wife and daughter, as was his usual habit, he was prevented from doing so that afternoon. Due to the need to participate in one of the small council meetings at the request of his grandfather since Aegon had disappeared to where only the seven knew.
The prince paid attention to everything, occasionally offering his own opinions or rolling his good eye at the rather idiotic opinions of others. The hours passed slowly, and at times his mind would wander to his wife and daughter, causing him, unconsciously, to let out a soft smile that confused those who saw him.
It was almost the end of the meeting when the table fell silent upon hearing the beginnings of a commotion in the Keep's corridors, causing the council members to frown as they looked towards the chamber door. Until Aemond's heart skipped a beat when he heard a pained, childish cry that he recognized almost immediately as his little daughter's.
Without even thinking, taking a breath, or answering his grandfather, mother, or the other members of the small council, Aemond simply dragged his chair back, running toward the sound with long strides and a frightened look. Finally spotting Rhaenys at the end of the corridor, being held by one of the guards, the moment Aemond saw her, it was as if his body were freezing.
There was blood on her lips. Blood on the lips of his little butterfly. The torpor instantly passed at the thought that someone had had the audacity to hurt his daughter. Eyes blazing, the prince marched toward the guard holding her and took her from his arms into his own with careful gentleness, even though at that moment his fury was deadly.
-Ziry iksos byka sõvion. - (It's okay, little butterfly.) Aemond murmured, rocking her gently in his arms while caressing her back with the palm of his hand. -Aōha Kepah iksos kesīr sir. (Your papa is here now.)
Instantly, Rhaenys laid her head on her father's shoulder, hugging him tightly as she wept. Little by little, her crying subsided, leaving only sobs and soft, shaky gasps as she held tightly to Aemond's neck.
When she finally removed her head from his neck and Aemond could face her properly, his stomach dropped with the realization that one of Rhaenys's upper front baby teeth was missing.
At that moment he saw red like he had never seen before in his entire life. He could feel his hands shaking with anger and his breath coming in short gasps, and it took all his self-control not to yell at the guard in front of his daughter and scare her again.
-What happened, Byka sõvion? - Aemond decided to ask Rhaenys gently, trying to understand what had happened, blowing softly against the little girl's face in an attempt to ease the pain.
-I was watching the butterflies Kepah. - She sobbed, her voice trembling, her bloodied lips curled into a pout, her beautiful little eyes shining with tears. - But then they pushed me, and I fell into the flowerbed.
Amidst her sobs, she began to cry again, trying to wipe away her tears with her dress. Standing there with Rhaenys in his arms, Aemond felt as if his own heart were being crushed by that painful sound. Watching his daughter's every movement closely, he noticed that her beautiful lilac dress was stained with dirt and a little blood, as were her small hands, and that a few leaves were stuck in her silver hair.
The prince could barely hear the sound of footsteps running towards him, such was his discontent at that moment. The only thing on his mind was trying to calm his little girl's cries. He only realized his wife's presence when he felt her savage touch on his forearm and heard her shrill voice close to his ear.
-What happened? - Y/n's worried eyes were filled with tears that she held tightly as she looked at her husband and daughter with trembling lips.
-I fell Muña. - She whimpered, laying her head on her father's shoulder, who stroked her silver hair while glaring deadly at the guard above Rhaenys's head.
-Let's take her to the Maester! - Y/n practically begged, her voice cracking as she looked at her daughter, carefully holding her hand in her own and placing a tender kiss on it even with the blood and dirt clinging to it. This instantly made Aemond nod in agreement, his thoughts returning more clearly, his stupor so severe that he hadn't even remembered the Maesters' existence at that moment.
Amidst slight sniffles and tremors, Rhaenys clung even tighter to her father's neck. Hiding her face there, her lips never touching the leather of his jerkin, so as not to hurt her gums, Aemond walked quickly toward the room with Y/n at his heels, staring at his daughter with watery eyes and lips trembling in pure anguish.
Meanwhile, the guard responsible for Rhaenys's care, Sir Jorson, didn't even wait for an order to rush forward, eyes wide as saucers in panic, and ordered the Maester to go immediately to Prince Aemond's chambers to examine the young princess.
•●○●•
-The princess will be fine, my prince. - The Maester declared in a slightly weary tone after examining Rhaenys once more at Aemond's request, as she slept soundly in her parents' bed, clinging to the blanket wearing only a white nightgown with colorful hand-painted flowers and soft socks on her feet that Y/n had put on her after giving her a warm bath as the maester had instructed.
-The impact only knocked out her baby tooth, nothing permanent.
-Only? - Aemond grunted, widening his eyes, causing the maester to swallow hard and lower his head at the same time. -You mean only?- He hissed with a furious look, taking long strides towards the maester, not shouting so as not to wake his daughter. - The fucking impact it takes to pull out a tooth that hasn't even loosened yet!
-Forgive me for my boldness, Your Grace. - The Maester muttered as he finished gathering his things from the table as quickly as possible, eager to get away from the prince's barely contained anger, which seemed on the verge of boiling over and sweeping everything in its path.
Glancing impatiently at the maester, Aemond walked to the door and opened it angrily, no longer bothering with the man's presence in the room now that he was no longer tending to Rhaenys, only refraining from slamming the door furiously behind the elder when he left so as not to disturb his little one's sleep.
-What happened, wife? - He asked as soon as the Maester left them alone, walking to where his wife was watching her daughter near the bed, still with a distressed look. Holding her hands firmly between his, his tone wasn't accusatory, just irritated and filled with concern.
-I don't know. - Y/n sobbed, hugging her husband tightly as she buried her face in his neck, still frightened by the sight of her daughter hurt and crying. -We were both in the garden picking flowers, and she was playing with the butterflies. - She sighed against the leather of her husband's clothes as he gently stroked her hair, soothingly.
-She said she was hungry, and I went to ask a maid to bring her some refreshments, but there wasn't one around, so I moved away a little. -Y/n lifted her head and looked him in the eye as she spoke. - When I returned she had disappeared and I found her next to you.
-This isn't your fault, ābrazȳrys (Wife). -Aemond murmured softly, breathing deeply, trying to contain his anger so as not to take it out on the wrong person.
-It isn't. -He gently pulled her back to him, and Y/n leaned against her husband's chest.
-It's the fault of that damned guard whose sole function in life is to protect you and our daughter. - He practically growled, tightening his hold on his wife as he watched Rhaenys sleeping in the center of the bed, clutching the covers, her lips parted, exposing the empty space where her lost baby tooth had once been.
-But I assure you, ābrazȳrys, it won't stay that way! - The prince growled in a low voice, leaving a kiss against Y/n's scalp, making all the hairs on her body stand on end. With a smoldering look of anger, Aemond left the shared chambers, heading off in search of the guard supposedly watching his daughter.
•●○●•
The door to the courtyard's weapons storage room opened with a dry, ghostly rumble, announcing the furious presence of the Targaryen prince, a sight that would make any man rather face the seven hells than him. Rhaenys's white cloak trembled from head to toe as her gaze met his enraged gaze.
-Mmmh… Now Sir Jorson you will tell me exactly what happened. - Aemond hissed in a dangerously low voice, almost spitting the words at the man as Sir Criston watched him closely at the door.
-T-the princess… S-she fell… - The guard began to stutter, barely able to keep looking Aemond in the eye.
-And how in the seven hells did a simple fall knock out one of my daughter's teeth? - Aemond shouted voraciously, taking long strides toward the man, making him shrink even further, if that were even possible.
-T-the princess was playing m-my prince. - The man stammered, trembling and looking at the ground while tightly gripping his hands together. -She was just picking flowers like she always does. - The guard sighed, shuddering, as he faced the prince and found his eyes shining with barely contained fury.
-Lord Dargood's son… naughty boy… was running and pushed her. - He looked away again, unable to keep his eyes fixed on the prince's angry gaze, his voice falling lower with each passing moment. - In the fall, she hit her mouth on the stones surrounding the flowerbed. I-it was an accident. - The man stammered and whispered the last words, looking at the ground as if he were a scolded child.
The prince's blood boiled in his veins at the thought of that boy, who must have been three times the size of his Rhaenys, pushing her into the damned flowerbed. It wouldn't be a fucking accident when Aemond personally pulled out every single one of that damned Dargood brat's teeth.
-You have only one fucking job within this Keep, which is to keep my daughter safe! - Aemond growled lividly, approaching the man even closer, cornering him as he would a cockroach. -And now she's lying in bed, wounded!
-I got distracted for a moment, my prince. - The man begged in panic, his gaze darting in every direction in pure desperation, with nowhere to run. - It won't happen again, have m-mercy! - He begged with wide eyes.
-You are relieved of your duties! - Aemond hissed through gritted teeth, his red face contorted with fury. - We're not keeping you here to distract yourself.
-My prince, I'm truly sorry… - The guard began, kneeling before him, but was interrupted at the same moment.
-You're sorry? - Aemond practically shouted, still maintaining his fierce tone, his eyes wide and his face contorted in fury. -If anything worse had happened to my daughter, I'd have your fucking head for it!
Sir Jorson cringed even more at that, if that were even possible.
-Don't you ever dare step foot near that fortress again if you want to keep your head on your fucking shoulders, you bastard. - Aemond grunted, clenching his jaw before finally leaving the room under Sir Criston's watchful eye.
•●○●•
-Husband, he's just a child! - Y/n tried to reason with Aemond a few moments later, after her husband returned to their shared quarters even angrier than before and told her everything he'd discovered while threatening the Dargood boy, too crudely to be just lip service.
-Our daughter is just a child too! - He growled softly, pointing toward the bed where the little girl slept soundly, sighing deeply, clutching the blanket.
-I know that, I'm furious too, but you couldn't demand physical punishment for Rodd Dargood. - She sighed, approaching him with a frown. -It would be wrong, and he probably wouldn't even understand the reason for the punishment!
-Do you know what happened the night I lost my eye? - Aemond asked her in complete dismay, his eye wide and bloodshot as he stared at her. -My father barely cared! I was covered in blood and scared, and he interrogated me about what happened as if I were a common criminal!
Y/n's heart sank when she heard those words, Aemond had already told her about that night in Driftmark, but hearing it said in such a raw and painful way made her want to pull him into a hug and never let go.
-What happened went unpunished, he acted as if that bastard had the right to do what he did to me! - He spat the words furiously, pressing the missing eye over the eyepatch with his fingertips amidst growls of rage. -I won't let that happen to Rhaenys! I won't let our daughter feel unprotected and helpless, like her father doesn't care about her, even if I have to pull every tooth out of that little bastard's mouth!
Aemond swore furiously, shuddering as he spoke, his hands clenching, the air he breathed growing thinner as memories of that horrible night mingled with memories of his precious little girl, covered in blood and dirt, huddled in his arms as she wept. Little by little he felt as if he lost his balance and leaning against the sofa he lowered himself and sat on the stone floor staring at the crackling fire in the fireplace.
At the same moment, Y/n crouched down beside him and touched his forearm, feeling him flinch at the touch and slowly pulling her hand away before sitting on the floor beside him and hugging him with all the care and affection she had in her being, her heart breaking at seeing her dear husband, always so strong, helpless like that.
-Husband, I'm here. - She murmured against his neck, trying to comfort him, leaving a gentle kiss there and caressing him through his hair. -I'm here, Aemond, you don't need to be afraid.
-What's the point, wife? - He whispered, raising his head towards Y/n with his eyes full of unshed tears. - Having done so much, having gotten to where I am… If I can't protect our daughter?
Y/n's heart felt like it weighed hundreds of tons as she heard those words leaving her husband's lips so rawly while his eyes looked as sad as she had ever seen them.
Slowly, she raised her right hand and tenderly caressed his face until her fingers curled around the eye patch and she carefully removed it, placing it on the rug and then pulling him closer to her.
-Aemond, I know you try, but you couldn't protect her from everything. - She stroked his back soothingly. - Accidents happen, our daughter will be fine.
The prince let out a shaky sigh against his wife's hair at that.
-Besides, you know… our daughter doesn't think that way of you. - She shrugged subtly.
-What do you mean? - He frowned in confusion the instant he heard the words.
-Aemond, you're the knight in shining armor from her stories. Her hero! - Y/n smiled, stroking her husband's hair tenderly and sweetly. -Didn't you notice how she was today? She was scared, in pain. And she didn't want to leave your arms for even a moment, because she feels safe with you. Because she knows you will protect her no matter what, our daughter doesn't doubt you. You shouldn't doubt yourself either.
Those simple words were enough to, albeit gently, calm the anger bubbling inside the prince. Even though a mere glance toward the bed made his stomach twist again at the sight of his little butterfly so still.
-I don't want her to think that I didn't give due importance to what happened. - He sighed, laying his head on top of his wife's head as they snuggled together on the plush rug. - I want her to know that the aggression she suffered was duly punished.
-What would you have preferred? For your father to have ripped out Lucerys's eye or to have taken you in and given you a hug? - Y/n asked him softly as she stroked his hands between hers, the two of them practically embracing each other on the floor now.
Aemond didn't answer her, but he knew exactly what he would have preferred when he was just a little boy.
•●○●•
That night passed as quickly as the wind, and the prince had barely slept, lying awake all night beside his wife and daughter, keeping watch, as if something might happen to one of them at any moment and he needed to be alert.
When Rhaenys woke and smiled at him, hugging him and leaving a kiss with a hint of drool on his cheek still sleepy, then laying her face on his shoulder, Aemond simply held her close, pressing her close as if she were suddenly going to disappear.
At that moment it seemed like nothing had happened, if it weren't for the missing tooth in the front and the slight purple bruise near the lip, the incident would barely have been noticed.
-Kepah? - She called him in a soft, sleepy voice, still lying against him, playing with the thread of her father's shirt.
-Yes, byka sõvion? - Aemond whispered, rubbing his palm against her back.
-Kotago nyki emago cookies syti breakfast?- (Can I have cookies for breakfast?) She whispered in high Valyrian, as always, mixing it with the common tongue and mispronouncing a few words.
-Hen rhinka, Kepah jāhor epagon zirȳ naejot maghagon" (Of course you can, dad will have them bring your favorites). He smiled, tenderly stroking his daughter's silver hair, who snuggled even closer to him.
The moment Aemond looked away from Rhaenys he could see his wife already awake looking at them both with a smile on her lips, and with a sigh the prince guided his free hand to her and tangled it in a soft caress through her hair.
•●○●•
Their morning was uneventful, except for the moment when Y/n gave her husband a subtle scolding for giving in so easily and letting Rhaenys eat three different types of biscuits for breakfast just to make her happy.
As the sun rose high in the sky, Aemond and Y/n shared a delicious pheasant pie with wine, while Rhaenys ate her favorite stew of shredded chicken with carrots and a few other fresh vegetables, prepared especially for her at Aemond's request.
After the meal, the prince could no longer avoid his daily duties, being forced to leave the room with a scowl, which intensified even more when Y/n announced that she was taking Rhaenys for a walk in the garden and some fresh air. He had barely stepped out of the room when he was already scolding the new guard Criston had chosen for Rhaenys earlier, standing by the door next to Y/n's sworn shield.
That afternoon was undoubtedly one of the most irritating of Aemond's life. Lord Dargood's pathetic voice, trying to apologize for the behavior of the wild animal he called his son, made his blood boil in his veins. The only thing stopping him from rushing the man and killing him on the spot was the fact that he had taken Criston with him precisely for the purpose of preventing him from doing so.
Even when the matter had been resolved and his thirst for revenge partially sated, anger still gnawed at Aemond, and with every step he took through the halls of Kepp, people seemed to move out of his way, as if afraid the prince's fury would spill over onto them.
The moment Aemond flung open the bedroom door and entered, Rhaenys's eyes lit up, and she ran toward him, calling out excitedly as she jumped into her father's arms. And as angry as he had been before, Aemond couldn't help but smile as he scooped up his little girl, lifting her into the air as if she weighed nothing.
-Kepah, I found an injured bird in the garden with muña and she said we can take care of it until it gets better. - She smiled excitedly at her father, and Aemond's heart ached at the sight of the missing tooth.
-Truth Byka sõvion? - He glanced around the rooms slightly, searching for his wife as he spoke, finding her organizing his books near the fireplace while Rhaenys merely nodded, wriggling out of her father's arms and pulling him by the hand.
-Look him, Kepa. -The girl's eyes shone with delight as she pointed to the small bird with gray and white feathers and an injured wing, huddled inside the wooden box lined with cloth and a saucer filled with cut fruit. - It's so small.
-But muña said he'll be fine. - She smiled expectantly, looking at Y/n who just watched their interaction with a smile after putting away her husband's last book.
Y/n was so worried about Aemond, afraid that even though they had talked about it at length, he would make some rash move, driven by anger at seeing Rhaenys hurt. She smiled at her husband, but Aemond could see the question mark over her head from miles away, and with a sigh, the prince crouched down, looking at his daughter.
-Are you feeling better, Byka sõvion? - Rhaenys nodded, smiling toothlessly at her father.
-Better! Sir Criston found my tooth in the garden, he came with Muñāz (Grandma) to bring it to me. And Muña said that if we put it under my pillow, a magic dragon will bring me cookies tonight! - She practically squealed with excitement, her eyes shining as she told Aemond everything in a very credulous way, and Aemond arched his eyebrows at his wife as he listened to his daughter speak. Y/n just shrugged, smiling, approaching them both.
-He will come, my love, but only when you sleep. - Y/n stroked her daughter's silver hair, smiling lovingly at her.
-See Kepah? - Rhaenys looked at him excitedly, almost skipping with her bare feet in just socks on the floor. - I want to hear my story earlier today so I can fall asleep faster and get my cookies!
Aemond nodded and smiled at his daughter's excitement.
-Kepa wants to know something very important now, Byka sõvion. - Aemond sat down on the rug and gently pulled her onto his lap, and the girl simply tilted her head to the side as she stared at him. - Do you know who pushed you yesterday in the garden?
-I think it was Rodd who knocked me down. -She whispered to her father as if it were a secret no one knew, looking at him very seriously. - He's always running.
Aemond nodded, knowing his daughter was right.
-Kepa had a very serious conversation with Rodd and his father, Byka sõvion. - Aemond said with a serious look as Rhaenys paid attention. - What Rodd did was very bad, and it won't go unpunished, okay? Rodd will apologize to you for what happened and will be grounded.
Rhaenys looked at her father, still a little confused, not quite understanding what all this meant, but she knew punishments were bad and that her father was really angry with Rodd for knocking her down. So the girl just smiled and hugged her father tightly, laying her head on his chest and just staying quiet for a while.
-Are you okay, my sweet love? - Y/n gently ran her hand over her daughter's back, looking at her slightly worried, and Rhaenys simply nodded.
-Did Kepa ground Rodd for being mean to me? - She asked after a few minutes of reflection.
-Yes, dear. - Y/n replied with a smile, leaving a soft kiss against her hair and still caressing her daughter's back. - No one has the right to hurt anyone and get away with it.
Y/n knew Rhaenys was still too young to understand certain things, and that her little daughter was too sweet for her own good, but seeing the sparkle in her eyes as she looked at Aemond and hugged him once more, while her husband smiled contentedly, was enough.
•●○●•
Night had already fallen throughout Kings Landing, and a very common habit between Aemond and Y/n was putting their daughter to bed together. Except when there was some kind of mishap, as there was that night when Y/n was called by Alicent for a cup of tea after dinner.
So, only Aemond was in his little daughter's room, sitting with her on the bed, telling her a story, some of the parts in high Valyrian while stroking Rhaenys's silver hair. She could feel her eyes growing heavy with sleep when he finally finished the story.
-I don't like it when you're sad, Kepa… - She murmured sleepily, staring at her father with her head slightly tilted to the side, unable to help but notice how sad her father had been throughout the day.
-Kepa isn't sad, Byka sõvion. - Aemond caressed his daughter's chubby cheeks, forcing a smile.
-I know you are, Kepa. - Rhaenys stared at him with those faintly violet-blue eyes that everyone said were identical to his, making him sigh. He didn't think so himself. Even though the color was identical, the sparkle of sweetness and innocence that burned in his daughter's eyes had long since faded from his.
-Is it because I fell? - She leaned closer to him as she asked, her eyes growing worried as she looked sadly at her father.
-No! - Aemond denied immediately, shaking his head negatively as he pulled his daughter into his arms. - It's not because of you at all.
