LEON KENNEDY Resident Evil Requiem (2026) dev. Capcom

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LEON KENNEDY Resident Evil Requiem (2026) dev. Capcom
❀˖° — TENSION AND TENDERNESS.
dunk x travelling companion!reader.
dunk is hurt in a tourney and you're so sweet and gentle looking after him. but when you suggest giving him a bath, and you're in just your shift and rubbing him down and pressed close to him, dunk can't help his mind wandering.
3k+ words.
cw: fem!reader, no y/n, injury, you're so sweet and dunk feels so guilty having dirty thoughts (plot twist you have dirty thoughts about him too), dunk keeping his eyes closed while you bathe him cause he wants to protect your honour and is desperately trying not to get a boner (he fails), lots of sexual tension, humping, mutual masturbation because dunk is too hurt to fuck
a/n: switches between dunk and reader's pov with *** marking a change in pov
you'd watched, horror struck and helpless from the sides, as dunk had taken an injury in the last tourney. a bad one. his opponent's lance had splintered against him and lacerated his right side. his ribs were bruised, possibly one or two broken. nothing that would endanger his life, provided he was careful to keep the wound clean. that was what the maester had said and you'd anxiously taken it upon yourself to ensure the wound was kept free of infection and that dunk was made as comfortable as possible.
"let's go to the brook. i want to wash the wound," you said more than asked one afternoon at your campsite.
dunk nodded. he followed after you some ways away from and out of sight of camp.
***
dunk's usual approach to injury was stoic acceptance and gritted teeth, managing it on his own, but you would have none of that, insisting you change his bandages at least once a day and that you allow him to do everything for him while he rested. he knew better than to argue with you. and, truthfully, he liked having your attention, though he'd be embarrassed to admit it.
"you should take a bath," you suggested.
he shrugged as best as he could with his injured side.
"i'd like as not hurt myself. still can't lift my arm properly."
"i'll help you."
dunk felt heat bloom across his face. he fidgeted.
"i can't very well take a bath with you," he said.
"just keep your trousers on. i've seen you without a shirt often enough now." ever since you'd been tending to his injured side. "you're sweaty and dirty—"
"thanks," he tried to distract from his awkwardness with a jest, but you were having none of it.
"and i don't want any of that grime ending up in the wound. besides, the cold water should help with the pain."
he knew you were right. a bath would help. and it was sweet that you wanted to take care of him. made him long to melt and do whatever you told him, so long as you'd keep looking after him. and he couldn't explain to you why the thought of you and him and bathing made him nervous. made his mind wander. no, it was alright, it wouldn't be any different from all the times you'd already helped him with dressing and undressing the wound (which, admittedly, he already found distracting). he nodded his agreement.
then you started taking your clothes off.
"w-what are you doing?" his voice hitched and he wondered if he was dreaming of you, again.
you stopped, fingers at your loosened dress laces.
"i'm just taking off my overdress. it'll take ages to dry if i get it wet."
his mouth opened and closed stupidly as he tried to find the words to make you understand.
"i can't see you in just your smallclothes!"
"close your eyes, then," you said simply.
right, dunk thought. course. you had a solution to everything. you could help him and keep your honour intact. he couldn't tell you the truth that just the sight of you starting to undress and the thought of you in just your shift, pressed close against him, your hands on him, worrying about him, had his heart beating fast.
"go on then," he squeezed his eyes shut. "d'ya want me to cover my eyes with my hand too?"
"no. i trust you."
that made it worse for dunk. knowing you trusted him. trusted him to protect you on the road. to respect you. you'd once told him you didn't feel afraid around him like you did with other men. hearing that had made his heart swell. he'd do anything to make sure you always felt safe with him.
he tried to focus on his breathing as he could hear the rustle of your clothes being removed.
***
dunk nearly jumped out his skin when you touched his arm.
"sorry! didn't mean to startle you," you apologized. "i'm going to take your shirt off."
dunk was much taller than you, so he had to bend over for you to pull the material up and over his head. you went slow and careful so as not to catch on his bandages. once it was off, he stood upright again.
it wasn't the first time you'd seen him shirtless, but it was the first time you'd had the opportunity to really look at him. usually you had been preoccupied with tending to him or had felt too shy to look. but now...well, dunk wouldn't know that you were looking at him. maybe it was taking advantage, but you couldn't resist the chance to stare at him. so big and muscular and strong.
"somethin' the matter?" dunk asked and shifted uncomfortably, his face flushed.
"just folding your shirt!" you lied and hastily half folded, half bunched up the garment and threw it to the side.
you took his hand and led him into the stream. you stopped as the cold water reached your knees and guided dunk to sit. you sat beside him. dunk fidgeted and moved to start splashing water on himself. you stopped him.
"let me," you cooed. "i'll start at the top and work down."
dunk didn't speak, just nodded.
you had brought a rag with you. you soaked it in the water and used it to wet his hair. you ran your fingers through the sandy strands and shivered as you realized there was still specks of blood in it. your fingers took his chin and gently turned his head towards you so you could wipe his face. his eyes were squeezed so tight it almost looked painful. you almost laughed, but you could feel how hot his face was, and knew he was already flustered. sweet man.
"how do you feel?" you asked. "does anything hurt?"
dunk shook his head.
"you'll tell me if i hurt you?"
dunk nodded.
your hands moved around to the back of his neck. the muscles there felt hard and tight. you squeezed out the rag, sending water running down his skin and clearing away the sweat and grime. you then set the rag across your shoulder and pressed both hands to his shoulder blades. you increased the pressure and began to rub the stiff muscles.
dunk whimpered.
"is this alright?" you asked, worried you were hurting him.
dunk only nodded.
you moved so you could better reach his shoulders and back and began massaging downwards, rubbing soothing circles into the taut skin. and yes, you allowed yourself to admire. his shoulders were so broad and firm. his back so strong. your main concern was helping dunk relax, helping distract from the pain, but you'd be lying if you said you weren't enjoying rubbing him down.
you shifted over again so you could reach his front and began washing his chest. dunk groaned.
"did i hurt you?" you asked, worried.
dunk shook his head.
"dunk, why aren't you talking?"
***
dunk was in one of the seven hells. he could feel you beside him, all soft and wet, but couldn't see you. feel your warmth all the more starkly against the cold of the water. could feel your thighs nudge against his legs as you knelt beside him, feel flesh of your legs where the current had lifted up and pulled on your shift. he'd had to bite his lip, hard, at the thought the water might have turned the white fabric of your shift translucent.
and you were so gentle and so good to him. so careful and sweet in the way you washed him. so worried you would hurt him, as if you could hurt him. dunk wasn't much accustomed to softness towards him. ser arlan was his only family, only friend, and ser arlan had been good to him, but he wasn't tender in the way you were.
dunk was torn between wanting to relax entirely and let you tend to him however you wanted and the desire to lay you down on the riverbank and make you squirm and cling to him from pleasure. give his all to making you feel good. thank you properly for...well, everything. dunk had certainly imagined it often enough, late at night, when he just couldn't help himself. imagined laying you down on his cloak and taking you by the fireside under the stars. imagined laying with you in a real bed, all soft and comfortable, and grinding his hips into you until you were moaning his name.
and all that was before you'd begun to rub his shoulders. you kept asking him things and it was all he could do to nod or shake his head in reply. he was hardly breathing.
you were just being nice, he told himself. you were being kind. he ought not to think of you that way, not when you were always so sweet to him. cooking his meals. looking after egg. and you'd been so worried when you'd first seen the wound. told him you had been so scared he would die. it made him feel good. not that you were worried, but that you were worried over him. he liked having you fuss over him. it made him feel good.
like he had a wife.
only if you were his wife, and you were willing, he could pull you into his lap right now and put his hands on your hips and—
you started rubbing his chest and he couldn't help but groan.
fuck, he was so hard.
"j-just didn' want t' bother you," dunk offered in weak explanation for his silence, knowing it didn't make any sense at all.
he felt you move closer to him again, doubtless so you could better reach his chest. you must have been having trouble as you steadied yourself with one hand on his shoulder and, worse, your leg moved on top of his. you were so close to his hardness that he didn't dare move.
the way you rubbed his chest would have been nice, if dunk hadn't felt like he was going to pass out any moment.
you shivered hard. must have been the cold water. it was chilly enough for him, but you were smaller and it must have been much worse for you. dunk didn't think. his protective instinct made him put an arm to your lower back and push you closer to him, trying to warm you. only, now you were pressed flush against his uninjured side. he could feel your stiffened nipples poking through the thin fabric of your shift. dunk broke.
"i can't," he groaned, desperate and miserable. "can't do this."
"dunk?" you asked, voice all gentle and concerned, which only made him feel worse.
he rubbed his face. he kept his eyes firmly shut and even turned his head away from you.
"'m sorry. know you're being sweet and...and good to me and...it's wrong, 'm wrong, but i can't handle you being almost naked and pressed up t'me and touchin' me like that. i can't. i didn' mean to disrespect you, but i can't help where my mind goes. 'm sorry."
he hid his face in his hands. he felt horrible. wanted to curl up into himself. could you forgive him? would you leave him? how would he explain it to egg if you left?
"dunk," you spoke, soft and low. dunk didn't react, bracing himself for a thrashing he deserved. "dunk, look at me."
dunk turned his head back to you. he took a steadying breath and opened his eyes. a more primal part of him longed to turn his gaze on your body, but he needed to focus on your face, to see if you were enraged or hurt or, gods, scared of him. his eyes hardly even met yours before you leaned in and kissed him.
***
ser duncan the tall was the sweetest man alive.
the poor soul had looked so completely miserable and so terrified that he had upset you. as if the admission that he desired you didn't take your breath away and make your heart race.
your first kiss was gentle as you somehow found the strength to hold back. but when he kissed you in return, you couldn't restrain yourself any longer. your hand went to the back of his head as you kissed and you swung your leg so you could take a seat in his lap. you gasped in surprise when you felt his hard cock straining against his trousers.
oh, fuck, he was huge.
dunk moaned into your mouth. he pulled back, eyes wide and alarmed.
"'m...'m sorry..."
"dunk," you interrupted. "dunk, i want you."
that evidently gave dunk whatever assurance or permission he needed. he groaned and kissed you, hard. his hands went to your waist and yours' went to his shoulders. you positioned your core directly on his covered cock and you both moaned loudly. you started to roll your hips, but then dunk let out a little cry, this time not one of pleasure.
"ah, fuck" he groaned, voice low and deep in a way that would have driven you insane if it didn't worry you. "it's my ribs."
"let's get out of the water."
you both climbed out and sat on the bank. your hands went to his side, gently prodding, gaze intent on finding if anything was wrong.
"it's fine. just need t'be careful," dunk assured.
you straddled his opposite thigh away from the wound. you inched your way forward so that the meat of your thigh pressed against his cock. you rolled yours hips slowly, angling your body so your clit would rub against his leg and his cock would push against your thigh. it felt heavenly. it felt like finally getting relief. you grinded back and forth, agonizingly slow but so good.
dunk's hand instinctively moved to grip your hip and he gasped and jerked again in pain.
you halted immediately and dunk whined in frustration.
"i can't believe—" he panted, blue eyes looking at you with such longing. "i can't believe i get you sayin' you want me and climbin' in my lap all soft and pretty, an' i can't do a damn thing about it without hurtin' myself. the gods are havin' a laugh at me."
you giggled at that, equally miserable.
"we can stop. we can wait—"
"the problem is i don't want to," he breathed. "unless you want to."
"i don't want to."
you just needed to figure this out.
"you won't be able to lay on top of me. you can't sit up and let me grind against you without moving and hurting yourself."
"don't mean to grab," he offered apologetically. "you just feel too good."
"i like it," you smile. "or i would if i wasn't afraid of you snapping another rib."
he laughed and winced.
"no laughing either."
"yes, m'lady."
you continued thinking aloud.
"you could lay down and i could stay upright but—" you broke off. you felt your face turn hot and your thighs clench around his leg.
"what?"
"you feel really big and i don't think i could take you like that without help getting ready for you," you admitted, voice hitched, flushed and panting and squirming despite every effort to stay still.
dunk's eyes closed and he let out the most pitiable groan that nearly made you reconsider, even though you knew even just by feeling it through his trousers that his cock would truly split you apart.
the gods truly were laughing at you both.
"look, why don't you just lay back and i'll stay upright, and we...we just touch ourselves..." you whimpered.
dunk didn't look happy at the idea of not being able to touch you, but it must have been better than nothing. he nodded.
you climbed off his leg and helped him lie back. once you were certain he was laid down comfortably, you leaned in to give him another kiss before straightening.
you situated yourself back on his thighs towards his knees. your hands bunched up your skirts and pulled your dress up and over your head. you shivered at the exposure. dunk stared at your naked body.
"fuck, you're beautiful" he murmured. "wish i could kiss you all over."
you whined and angled your hips so you could grind your clit against his muscular thigh.
"wish i could make you feel good," he panted.
"you are making me feel good."
"properly. wish i could properly make you feel good." his hand slid down to palm over his covered cock as his eyes fixed on where your cunt slid against his leg. "w-want to give you everything."
"want that too, dunk."
he whined and fumbled at his trousers until he managed to push them down and free his cock.
the tips of his ears burned red as he blushed at being exposed under your gaze. you hardly noticed.
"fuck, dunk. knew you'd be huge."
he was massive. would he even fit inside you? seven hells, you could hardly wait to find out, once he was healed.
dunk squirmed in pleasure at your praise. you grinned.
"so big and pretty. know you'd feel so good inside me."
he gripped his cock so hard you wondered how it didn't hurt him. your own hand dropped down and began rubbing your clit.
"s-so good and full," you whimpered.
"i dream about you," he confessed, voice low and reverent. his breath hitched as his hand sped up. "all the time."
"i dream about you too" you admitted.
the finger against your clit moved faster as you grinded your cunt down on to him. it all felt too good and dunk was too beautiful and you'd been pent up wanting him for far too long. you came, hard, crying out his name as your thighs went tight around his leg. you calling for him sent dunk over the edge of his own white hot release.
your body went weak. you climbed off his lap and collapsed onto the grass beside him. dunk's arm was immediately on you and pulling you closer into his uninjured side. your hand rested on his chest and you could feel his heart racing beneath your fingertips. you both were struggling to catch your breath.
"did it hurt?" you asked, worried for his injury.
"if it did, i didn' feel it."
you giggled and nuzzled against his neck.
A Very (Un)Fortunate Turn of Events
dividers: @uzmacchiato | gif: x
Pairing: Ser Duncan the Tall x Targaryen Fem!Reader Summary: You, Princess and daughter of Prince Baelor, sneak away into the Ashford tourney and meet an interesting knight. Wine, dancing, and poor decisions follow. Word Count: 7.5k Warnings/Tags: 18+ MDNI! smut. i like my porn with a bit of plot. unprotected p in v. internal ejaculation. creampie. slight dom Dunk. outdoor sex (they do it on a wagon). oral sex (fem receiving). size kink. marking. dirty talk. praise kink. fingering. clitoral stimulation. breast play. hair pulling. getting caught (sort of). reader loves to tease him. alcohol consumption. slight canon divergence near the end. no use of y/n. reader is described to have dark hair for story purposes. not beta'd!!
Masterlist | AO3
Ashford Meadow had become a small city.
Colorful pavilions stretched across the field, banners snapping in the warm wind as horses stamped along the picket lines and squires hurried past with helms tucked under their arms. At the center of it all, the lists waited, freshly marked and already drawing crowds eager for the first tilts of the tourney.
You had slipped away not long ago.
Your family’s pavilion stood among the royal tents at Ashford, raised as soon as your party arrived—your father, Prince Baelor, insisting it was the most practical arrangement. Practical, however, also meant watchful servants and the quiet expectation that a princess ought never wander where no one could account for her.
Unfortunately for them, that had never been a rule you followed particularly well.
If anyone was to blame for your younger cousin’s wandering habits, it was probably you. Aegon had spent far too many afternoons in your company not to learn how easily one might slip out and disappear for a while.
You only hoped he and Daeron would arrive safely soon. They had not yet reached Ashford, and the tourney grounds felt strangely incomplete without them.
In the meantime, it was far too lively to remain indoors waiting.
You had chosen the simplest dress you owned before sneaking out—plain enough, if not quite so plain as you might have liked—to pass through the crowds without notice.
A light cloak hung over your shoulders, its hood pulled loosely over your head. You lacked the silver hair most expected of Targaryens, favoring your father’s darker coloring instead—though that alone was hardly enough to hide who you were from those who knew your face.
Still, the disguise served well enough. Most people paid you no mind, save for the occasional vendor who noticed you beneath the hood and offered a quiet nod or soft “Princess” before looking away.
You simply smiled and moved on.
For a while you wandered through the encampment, watching the bustle with open curiosity. The banners of great houses flew above the tents—lions, towers, apples, stags—bright cloth billowing over the crowd.
Soon your wandering carried you farther. The ground sloped gently toward the road that led away from the tourney field, where a narrow bridge crossed the shallow stream running along the edge of the grounds.
The bridge itself was busy, with travelers moving steadily back and forth between the town and the meadow.
That was when you noticed them.
The man himself was enormous. Even among the movement of the crowd he stood out—broad-shouldered and towering over anyone nearby, standing almost as tall as the horse at his side.
You slowed without quite meaning to, curiosity catching you there for a moment as you watched.
He held a shield awkwardly against his arm while a small bald-headed boy beside him leaned in, tugging stubbornly at the leather fastenings. You could only see the back of the boy’s head, shaved smooth and pale in the sunlight as he leaned forward, over the knight’s arm.
“Hold still.”
“I am holdin’ still!”
“You keep moving.”
“That’s because you keep pokin’ me.”
The boy gave one last tug, then straightened. He lingered for a brief moment with his back still turned before reaching for the mare’s reins.
“Well,” the boy said abruptly, “I should see to the horse.”
“What horse?” the knight asked.
“This one.”
Before the knight could protest, the boy was already leading the mare across the bridge.
“You just finished brushing her,” the knight called after him.
Within moments, both the boy and the mare had disappeared down the road beyond the bridge, leaving the tall knight standing alone at the edge of the tourney grounds.
You waited a moment longer, watching after them. Once the path was clear, you crossed the grass toward him.
He was still looking down the road when your shadow stretched across the ground before him.
At the movement, he turned and blinked, surprise flickering across his face at the unexpected sight of you.
Up close, he seemed even larger than he had from a distance—sun-tanned skin, rough hands, and earnest eyes that lingered for a moment on you before he gave a small, awkward nod. It occurred to you then that he was rather handsome, in a plain and honest sort of way.
“M’lady,” he said, dipping his head in greeting. “Beggin’ your pardon.”
The words seemed to leave a small pause between you, just long enough for your gaze to travel upward once more.
“You are very tall,” you said at last, rather abruptly.
A faint flush crept up his cheeks. “I get that a fair bit.”
“I imagine you do.”
For a moment, your eyes lingered on the worn armor strapped over him.
“You’re riding in the lists?”
“If they’ll have me,” he said. “Name’s Ser Duncan…the Tall.”
You echoed it softly, and a small laugh escaped you before you could stop it.
He blinked at you.
“Somethin’ funny, my lady?”
You shook your head quickly, though the smile was still there.
“No, no. It is simply… very direct.”
“Direct?”
“Yes.” You tilted your head slightly, amusement lingering in your eyes. “Most knights seem to favour grander titles.”
He rubbed the back of his neck.
“Well… it weren’t meant to be grand.”
“I gathered that.” Your smile widened just a little. “But I do appreciate the honesty of it. It’s accurate, at least.”
He looked faintly flustered by that and for a moment he only looked at you, as though uncertain whether he had been praised or gently made fun of.
“And you, my lady?” he asked after a beat. “Might I know your name?”
You gave him your first name and nothing more.
“Truly?”
You laughed softly. “It has been known to be true, yes.”
His ears went a little pink. “No, I only meant—” He stopped himself, seeming to realize he was only making it worse. “It’s just… someone mentioned it earlier. That’s the same name as the Targaryen princess.”
You only smiled. “Yes, I am aware.”
He looked at you as though he knew there was something in that answer he ought to understand, but before he could find hold of it, you tilted your head and went on lightly. “It is a very fine name. You need not look so stricken over it.”
That drew a crooked, embarrassed smile from him. Your gaze moved over him again, taking in the plainness of him, the worn tunic and the lack of any bright finery such as the other knights wore.
“You don’t look like the other knights here,” you said.
He gave a crooked half-smile. “That bad, is it?”
“Not bad…different.”
“Well… I reckon that’s about right.”
A small smile touched your lips. “I shall watch for you in the lists.”
“You will?”
“Perhaps. I do like to see how the stories turn out.”
“What stories?”
“The ones where princes and champions discover they are not the only ones worth watching.”
He blinked, clearly not expecting that. A faint flush crept up his neck as he tried—and failed—to think of something clever to say in return.
“Good luck, Ser Duncan the Tall.”
With that you turned, letting the movement of the tourney grounds carry you away again as you disappeared between the colorful tents.
Behind you, Dunk remained where you had left him, staring after you for far longer than he ought to have. The crowd moved around him, but he scarcely noticed. He looked plainly flustered now, a faint color still at his ears, as though the sight of you leaving had unsettled him more than your words had.
Eventually, he scrubbed a hand over the back of his neck, still looking toward the place where you had vanished.
“That was somethin’.”
Long after the cheers had faded and most of the folk had settled into drink and laughter, sleep refused to come.
The night air carried distant sounds of celebration, voices rising and falling, the faint strain of music, and the occasional burst of laughter drifting across the darkened field.
Near the center of the grounds, a small crowd had gathered around a puppet booth.
You lingered at the edge, half watching the painted puppets dance while the players recited some tale of Florian and Jonquil in voices grander than the figures themselves. Laughter moved through the crowd while a few children shrieked with delight whenever the wooden dragon appeared.
It was entertaining enough.
But not nearly as entertaining as the day had promised.
You had not seen him ride. In fact, you had not seen him anywhere all day.
Which was why the familiar shape standing a short distance away caught your attention at once.
He lingered near the edge of the crowd, his broad shoulders unmistakable even among the press of people, the firelight catching on the rough edges of his worn tunic.
He seemed wholly absorbed in the puppet show, gaze fixed on the little stage while laughter rose and fell around him.
Before you could think better of it, you stepped forward. He noticed you more quickly this time, turning at once, his brow furrowing before recognition settled across his face.
“M’lady?”
You stopped beside him, the faintest smile touching your mouth.
“Ser Duncan.”
“I was not expectin’ to see you again tonight,” he admitted, still sounding a little surprised.
“Should I take it you were hoping not to?”
“No, no that’s not— I only meant—”
He broke off, rubbing the back of his neck as he searched for a better way to put it. A small laugh slipped from you.
“I am only teasing you, Ser Duncan.”