-Then what is it? Muña always says that if I tell her what makes me sad, I can feel better later. - Rhaenys was looking at him expectantly now.
-I was just upset with myself for not being there when you got hurt. - The older man stroked the little girl's slightly curly silver hair.
-But that wasn't your fault, Kepa. - She placed her small hand on Aemond's face, gently caressing him as if he were one of the cats she played with around the keep, while looking at him confused. - It was Rodd.
-Boys are all silly. - The little girl snorted, still hugging her father. -Except you, Kepah. You're smart and kind and know how to tell the best stories!
Aemond just chuckled , leaving a kiss on his sweet little girl's forehead.
-The important thing is that you are okay now Byka sõvion. - He sighed, carefully laying her down on the bed and covering her with her favorite blanket that Y/n had embroidered with flowers, bees, colorful butterflies and her name in blue thread in the center. -Bona's ry bona gaomon.
-I don't know what those mean yet, Kepah… -She murmured confusedly, snuggling into her blanket, smiling and rubbing his sleepy eyes.
-It means you're all that matters. - Aemond whispered, leaving a soft kiss on her forehead in the process. - Issa byka prūmia. (My little heart.)
-Avy jorrāelan Kepah… - (I love you, Daddy) Rhaenys laughed and kissed her father on the cheek, warming his heart, as always, with her daughter's sweet words and gestures.
It wasn't long before she finally fell asleep, and the prince only left the room when she was snoring loudly in her sleep while being watched by one of Kepp's nannies.
Aemond couldn't help but smile as he left his daughter's quarters and turned into the corridor that led to his own shared quarters with his wife, since just like him, Y/n had just appeared at the opposite end of the corridor, but unlike him, her brow was furrowed in a thoughtful look.
-Did you order Lord Dargood's tooth pulled? - She questioned with an arched eyebrow as soon as the two met in front of the door to they chambers.
-Mmmh… - He shrugged with a dismissive pout as he reached for the doorknob, opening the door and politely ushering his wife inside. -Unlike his son, he's a grown man, he can very well deal with the consequences of his inability to raise a well-behaved child.
•●○●•
Not much later that night, Aemond had finally given in to the day's weariness and lay down next to his wife, wearing the more comfortable clothes she had chosen for him.
The yellowish candlelight was low, and the two were cuddled together in a comfortable silence that usually helped calm the prince's troubled mind, until he himself broke the silence with a velvety voice.
-After you gave us our daughter, I began to understand my father and his reasons better. -His brow furrowed as he spoke. - But on the other hand… I began to feel angrier toward him for it.
Listening to her husband's thoughtful ramblings, she looked at him curiously from beneath her lashes, her head still resting on his strong chest.
-If I lost you, I would never be able to love another woman. - He gently stroked his wife's soft hair, each word leaving her lips slowly. - I could never love a child if you didn't give it to me… If it wasn't a part of you too, if it didn't have your sweetness.
-And I hate him for knowing that he also had this certainty when his first wife died, but even so he married my mother and made her unhappy, having other children that he will never be able to love. - He muttered the last part with subtle bitterness in his voice, but Y/n didn't even notice. She had been holding her breath many words ago.
Love. She thought, nearly gasping for breath at her husband's verbal admission of his feelings for the first time in years of marriage.
She knew Aemond loved her. She knew her husband cherished her with all his heart and soul. But hearing those words come from his beautiful lips made her heart swell with the purest, most simple joy, and in that same instant, she hugged him tighter and whispered against his chest the words she had also learned by now, making Aemond sigh with contentment.
-Avy jorrāelan…
•●○●•
The following weeks passed as quickly as the winter winds, and in the meantime, all of Kepp whispered about the frightening fact that Prince Aemond had personally pulled Lord Dargood's tooth because of his eldest son's offense to the young princess.
Even more terrifying, about how the house of Sir Jorson, Princess Rhaenys's former guard, had burned to the ground with him inside shortly after his dismissal from service at Red Kepp. No one could prove anything, but everyone knew that the strange, uncontrollable fire in the man's secluded hut had been Aemond's doing.
In the midst of all this, Rhaenys just cared for her injured bird with all her dedication and love alongside her mother, completely oblivious to the gossip surrounding her name, completely innocent of the atrocities her father could commit in her name. She fed the bird from her own hands day and night, grooming its feathers with all the delicacy in the world, and both Aemond and Y/n had found themselves smiling as she told him one of her favorite stories one afternoon.
Rhaenys's favorite thing was that if she whistled near it, the little bird would repeat the melody almost instantly, no matter what it was. She talked about it to the whole family for days, even dragging Sir Criston from his duties to hear the bird sing.
Aemond, for his part, was very pleased, after all his little girl was happier than ever, even if she had no other topic of conversation other than her precious little bird. Besides, Rhaenys was so absorbed in caring for the bird that she didn't even have time to wander the gardens looking for other little flying creatures as she usually did. And that, well, that brought Aemond peace of mind, knowing that in they chambers, accompanied by her mother, his daughter was safe.
That was until the day the damned bird began flapping its wings again and flying around the room while singing, making Rhaenys scream and laugh, clutching the skirts of Y/n's dress.
-Look, Muña! Look! - She pointed smilingly at the little bird that flew happily around the room, getting higher and higher. - Now he can go back to the garden!
The moment he heard that, the prince's stomach sank and he could no longer continue reading the words on the pages of his philosophy book. He even tried to convince Rhaenys to keep the bird under his wife's incredulous gaze, but the girl was adamant about it.
Four days later, when Y/n and Rhaenys were sure the little bird had truly recovered, the three of them went together to Kepp Gardens to release it. And Aemond had to admit, over the course of those four days he'd seriously considered breaking the damn bird's wing again, but he hadn't, knowing neither his wife nor his daughter would forgive him if he did.
-Are you sure you won't keep him? - Aemond asked, frowning, as his smiling daughter prepared to release the little bird back into the sunny garden. - He might get hurt again if he's left loose out there.
-I can't, Kepa. - She sighed, stroking the bird's soft feathers, now holding him in her hands. -He's a little bird; he has to fly with his bird friends and find his muña again. He'll be sad if I leave him in my room. - She looked sadly from her father to the bird she had learned to love so much. - And if he gets hurt again, muña and I will take care of him again.
-Are you ready, dear? - Y/n smiled at her daughter, her eyes sparkling with pride, and Rhaenys nodded, carefully stroking the bird's soft feathers.
With a sweet, childlike, and still toothless smile, Rhaenys opened her little hands, letting the bird fly free through the flower gardens of Red Kepp. The little bird landed in a nearby tree, humming happily, but then flew off again and circled the girl's head, making her laugh and squeal with excitement as her parents watched.
-See, husband? - Y/n murmured with a smile to the prince, who held her close by the waist. -The bird will return.
-Mmmh… - Aemond watched Rhaenys skipping around the garden chasing the bird with a smile from ear to ear on her lips, and even though the missing tooth reminded him of the unfortunate accident with Rodd Dargood, seeing such a bright smile on his daughter was the greatest of his joys.
It was there, as he watched Rhaenys run happily toward him, tripping over the hem of her own dress and catching her balance to run again, that Aemond thought that perhaps he could give his little butterfly a little more room to flap her wings, even if it was just… a few inches at a time.
A/n²: I'm so happy to finally post this one-short. It's been ready for a few months, and now I finally have the courage to post it! I hope you enjoyed it. The title came from Eminem's song Mockingbird, especially the final part, which makes you want to know more, haha. Thanks for reading! 💖💖🥰🥰
tags | 18+ MDNI, Jealously, Aemond yearning, explicit sexual content, mentions of bastards, loss of virginity, unprotected sex, size kink (?), oral f!receiving, Angst if you squint. "Technical" infidelity but is it really if Jace started it? (yes). ooc!Aemond (probably). NOT PROOF READ (its one am, leave me alone).
w.c | 3.8k
note(s) | My first smut fic!! Ah I'm scared...I also think I have a problem with making Aemond want fem!reader when he rightfully can't have her. Also I swear I'm not a Jace hater!! I love Jace, but in this fic specifically I made him long and wish for Baela.
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“Why don’t you marry her then?”
Aegon’s voice was taunting, as if pushing Aemond to say something. Aemond stared down at the cup in front of him; even with a stoic expression, his mannerisms betrayed him. He tapped his finger against the edge of the cup, he picked at the skin around his nails on the opposite hand-all the tell tale signs of thinking, a mind that cannot be stopped.
“Because she is betrothed to Rhaenyra’s bastard.” His voice dripped with malice as he spoke. Aemond hated that Jacerys would inherit the throne enough; What his bastard nephew didn’t need was the girl Aemond had wished for his entire life. Ever since the two of them were children Aemond had a…weird infatuation with her. When he was a boy, he would pick flowers from the garden and he would purposely do good deeds for her, just to have her hug him or smile graciously at him.
But now, everything was different. She was a woman grown, and him a man grown. She was to be engaged to his bastard nephew, and he would have to sit and watch as they shared a kiss, held hands, smiled and danced as newlyweds. He’d have to hold a straight face as the two of them left to Jacerys’ bed chamber, only knowing the connotations that came with what would happen on their wedding night.
Ignoring his brother's tedious rants about hells knows what, Aemond stood from his chair, opting for a walk in the gardens.
____________________________________________
Aemond walked, hands clasped behind his back, and his gaze drifted into nothingness as he walked with just his thoughts, and the cool breeze that accompanied the summer evenings. He tried to distract himself from the thoughts of her, for they were all almost too painful to ever truly think about.
But he couldn’t help himself. He thought of her as a sickness, one that lingered and grew stronger by the day until it fully consumed your every waking moment. He thought of her laugh just as contagious as the plague, her eyes as intoxicating as the finest of wines. He thought her to be a type of sickness, and he so desperately wanted to be affected.
Aemond was never one to smile-one to truly-smile, his half smirks or half smiles were only ever in a sarcastic sense, but for some reason his smiles were real with her. With her he laughed a little more, with her he walked a little faster. He knew it was stupid, perhaps perpetually idiotic-to ever think, let alone long for such a pure and innocent creature.
As Aemond walked, he noticed her sitting by one of the fountains in the garden. She looked breathtaking, he thought to himself. Her hair was down and cascaded down her shoulders, her face was just the perfect amount of shaded with the moon's light. And above all, she held that intoxicating smile that she always held. He never knew why she was always smiling, nor did he wish to find out.
She turned her head, her smile widening at the sight of Aemond.
“Aemond!” Her voice was cheerful, slowly standing as he walked towards her.
“Princess,” Aemond smiled-a half smile-at her as he looked around, then slowly back at her. “It’s quite late. Should you not be in your chambers?”
She always thought the way he cared for her, even if he didn’t show it outright, was extremely enticing. She knew how he was with others, but she knew the differences he had with almost everyone in court-so what made her so different? Why her, the object of the second son's affection.
“Perhaps I do not wish to sleep. Perhaps…I quite like the quietness of the garden.” She smiled innocently, looking back towards the fountain as she started to walk. Aemond knew her well enough to see that this was a quiet plea for him to join her; Because no matter how much she enjoyed the quietness of the garden, she enjoyed it much more when he was with her.
Aemond stared at her, as he often did, but this time, it was different. The stare he held was nothing short of primal. He watched the light in her eyes as she smiled up at him and for some reason, now, he wished to watch as the innocent light in her eyes slowly dwindled as he claimed her.
“Aemond? Is something wrong?” Her voice snapped his thoughts back, if only for a moment. She stopped walking to look up at him and she crossed her arms underneath her chest. His eye trailed down slowly, fixating on the way that her cleavage just slightly out of her dress. He was like a man starved; Clinging to the littlest of details that would make his imagination run wild.
She seemed to notice the way that his eye raked over her chest like a starving man, and her face flushed with embarrassment. She-though subconsciously-reached up to place her arm over her chest, but to her surprise, Aemond gently took her hand, and when she looked up, his one sapphire eye was locked with hers.
“You needn’t cover up. Not around me.” He spoke calmly, though his heart was racing and his head spinning. He let out a shaky breath as he lowered her hand and looked into her eyes.
She watched him carefully, searching his gaze for anything that would betray him. In truth she didn’t know what she was searching for, but she felt as if she should be searching for something.
Aemond lifted a hand, placing the back of his knuckles against her hot cheek. The gesture was gentle, and slow, something he was not known for. His eye slowly trailed down her face, and his eye caught on her lips, his breath heavy as he reached his hand up and gently placed his thumb over her plush bottom lip.
Her eyes followed his, big, and full of longing. She stared at him as his thumb pushed against her lip. She didn’t know exactly what to do; She knew that this moment was intimate, far too intimate to be happening between a betrothed woman and a bachelor. But, the way he gazed at her made her feel hot, and the way he trailed his hand over her face and body made her want to see where this could lead.
His free hand shakily went up to her waist, cupping it firmly as he brought her closer. He leaned forward, just slightly, till his nose was pressed against hers. Her breath hitched, and her eyes instinctively closed. She waited for him to press his lips against hers, to feel his mouth on hers like she had (shamefully) always wished for. But, it never came.
When she opened her eyes again, she saw Aemond breathing heavily, desperately trying to restrain himself. He pulled away slightly, and he shook his head,
“I shouldn’t take advantage of you…not like this.” Though his words held conviction, it seemed his body betrayed him. His hand stayed on her waist, slowly trailing up and cupping her breast in his hand. She gasped softly at the feeling, and his thumb went to her lip again before he connected his lips to hers. She responded immediately, putting her hands on his arms.
He kissed her like he was dying, his body subconsciously reacting more to the kiss then he’d wish it to. He pulled her flush against him, his strong hands coming to cup her face, his shoulders shrugging in a futile attempt to have her closer. He opened his mouth, causing her to gasp at the feeling of his tongue against hers. Her mouth moved with his as if it was known to her; As if this was a dance she had practiced for years to perfect, as if the dance of her lips was a song that Aemond had mastered just for her.
She practically melted in his arms. She had been kissed before; Jace was a good kisser but he was soft, and the kisses were never not chaste. But, kissing Aemond was like walking through fire. Her entire body reacted to the way he clung to her body, how he pulled her impossibly closer. It was like a fire had escaped through his lips and was now coursing through her veins and settling in her abdomen.
Even though she didn’t know exactly what to do, it seemed her body did. Her hands slid down his arms and slowly made their way to his chest as she moaned softly.
The moan grounded him, like he had been falling from the heavens and down to earth. He suddenly pulled away, breathless as he stared down at her. Her eyes opened steadily, and she looked up at him with confusion while a frown graced her kiss swollen lips.
“We shouldn’t have done that.” He spoke breathlessly, his hand still gently stroking her side.
“Maybe not..but it felt good.” Gods, the way she spoke held him in a chokehold. He wished desperately to dive back into her; To drown in her lips and never come up for air, but..
“Not again. You are to be married.” He suddenly pulled away and at the feeling of his hands leaving her body, she frowned deeper.
“Aemond-”
“Goodnight, Princess.”
And with that, the prince turned and rushed back into the keep.
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Aemond couldn’t sleep. He tossed and turned in bed, picking at his nails, biting his lip-genuinely anything to help stop the incessant thoughts of her lips.
The thoughts started off sweet and innocent. The way she looked up at him as he trailed his thumb over her lip, the way her lips pursed just slightly when he leaned forward.
But then the thoughts got venereal fast. He thought about how he felt to finally kiss her. The way his lips practically burned when they pulled away. He knew that as he gazed at her kiss swollen lips his night would be harbored with thoughts of what they’d look like doing gods knows what else.
His hand slid down underneath the sheets, firmly grasping at his length as he let out a shuddering breath. He hated doing this; Feeling so pent up and so desperate that he had to resort to using himself. But as of right now he couldn’t care less.
He imagined her lips around his cock, her innocent eyes gazing up into his. He’d imagine the way she’d gag around him, how her lips would look kissing the head of his cock.
He groaned at the thought, his head tipping back as he closed his eye and let his thoughts wander more. He’d think about how she’d look with his seed covering her lips and her chin, how she’d moan his name as he devoured her between her legs-
He peaked with a gasp, and a low moan of her name. The minute his orgasm washed over him, and he started to slowly come down, he felt an intense feeling of guilt, shame, but most of all pain.
Guilt and shame because he hated himself for touching himself to someone who couldn’t be his.
Pain because she’d never be his. Pain because he knew that no matter what he did, she’d still be betrothed to Jacerys.
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The next morning, she sat alone at breakfast, supposedly liking it more that way. With her fiance practically ignoring her, and her father too entranced with kissing the king's ass, she learned to enjoy the solitude of just…nothing.
Plus, she always had her thoughts. Even if they were only occupied with Aemond.
She played around with the food on her plate as her mind trailed. She remembered the way he kissed her, how he held her. She felt happy, something she so rarely felt with Jacerys.
She knew how he felt, how he longed for and wished for Baela. She did not blame him, she was beautiful, but she also didn’t feel sad, which, at a point did bother her but, not so much.
At least, not after last night.
She smiled to herself as she thought about the kiss, wishing that he would do it again, longing for the way the heat escalated through her body.
She didn’t register the voice next to her until it spoke her name.
She looked up, surprised. But, when her eyes met with Aemond’s, her heartbeat quickened, and she smiled.
“Aemond.”
“You’re not hungry?”
“What?”
“You’re not eating.”
“Oh,” Her cheeks flushed red for a reason unbeknownst to her, and with a soft huff, she pushed the plate away, “It seems as though I have lost my appetite.”
Aemond looked concerned at that, and he looked down at her. Despite himself, he found himself worrying yet again for her comfort, her needs.
“Is something the matter?” She shakes her head, but for some reason, Aemond was persistent. “If this is about what happened last night, then I should apologize-”
“Apologize?” She interrupted, sitting up straighter at the mention of the word. “Why?”
“Yes…apologize. Because we should not have done that-”
“But I wanted it to happen.”
Aemomd stopped and he slowly looked towards her. His eye pierced into hers as if to read every thought and emotion that crossed her brain. He just simply couldn’t believe her.
“You shouldn’t say things you do not mean, Princess.”
“You don’t know that I don’t mean it.”
“Princess-”
“Aemond.” She said his name as if to challenge him, and he knew that he truly could never challenge her. He saw it in her eyes, he saw by the way she looked at him and smiled that she wished for him just as he wished for her. But these feelings-these blockages-would only cause unnecessary trouble.
“Please, do not give me a hope that cannot be upheld.” Her heart broke a little at that, and, as he stood to leave, she instinctively stood with him, taking his wrist in her hand as she pulled on his arm. As if the small gesture would stop him from walking, (it did).
“Aemond please..You do not know what I wish for.”
His lip curled down into a small frown as he looked at her. He knew what she felt-at least he thought he did-but even if his suspicions were right, even if she did wish for him like how he longed for her, he couldn’t. He may dislike, perhaps even hate his nephew, but he was better than stealing his fiance.
Right?
“We cannot. To be with you would disgrace your family and the alliance-”
“Fuck the alliance!” She swore, her eyes boring into his as she studied his face. “Fuck the alliances Aemond, I wish for you. Desperately, I wish for you. Jace does not see me like how you do. Jace does not make me feel the way that you do-”
“It does not matter if Jace makes you happy or if he makes you feel desired-”
“He does not wish for me as you do!”
“Princess-”
“You do not understand! We are speaking of breaking it off. Neither of us wish for this.” Aemond went quiet at this and he sighed heavily, turning his full body towards her. He pried his arm away from her, staring at her incredulously, his body language giving no open window to how he was truly feeling. With no words coming from him, she continued.
“I love you.” At those words Aemond showed his shock. He took a step back from her and he raised an eyebrow.
“You do not mean-”
“Oh for the love of-Yes! I mean it! I love you, Aemond! I love you as if it is breathing! Instinctively, not thinking about it….I love you.”
Aemond couldn’t hold it anymore, he walked to her and gripped her face tightly, her cheeks squishing slightly in his grasp as he smashed his lips against hers. She initially was shocked at the sudden kiss, but she kissed him back fiercely, holding his wrists as she leaned up to kiss him deeper.
He led her back until he pressed her back against the table, holding her thighs as he pushed her onto the table. His body fit perfectly in between her thighs, just like he imagined it would. His hands gripped her thighs, one of his hands traveling up, feeling and savoring the soft skin as he groaned.
She pulled away from the kiss to leave small kisses along his jaw. He bit his lip at the feeling, the action presumably so innocent and so sweet it almost made him chuckle.
He pulled back slightly, his gaze intense and lust filled as his hand trailed underneath her breasts.
“Tell me to stop.” He demanded. His head was spinning with the lust that clouded it. He waited for her to push him away, or to whimper a soft “I do not think myself ready”- But she shook her head, bringing his head back to hers swiftly to connect their lips in another passionate kiss.
He pulled away from the kiss, groaning to himself as he left hot, open mouthed kisses against her jaw and neck. He looked down, his breath heavy as he stared down into her cleavage. He wished for nothing more than to rip her dress open and kiss every inch of her body, but being in the dining room came with its disadvantages. So, he settled for kissing her cleavage, before trailing his lips down the fabric of her dress till he came to her thighs.
Aemond pushed her dress up as far as he could, staring at her the whole time. He slowly pushed her thighs about, giving her time to stop him but she never did. Gently kissing the inner side of her thigh, he tried to reassure her. He could see the uncertainty in her eyes; The way she looked at him with both anxiety and lust. He stared up at her searching for any sign or signal that would make him stop.
“Is this okay?” Once he saw the light nod of her head, he disappeared underneath her dress.
She had never been intimate with a man-courtesy of her father, enforcing the “Women should be pure” melodramatic speech into her head ever since she could stand. She always thought it to be a chore, only having heard stories from unhappy married women who hated their husbands, and much less disliked their children a little less, but this? This was exciting, this felt good.
She placed a hand on his head, moaning his name under her breath as he ate her like a beast. His hands gripped her thighs as if to ground himself-He had tasted women before but for some reason she was so much sweeter, so much more divine. His eyes practically rolled back just from pushing his tongue into her heat, sucking gently on her flit before he pulled away slightly, focusing his attention on her clit as he dipped a finger inside of her.
The sudden stretch made her jump, and gasp loudly. She may have pleasured herself before but it really never felt like what Aemond was doing to her. He eased his finger in slowly, dragging it back out, and then slowly pushing it back in. Hearing the moans that graced her lips, he continued the slow thrust of his finger for a moment before he added another one.
She let out a loud moan, a hand on the back of his head as she pushed his head closer to her heat. She felt him chuckle against her, the vibrations only adding to the pleasure. She moaned loudly, perhaps too loudly for comfort, but Aemond only seemed to want more of those noises to come from her.
He slowly curled his fingers, his mouth praising her clit. The added pressure with the curl of his fingers, and the sucking of her clit made her eyes squeeze shut.
“Oh gods Aemond, I’m going to-” Just as her orgasm was going to consume her, it stopped. With her heavy breathing, and slightly shaky legs, she slowly sat up. Aemond smirked up at her, holding her gaze as he nipped at her inner thighs. “You stopped..”
“Yes. Because if you are going to peak it should be on my cock.”
Her face flushed at the words, and she stared at him with wide eyes as he pulled his trousers down slightly to free his throbbing cock. As their eyes met, he seemed to notice the slight anxiety in her eyes, because he pressed his forehead against hers and lined himself up with her entrance.
“Tell me to stop if it hurts too much.” She nodded in response, and she wrapped her arms tightly around his shoulders as he pushed into her. She let out a gasp; The feeling was new, discomfiting but..new. Her face scrunched up at the stretch, and Aemond shushed her quietly as he started to move. After a few thrusts, her body relaxed, and she started to moan his name.
Hearing his name fall from her lips was like a prayer answered, like a lifelong dream he had been waiting for. He grunted as he started to rock his hips back and forth into her slowly. It took everything inside of him to not pound into her, to fuck her like he had fantized about. He wished that her father could see her now, her maidenhood gone and her body fully submitting to the pleasure he so gracefully gave her.
“Aemond..Aemond oh gods-” Her voice broke as he went faster, her moans only getting louder. She tried to wrap her mind around the pleasure he was giving her, the way his hips moved slowly yet deeply, the way the tip of his thick cock rubbed against the spot so deliciously. Her eyebrows furrowed, and she held him close to her.
One of his hands was on her thigh, the other on the table as he thrusted into her, as if holding the edge of the table would stop the creaking sounds, or the way she moaned his name, or how his groans got louder as his climax approached.
White splattered her vision as her orgasm washed over. She cried out his name in pleasure, holding him close as his legs trapped him inside of her. The feeling of her core pulsating and tightening made Aemond’s head spin, and he grunted out a moan of her name as he came himself, spilling his seed inside of her.
As the two sat there, basking in the afterglow of being intimate, neither of them would move for what felt like hours. Even though the position that they were in was compromising, they smiled, and laughed softly at the situation itself.
Once they both got cleaned up-the best they could get cleaned up for just having sex on the dining room table-Aemond took her hand. She smiled softly at Aemond, her heart racing in a new, and exciting way. The two stared at each other for a while, trying to wrap their minds around the fact that now, they could truly be together, or at least, now, they had a hope that they could be together.
Summary: a series of diary entries written by Aemond Targaryen following his tumultuous marriage and the realm's descent into war | word count: 13k~ | warnings: angst, smut, infertility, chronic illness, war, character death, wife features is described briefly, spoilers for f&b
15th day of the 4th moon, 128
They have made me a husband. A prince wed to a flower plucked too soon.
She stood before me by the Septon, trembling in her silken gown, her face pale as the moon. I was told her beauty would make up for her lack of standing. That her delicate disposition was proof of her good breeding, a prize unfit for a mere second son. How fitting, then, that it was to me she was given. A scrap for a scrap.
I find myself wondering how she might have appeared in better health, had her frame not been so thin, her skin not so colourless. She is the image of a flower wilting in the frost. I cannot fathom what my father intended when he arranged this match. Did he think her weakness would breed strength in me? That I would look upon her frailty and find myself tempered by pity?
Perhaps it is too kind to assume that my father put any thought into the matter. The one of little importance.
I feel nothing but irritation. A prince needs heirs, and she is as likely to bear a child as a winter rose is to bloom.
She retired early tonight, her maids fretting over her as though she were a babe in swaddling clothes. Preparing her for the bedding no doubt. Several lords approached me thereafter asking for a ‘bedding ceremony’. I fear her gentle heart would have given out if such a thing were to actually happen.
They tell me her name means ‘grace’ in the ancient tongues of the Reach. Grace, indeed. She moves as though her bones might shatter beneath her weight, her steps feather light. I suppose if I were to be truthful and perhaps kind, which I do not know why I should, I would admit there is a beauty in her fragility. Such is the beauty of a fine layer of ice on water in the early winter, easily broken with a mere breath to its surface.
I have no need for beauty, and no patience for weakness. Yet weakness is what I was served, wrapped in lace and trembling upon the bedsheets.
When consummation was inevitable, I thought I might snap the poor thing in two when I fucked her. She is so slight, so frail, as though the gods built her of spun glass and good intentions alone. She did not cry, though I expected it. She lay beneath me as one might endure the bite of a leech, silent, resigned, and still.
I despised her for it.
Not for her fragility, but for her acceptance. For the way she stared at the canopy, her lips pressed into a pale line, her hands gripping the sheets as if she feared being swept away by my storm. I do not know what I wanted. A protest, perhaps. A tear. Something to remind me that she was alive, that I was not bedding a corpse.
When it was over, she whispered, “Thank you, my prince,” so softly that I nearly thought I imagined it.
Thank you. For what? For duty? For what she believed was kindness? She did not look at me as she said it, and yet those two words have haunted me since.
It has been three nights now, and I have not returned to her chamber. Mother, ever dutiful, had broken fast with me the next morning to ensure ‘the act’ had indeed taken place, of which I confirmed it had. But she pressed no further on the matter, as if that was all that was important.
I tell myself it is for her benefit, that I do not wish to worsen her condition. But the truth, if I am to be honest here, is that I do not know what to do with her. She is no adversary, no equal, no dragon.
She is a flower pressed flat by the weight of its own stem.
2nd day of the 5th moon, 128
The rain has not ceased for a fortnight. King’s Landing reeks of soiled hay and wet stone. I've kept to my chambers to avoid the rancid air, but the storm intrudes all the same.
She has been ill again. The maesters tell me that her disposition is weakened, the damp worsening her condition. It grates on me relentlessly to think that something as simple as rain is enough to set my sickly wife abed for days on end. As if she is made of sugar and will dissolve if she steps outside for a single moment.
I half-expected to hear of her passing this morning when I visited her. Pale and fragile as she appeared when her maids opened the curtains. And when she rose out of bed to look out the window, it was painfully, like a stubborn plant forcing its way through frozen soil.
I asked her why she did not wish to rest.
Her smile was as weak as her body.
“Once these rains have washed away, the grass in the Reach will be as green as those in the Seven Heavens.”
She thought of her home even now. She did not consider King's Landing her home.
Since she uttered those words, I have tried to see it as she does. To see past the filth and shit of King's Landing and imagine the fertile fields and warm sun. As she hails from the Reach, she is drawn to flowers, hence why I noted that day that there were so many strewn about the room in various vases.
They wilt in the damp, just as she does.
Sometimes I find myself watching her more often than perhaps I should. I reason that as much as I loathe it, she is my wife. Whether she notices my watching her and says nothing or is ignorant to it, I do not know.
She moves slowly, as if not to shatter her fragile bones, but not out of fear I now see. She is afraid of little I have noticed, though she has every reason to be. A girl as sickly as her wed to a prince known for his temper, gods, she should tremble when I blink.
But she does not.
I regret I spoke harshly to her. Told her to rest. Save her strength. To let the flowers wilt if they must.
And before retreating back to her bedsheets at the will of her maid, she said.
“Even wilted flowers have worth, my prince.”
I had no reply for her.
11th day of the 6th moon, 128
She looks better today. Has done for several days in a row, much to the maesters relief.
The flush in her cheeks was neither from fever or strain, but life. And seeing her now as opposed to how I had often known her, she was beaming with it. Whether it was out riding or the gardens, she would routinely ignore the advice of those who cared for her health to bask in the sun, if only for a mere few hours.
Her breath was even, her voice was clear.
For the first time since our wedding, we spoke freely.
I had not meant to stay for long, truly. But we walked through the gardens on a warm early afternoon. Although I had to stop every few paces to allow her to bend to retrieve some half-wilted flowers so she might place them in her basket.
She said the maesters said she will likely never be strong enough to bear children. At least healthy ones, or ones who would draw breath once born. That feminine melancholy drifted over her face for a moment, as if she suspected I already knew that truth myself.
And truly I had. It was why I had made no attempt to bed her since our consummation.
I did not know how to respond. Usually women speak of such matters with carefully shielded delicacy, whereas she spoke plainly. But I could not bring myself to express the disappointment I should have felt, or the anger that had simmered beneath the surface for so long.
Anger, perhaps not. Weary, maybe.
My answer was not one she would have expected. That I never asked for children. But in my stupidity, I had in fact said, I never asked her for children.
It seems I have driven an already sheathed blade even deeper.
My words may have been misshapen but they were the truth and that is all I have to offer her, is it not? I hold no love for her, but I would never deny such a fragile creature as my wife what I would give any other.
She said nothing. She lowered her lashes and the silence that followed was so unbearable I considered leaving her altogether.
I never asked her for children.
True enough, I suppose. But even I can see how little truth matters in the face of what I’ve taken from her.
I know as well as anyone, what I have actually expressed is that I expect nothing from her.
And perhaps the latter is more cruel.
14th day of the 6th moon, 128
Tonight, we coupled for the second time in our long marriage.
I had avoided her bed for months, claiming duties, council matters and brief bouts of illness that she no doubt didn’t believe as reasoning for my absence. Though after a time, people were beginning to whisper, so I had no choice but to comply. And there was a time where I believed my own mistruth, that I was sparing her. But in truth, I did not wish to see her fragility laid bare again.
She never protested, and likely never would.
So I went to her.
Her chambers were lit by a single candle dotted at several points around the room. She sat at her vanity, pulling her hair free of tight braids and pins. Her hands were so small and pale, I wondered if this small action itself did not overwhelm her delicate nerves.
It was she who broke the silence.
“Have you come to pity me, my prince?”
I almost turned away then.
She let me unlace her gown, let me bare her to the dim firelight.
It was less frantic though no less awkward. She held me as though she feared I might vanish, and I let her. Perhaps it was the wine, or the quiet of the hour. When I touched her, she shivered. And when my lips accidentally brushed against her neck, she tilted her head back. The floral perfumes she had applied to her skin felt too much of a distraction.
When I finished she looked up at me. It has always unsettled me, her ability to look upon me without flinching. I am a dragon and she is a petal, and yet it is I who wilts beneath her gaze.
Even the bloodiest of injuries had no such effect on me.
- - the day of the 8th moon, 128
Aegon celebrated his nameday swiftly as he usually does. It is the third time in one month where he has had to be dragged from celebrations because he is unable to handle his wine. He had of course revelled in the attention, called for songs, dancers and yet more Dornish Red, as if he had not had enough.
The lords humoured him. The ladies pretended not to notice. Father was not even in attendance, it was mother and Helaena who sat diligently at the top table, faces sullen as if they held the weight of the Realm on their shoulders.
For my part, I watched from the shadows, as I often do. My appetite for such things is thin at best, and thinner still with the murmurs that reached my ears tonight.
They speak of her. My wife.
“Too weak to attend,” one said. “She’s been frail since the wedding,” said another.
I could feel their eyes upon me, their pity or curiosity or judgment, I could not say which was worse. It felt such a disservice for others to remark upon her the way I have.
Nobody was as shocked as I to see her when the doors to the hall opened. There she stood, walking carefully into the light, bathed in a dress that was not crimson, not dark, never. But red all the same, as if she had thought of honouring the house she wed into but not yet willing to loosen the reins on herself entirely. The colour was pale, muted, a shade more suited to her, though it did little to disguise her frailty. Truth be told, she does look sickly in red.
I knew she had wanted to wear it, though. That was why she had chosen it.
For a moment, I thought she might collapse under the weight of the eyes and silence on her.
I thought to rise as she approached me, but for some reason I did not. She inclined her head to me so faintly I doubt anyone else saw, and I saw her locks were adorned with jewellery she had not usually worn.
She inquired as to the whereabouts of my brother, no doubt asking whether the celebrated prince was on his very own nameday, but she did not seem downtrodden when I informed her he had retired to his chambers. As if it were a mere formality.
“Shall we dance, husband?”
I thought to refuse her, to spare her the strain, but the look in her eyes silenced me. And I could not very well be seen to refuse my own wife. She extended her hand, pale and trembling, and I took it without a word.
I thought it would embarrass me, this spectacle before the court. Her weakness had done so before, and I had no doubt it would do it again. But I could not bear to say the words aloud, not when she had dressed in my house colours for me.
I led her to the centre of the hall, her small frame so light beneath my guiding hand that I wondered how she had summoned the strength to stand, let alone to dance. When I placed my hand at her waist and we began to move, I noticed almost immediately that she was struggling to keep pace with the beat. Her breaths were short, shallow, her fingers tightening on my shoulder as though holding herself upright by sheer force of will. Still, she did not stop.
“I hope I have not made a spectacle of us,” she whispered.
I only said there was no need for her to apologise.
When her steps faltered again, I acted without thinking. I lifted her slightly, guiding her feet onto mine so that she would not have to move. She blinked at me, startled, but did not protest. For the first time that evening, her breaths seemed to ease, her grip on my shoulder loosening ever so slightly.
I kept my gaze forward, refusing to meet the eyes of the court. If they found it amusing, I would not give them the satisfaction of seeing it bother me.
I told her that when I was born, it was said I was half the size of Aegon, but twice as fierce. He had cried louder, but they said I fought harder. That perhaps it was the cruelty of the gods to make those of us born weaker feel as though we must prove ourselves twice over.
She studied me, with her soft eyes, but I did not meet them. I regret that now.
When I lost my eye, I told her, they pitied me. Looked at me as if I were a thing to be mended, or worse, endured. And that is I imagine how she feels when they look at her.
She said nothing for a moment, but the faint pressure of her hand against my shoulder told me she had heard.
“Yet, you have made yourself strong. Where I have not.”
For a moment I could only stare at her. But when I found my voice, it was hushed, so that others dancing around us might not hear.
“Strength is not always shown through the sword.”
She replied with nothing.
Perhaps we are not so different, she and I.
19th day of the 10th moon, 128
She is with the maesters today.
I knew this but I found myself in her chambers regardless.
Aegon, in his perpetual state of drunkenness, had the gall to make a joke of it. Saying that she was with child. The court laughed of course, unable to tell the difference between a joke and insult. I am grateful she was not present to hear it. And for the fact that I did not defend her.
Her desk was an array of papers and cuttings as if she had left in a hurry. Lately she was more tired than usual, and instead of chills and shakes, she was hot to the touch and feverish. Perhaps nobody will understand her condition truly, but I am told that she has been this way since birth.
Lately I have found that practicing with the sword does not steal my attention the way it used to, so there I found myself, looking through the smatterings of paper and flowers, and I doubt it will be the last time.
A leather bound notebook sat snugly atop everything else, the pages fanned out as though abandoned mid-turn. I thought perhaps it was a diary, not unlike the one I keep myself, somewhere to keep my thoughts and worries if they arise. But the little writing that was present was descriptive, brief, and so feminine in its curves and loops that I could barely read it.
When we were first wed, and for several months since then, I had watched closely and from afar as well as she insisted on walks through the gardens, even despite the advice of the maesters. She could not be stopped. She would fill her basket slung over her elbow with wilted, near-dead flowers, the petals curling inward, their stems drooping,
I had not thought to ask her why then. Why she collected such things if they were already so close to falling short of bloom.
The flowers are pressed between the pages of a book, their fragile shapes preserved as though she has defied time itself. Beside them, in her careful script, she has labeled each one, names I recognise, though I have never cared to remember them before. A rose, a poppy, a sprig of thyme, rosemary. Even weeds have found their place here.
She has always been given to sentiment, to seeing beauty where others would not bother to look. It is a softness I have long struggled to understand. But she has made them more than what they were, given them a purpose beyond their fleeting bloom.
It was an evening primrose, its pale petals pressed so thin they seemed almost translucent. Beneath it, in her neat script, she had written:
“Evening primrose. For quiet devotion.”
And below that, a date, the day after we were wed.
I stared at it for a long while.
And as I stand there, I realise I have never seen her hands tremble when she writes.
I cursed myself when I returned to my chambers and remembered I had not restored the book to the page I found it on. She will know I have touched it. Her sacred little book.
27th day of the 12th moon, 128
The Keep is more quiet than it has been in months, as the year comes to its close. The usual tensions of the Realm remains, as does my father, who is more akin to a walking corpse than a man most days. He can no longer walk up the steps by himself, and my mother does not have the strength to assist. Even Aegon has managed to hold his tongue of late, though I suspect it will not last.
She has been visiting Helaena more often than usual as of late. Seated together in her solar, embroidering, their voices soft and indistinct, like the murmuring of a distant brook. A casual observer might have mistaken them for sisters, though I doubt either would care for the comparison.
“Soft in the head,” Aegon says of Helaena. “Soft in the body,” he says of my wife. He does not mean it as a compliment, though he says it with a grin, as if he expects me to laugh. I do not.
Though I don’t agree, the two do share a certain gentleness. An ethereal charm that I am not able to form into words. They are both easily dismissed, glanced over in a crowd of boisterous and overzealous personalities. Dismissed by those too blind to see. Aegon, is one such fool.
When I approached, Helaena looked up first with her pale eyes that were so familiar, but said nothing. And my wife, to my surprise, greeted me warmly, and seemed surprised to see me. When I spoke to Mother later, she insisted that my wife was a good influence on Helaena. And that she has a calming presence. One she says I should feel grateful for.
I did not tell her that I am.
2nd day of the 1st moon, 129
The belly of King’s Landing celebrated the turn of the new year more so than any within the Keep. The thunder of laughter and dancing seemed to stir the very grounds beneath me. The merriment of the season seemed to warm the chill in the air, and it seems almost everyone has felt its embrace.
She surprised me tonight.
I had not expected her, not at this hour, and certainly not in such a state. Her usual pallor was touched with faint color, her step more certain than it had been in weeks. There was a lightness to her gaze, an energy that I had not seen in some time, and for a moment, I thought her appearance a trick of the dim firelight.