That earned a short, sheepish huff of laughter from him, and some of the tension left his shoulders, though the color on his cheeks remained.
“I ain’t always the quickest with that sort of thing,” he muttered, glancing briefly toward the stage again.
“So I see,” you said with quiet amusement.
“What brings you out tonight?” he said after a moment.
“I was bored,” you said simply.
“It was entertaining for a time,” you added, nodding toward the tilts outside. “But not nearly as entertaining as the day had promised to be.”
His brow lifted slightly. “You mean the tourney?”
“I had hoped to see a certain knight ride today.”
“Well… there were plenty of them,” he said.
A quiet chuckle slipped from you at that.
“Yes,” you agreed. “There were.”
You let the words sit for a moment, studying him in the dim light.
“But I didn’t see you ride,” you said.
His expression shifted, the faintest hint of embarrassment touching his face.
“Well… you wouldn’t have.”
“No?”
“No.” He rubbed the back of his neck again. “They’ve got the tilts set by rank. Knights with banners and proper standing go first.”
“Ah. Yes, that’s right.” You had known that, of course, it simply hadn’t occurred to you earlier.
“And Ser Duncan the Tall?” you asked.
He gave a small shrug.
“Still waiting his turn, looks like.”
“What a shame.”
Your gaze drifted past him then, toward the lantern-lit press of tents and pavilions beyond the crowd.
“Are you thirsty, Ser Duncan?”
“Thirsty?”
“Yes.”
“I… suppose so.”
“Good,” you said, already turning toward the glow of the tents. “Come along.”
He hesitated.
“M’lady—”
You glanced back over your shoulder. “Do you often protest refreshments so solemnly?”
He looked caught between caution and confusion. “It’s only…ought I to be goin’ anywhere with you?”
That made your smile return. “To get wine from a tent across, Ser Duncan. Not across the Narrow Sea.”
The answer seemed to fluster him more than it should have. His eyes flicked once toward the crowd, then back to you.
“I did not mean—”
“I know you did not,” you said lightly. “Are you coming?”
“Well… I suppose one drink couldn’t hurt.”
You had led him easily through the movement of people until the stag banners of House Baratheon came into view.
Their pavilion was lively.
Laughter spilled from within, where a group of knights argued loudly over some point of honor that had clearly become less important with every cup of ale.
Ser Duncan slowed beside you, but before he could begin protesting again, you slipped through the pavilion’s open flap. Inside, the air smelled of roasted meat and spilled wine and ale.
A passing squire paused long enough for you to take two cups of wine from the tray he carried. You handed one to Duncan who accepted it slowly, still looking faintly uncertain.
“You do this often?” he asked.
“Drink wine?”
“Walk into lords’ tents like you belong there.”
You took a small sip.
“Only when I do.”
That earned a quiet laugh from him.
One cup turned into a second, then a third. Another cup that neither of you quite remembered accepting as time slipped by in easy conversation and careless amusement.
You had him talking about the road and the places he had seen. Ser Duncan answered honestly, and the more you laughed at his stories, the more his earlier awkwardness began to fade.
When he tried to ask after you in return, you offered only vague replies just enough to satisfy him, and not nearly enough to reveal anything about yourself you did not mean to.
At some point you shed your cloak, the warmth inside making it unnecessary. Most of the people around you were far too occupied with drink and laughter to notice who you were without it anyways.
The same could not be said for the tall knight beside you.
He tried very hard not to stare when the cloak slipped from your shoulders, revealing the close fit of your dress beneath. Still, his eyes betrayed him more than once as the evening wore on, catching where the fabric followed the line of you before darting guiltily away. You did not seem to notice—or if you did, you gave no sign.
Before long, someone began playing a fiddle.
A few people cleared space between the tables, feet thumping against the ground as they dragged friends into the circle. Someone caught Duncan by the sleeve before he could refuse, and soon enough you found yourself pulled into the same lively chaos of spinning bodies and clumsy steps.
He looked horrified for all of two seconds.
Then he laughed.
The music swept you both along over the packed earth as voices rose all around. You spun once, nearly losing your balance before Duncan’s hand found your waist. The span of it seemed to cover an absurd amount of space there, broad enough to steady you in an instant. A startled grin broke across his face when you looked up at him.
“Careful,” he said.
“You’re the one who stepped on my foot.”
“That was not intentional.”
“You did it twice.”
The rest of the evening seemed to run together. More dancing. More drinks.
Eventually, the air inside grew too warm. You stepped out through the flap into the cool night and paused there a moment, letting the breeze settle over you after the heat and noise behind you.
Behind you the canvas rustled, followed by a familiar voice. “I was beginning to think you’d escaped.”
You turned at the sound to find Ser Duncan stepping out after you, one hand still holding the edge of the tent.
“What? You didn’t think I’d leave you to suffer alone, did you?”
He snorted softly. “Would’ve been a cruel fate, that.”
Candlelight from within caught him for a moment as he stepped out beside you before the flap fell closed again, leaving the two of you in the quieter dark.
He came to stand beside you then, close enough that his arm nearly brushed yours. When you looked up, you found him already smiling down at you—faint and easy in a way you had not seen before. After a moment his gaze drifted past you, lifting toward the night sky overhead.
The wine had left a pleasant warmth in your limbs, at odds with the cool breeze tugging lightly at your sleeve. For a moment you simply watched the stars overhead before speaking.
“You’re not what I expected,” you said quietly.
At that, Dunk turned his head to look at you, a slight frown touching his brow. “What were you expectin’?”
“I’m not sure.”
“That’s not much of an answer.”
“No,” you agreed, your voice light as you turned to him. “But I do know this.”
He waited, watching as you faced him, his attention now fixed wholly on you.
“You are not much like the others here.”
“The others?”
“The knights. Most of them spend half their time trying to sound grander than they are.”
“And me?”
“You don’t.” A small smile touched your mouth. “It’s rather refreshing.”
He only looked at you, uncertain what to say.
“Perhaps that is why I noticed you at all,” you added.
“Because I wasn’t talkin’?”
“Because you weren’t trying so hard.”
The corner of his mouth twitched. “That’s a generous way of sayin’ I’ve got no talent for showin’ off.”
“No,” you said softly.
You stepped a little closer, tilting your head back to meet his eyes.
“It is a generous way of saying I prefer you as you are.”
He didn’t answer right away. His breath caught, faint but visible, and something in his expression softened before caution settled over it again.
“M’lady,” he said carefully.
“Yes?”
“You’re standin’ very close.”
Your smile was small. “Am I?”
He nodded once, though his eyes had not left yours. “Aye.”
“And is that a problem?”
A quiet breath left him, almost a laugh. “It might be.”
“Why?”
His gaze dipped briefly to your mouth before lifting again. He hesitated, as though reaching for the safest answer and finding none.
“Does your family know you’re out here?” he asked instead.
“No.”
Dunk glanced back toward the lantern glow of the tents. “You should probably head back before they start lookin’.”
You tilted your head slightly. “Are you sending me away, Ser Duncan?”
“I’m tryin’ to do the right thing.”
You glanced up at him through your lashes, a small smile curving your lips, brow raised as if to challenge him to explain.
He rubbed the back of his neck. “Rememberin’ who I’m talkin’ to.”
“And who is that?”
“A noble lady,” he said simply. “And me… a hedge knight who ought to know better.”
Your voice softened. “So that’s all it is? Your better sense?”
“No.”
You held his gaze.
“Then what are you afraid of?”
He was quiet, the faint music from the pavilions drifting through the dark. When he finally spoke, his voice had gone lower.
“That I might forget my place.”
Something in that made your chest tighten.
“Perhaps,” you said, your hands lifting almost without thought to rest lightly against his chest, “you have been worrying over that all evening.”
He went still beneath your touch, breathing a little harder, his gaze fixed on your lips.
You leaned closer—slow enough that he could have pulled away.
He didn’t.
Then it happened all at once. His hand closed around your waist and he pulled you forward, kissing you before either of you could think better of it.
The kiss was brief and careful, almost hesitant, as though he still meant to stop himself. When he drew back, it was only far enough to search your face, his hand still warm at your waist.
“You’ve had wine.”
“A devastating observation, Ser Duncan.”
That drew a quiet chuckle from him despite himself.
“At this point,” he murmured, “you may call me Duncan. Or Dunk, if it please you.”
Then the amusement faded, and he looked at you more carefully.
“I mean it,” he said, quieter now. “Is your head clear enough for this?”
You held his gaze. The warmth of the wine still lingered pleasantly in your veins, but there was nothing uncertain in your thoughts.
“Yes.”
Your hand slipped from his chest to rest lightly at his waist, fingers curling against the fabric there.
“And you?” you asked softly. “Is your head clear enough, Dunk? Is this what you want?”
He drew a slow breath. His eyes dropped to your mouth for a moment before lifting again.
“Since this mornin’ I’ve wanted little else,” he said.
Your smile was small, but it undid him completely. His grip tightened at your waist, and when he kissed you again there was no care left in it, only heat.
Your fingers knotted in his tunic as his mouth worked over yours, teeth catching briefly at your lower lip before his tongue slid against yours, warm and insistent, touched by the faint taste of ale.
His hand slid lower, closing over the curve of your arse as he squeezed, pulling a breathless sound from you that vanished into his mouth. He groaned softly in answer when your fingers slipped into his hair, tugging him closer, and he drew you firmly against him.
The full length of him pressed close, stealing your breath as the kiss deepened, until the evidence of his arousal was impossible to mistake.
The world seemed to narrow until there was nothing left but the warmth of him. Then laughter rang out from the tent behind you, sharp enough to break the spell and drag you back to where you stood.
You pulled back just far enough to catch your breath, lips tingling and pulse racing, but Duncan scarcely let the distance form. His mouth found your jaw at once, then the side of your neck, leaving slow, heated kisses in its wake that made your breath hitch.
When his teeth grazed the spot just beneath your ear, a shaky breath slipped from you. His hand slid higher, thumb brushing the underside of your breast through the fabric, and your knees nearly gave at the touch.
“Duncan,” you breathed.
He answered with a low hum against your skin and kissed lower, lingering at the base of your throat.
“We’re… out in the open,” you whispered, fingers threading into his short, sun-streaked hair. “Anyone could see.”
The words seemed to reach him slowly, dragging him back from whatever had overtaken him. He let out a low groan like the effort of stopping pained him, then went still, his breath warm against your neck as a soft sigh slipped out before he finally pulled away.
His pupils were blown wide in the dim light, mouth parted and expression rough with want, only barely wrestled back under control. Gone was the flustered knight who had stumbled over your teasing. What looked back at you now was all hunger, held in check only by the thinnest thread.
His gaze drifted past you, searching the dark between the tents as though weighing something. Then without a word, he caught your hand.
You let him lead you.
He moved quickly, leading you away from the brighter noble pavilions and around the backs of the smaller tents near the edge of the grounds, where the light thinned and the noise of the feast faded to a distant hum. Out there, the night felt closer, broken only by the soft stir of horses and faint music drifting on the wind.
Duncan stopped in a narrow gap between a supply wagon and a stack of casks tucked beneath a canvas awning. The wagon’s tailboard hung open, its worn wood faintly pale in the dark, and the space behind it lay deep in shadow—hidden from the lantern light of the nearby tents.
When he turned back to you, he looked no calmer than before. If anything, the short walk had only sharpened whatever had taken hold of him. Still, a brief, crooked smile touched his mouth at the sight of you waiting there.
“You are not so steady now,” you murmured.
His brow lifted slightly. “I was never steady.”
“You were trying very hard to be.”
He gave you a look that was almost pained. “You are enjoyin’ this far too much.”
“Perhaps.”
“Cruel thing.”
A quiet laugh slipped from you—cut short as he moved. One moment you were standing, the next his hand was at your waist, the other sliding beneath your thigh as he lifted you with startling ease and set you on the lowered tailboard of the wagon.
You barely had time to catch your breath before he stepped between your knees, broad and solid, close enough to steal the rest of your thoughts.
His mouth found yours again, slow at first, then deeper as his hands tightened around you. When he finally drew back, it was only far enough for his lips to brush the corner of your mouth before drifting along your jaw.
“This is no place for you,” Dunk muttered, his words rough and half-spent between kisses, the warning meant as much for himself as for you. “You ought to be in a proper bed…”
His mouth pressed briefly to your skin again.
“Not out here with me losin’ what little sense I’ve still got.”
You smiled against the brush of his mouth, fingers curling tighter into the rough weave of his tunic at his shoulders.
“Then perhaps,” you breathed, catching his lower lip gently between yours before speaking again, “you should stop trying to make sense of it.”
A low, unsteady sound escaped him, almost a laugh but roughened by the way he kissed you harder. His tongue brushed yours while the hand braced high against you tightened. The other slid lower, gathering your skirt in his fist and dragging it upward inch by inch, rough fingertips grazing the bare skin of your thigh.
“That’s poor counsel, m’lady,” he rasped against your mouth. “If I don’t stop now… I don’t know that I shall.”
His fingers slid higher beneath your skirt, tracing the sensitive skin along the inside of your thigh, pausing just short of where you ached for him to go.
“Tell me if I ought not,” he murmured right against your lips, barely breaking the contact.
You laughed softly, the sound swallowed by his next kiss.
“You ask that now?”
A flush climbed high on his cheeks, visible even in the dim lantern spill, though his hand stayed where it was—warm and possessive, trembling just enough to betray how hard he was holding himself in check.
“Aye,” he said, voice gravel-rough. “Now.”
You tipped your head, brushing your mouth over his once, twice, slow and teasing.
“No,” you whispered against the seam of his lips. “Do not stop.”
His breath left him in a rush. You eased yourself back across the open tailboard, drawing away just enough to shift farther onto the wagon. Dunk followed at once, climbing up after you, one hand catching the edge of the board before he leaned over you again.
As he settled above you, his free hand found the lacing at the front of your dress, thick fingers working the knot with surprising gentleness. The cord loosened with a soft hiss, and the fabric slipped from your shoulders to gather at your elbows, baring you to the night—and to him.
His mouth found your neck once more, lingering at your pulse long enough to steal your breath. The faint scrape of his stubble sent a shiver through you before he moved lower, following the line of your throat and collarbone until he reached the soft swell of your breast above the loosened neckline.
He kissed you there with parted lips, his mouth lingering as his breath warmed your skin, his tongue tracing the curve in a slow, deliberate stroke. The low sound he made against you sent a tremor through your ribs, your breath catching at the sensation.
Duncan drew in a rough breath, pausing only a moment as if steadying himself, before lowering his head again. This time his mouth closed over the sensitive peak, firmer, more certain. Your fingers slid into his hair and tugged him closer, urging him on.
He answered with a deeper pull, his tongue moving in slow, firm circles as his lips held fast.
A sharp jolt of pleasure shot down your spine, and your hips lifted instinctively, hooking around him as you drew him closer. The hard length of him pressed flush against you through his breeches and the thin barrier of your shift.
He groaned against your breast, the sound muffled as he sucked deeper. His hips rocked forward in answer, grinding that rigid heat along your core in a slow, heavy slide.
Without pause he shifted, his mouth finding your other breast with the same hungry care. The change drew a sharp arch from you, your back lifting off the sacks as a ragged sound slipped from your throat.
Then Duncan’s mouth left you with a slow, wet pop, the sudden loss of warmth sending a shiver through you. He pulled back just enough to ease the press of his hips against yours, and the absence of him drew a soft, needy whine from your throat before you could stop it.
“Easy, I’ve got you,” he murmured. One large hand settled on your thigh, his thumb brushing once in reassurance.
He began shifting lower, sliding down your body with careful strength. Broad shoulders rolled as he settled between your legs, hands finding the backs of your knees as he guided them gently over the wide span of his shoulders.
The motion raised your hips, and you gasped softly at the sudden shift, the cool night air brushing the damp linen between your legs before his warm breath chased it away.
Duncan paused there. The tip of his nose grazed the soft skin of your inner thigh. He looked up once more, eyes dark and unguarded—raw hunger mixed with something close to reverence.
Then he dipped his head.
His mouth found you through the thin shift first. A slow, open-mouthed kiss pressed directly to your center. The fabric turned wetter beneath his tongue as he dragged one long, firm lick upward, tasting you even through the linen. A low groan rolled out of his chest and thrummed straight into you.
He hooked one finger under the hem of your shift, tugging it aside with careful slowness until bare skin met his lips. Your hips jerked up toward his mouth, a broken moan slipping past your lips.
Then he kissed you there properly, warm and unhurried, tongue parting your cunt with gentle insistence. The first slow swirl sent pleasure flashing sharp and bright through you, your thighs tightening instinctively around his head, heels pressing into his broad back.
Duncan hummed softly in answer and set to work with hunger as his large hands held your thighs open and steady over his shoulders.
His mouth never faltered—tongue moving in slow, deliberate circles around your clit before sliding lower, tracing the slick seam of your entrance and gathering wetness before returning to that swollen bud with firmer pressure, lips sealing around it, sucking lightly in time with the slow lap of his tongue.
One of his hands slipped from your thigh, fingers trailing warm along the inside until they reached your core. He paused only long enough for his thumb to brush once where his tongue had been, before they lowered until his fingers found your entrance.
He pressed one thick finger inside you with aching slowness, letting the stretch bloom into pleasure before adding a second. His tongue never faltered as his fingers curled gently upward, searching until the pad brushed that sensitive place deep within.
Your hips jerked sharply upward, a broken cry spilling from your lips.
Duncan groaned low against your cunt at the sound, the rough vibration rolling straight through you and the noise seemed to unravel something inside you. Your fingers flew to his hair, burying themselves in the thick strands and gripping tight before giving it a sharp tug.
The action pulled another ragged sound from him, his shoulders shuddering as his groan deepened into something more desperate, muffled against your slick folds as the pull on his scalp sent pleasure arrowing down his spine.
The twin sensations built fast and sure, fingers sliding in and out with even rhythm, curling deeper each time to coax every shudder from you as your body began to shake.
You slowly felt the coil draw tight low in your belly, winding higher with every measured pump and every wet swirl over your heat. Your heels pressed into his broad back, thighs trembling around his ears, fingers knotting in his hair.
He sucked harder then, fingers driving faster, curling with exact precision against that spot until pleasure broke over you in sharp, pulsing waves. Your release crashed over you, thighs clamping around his head as you cried out, back bowing off the grain sacks, every muscle pulled taut and quivering.
He stayed with you through it, tongue easing to soft laps, fingers slowing gradually until the final tremor passed and you melted boneless against the sacks. Only then did he slip his fingers free and press one last gentle kiss to your mound before lifting his head.
For a long moment neither of you spoke. The wagon creaked softly beneath you, and somewhere beyond the tents the distant hum of the tourney grounds drifted through the night.
Then the corner of his mouth tipped upward. A small, crooked smile appeared—almost sheepish, as though he still could not quite believe he was kneeling there before you like this.
You smiled back, soft and easy, before your gaze slipped lower.
His breeches were straining tight now, the thick line of him pressing so hard against the laces it looked almost unfair how much space he took up even there. You sat up and reached out without a second thought, fingers brushing the worn leather until they found the ties.
His gaze dropped to your hands as your fingers worked at the ties, rough and worn beneath your touch. The crooked smile faded into something quieter, more intent, the last trace of humor slipping from his face as he followed every small movement.
His shoulders rose and fell with a slow breath.
You worked the knot loose, then tugged the laces free one by one. The fabric parted as you eased it down just enough, and he sprang free, the sight of him stealing the breath from your lungs.
He was thick and long, flushed dark at the tip, veins standing proud along the shaft. Not shocking in the way that surprises, not truly, not when the rest of him towered so large and broad, but still the sight of it made your fingers curl instinctively around him, testing the heat and the solid weight. Your thumb traced a slow line up the underside, feeling him twitch in your grip.
Duncan let out a low groan, his head dipping for a heartbeat before his eyes found yours again. His hands stayed planted at his sides, knuckles whitening where they clenched into tight fists, every line of him drawn taut.
“Gods,” you whispered. “You are big everywhere.”
A faint, crooked smile tugged at his mouth despite the flush climbing higher along his neck. He watched as your hand closed more firmly around him, moving once from base to tip in a slow, testing stroke.
The touch drew a shudder from him. His hips jerked forward a fraction before he caught himself, breath leaving him rough and uneven. His eyes never left your face—dark and heavy, fixed on every flicker of your expression as you explored him.
“Forgive me, m’lady,” he said hoarsely. “But I can’t wait a second longer.”
Before the words had fully settled between you, his hands found your shoulders. He pressed you back with eager strength—not rough, but urgent enough that your back met the rough weave of the sacks in a soft rush of straw.
Surprise stole your breath for half a heartbeat, and then his mouth claimed yours again, fierce and deep, the kiss carrying the faint taste of yourself.
You opened beneath him at once, your hands sliding up to fist the soft strands at the back of his neck and pull him closer as a startled sound escaped into the kiss.
All at once he tore his mouth away, breath coming rough and uneven. He shifted his weight, one knee nudging your thighs wider as his hand moved between your bodies. His fingers closed around himself, guiding the thick head to your entrance. You felt the blunt pressure there—hot and insistent—parting your slick folds just enough to tease.
A smirk curved your lips despite the sudden rush of heat pooling low in your belly.
“Ser Duncan,” you began, voice low and teasing, “are you always so—”
He answered by pushing forward in one slow, steady thrust.
Your words died on a sharp gasp as he filled you, stretching you wide and deep in a single burning glide. Your back arched, fingers digging into his shoulders as he sank to the hilt and stilled there buried fully inside you, every thick inch of him pulsing against your inner walls.
Duncan let out a broken sound, forehead dropping to rest against yours. His arms trembled where they caged you, breath coming in harsh pants against your mouth.
“Gods,” he rasped. “You feel… better than I dreamed.”
He did not move yet, giving you time to adjust to the overwhelming fullness, though the effort cost him visibly—muscles locked, jaw tight, eyes squeezed shut as though holding himself in place took every scrap of will he possessed.
The fullness of him stole every thought, leaving only the heavy throb where your bodies joined. You felt every ridge, every pulse, the way he stretched you to the edge of too much and yet exactly right. Your walls fluttered around him, drawing a fresh groan from deep in his chest.
Slowly, you rocked your hips, testing the stretch and coaxing him deeper still though he was already seated to the root. The small movement sent sparks racing up your spine.
Duncan’s eyes snapped open at the motion. The blue had gone near black with hunger as a low growl rumbled through him.
“If you keep that up I won’t last long,” he managed, voice rough.
You smiled through the haze of pleasure, your fingers sliding from his shoulders to thread into the damp hair at his nape.
“I want to feel you lose yourself,” you whispered against his mouth.
The words seemed to snap whatever last thread of restraint he held.
He drew back in a long, deliberate pull before driving forward, the motion pulling a sharp breath from you. Your body answered him too eagerly, hips lifting to meet him as your heels pressed into the small of his back.