I motioned for her to sit, though she declined, choosing instead to stand near the hearth. For a while, neither of us spoke.
But then she said she had been thinking about her place here, at the Keep and by my side, as my wife. I waited, unsure of where this conversation might lead.
“I know I am not the wife you might have wished for,” she continued. “I know what the court says of me, of my frailty, my weakness. And I know what it is to be a man of your station.”
Her meaning became clear, though I did not wish to hear it.
“If you were to take a mistress.”
I did not mean to startle her by interrupting, but I could not bear to hear the rest. Had she no respect for herself? That she would assume I am so restless that I cannot stay one moment without bedding another woman, simply because I am afraid she will break beneath me? What could I say? That I did not desire anyone else? That the thought of betraying her, even in name, made my stomach turn?
And then she asked why. I offered the only truth I could manage.
“I do not know. I only know that I do not wish to. Is that not enough?”
She replied with a simple, but quiet, “it is.”
She did not stay long after that, but she lingered yet in my mind as she does now, writing this entry at the hour of the wolf. Sometimes when I look upon my delicate wife, it feels as if she is other-worldly, plucked from some distant place and planted right here to wither in the sun. She seems less a creature of flesh and blood and more a whisper of something eternal, a soul untethered by time.
There is a stillness about her, a quietness that feels unnatural, as though she is not bound by the same rhythms of life that govern the rest of us. She exists in the space between moments, the breath held just before the candle flickers out.
She is not a woman to me, not entirely. She is something deeper, something I lack the words to name. Perhaps that is why I cannot bring myself to stray, why the thought of betraying her feels like a sin greater than I could bear.
Indeed why not? I could not answer her then, and I doubt I could answer her now.
5th day of the 2nd moon, 129
Am I not a man, but a beast.
She accompanied me this morning to break my fast. Something we now often do to please Mother.
She sat across from me, the light through the windows pebbled across her face, showing how the flush that had decorated her cheeks was starting to fade. A fleeting bloom I did not wish to see vanish.
She picked at the honeyed bread with delicate, little bites, savouring its sweetness. I hardly touched my breakfast. I find it difficult to eat in the morning. But here I sat, too focussed on the golden sheen of the syrup upon her lips.
When she licked the honey from her lips and fingers, I felt a sharp, sudden pain to my chest.
I do not know what possessed me then.
One moment, I was watching her across the table. The next, I was upon her. My hand tangled in her hair, my tongue licking along the seam of her lips to taste the sweetness that lingered there. She gasped against me, I remember her warm breath, startled but pliant.
It was not quick, though it was desperate, as if I could mold her body to mine, as if I could press all I was, all my essence into her fragile frame. My hands gripped her waist, her hips, her thighs, heedless of her delicacy.
I was a creature of need, of raw, unchecked hunger. And her sweet cunt tightening around me was the only thing that could sate it.
Her breath hitched as I fucked her, but said nothing. Her hands held my shoulders, as if to keep herself steady. I did not stop to think, to question.
When it was over, she lay beneath me, her breathing shallow, her hair tousled. And for a moment I could not bring myself to move. I stayed inside her, relishing the warmth of her sweet womanhood, breathed in her scent at her neck, and felt I might weep.
She smelled of vanilla and amber.
What have I done?
I did not dare look at her, but equally she said nothing.
I fear I have hurt her. Both in body and spirit. And yet, I cannot regret it. Though now I must wonder if she looks upon me with fear, with pity.
6th day of the 2nd moon, 129
I sought her out today.
The guilt has gnawed at me. Sharp and aching. I thought she might be angry. Or worse, afraid.
She was in her chambers, a shawl around her shoulders to stay the chill that seemed to find her easily, a book rested in her lap. When I entered, she looked up, her expression unreadable.
I said I owe her an apology. Which was a difficult enough thing to admit to myself than to her.
She closed her book slowly, and moved to stand. The shawl made her look frail.
“For what?”
For that morning, I replied to her. For taking liberties. For being selfish and only thinking of myself.
She interrupted softly. “You have nothing to apologise for.”
She must have seen the confusion on my face.
“You did not hurt me,” she added. Then, almost as an afterthought, she added, “I was…surprised, perhaps. That is all.”
Surprised?
She answered that sometimes she felt undesirable. Repulsive. And the words from such a delicate, little thing were like a blade to my heart.
How do I tell her that I desire her more than I can bear?
She told me that she said nothing during the act because she felt it was improper for young ladies to desire such things. To enjoy them. And she had.
I only said that she is not simply a lady.
She is my wife.
She uttered so quietly I thought I might miss it.
“I did not think I could make you feel this way.”
Gods. She can.
She is not what I expected, not what I thought I wanted. But she is what I need, in ways I am only beginning to understand.
4th day of the 3rd moon, 129
Father is dead.
I've repeated the same sentence in my head for hours now, and yet they still feel hollow. Echoing like the toll of a dull bell. Everything has changed.
Though not unexpected, the whispers of his failing health have been constant for years. Even as long as I have been alive, I'd wager. But the finality of it. The truth. The realm will stir into chaos, as Mother had always warned us it would.
They mean to crown Aegon. They mean to gift him what Father had always upheld was Rhaenyra's.
Any whisper of treason is swiftly dealt with. Otto Hightower sees to it. Nobody is safe, it feels.
My wife has been locked in her chambers, barred from leaving as if she were a criminal. I am forbidden to see her, but I am told by the maesters that her condition is too delicate to bear the strain of what is unfolding around us. The stress, they claim, has worsened her already fragile health.
I am furious. The thought of her, alone and frightened, makes my blood boil. She is not a pawn to be hidden away while the realm burns. She is my wife, and I will not be kept from her.
Mother has tried to calm me, speaking of duty and order, of the chaos that would erupt if the truth of Father’s death were known before the plans are set in motion. But I see no order in this, only madness.
She does not understand. How could she? She has never known weakness, never known what it is to live under the constant shadow of her own failing body. My wife has. And now they confine her to her chambers, as though the isolation will preserve her.
Surely they must know it is not the noise of court or the weight of the realm that will break her. It is the solitude.
If they think to keep me from her, they are fools.
I will not allow her to be dragged head first into the mess Mother has made of this.
9th day of the 3rd moon, 129
Aegon is king.
The bells rang to usher in a new era. A new king. Grandfather had organised the crowds to gather in the Dragonpit, to witness the moment the conqueror’s crown was placed upon my brother's brow, and Blackfyre thrust into his grip.
For all his faults, Aegon is no stranger to spectacle. He held our great ancestral sword aloft, and the smallfolk roared their approval, blissfully ignorant of the blood that stains this crown and the chaos that will surely follow.
I stood beside Helaena. She was dreamy as usual, and barely looked in her husband's direction. She knew as well as I, that it all stank of desperation.
My wife attended, though she was likely too unwell to. It wasn't difficult to guess she had been spoken to by Grandfather, instructed what to do to appear as if she was supportive of this farce. But still, she insisted on standing by my side.
She had applied rouge to her cheeks in an effort to mask her pallor, but it did little to fool anyone. Her face was thin, her movements careful.
The smallfolk noticed. I saw the way they whispered to one another when their eyes fell upon her. They are a superstitious lot, always quick to see omens where there are none. A sickly wife at the hasty coronation of a king.
Her hands trembled as she gripped mine, her strength waning with each passing moment. I whispered to her that she should sit, but she shook her head, her resolve unbroken despite the frailty of her body.
And then the ground shook.
Meleys burst forth, the Queen-Who-Never-Was seated at her neck. And the smallfolk that were not stuck beneath her claws scattered like leaves in the wind. My wife’s knees buckled, her strength finally giving way. I caught her before she could fall, my arm wrapping around her waist as I shielded her from the chaos. Her breath came in shallow gasps, her fingers clutching at my sleeve.
But Meleys did not strike. Nor did Rhaenys speak.
I did not release her until the crowd began to stir again, until the danger had passed. Even then, I could feel her trembling against me, her breath shallow and uneven.
My house has been fractured. Our futures uncertain.
And all I can think of is her pale face, her trembling lips, as she said. “Are you alright?”
I could have laughed if I were not so angry.
12th day of the 3rd moon, 129
The maesters still hover over her, though I have been here at her bedside since the coronation.
She is more fragile than I remember, her breath shallow, her skin too pale beneath the warmth of the fire. Her gaze follows me everywhere, as if afraid I might vanish. Perhaps she sees me as fleeting too.
Perhaps she fears that I might not return.
I did not think I would be the person she would cling to. And at times I do not know how to feel about it. She has not changed, and yet I used to look upon her with contempt and irritation.
Could it be that I have changed?
I must go to Storm’s End soon.
The Baratheons are key to ensuring an alliance, to strengthen my family's claim to the throne by rallying the great houses of Westeros to our cause. I resent Aegon's rule, yes, but I do not wish to see my whore sister on the throne even more so.
Should that happen, my wife would be in danger as well.
It is Daeron who I must barter a marriage for. It is a necessary journey, one I cannot avoid, no matter how much my heart aches at the thought of leaving her.
She knows this. She knows my duty to the family, to the crown, and yet when I spoke of it, a shadow crossed her face. Her lips parted as though she wished to speak, but she remained silent. The fear in her eyes, however, was enough.
“Will you come back to me?” she asked me.
She is afraid. She fears for my safety, just as I fear for hers. And equally, though she does not speak it, she resents that I have been dragged into this cause.
I promised her I would return.
When I kissed her before I left, I did not want to let go. Her hand gripped mine as though she might shatter with the slightest breeze. She did not speak again, but I saw the unshed tears in her eyes, and it nearly undid me.
I do not wish to leave.
I do not wish to leave her.
- - - - - -
I am living in a nightmare.
She sleeps as I write this. So deeply I keep looking over my shoulder to make sure she is not stood right there.
The journey from Storm's End to Kings Landing was a blur. And when I returned and dismounted Vhagar, I was soaked to the bone from rain. I did not stop to speak to Mother. Could not bear to.
I had not meant for it to happen. But what does intent matter now? The boy is dead.
Lucerys Velaryon is dead.
His body fell from the skies, his dragon broken and bloody. And I just watched. Fear gnaws at me, but not for myself, but what this means for my family and all those that live under my protection. Rhaenyra will want vengeance for this.
My mother, grandfather, they will want for me to claim I wanted this, just so they might shift their judgement onto me instead. Claim that I began this war and not their scheming. They will whisper, I know they will, that this was revenge for the boyish quarrel that left me half-blinded.
And such has ended in his death.
It is not so simple. I know what I have done. I know what they will call me. A kinslayer. A monster. And worse, I fear that she, my wife, will see it too.
When I returned to our chambers, she was sat in a nest made of pillows, propped up to avoid strain. Hearing my arrival, she sat up straighter, though she looked weak, and shakily got to her feet despite my initial protests.
Her eyes still looked upon me with softness, as if I were deserving. And I was unprepared for her reaction. She saw me, soaked and trembling but did not speak. Did not ask what had happened, though she could see some turmoil in me.
Her hands, small and trembling, undressed me without rush. Stripping me of not only my clothes but the weight that slumped my shoulders. She did not judge, did not speak of what was so plainly written across my weathered face.
Her silence was a gift. One I did not deserve.
And yet I leaned into her touch. It was so warm against my skin. I even allowed her to remove the leather over my stolen eye. Something I rarely do in her presence.
I was bare, laying beside her, shaking. And she shed her clothes so that we might embrace without the confines of fabric. Her hands ran through my hair, untangling the salty strands delicately with all the patience in the realm.
“I killed him.”
I whispered it into the dark, without seeing her face.
“Lucerys. I killed him.”
She did not ask why or how. She slid closer, her tender breasts against my back, and ran her hands down my arm.
I told her everything. What I said. Threatened. How I flew after him in the storm. Vhagar.
Her voice in response had no anger. Only sadness.
“You returned to me. That is all that matters.”
12th day of the 4th moon, 129
I went to her chambers tonight as if the Gods had paved the path for me. I could not summon the strength to summon her to mine. Not after what I have done.
She did not question the shadows under my eyes. She simply welcomed me as she always does, with a tenderness I do not deserve.
When our bodies came together it was a communion of two souls. Deliberate. Not a conquest in the least. She is the only thing anchoring me to this world. And each scrape of her fingernails against my back felt heavenly. Kissing me softly. Tracing the scars that mark my body with the same hands that never tremble in my presence. Even now, when I feel I am beyond forgiveness.
For a night, I did not feel like a kinslayer.
14th day of the 4th moon, 129
I was not there.
I was not there. And I should have been.
I was with her instead. And in my place, it was Helaena’s chambers they reached. Their names I forget, but they were grotesque as if from some old wives’ tale. I cannot stomach to imagine their faces in my mind.
My nephew is gone. They made my sister, my blood, point him out, as if he were meats fetching a good price at the slaughter. If I had been there, in my chambers, as I was supposed to be, would I have been able to stop this? Could I have spared my sister the sight of her son’s blood soaking the stone floors?
I cannot think of it without bile rising in my throat.
The court is ablaze with questions, panic rippling through every corner of the Keep.
Where were the guards? How could this have happened?
I, too, demand answers. For all her faults, I never believed Rhaenyra capable of such an act, sending assassins into the heart of the Keep to put Helaena, of all people, in danger. But this? This cruelty? She has proven herself to have even less humanity than I once dared to credit her.
Helaena has not spoken and not emerged since. I do not know if she ever will.
I cannot protect my family, even in my own home. Though my wife reassures me, I feel like a kinslayer twice over. Even once I returned to her bed after the commotion had died down and Aegon too, she reached for me, and I let her. Her hands were frail, but somehow steady when they touched me. Like tiny little stems curling into my blood. Growing more and more. Like a gentle annihilation of the man I think I am.
She wept for the child. For Helaena, who would never again hold her son.
And I wept with her.
25th day of the 4th moon, 129
The boy was paraded through the streets, wrapped in silks and embroidered fabrics. My mother and Helanea followed, and any level-minded person would guess that this is desperation. Something I would not forgive grandfather for if he forced such a thing onto me and my wife, if we had a child of our own.
Aegon has ordered the ratcatchers put to death, every one of them, as if blood could somehow wash away blood. I doubt it will ease his conscience, if he has one left. He claims it is vengeance, justice. It is anger. It is shame. It is fear, thinly disguised.
At the council, I learned that Aegon had dismissed my grandfather as Hand. His replacement? Ser Criston Cole. A decision as reckless as it is insulting.
Mother’s face said what the rest of us could not. She sat in silence, her hands folded tightly in her lap, her lips pressed into a thin line. I said nothing either, though the weight of her displeasure mirrored my own. Criston may wield a sword with skill, but a Hand must have wit and reason. He has neither.
I know I hold little love in the eyes of my own mother now anyway. She looks upon me like I am a monster, as if I have been my whole life. As if this is not what she has made of me.
I returned to my wife afterwards. We rarely speak now, though her presence is a balm I cannot name. The illness has caught her chest again, I can hear it in her breath. She told me to keep my distance, fearing I will catch it, as if I care for such trivial things.
I stayed regardless, seated in the chair by her bed as the fire burned low. She did not scold me for it. She simply turned her head to watch me, her eyes soft, almost apologetic. I reached for her hand, and she let me take it. I can see the fear of what is to come weighs heavy on her.
This quiet between us. Is this feeling what those countless ballads harp on about? Could this marriage, born of resentment and difficulty, become love?
2nd day of the 6th moon, 129
Aegon’s hold on this war is akin to his grip on a cup of wine at the hour of the wolf. Slippery, at best. He sits in council and speaks of Harrenhal with such conviction, as though Criston Cole marching there will be anything more than foolishness. Daemon holds that cursed ruin, and we all know what awaits Criston if he tries to pry it from him. Yet Aegon seems blind to reason, drunk on his desire to pull victory from thin air.
I suggest a different course. Rook’s Rest. But he will not see reason. And of course it was met with hesitation. Aegon’s indecision is a rot that will take him black, and Mother’s silence does nothing to stay it.
They all think me hungry for blood and battle. Aemond One-Eye.
There is a part of me that longs to prove myself. To be remembered for something other than the boy who lost his eye or the prince who killed his nephew. My wife knows an Aemond the realm does not. The one that sits beside her as they lays coughing at night. She sees a man, a good one perhaps. Whereas the court merely whisper of me as if I am a dark shadow.
The realm will never know the man my wife sees. There is a power in them seeing only what I allow, what I need them to know. Strength. Fire.
Sometimes, I wonder if she mourns the parts of me that the world will never have.
She listens to me speak of my plans, hands clasped, seeing the fractures in her husband, the places where pride and vengeance run too deep to cut out. I wonder if she pities me for it. If she doesn’t, perhaps she should.
13th day of the 6th moon, 129
Rook’s Rest still burns, I'd wager. Though it has been several days since the battle. The wind still whips at me, I feel, as I watch Meleys hurtle towards the earth. Her dragonrider still pitched to her back.
Aegon does not relish in his victory. He lays near death, every breath a struggle. Not dissimilar to how I have seen my wife oftentimes.
I returned to her chambers as soon as I was able. The Keep feels hollow these days, and there I might find peace, where none exists inside me.
She looks frailer than she did when I left, though she insists otherwise. The maesters prattle about her condition, and I find myself snapping at them more than I ought. They are failing her. Everyone is failing her. Even me.
When she tried to rise from bed to greet me, I could not stop myself, I barked at her to stay put, the words sharper than I intended.
I hate myself for it. But the thought of her straining herself, of her fragile body bending beneath the weight of this cursed war...it twists something in me, something I cannot name.
She is mine. My wife. My delicate flower. The one thing in this accursed world that is still soft, still untouched by the poison of the crown and the war.
I will not lose her.
She, of course, asked what had happened. Having heard the unfortunate nature of the king’s condition. Having heard the whispers. I said it was recklessness. Incompetence. But she has always been perceptive.
She sees the darkness in me. The flicker of doubt that darkens her beautiful eyes, one she does not dare speak aloud.
But I cannot speak to her of the shadow that is cast over my heart. So instead, I spared hers, and told insisted it was Aegon's folly that lead to his downfall. Nothing more.
She nodded. But her gaze lingered on me. Searching. I know she does not believe me.
She reached for my hand, and I held hers too tightly. She winced.
I watch her even now, as she sleeps, her breath too shallow for my liking, her form too still beneath the furs. My mind races with thoughts I cannot quiet. What if she never sees me return again? What if I leave and come back to find her gone?
I will not let it happen.
19th day of the 6th moon, 129
The council have chosen me as their Regent. Me, over Mother. It is as it should be. For all her wisdom, her place is not there. Her gentle sex does not suit the burden of governance, no matter how much she believes otherwise. She clings too tightly to something she herself has denied Rhaenyra, and I will not stand idly by and listen to her hypocrisy.
The council at least know my worth.
Already I have begun to shape the crumbling realm back to stability. The first act began with Mother, relegating her to duties befitting of a Dowager Queen, and one she did not take lightly. It is not cruelty. Necessary. There is no place for soft murmurings of mercy at my council. She will understand in time.
The work is endless. The weight immeasurable, but one I wear with pride. I have longed for this. To show I am not weak, but formidable, with no time for distraction.
The realm needs me now more than ever.
28th day of the 6th moon, 129
Regency suits me well. It is a shame I was not born first.
The first real edict was to close the city gates, to forbid people from leaving and also to avoid our enemies sneaking past our fragile lines. King’s Landing must be fortified, protected from the vipers who would see us undone. Let the smallfolk whisper and grumble, their safety is ensured only because I am willing to make the hard choices.
Trade has slowed, of course, but I care little for the merchants’ squawking. Better that they lose their coin than lose their lives when Rhaenyra’s forces march upon us.
Though the power is intoxicating it is not without its burdens. I see the faces of the council as they defer to me, the uncertainty that flickers behind their eyes. They doubt my youth, my ability to lead, but they dare not say it aloud.
There are moments, fleeting though they are, when I wonder if I have already given too much of myself to this war. But I cannot dwell on such thoughts. The realm does not wait for doubt, and neither shall I.
7th day of the 7th moon, 129
I had nearly forgotten her.
The council chamber was quiet when she appeared, the hour so late that even the most loyal attendants had taken their leave. I sat, pouring over papers and maps, looking up as she stood at the doors draped in translucent fabric, her fragile frame looking almost ghostly.