Soft sounds slipped from your lips with each movement—encouragement he could not ignore.
His pace quickened. The wagon creaked with the motion, his face burying against your neck, breath growing harsher. One broad hand slid beneath your hip, lifting you slightly so each plunge struck deeper, harder, finding that place inside that made stars burst behind your eyelids.
You clutched at him, nails scoring lightly down his back through the linen, urging him on. “Dunk,” you breathed, the name a broken prayer. “Yes…like that.”
He answered with a rough thrust that jolted you both. His mouth found yours again, messy and desperate, swallowing the next cry that tore from your throat. The rhythm turned wilder, less controlled, the wet slide of him inside you echoing into the quiet night.
“Gods,” he growled against your mouth, voice raw and broken between harsh breaths. “So fuckin’ tight…”
Your walls spasmed hard around his thick length in helpless answer, gripping him so fiercely he hissed through clenched teeth. His hips snapped forward harder, punishing, relentless, the grain sacks shifting and rustling beneath you with violent force.
The wagon groaned under the onslaught, wood creaking in protest as he fucked into you with hungry need. You clawed at his back, nails raking down through wool and linen, leaving stinging trails that only seemed to spur him on.
He buried his face in the crook of your neck, teeth scraping over your pulse, then biting down—not enough to break skin, but enough to mark. A low, animal sound rumbled from his chest as he sucked hard at the tender spot, tongue laving the sting while his hips never slowed.
He snarled against your throat, hips pistoning faster, harder, the wet slap of skin on skin filling the air. One massive hand shoved under your arse, lifting you higher so he could pound into you at a brutal new angle. Each thrust ground the base of his cock against your pearl, sparks exploding behind your eyes until you could barely breathe.
Pleasure coiled vicious and tight, almost too much. Your body shook, thighs trembling violently around him, walls fluttering wildly as release barreled toward you.
“Duncan—fuck—I’m—”
He slammed in one last time, grinding deep, hips rolling in filthy circles that dragged every thick inch against your fluttering walls. His thumb found your clit again, pressing hard, rubbing fast and rough.
The world shattered.
Your release ripped through you in violent, pulsing waves. You screamed his name, back bowing off the sacks, nails gouging crescents into his shoulders as your cunt clamped down like a vise, milking him with desperate, rhythmic spasms. Tears pricked your eyes from the sheer force of it.
Dunk broke with a guttural roar. His hips jerked erratically, burying himself to the hilt as he came hard, flooding you with hot, thick spurts that seemed endless. His whole body shuddered violently, muscles locked and trembling as he ground against you through the aftershocks, wringing every last drop deep inside while low, wrecked groans spilled from his throat.
He collapsed over you, heavy and spent, his breath coming in slow, heavy pulls against your neck. For a long while neither of you moved. The wagon creaked softly beneath you while, somewhere beyond the tents, faint music and distant laughter drifted through the night air.
At last he lifted his head. His eyes were still dark, though softer now. Sweat had plastered strands of his hair to his brow. He brushed his thumb across your swollen lower lip and then pressed a slow kiss there.
“Gods forgive me,” he murmured hoarsely. “I meant to be gentler.”
You smiled, lazy and sated, fingers tracing the fresh red marks you’d left on his neck. “Don’t you dare apologize, ser. I wanted every brutal inch of you.”
His crooked grin returned. He kissed you again, slow and lingering, then pressed another soft kiss to your forehead and stayed there a moment longer.
Suddenly, a voice cut through the quiet.
“Ser Duncan?”
The call was young and uncertain, carrying from somewhere between the rows of pavilions.
Dunk went rigid over you.
You both went still as the quiet rustle of canvas and footsteps moving through the grass reached your ears. Someone was weaving between the wagons and tents, drawing closer with each step.
“Sevens help me,” he breathed under his breath.
“Ser Duncan!” the voice called again, closer this time.
He pushed himself upright at once, running a hand through his hair before realizing exactly how disheveled it must look. His eyes flicked to you, wide with sudden panic.
You were already scrambling upright, dragging your dress back over your shoulders and fumbling with the loosened laces. Dunk turned halfway away out of instinct, hastily tugging his breeches back into order and retying the cords with clumsy fingers.
The footsteps came closer followed by another rustle of grass.
Dunk glanced once toward the edge of the wagon, then back at you, his eyes still wide with embarrassment and disbelief.
You were just finishing with the laces of your dress when approaching footsteps sounded beside the wagon, then came to a stop. A small head appeared over the edge first, dark eyes squinting into the dim light.
“There you are,” the boy said with clear relief. “I’ve been looking every—”
He broke off mid-sentence.
Dunk sat stiffly near the edge of the wagon, looking only slightly worse for wear, though his hair refused to settle no matter how many times he tried to smooth it.
For a moment, the boy only frowned at him—then something behind Dunk caught his eye.
You had pushed yourself upright on the tailboard, sitting a little straighter as you gathered the last of your composure.
The boy’s gaze shifted past Dunk, and his eyes widened.
You froze the instant you recognized him.
“Aegon?”
He blinked at you in disbelief. “…Cousin?”
Between you, Dunk slowly turned his head, confusion spreading across his face.
You lifted a hand to your hair, fingers catching in the thoroughly tangled strands, and winced slightly. “What in the Seven Hells happened to your hair?” you asked, squinting down at him.
Aegon’s mouth fell open. “What happened to my—” He stopped himself, staring up at you more closely as suspicion crept across his face. “What happened to your hair?”
“Wait,” Dunk cut in, raising a hand slightly. “Hold on a moment. You two know each other?”
Aegon blinked at him, but Dunk was already frowning, glancing between you again. “How do you know my squire?”
Your head snapped toward him. “Your squire?”
Dunk nodded slowly, still trying to piece it together.
You stared at Aegon, then back at Dunk, disbelief slipping into your voice. “Your squire is the son of Prince Maekar.”
Dunk’s brow furrowed. “Prince—”
Aegon folded his arms with a small, miserable sigh. “…Yes.”
You gestured toward him helplessly. “Aegon Targaryen. My cousin.”
Dunk went very still.
Slowly, almost mechanically, his head turned toward you.
Aegon followed his gaze with grim satisfaction. “And you,” he said, looking back at Dunk, “are currently with the Princess—”
You sighed softly.
“Daughter of Prince Baelor,” Aegon added. “You know… Hand of the King. Next in line to the throne.”
The color drained from Dunk’s face.
For a long moment, he said nothing.
Then he shut his eyes briefly.
“…Seven hells.”
Whore
Dark!Ormund Hightower X Targ!Reader
Summary: After receiving a shipment of dresses from Dragonstone, you finally experience a moment of happiness and reconnect with your former self. TW: Emotional abuse, Psychological abuse, Domestic abuse, Misogyny / slut-shaming, Gaslighting, Age-gap relationship, Implied sexual coercion / marital sexual abuse themes
WC: 6K
The morning of the day everything changed began like so many mornings before it quietly, with the weight of someone else's choices pressing down on you before you had even opened your eyes.
You woke to the sound of the bells. Oldtown was a city of bells, something you had not known before you came here. They rang at dawn, at noon, at dusk, at every hour in between, marking time with a relentlessness that made you feel like you were living inside a heartbeat. The sound echoed through the stone walls of the Hightower, bouncing off the ancient masonry, seeping into your dreams. On Dragonstone, you had woken to the sound of the sea and the distant cry of your dragon. Here, you woke to bells.
You lay still for a moment, watching the light creep across the ceiling. The curtains were heavy but a single sliver of gold had found its way through the gap, painting a line across the stone above your head. You traced it with your eyes, following it from one corner of the room to the other, and tried to remember what day it was.
It did not matter. The days were all the same now.
You turned your head on the pillow. Ormund was already gone. His side of the bed was cold, the blankets pushed back, the indentation of his body already fading from the mattress. He rose early, your husband. He had a city to run and a household to command. You had learned quickly that he did not expect you to be awake when he left. He did not expect anything from you in the mornings except that you would be there with your legs opened when he returned.
You sat up slowly, pushing the heavy blankets aside. The air in the room was cool, carrying the faint, familiar scent of smoke from the fireplace. Your shift was wrinkled from sleep, twisted around your legs, and you smoothed it down automatically before swinging your feet to the floor.
You crossed to the window and pulled back the curtain, just a little. The view was spectacular, you could not deny that. The Hightower rose above the city like a spear thrust into the sky, and from your chambers near the top, you could see everything. The Honeywine River winding its way to the sea. The rooftops of Oldtown spreading out below, a patchwork of slate and tile and thatch. The Citadel in the distance, its domes and spires gleaming in the morning light. And beyond it all, the Whispering Sound, blue and endless, stretching toward the horizon.
It was beautiful. It was not home.
You let the curtain fall and turned back to the room. Your gown was laid out for you already. It always was. You had not chosen the dresses you wore since your wedding night. They simply appeared each morning, draped over the chair by the hearth, waiting for you. Today's was a deep charcoal grey with silver embroidery along the scooped neckline and long, tight sleeves. The fabric was heavy—it was always heavy—and the cut was modest. You had never worn anything like it before you came to Oldtown, and now you wore nothing else.
Your ladies arrived as you were washing your face. Three of them, all Hightower women, all chosen by Ormund's steward. They helped you into your dress without comment. The laces were pulled tight, the sleeves smoothed down, the high collar fastened close around your throat. You stood still and let them work, lifting your arms when they needed you to, turning when they asked. You had learned that it was easier to comply than to question.
"Your hair, my lady?" Ellyn asked, her hands already reaching for the brush.
You hesitated. "I thought I might leave it down today."
A pause. Barely a heartbeat, but you felt it.
"Lord Ormund prefers it up," Ellyn said. Her voice was neutral. Polite. The voice of a servant who had been given instructions and intended to follow them.
You opened your mouth to argue—it was your hair, after all, your head, your choice—but the words died on your tongue. It was not worth the fight. Nothing was worth the fight anymore.
"Very well," you said quietly.
Ellyn nodded and began to brush. You watched yourself in the mirror as she worked. The girl looking back at you was beautiful—you knew that, had always known that, had been told it so many times it had ceased to mean anything—but she did not look like you. She looked like a portrait of you, painted by someone who had only heard a description. The hair was right, silver-gold and falling in soft waves. The eyes were right, violet and clear. But something was missing. Some spark. Some light.
You looked tired. You looked pale. You looked like a woman who had been slowly fading for weeks and had not noticed until this moment.
Ellyn pinned your hair up in an elaborate twist, securing it with silver combs. You felt the weight of it pulling at your scalp, the familiar tension that always followed. Your mother had never made you wear your hair up. Your mother had let you wear it however you wanted—loose and wild when you were flying, braided with ribbons when you attended court, simple and unadorned when you were alone. Your mother had always said that you were beautiful because you were yourself, not because you looked like anyone else's idea of beauty.
You missed your mother. You missed her so much it felt like a physical ache, a hollow space in your chest that nothing could fill.
"There," Ellyn said, stepping back to admire her work. "Very proper, my lady."
"Thank you," you said, because that was what you were supposed to say.
They left you alone after that, retreating to their own tasks, and you sat by the window for a long time, watching the clouds move across the sky. Somewhere out there, beyond the city walls, beyond the Whispering Sound, beyond the Reach and the Kingswood and the Blackwater Bay, your mother was sitting on Dragonstone. Your brothers were running through the halls, laughing, arguing, living their lives.
And you were here. In Oldtown. Married to a man you barely recognized anymore.
The courtship had been so different. You remembered it now, sitting in the grey morning light, turning the memories over in your mind like stones. Ormund had come to King's Landing two years ago, representing his house at some council or another, and he had seen you across the throne room. You had been ten and eight then, young and shy. He had been thirty-six, a widower with four children, a lord in his own right. He had looked at you with such intensity, such focus, that you had felt like the only person in the room.
He had been charming. He had sent you gifts, books from the Citadel, rare perfumes from Lys, a necklace of sapphires that matched your eyes. He had written you letters, long and eloquent and full of praise. He had sought you out at feasts and tourneys, always finding a way to sit beside you, to speak with you, to make you laugh.
Your mother had been skeptical at first. "He is older than you," she had said, her brow furrowed. "And he is a Hightower. The Hightowers are ambitious, my love. They do not do anything without purpose."
But you had argued for him. You had told her that he was kind, that he was good, that he made you feel special. And eventually, reluctantly, she had agreed to the match. Not because she trusted him—you knew now that she never had—but because she trusted you. Because she wanted you to be happy. Because she thought that denying you this would only make you want it more.
And there was the political reality, too. You had known that, even then. The Hightowers were powerful. The Hightowers were influential. The Hightowers could tip the balance in the coming struggle for the throne. Marrying you to Ormund was a way of securing their loyalty, of ensuring that when the time came, Oldtown would stand with Rhaenyra.
You had been a gift. A guarantee. A hostage wrapped in silk and sent south with a smile.
You had told yourself it did not matter. You had told yourself that Ormund loved you, that he would be good to you, that the political reasons were secondary to the personal ones. You had believed him when he promised to cherish you, to protect you, to make you happy.
You had been so stupid.
The knock at the door startled you out of your thoughts. You turned, smoothing your features into the placid expression you had learned to wear, and called out, "Enter."
It was a servant, one of the many whose names you had not yet learned. He was young, barely more than a boy, and he bowed awkwardly when he saw you.
"My lady," he said. "A shipment has arrived for you. From Dragonstone."
Your heart stopped.
"A shipment?" You rose from your chair, and your voice came out breathless, eager, the way it used to sound before you learned to keep your feelings hidden. "Where is it?"
"In the courtyard, my lady. I can have it brought up to your chambers, if you wish."
"No." The word was too quick, too sharp. You forced yourself to slow down, to breathe. "No, thank you. I will come down myself. I would like to—" You stopped. You did not know how to explain what you wanted. You wanted to see it. You wanted to touch it. You wanted to hold something from home in your hands and remember what it felt like to be yourself.
"Of course, my lady," the servant said. He bowed again and retreated, and you were alone once more.
You did not run. Running would have been undignified. Running would have drawn attention. But you walked faster than you had walked in weeks, your heart pounding in your chest, your hands clasped tightly in front of you to hide their trembling.
The courtyard was busy when you arrived. Servants and guards and grooms going about their daily tasks, none of them paying much attention to the crate sitting near the stables. It was large, nearly as tall as you were, made of dark wood and bound with iron bands. And stamped on the side, clear and unmistakable, was the three-headed dragon of House Targaryen.
You stopped a few feet away, suddenly afraid to approach. It was silly, you knew. It was just a crate. Just wood and iron and the things your mother had sent. But it felt like more than that. It felt like a message. A reminder. A lifeline thrown across the distance between Dragonstone and Oldtown, telling you that you were not forgotten.
"My lady?" A servant—a different one, a woman with kind eyes and flour on her apron—approached with a slight curtsy. "Shall I have it brought to your rooms?"
"Yes," you said, and then, because you could not help yourself, "No. Wait. I want to open it here."
The woman looked surprised, but she nodded. "As you wish, my lady. Shall I fetch a crowbar?"
"Please."
You stood there, in the middle of the courtyard, while she went to find the tools. The sun was warm on your face, warmer than it had been in days, or perhaps it only felt that way because you were happy. You were actually happy. The feeling was so unfamiliar that it took you a moment to recognize it.
When the crowbar arrived the scent hit you first.
Jasmine. Your mother's perfume. The same perfume she had worn since you were a child, the same scent that had clung to her hair when she held you, to her gowns when you pressed your face into her shoulder. It was faint, barely there, but it was enough. Your eyes stung, and you had to blink rapidly to keep the tears from falling.
And then the dresses. They were packed in layers of fine paper, each one wrapped carefully to protect the delicate fabrics. You pulled them out one by one, your breath catching in your throat each time. Silk. Chiffon. Velvet so soft it felt like water running through your fingers. The colors were breathtaking, deep violet, pale blue, crimson, silver, black, gold. Lyseni cuts, every one of them. Flowing skirts and fitted bodices and sleeves that would flutter when you walked.
These were your dresses. These were the clothes you had worn before your wedding, before Oldtown, before everything. These were the clothes that made you feel like a Targaryen princess instead of a Hightower wife.
And then, at the very bottom of the crate, you found it.
The silver-grey gown.
You lifted it from the paper with hands that shook, and the sunlight caught the beadwork, and for a moment you forgot how to breathe.
It was the most beautiful dress you had ever seen. The bodice was gathered chiffon, layer upon layer of it, so fine and sheer that it looked like morning mist made solid. Tiny silver beads traced patterns across the fabric—flowers, vines, delicate spirals that caught the light and sparkled like captured stars. The neckline was a sweetheart, low and elegant, designed to frame the collarbones and accentuate the curve of the breasts without being vulgar. The sleeves were off the shoulder, sheer and flowing, held in place by jeweled straps so fine they looked like threads of starlight. The waist was fitted, structured, creating a dramatic contrast with the flowing pleated skirt below. And the skirt was layer after layer of soft, swirling fabric that would catch the air and dance with every step you took.
It was a dress for a princess. It was a dress for a dragonrider. It was a dress for you.
You held it up against your body, right there in the courtyard, and you could not stop smiling. You probably looked ridiculous—a lady of House Hightower clutching a gown to her chest like a child with a new toy—but you did not care. You did not care about anything except the feel of the fabric beneath your fingers and the sudden, overwhelming certainty that things were going to be better now.
"Would you like to wear it, my lady?"
You looked up. The servant woman was still there, watching you with an expression that was almost a smile.
"May I?" you asked, and then realized how foolish the question was. You were the lady of the house. You did not need to ask permission. But somehow, without thinking, you had.
"Of course, my lady," the woman said. "I think it would suit you beautifully."
You dressed alone. You did not want anyone else's hands on this dress. It was too precious, too personal, too much a part of you. You slipped it over your head carefully, reverently, letting the silk whisper against your skin. You adjusted the bodice, settled the sleeves on your shoulders, smoothed the skirt down over your hips. And when you looked in the mirror—
You gasped.
You were beautiful. You spun in front of the mirror, watching the skirt flare out around you, and you laughed. A real laugh, bright and surprised, the kind of laugh you had not made since your wedding night.
And then the knock came.
"My lady?" Margot's voice, muffled through the door. "The other ladies are asking if you will join them in the solar. They have heard about the dresses and are eager to see."
You took a deep breath. You smoothed your hands down the front of your gown. And then you opened the door.
Bethany gasped first. Loud and delighted, the way only a girl could gasp. "Oh, my lady! You look like a queen!"
Ellyn was more restrained, but even she could not hide her surprise. Her eyes widened, and her mouth opened slightly before she caught herself. "It is... very fine work, my lady," she said carefully. "Lyseni, I presume?"
"Yes," you said, and your voice came out stronger than it had in weeks. "My mother sent them. I used to wear this style at court."
The walk through the Hightower was different than it had ever been before. You had walked these halls dozens of times since your wedding, head down, eyes averted, trying to take up as little space as possible. But today, in your gown, you walked with your head high. You looked people in the eye. You smiled.
And people noticed.
Servants stopped to stare as you passed. Guards straightened, their gazes lingering on you longer than was proper. A young squire dropped the sword he was carrying and had to scramble to pick it up, his face bright red. You felt their eyes on you and you did not mind. You had been invisible for weeks. It was nice to be seen.
—
Ormund found you in the solar.
It was late afternoon by then, the sun beginning its slow descent toward the horizon, painting the room in shades of gold and amber. You were sitting by the window, reading your mother's letter at last—it was full of news from Dragonstone, gossip about your brothers, questions about how you were settling in—when the door opened and he walked in.
You looked up and smiled. "Husband. I did not expect you back so early."
He did not smile back. You should have noticed that. You should have seen the storm gathering behind his eyes, the tightness in his jaw, the way his hands were clenched at his sides. But you were still floating on the happiness of the morning, still wrapped in the warmth of your mother's words and you did not see.
"Where did you get that dress?"
His voice was flat. Too flat. The kind of flat that comes before a storm.
"It was in the shipment from my mother," you said, and you heard the happiness in your own voice, bright and fragile and utterly unaware. "She sent me dresses from Lys—the kind I used to wear at court. Isn't it beautiful? I have not worn anything like it since—"
"Stand up."
You blinked. "What?"
"Stand. Up."
You stood. The letter slipped from your fingers and floated to the floor. You stood, and he looked at you, and the silence stretched out between you like a wound opening.
"Ormund," you said carefully, "is something wrong?"
He crossed the room in three strides. He grabbed your arm and pulled you toward the door.
"You will come with me," he said. "Now."
"Ormund, you are hurting me—"
"Now."
He dragged you through the corridors. You stumbled after him, your beautiful skirt tangling around your legs, your jeweled straps digging into your shoulders. Servants saw you—you knew they saw you, you saw their faces turn away, their eyes drop—and shame burned hot in your cheeks. You were the lady of the house. You were a princess of the blood. And you were being pulled through your own home like a disobedient child.
He did not speak again until the door to your chambers slammed shut behind you.
Then he let go of your arm, and you stumbled backward, catching yourself on the back of a chair. Your chest was heaving. Your heart was pounding. And when you looked at his face you barely recognized him.
"What," he said, low and dangerous, "are you wearing?"
You stared at him. "It is a dress. I told you. My mother sent—"
"Your mother." He spat the words like they tasted of poison. "Your whore of a mother sent you a whore's dress, and you decided to parade yourself through my keep in it."
The word hit you like a slap. Whore. Your mother. He had never—no one had ever—
"Don't look so shocked." He stepped closer, and you stepped back, and the chair between you felt like nothing, like paper, like a wall that would crumble at a single touch. "You know what I am talking about. You know exactly what your mother is. The whole realm knows. She spreads her legs for every man who looks at her twice, and now she cannot even control her own daughter."
"That is not true." Your voice came out thin. Reedy. Nothing like the strong, confident voice you had used all day. "My mother is not—you cannot speak of her that way. She is your future queen—"
"She is a whore." He said it flatly. Calmly. Like he was remarking on the weather. "She is a whore who put bastards in the line of succession and expected the realm to bow. She has fucked her sworn shield for years—everyone knows it, even if they are too afraid to say it—and those Strong bastards she calls sons are proof. And now she has sent her daughter to me, dressed like a common bedslave, and I am supposed to be grateful?"
Your hands were shaking. You pressed them to your stomach, trying to steady yourself. "I am not dressed like a—I am not. This is just a dress. This is the kind of dress I have always worn. You saw me in them at court. You said I was beautiful. You said—"
"I lied."
The words stopped you cold.
"I lied." He stepped closer again, and this time there was nowhere to back away to. Your shoulders hit the wall. "Of course I told you that you were beautiful. That is what men do when they are courting. We flatter. We praise. We tell you what you want to hear. And you—" His eyes raked down your body, and you felt naked, exposed, like every inch of skin was on display. "You were a maiden then. Untouched. A prize to be won. I could look at you and imagine all the things I was going to do to you once you were mine."
He paused. His tongue swept across his lower lip, and the gesture made your stomach turn.
"Do you want to know what I really thought, when I saw you in your pretty little dresses? I thought about what was underneath. I thought about tearing them off you. I thought about bending you over a chair and seeing if you were as tight as you looked. I thought about how sweet it would be to be the one who finally got to touch what you were showing everyone."
"Stop—" The word came out as a choked whisper. "Please, stop—"
"But that was then." His voice hardened. "That was when you were a maiden. That was when you were untouchable. Now you are my wife. Now you wear my name and live in my house and sleep in my bed. And my wife does not dress like a whore."
"I am not a whore." Tears were burning in your eyes now, hot and stinging. You blinked rapidly, trying to hold them back. "I am a Targaryen princess. I am a dragonrider. I am your wife, and I have done nothing wrong—"
"Nothing wrong?" He laughed, and it was an ugly sound. Ugly and cruel and nothing like the warm, charming laugh you remembered from the courtship. "You paraded yourself through the entire keep in a dress that shows your tits to every man with eyes. Guards stared at you. Servants stared at you. My squire -your own uncle- dropped his sword because he was too busy looking at your body to remember what he was doing. And you think you have done nothing wrong?"
You had not known about the squire. You had not noticed. But it did not matter. It would not have mattered. He had made up his mind about what you were, and nothing you said would change it.
"It is just a dress," you whispered. "It made me feel beautiful. It made me feel like myself. I have been wearing your dresses for weeks—your grey dresses, your heavy fabrics—and I have not complained. I have not asked for anything. I just wanted one thing that was mine. One thing that felt like home."
"Home?" He sneered the word. "You mean Dragonstone? You mean your mother's castle, where she hides her bastards and her lovers and pretends she is fit to rule? That is not home. That is a den of sin and corruption, and you are lucky I took you out of it."
"Lucky?" The word escaped you before you could stop it, high and incredulous. "You think I am lucky? You think I am grateful for this? For being dragged through the corridors like a prisoner? For being called a whore in my own home? For being married to a man who—"
"Who what?" His voice dropped to a dangerous murmur. "Who what? Say it."
You opened your mouth. You closed it. The words were there, burning on your tongue, but you could not make yourself speak them. You were afraid. You were so afraid.
"Who does not love you?" He finished the sentence for you, and his smile was terrible. "Is that what you were going to say? That I do not love you? Let me tell you something, little wife. I love you more than you deserve. I love you despite your mother, despite your reputation, despite the rumors about your parentage. Everyone knows you are not Laenor's daughter—no more than the Strong bastards are. And now you come here, dressed like a whore, and expect me to be grateful?"
"My father loved me." Your voice cracked, and the tears spilled over at last. Hot and wet, tracking down your cheeks. "Laenor Velaryon raised me. He was my father. And you will not speak of him that way."
"Laenor Velaryon was a fool." Ormund's lip curled. "He raised another man's bastards because he was too weak to do anything else. Just as your mother is too weak to control her own desires. And you are just like her. Weak. Vain. Desperate for attention. You think you are special because you have a dragon? You are nothing. You are a spoiled princess who has never had to work for anything, who has never had to serve anyone, who does not know the first thing about being a wife."
"I am not—"
"You are a piece of property." He stepped forward, and his hand came up, and for one terrible moment you thought he was going to hit you. But he did not. He touched your face instead, his thumb tracing the line of your jaw with a gentleness that made your skin crawl. "My property. Your body belongs to me now. Your hair, your face, your tits, your cunt—all of it. You do not get to decide what you wear or what you show. You do not get to decide anything. You are mine. And I will not have my property parading around like a common whore."
"Let go of me."
You did not recognize your own voice. It was quiet and cold and utterly steady, nothing like the sobbing, broken girl you felt like inside.
He did not let go. His grip on your jaw tightened, just slightly. Just enough to remind you of his strength.
"You do not give me orders," he said softly. "You are my wife. You obey me. You do what I say, when I say it. And if you cannot do that—" His thumb pressed harder, digging into the soft flesh beneath your cheekbone. "Then I will teach you. I will teach you to be grateful for my attentions. I will teach you to be the wife I need you to be. And by the time I am finished, you will thank me for it."
"You are hurting me."
"I am trying to help you. But you are making it so difficult." He released your jaw, finally, and stepped back. His eyes dropped to the dress. To the silver beadwork. To the sweetheart neckline that he hated. "Take it off."
Your blood ran cold. "What?"
"Take. It. Off."
You did not move. You could not move. Your body was frozen, your mind screaming, your heart pounding so hard you could feel it in your throat.
"Please," you whispered. "Please, Ormund, I will not wear it again. I will put it away. I will wear whatever you want. Just please—"
"Take it off, or I will take it off for you."
You raised your hands. Your fingers were shaking so badly you could barely grip the fabric, but you tried. You tried to be good. You tried to do what he wanted. The jeweled straps slipped from your shoulders, and the bodice sagged, and then—
His patience ran out.
He grabbed the neckline with both hands and pulled.
The sound the fabric made was like a scream. A high, rending shriek of tearing silk, and then the bodice was splitting, the beadwork scattering in all directions like falling stars. You cried out and tried to pull away, but he was too strong. His hands found the seams and pulled, and the dress came apart in his grip like paper. Chiffon shredded. Beads flew. The jeweled straps snapped, the tiny stones scattering across the floor and skittering into corners where you would never find them again.
"No, no, no—" You were sobbing now, your hands batting uselessly at his arms, your voice rising to something that was almost a scream. "Please stop, please, it was a gift, it was from my mother, please—"
"Your mother." He grabbed the skirt and tore it from the waist, the pleated fabric ripping with a sound like thunder. "Your mother should have taught you how to be a wife. Instead she taught you how to be a whore."
"My mother—" You could barely speak. The words were choked with tears, your throat raw from screaming. "My mother loves me. She sent me this because she loves me—"
He laughed. It was the cruelest sound you had ever heard.
"Your mother sent you here because she wanted to get rid of you. Because you were inconvenient. Because she has her bastards to think about now, her precious Strong boys, and there was no room left for you. You were a spare. A surplus. A problem to be solved. And I solved it. I took you off her hands when no one else would."
That was when you slapped him.
You did not think about it. You did not plan it. Your hand just moved, arcing through the air and catching him across the cheek with a crack that echoed through the room. You stared at him, your palm stinging, your breath coming in ragged gasps. And he stared back at you, his head turned slightly from the force of the blow, his cheek already reddening. For a long, terrible moment, neither of you spoke.
Then he turned back to you, and his eyes—
His eyes were dead. Empty. Two pits of black that looked at you without recognition, without humanity, without anything at all.
"You should not have done that," he said quietly.
And then he reached for the rest of the dress.
You did not fight him anymore. You could not. Your body had gone limp, your strength drained, your spirit crushed into something small and broken. You stood there, shaking and crying, as he tore the remaining fabric from your body. The skirt fell away in ribbons. The underskirt followed, ripped from the waistband like paper. And then you were standing in nothing but your shift, your arms wrapped around yourself, your shoulders bare and trembling.
He stepped back. His chest was heaving. His face was flushed. And in his hands, he held the ruins of your dress. He held it up. Looked at it. Then looked at you.
Then he walked to the fireplace.
"No." The word came out as a broken whisper. "No, please. Please, Ormund. Please don't."
He threw it into the flames.
You watched it burn. The silk caught immediately, curling and blackening like a living thing in its death throes. The beadwork melted, silver droplets running down the fabric like tears. The chiffon vanished in a flash of orange, there and gone, consumed by the fire that had never felt warm, not once, not since you arrived in this cold, cold city.
You sank to your knees. You could not stop crying. Your whole body was wracked with sobs, your shoulders heaving, your hands pressed to your face to muffle the sounds. You were kneeling on the cold stone floor in nothing but your shift, surrounded by scattered beads and torn silk and the ashes of the only thing that had made you feel like yourself in weeks. And you had never felt so small in your entire life. You had never felt so alone.
And then he was there.
He knelt in front of you. His hands found your face, cupping your cheeks, tilting your head up so that you had to look at him. His expression had changed completely. The fury was gone. The cruelty was gone. In their place was something that looked almost like tenderness. Almost like love.
"See?" he said softly. Gently. As if he were comforting a frightened child. "See what you made me do?"
You stared at him through blurry eyes. You could not speak. You could not think.
"I do not want to be like this." His thumbs brushed your tears away, tracing gentle paths across your cheekbones. "I want to be a good husband to you. I want to love you, and cherish you, and protect you. But I cannot do that when you dress like a whore. You make me angry. You push me to do things I do not want to do."
You shook your head. It was a tiny, weak movement, barely perceptible. But he saw it.
"Yes," he said, and his voice was so certain, so utterly convinced of its own righteousness. "It is your fault. If you had worn what I told you to wear, if you had been a good wife, if you had simply obeyed me, none of this would have happened. I would not have had to raise my voice. I would not have had to rip the dress. You made me do this."
"I did not—" Your voice was wrecked, hoarse, barely audible. "I did not make you do anything."
"You did." He stroked your hair now, smoothing it back from your tear-stained face with a gentleness that made your stomach turn. "You know you did. You knew how I felt about those dresses. You knew I did not want you wearing them. And you wore it anyway, in front of everyone, flaunting yourself like a common—" He stopped himself. Took a breath. Softened his voice even further. "You chose to disobey me. And actions have consequences. You understand that, don't you?"
You did not answer. You could not answer. You were trapped in a nightmare, and the monster was stroking your hair and telling you it was all your fault.
"But I forgive you." He pressed a kiss to your forehead, and his lips were warm and dry, and you wanted to scrub the feeling of them off your skin. "I will always forgive you. Because I love you. Do you understand that? Everything I do, I do because I love you. If I did not love you, I would not care what you wore. I would not care who looked at you. But I do love you. I love you so much it drives me mad. And that is why I get angry. That is why I cannot control myself sometimes. Because I love you, and I cannot bear to see you make yourself look like a whore."
You were shaking your head again, but you did not know what you were denying. The words coming out of his mouth? The gentleness of his touch? The horrible, impossible reality of everything that had just happened?
"Say you are sorry," he said.
"I—"
"Say it." His grip on your chin tightened, just a fraction. Just enough to remind you that he was still in control. "Say you are sorry for what you did."
You were sorry. You were so sorry. You were sorry you had worn the dress. You were sorry you had opened the crate. You were sorry you had been happy, even for a moment. You were sorry you had ever come to Oldtown, ever said yes to his courtship, ever believed him when he looked at you with hunger in his eyes and told you it was love.
"I am sorry," you whispered.
The words tasted like ash.
"Good girl." He kissed your forehead again. "Good girl. I forgive you."
He pulled you into his arms. He held you against his chest, one hand cradling the back of your head, and you could feel his heartbeat. Steady. Calm. Satisfied.
"See?" he murmured into your hair. "It is over now. It is over. I love you. I love you so much."
You could smell the smoke from the fireplace. The ashes of your dress. The death of the girl you used to be.
"I will always take care of you," he said. "I will always forgive you. But you have to learn. You have to be better. You have to be the wife I need you to be. Do you understand?"
You nodded against his chest. You did not know what else to do.
"Say it."
"I understand." Your voice did not sound like your own. It was hollow. Empty. A shell of the voice that had laughed in the dragonpit this morning.
"Good girl." He stroked your hair. "Good girl. We are going to be happy together. I promise you. We are going to be so happy."
He held you there, in front of the dying fire where your dress was ash, and you cried into his chest until you had no tears left and when he finally pulled back and tilted your face up to look at him, you let him see the tears drying on your cheeks and the emptiness in your eyes, and you did not flinch when he smiled.
"There," he said. "That is better. That is my good, obedient wife."
He kissed you. Softly. Tenderly. The kiss of a lover, not a monster.
And you did not pull away.
Because you were learning. You were learning to be the wife he needed you to be. You were learning to smile when you wanted to scream, to nod when you wanted to fight, to say "I love you" when what you really meant was "I am afraid of you."
It was easier than admitting that you had made the worst mistake of your life, and you did not know how to undo it.
i wanna smooch very freckle on his pretty face
holy shit u guys…. saw this on twitter and immediately thought of DAERON
Hidden Presence
Maekar Targaryen x fem!servant!reader
[Part 2] soon
summary: Deep at heart Maekar is furious that it took him so long to finally meet the woman that everyone seems so suspiciously fond of. Nothing is worse than the fact that his brother beat him to it though.
tags: reader pretty much owns the kitchens, maekar is jealous and annoying, the maekarlings are menaces, we don't really like aerion in this house, the princes are probably more attentive than they would be, mentions of traumatic past but in a joking way (it's still cruel though if you ask me), maekar will probably protect reader for the rest of their lives. English is not my first language and it's written in the middle of the night before a final exam lol. word count: 3.6k+
a/n: i love sam spruell, he's so handsome... and I missed maekar fics 🫶 I have my English oral exam tomorrow, and I'm so scared omfg...
Many years ago Maekar used to feel bad for eavesdropping on his children’s conversations. It was back when he looked at Daeron with pride and believed that Aerion is truly a wholesome child. Surely, he was blinded by a father’s love.
Well, he learned the hard way that his offspring could be blithering idiots when they didn’t try, and if he didn’t peek into their minds, they would do something stupid sooner or later. Maekar made his choice – he preferred to be feared and hated by the people he loved, rather than have their trust and watch them fall into an endless pit that he wouldn’t be able to get them out of.
But to be completely honest, he could have made the listening too much of his routine. He lingered near the doorstep, held his breath, stayed still and he did it all without really thinking about it. Yet, he felt like now he had a reasonable idea. He had to be sure, and that was it.
“Didn’t she seem worried to you when you last spoke with her?”
Aegon’s sweet voice made his father frown; not in surprise but a sort of disappointed confirmation. His youngest son spoke to his brothers and Maekar could almost imagine the boy’s concerned face when he fought for the attention of others. He probably didn’t even know that his father could recognize worry on his expression within seconds.
Only now Maekar didn’t see his face.
“I don’t speak with her. I couldn’t care less,” Aerion snapped immediately, making his oldest sibling chuckle deeply. “What?” He asked with a fierce expression, voice almost daring Daeron to say something brave.
“Nothing, just that you spend the most time with her out of all of us,” the oldest prince said nonchalantly, yet with a small grin on his face. He was clearly just using a chance to pick on his brother’s skin. “Someone might wonder what are you doing there if you don’t speak,” he mocked.
Even from the place behind a corner Maekar could hear a chair squeak announcing Aerion’s anger.
“Are you suggesting something, brother? Say it, and we will sort it like–”
“I really think something is wrong,” Aegon cut in, clearly not interested in his brothers’ brawl. “Daeron, didn’t you notice it too?”
“I think, dearest brother, that there is nothing to be worried about,” he assured, ignoring Aerion who wasn’t about to let go that easily.
“Answer me, you–”
“She could have this realm under her feet if she wanted, Egg,” Daeron assured jokingly, looking at his youngest brother. “She is fine. You shouldn’t let it bother you.”
“You really think so?”
“Truly. Y/n is a capable woman…”
“Bullshit,” Aerion hissed, annoyed by his brothers’ ignorance, “she’s just a fucking cook.”
“Shut up, Aerion!” The brothers whined in union at the same time.
Aerion’s face turning red made Daeron laugh hoarsely in this drunken way of his, but it managed to scare Egg. Instead of hiding behind his brother’s back he decided to flee at once and run from the chamber.
He jumped off his chair, but just after he went through the door his little body was stopped by a thud. He would fall back from the impact if not for the strong grip of his father. “Where are you rushing so carelessly, boy?”
“I–”
“Speak the truth.”
Aegon grimaced and looked behind his shoulder, calming down when he noticed that Aerion was busy with screaming at Daeron. “Away from my brothers,” he offered honestly.
Maekar was left with nothing to do but sigh and let him go, smoothing the clothing over his shoulders.
It was an interaction that would make any father proud of his sons, but at least Maekar’s point was proven. His children were in touch with someone who he didn’t know, and he wanted to change that as soon as possible.
It wasn’t the first time he heard about you – a woman from the kitchens that raised more attention than a servant ever should. Still, everyone was suspiciously quiet when asked which only made Maekar more cautious.
He coughed a glimpse of you once, sitting with his youngest son. You handed the boy a big cup of warm milk and held a soft conversation. Somehow Maekar found some kindness of a father in himself and didn’t enter the room, knowing it would startle Aegon.
When he overheard your name from his eldest’s mouth, he decided that he’s got enough of unconsciousness.
“Who the hell is Y/n, hm?” He asked a man who leaned over his shoulder to refill his cup with wine. The demanding tone was supposed to suggest that Maekar already knew something and the servant was left with no choice but to cave in and speak up.
A poor scheme, true, but Maekar was in a dead end anyway. It didn’t work very well.
He took a step back to not bother the prince, made big eyes and stood there like a pillar until Maekar cleared his throat suggestively. “My prince?”
“Y/n,” he repeated, no less firm. “Do you know a woman of that name?”
“I…”
He was wondering – clearly thinking too hard than Maekar would like. Too hard to believe it was genuine.
“Cat got your tongue?” He snapped. “Fuck’s sake… You’re all turning blind and mute whenever someone tries to get something coherent out of you. Get out of my sight.”
“At once, my prince.”
He heard his own sons talk about a woman from the kitchens like she was some kind of prophet, a secret presence that they all knew and guarded like it needed sacred protection. Maekar would be a liar if he said that he raised his children with great respect for servants… That’s why it was so strange.
He didn’t like it, not at all.
His bones ached reminding him he wasn’t the youngest anymore and a cruel headache tortured him ever since he left the council meeting. A tired old man, that’s how he felt, not to mention that he was also annoyed… But when he wasn’t annoyed these days?
No matter how weary and in a bad mood he was, he prioritized his children’s safety, of course. It was late in the evening when he finally found time to march into the kitchens. It was only half-true, actually. He knew that his kids always visited you after dawn, so he only thought to do the same. He wore a face worth of a battleground, not an encounter with a servant.
The fireplace crackled, and the cozy sound only made him more aware of how he missed his bed. His bed that would be empty, cold and slightly unwelcoming, just like it had been for a long time— Gods, it was not a time to think about such things.
He slipped inside unnoticed, like a shadow hiding in the dark. He set his careful eyes on you, and to his surprise the sight was nothing but ordinary. You strolled around the room, breaking the silence with a soft hum. Your long sweater swayed behind you when you moved, and Maekar couldn't help but think that you did it on purpose.
He never really cared about visiting the kitchens before, and now a look at the woman in such a place makes him feel something domestic crawl over his back. Strange, since it was nothing he knew from his everyday life.
His carefulness was back on point when he noticed that your behaviour changed. You didn’t see him, but you could sense that something shifted in the air. You flicked some flour from your hands and stopped in one place, looking at the dark corner that seemed to be staring at you.
Then you looked at the door that was open ajar and your expression changed. Maekar watched it like the greatest theater play. Your eyebrows moved, and you pouted – he knew that face from his daughters. They never failed to show it to him whenever he promised them something and couldn’t keep his word.
“My prince?” You spoke up, but Maekar didn’t move. Silence seemed to annoy you. You rolled your eyes and turned your back to him, going back to what you were doing. “Baelor, if that’s a jest…” you muttered between adding a splash of milk to a bowl and starting to mix it.
That surprised Maekar. He wanted to scoff, perhaps scold you for such boldness. Say that it was ‘his grace’ for someone like you, call you mad for thinking that the heir to the iron throne would make his way here.
Instead, he took a steady step out of the shadow. “Are you waiting for my brother?” He asked like it was offensive to him.
You turned to him immediately, but he saw no fear, just surprise.
“My prince,” you greeted him and smiled like you were caught doing something silly. “Not waiting, no. Just… Prince Baelor often shows up after attending the council. That’s why I expected to see him.”
He needed a moment to understand the words.
“Baelor shows up in the kitchens after attending the council?” Maekar repeated like a tease.
At least he didn’t sound like you were committing treason in front of his eyes anymore.
You shrugged, slightly annoyed now. “We all do get hungry, don’t we?” You offered, and Maekar’s brows raised.
Oh, he wasn’t having it. It was wrong and his children were involved… You had to be someone vicious, someone of uncertain nature. Or perhaps he only wanted to believe that because he was scared of how warm and addictive your presence felt.
“My children speak of you.”
That made you smile a bit, and even he wasn’t blind enough to think it meant something suspicious. You were somehow proud of that.
“Do they?” You asked, trying to sound like it was nothing. “They come here sometimes, but I don’t think I’m worth the bother to be mentioned.”
“They come here often, I hear,” he corrected sharply.
“You might say so, my prince.”
“Prove it.”
You stopped what you were doing and cleared your hands on your skirt again. “What?”
“What do you know about my children?”
Now you allowed yourself to frown without hiding it. He was speaking to you like you were a traitor who sold knowledge about his family, and not a maid who fed them cakes and milk just to cheer them up. A strange, suspicious man he was.
How in the seven hells did he manage to keep some of the rough charm he had in him, while he was so gruff and unapproachable. One would think such a man was incapable of being charming, and yet here he was…
“May I offer you a seat first, my prince?”
He took it without a word and nodded for you to do the same.
You cleared your throat and stared at your own hands for a while. Surprisingly, he didn’t rush you, even if you could feel his burning stare on your skin. You could feel a shiver down your spine when you finally looked up at him.
Gods, Baelor could be impressive too when he wanted, but his younger brother seemed much less enduring. You would never guess that a spark of anger and tiredness could look so good on a man.
“Dareon usually brings his own drinks and tries to make me share it with him. He prefers to hear me talk about my day, rather than dwell on his dreams, even though he mentions them all the time.”
“That idiot told you about his–?”
You failed to stop yourself before cutting in. “You would be surprised that your son has nothing of an idiot in him. And he did, though the knowledge is safe with me… even if you don’t believe me yet.”
He scoffed. “You’re not wrong that I don’t.”
“Shall I continue…?”
He nodded.
“So… Aerion always sits in silence, thinking, after ordering me to light the fireplace. He gets cold easily… He’s rather delicate for such a fierce prince, I must say.” The corners of your lips twitched up, but you managed to keep your face serious. “Daella speaks of suitors and boys that she’s fond of… She likes to watch when I cook for her. Aegon is fond of talking about books and knights. He wishes to be a squire, you know? He feels like it’s a wrongdoing that you don’t allow him to—”
It was a touchy subject for the prince, apparently.
“He can squire to his brothers,” Maekar muttered under his breath.
You knew how important it was to little Egg, so you took a deep breath and shook your head. “You know that’s not true.”
It was bold and made him clutch his teeth at first. But was it wrong? Perhaps he should think and listen… for the sake of his son.