She had come all the way from her chambers, weak as she is, just to see me.
For a moment, I was struck dumb, caught between guilt and irritation. I had not sought her out in days, too consumed by the weight of my duties.
I asked her, sharper than I intended, what she was doing here and that she should be resting. And she did not flinch, but I could see her eyes flicker downwards.
“I had to see you.”
It was as if she wanted to see if I still existed. And that I was not some otherworldly vision, told only through whispers and rumours. For she had not seen me in near a fortnight. Her voice was so soft that it struck a chord I did not need for it to resonate.
I could not say anything more than the realm expects more of me now. The demands on my shoulders. I cannot spare a moment.
Her voice strained. “I had to see you because otherwise I scarcely know my husband lives and breathes.”
Her words erupted guilt and irritation alike. Buried beneath a thin, black veil I have carefully fabricated.
I could only insist I do all this for her. To keep her safe.
“How is it for me, Aemond? All I see in you is this desire for power. You speak of the realm, of me, but this is just sheer ambition, and you are too blind to see what it is doing to you. And I will not be your excuse for how tightly you cling to what you seek.”
I snapped and said how could she know. She has not ruled and never will. She does not understand the burden I bear.
“Perhaps I don't understand. But I know the man I married, the one I grew to love. And all I see is him slipping away.”
Gods, she sounded so wounded I was not sure whether to resent it or pity it.
The man she grew to love.
I was rendered so shocked I could not say anything. Even when her eyes begged for a response. And she turned to leave, her steps weak and faltering with every second. And I did not help her.
I did not help her.
I cannot shake the look on her face.
I know I should go to her, but I cannot. Her weakness, her frailty, I am afraid it will take me down with it.
And the realm cannot afford more weakness from the crown.
24th day of the 7th moon, 129
Everything is unravelling.
Rhaenyra has thrown everything she has at us, now even her bastards ride dragons. It is a cruel mockery of what we were meant to be. Blood of the dragon, sullied by lowborn filth. And Helaena, sweet and broken, refuses to aid us. Her grief holds her captive, and I cannot rouse her from it. I need her dragon, but she will not hear me.
Today was unbearable.
The council drags their feet and the walls close in. The smallfolk riot in the streets from hunger, one Rhaenyra herself has caused but that they seem to forget.
I came back to my chambers after the council adjourned, weary and enraged. And there, on my desk, I found them. Snapdragons. Flowers of bold pinks and oranges, fierce and alive, their edges tinged with red like the tips of dragonfire.
She has been here.
There was no note. No explanation. The flowers spoke what she did not.
It is a reminder of who I am, or rather the man I should be. The man she loves, not the beast I fear I am becoming.
I stood there for what felt like an age, staring at the blooms as if they might speak to me. In that moment, I made my decision. I must go to Harrenhal soon, to face Daemon, but I will not leave without seeing her first. Without making amends.
When I went to her chambers, there were no maesters, but her fever was heightened, and so she slept with sheer clothing and no bedsheets. She looked like a nymph, laid there, her breasts visible through the fabric and flowers at each bedside.
Like she didn't belong in the confines of the Keep. She belonged out there, amongst the trees and rivers, to exist in breath and wind.
She looked up, rose from her gentle slumber, and looked at me. Her eyes soft and searching.
I kissed her and she did not pull away. She let me touch her, hold her, gasped as I slid her nightgown up her hips and nipped at her thighs to taste the sweet nectar that poured from her.
She was warm and heady, an intoxicating mix of salt and sweetness, like honey warmed by the sun. I drank from her as if parched, savoring the way she trembled beneath me, the way her body seemed to bloom under my touch.
Her breath hitched as I lavished her with my tongue, her fingers desperate as her nailed pulled pleasantly at my hair. Each sound she made was a victory, each shiver a testament to the power she held over me. For all my strength, all my fury, I was undone by her, reduced to this, worshiping at the altar of her body.
Even as she cried out I could not stop. And when it became too much, I rose, her flavour still clinging to my lips. And we coupled slowly, tenderly, for hours. Devouring her as if by doing so, I could take some of her kindness, and bathe me clean of the darkness that lingers within.
She is no fool.
“My love. Do not make love to me as if I will never see you again.”
I could not answer her. She knows I must go. To Harrenhal. Now on my own, if nobody else will assist me.
I felt her fingers on my cheek.
“If you cannot promise me that. Promise me this. Write to me. Wherever you are. Whatever you do.”
I could not find it in my heart to deny her such a simple thing. I will send her my words, if I cannot send my body, soul and love.
I realised right there, her small body spent in my arms how many weeks, months even, I had spent unappreciative of the flutter she always gave me. The unending kindness she would offer. The truth, even when I didn't want it.
I had forgotten to treat her with tenderness.
1st day of the 9th moon, 129
Harrenhal is mine.
The stronghold of the Strongs fell with little resistance. The castle itself, vast and cold, looms like a beast over the land, its ruins whispering of past glories and darker tragedies. House Strong is no more. I have seen to that myself.
Save for one.
Alys Rivers remains. She claimed she had visions of my coming, of my victory, and of greater things yet to unfold. She spoke in riddles, her eyes fixed on me as though she could see into my soul.
Her words, her presence, are tempting in their way. Alys Rivers is a beautiful woman, older than I expected, with a certain allure born of her confidence and mystery. She has made no secret of her willingness to warm my bed, to offer herself to me in exchange for her life.
But I did not take her. I will not.
I told her plainly that she would live for now because her visions may serve a purpose. Nothing more. Let her think she has some measure of power over me if it keeps her pliant and useful. Yet even as I write this, I know I should send her to the sword, for the danger she represents.
My wife would see it how it is. Desperation.
I have not written to her yet. Not my wife. Not the only soul who would calm the storm within me.
I will tomorrow.
For tonight, the shadows of Harrenhal linger too heavily, and the blood on my hands feels too fresh.
17th day of the 11th moon, 129
Now I know why Daemon left this wretched place behind.
Harrenhal is not a castle, it is a carcass. Its halls are hollow, its walls crumbling, and its very air feels like a curse pressing down on my chest. The fires that claimed this ruin have never truly died. They linger in the stones, in the bones of the dead, whispering their stories to anyone who dares to listen.
And I am here now, breathing it in. I thought it would feel like a triumph, taking Harrenhal, but it is not.
I have not slept well since my arrival. And when I do, the dreams come. Muddled and confusing. Vivid and cruel things that weave consciousness into sleep.
Last night, I dreamt of her.
She was in her chambers in bed, sickly, her skin pale and translucent. The maesters swarm her like vultures for flesh, muttering useless words and hovering instead of healing. Her eyes found me, tired and hooded, and it was not a look of blame or fear, but something that still reminded me I am not the man she needed me to be.
In her eyes I saw my regrets. Every harsh word I spoke. Every moment I turned away. Every time I let ambition and anger drown out what little light we had kindled between us.
I tried to reach for her in the dream, but the distance was too great. I called her name, but she did not answer. And when I woke, my throat was raw, as if I had truly been shouting in my sleep.
In another dream, I was between her milky thighs, lapping at her sweet cunt like I had been starved of it for years. She moaned so sweetly as she always did. And when she clawed at my scalp to pull me closer to her it felt different. She was stronger. Less tender.
And when I looked up, her nectar glazing my face, I felt my heart grow cold and hollow. Her skin was pale, yes, but her hair darkened into something akin to raven feathers, her eyes sunk back slightly, cheekbones sharpened. And the soft, lightly colour there morphed into stark emeralds, lips red and quirked upwards.
Perhaps Harrenhal is cursed. Perhaps it draws out the darkest thoughts, the deepest fears, and forces them to the surface. Or perhaps it is only me. Perhaps I am cursed.
I must write to her. She is my tether, the only thing that keeps me from being swallowed whole by the darkness here. Tomorrow, I will write. Tonight, I will try to sleep and hope the dreams do not return.
Dearest Wife,
I write to you from the cold halls of Harrenhal, a place that holds no warmth, no life. Not like your chambers do. The days here stretch long, the nights longer still. It is a place of ash and shadow, where even the air feels heavy. And yet, amidst the ruin, I found something unexpected, a winter rose, growing stubbornly in the cracks of stone.
I have enclosed it with this letter. It is small, fragile, but it persists. A reminder, perhaps, that beauty can be found even in the bleakest places. I thought of you when I saw it. Handle it gently, as you always do.
How do you fare, my love? I pray the maesters have been attentive, and that the chill has not worsened your condition. I think of you often, though I fear my words fail to capture how much. I see you in every quiet moment, in every breath of wind. You linger in my thoughts as if you are a part of me, inseparable and eternal.
I do not wish to burden you with the trials of this place, nor the weight of my duties. But know that I am well, and I will return to you as soon as I am able. Until then, take care of yourself, for I cannot bear the thought of you suffering in my absence.
Yours Always,
Aemond
4th day of the 2nd moon, 130
Alys spoke of visions today.
She said she could see two dragons coming together, sharing the same fate above the great God's Eye. Then my wife, she saw our reunion, my wife's hair lit as if from the sun of the Seven Heavens. She sounded so certain, as if recounting events that had already transpired. She was so confident, I almost believed her.
Almost.
She sees so much, so she claims. Watching the flames dance along her eyes is, in itself, invigorating to watch. Her gentle mutterings are welcome sometimes in the quiet, hollow hallways of Harrenhal. They linger, pulling on the threads of my mind as if I am to her whim.
She moves through this great castle as if she has been a ghost here for generations. Her gaze does not cower before me as many others do, but she stands close. Perhaps sometimes, too close. And I think myself weak for not dismissing her.
She is a woman who knows the route to survival, and I cannot fault her for that.
They are brief, fleeting. The times where I wonder if she offers herself for something more than just survival. When she hands me a raven, her touch lingers longer than it should.
I do not know what Alys Rivers wants from me, nor do I care to ask.
I have not written to my wife of her. How could I? How do I explain this shadow in my midst, this woman who speaks of futures I do not wish to see? I tell myself it is unnecessary, that Alys is nothing more than a tool, a means to an end.
And yet, I wonder if I am lying to myself.
Daemon is coming. That much I believe. Whether Alys’s visions are truth or falsehood, the outcome remains the same. We are on a path that cannot be turned aside.
When the time comes, I will be ready.
My Dearest Husband,
Your letter reached me today, and I must confess, I wept to see the winter rose you sent. Such a small and delicate thing, so rare. I pressed it into my own book, so it may keep company with my other treasures. Thank you, my love.
I have pressed a snapdragon into these pages also. Last spring, you commented that the colour of their petals reminded you of a dragon mid-roar, and I wished to remind you of simpler times, before the world felt so uncertain.
I have soaked these papers in the oils I apply to my hair and skin. Perhaps a silly indulgence to some, but I thought perhaps it might bring you some comfort, a memory of home in the coldness of that dreadful castle.
The maesters say the chill has caught my chest, though it has for many here. You must not worry, I assure you it is nothing more than the season’s cruel bite. I have taken my draughts and kept warm as you would wish me to, though the days feel colder without you here to hold me.
I hope this letter finds you well. Write to me when you can, even if it is but a few lines. Your words are a light in these dark times, and I cling to them more than I dare admit.
I hope you campaigns in the Riverlands fare well. Remember you are my husband first, not a shadow of war or duty. Please do not forget or lose grip on the man I fell in love with.
Yours Forever,
Your Loving Wife
- - - - 130
The quill trembles in my hand as I write. Ink smears before I can make sense of my thoughts. This entry will be illegible by morning, I am certain. It makes no sense— how could it? Dreams are madness.
Alys.
Alys.
Her belly was swollen, a grotesque curve rounded with child, one of my blood. Not hers. Not hers! I could not look at her without feeling bile in my throat, the heat of shame.
And then my wife.
My wife!
She was there, crumpling to the ground, her grief splitting the air like a storm. Her screams. Gods, her screams. I have never heard her voice raised in such a way, never seen her face contorted with such anguish.
I wanted to go to her, to explain, but I could not move. My feet were rooted, and the air was thick, choking me. She looked at me, her eyes wide with betrayal, and I felt myself drowning in them. No. Not in them.
In water.
My lungs burned. My limbs thrashed. The surface was a distant shimmer, unreachable. I could hear her still, even beneath the water, her screams warped and muffled, but no less devastating.
I woke gasping, clawing at the air as if I could still feel the water pulling me under.
What does it mean? What does it mean?
Harrenhal speaks as if it has a clawing, fearsome mouth.
Kinslayer. Usurper. Liar. Monster.
I am all and none. All and none.
The water, surely it does not drown me, it must cleanse me.
But it cannot. Nothing can. Nothing will.
My Dearest Aemond,
I write to you from my bed, as I have found myself unable to rise for much of late. The maesters are vigilant, though they assure me there is no cause for alarm and that I should not tire myself by writing. They say it is only the season and my own weakness conspiring against me. I do not tell them how I feel the cold seep deeper with each passing day, but I tell you, my husband, because I know you will not dismiss my words so lightly.
News of the battle at the Lakeshore has reached even here. The servants whisper of it, though I hear only fragments. There seems to be a changing of guards here at the Keep, but I do not leave my chambers, so I cannot see why. Are you well? Please tell me you are. It has been too long since I last heard from you, and I cannot help but worry. You are so far away, in such a dangerous place, and the weight of it lies heavy upon my chest.
I would not ask this of you if I thought it selfish, but please, write to me. Even a single line would be enough to still my restless heart.
Take care of yourself, my love. Remember that you are not alone in this, no matter how distant we may seem. You are mine, as I am yours, and nothing, not war, not duty, not even death, can change that.
All My Love,
Your Wife
My Loving Husband,
Why have you not written? Why do you leave me in this silence? The days are long without word from you, and the nights are even longer. I wait, and I wonder, and I worry. Is it so hard to take up your quill? Is it so hard to tell me that you are well?
Please, my love, do not let this silence stretch any longer. Tell me you are safe. Tell me you are whole. Tell me anything, for I am desperate for the sound of your voice, even if it must come to me through ink and paper.
Do you think of me, Aemond? Do you think of the nights we spent in each other’s arms? Do you think of the flowers I left for you, the words I whispered when the world felt less cruel? I hope you do. I hope you remember.
I have tried to be strong, for you, for us, but I am alas not as much as you. Please, my love, do not leave me to this silence any longer. Write to me. Ease my heart. I apologise for my heavy emotions, the ink smudges because of my shaky hands, and they are not as steady as they once were. Do not think poorly of me for it.
I fear I am beginning to lose my sense of time. Did I already tell you the maesters say I will recover? Forgive me if I repeat myself. My thoughts seem to wander, but they always find their way back to you.
I love you, Aemond. It hurts more than breathing. Please let me hear from you.
Yours, always and forever.
Your Loyal Wife
My Beloved Wife,
I read every stroke of your ink like a blade to my chest, not because they wound me so, but because I imagine your voice. Reminding me what I have left behind.
Do you know, my love, how much I miss you? How much I miss the feel of your hands on me, grounding me when the storms inside threaten to consume me?
Do not lose hope, for I cling to it still. If you cannot feel my arms around you, know that my soul reaches for you, across all the miles that separate us. Hold fast, my love, until I can come back to you.
Do not think poorly of your emotions, nor of your trembling hands. They have always been steady enough to hold me, to steady my own restless soul.
I do not deserve you, my delicate flower. But I am yours, wholly and utterly. I will write to you again soon, I swear it. I will not leave you in silence again.
Please, take heart, as I try to do. Remember that I love you, more than I have ever been able to say.
Yours, now and always,
Aemond
My Dearest, dearest Aemond,
Do you remember our first days as husband and wife? How cold you seemed, how distant? I used to think you disliked me, perhaps even resented me for my frailty. I was so small and scared then, unsure of my place in your life, in your heart.
But I see now what I could not see then. You are a man of storms, my love, and I was too weak to weather them. Yet, even storms have their moments of calm, and it was in those moments I found the man I have come to love more than life itself.
I do not know if this letter reaches you, nor if I have the strength to write another. But I need you to know, that I am wholly, and truly, yours. Now and always.
Please, remember me kindly.
Forever,
Your Loving Wife
My love,
It has been too long since I last wrote to you. For that I am sorry. I did not mean to worry you.
Truthfully I have left Harrenhal behind, trawling the Riverlands to those loyal to my sister still, even now. I head towards a confrontation I cannot avoid. Daemon wants his fight, and as much as I would like to be by your side, this challenge cannot be ignored. He is a fool if he thinks he can stand against me, but I must prove it nonetheless.
Once that is done, I swear to you, I will return to your side. This madness, this war, it has taken too much from us both. I long for the peace of your presence, the quiet of our chambers, where only you and I exist in our own world.
I do not know what awaits me when I return. I do not know what has become of you, though I hope you are well. Please know that, despite the distance and the bloodshed, you are always in my heart.
I will write again as soon as I can. Stay strong, my love. Wait for me.
I am yours,
Aemond
My love,
I await your reply like a lovesick child.
I fear the worst with each passing day, each hour that I do not hear your voice. Have I lost you? Is the cold consuming you, or have you fallen into silence for some other reason I cannot fathom? Please, I beg of you, send me word. Let me know that you are still waiting for me.
I have prepared myself to face Daemon, though I care little for the confrontation. His challenge has become a matter of necessity, but I cannot shake the thought of you, fragile and alone, while I am here, so far away. I would rather be by your side, taking care of you, than facing that traitor. But I have no choice now.
I am desperate, my love. A few lines in your gentle hand would give me the strength of a thousand men. Without you, what am I but a man trawling this desolate, darkened land, lost forever without your light to guide my way.
Please do write. My cherished flower.
Aemond
My darling wife,
I woke to a raven today. The words written within it seemed impossible, a cruelty that no man should have to face. It tells me of your passing, of your death.
But I refuse to believe it. I cannot.
You are not gone. I would have felt you, felt your soul leave this realm. I would have felt the Stranger take you from me, and yet, there is only the emptiness. The cold distance that stretches between us, yes, but not your absence. Not truly.
Were such a thing to happen, my love, I would have felt a pain so deep in my chest, I would have cried out. I would have howled until my throat bled. You are too vital to me for your death to be a mere whisper in the wind. No, this cannot be real.
Do not let the maesters fill my mind with their lies. Do not weaken the fragile hope I cling to, the only thread keeping me tethered to this world. Please, I beg of you, let me hold onto the belief that you are still waiting for me. That when I return, I will find you where you belong, by my side.
I will nourish you, body and soul, as I should have from the very beginning. For I do not believe that the distance, the war, the bloodshed, it has not been enough to sever the bond we share. When I come to you, I will fix what I have broken in myself, and I will fix what has withered between us.
This war has broken me, my love. I have witnessed too much, done too much, and it has hollowed me out in ways I cannot even express. But you, you always knew how to heal. Your touch, gentle, sure could mend what no one else could. And so, I beg you, when I return, lay your hands upon me.
Fix me.
Make me whole again. It has been so long since I have felt so. Without your touch, your voice.
I will come for you.
Forever Yours,
Aemond
21st day of the 5th moon, 130
The winds howl so loudly now.
They sing on the eve of what may be my last. Daemon is here and he waits for me. One of us must fall, though I have reassured my wife that it shall not be me.
I write this now because I do not know if I will have another chance. If the Stranger comes for me, I will not meet him with words left unsaid.
To my mother. You were the first to see me, even before I knew myself. When I was a boy without a dragon, I ran to you, tears staining my face, and you held me as though that could mend what I lacked. The day I lost my eye, the boy you nurtured was forced to become a man. A bitter man. Perhaps I lost more than my eye that day. Perhaps I lost the better parts of myself. If I am to die tomorrow, know that I never blamed you for showing your love to me the way you did, and though I may not have shown it, I am grateful.
My sister. Sweet sister, I am sorry. Sorry for your grief, sorry for your pain, sorry for all the ways I could not protect you from this cruel world. You deserved peace, and all you have been given is sorrow. I hope that, in another life, I might have been a better brother to you. I hope you will forgive me for failing you.
Aegon. Brother, I have resented you for much of my life. Perhaps it was jealousy, perhaps it was anger, perhaps it was something I will never fully understand. But you are my brother, my blood, and for all our differences, I have never wished you harm. Not truly. If I do not return, lead this realm as you see fit, but know that power is a fleeting thing. Do not let it consume you as it has consumed me.
To my wife, my delicate flower, if you ever read this: forgive me. Forgive the times I was cold, the times I let my anger and pride obscure my love for you. Forgive my silence, my absences, my failures to be the husband you deserved.
I see you even now, though miles lie between us. I see your smile, rare but radiant. I hear your voice, soft but sure. I feel your touch, delicate but anchoring. You made me feel whole, even when I thought I was nothing but a shattered thing.
Daemon may take my life tomorrow, but he cannot take what I carry with me, the memory of you, the warmth of you, the love you gave me even when I did not deserve it. That is mine, and mine alone.
If the Stranger does not take me, I will come back to you. I will hold you, care for you, and let the world crumble as long as I have you. But if I do not return, know this.
I loved you.
With all that I am, with all that I ever was, I loved you.
The winds howl louder now. Perhaps it is time I let them carry me. And if it is to be so, take me to her.
Summary: Aemond’s life was incredibly dim after the war, a bottomless carven he’d sunk himself into with his own actions, until one by one, little flames came into his life.
Pairing: king!aemond targaryen x wife!reader (AU)
Fic warnings: nothing, just FLUFF, there’s mentions of past angst and trauma, but... GIRL DAD AEMOND!!!
Word count: 8.2k
authors note: happy fathers day to girl dad aemond <3
masterlist
If someone had told Aemond during the war that he’d even live to see past that fateful day at the Gods Eye, he would snarl and tell them that he’d rather die gloriously than whatever else fate had in store for him. But as the war ended, and the ashes from his discretions dimmed, he was left with a hole in his life so vast that he wasn’t sure that he’d be able to fill it.
But the war had eventually ended.
The fires died down, the roar of familiar dragons faded into bitter memory, and the ashes of his many discretions settled into quiet ruin, not forgotten by anyone but not brought up. What remained for him was not peace, but a yawning emptiness that he could almost feel cramping at his own jaw. An empty abyss so vast that he doubted it could ever be filled. War had changed Aemond, irreversibly, and in ways he hadn’t expected.
The whispers of a woodswitch had twisted his mind, and now he bore the scars of unnatural influence on his mind, and was traumatised by the things he’d seen within the damp walls of that cursed land. He had watched those who wronged him meet their end — some by his own hand, others by the hands of chaos during — but he had also lost more than any amount of revenge could ever restore.
His family, his blood, his brothers and sister were gone, burned out as swiftly as it had been forged. And what remained was hardly anything to sing about; his mother was now so entangled in her own delusions that speaking to her felt like reaching through smoke.
His reign as Prince Regent had never been meant to last. Although he begged, he knew it was a borrowed title, a duty taken up in the name of his fallen kin, something of his own doing to some degree. But when the last of his brother's children succumbed to the cruel winter fever that swept through the city, everything changed.
The Targaryen line of succession thinned from a rope to a thread, and suddenly, the burden of kingship shifted squarely onto his shoulders permanently. While Aemond has prepped himself for being King all his life, his short time leading during the war, and the task he was to take on after were two completely different monsters to fight.
The war had been a monster he understood: it roared, and he roared back, ready to fight; it was two sides: Green and Black, family and hate. But peace? Peace was a stranger in fine robes to him, a subtle, insidious thing that demanded he be whole when all he felt was broken and alone.
Aemond sat the throne not as a conqueror, not like his ancestors, but as a ghost wearing a crown, feeling as dead as the people who created it.
Aemond truly had little to enjoy in life; getting everything that he wanted and longed for was a double-edged sword that left him wounded more than losing his eye ever had. He had to navigate his grief along with taking on a new task, a realm, something his small council had wasted no time in reminding him about.
“You cannot rule alone, Your Grace.” He could still remember the pain behind his eye as he heard from one of his small council members during one of his first permanent meetings as King, “The Realm needs unity, and you need a wife.”
That much, he could not deny. He needed a queen, whether he wanted one or not.
But where others might have seen an opportunity for alliance, for legacy, for strength, Aemond saw only chains.
His cousins Rhaena and Baela were the obvious suggestions from everyone, names whispered in the corridors of the Keep like half-formed prayers that he could salvage the Targaryen line that way. But he dismissed the thought outright. No number of empty words or desperate pleas could convince him, or them, to pretend they could mend what had been broken, that he hadn’t killed their father.
The blood spilt between them was too deep, too fresh, and even if it hadn’t been, he would never entertain such a farce. He would rather have perished that day at the Gods Eye than bind himself to a woman he deemed a pretender.
That decision, however, left few other paths.
The great houses of Westeros wanted little to do with the remnants of House Targaryen. The Baratheon’s, once staunch supporters of his cause, had turned their backs in bitter silence, scorning the memory of oaths made before the war. The Lannister’s were quiet, too busy rebuilding their own strength to entangle themselves in dragonfire politics. The Riverlands still wept for their fallen. And the Reach had closed its gates.
As for the witch, the strange, beguiling witch, she was long gone. Dead and buried beneath marshlands and silence, leaving behind nothing but half-remembered whispers and a ghost of betrayal that stung a little more than others.
There was no one left to marry.
No one suitable. No one willing. No one alive.
He often stared at the list the council had delivered — daughters of lesser lords who still had weight to their name, some barely past their maiden years, others hardened by politics and ambition. But they were all names with no meaning, no faces to haunt his thoughts. It felt like choosing a sword from a room full of dull blades - serviceable, but uninspired.
Still, he knew he would have to choose eventually.
The realm would not wait forever; winter was creeping further south, and with it, uncertainty. If the Targaryen line was to endure, it would need more than one scarred prince with a dragon and a crown. It would need heirs. It would need strength.
And he… he would need to become something more than the broken man left behind by war.
For a while, all hope had truly been lost that Aemond would find someone to sit beside him for the rest of his life, that was, until he met you.
You arrived at court in the quiet aftermath of war, the daughter of a minor Reach house — one that had bent the knee late, but wisely, avoiding the full wrath of dragons. Your family name was known only in passing, and your presence at the Red Keep was unremarkable by court standards: part diplomacy, part observance, part subtle reminder of House Targaryen’s waning influence over the once-loyal South.
And yet, to him? You were unforgettable.
You did not shimmer like the daughters of the Great Houses, nor did you have a presence that filled rooms with pointed laughter or political ambition. You moved like a whisper through the Red Keep; gentle, observant, seemingly delicate. But Aemond, trained to read silence as keenly as sound, sensed something else beneath that soft exterior. You were not weak, just quiet. Tempered, and in that calm restraint, there was strength.
At first, he ignored you, or tried to.
You were one more face at a banquet, another name offered with a bow too low. But there was a steadiness to you that made him linger. When you spoke, it was never to impress. When you listened, you truly heard everyone around you. And when you met his eye for the first time, you did not flinch.
That unsettled him more than he cared to admit.
He began to notice things. The way your hands folded in your lap with practised grace at the sept on the 7th day. The way you walked alone in the gardens rather than crowding into courtly gossip that the ladies often held during afternoon tea. The way your voice never rose to chase attention, and yet somehow always carried when you did decide to speak. You were not like the others, not moulded for power in the way the council would prefer, but neither were you afraid of it.
There wasn’t steel in you, but bone, something raw and natural, hidden beneath linen and courtesy. And gods help him, Aemond found he preferred it to the glittering blades the lords kept offering him.
He first spoke to you in passing, a cool exchange in the library over some half-forgotten history that Aemond knew by hand, but for you, he’d pretend he just learned. You had corrected him on a minor detail — a date, a name, he couldn’t recall, and he didn’t care — and while his brow had creased in irritation, you had not withdrawn from talking to him. You had looked up at him, unwavering, and said: “Even dragons can be mistaken, my King.”
He should have been offended; usually, people often sought to offend him when correcting him. But instead, for the first time in what felt like years, he’d laughed, just once, just enough to startle himself. Just enough to remind himself that he wasn’t made of dragon glass inside.
He found excuses to see you after that.
A letter asking for a stroll through the Queen’s gardens, a conversation in the sunroom where you sat reading in the warmth. A dinner where seating was rearranged at his subtle command. He never confessed to it, not even to himself, but every encounter seemed to leave behind something he hadn’t felt in years: quiet, peace, possibility, and warmth.
And yet, he knew it could not last — not easily at least.
Aemond knew that while he was king, the council still had expectations. A wife from a lesser house was not the alliance they envisioned for him and his reign, hence why your name was never uttered on any list he was ever given. Even those loyal to him would question it if he was to indulge, you had no great army behind you, no sprawling coffers of gold to offer the fading riches of the crown. You offered no guarantee of peace beyond the boundaries of your small domain.
But what you did offer was something Aemond had never expected to find: someone who did not look at him with fear, worship, or loathing, but with a tender understanding that he hadn’t seen since he was just a boy. Eyes damped with calmness, with a softness that neither threatened him but instead, welcomed him as he was—the scarred, bitter, dangerous man he had become.
That terrified him more than he could say.
He still hadn’t told the council. Not yet. The list of eligible brides remained untouched on his desk, curling at the edges and gathering dust on the ink. He stared at it some mornings, all while he felt the weight of the crown settle like a shackle around his throat.
But then, by some play of his hand, he would see you in his mind, see you wrapped in your soft pink shawl as you walked the paths of the godswood, your breath misting in the cold morning air, your eyes soft and watchful as you mumbled to yourself in the heart of the Keep. Walking towards something, walking towards him.
And for a moment, he allowed himself to wonder, not about duty or strategy, but about what it might feel like to choose something not out of obligation, but desire, to have you walk towards him and never stray.
He didn’t want a political bride; he didn’t want an allegiance; his days of mindless duty were gone.
He wanted you.
But Aemond was not a man who made decisions lightly, even at the notion of wanting you left him at war with himself for weeks. His mind trapped in a web of what-ifs and imagined consequences if he proceeded.
Every quiet moment was filled with them.
What if the realm turned against his family once more? What if his choice fractured already tenuous alliances? What if he proved, in the end, no better than the fools who had once ruled with their hearts instead of their minds?
And yet, the louder those doubts became, the more persistent his thoughts of you grew. Through your time together, you had taken no action to sway him, offered no subtle seduction or plea for affection from him, or even shown a desire to be Queen. You had merely remained, as you were, calm, honest, composed, while he stewed in his turmoil. He admired that.
Gods help him, he needed that.
The war had left him surrounded by ghosts and obligations. His own mother wandered the halls, half lost in her own memories and mumblings, more in common with his late sister than he ever thought. His council muttered constantly about names and lineages, numbers and heirs. Every path he was offered felt like a negotiation with fate — a stupid compromise wrapped in silk and laced with poison.
Except you.
You were the only path that didn’t feel like a betrayal of himself.
He wore himself down with the weight of it.
He never was one for sleeping well but it got worse. He grew short with his council, his temper fraying. He stopped attending the hunt for a bride altogether, letting names pile up like snowdrifts in the throne room. And when he finally made his decision, he did not announce it with any bite or snarl like he would have a year ago. He simply rose from his chair in the council chamber one bitter cold evening, the candlelight catching on the silver of his hair, and said, flatly:
“I will not marry for the crown, I will marry for the future, and I have chosen my queen.”
The chamber had gone silent as soon as the words had passed his lips.
There were objections, of course. Predictable ones. His master of coin was the first to speak — pale with shocked fury, citing precedent and strength and alliances to fill the pockets of the crown. Others followed, half in shock, half in fear of what it meant that Aemond Targaryen — scarred, cold-eyed, terrifying Aemond—had done something unexpected.
But it didn’t matter.
He had made his decision, and for once, it was not for war, not for vengeance, not even for power. It was for something simpler, something that had somehow become more terrifying than all three.
It was for you, the woman who accepted him and his hasty proposal that same night.
The wedding ceremony was small by Targaryen standards, the crown too depleted for anything extravagant, but neither of you wanted that. It was modest, almost private, exactly what the two of you were. There had been an intimate ceremony with just the two of you on Dragonstone as well, a small Valyrian ceremony that Aemond had wished to honour himself and his family.
But as soon as it was announced there would even be a wedding, whispers flitted through the court like restless birds. Some called it a disgrace, others a political blunder. But none dared say it to his face. And as you stood beside him in the Great Hall that day, draped in the soft colours of your house, your hand small but steady in his, Aemond felt the world fall quiet for the first time in years.
No gold-braided noblewoman could have steadied him like you did. No courtly-trained bride could have met his gaze the way you did, unflinching, calm, knowing. You had not been born to be queen—but somehow, you became one the moment you chose him in return.
And at that moment, with your fingers intertwined in his, and you shared your first kiss, Aemond finally understood. The realm could hate him, the council could doubt him, the histories could question him.
But for once, he had chosen something not for House Targaryen, not for the throne, not even for the realm.
He had chosen peace.
And he had found it.
In you.
Marriage did not make Aemond easier to love.
He was not cruel — not in the way many feared he would be — but he was still distant. Guarded. Silent in ways that words could not mend. He had spent so long surviving by himself—gripping tightly to his rage, grief, and discipline — that the new peace felt unnatural. Softness felt dangerous. Love… even more so.
He knew bedding you was never going to be an issue; the two of you clicked in ways he wasn’t sure were possible with someone, but loving you was a beast he did not know how to tame.
Aemond still carried the war inside him like it was bound to his soul, and even now it clung to him in the darkest hours of the night. It lingered in the shadow under his eye, in the way he sometimes flinched from your kindness as if it were a trap. And though the crown was now firmly upon his head, the halls of the Red Keep no longer echoed with the cries of grief.
He still remained ever vigilant — watchful, restrained, cold.
You had not walked into the union with rose-tinted hope. You had seen him before the vows were ever exchanged, truly seen him. The way he moved, like he bore chains only he could feel. The way his eye, so sharp and calculating in court, would sometimes lose focus—drawn back into memory or regret. You had not been chosen to heal him. You had not expected to.
But even so… you hoped.
The early months of marriage were difficult.
You learned the limits of his affection by accident — what could be touched, what should be left alone, what you shouldn’t ask about. He rarely offered compliments, and he never asked for comfort. And in truth, he seemed unsure of what to do with your presence at all.
Some days, he left before sunrise and returned after dusk without a word. Others, he sat beside you in silence during meals, eating little, his thoughts miles away as you mindlessly tried to fill that silence. You tried not to take his attitude to heart; you told yourself it was not you, but the war, the ghosts, the boy he had been and the man that had been shaped in his place.
Still, there were cracks in the armour.
He would watch you when he thought you weren’t looking. It was subtle glances over books, across the courtyard when he was walking, from the balcony as you walked in the garden. And sometimes at night, when sleep came extra uneasily, he would rest his hand just close enough to brush yours between the sheets, not holding it, not quite that.
Simply close.
And then, there were the words. Sparse, but honest. When he spoke to you, it was never idle. No flattery, no pretty courtly lies. But when he told you something, he meant it. A memory of his brothers, a thought he had while flying, a single low-voiced admission after one of his many sleepless nights: “I do not know how to be what you deserve. But I will try.”
That was the first time he looked at you not as his wife, but as something more. Someone real. Someone he could not pretend to keep at a distance forever.
And then came the change.
It was not sudden, not the sort of shift that others noticed straight away, but you did. The way he lingered longer at your side. The way his hand found yours without hesitation, the way he began to listen when you spoke of your family, your home in the Reach, your childhood. He asked questions, not out of obligation, but out of honest interest, as though he was trying, in his own quiet way, to build something with you.
Then one morning, not long after the first thaw of spring, you told him you were expecting.
For a long time, he said nothing. Just stared at you with something unreadable in his lone violet eye. You wondered if you’d done something wrong — if the news had stirred the wrong ghosts, if he truly regretted you in that moment. But then he stepped forward, hands unsure as they hovered just above your waist.
“Truly?” he asked, voice uncharacteristically hoarse.
You could only nod, and something in him broke.
Not in grief, but in wonder.
He sank to his knees before you — Aemond, Prince Regent, second son of Viserys the Peaceful, kinslayer, oathbreaker, dragonrider — and rested his forehead against the swell of your stomach that barely existed yet.
For the first time in your marriage, he wept. Not like a king. Not like a warrior. But like a man who had never believed he would feel anything again but cold.
After that, things began to change — not all at once, and not without effort. He still had sharpness in him, still vanished at times into thought or memory. But he returned to you quicker now. He sought you out without excuse, he placed a hand to your belly every night before sleep, and when he dreamed, he dreamed aloud to you—of flying, not for war, but for the sake of showing his child the sky.
He began to show up, not just as a ruler or a husband, but as a man trying to build a life.
He spoke to you more freely, asked after your health, dotted on you in ways you didn’t think you needed, and read over the old Valyrian texts on childbirth and naming customs to better understand as your belly swelled. He took to escorting you through the Keep himself, one hand hovering protectively at your back, untrusting of the new guards. When you sat, he sat beside you. When you stood, he offered his arm to take the weight off. And when you smiled — when you truly smiled with teeth — he watched as if trying to memorise it.
At night, he would lie with his hand spread over your belly, his eye half-lidded with thought, whispering things he couldn’t say in daylight to anyone else but you.
“They will know your strength,” he murmured once. “Not just my blood, but yours too.”
He began to speak to the babe as if it could hear him — sometimes in High Valyrian, sometimes just in soft, uncertain words. He told stories he thought they’d like, and he made promises. And when the council dared ask again about heirs and alliances, he answered with a calm finality that allowed no argument: “My queen carries the future, that is enough.”
Even the court — always gossiping, always watching — grew quieter in regard to the two of you. There was something different about him now. Aemond still walked like a sword unsheathed, but there was purpose behind it. Peace in the tension. He smiled more in the privacy of your quarters—not often, not wide, but real. And when he looked at you, it was with something unmistakable.
Not possession.
But sheer devotion.
And so, the man who had once been war incarnate now sat with a hand on your swelling belly, speaking softly of futures he had once believed would never come. And you—who had never expected to hold a broken dragon’s heart — held it nonetheless, steady and true.
For the first time in his long, blood-ridden history; Aemond’s life was no longer rooted only in violence, but was now founded in the beginings of love, in life. His rage soothed in the quiet strength of a woman who had refused to flinch from him.
The day your daughter came into the world, the Red Keep was cloaked in storm clouds and the threat of rain. The wind howled over the walls, and thunder rumbled over Blackwater Bay drawing closer; echoing off the water and straight to the Keep like the gods were angry at something unseen.
You had been in labour since the early hours, having woken up that same morning with a gush of wetness down your leg and a cramping that had you yelling for your husband instantly.
At first, customarily, Aemond had remained outside the birthing room. Left to pace the corridor like a barely contained dragon. But as the day dragged on, every scream that escaped the chamber sent a jolt through him — each one more violent than a sword to the gut.
He stood motionless at times, staring down the corridor with his jaw clenched so tightly that blood rose in his mouth and teeth threatened to crack. The servants and maesters who would update him gave him a wide berth, and no one dared speak to him beyond that. Not even his mother, who watched him from a shadowed alcove, whispering prayers to the Mother and nonsense he couldn’t even listen to properly.
He tried to reason with himself that this is nature, this is what women were expected to endure. That his wife was strong, stronger than anyone he’d ever known.
“She will be fine, they said she would be fine.” He could hear rattling around his head.
But reason meant nothing when it was you crying out in pain behind that door.
And when the fourth hour passed — and then the fifth — and when he heard your voice break on a scream that sounded like it had been torn from your very soul, Aemond finally snapped.
Without a word or a care, he shoved open the heavy wooden doors that locked him from you and stepped into the room.
The midwives gasped instantly, panicked about what to do as one of the maesters stumbled backwards. The heat of the room hit him like a wave — thick and metallic with blood, with sweat, with the scent of pain and your tears.
You lay on the birthing bed, hair damp and curling, cheeks flushed and streaked with tears, your body bent in the throes of another contraction as your hands grasped at the bedding. You didn’t see him at first; you were too far gone in the storm of labour to see him or hear his entrance.
He had never seen you like this, never seen anyone like this.
You looked like a goddess at war.
“Your Grace, you must wait outside,” one of the Maesters protested.
But Aemond didn’t hear him. He had gone utterly still by the door, frozen as he took you in.
You turned your head then — eyes meeting his — and in your gaze was something he’d never known how to name. Pain, yes, but also defiance. Love. Trust. Help.
“My love,” you rasped. Just one word, one breath. That was all he needed to know you needed him by your side, to stay.