Gods, it was like a fistful of salt thrown right in his eyes. Ever since he lost his wife he felt out of control over his kids, and here he was met with another woman who apparently knew them like a back of her hand without even trying. Without having reasons to care.
“You raised them well, if I might say, my prince. Well, maybe not…” You wished to fall under the table and never face him again after the words escaped your lips.
The air was sharp for a moment. You could hear Maekar take a breath and the silver spoons and plates around you almost clattered.
“Maybe not Aerion?” He suggested suddenly. You nodded hesitantly. “Say it.”
“Yes,” you managed to choke out, and he only lowered his head.
Just like he was hearing out a death sentence on a trial – while he was listening to a maid that he intended to question.
“And my brother?”
It was a grand matter, maybe less interesting to him, but more crucial. Sensitive, problematic even. If he was about to learn something he didn’t wish to, perhaps it was better to not ask–
“Oh… Baelor has been coming here for years,” you explained without making it sound like a big thing. “Whenever he needs a break, apparently, or seeks the point of view of a commoner.”
“He asks for your opinions?”
“Sometimes,” you admit with a shrug.
Maekar was desperately trying to fit it to what he imagined in the first place – that you were some sort of snitch… For how long could he keep clinging to this thought, though, when you were staring at him like this? Like you were a creature much greater than him, a goddess of her small, cozy, warm corner.
“So you have some influence over him,” he said stubbornly.
“That would be offending to your brother,” you pointed out immediately. “He makes his own decisions, I just give him some insight on what his subjects might think. I can promise I only speak when he directly asks for it, if it makes it easier for you, my prince.”
He hummed, deep in thought. Out of nowhere Maekar felt jealousy that his brother had been graced with such presence for a long time while he stayed oblivious. He never liked sharing with his siblings but this… Maekar wouldn’t mind handing some of you to Baelor if it meant he would have his own share as well.
“It’s not like I could deny his grace an answer. He’s Baelor Targaryen, after all.”
Was it… mockery? Did he hear right? He almost laughed out loud, and his amused expression made you smile. You were partially expecting him to scream, scolding you for being so disrespectful.
“He would talk your ears off anyway until you did what he wanted,” Maekar couldn’t help but add.
You giggled warmly, but made sure to cover your mouth and wave a hand as to signal you weren’t guilty of what you just did.
It made Maekar feel warm somewhere deep in his chest. His palms tingled, and he almost forgot about the throbbing pain in his head. How did he manage to never notice you before…?
He wasn’t much better than his brother and was stubborn in his questions too. You had to explain that you were once put on a kitchen guard as a little girl and you pretty much never left it. You prepared new ideas for meals and looked over the main cooks. “Well, you can say I’m the boss here,” you said with a laugh. “I wouldn’t have to get my hands dirty if I didn’t wish to. I don’t like working with others, so I just make orders and control.”
“You surely earned your place,” he marked.
“Oh, trust me, my prince, I did. No one was getting beaten by the previous master as badly as me,” you said like it was a reason to be proud.
“Is that so?” One could think he was bored with it, but he was actually trying to imagine how the little hierarchy worked down here.
“Aye. She once threw a hot pan at me from the other side of the kitchen. I could be… thirteen, maybe. I can still hear the clatter.” You rolled your eyes when he smiled a bit too brightly. “It’s a stupid story, but Daella loves hearing it… I have to make it more interesting every time she demands to hear it.”
Gods, even his sweet daughter had a thing for cruelty. She probably had it from him anyway…
Then he spoke up about a matter that kept bothering him in the back of his mind. “My son said–” he stopped, trying to answer the question of why he cared in his thoughts. He couldn’t. “My son said that you were worried recently.”
“Excuse me?” You tapped the table nervously.
“You heard what I said.”
“You mean Aegon, don’t you?” You asked, trying to fake a smile. “He’s a good boy…”
“He is,” Maekar agreed, not letting you redirect the conversation the way you wanted. “So what troubles you?”
You brushed your hand over your face and Maekar started paying attention to the signs of tiredness on your skin. You were undeniably a beautiful woman, a true beauty that somehow was only sharpened by the darkness of the kitchens. Other women would rot here, turn into dust or old crones, while you glowed.
“Ahh, it’s just… Simple life in King’s Landing isn’t the most cheerful one, that’s it. I–I’m flattered that you ask, though, my prince.”
He hummed, completely unconvinced.
“You know what is the punishment for lying to a member of a royal family?”
That only made you smile. “I don’t, because I never did.”
“Till now,” he argued, and you finally saw what his children meant when they complained to you about him.
“I told no lies,” you said firmly. “Just meant to spare you the boring details. I’m in a… conflict with some guards.”
“Do I really have to force you to speak or will you finally–”
“Oh, alright, fine, I’m speaking,” you shushed him and stood up. With your arms crossed over your chest you looked at the prince of the crown, sitting in your humble kitchen, demanding that you rant to him about your problems. “I support the local orphanage whenever I can, and those bastards sensed some easy coin. They steal the food I provide for the children and sell it. Only recently they turned brave and started coming directly to me, demanding that I hand them all the supplies I have.”
“And what have you told them?”
“Like, literally?” His annoyed face was enough of an answer. “To go fuck themselves, excuse the language.”
He knew for less than a few hours, and he already felt pride because of your behaviour. “Good girl.”
You stood there frozen for a moment, but eventually you had to take another breath. “I was proud of myself too, but… Yeah, I won’t repeat the things they threatened me to do. And I know for a fact that they will be back.”
Maekar stood up with a rustle of his clothes. He was a tall, strong figure that made the room seem smaller. Almost like the guards you feared now so much, but refused to admit. He brought care with him, though – you scolded yourself for being stupid and believing it, but he truly did. When he stood there and stared at you with interest in his cunning eyes you really wanted to think he wouldn’t let anyone harm you.
Especially when one of the candles shed some light on his face, and you could see the well hidden anger.
“They won’t be,” he said like it was already a solved case. He sent you one last look before making his way to the door. “You have my word, kitchen keeper.”
“Did you know that your beloved Y/n was being harassed by some fuckers right under your nose?” He snapped at his brother the next day, after thinking about it for probably too little. He was a hasty man, what could he do? “And you did nothing.”
Baelor stopped in his tracks and stared at Maekar with an unreadable expression. “Brother?” He asked, his voice almost seeming small under the crush of the other prince’s anger.
“Nothing, Baelor,” he hissed, not really wanting to hear explanations that Baelor probably didn’t wish to offer anyway. “I sorted it out myself.”
It was a bit of a boast – even Maekar had to admit it. But didn’t Baelor owe him that? Why wouldn’t he have his own five minutes now, if his brother had years with you? It was a stupid manly need to argue about the care that he could provide.
“You clearly accuse me of something,” Baelor pointed out, but Maekar didn’t listen anymore.
He probably was – of using the company of someone as lovely as you, while Maekar was left out.
He only calmed down later that day when he sat opposite you, staring at a plate. Despite the dish looking amazing and the smell making him salivating, he made sure to grimace a little.
“What is it?” He asked skeptically.
“Oh, don’t complain. Your children like it and you shall too.”
a/n: inspired by… my infamous attempts in the kitchen (I mastered baking but don’t ask me for more) and writing Doubt your man (which was MONTHS ago). I love reader and Egg’s relationship there!
A poor thief.
Ser Duncan the Tall x Targaryen!reader
Summary: the reader runs off with Daeron and Egg. But when she loses them, she's forced to try to steal coin for food. She ends up stealing from the wrong hedge knight-- or perhaps, just the right one.
A/n: italics indicate flashbacks!
Masterlist
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You'd been walking for far too long in the dark, and you were growing exhausted.
Daeron had somehow taken a different turn than you, and you were utterly lost.
It was dark now. He was probably too deep in his cups to want to look for you, or even too drunk to remember you existed. You just hoped Egg had stayed close by.
"Where are you going?" You'd asked from the doorway of your chambers, seeing his silhouette down the hall.
He paused, tension rising in his shoulders. He turned his head just enough to acknowledge you. "Out."
"I know you," you sighed. "Out to taverns, or out for good?"
"Does it matter?"
You shrug. "Matters to me. I thought you had a tourney to go to in the morning."
He finally turned to fully see you. It was dark, but you could make out the circles under his eyes. "Father can't make me go."
Ah. He was running away.
"And where will you go? He has eyes everywhere. If the guards don't find you, then someone else will. I'd hate to see you get hurt."
"I'll get hurt if I stay," he says, voice raising. "I'm taking Egg. We're leaving."
You scoff. "You'll not take the boy anywhere. You'll let him sleep."
He stormed up to you, voice low. "I won't leave him with Aerion. You know how he is."
"Oh, but you'd leave me?"
He hesitates. "You're Father's favorite. He wouldn't let anything come of you."
"He wouldn't love me as much if he knew I watched two of his sons run away."
"Oh?" He questioned, a smirk coming to his face. "So you're coming with us?"
And now, having empathy for your older brother feels like a punishment.
It was cold out, and you weren't used to fending for yourself like this. You hadn't eaten in a while. And worst of all, Daeron had the coin purse, leaving you with absolutely nothing but the clothes on your back.
It had been hours now, and you were becoming desperate. For food, water, shelter, anything you could get.
That's when you noticed Dunk.
You'd seen him go through the small village with his three horses. The clothes on his back weren't the nicest. But having three horses is surely a sign of wealth. You had a lot back home in Summerhall.
You followed behind him for a while at a steady pace. He seemed to not notice.
You'd never stolen before. Not like this. You'd swiped things from Daeron or Aerion, as all siblings do, but you'd never outright stolen from someone. How pathetic for a Princess of the Realm to do so.
But the rumbling in your stomach won out over your honor.
He'd stopped when he saw the saddle on the brown horse slipping. He dismounted immediately and moved to the animal to fix it.
You jumped into action.
You walked around the three horses, trying to avoid his eye. And blocked by the large things, you began to dig through the saddle bag on the white horse.
You felt around for things. Just clothes in this one. You moved to the small bag and grinned when you felt the leather of a coin purse.
"Oi!" Came his voice loudly.
You gasped, seeing the large man's blue eyes wide and set on you.
You didn't get a good grip on the coin purse unfortunately (the curse of being an amateur thief, you supposed) and you had to abandon your mission.
And though you'd meant to run off, you were no match for the longer legs of the hedge knight. He caught you with ease, not many meters from where you'd begun. His hand had grabbed your bicep. "You know what they do to thieves where I come from?" His accent rang in your ear. "They take their hands, boy."
You fought against him, though you knew it was no use. You squirmed and pushed, just trying to get your arm free. He spun you around and pulled down the hood of your cloak.
His face fell when he saw you were a girl instead. You were thankful to your past self for hiding your hair back in a hat, for this interaction would have went differently. You couldn't let him know you were a Targaryen. He might have been a knight, but that didn't make him a noble one.
You could see the gears turning in his head as he looked over your face. His grip softened just a little, as if trying not to harm you now. His angry voice had become lower. "Why are you stealing from me?"
You'd never been threatened before. Never been handled so roughly. Seeing him so close, anger evident in his eyes— for once in your life, you were terrified.
You couldn't help the way your eyes began to water and you hoped he wouldn't hate you more for it.
He noticed. He saw the way you tried to avoid his eye. You even bit down on your lip to keep a sob from coming up through your throat.
"M… My brother," you hiccup. "I… I got lost. Forgive me, my lord. Please. I didn't mean anything—"
"Are you hungry?"
The question stuns you a bit, making you finally look up at him. His jaw is clenched but his eyes have softened.
You nod.
He sighs. "C'mon. I'll getcha fed, girl."
You let him pull you about, not that you have much choice in it. His grip is light but firm. And his hand wraps around your bicep with ease.
He gets you into the closest pub and forces you down at a table. He politely waves two fingers to one of the tavern girls, who nods and takes off to presumably get him a drink.
You'd never been in a pub before. But you didn't get to even look around before he's interrogating you.
"Where's your brother, then? Did he leave you?"
You blink, unsure how to respond to that. And even then, telling the truth to a huge man who you can't fight against would be dangerous. "My brother… he's big and tall," you lie through your teeth. "He's a knight, you see. He was…" your hesitation doesn't go unnoticed by Dunk, but he doesn't rush you either. "He was heading to the tourney."
He nods. "What's the truth then?"
"My brother and I are running from home and we were separated."
You watch him blink, surprise coming over his face at your sudden rush of truth that spews without the slightest pressure. "You're a nobleman's daughter," he says. Not a question. A statement.
"I… I suppose so, ser."
He hums. "I thought so. You don't speak like the small folk do."
Your head tilts.
A grin pulls at his lips. "You're polite," he says, as if that's the entire explanation. "And a damn poor thief."
A bowl is set in front of you by the bar maid. A warm bowl of stew that immediately makes your mouth water.
Duncan looks down at his own and gives a polite thanks to the woman before paying her with the coins you had tried to steal.
You stay still, eyes now on him as if waiting for him to punish you or take the food away.
But he doesn't do anything like that. Instead, he starts eating his own. It takes a while, but he feels your staring and looks up. "It'll get cold," is all he says. "Won't warm you like that."
That's the invitation you need.
That first spoonful is like drinking satisfaction. You're sure in any other circumstance, this stew is less than average. It's probably not something that would even be served in the castle.
"Suppose you won't tell me what house you're from," he asks.
You shake your head.
"I'm Dunk," he offers first, waiting to see if you'd take the bait. But you don't. "What's your brother look like then? I can at least help you look for him."
That eases you somewhat into talking again. "He's a piss drunk. No need to even tell you what his face looks like. He's probably five cups deep or passed out in some stable."
He takes a sip of his ale. "What was so bad at home that the two of you had to run away? Surely living in a fine castle with servants can't be that bad."
Your gaze hardens. "One of our other brothers. He's quite evil. And our father? He… he expects a lot of my drunken brother."
"Quite evil?" He repeats, now intrigued. "Other brothers? Pardon my asking, milady, but how many siblings do you have?"
You blink. "Six."
"Fuckin—" he stops himself. "Pardon. But how many heirs does your house need?"
"Exactly," you huff. "Father wouldn't miss if a few of us just disappeared."
Dunk watches as you contemplate your own words. They stew in the back of your mind.
"You don't believe that, though. Do you?" You bite at your lip, angry that he can assess you that easily. "I'm sure your father is worried sick about you. If he were a higher noble, I'm sure he would've sent people searching for you. But even still. I'm sure he wants you home."
You just nod.
You both finish up your meal, and a guilt begins to stir in your gut. You have no coin to repay the man. And you don't know what he's expecting in return for his kindness.
"You get enough?" He asks. There's nothing but genuine concern in his eyes.
"You're very kind, ser. Forgive me again for stealing from you."
"Attempt," he corrects with a grin. "You didn't make it very far."
"Forgive me that my first time thieving did not go to plan," you huff. "I shall try harder the next time."
"There won't be a next time," he explains. "I'm helping you find your brother." The two of you stand and he begins to lead you out from the pub.
"That's not necessary," you try to cover. "Really. I can find him on my own."
"And starve again until you steal from some other man who'll beat you senseless? I'll not have that."
The night air is cool, making you pull your cloak a bit tighter. "What house do you serve?"
The question catches him off guard. He closes the pub door and tilts his head at you. "Why would that matter?"
I want to reward the house with such valiant knights, you want to say. But you don't. "In case I need help again. So I know where to find you."
He shakes his head. "Sorry to say, but I'm only a hedge knight."
"A hedge knight?" You'd never actually met one of those. Not until today. "Were you going to the tourney, then?"
He smiles. "I was. I mean… I am. Did you… Did you want to accompany me? If we don't find your brother?"
You'd never been more grateful to someone in your life. If you couldn't find Daeron, you could find your way back to the tourney with Ser Dunk and find your father. "I'd like that."
His smile grows, bright and eager. "Good. Great. Let's…" he takes a breath to collect himself. "Let's get some rooms for the night. No use in looking in the dark."
He guides you over to his horses. "I'm assuming you've ridden a horse before, milady?"
You had. But you weren't very good. You nod to him, and he accepts that.
"I'll put you sidesaddle on Thunder then. I'll guide 'em. You just gotta hang on."
You turn to say something to him, but notice his lips part in something akin to awe or disbelief. A strand of your hair had fallen from your hat, bright silver blonde.
"You… I know that hair," he accuses. "You aren't just some nobleman's daughter, are you?" At your silence, he takes a step back, trying to gather himself. You're not sure what he's thinking. Perhaps, he'll strike you for deceiving him. Instead, he scoffs to himself. "And to think, I threatened you."
"That's what you are worried about?"
"I… well, yes!" He holds his hands up to his head. "I threatened a Targaryen— a princess! Gods, why would I do such a thing?"
You look around, a bit confused. "I stole from you—"
"I grabbed you! I probably bruised you, at that. I shouldn't do that to anyone, let alone a princess." The gears in his head turned. "Your brother. The prince. He's not… Daeron the Drunken. Is he?"
He didn't even need to see your answer.
He runs a hand over his face before letting his hands drop. "Of course, I'll help you to your brother. How could I not? The crown must be worried sick over you."
"You won't… keep me?" You ask hesitantly.
"W-what?" He gapes. "Keep you? For what?"
"Ransom."
"I would never, Princess. Never. You're a good woman. A kind one. A bit misguided, but I'll help you back where you're needed. I'll not see you starved or held against your will. I meant what I said before."
You see the truthful gaze in his eyes. You reach up and pull off your hat. Long, silver locks fall around your face, messy and tangled. "Thank you, ser."
"Of course, Princess. Any knight would do the same."
Before you can correct him, he's already lifting you onto Thunder. His hands are firm around your waist, picking you up as if you weigh nothing to him. He's careful to place you down well and ensure you're safe. Then, he moves to Sweetfoot.
Once he mounts her, he looks back to you. "Ready, Princess?"
You nod, and the two of you begin your journey across the village. "You know," you finally say. "Knights aren't as kind as you."
"Hm? Course they are," he says, as if obvious.
"They aren't," you push. "Some of them are pigs, really."
He gawks, looking back at you. "High lords? Pigs? Either I'm wrong or you're a very spoiled girl. There are plenty of good men out there."
"Perhaps I am spoiled. But I'm not an idiot."
"Your uncle, for example. The Prince Baelor. He's honorable, isn't he?" He asks the question, but you can tell he's not waiting for an answer. "My old master told me how gracious of a man he is."
"He's the only one," you say. "Him and Valarr. Even my own family is quite monstrous."
"The princes can't be that monstrous."
"If you're going to the tourney, ser, then you'll see for yourself."
He stops the small caravan outside an old building. He gets off, and helps you get down with ease. His hands linger on your waist for just a moment longer than proper. "Go inside, then. I'll see to the horses." And he pulls away quickly.
You obey him for once, stepping into the place.
There's an older woman with a kind face who greets you. "Sit where you'd like."
You smile back at her, and look around. The place is empty, except for a man who is so deep in his cups, he's passed out with his head on the table.
"Daeron?" You hiss, stomping over to him. You shove at his shoulder angrily. "Get up! Daeron, get up!"
He rouses just enough to shove you back. "Fuck off."
"Did you even notice I was gone?" You huff.
"I'll look for you in the morning," he slurs. "Besides, I dreamt of this. You meet some… man, you get married to him or whatever," he shrugs. "You'll be fine."
"Married? What the hell are you talking about?" He slumps down against and you groan. "Why are you always so difficult? Where is Egg?"
He doesn't answer his time, and you give up.
You sit across the room from him, but it doesn't stop you from glaring daggers.
Dunk enters not long after, making his way over to you. He barely even notices Daeron. And if he does, he doesn't recognize him as a prince. He sits down next to you. Not across. Like he needs his eyes on the entire room, door and all.
The two of you sit there. And he's entirely unaware of the war you're fighting with yourself.
Daeron is there. Just there. You could tell Dunk and be rid of him like this day never happened. But you don't.
But not saying anything at all would be lying. And you can't see him forgiving you if you don't start telling him the truth.
And above all of that, you're worried for Egg.
So when he begins to talk to you, you aren't quite present. You give nods and chip in when you can, but you're not really hearing him.
The woman brings you both some water, which you accept graciously.
"How much further to Ashford?" Dunk's hushed voice comes.
"Days ride," she shrugs. "Bound for the tourney?"
"I dreamed of you," came Daeron's voice. He'd sat up, just enough to retrieve the dagger from its sheath. He eyes Dunk with a dazed look. "Take my sister. But stay the fuck away from me, you hear?"
Dunk's brows raise. "M-Milord?"
When Daeron stands, Dunk immediately stretches his arm across the table in front of you, naturally protective.
Daeron blows his hair from his face and sheaths his dagger. He looks and Dunk, then at you. "Goodnight, sister." He slams down a coin. A gold dragon. With that, he stomps up the stairs to his accommodations, leaving the two of you once again.
Neither of you say anything for a while.
The woman moves to the table and takes the coin, tucking it safely into her pocket. "Never you mind that one, ser." She leaves as well.
Dunk looks up at the staircase once again before you feel his head turn to look down at you.
"Prince Daeron," you breathe, refusing to meet his eye.
In that moment, Dunk realizes that he can't just leave you here. His mission had been to get you to your brother. But in his mind, your brother was still a proper prince who wanted the best for you. The man he just saw was far from that.
"What did he mean by that?" He asks softly. "If he thought I was a threat, he wouldn't have abandoned you like that, would he?"
You think back to what your brother had said earlier. 'You meet some man… you get married to him, or whatever.' You look back to Dunk. Surely not…
But Daeron's dreams were never wrong. He said he would get injured at the tourney, and that's where Dunk is heading. Those two things won't cross, right?
You watch Dunk's arm come back to his side, giving you space again. Your eyes are still locked on his hand, large and powerful. How it had held your waist so delicately when he'd helped you off his horse earlier.
"I'd… appreciate it, princess, if you accompany me instead to the tourney," he says softly, bending down to whisper it like a secret in your ear. "I'll not see you get… overlooked by your brother."
Your head tilts up to meet his eye. He's close, far too close for what's proper. But his eyes are on yours, so hypnotically blue that you can't make yourself move. "I'd like that, Ser."
A small smile pulls at his lips, and he pulls away from you like he's remembering his place in this world. His face and neck turn a bright red. "Right. Right. Good. It's settled then."
You watch his fingers twitch, almost brushing the fabric of your skirt. But it doesn't. He keeps to himself, like he knows he should.
Married, you think to yourself, that wouldn't be so bad. He's a handsome man, kind and truthful. Even if he's a bit clumsy. You'd take a heart of gold from a hedge knight than the fake smiles from some fat high lord that dreams of climbing the social ladder.
No, the more you think about it, Dunk is quite perfect. His size is something else entirely, one that you'd have to get used to. Those arms, his hands, they could pick you up with such ease.
"Are you alright?" He suddenly asks.
You blink out of your stupor, "hm?"
He gives a boyish grin. "You've been staring at me for a while. Not having second thoughts, are you?"
"No," you smile, hiding your blush behind your cup of water. "No second thoughts at all."
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if you love me for me.
Cregan Stark x Princess and the Pauper!reader
Summary: When you traded places with Alysanne Blackwood, you thought you were doing her a favor. But she doesn't return and now you're stuck meeting her betrothed, the Wolf of the North.
Masterlist
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"The Lord Stark will be joining us soon, my Lady."
The servant's words spoken through the door brought pure terror to your heart.
Alysanne Blackwood should have been back by now. When you took the place of her for the day, just one, so that she could explore as she so desperately wanted, you thought it was an ingenious plan. You looked identical to her, after all.
You both gained your own form of freedom for a day.
But that quickly turned sour when one day turned into two, then four, then a week.
And now Lord Stark was here-- the Lady Blackwood's supposed betrothed that she'd never met.
And now the imposter, you, would instead.
"J-Just a moment," you called out, smoothing over your skirt.
Her handmaiden did the final touches to your hair. "Are you nervous?" She asked politely.
You picked at your nails. "I suppose. Meeting the man you're to marry can bring nerves, can it not?" You covered.
"Oh, indeed. But, and pardon my gossiping tongue, Princess, but Lord Stark is humored to be a handsome man. Perhaps the best swordsman of our generation as well. That would be a fine husband."
You hum, keeping your chin high as you stared at your reflection in the vanity. "A fine husband, indeed. C'mon," You call to your cat, checking to make sure he trails behind you.
…
"Ah, just in time," Lady Blackwood smiles. She doesn't do it often anymore— not after the death of Lord Blackwood.
War was odd in that way.
The Brackens had almost taken Alysanne's younger brother, Benjicot, as well. But instead, he was now the new Lord Blackwood, taking over as head of the house.
Benjicot joined your side, extending his hand to you as he was expected. "Sister, may I present Lord Cregan Stark?"
You finally notice the man behind Lady Blackwood. He was much taller, towering over all of the Blackwoods with ease.
He was much sturdier as well. You supposed most Northerns were like that— you had to be sturdy or freeze. Blackwoods were used to water; more slinky— thin and slippery. Not this man.
With no cloak, you could admire him. His biceps were some of the largest you had seen. The Stark Wolf on his surcoat's crest looked so natural, like it reminded him to hold his chin up.
But his eyes. They were lightly colored, yet dark. Like he knew things you didn't. Saw things you didn't. His brows were tugged down and you began to think that maybe the creases it caused between was permanent.
Perhaps he knows that you're not who you say you are.
Benjicot walks you over, standing between you two like a buffer. "Lord Stark, may I present my sister?"
Cregan's brows barely quirk up in acknowledgment before tipping his head down. "Lady Alysanne. It seems we've both waited a long while for this day."
You try your best to smile. "Indeed." Only then do you blink and remember yourself. "Thank you," you rush out, "for traveling such a long distance. I trust it was pleasant."
His head tips to the side once in thought. "Wouldn't call the marshlands easy for travel. But without it, the Realm would be lost."
If you were Alysanne, you might have been more upset at the slight jab.
Good thing you're not.
"Perhaps you two should walk the gardens," Benjicot suggests, wanting to be as far from the manners of court as possible.
"'Tis a good idea, Benjicot," Lord Stark grins. He offers his hand.
You look it over, large and rough. A particular scar runs across his palm deeply.
…
"You are close with Benji, then?" You ask. You're pretty sure you heard Alysanne call him that once.
Lord Stark nods as he walks, hands behind his back. "We have been friends for a few years. He's a stout lad. Stubborn. Wins his battles. Someone might mistake him for a Northern one of these days."
"If he weren't so short."
You freeze, realizing you just insulted the Lord Blackwood behind his back. That's a treasonous offense for a peasant.
But Stark's deep laugh eases your tension. "You might be right, Lady Alysanne. Northerns are quite a bit larger than that."
Right. You're Lady Alysanne right now. Thank gods.
"I apologize that I don't know that much about you," He starts again after his laugh quiets. "Might that be remedied?"
"Hmm, and what would Lord Stark of Winterfell wish to know of me?"
He hums in thought, looking over the garden for a while before answering. "What do you think, of all this?"
"Of the gardens?" Your eyes roam over the various vines and bushes that grow. "I suppose it's nice. I'd s—"
"Of us," he clarifies. He turns to you completely now, letting his eyes roam over you.
You feel completely exposed, like he might see right through every lie that got you to this moment.
"This is a… beneficial match. For the Blackwoods, I mean."
He shakes his head. "That's not an opinion, my Lady."
"Well, I don't have an opinion, then."
"Oh c'mon," he finally smiles. It's a blinding sight. "Everyone has an opinion."
"That's the problem, isn't it?" You snap. "Everyone has an opinion of what the great Lady Alysanne Blackwood should do."
His smile falls as quickly as it showed, like he'd been slapped. "Forgive me. I did not mean to insult you."
"No, no, forgive me. That was entirely uncalled for."
"It was quite refreshing, really."
You dare to look up at him to see him looking right back at you with a calm expression.
"Might we continue, then?"
He nods, "Of course. Lead the way, my Lady."
Maybe you'll give him a chance. Just until Alysanne can get back.
…
Okay, so maybe Lord Stark was really charming. And just maybe you found yourself thinking about him often.
He wasn't charming in a typical way, no. He was brash and rough, but not so deeper than that was a respect in his heart that not many men had the same quality of.
And he began to care for you, as well.
No, you continually tell yourself.
He began to care for Lady Alysanne Blackwood. Not you.
But as the days turned into a week, then two weeks (now three weeks with Alysanne's return), you were worried you wouldn't be able to cover yourself much longer.
Things would come up that you couldn't cover. Things you didn't understand as a peasant. Family members that you couldn't recall in conversation.
And you could've sword Lord Stark saw through it every time.
But Alysanne should be back soon, you hoped. Very Soon.
…
"Careful," Lord Stark speaks lowly into your ear.
His chest is pressed to your back, his hands adjusting the grip you have on your bow.
"Loosen the tension in your shoulders. Just like that. Good," he praises softly. "The arrow will go where you intend it. Deep breath—"
You release on the downbeat, watching it clip the edge of the target.
He shrugs, backing away. "It's getting better. Don't lose hope yet, my lady."
"Placing bets on target practice, are we?" Benjicot's voice rings out as he joins.
"With all respect, Benjicot. I wouldn't bet on your sister quite yet," Stark smiles, retrieving your arrows that were scattered around the target.
"Not—" The Lord Blackwood pauses. "Alysanne's a better bowman than me by all accounts. I once bet my own horse on her skills."
Stark whips around to look at you. "Were you playing me a fool?"
Benjicot laughs. "No, no. Let her show you. Sister, show Cregan how good you really are!"
There's a part of you that's glad to see such high lords arguing like young boys again. But not when it's over your very lack of bowman ship.
"Benji, I really shouldn't—"
Stark waves it off. "You won't offend me. You'll only wound my pride on account that I tried to teach a well educated bow-woman. Please," he adds softly on the end.
You take the bow and one of the arrows from his hand, notching it slowly before drawing back the string. You mentally go through all the steps he'd taught you before. You can hear his hum of approval when your shoulders visibly relax.
You say a prayer to anyone listening before releasing the string.
Thunk.
"By hell," Stark mutters under his breath.
The arrow lies neatly in the second ring. Nowhere near a bullseye, but easily the best thing you've ever gotten.
Benjicot grunts. "Must be the nerves."
"You think I make her nervous?" Stark laughs.
"Clearly," he argues. "That's nowhere near—"
"I know," the other laughs. "She's doing quite well!"
Confused and having far too much interaction, Benji mutters under his breath, leaving the two of you once again.
"That was incredible!" He continues to laugh, nearing you and gripping both your biceps. "Extraordinary, even!"
Your eyes widen, bursting him from his excitement.
"Oh," he quiets. "Forgive me. That was," his hands run down your arms, "that was uncalled for."
"It was good though?" You ask, a bit insecure.
He nods, holding the excitement from coming back. "Very good. Very good, my girl."
You can't help the way your heart flutters at that name.
"And well, if your brother is a worse shot, perhaps I should be more worried."
…
The next day, you're walking through the corridor of the humid Raventree Hall when you're stopped by your brother's advisor.
He steps in front of you. And when you curtly nod and move to step around him, he steps in front of you again, gripping your arm.
"I know what you are," he spits in your ear. "And I know what you are is not the Lady Alysanne."
"I… I can explain," you try.
"No need to. What is done is done. And you know what happens to traitors in Raventree Hall? Ones that have done what you have?"
You keep your eyes on the stone floors. "Please—"
You're cut off by a voice you have come to recognize.
"Name a reason you have your hand on the Lady Alysanne." It's low, guttural. A growl that even makes you shake.
Lord Stark is behind the man with his longsword, Ice, tip poking into the advisor's back.
When no answer comes, he pushes it a bit further. "I'm not a patient man."
The advisor finally squeaks out an apology, letting you go.
Stark lets his sword drop. He grabs the advisor by the wrist that was holding you just before. "Would you rather Lord Blackwood banish you or I kill you here?"
This is not the same man that taught you archery.
This is the Wolf of the North.
Stark shoves the man away with a threat you don't quite hear.
But then, just as easily, his hands find yours. But it's soft and caring. "Are you hurt?"
You don't quite register all of it. The threat that was just against you.
"No, no, listen, sweet girl," he tries again, gripping your chin and forcing your head up to meet his gaze. "Are you hurt?"
You hear that one and mutter something you yourself don't quite understand. "Lord S-"
"'S alright," he cooes. "Let's get you to a maester, hm? I got you."
And if you didn't love him then, you love him now.
"I'd say we're on first name terms at this point," he tries to brake the tension. "Think I'd like to hear Cregan from your lips. Perhaps we can work on that next. 'S that alright, Alysanne?"
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A patient man and his sweet wife
Baelor Targaryen x sweet wife reader
synopsis: Baelor Targarayen’s sweet wife finds herself tangled between Lyseni silk, and her husband.
word count: 2,392
trope: husband x wife
warnings: smut (eventually), (unprotected) p in v, reader is shy and sweet, gentle reader, slightly possessive baelor, female reader, no use of Y/N, nudity, no reader looks described, reader is a legal adult. READ AT YOUR OWN DISCRETION!!! REMEMBER - YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CONTENT AND MEDIA THAT YOU CHOOSE TO CONSUME
DISCLAIMER: All themes, plot, images used and characters from A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms + elsewhere belong to the rightful owners, I hold not rights to the original media - but my writing belongs to me.
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“Sweet girl you are causing me far too many problems today. The books I will overlook, you enjoy reading. But all the coin on Lyseni silk and near fifty gold dragons on different golden wine goblets from Dorne, this is near insanity.” Baelor’s hand pinched the bridge of his nose tightly, looking up from his papers as his eyes fell to you in your sapphire encrusted gown. The neckline all too low and adorned scandalously in said gemstones, azure blue layered the fabric elsewhere as it hugged to your body and loosened at the foot and wrists. It was very beautiful, and very you. “But they are for your name-day feast.” Baelor stilled “The goblets I will let pass as my Father has desired more, but I am failing to see how thirty gold dragons worth of Lyseni silk relates to my name day?” Your cheeks flushed hot as you gnawed at your lip, “Is there something you’d like to tell me, my girl?” The twinkle of amusement in his eye did not escape you. Turning on your heel you escaped the heat on the room throwing a quick “No!” over your shoulder before swiftly exiting, leaving your husband to chuckle quietly to himself.
You were far from an outspoken woman, often flustered when in large social circles or having sole attention from anyone seemed to make your cheeks grow flushed and your teeth gnaw at your lower lip. It’s not that you were timid, nor scared of those that surrounded you, it was just a lightly humiliating bodily reaction that Baelor seemed to get amusement out of playing off of. He found it endearing after near four years of marriage now you still got so flustered when he addressed you publicly. You were his second wife, a political alliance from your lavish house of the Reach, and a Prince of the Realm who was also heir to the Iron Throne. A unique pairing, yet one that had grown into something far beyond just fondness of companionship.
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Baelor’s name-day feast was long, and grand. The heirs day of birth was always an affluent affair, the King had always made it so for each of his sons, yet it was almost the right as the first born son for Baelor’s to be the fairest of all. Not that he ever desired such a thing to be held in his honour, which is how he found himself seated between yourself and his father at the head table watching his guests dance. He was utterly bored in truth, the music was pleasant and the atmosphere was comfortable. But none of these people were here for him. They didn’t care for him like you did. They were here for drink and dinner, nothing celebratory about it, just an honourable reason to get drunk on the Kings coin. You wore a gallant dress of crimson and black, to match his own house colours that adorned his doublet. The three headed dragon across your breasts caught his eye more than he wished to admit, watching them heave with every quiet breath that swelled inside of your chest. Clearing his throat, arm around the back of your chair, he leant closer to your ear so that he could speak more comfortably to you, body angled so effortlessly toward your own it was painfully natural.
“You see that man there, flirting with half of your handmaidens. He is Leo Tyrell, his son is a pain in the arse to the crown. He’s broken more betrothals and upset more Lord’s daughters than my own nephew has.” His voice was low, it kissed your ears only, your teeth moved to bite the inside of your lip as you leant closer to your husband. “And him there, Abelar Hightower. He’s only loyal to us for our supposed faith in the Seven, you know. They supply the Tyrell bannermen when called to war. And I’m sure you can never forget the face of Tybolt Lannister. He danced with you during our wedding feast do you remember? My brother near threatened to break both his legs if he spun you one more time.” You nodded subtly yet intently, a small giggle escaping your lips at the memory of your own wedding feast. You often heard much of many houses and their heads from your husband, when he had been overworked and was in need to just tell someone something. Yet you did not know many faces of the court, or other houses of the realm. You had preferred a quiet life away from the drama of it all, which was why it had been such a shock to the realm when the great Baelor Breakspear chose you for a wife. Many people here had not known you or even known of your existence before the royal announcement of your betrothal to your now husband, and Baelor had made sure it was abundantly clear all knew just who you were, and who you were to him. Even now the only time you saw half of the drunkards that filled the hall was at pointless events hosted by the King, where all only attended because it did favours for alliances, and having the funding of the crown behind them.
“Would you like to retire for the evening sweet wife? I think all here are too drunk to note our absence.” His words rung true as he allowed his fingers to toy with the end of your hair. “If you wish it, husband.” You smiled politely yet he raised an eyebrow, “If you wish to leave I suggest you say your truth, not just what you think that it is I wish to hear.” Your eyes found that of your now near empty plate, a few odd vegetables that you still could not bring yourself to eat for childish reasons. “Look at my face, not your plate. It is not going to speak for you now, is it?” You did as instructed, feeling the prickle of heat begin to taint you silently. You watched the subtle smirk grow on his face as he took in the reaction your body was giving him, he was not outright when he teased you, he enjoyed picking you apart so quietly others failed to notice- even in such a crowded room as you were. “We could retire?” You proposed, eyes meeting his fleetingly. “Now without the question.” He was a patient man, you’d give him that. He liked the game of it, the fact you knew he was listening to your every word, the way your tone changed, the flicker of your eyes or the fidget of your fingers. He saw it all, and there was no escaping him, not that you even wanted to, because you adored him all the same. To be loved, is to be seen. And Baelor never let you go unnoticed, in his eyes all of you was always worth seeing. Understanding. Cherishing. Because Baelor Targaryen did not ever half do anything, if it was being done it was being done right. Loving his sweet wife? That was a matter he took in deep levels of devotion, making sure you truly knew and acknowledged your worth.
“We could retire.” Your voice soft, eyes fulling locking to his own mismatched ones as he granted you an approving nod. He informed his father quietly before rising, taking your hand within his own and leading you from the hall, the noises of clattering feet and drunken song falling far behind you as the stone walls tried their best to carry its word.
৻ꪆ
Baelor had taken his time washing his face in the bathroom basin, not intentionally, yet his distracted state had given you enough time to slip out of your Targaryen dragon-headed gown and into an equally daring cerise Lyseni silk gown. It wrapped across your breasts in a band, wrapping over and under each shoulder yet it flowed freely down your arms as loose fabric. Across from your left breast across to your right hip another wave of it encased you, allowing the final wrap to spin around your waist until it hit the floor softly, covering from your hips all the way to your toes.
Baelor exited the bathroom yet stopped entirely to take in the sight of you stood before the mirror, he did not know if he wished to touch you raw or preserve you for his own selfish pleasures. “Aren’t you just enamouring, sweet girl.” His lips latched onto your neck from behind, yet his eyes never left the sight reflecting back at him through the light of the mirror. “Do you like it, husband?” The teeth that grazed your skin could have spoken but a thousand words. “You will have to forgive my ignorance the other afternoon, I did not know I would be blessed with such a sight of my wife when I criticised your spendings.” A trail of heavy purple marks had begun to bloom from your exposed shoulder up to the cut of your jaw, courtesy of his rough lips. “It’s a shame really, I fear it may not last the night, sweet girl.” The heat that radiated from his bare chest against your back was like a furnace, his hands caging around you to lift you to the bed. You did not fall to your back, you instead propped yourself up onto your knees. Baelor’s hands tangled themself within your hair, pulling you in for a suffocating kiss, a groan escaping him as you parted your lips and allowed his tongue passage into your mouth. Your hands untied his breeches, pulling them down only for his hand to grasp both of your wrists in one tight movement. “Do not.” His voice was hoarse, a hunger overtaking his eyes. “Baelor?” You questioned, not daring to try pull from his grip as he forced you to lie back, releasing his grip and pulling you towards the end of the bed by your ankles. “Lift the dress and I promise I will not tear it.” You complied swiftly, bunching the fabric up above your hips so that your expensive gift was not so easily ruined.
Baelor wasted no time in delving his head between your parted thighs, like a starved man he tasted you, tongue splitting your folds as he begun his descent. He was not shy in his praise as he unravelled you, words slipping from his tongue like honey as you writhed with pleasure beneath him. He drew you close to your peak, too close, before withdrawing from your skin entirely. A whine escaped you, “Baelor- what are you-”
“I lied, I’m sorry sweet girl.” His cock bullied it’s way into your tight heat, your eyes squeezing shut upon impulse, your senses being so overwhelmed they were unable to register Baelor had near ripped the expensive silk gown it two, prying it from your slick skin. When he rested inside of you, not willing to move until you spoke, you realised he had torn the dress. A pout embraced your plump lips, still damn from his earlier kisses, “You promised.”
“I did, but I suppose I will have to buy you another. Perhaps with less fabric.” He smirked, lowering his lips back to your collarbone, the coarse grey hairs of his beard scratching at your soft skin beneath him as he kept you caged under the weight of his own body. Another whimper escaped you as he shifted, not enough to bring immense pleasure only to remind you that he was in fact so deep inside of you. “If you want something, sweet girl, you’re going to have to use your words and ask for it.” The smugness of his tone so close to your ear sent shivers across you, hands coming up to press into his chest and the greying hairs that adorned it. “I want you to fuck me.” The gentleness in which you asked brought him great satisfaction, teeth nibbling at your earlobe before the heat of his breath graced you again, “Speak up, how can I satisfy you if you do not speak it to me.”
“Please fuck me, Baelor.” Your voice wavered yet it was more assured as he gave a pliant nod, you felt his hips begin to rock against you slowly, a faltered “More.” Fell from your tongue as your eyes rolled back. “No, keeps those pretty eyes open f’me. I want you to look me in the eye as I fuck you senseless.” The needy undertone of his voice did not escape you, he needed this, needed you. He had all evening, and now into the night his restraint had escaped him as he finally gave into his true desire.
The moon would be hung long in the sky, yet Baelor did not take advantage of that, his pace was raw and brutal, the whimpers and moans and incoherent sentences spilling from your tongue only fuelling on his ravenous chase to keep you where he had you, falling apart beneath him. “Fuck, so tight for me, sweet girl. You were just made for me, weren’t you? Tell me.”
“Yes yes yes- just for you Baelor, all yours.” you cried, trying your best to keep your eyes on him as your voice grew weak, your ankles locking behind his back to push him impossibly further inside of you as you unravelled. “That’s it, let go for me, take me for all I’m worth.” He grunted, composure faulting as he soon followed your own release, mixing himself with you entirely. You could not recall how long you remained still, his own body near atop of yours as he turned both your bodies to settle you against the plush pillows atop the bed.
Your face found refuge in the crook of his neck as he remained still inside of you, refusing to break the coil you had both so tightly wound together in such deep devoted affection. “You tore my dress.” You mumbled into his neck, his hand caressing your back softly as a quiet chuckle escaped him. “You did look so beautiful in it. But I prefer you without any fabrics at all, my sweet wife.” His lips, pressed against your head as he spoke softly, eyes casting over you to watch you in your utterly relaxed, undone, raw state that he had brought before himself only by his own devout touch.
A/N: i’m pushing the baelor ‘sweet girl’ agenda fr (it’s just so him), (i apologise for crappy smut) been obsessed with baelor recently so maybe there’ll be a few fics posted from my drafts of him (depends if you guys want more of baelor or not really, i’m more of a maekar girl myself but there’s just something about him fr). i have a few other fics im gonna upload first, also answering through requests so fear not you haven’t been forgotten!! as always: requests open, likes, comments, reblogs and any interactions are always always appreciated. take care everyone!!
general akotsk taglist:
@noone1233nobody @antobooh @mikariell95 @kravitzwhore @vanillafan6 @ae-gax @galactict3a @aleemendoza2425-blog
baelor targaryen taglist:
@mimistimesblog @munsonintheupside @justmasblack
Through Stone and Shadow
Pairing: Jacaerys Velaryon x Targaryen Cousin!Reader (ft. Aegon)
Description: You're a Targaryen princess with a dragon, a seat on the small council, and a hole in your wall that looks directly into the Crown Prince's chambers. You should seal it. You should forget what you've seen. You should definitely stop watching your cousin fuck his way through King's Landing's noblewomen.
But you don't. And when Jacaerys starts looking at you like he knows, like he's been waiting for you to break—well. That's when things get complicated.
Genre: voyeurism, jace likes to fook, he definitely knows you're watching, fucking your cousin (it's targaryens what did you expect), why does everyone want to marry him, angst with your hand between your thighs, oblivious pining except he's not oblivious at all, im not sorry, SLOW BURN, VERY VERY SLOW, he hasnt even kissed you and its been 30k words, that type of slow, why do u want to fuck. every cousin........... porn with heavy plot
WC: 48k (100k projected) also on ao3 (where it will be updated!)
It wasn't supposed to happen like this.
You hadn't meant to discover the hole in the wall—a gap where the stone had crumbled between your chambers and his. It was small, barely the width of your index and middle fingers, hidden behind the carved wooden screen that stood in the corner of your room. You'd only found it when you'd moved the screen aside to retrieve a dropped pearl earring, and there it was, a sliver of forbidden sight directly into the heir's private quarters.