And he did.
He crossed the room slowly as if the floor itself might collapse beneath his boots and knelt at your side. He was careful in taking your hand, unfurling it from the soaked cotton bedding, as it trembled with exertion. You gripped his fingers so tightly it hurt, but he didn’t flinch.
His pain, he could take. Yours, he could not.
“I’m here,” he said gently, voice cracking as he spoke only to you. “I’m here, my flame, I’m here...”
The next hour blurred into one, as you screamed, as you pushed, as you wept.
And Aemond — Aemond shook beside you like a boy who was trying to keep it together. He wiped the sweat from your brow with a trembling hand, and he cursed the gods under his breath with each push. He pressed his forehead to your temple and whispered in High Valyrian a promise that no harm would come to you or the child.
And when, at last, the child emerged into the world—small and wailing, pink and perfect—Aemond was the first to move.
The maester, pale with exhaustion, offered a nod as he looked over the child. “A daughter, Your Grace.”
He watched, stunned, as the midwife cut the cord and wrapped the bloodied child in linens. His legs were unsteady as a doe beneath him as he reached out for her.
She had barely opened her eyes, but he could see that they were as violet as starlight, and she cried.
Aemond Targaryen had never known such feelings.
He turned to you — your face radiant with exhaustion as the maid attended and cleaned you up, your smile fragile but victorious—and said the only thing he could.
“She’s perfect.”
You let out a weak laugh. “She’s ours.”
He stepped toward you then, laying the child against your chest, his hand still cradling her tiny back as she nuzzled your bare skin; her mother and her kin. Tiny fists scratching against your skin as she finally settled down at your touch.
“Her name is Vaella,” You whispered, looking down at her, and he nodded once, reverently, with no argument to the name.
“Vaella,” he echoed, like a vow.
And as he knelt beside the bed, one arm wrapped around you, the other holding your daughter to your heart, the storm outside finally started. Rain lashed the windows, and the wind howled across the stones.
But within the chamber, all was quiet.
Aemond had faced every horror the world had to offer, but nothing had brought him to his knees before quite like watching you bring life into it.
And from that moment forward, he was no longer just a kinslayer, or even a king.
He was a husband.
He was a father.
He was hers.
By the time Vaella reached nine months, she had mastered the art of wrapping Aemond Targaryen around her tiny, chubby fingers.
She was crawling now — fast, determined, always after something, or trying to look for someone.
Usually waiting for her father. It was to the point that if she so much as heard the distant sound of his boots in the corridor, her little hands would slap against the stone floor as she scrambled toward the door. Little body crawling at pace; shuffling and bubbling out excited noises that only grew louder when her father finally appeared in the doorway.
And even after a long day of meetings and holding court, he still had the energy to share his daughter's excitement with a smile that he'd never share anywhere else.
Aemond was as soft as melted butter in the sun when it came to her.
He never let her cry or wait for long, not if he could help it. The moment her lip wobbled or her hands reached for him, he was there — scooping her up with a tenderness so at odds with his reputation that even the most hard-hearted of courtiers would be shocked to see him.
But peace in your home, as always, was temporary.
The Riverlands were stirring again.
It wasn’t war, at least, not yet, not if he could help it, but there were disputes between old houses, tension still thick in the air from the burning at Aemond’s hand barely buried. And the lords had requested the presence of the crown itself to remind them who ruled, to build amends with them for everything he had done. Aemond had resisted at first; he had trained stewards and sent emissaries in his place, even some of his small council. But in the end, it had to be him.
He, with his dragon’s shadow again covering the Riverlands.
He, as a symbol of the realm’s new stability, despite terrorising the Riverlands just years previously. He had lamented to you in the dark of the nights, the both of you curled in bed as he whispered that I didn’t feel like he could ever go back, for as fearsome as your husband was, then the crown was off and the court was away, he was just as scared at the young boy he had hoped he had grown out of.
You knew he had to go, and he knew it too, but it didn’t make it any easier.
“She won’t understand,” he murmured to you the night before his departure, holding Vaella tightly against his chest as she babbled sleepily, her fist clutching strands of his hair. “She’ll think I left.”
You reached for him, brushing your hand over his shoulder as you sat beside him on your shared bed, curled affectionately towards him. “She’ll know you’re coming back, my dragon.”
His eye flicked to yours. “Will she? She’s just a babe.”
“She’s your daughter,” you said gently. “And your daughter is brighter than all the men on your council combined; she’ll know you won’t be gone for long.”
That earned you a quiet smile, a tired one, a grateful one.
“She tried to say dada today,” you added softly, your hand smoothing over her little back, feeling the breaths under your palm.
“She did not.” He tutted softly, amused at you.
“She said ‘Dahhh’ and pointed at the sky. I’m counting it.”
He laughed, truly laughed, and the sound loosened something in your chest.
The morning he left, Vaella was still drowsy when he pressed a kiss to her downy hair and another to your lips. She clung to his tunic as if she knew something was different, that something wasn’t right, letting out a soft protest when he tried to pass her back to you, her tiny legs kicking instantly, anxiously.
“I’ll return before the next moon, but hopefully sooner,” he promised, resting his forehead gently against yours. “And I’ll bring her something—perhaps a river pearl, or a little sword she can’t use yet.”
“She’ll want your boots and your rings and nothing else,” you said, smiling despite the ache in your heart, bouncing the babe who looked confused as to why her father was so sad.
“I’ll give her all of it.” He murmured softly, promising.
And then he was gone — Aemond, King, Protector of the Realm, husband, father — swept away by duty once more.
The Keep was quieter without him.
Vaella adjusted better than you had feared, though she grew restless in the evenings without her father to sing to her. Her eyes would always flick to the door, and she’d crawl toward it whenever heavy footsteps of a guard passed, as if expecting to find her father there again, arms open, waiting.
Only to be saddened when the door never opened, her tiny bottom on the floor in waiting.
At night, you held her a little tighter than usual, cuddling her as tight as Aemond did, trying to sing the songs that only his tongue could muster. And when she said "Dada" for the first time — clear, strong, insistent as she looked at the door.
You wept.
You wrote to him every day, though you knew the ravens could not always keep pace with his travels. Still, you did it anyway. You told him of Vaella’s teeth beginning to finally push through her gums, how she began to bite at everything and anything to numb the pain of it growing.
How she tried to mimic your laugh and clap when she’d sit with you, or copy the words you’d say in tiny babbles. How she discovered her reflection and seemed convinced it was another babe, a friend, a sibling.
And Aemond, despite his busyness, wrote back when he could; his letters were short but warm. You could tell he wasn’t indulging the stress of being in the Riverlands and dealing with them, trying to make amends and put out fires that had long continued to burn over the years. He never wished to stress you, but he always left ending with a line for his darling girl:
Tell Vaella her father dreams of her laugh every night.
It was three long weeks later when he returned.
It was not a grand return, not heralded by trumpets or banners. Just the soft thunder of Vhagar’s wings against the clouds, circling once above the Keep before landing outside the gates as the sun began to set. Closer than he would usually land, but he was anxious to return to you, to his family.
You were already waiting with Vaella in your arms, wrapped tightly in your soft pink cloak, her little eyes squinting against the fading light as the two of you stood just outside the city gates, surrounded by modest amounts of guards.
The moment Aemond dismounted Vhagar, Vaella let out a loud, delighted shriek, her legs kicking in your hold as her tiny fists flapped about, eager to get out of your arms and to him.
“Dada!” She shrieked into the early evening.
Aemond froze at the sound, and for the briefest second, his composure cracked where he stood — lips parted, chest heaving, eye glassy with stunned emotion. And then he was pacing towards you, his hand and his councilmen forgotten as he b-lined for his flames, his girls.
He reached you without hesitation, arms wrapping around both of you at once. He pressed a kiss to your temple, then another to your lips, and finally, carefully, he took Vaella from your arms and held her as if she were something sacred.
“Let me see you,” he whispered, cupping the back of her head with one long-fingered hand. “Gods, let me look at you.”
She babbled at him, delighted, hands tugging at his collar, and he just laughed — low and hoarse and full of something ancient and overwhelming.
“She’s heavier,” he murmured. “Has she grown this much in just three weeks?”
“She never stops moving,” you said, smiling, fingers brushing her soft cheek. “And she said ‘Dada’ for the first time this week.”
Aemond pressed his forehead gently to hers. “She saved it for me.”
“She did.”
He didn’t let go of her as he walked with you back through the Keep.
The servants bowed deeply as he passed. He was still their king, but he scarcely noticed them. His world had narrowed to just two: the child in his arms and his wife at his side. And for all his grace and poise, there was something nearly boyish in the way he kept glancing down at Vaella, as though afraid she might disappear if he blinked.
That night, you did not dine in the Great Hall.
You stayed in your private chambers, just the three of you, with a fire that burned low in the hearth, casting golden light across the stone walls, and the air was filled with the scent of violets and cinnamon from the oils your maids had used earlier in your bath.
The room was made ready with dinner upon your arrival; plates of meats, fruits, and cheese, and a small bowl prepared just for the baby. The servants slipped away quietly as you entered, leaving the three of you in peace.
Aemond wasted no time as he sank down into the chair with a weary exhale, pulling Vaella into his chest again and watching her explore his face again with tiny, curious fingers, poking and prodding.
“She has two teeth now,” you said, handing him the tiny silver spoon to feed her with. “But don’t let her bite you, she keeps trying to take fingers and nip at them.”
“Good girl,” he murmured, amused, letting her gum at the spoon before attempting to feed her.
It was clumsy, but he was out of practice. She spat half the food onto his sleeve and herself, but he laughed; there was no anger to be had in a happy baby.
“She’s perfect.” He mumbled again, neglecting his own food while his girls ate.
You sat across from him, watching the two of them like a dream made real. The fire crackled. The Keep was quiet. And the King who once spoke only of war and vengeance now gently wiped mashed pear from his daughter’s chin, letting her smear a sticky mess on him as she found a way to nibble at his knuckles too, all without flinching.
When she was finally full and drowsy from food and milk, Aemond pulled her close against his chest, rocking her slowly. He had refused to let the nursemaids take Vaella for the night and denied entry to every servant who came to the door.
Tonight was not for the crown. Tonight was for him and his family. In that quiet moment, Aemond was not a king, not a ruler—he was simply a father and a husband.
“I hated being away,” he admitted quietly. “Even when I was doing what had to be done. It felt… wrong. Empty, without the two of you by my side.”
Your heart thumped a little harder at that, your footsteps quiet as you rose and knelt beside his chair, your hand resting on his leg.
“You came back in one piece,” you said. “That’s what matters, to both me and her.”
He leaned in, brushing a kiss against your brow, and then another to your lips—slow, lingering, grateful.
“I don’t know if I’ll ever deserve either of you,” he said against your skin, “but I swear to the gods I’ll never take this for granted.”
Eventually, it was time for bed, and he undressed slowly, carefully, comfortably for the first time in weeks. He wore a simple black tunic and breeches as he took Vaella from her cradle once last time, settling into the large chair near the fire to sing to her like he did before he left, his long legs stretched out, her tiny form curled on his chest.
You sat nearby, dressed softly in your own nightwear, hands carefully undoing your hair as you sat and watched him. He was staring at the child like she had become his religion.
“She crawls faster now,” You said softly, brushing out your hair from the day. “Sometimes I swear she’s trying to find speed and fly.”
“She’ll ride before she walks if I have anything to say about it,” he replied, his voice low. “She’ll have Vhagar, one day.”
“She might not want Vhagar.” You smile softly.
“She’ll have any dragon on Dragonstone that she pleases when she’s older,” He hummed softly, lips pressing to her hair.
“But for now, I’ll build her a saddle for your lap, and we’ll fly together on Vhagar,” he said with a faint, wistful smile. “I will never leave her or you again—not like that, not for that long.”
“She understood,” you said gently. “She missed you, but she never doubted you’d return. I think… in her own way, she knows who you are.”
“Who I was,” he corrected quietly. “But she changes everything.”
You watched as Vaella’s fingers curled against the fabric of his tunic. Her lashes fluttered, already falling into sleep. Aemond looked down at her, as if in awe that something so perfect could find rest against him.
“She is the best of us,” he whispered. “Because of you, I look at her, and I see the man I left behind… and the peace that I took and almost didn’t believe I deserved.”
He looked at you then, eye soft in a way only you had ever seen.
“Thank you,” he said. “For waiting. For keeping her whole, for keeping me whole.”
You rose from your vanity seat and came to his side, sitting on the arm of the chair, your hand resting lightly over his on her back, and the other on his neck as you kissed his hair. Vaella slept between you, her warmth binding you both tighter than any crown or vow ever could.
And in that firelit room, for the first time in years, Aemond did not feel like a prince returning from war. Or a King out of his element.
Much to your dismay, Prince Aemond insists on bringing your little son to Vhagar. Set sometime during the Dance.
Contents: Just a little practice thing... Dad!Aemond, Targaryen parenting, subtle fluff. Little bit of subtle angst too. No filth this time..
Words: 3000, and very sloppily proof read.
The carriage can only take you so far as to the Iron Gate.
Beyond its massive doors, the Rosby Road winds North, poorly maintained and full of potholes, as it is the shortest of the main roads, and thus the least important. It is not as busy as others, and the gate is not guarded as well - clearly, as the men who should be protecting it are presently engaged in a game of cards, laid out on top of a large, flat rock.
That is where the driver will wait, but it is not your destination.
There is another little trail. One that runs in the opposite direction, scarcely used and partially hidden, visible only to those who know it. No horse or wagon can make the journey, and there is no option but to walk - first along a narrow, trodden path, and then further still, down treacherous steps, carved into the very rock the city rests upon. Past the watchtower, and across the Northern beach, to the vast caves of Maegor the Cruel, where Vhagar has made her nest.
You walk alone, just the two of you. The prince in his coat and boots, and yourself in attire much less suited for the occasion. Fine shoes, fine skirts, and with your little son cradled in your arms.
The gentle rocking of the carriage has lulled him to sleep. Four months old, he is, and a source of such joy that your poor heart can scarcely contain it. From his first high-pitched cry when you brought him into the world - oh, the pains of labour were all but forgotten, as was the threat of the raging war. And when the prince came to see his son, you could hardly even bear to let him hold him.
He wanted to bring the boy much sooner, but both you and the dowager queen staunchly put your foot down against that. Children should not be brought outside the home until they have at least lived through the first perilous weeks, and possibly even their first fever. And even then, most would argue, they have no business being around ferocious animals.
“I don’t like it,” you say, for the umpteenth time, taking the hand offered to you by the prince to help you cross a treacherous stretch. “It is mad, bringing an infant to such a beast - ”
“Vhagar should know him,” he says, steadfast and determined. As he has done whenever you voiced your concern.
It does nothing at all to calm your nerves. But it is his most compelling argument, and the only reason you have allowed this lunacy in the first place. So the dragon would recognise the boy as his, and as one of her own. So she would know to protect him, if - something should happen.
You make it halfway across the pebbled beach before the prince pauses. And you do too, lifting your gaze to follow his line of sight; see what he is looking at.
An enormous, greyish mass, some yards away, that at first you thought was a moss-grown rock, or years of washed up seaweed. But the mass makes a rumbling noise and begins to shift and lift itself, slowly and carefully, as though with much effort. Part of it becomes a leg, another part unfurls into a great wing, and the rock nearest to you becomes a head, with a mouth full of jagged teeth, and two eyes opening slowly. Amber in colour, and with slitted pupils staring straight at you.
“She can sense me,” the prince declares, with no small amount of pride, lifting his chin and straightening his back.
You, however, are paralysed, utterly shocked by her vastness. You have never seen Vhagar this close before, and though you knew of her impressive size, it is one thing to see her soaring across the sky, and quite another to be right next to her, unprotected and vulnerable.
It seems to you that the span of her wings could cover half the city, that entire buildings could fit in her mouth. And certainly, she could end all three of you with her fiery breath, or with a single swipe of her claw or her massive tail. One wrong move, even if accidental, even if she did not mean to - you would all be dead.
“Come,” the prince says, pushing at the small of your back. But you stall, digging in your heels, frozen in place at the sight of her.
“I’ve changed my mind,” you stammer. “We should go back - it is not safe…”
The prince gives an overbearing, if somewhat irritated sigh.
“Dragons are loyal beasts,” he reassures. “Vhagar is loyal to me, she obeys me - ”
“She is a beast,” you hiss, hugging your drowsy son closer to your chest. “She cannot be trusted. It is too dangerous - I won’t let you bring him any closer - ”
Prince Aemond does not like to be challenged. He turns around to look at you coolly, his voice low and scornful as he speaks.
“Is your opinion of me so unfavourable, wife, that you think I would risk harm to my own son?”
“No,” you respond, quietly, but truthfully. Since you were married, your opinion of the prince has only risen, slowly but surely. And it continues to do so, still - though perhaps not right now. “I don’t like it - ”
“Mhm - so you said,” your husband says dryly, all but wrenching the swaddled boy from your arms.
He does not complain, the boy. Prince Aemond comes to visit often, at least once a day, and sometimes more. He sits with the child, reads to him, lets him fall asleep in his arms - not for very long each time, but it is at least enough for the little boy to recognise his father’s low voice and stern face as something safe and comfortable. As is evident from the way he now settles against the prince’s leather-clad chest, tangling his little fist into a lock of his hair.
The beast remains still, pensive as her rider approaches, her serpent’s eyes fixed on the thing in his arms, on what he is bringing her. Your most precious treasure, your life’s very purpose, completely at the mercy of the greatest dragon in the world.
You might have felt more at ease if the soft, sparse hair on his head had been silver like his father’s, but alas, it is not. It is exactly like yours, and only the bright violet of his eyes gives away his true inheritance.
And that seems like too little a thing for such a large creature to notice.
Prince Aemond calls out in that strange language of his, with the open vowels and the rolling R’s. It is beautiful, especially in his mouth, and the dragon responds at once, contorting herself to let him touch her wrinkled neck with affection. Which is a strange sight, but what is even stranger is the way she grumbles - as though she likes it. He speaks to her as if she was another person, in long, full sentences that are much too complicated for you to even attempt to understand. There is only one word you can make out, for the sole reason that he says it twice - yoreliatzeh, or yorelatzya, or something akin to that. You haven’t a clue as to what it means.
Vhagar snorts once, and the prince steps back to give her room to move, to rise up onto her legs and bring her head closer, her nose almost touching his hip. While you stand at a distance, staring at the utterly bizarre scene playing out in front of you. A fearsome, vicious beast, sniffing the child like a dog would. Gently and carefully, only she is so big that each of her cautious breaths is like a small gust of wind, making your husband’s hair billow about his face. When she makes a grunting noise, he carefully unwraps some of the swaddlings, holding the child up to let her see him better, smell him better.
He is bright, your darling boy, and curious, like all babes and children. His eyes are wide as they take in Vhagar’s scaly form, and he gives a soft squeal of surprise or wonder, kicking his little feet under the blankets. Reaching his arm towards the beast's massive head, her massive teeth -
“Aemond, please - ” you gasp, clutching your hands to your throat.
The prince turns his head to give you a stern look, one that clearly shows he is running out of patience. And maybe this time it is justified, because your fearful outburst startles the boy, who begins to squirm unhappily in his father’s arms. Fussing and whimpering; a sound that is as painful to you as salt to an open wound.
“Bring him to me,” you plead, “can’t you see that he is frightened - ”
“He is frightened because you are frightened,” the prince says, as soft spoken as always, but with a hint of something sharp underneath.
He cradles the boy closer to his chest, bouncing him gently, holding his head and murmuring soothing words. Exactly as you would do, and to the same effect. It calms him down, and his big, round eyes start darting around again, taking in his surroundings. The dragon, the grey sea, the fine silver clasps on his father’s clothes. It does seem that the latter intrigues him the most.
Vhagar lifts her neck and tilts her head just slightly, seemingly very interested in the child, in this tiny little creature; the way he moves his little limbs, and his soft coos and noises. There is an almost… thoughtful look in her eyes, or at the very least a curious one.
It makes you wonder about the extent of her perception. Whether she truly knows that this is Aemond’s child, that it came from him, from his body, his flesh. If she can sense it somehow, through the bond they purportedly share, or if she understood it when he spoke to her.