You stared at it for a moment longer, crouched onto the floor with the pearl still in your palm.
Rotted mortar, you thought. Old stone. The Red Keep is falling apart in places no one bothers to look.
The right thing would have been to call for the servants, have it sealed with fresh mortar. To forget you'd ever seen it, like a proper lady would.
That first night, however, curiosity won. Just a glance, you kept telling yourself. Just to see if it truly looked into Jacaerys's room or if your eyes had deceived you in the dim candlelight.
They hadn't, and your breath caught in your throat as soon as your eye found the gap. His bed was perfectly visible—the heavy posts of dark wood, the deep crimson coverlet embroidered with the three-headed dragon of House Targaryen. And there, tangled in those sheets, was your cousin.
Worst of all, he wasn't alone.
Turn away. The thought flickered through your mind even as you stayed perfectly still, silver hair spilling over your shoulder and onto the floor in waves as you leaned closer. Your heart hammered against your ribs. You knew what the right choice was. You simply weren't making it.
The woman beneath him was dark-haired, flushed, with her mouth open as Jacaerys pounded into her from behind, and you realized with a strange twist in your stomach that this was far from his first time. The rumors that swirled through the Red Keep were true, then. The Crown Prince, for all his duties and noble bearing in the daylight hours, was as much a creature of appetite as any Targaryen before him.
You, on the other hand, had never even been kissed. Never been touched. Good noble ladies waited for their wedding night, and common fucking was for the common whores—thank you for that wisdom, cousin Aemond.
His hand fisted in her dark hair, pulling her head back as he drove into her cunt with a rhythm that was almost borderline brutal. The sound of skin meeting skin echoed off the stone walls, punctuated by her breathy moans and his low groans of pleasure. You could see the sheen of sweat on his shoulders, the flex of muscle beneath his skin as he gripped her hips hard enough to leave bruises.
"Fuck," he growled, and the vulgarity of it—hearing such words from the lips of the Crown Prince—sent a forbidden thrill down your spine. "You take me so well."
The woman whimpered something you couldn't quite hear, and Jacaerys laughed—dark and satisfied. He leaned forward, pressing her face into the pillows as he changed his angle, and her muffled cry of pleasure made heat pool low in your belly.
Your hand had somehow found its way to your throat, fingers pressed against your racing pulse. This was wrong, so utterly wrong. You sat here, watching your cousin rut like a beast in heat, and worse—far worse—your body was responding to it. Your thighs pressed together on their own accord, seeking friction you had no right to want.
Leave. Now.
You started to pull back from the gap, but then Jacaerys pulled out suddenly, flipping the girl onto her back with easy strength, and you caught a glimpse of him fully—his flushed cock, hard and completely shameless. He spread her thighs wide and thrusted back into her cunt in with one smooth stroke, and a gasp tore from your throat before you could stop it.
Your hand flew to your mouth, palm clamping hard over your lips. The pearl earring—forgotten, still clutched in your other hand—slipped from your fingers and hit the stone floor with a soft clink that sounded deafening in the quiet of your chamber.
You froze, heart hammering, terrified the sound had somehow carried through the wall.
But Jacaerys didn't pause, didn't look toward the gap. He was too focused on the woman beneath him, and you—gods help you—you couldn't look away.
"Look at me," he commanded, and something in his voice—the authority, the certainty, the want—made your breath catch. The woman's eyes snapped to his face. "Good girl," he murmured, and thrust deeper.
The words sent heat flooding through you, pooling low into your belly. You felt it between your thighs—a pulse, an ache, something you had no name for. Your hand was still clamped over your mouth, but you couldn't move, couldn't think, could barely breathe—
The sharp knock at your chamber door made you jerk back from the wall as though it burned you.
"My lady?" came Lysa's voice, muffled through the heavy oak. "We've come to prepare you for supper."
You stumbled back from the screen. Your hand pressed against your cheek—Seven Hells, you were boiling. "A moment," you called out, breathless, hating how your voice wavered in the otherwise silent room.
You smoothed your skirts with trembling hands and tried to compose yourself before crossing to open the door. Your three ladies-in-waiting filed in—Lysa, Maryse, and young Elaena, their arms full of silks and jewelry boxes. They were good girls, all of them. You'd chosen them yourself—daughters of minor houses who actually seemed to like you rather than seeing you as a political opportunity. The last thing you needed were the usual vultures, daughters of great lords who'd spend more time reporting back to their mothers than actually being useful.
"You look flushed, my lady," Maryse observed you with immediate concern, setting down the silks onto the dressing table. "Are you well?"
"Quite well," you lied, settling into the chair before your mirror. Your reflection was damning, your silver hair mussed, falling loose from where you'd been pressed against the wall. Your cheeks were flushed, pupils blown wide and dark, emphasizing the violet haze. You looked exactly like what you were, a woman who'd been watching something she had no business seeing. "The fire was burning too hot. I've only just opened the window."
Lysa moved to begin unpinning your hair, her fingers gentle, yet ever so clever, as they worked. "I see my lady. The cook's boy told me the funniest story today," she began, and you felt yourself relax into the familiar rhythm of their chatter.
This was safe. This was normal. Unlike whatever madness had possessed you just moments ago.
Elaena brought forward the gown, it was a beautiful collection of pale red silk that caught the candlelight like dawn breaking over the Narrow Sea. The bodice was fitted, the neckline modest but elegant, with delicate embroidery along the sleeves that fell into drapes. It was a gown befitting a princess of dragon blood, though you sometimes forgot that's what you were.
As your ladies worked, Lysa plaiting your hair into an intricate crown of braids, Maryse threading deep crimson rubies on fine silver chains to weave through the silver, Elaena carefully lacing you into your gown—your mind wandered despite your best efforts.
You could still see it. The flex of Jacaerys's shoulders, the way his head had fallen back in pleasure. The sound of his voice, rough with need and desire.
Seven hells.
"Tilt your head, my lady," Lysa murmured, and you obeyed, watching in the mirror as she secured the final braid with a dragon brooch of white gold and rubies, its eyes tiny chips of garnet that seemed to glow due to the candlelight.
Your hair fell in a waterfall of silver down your back, nearly to your calves, the braids creating an ornate crown that framed your face. The rubies caught the light like drops of blood, and for a moment you understood why men wrote songs about Targaryen women. More specifically, why their chantee’s were filled with tales of you.
"Beautiful," Maryse breathed, stepping back to admire their work.
You were beautiful. You knew this, had always known it—it was simply a fact, like knowing the sky was blue or fire was hot. But beauty felt like a strange, useless disease when your mind was still full of images it shouldn't hold.
When your thoughts were consumed by your cousin, the heir to the Iron Throne, and the way he'd looked lost in pleasure with a woman who wasn't you.
The private dining hall was already warm and loud when you arrived, filled with the low hum of conversation and the clatter of serving plates. This was your favorite meal of the week. no courtiers to impress, no performers to sit through, no need to smile politely while some lord droned on about his son and why he’s worthy of your hand. Just family. The table could have seated fifty people easily, but tonight it was just the twelve of you, which somehow made the hall feel bigger and emptier at the same time.
Rhaenyra sat at the head in a gown of black and red, her crown set aside for the evening, silver hair braided simply. Daemon lounged beside her, looking more like a dangerous cat than a prince consort. Down the table, Alicent sat with her children scattered among Rhaenyra's, Aegon laughing at something Jace had said, Helaena showing Baela her embroidery. A year ago, they'd been on the brink of war. Now they broke bread together like it had never happened.
"There she is," Aegon called out as you entered, already half in his cups despite the early hour. "Our lovely cousin, late as always."
"I'm not late," you replied, taking your usual seat between Helaena and Baela. "You're simply too eager for the wine, Aegon."
Aegon clutched his chest in mock offense while Helaena reached for your hand beneath the table, giving it a gentle squeeze. She said nothing—she rarely did in company—but her smile was soft and genuine. You squeezed back, wishing she'd been born your sister instead of your cousin. She understood silence, understood that sometimes you just needed to exist quietly in a world that never managed to simply shut the fuck up.
"You look beautiful tonight," Helaena murmured, so quietly only you could hear. Her green eyes—so unlike the rest of the Targaryens—studied your face with an intensity that only she had. "Red suits you. Like fire. Like blood."
Before you could respond, the servants began bringing out the first course, and your attention was pulled elsewhere. You reached for your wine, grateful for something to do with your hands, and that's when you saw Jacaerys sat across the table and down two seats, between Luke and Joffrey. He was dressed formally in a black doublet with red embroidery, his dark hair still damp as though he'd bathed recently. He looked every inch the Crown Prince—composed, attentive, laughing at something Luke said.
He looked nothing like the man you'd seen less than an hour ago, flushed and shameless, fucking a woman whose name he probably didn't know. Or didn't care to remember.
Your cheeks heated at the memory, and you quickly looked down at your plate.
Gods, were you that much of a prude?
"How was your afternoon, my dear?" Rhaenyra suddenly asked you, her voice carrying easily down the table. She'd always been kind to you, treating you more as a daughter than a niece. Your father's sister, mourning the brother she'd lost, had perhaps seen something of him in you.
"Quiet, Your Grace," you managed, hoping your voice sounded normal. "I spent most of it reading in my chambers."
"Always with your books," Daemon observed with amusement. "You're worse than the damn Maesters."
The conversation flowed easily after that—talk of the day's small council meeting, Aegon's latest exploit (falling asleep during a petitioner's complaint), Helaena's new collection of butterflies. You participated when required, but part of your attention kept sliding back to Jacaerys despite your best efforts.
He caught you looking, which was more embarrassing than usual. His eyes narrowed, and for one horrible second you were certain he knew. Knew what you'd seen. Knew you'd watched. Your stomach dropped and you bit your lip hard enough to taste copper and looked away. When you risked another glance, he was already talking to Luke again, the moment forgotten.
It wasn't until the second course that Rhaenyra cleared her throat in that way that meant an announcement was coming. The table quieted immediately, all eyes turning to their queen.
"I've been thinking," she began, glancing at Jacaerys with obvious affection, "that our heir is now two and twenty. More than old enough to take a wife."
Across the table, Jacaerys kept his expression perfectly neutral and composed. But you saw his jaw tighten, saw the way his hand clenched briefly around his fork before he forced himself to relax.
"It's time we began seeking suitable matches," Rhaenyra continued. "I've already received inquiries from several great houses—the Arryns, the Starks, even a letter from the Triarchy expressing interest in an alliance."
"The Triarchy?" Daemon barked a laugh. "What would they offer, a wife who smells of spices, counts coins and wouldn't know what to do with a cock if you handed it to her with instructions?"
"They offered three ships of gold and exclusive trading rights," Rhaenyra replied dryly. "Which is more than most houses can promise."
"I won't marry for ships," Jacaerys said quietly, and something in his tone made you look at him once more. His expression was still composed, but there was a hardness around his eyes.
"You'll marry where it serves the realm," Rhaenyra said, though not unkindly. "As I did. As all rulers must."
"You married for love the second time," Jace pointed out.
"The second time, yes." Rhaenyra smiled at Daemon. "But first I did my duty. And you will do yours."
The tension at the table was palpable. Alicent looked uncomfortable, her hands folded tightly in her lap. Aegon was watching the exchange with barely concealed glee—always happy when someone else was being pressed into marriage talk instead of him.
"We'll host a series of feasts," Rhaenyra continued, her tone allowing no argument. "Let the eligible ladies of the realm come to court. Let Jacaerys meet them, dance with them. Surely among them there will be someone suitable."
"How many feasts?" Luke asked, grimacing. "I hate feasts."
"As many as it takes," Rhaenyra replied. "We'll begin preparations the following morrow."
Your stomach dropped. Feast after feast, watching Jacaerys dance with simpering ladies who would fall over themselves for the chance to be queen. Watching him smile that charming smile, knowing what you now knew—that he was skilled at pleasing women, that he knew exactly how to make them fall at his feet.
"How exciting," Baela said beside you, though her tone suggested she found it anything but. "More opportunities to wear uncomfortable gowns and make pleasant conversation with people who hate us."
"They don't all hate us," you murmured, though your heart wasn't in the defense.
Across the table, Jacaerys stared at his wine cup like it might provide him with answers. You almost felt bad for him. If anyone at this table had no chance of marrying for love, it was him. Not that he seemed particularly interested in finding one person to settle down with, but still, your point stood.
"Well then," Aegon raised his cup. "To Jace's upcoming nuptials. May his future wife have the patience of a saint and the deafness of a stone."
Despite the tension, several people laughed, and Rhaenyra shook her head with exasperated fondness. "Perhaps we should have music," she suggested, gesturing to the musicians who always waited in the shadows during these intimate suppers. "Clear some space. Let us remember we're still young enough to enjoy ourselves."
"An excellent idea," Daemon agreed, already rising. He offered his hand to Rhaenyra with a theatrical bow that made her laugh.
The servants quickly moved the table back, creating a space for dancing as the musicians struck up a lively tune. It was informal, nothing like the rigid court dances you'd endure at the upcoming feasts—this was just family, moving together without judgment or ceremony.
Luke grabbed Rhaena's hand first, spinning her into the space with more enthusiasm than grace. She laughed, steadying him when he nearly tripped over his own feet. Joffrey tried to convince Helaena to dance, but she demurred with a gentle shake of her head, content to watch from her seat.
"Dance with me," Baela demanded, pulling you up before you could protest. "Before one of the boys asks and proceeds to step on our feet."
You let yourself be drawn into the movement, falling into the familiar pattern. Baela was a good dancer—all the Targaryen children were taught from youth that grace in the ballroom was as important as grace on dragonback. You switched partners as the song changed, first with Aegon, who was surprisingly light on his feet despite the wine, then with Luke, who apologized three times for nearly stepping on your hem, which you found adorable.
"You're doing fine," you assured him with a smile, and he grinned back, boyish and sweet.
When that dance ended, you found yourself passed to Jacaerys.
Your breath caught as his hand found yours, the other settling at your waist. His palm was large and warm against your back, steadying you. You could smell him now, clean linen and spice. Could see his eyes up close, brown with flecks of amber in the firelight. Could see, really see, how stupidly beautiful he was.
"Having fun?" he asked as he led you through the steps, his tone pleasantly neutral and polite. The exact same way he'd speak to any cousin at a family gathering.
"Yes," you managed, hoping your voice sounded normal. "It's nice, having everyone together like this."
"Mm," he agreed, spinning you smoothly. "Rarer than it should be. Though I suppose it'll be even rarer once I'm shackled to some lord's daughter who'll expect me to sit through needlepoint demonstrations."
He was trying to make it sound like a joke, but it came out flat. Like he'd already accepted this was happening and hated every second of it.
"Maybe you'll find someone you actually like," you offered, though the words tasted bitter on your tongue.
A laugh, short and bitter. "Maybe. Though I doubt the great houses are sending their daughters for love matches. They want a crown, not a husband."
"Then perhaps you should look for someone who wants neither," you said before you could stop yourself.
Jacaerys raised an eyebrow, something that might have been interest flickering across his face. "And where would I find such a creature? They seem to be in short supply."
Before you could respond—before you could make an even greater fool of yourself—the song ended. Jace released you with a small bow, perfectly proper, and turned to offer his hand to Rhaena for the next dance.
You stepped back, your heart still racing for reasons that had nothing to do with the exertion of dancing. He'd been so normal. So completely indifferent. There was no awareness in his eyes, no sign that he saw you as anything other than his cousin, someone to dance with at family gatherings and exchange pleasantries with at supper. Which was as it should be. You should be relieved and instead, you felt something uncomfortably close to disappointment.
"You look troubled," Helaena's soft voice came from beside you. She'd moved so quietly you hadn't noticed her approach. "Like a bird that's flown into a window."
You turned to her, finding those strange green eyes studying you. "I'm fine," you said automatically.
"The spider watches from the corner," Helaena murmured, her gaze distant in that way it sometimes got after one of her vision spells. "But the spider doesn't know it's caught in a web of its own making."
"Helaena—"
But she'd already drifted away, drawn by something only she could see, leaving you standing at the edge of the dancing with her cryptic words echoing in your mind.
The spider watches from the corner. Seven hells, your poor, dear, earnest cousin knows you’re a pervert.
You watched Jacaerys spin Rhaena through the steps, laughing at something she said. Watched him dance with Baela next, then with his mother, the perfect dutiful son. He never once looked your way again and you told yourself that was exactly what you wanted.
The dancing continued for another hour before Rhaenyra finally called an end to the evening. "Early council meeting tomorrow," she announced with apologetic warmth. "And I need at least some sleep if I'm to endure Tyland Lannister's complaints about the damned grain tariffs."
The group began to disperse—Aegon stumbling slightly as Aemond steadied him with the patience only a brother could have, Luke and Joffrey arguing about something as they headed toward their chambers. You walked back to your chambers with Helaena and Baela, their soft conversation a comfortable buffer against your own churning thoughts. When you finally reached your door, you bid them goodnight and slipped inside, leaning back against the heavy oak with a shaky exhale.
Your ladies had been by earlier, the room was tidy, the fire banked low, your nightgown laid out across the bed. Everything was peaceful and ordinary. Your gaze immediately drifted, unbidden, to the corner where the carved screen stood.
You shouldn't. You absolutely shouldn't. But your feet carried you forward anyway, your hands moving the screen aside with trembling, eager, perverted fingers.
Empty. Fuck.
His room was dark save for a single candle burning on the bedside table. The crimson coverlet was smooth and undisturbed. The heavy curtains drawn back from the windows to let in the moonlight. No Jacaerys. No woman writhing beneath him. Nothing but silence and shadows.
You sat back on your heels, a strange mix of relief and something else—something you refused to name as disappointment—settling in your chest.
Where was he?
It was late, well past the hour when most of the castle had retired. Perhaps he'd gone to the Street of Silk, unwilling to bring his entertainment into the Red Keep on a night when the family had gathered. Perhaps he was in someone else's bed entirely, some lady's maid or kitchen girl who'd caught his eye.
Perhaps he was being discreet, something he clearly hadn't bothered earlier today. The thought dissipated as quickly as it came, no, maybe he was being discreet. Thoughtful, even. Of course, he'd been perfectly discreet earlier too, it was your fault for being a creep.
You pressed your palm against the cold stone, staring at that empty bed as though it might offer answers. The image from earlier was still burned into your mind—the flex of his shoulders, the sound of his voice rough with pleasure, the casual way he'd commanded that woman's body like he owned it.
Your cousin. The heir to the Iron Throne. The boy you'd grown up with, who used to let you win at cyvasse when you were children, who'd shown you how to skip stones across the fountain and laughed when you both got yelled at for it.
When the fuck had he turned into that? When had he learned to move like that, to take someone apart with his hands like it was easy?
And why, by all the Seven, couldn't you stop fucking thinking about it?
You pushed away from the wall, suddenly furious with yourself. This was madness. Dangerous, stupid madness that could only end in humiliation or worse. You needed to forget what you'd seen. Needed to seal that hole in the wall and pretend it had never existed.
Starting tomorrow. You'd call the servants first thing in the morning and have it filled with mortar. Tonight, tonight, though, you would sleep, and you would not dream of your cousin's hands, or his voice, or the way he'd looked so beautiful while lost in pleasure.
You climbed into bed still wearing your red silk gown, too tired to call your ladies back to unlace you. The rubies in your hair pressed uncomfortably against the pillow until you pulled them free with impatient fingers, letting your silver hair spill loose around you.
Sleep was slow to come. When it finally did, you dreamed of dragons and fire, of flying on Cannibal's back while something nameless chased you through the clouds. And in the dream, when you finally turned to face it, it had Jacaerys's eyes.
You did not look through the hole the following morning.
The temptation was there—gods, it was there, a constant itch beneath your skin as your ladies dressed you. But you kept your eyes firmly away from that corner, focusing instead on the monotonous task of standing still while they laced you into your gown.
It was white today, or perhaps the palest blue, the color seemed to shift in the light like a sort of moonstone. The bodice was scaled like dragon armor, each piece of fabric layered and stitched to create the illusion of protection. Gold chains draped across your shoulders and down your bare arms, cold against your skin. More chains hung from your waist, swaying gently when you moved. The sleeves were sheer and flowing, doing little to ward off the morning chill.
"You look like a goddess," Elaena breathed as she stepped back to admire their work.
"I look like I'm about to freeze to death, thank you very much," you replied, though without any real complaint.
Your hair was left mostly loose today, falling in silver waves down your back, with only two small braids pulled back from your face and secured with a dragon clasp of white gold. It was simple and appropriate for a small council meeting where you needed to be taken seriously.
The walk to the council chamber was embedded into your brain, your slippered feet silent on the cold stone floors. Guards nodded as you passed, servants stepped aside with murmured greetings. You were known throughout the Red Keep as kind, perhaps too kind for a Targaryen. You stopped to ask the head cook about her daughter's fever, remembered the name of the stable boy's new puppy hound, listened when the washerwomen complained about the state of the linens.
Your father had been like that, or so Rhaenyra told you. Loved by the smallfolk, remembered fondly even years after his death. You hoped it was true. You hoped you carried something of him beyond just his silver hair and violet eyes.
The council chamber was already half-full when you arrived. Lord Corlys sat at Rhaenyra's right hand, his age showing more each moon but his mind still sharp as any of the younger council members. Daemon lounged in his seat with typical irreverence, picking at his nails with a dagger. Grand Maester Gerardys shuffled through papers, and several other lords whose names you'd long since memorized filled out the remaining seats.
Rhaenys was there too, your mentor in all things draconic and strategic. She caught your eye as you entered and gave you a subtle nod of approval. She'd been instrumental in convincing Rhaenyra to let you train, to let you learn the ways of war despite your aunt's maternal protests.
"Good morrow, niece," Rhaenyra greeted you warmly as you took your seat. "I trust you slept well?"
"Well enough, Your Grace," you replied, ignoring the knowing look Daemon shot you. He always seemed to know when someone was lying, the bastard.
You'd earned your place at this table through years of study—history, law, trade routes, military strategy. While other noble daughters learned needlework and song, you'd buried yourself in the library, devouring every tome you could find. Knowledge was power, and you'd wanted to be useful. Wanted to matter beyond being another pretty Targaryen to marry off for alliances.
And then there was Cannibal. Your sweet baby boy, Cannibal.
You'd claimed him at two and ten, a feat that had shocked the entire realm. The wild dragon, the one who'd killed and eaten other dragons, who'd never been ridden—you'd walked up to him on Dragonstone's smoking beaches and simply asked. And he'd lowered his massive black head and let you climb onto his back.
The bond between you was unlike anything the Dragonkeepers had seen. You could feel him, always, a presence at the back of your mind, dark and fierce and free. Sometimes you knew his thoughts, or at least his intentions. When he wanted to hunt. When he wanted to fly far from the castle and its confining walls. When he missed you, though he'd never admit it, that damned proud creature.