How intelligent is a dragon? Are they like dogs or horses, able to learn the meaning of certain words, but not the full breadth of language? Or do they think as people, with nuance and emotion, and a mind as vivid as your own.
You do not know. You suppose no one really does.
“Come,” the prince calls, reaching his arm towards you, beckoning you closer. However, a single glance at Vhagar, whose mighty gaze is now focused on you, is enough to inspire disobedience in even the most well-behaved wife.
“I would really rather not - ”
“She must know the both of you,” he insists.
“Is that - necessary?” you squirm, wringing your hands, very much aware that you are not a dragon rider, that you haven’t a drop of Valyrian blood. “Vhagar has no reason to think fondly of me…”
The prince scoffs.
“Are you not the mother of my child?” he says. “Now, come.”
You must go to him. He is your lord husband, and he is a prince, and such is the way of things. But you are not at all glad to, and you walk with shaky, reluctant steps, gripping onto his elbow and cowering behind him like a frightened child.
You close your eyes when the dragon lowers her head once more, bringing it towards you. A sudden, low-pitched growl makes your heart tremble, but the prince speaks a soft command. Lykirī, Vhagar. Lykirī.
It has a calming effect on you too. As does the arm he keeps outstretched in front of you - solely for your comfort, you assume, as it would make no difference whatsoever, should Vhagar decide that she does not like you. But you appreciate the gesture nonetheless.
The air is warm, this close to her, and your skirts move around your legs when she breathes, slowly and deeply, while the prince speaks to her in soft tones. That word again, the one from before, and many others. You know the words for wife, for king, for father, brother, sister, even for dragon, but he says none of those now, so you have no guess as to what he is telling her. Or if she understands. Or what he would call you, if not his wife.
This woman is my - spouse? lady? lover?
You do have a kind of love for him, and sometimes you think he does for you, too. Sometimes. One can never be sure of anything with the prince, who keeps himself so closely guarded. Even after more than a year of marriage. Even now that you have given him a child.
The birth went mercifully well, but your recovery was long, and he has only recently begun to come to your bed again. And so far, only a handful of times. The first time, it was so painful for you that the act could not be completed, and the second time, he finished so quickly that it barely even counts. The third was better. Pleasurable for both of you, but still strange after going so long without it - at least for you. It is both likely and possible that the prince satisfied his urges elsewhere while your body was indisposed. You do not know. Nor do you wish to.
The ground shifts beneath your feet, and the heat around you lessens, as does the heavy smell of burned flesh and brimstone, the very same one that so often clings to your husband’s clothes. When you open your eyes it is to the sight of Vhagar, settled onto her belly, her head laid atop her claws. Calm and docile, and with a deep rumble coming from her chest - one that is probably a sign of contentment, even if it sounds utterly terrifying.
“Touch her,” the prince commands, giving a gentle push to your back. “You have nothing to fear, touch her.”
It is quite clear that Vhagar is unruffled by your presence, that she is resting. But with her eyes heavy and half-closed, it makes her look so menacing, so evil - even though you know that evil does not exist inherently in any beast. Only in those who train it.
You draw in a steadying breath, gathering up your courage, reaching your hand out - only to then think better of it and let it fall.
“I am afraid to,” you whisper.
The prince sighs. But his hand closes gently around yours, bringing it to rest on the side of her nose, first the tips of your fingers, and then your whole palm.
It is like nothing else you have ever felt, her scales. You always imagined that a dragon’s skin would feel like leather, but Vhagar’s skin is so much tougher, so much rougher, like running your hand over little rocks. And she is warm - so warm, as though a fire is always burning somewhere in her throat.
She does not object at all to your touch, even when the prince withdraws his own hand, leaving only yours. Only you and Vhagar. The largest, oldest being in the world.
To think, the things she has seen. The conquest, the Dornish Wars, the very founding of the realm of the Seven Kingdoms. Dozens of castles have crumbled in her fire, and thousands of people have perished, and she has fought and won hundreds of battles; torn through stone, rock and earth as though it was boiled jelly.
It is at once terrifying and romantic, like something from a fairytale, or stories of ancient times. A creature of such myth and legend that you almost feel as though you should bow down to her, as one does before a great matriarch.
Vhagar the Conqueror. Queen of all Dragons.
She closes her eyes when you draw back.
“He might ride her too, some day,” the prince says quietly. Wistfully.
“But dragons only have one rider - ” you protest, cutting yourself off when you realise what he meant. What he left unsaid.
This is war. The realm is at war. Death is everywhere; at the end of a blade, in the point of an arrow. And if not on the field of battle, then in tainted water or plague-ridden camps; empty bellies or festering wounds.
“You shouldn’t say such things,” you mutter, looking down at your feet. Your dirtied shoes.
The prince does not answer. A heavy mood has settled over the rocky beach, something vast and bleak and empty, only compounded by the surroundings. The colourless sky, the sombre crashing of waves. Even Vhagar gives a doleful sigh, as though she too is weary of what is to come.
She has been the prince’s companion since childhood. He was born to the queen, but Vhagar made him what he is, made him ruthless, made him brutally ambitious. Made him Aemond One-Eye, Aemond the Kinslayer. Prince Regent, Protector of the Realm. She has known him boy and man, as well as any, and better than most. She has known him in life, and she may yet know him in death.
You push that thought away as forcefully as your mind allows. You shouldn’t think such things.
A coo from your son breaks the tension, and his eyes turn to the sky, where a large heron is flapping its wings. The afternoon is turning to evening, and soon the bell will ring for supper - something warm and comforting, you hope. You are cold, your breasts feel sore, and you have most certainly had enough excitement for one day. For several days, in fact.
“Can we go, please,” you breathe, looking up at your husband with wide, pleading eyes.
“She is tired,” he says, with a soft glance at Vhagar’s terrifying face, and a gentle touch to her side. “Yes, we should.”
—
You walk slower on the way back. Uphill, with sore feet, and your boy now fast asleep in your arms. Safe and snug where he belongs.
“My Prince,” you begin, sweet and innocent. “What does… yoreliatzeh mean?”
There is a sly little smile on his face when you look at him, a self-assured look in his remaining eye.
“Jorrāeliarza,” he corrects, with an artful pause before he continues. As though to keep you in suspense. “It means dear. Or… beloved.”
If he sees the sudden blush on your face, he does not let on.
“Jorālitzeh.”
“No,” he says. “Jor-rāe-liar-za.”
“Jor-rāe-liar-za,” you repeat, trying your very best to mimic the exact movements of his mouth, the way he gently rolls his tongue. “Jorrāeliarza.”
“Better,” he nods, and then you round a corner, just in time to see the guards hastily hide their cards away, and the driver shuffling back towards the carriage, eagerly shoving his winnings into a pocket.
Jorrāeliarza. Jorrāeliarza. Jorrāeliarza.
Dear. Beloved.
You like that very much.
Please feel free to come into my asks or DMs with critique of my fics! Constructive is preferred, but not required.
summary: Aemond only saw his wife as a duty, hardly ever paying any attention to her. But, his wife is attentive to him, something he tended to ignore until the moment he was away from her. When Aemond returns from his royal duties outside of King's Landing, his wife yearns for him just as he yearns for her.
author's note: This little drabble has been in my drafts originally as a no pressure fic, only for it to stay in my drafts for months 🙃 but I hope you all enjoy this short soft!Aemond drabble! I'm trying to get some oldies & requests out of my draft box as much as possible before beginning on new fics 🤍
pairing: soft!aemond targaryen x wife!reader
warning(s): established relationship (reader & aemond are married), cold, but soft!aemond, a little angst, fluff, comfort fic, high valyrian translation may/may not be correct (please forgive me in advance), let me know if I missed anything! not proofread!
★ aemond targaryen masterlist ★
Night had fallen over King's Landing, everyone in the palace had taken their respective places in their chambers to retire for the night, except for Aemond. Or so he thought...
Aemond heaved out a heavy sigh as he enters the Red Keep, he had been away from the place he called home for too long. His royal duties kept him away from the one person who mattered the most to him, you, his dear wife.
The relationship wasn't an easy start, Aemond purely only saw the marriage as a duty to him, he hardly ever showed any affection or concern towards you and barely allowed himself to be vulnerable around you. However, the fact that he'd been away was affecting him rather terribly. Even though he was quite distant with you, you still showed him your subtle ways of affection and concern. One of them, he remembers as clear as day before he left King's Landing: you watched him train in the Red Keep's training yard and treated the small wound on his hand that he sustained that day. He wouldn't admit it to anyone, but his heart truly ached when he was away from his wife.
Entering the chambers he shared with you, Aemond was expecting to see you fast asleep on the large bed. But, to his surprise, he saw you sitting on the settee in front of the fireplace. When you heard the metal hinges of your shared chambers doors creak open and shut, your head turned toward the direction of the door to see who would enter your chambers at this late hour. It was none other than your husband, the one person you were waiting for when the messenger announced his return to King's Landing earlier that evening.
You stood up from the settee, sauntering over to Aemond and wrapping your arms around him, pulling him into your arms.
"Welcome back, my husband," you greeted him, nuzzling into his chest.
Aemond's body froze from the physical contact, your arms were clutched around his waist, not letting him go. You lifted your face from his chest and released one arm to brush a stray hair away from his face. "I'm glad you've returned safely, husband," you confessed, softly smiling at him.
"Shouldn't you be asleep, wife?" Aemond changed the subject, his nonchalant tone betraying what he truly harbored for you.
The optimism fell from your face as you untangled yourself from your husband, your gaze now fixated on the floor of your shared chambers. A sudden rush of humiliation came over you, especially when you simply just wanted to stay up and wait for Aemond. Your bed had been cold since he was away and you barely slept without him by your side.
"I thought you would appreciate it if I waited for your return," you admitted, rather reluctantly. "I...I haven't been able to find any sleep at all without you by my side."
Aemond's heart dropped into his stomach after hearing that you weren't able to sleep without him. Have you been suffering like this since he was away?
You now stood at the veranda that was outside of your chambers, gazing at the night sky when Aemond was in deep thought. Quietly sighing, Aemond began to dress himself into a lighter tunic and trousers that's more suited for sleepwear. He proceeds to head over to the veranda where you were standing, now that he stood behind you, Aemond wrapped his arms around your frame, pulling your back to his chest.
Perplexed by his actions, you tried to pry his arms off of you, but Aemond's grip on your frame was firm. Just before you could tell him off, he spoke first.
"I...have something to confess," Aemond sighed, placing his chin on your shoulder and nuzzling his face into your hair. "I truly yearned your presence while I was away as well, my dear wife. I too, have had trouble finding sleep, especially when you're not by my side."
Awkward silence falls between you both, until your hands were now gently on top of his. You managed to loosen his firm grip around you so you could turn towards him, wrapping your arms around his shoulders.
"It warms my heart that you yearned for my presence when you were away," you replied, biting your lip anxiously as you rested your head against his chest, listening to his heartbeat. "I...I thought you resented my presence..."
Aemond pressed his lips at the crown of your head as he brought you closer to him. "I could never resent you, my dear wife. You've done nothing wrong. You've taken care of me in the ways no one else can, and I was always afraid of hurting you. But now, I don't want to hold myself back from you, I've yearned for your presence more than anyone would ever know."
"I yearned for you too, husband," you mumbled. "The nights are cold without you by my side."
"Then let's go to bed, shall we?" he offered. "I will be by your side, shielding you from the chills of the night."
You nodded and Aemond scooped you up in his arms, carefully sauntering back inside of your shared bedchambers with you in his arms. He laid you down on your side of the shared bed, tucking you in with the heavy, embroidered blankets first before getting into the shared bed on his side.
Before Aemond laid down on his pillows, he took off his eyepatch and placed it on his nightstand. Once the eyepatch was off, Aemond finally laid down on the bed and you shyly shuffled toward him. His lips curled up into a soft smile as he extended his arms to pull you into his embrace. Your body instantly warmed up when you were in his arms, you eventually closed your eyes and rested your head against his chest, listening to his steady heartbeat as if it were a lullaby, lulling a babe to sleep.
It didn't take long for you to enter the land of dreams with your husband holding you in his arms, his gaze landed on your serene expression as he whispered:
"Avy jorrāelan. Ēdrū sȳrī, ñuha jorrāelagon. Kesan sagon paktot kesīr." (I love you. Sleep well, my love. I will be right here.)
Several people asked for a new Mafia!Aemond fic-just a short smutty story so here you are. I hope you all love it
Warning: SMUT! Oral(Fem Rec), Alpha/Omega Dynamics, Luke Being a Creep
I knew what they were of course.
I had met Helaena in college, her being the only other girl in my Entomology class (which I only took because I thought it would be fun) and we ended up gravitating towards each other to stay away from the immature boys. Neither of us really had any friends, both of us being the “weird girl” in our classes all our lives and we bonded over it. She had trusted me enough to tell me about her family being a part of the Mob and after such a secret I had trusted her to know that I was an Omega.
The first time Helaena brought me home was for Thanksgiving and I got to meet her whole family (who all loved me and I loved almost instantly). I quickly found that I couldn’t really shake off the attention of Lucerys when I was there. He seemed to have a bit of a crush on me-he was only 14 so I couldn’t really fault him for it but it was like being followed around by a needy puppy-all the while another set of eyes followed me as well. Aemond.
Aemond seemed to watch me closely for whatever reason but it didn’t feel creepy like Luke’s attention did-I didn’t hate the attention…it made me feel protected.
It was the second time that I visited that we found out why he was so drawn to me (and vise verse but he didn’t need to know that). Aemond was the only Targaryen Alpha in the family and he subconsciously knew that I was an Omega-even before my Christmas visit where Helaena swore I didn’t need to wear my scent blockers. Turns out she just wanted Aemond and I to know what we’re missing.
Once again just like the month prior Luke was following me around like a pup…until Aemond arrived that is-late Christmas Day as he had some family business to take care of. His growl announced his arrival and everyone’s attention was now his as he walked through the mansion, dropping a bag of presents that the kids all scrambled to. He stepped into the living room and straight up to me where he proceeded to bend down and take a deep smell of my throat at my scent gland. He pulled me to his chest and allowed me to take in his scent as well, baring his throat for me (something an Alpha only ever does for their Omega) and continuing to breathe in my scent.
‘You smell even more perfect than I could have imagined, Omega.’ He spoke, his mother gasping in excitement as everyone else stared on.
‘You’re an Omega?’ A smaller voice questioned and I looked over to see Luke still very close to my side which it seemed Aemond decided that he didn’t like, growling deep in his chest-like the sound of an angry bear that’s been woken up from hibernation too early.
‘Hush Lucerys.’ His mother snapped, pulling him away quickly but not quickly enough it seemed as Aemond’s attention was already on the small Beta that dared interrupt him meeting his Omega. ‘That’s enough Aemond.’ Rhaenyra spoke softly, trying to diffuse the tension, grabbing ahold of Daemons arm in fear for her son though I reached out, grabbing ahold of his hand before Daemon had to move and the Alphas eyes snapped back to mine.
‘I got you a Christmas present…do you want to open it?’ I asked, feeling the soft part of my brain taking over as I felt the presence of my Alpha for the first time, taking in his scent surrounding me. I tugged on his arm and he gave in easily, following behind me as I grabbed the gift and pulled him into the den and sitting in front of the fireplace as we all had earlier for the kids to open presents.
‘You didn’t have to get me anything.’ I handed him the box and he tore the paper off to find a fancy bottle of bourbon that his sister had told me was his favorite. ‘Omega…thank you…this is my favorite…I am sorry I don’t have anything for you in return. You and I will go shopping before the holiday is over and I will learn everything you like.’
‘You don’t need to-‘
‘Shh…if I want to take my Omega shopping then I will. No arguing. You will never win when it comes to spoiling you…let me spoil you Omega…’ he breathed, leaning forward and pressing his lips to mine softly. He pressed forward, shoving me back into the fluffy carpet and pulling my legs up around his waist as he leaned over me, kissing down my jaw to my neck. His tongue licked over my scent gland just as he tore my pajama top off, leaving me in just my sleep shorts.
Aemond kissed his way down my chest, suckling on my nipple as his hands pulled my shorts and thong off my legs. ‘Alpha…’
‘Mmm…Good Omega…gonna smell like your Alpha before you go back out there. My Omega…’ he growled softly, tongue peeking out and sliding along my slit, lips suckling on my clit and making me gasp.
‘Aemond! Y/n! The kids want to watch A Christmas Carol! You’ll have plenty of time to talk later!’ Alicent called and Aemond sighed.
‘Be Right Out!’ He shouted back, kissing over my clit again before reaching down and unhooking his belt, pulling his pants down enough to free his cock which shocked me instantly with how long it was. ‘Don’t worry Omega, Alpha will take extra special care of you tonight…right now you just need to smell like me…good girl.’ I whimpered as I heard that, loving the sweet words he whispered to me. ‘You like that? Hmm? Alphas sweet Omega, spreading your legs like a good little mate. Gonna fill your belly up so good-get your body working on our little babies. Alphas gonna rut you so good! Oh Fuck!’ He groaned as he pressed his cock into my pussy, pressing his hips forward and not stopping until he filled me.
‘Alpha! Oh Gods!’ I gasped, his hand covering my mouth as he looked down at me.
‘Shh…don’t want anyone coming in and seeing us…do we?’ Aemond warned in my ear just as he had watched the door swing open and locked eyes with Lucerys who froze mid step, eyes going wide. ‘Good Girl…letting your Alpha inside you already-such a Perfect Omega! And All Mine!’ He growled, pulling his mate against his chest and lifting me to him, sitting back on his knees to thrust up into my body-giving the Beta the perfect view of him thrusting up into his Omegas cunt without actually letting him see anything at all. ‘My Omega! Mine! Mine!’ He snarled, baring his fangs and burying them into my throat right over my scent gland, eyes glaring back up at Luke as he did and the boy retreated quickly as he watched the Alphas eyes bleed red.
‘Alpha…’ I whimpered, my cunt clamping down on his cock as my orgasm rocked through me, my claws sinking through his shirt and leaving little rips as they dug into his skin and I bit down into his neck a moment before his own end hit him and he growled, shoving his cock as deep as he could into my pussy and taking immense pleasure in filling my womb with his cum, feeling his body spill even more inside of me as he pictured my belly swollen with his babies, my breasts full of milk for him to suckle for the rest of our lives together.
‘Aemond! You were already late! Hurry Up!’ His mother snapped and my Alpha rumbled out a soft growl before nuzzling my neck and standing up, pulling me with him and grabbing his bag. He pulled a button up shirt over my head and gave me a pair of black boxer briefs that he pulled on me as he pulled himself out.
‘Where’s your bathroom down here? I just want to…clean myself up.’ I cringed, not wanting to feel his cum leaking out of me while I’m with his family.
‘No, No. You leave my cum exactly where it is. I want them to smell me on you-and I want my seed to take hold in this belly.’ He rumbled out a soft purr like noise as he wrapped his arms around my waist, settling his hands on my stomach. ‘By Christmas next year we’ll be right back here with a new baby to celebrate their first holiday. Maybe 2 if we’re lucky-twins do run in our family.’ He teased, kissing my head and taking my hand, pulling me from the den into the living room.
‘Y/n!’ The kids cheered as I walked in, having saved Aemond and I a spot on the couch that they dragged me to, Maelor planting himself on my lap as Alicent started the movie.
‘I expect her to have a child of yours on her lap this time next year.’ Viserys whispered to his son though I could hear him with how close I was.
‘Oh trust me, she will. You’ll have plenty more grandchildren to spoil in the future.’
‘Hmm. You’ll need a home and not that penthouse apartment, children need a stable house and so does an Omega-a house to make a home where she can be happy while you work. An unhappy-unfulfilled Omega is a recipe for disaster-a big house and a big decorating budget. Trust me. We can get you to work from home more except for important things-your new job with an Omega at your side is to grow our family bigger.’ Aemond didn’t respond to his father, instead leaning over and nuzzling me.
‘Do they all see me as a baby making machine now?’ I wondered and I could see Aemond was instantly offended by that.
‘I don’t care what anyone else sees. You’re my Omega and we will have as many babies as you want.’ He promised, kissing the side of my head. ‘Rest Omega. You have a long night ahead of you.’ He chuckled, pulling me close as the boy on my lap began to drift to sleep after this mornings early excitement. ‘You’re gonna make a wonderful Momma.’