He was out there now, somewhere over the Bay of Blackwater or perhaps the Kingswood. You could feel him, distantly, content in his solitude.
Vhagar was different—ancient, massive, slow with age but no less deadly. Aemond insisted he had full control of her, but you'd seen the truth when you flew near them. Vhagar tolerated Aemond. She hadn't fully accepted him, not the way Cannibal had accepted you. It would take years, perhaps decades, before that bond truly solidified.
If Aemond lived that long. Vhagar was known for her temper.
And Cannibal—Cannibal was larger still. Nearly the size of Balerion the Black Dread himself, or so the Dragonkeepers whispered when they thought you couldn't hear. Black as a night sky with none of the stars, with eyes like green flame and teeth as long as swords. He'd never accept the Dragonpit even if he could fit, which he couldn't. He roosted where he pleased, in sea caves along the coast, in the ruins of old Valyrian outposts, anywhere that gave him space and freedom and solitude.
"Shall we begin?" Rhaenyra's voice pulled you from your thoughts. She waited until everyone had settled, then gestured for Grand Maester Gerardys to start with the day's business.
The first hour was tedious, grain shipments from the Reach, trade disputes with the Free Cities, a complaint from House Royce about border incursions from mountain clans. You paid attention, offered your thoughts when asked, but your mind kept drifting.
Don't think about it. Don't think about him.
"There is one more matter," Rhaenyra said as the meeting drew toward its close. She looked around the table, her gaze lingering on you for a moment before moving on. "I've decided that Jacaerys should begin attending these meetings regularly. Starting the following morrow, he'll be joining us."
A few eyebrows raised, but no one protested. It made sense, he was two and twenty, the acknowledged heir, soon to be married. He needed to understand the workings of the realm he would one day rule.
"Will he be given a formal position?" Lord Corlys asked, ever practical, ever scheming.
"Not immediately," Rhaenyra replied. "Let him observe first. Learn our ways, then we'll see where his talents might be best utilized."
Daemon snorted. "His talents are best utilized in the training yard and the—"
"Daemon," Rhaenyra cut him off with a warning look, though her lips twitched with suppressed amusement.
You felt your cheeks heat and kept your eyes fixed firmly on the table. In a week’s time Jacaerys would be here, sitting in one of these chairs, probably directly across from you. You'd have to see him regularly, maintain professional courtesy, pretend you hadn't watched him fuck a woman senseless.
Gods have mercy.
"Any objections?" Rhaenyra asked, looking around the table.
Silence. What could anyone say? He was the heir and none of you were about to tell the Queen that her son wasn't allowed in the Small Council. That seemed like a great way to lose your head.
"Good. Then we're finished for today." She stood, and everyone else rose with her. "Same time in three days. Try not to let the realm burn down before then."
The council members began to file out, but Rhaenys caught your arm as you moved to leave.
"Walk with me," she said, and it wasn't really a request.
You followed her out into the corridor, down a side passage that led into the city and the Dragonpit. She said nothing for a long moment, just walked with that regal bearing she'd never quite lost, even after being passed over for the throne.
"You seem distracted," she finally said.
"I'm fine."
"You're lying." She stopped, turning to face you with those sharp eyes that missed nothing. "What's wrong?"
For a wild moment, you considered telling her. I accidentally discovered a hole in my wall that looks into Jacaerys's chambers, and now I can't stop thinking about what I saw, and I think I'm losing my mind.
Instead, you said, "I'm just tired. The dancing went rather late last night."
Rhaenys studied you for a long moment, clearly unconvinced, but eventually she nodded. "Very well. But if something is bothering you—truly bothering you—you know you can come to me."
"I know," you said softly. "Thank you."
She squeezed your shoulder once, then continued down the corridor, leaving you alone with your thoughts and the distant sound of dragons roaring in their pit.
You stood there for a moment, staring at nothing, and wondered how in seven hells you were going to survive sitting across from Jacaerys in council meetings. Wondered if he'd look at you the same way he'd looked at you while dancing—politely indifferent, completely unaware of the effect he had.
Wondered if that was better or worse than the alternative.
You found yourself wandering toward the kitchens, drawn by the familiar sounds of clattering pots and raised voices. The rest of the castle felt too quiet after council meetings, too full of people watching their words. The kitchens were honest, they were steaming hot, loud and smelling like fresh bread and meat.
"My lady!" Jessamyn looked up from the massive hearth, her round face flushed from the heat. She'd been head cook for as long as you could remember, ruling her domain with an iron ladle and a sharp tongue. "What brings you down here? Shouldn't you be off doing princess things?"
"Princess things are dreadfully boring," you replied, stealing a piece of candied lemon from a nearby tray. "I'd much rather be here."
"Oi, those are for tonight's supper!" But Jessamyn was smiling, swatting at you halfheartedly with her wooden spoon.
The kitchen staff had long since grown accustomed to your presence. You'd been sneaking down here since you were a child, preferring the warmth and chatter to the formality of the upper floors. Here, no one cared that you were a Targaryen. Here, you were just the girl who always burned her tongue on the stew and asked too many questions about how to make proper gravy.
"How's Mara's fever?" you asked, hopping up onto a cleared section of the work table.
"Broke this morning, thank the gods." Jessamyn's expression softened. "That tea you brought from the Maester helped, I think."
"Good. I'm glad." You watched as two scullery maids argued over the proper way to pluck a chicken, their debate growing increasingly heated. "Should you be concerned about that?"
"They'll sort it out," Jessamyn said dismissively. "Or they'll stab each other with the bloody kitchen knives, and I'll have two fewer girls making my life a misery. Either way."
"You staying for midday meal?" one of the kitchen boys asked hopefully. "We're making that venison stew you like."
"Can't today. I'm going to the Dragonpit."
"Your beast finally coming back?" Jessamyn asked, pulling a tray of bread from the oven. "Haven't seen him in what, near a fortnight?"
"Twelve days," you confirmed. Cannibal preferred his freedom, and you'd never been one to cage him. He came when he wanted, and you would not have it any other way. "He's out past Blackwater Bay somewhere. I can feel him."
"Feel him," one of the maids muttered. "Still sounds like madness to me, my lady."
"It is madness," you agreed cheerfully. "But it's a very useful madness."
You stayed a while longer, listening to the kitchen gossip, who was bedding whom, which lordling had insulted which servant, the general consensus that the upcoming feasts were going to be a right fucking nightmare to prepare for. Apparently, Rhaenyra had requested swan for one of them, and Jessamyn was already composing angry speeches about the impracticality of cooking swan.
"Tough as old leather and mean as sin," she complained, gesturing violently with her ladle. "But does Her Grace care? No. She wants swan because it's elegant. I'll give her elegant—I'll serve it so tough she'll break a tooth on it."
"I'll speak to her," you offered. "Suggest something else."
"You're a good girl," Jessamyn said, patting your cheek with a flour-dusted hand. "Too good for this lot of pompous cunts, if you ask me."
Eventually, you took your leave, stealing one more piece of candied lemon on your way out just to hear Jessamyn's exasperated shout behind you.
The walk to the Dragonpit took you through the city streets, and you pulled your cloak up to hide your distinctive hair. The smallfolk knew you by sight anyway—you came this way often enough—but it was easier not to draw any attention. A few people nodded as you passed, and you nodded back, trying not to think about how different you were from most nobles who never set foot outside the Red Keep's walls without a full escort of gold cloaks.
The Dragonpit loomed ahead, ancient and crumbling in places despite the best efforts to maintain it. The Dragonkeepers bowed as you approached, their respect tinged with something like awe. They still spoke in hushed tones about the day you'd claimed Cannibal, about the wild dragon who'd finally accepted a rider.
You came here even though your dragon never would. Cannibal was too large. He'd never fit through the Dragonpit's entrance even if he wanted to, which he decidedly did not. But you came anyway, to see the other dragons, to speak with the Dragonkeepers who understood what it meant to be bonded to such creatures.
"My lady," the eldest keeper greeted you. "Still no sign of your beast?"
"He's hunting in the Kingswood," you replied, moving past them into the cavernous space.
Some of the other dragons were here, Vermax in his usual corner, Arrax further back, Syrax sunning herself near the entrance where the light streamed in. They all shifted as you entered, great scaled heads turning, sensing you the way dragons always sensed Targaryen blood.
But none of them called to you the way Cannibal did. None of them were yours.
You could feel him now, distant but present in your mind. He was flying over the Kingswood, hunting deer or perhaps wild boar. Satisfied. He sent you an impression—not words, but feeling—of wind and height and the joy of the chase.
Umbās lenton, ñuha riña, you thought at him in High Valyrian, not knowing if he could truly hear your thoughts the way you felt his intentions. Māzigon lo jorrāelagon.
Stay free, my boy. Come if needed.
You stood there in the Dragonpit for a while, watching the other dragons, feeling the heat of their breath and the weight of their ancient eyes. Vhagar wasn't here either—she was too massive, kept in the fields outside the city where she had room to spread her wings without crushing half the buildings in King's Landing. But even Vhagar was smaller than Cannibal.
"He burns green, doesn't he?" one of the younger keepers asked, approaching cautiously. "Your Cannibal. Green flame."
"Yes," you confirmed. "Like poison made fire."
The keeper shuddered slightly. "I've never seen anything like it. Most dragons burn orange or red, sometimes gold. But green and his size. Seven hells, my lady, he's near as big as Balerion was."
"Bigger, perhaps," you said softly. "He's still growing."
The thought should have terrified you. Instead, it filled you with something like pride.
Supper that evening was a grander affair than the intimate family meal from the night before. The great hall was filled with lords and ladies of the court, the high table crowded with Targaryens and their most favored bannermen. Musicians played from the gallery, servants moved between the tables with platters of roasted boar and honeyed duck, and the wine flowed freely.
You sat between Baela and one of the Velaryon cousins whose name you could never quite remember, making polite conversation and trying not to let your gaze wander too obviously across the hall.
Jacaerys, much to your surprise, wasn't there.
His seat at the high table sat empty, and when you'd asked Rhaenyra about it as casually as you could manage, she'd simply said he was indisposed. Daemon had smirked into his wine cup at that, and you'd felt your cheeks burn.
Indisposed. Right, your arse.
The meal dragged on, course after course, toast after toast, Lord Whoever droning on about trade agreements until you wanted to scream. You smiled and nodded and said the right things, all while your mind churned with thoughts you had no business thinking.
Where was he? Out in the city again, finding another willing woman to warm his bed? Or perhaps he'd brought someone here, to his chambers, and simply hadn't wanted to risk being seen at supper with the smell of sex still clinging to him.
Gods, you needed to stop. This needed to stop, permanently, and immediately.
By the time Rhaenyra finally dismissed the court for the evening, you were wound tight as a crossbow string. You said your goodnights to Baela and Helaena, declined Aegon's slurred offer to continue drinking in his chambers, and practically fled back to your own rooms.
Your ladies had already been by, the fire was lit, your sleeping shift laid out. You should call them back to help you out of your gown. Should prepare for bed like a sensible person and get some actual sleep before tomorrow's duties.
Instead, you found yourself moving toward the corner where the carved screen stood.
Don't, you told yourself firmly. Don't be a fool.
But your hands were already pushing the screen aside, your knees hitting the cold stone floor as you pressed your eye to the gap.
Empty. Again. Damn, damn, damn.
The room was dark save for moonlight streaming through the windows. The bed undisturbed, the coverlet smooth. No candles lit, no sign of life. You sat back, frustration coiling in your chest. Where in the seven hells was he?
You should go to bed. Should stop this madness before it consumed you entirely. But instead, you paced. Back and forth across your chamber like a caged animal, your silk skirts swishing against the floor. Every few minutes you'd stop, kneel down, check the hole again.
Still empty.
This was pathetic. You were pathetic. Waiting like some lovesick girl for a glimpse of a man who didn't even know you existed beyond being his cousin at family suppers.
He danced with you, a small voice whispered in your mind. He smiled at you.
He smiled at everyone. That was what princes did. And once again, you checked.
Empty.
"Fuck," you muttered under your breath, pressing your forehead against the cool stone. This was going to drive you mad. You needed to seal this hole, needed to forget you'd ever found it, needed to—
The door to his chamber opened and you froze, eye pressed to the gap, heart suddenly hammering.
Jacaerys entered first, and he wasn't alone. Your throat tightened, and for a split second, you told yourself to look away, to be decent for once. Instead, you pressed harder against the gap, like that might somehow get you closer.
The woman who followed him through the door was decidedly not a servant or a whore from the Street of Silk. Her gown was fine silk, deep green with gold embroidery at the sleeves. This was expensive, well-made, the kind only highborn ladies wore. Her dark hair was pinned up elaborately, though a few strands had come loose, and when she laughed at something Jace said, the sound was refined.
You recognized her after a moment—Lady Cassandra Baratheon, one of Lord Borros's daughters. She'd been at court for the past month, ostensibly to foster closer ties between Storm's End and the crown.
Apparently, she'd been fostering ties of a different sort.
"Wine?" Jace asked, moving to the table where a pitcher sat waiting.
"Please," Cassandra replied, and there was an ease between them that spoke of familiarity. This wasn't their first time together. Not even close.
Something hot and ugly twisted in your chest. Jealousy, perhaps, though you had no right to it.
Jace poured two cups, handed her one, and they stood there for a moment just talking. You couldn't hear the words through the stone, but you could see the way Cassandra touched his arm, fingers trailing down from shoulder to elbow with the intimacy of someone who'd done it before. The way Jace leaned in closer, his head tilted as he listened to whatever she was saying, a small smile playing at his lips.
And then he kissed her, and you inhaled sharply, pulse suddenly pounding everywhere, your throat, your wrists, between your legs.
It started slow—almost tender, really. His hand came up to cup her face, thumb stroking along the line of her jaw as their mouths moved together in a way that suggested they'd learned each other's rhythms. Cassandra made a soft sound, stepping into him, and her fingers tangled in his dark hair, tugging slightly.
Pervert, pervert, pervert.
Your eye stayed pressed to the gap in the stone. Your hand, seemingly of its own accord, had drifted to press against your stomach, just above where heat was beginning to pool low and insistent.
Jace backed her toward the bed, still kissing her, his hands starting to work at the laces of her gown. She helped him, both of them fumbling slightly in their eagerness despite clearly having done this dance before. You watched as layer after layer of silk fell away and onto the floor, first was the overdress, then the underdress, then the stays—until she stood in just her shift, the thin fabric clinging to curves that made your throat go dry.
"Gods, you're beautiful," Jace murmured and you could read the words on his lips even if you couldn't quite hear them through the stone.
Cassandra smiled, reaching for the fastenings of his doublet. "You say that to all of them, my grace."
Your jaw clenched. So you were right. There were others. Many others, probably.
"I mean it with you," Jace said, and you wanted to scream at Cassandra not to believe him, that those were just pretty words he knew how to wield.
But Cassandra seemed to believe him, or at least didn't care if it was true. She pushed his doublet off his shoulders, her hands running over his chest, fingernails scraping lightly over skin, and Jace groaned—a sound you felt echo between your own thighs. He pulled her shift over her head in one smooth motion, and then she was naked before him.
She was beautiful, that you could admit that even through the haze of jealousy burning in your chest. Full breasts, a narrow waist flaring into hips that Jace's hands immediately claimed, skin like cream in the candlelight. Dark hair spilled down her back as Jace turned her around, pressing kisses down her spine, and you watched his mouth trace the path of her vertebrae one by one.
"Jace," she breathed, arching back against him, pressing her bare arse against where you could see he was already hard beneath his breeches.
Your own breathing had gone shallow. Your hand pressed harder against your stomach, wanting to move lower but not quite daring. Not yet.
Jace took his time with her. His hands mapped every curve, every dip and swell of her body. He cupped her breasts, thumbs circling her nipples until they peaked and she gasped. Kissed the side of her neck, teeth scraping against the tendon there in a way that made her shiver. Slid one hand down her stomach, between her thighs, and even from here you could see how she bucked against his touch.
"Please," Cassandra whimpered, and the desperate edge to her voice made your breath catch.
"Patience," Jace murmured against her skin, but there was dark amusement in his tone. He was enjoying this—enjoying making her wait, making her beg.
When he finally guided her onto the bed, she went willingly, eagerly, spreading herself out on the crimson coverlet like an offering. Her thighs fell open without prompting, shameless in her want, and you could see the glistening evidence of her arousal even from your hidden vantage point.
Jace shed the rest of his clothes—unlacing his breeches with quick movements—and your mouth went dry at the sight of him. You'd seen him before, that first night, but somehow this felt different. More intimate. You could see every line of muscle in his stomach, the dark hair trailing down from his navel, the thick length of his cock jutting proudly from his hips as he climbed onto the bed.
Your hand finally, finally, slipped beneath the waistband of your smallclothes.
Jace settled between Cassandra's thighs, bracing himself above her on his forearms, and for a moment they just looked at each other. Then he pushed his cock deep inside her—slow, so agonizingly slow—and Cassandra's head fell back with a moan that you felt echo through your own body.
“Your grace—-hhhhh,” she moaned.
Your fingers found the wet heat between your legs, already slick and aching. You bit your lip hard to keep from making a sound.
"Fuck," Jace groaned, his hips rolling in a steady, measured rhythm. "You feel perfect. So tight and wet for me."
"Harder," Cassandra gasped, her nails raking down his back hard enough to leave red marks. "Please, your grace, I need—"
He gave her exactly what she wanted.
The gentleness evaporated like morning mist, replaced by something raw and almost brutal. Jace pulled nearly all the way out before slamming his cock back into her, and Cassandra cried out—pleasure and pain mixing in her voice in a way that made your fingers circle faster over your clit. His hand fisted in her hair, yanking her head back to expose the long line of her throat, and his teeth found the skin there, biting down just hard enough to make her gasp.
"Is this what you wanted?" Jace growled, his voice low and dangerous in a way you'd never heard before. Not gentle, princely Jace. This was something darker. "This what you've been thinking about all through supper? Sitting there with your father, making polite conversation, while all you could think about was having my cock inside you?"
"Yes," Cassandra sobbed, her body arching to meet each brutal thrust. The obscenity of the words, the rawness of it, sent liquid heat flooding through you. "Gods, yes, don't stop—please don't stop—"
Your fingers worked faster, your other hand coming up to muffle any sounds threatening to escape your throat. You could feel your own wetness coating your fingers, could feel the tension building low in your belly as you watched Jace fuck Cassandra with single-minded intensity.
"Greedy little thing," Jace muttered, but there was dark satisfaction in his tone. His free hand moved between their bodies, and you knew exactly what he was doing when Cassandra suddenly cried out sharply, her whole body going rigid. He was circling her clit with his thumb while he pounded into her, giving her pleasure from two directions at once, and the thought of it—the thought of him doing that to you—made your legs tremble.
"Jace, I'm going to—oh gods, I'm going to come—"
"That's it," he encouraged, his voice rough and strained. "Come on my cock. Let me feel you, sweetling."
She shattered. Her whole body convulsed, back arching off the bed, mouth open in a silent scream before the sound finally tore from her throat—his name, over and over, like a prayer. You could see the way her cunt clenched around him, could see the exact moment the pleasure crested and broke over her.
Your own fingers moved desperately, chasing the same release, imagining it was Jace's hand between your thighs, Jace's cock filling you, Jace's voice in your ear telling you how good you felt. But Jace didn't stop. He kept fucking Cassandra through her peak, relentless, using her body to chase his own pleasure as she whimpered and clutched at the sheets beneath her. Her sensitivity must have been overwhelming, but he showed no mercy, just kept driving into her with brutalness.
He was so undeniably good at this, at fucking whores, noble ladies, at driving his cock into their cunts and making them squeal beneath him from the pleasure.
"Too much," she gasped, but her hips were still rising to meet his, her body betraying her words. "Y-your grace, it's—fuck—it's too much—"
"You can take it," he said, and there was something almost cruel in his certainty. "You always take it so well for me."
His rhythm grew erratic, desperate. You could see the tension in his shoulders, the way his jaw clenched, the muscles in his arse flexing with each thrust. He was close—so close—
Your own pleasure was building, that familiar tightening, that pressure mounting—
Jace pulled out suddenly, wrapping his hand around himself and stroking once, twice, before he came with a groan that sounded almost pained. His seed spilled across Cassandra's stomach in thick ropes, marking her, claiming her, and the sight of it—the raw, animalistic possession of it—sent you tumbling over the edge.
You bit down on your palm hard enough to taste blood, muffling the sound threatening to tear from your throat as pleasure crashed through you in waves. Your fingers didn't stop, working you through it, drawing it out until you were shaking and oversensitive and barely able to see through the haze.
When you finally came back to yourself, gasping and trembling, Jace was cleaning Cassandra with gentle touches that seemed almost absurd after the brutality of moments before. She was boneless against the pillows, looking thoroughly debauched, her hair a tangled mess and her skin flushed pink.
"Stay," Jace said quietly, pulling her against his chest.
"I shouldn't," Cassandra murmured, but she was already nestling into him, her head tucked beneath his chin. "If someone finds out—"
"Let them find out. I don't care."
You wanted to laugh at the lie of it. Of course he cared. He just didn't care enough not to fuck her. Within minutes, Cassandra's breathing had evened out into sleep, her body going lax in his arms. Jace stared at the ceiling for a long while, his expression unreadable in the dim light. One hand stroked absently through her hair, gentle in a way that made your chest ache.
Then he turned his head slightly—and for one heart-stopping moment, his gaze seemed to land exactly where you knelt. Directly at the wall. Directly at your hiding place.
But that was impossible. He couldn't see you through solid stone. Couldn't know you were there, hand still between your thighs, lips swollen from biting back your moans, watching him like some desperate, pathetic creature.
You jerked back from the hole anyway, your heart hammering wildly against your ribs. Your whole body was trembling—from the release, from the fear of discovery, from shame so acute it felt like it might choke you. You'd just brought yourself to peak while watching your cousin fuck another woman. While imagining it was you in that bed, you he was whispering filth to, you he was making come apart on his cock.
This was sick. Wrong. You were sick and wrong and yet, deep down, you knew, with terrible certainty, that you'd be back tomorrow night. And the night after that. Until this madness either consumed you or destroyed you entirely.
You barely slept that night.
Every time you closed your eyes, you saw him, his shoulders, his body, his thick cock, the way his hand had fisted in Cassandra's hair, the rough timber of his voice as he'd commanded her to come. And beneath it all, the shameful memory of your own hand between your thighs, chasing pleasure you had no right to feel.
When dawn finally broke, you were grateful for it.
Your ladies dressed you in silence, perhaps sensing your foul mood. The gown today was the palest blush pink. The bodice was fitted with embroidered silver thread in delicate patterns that caught the morning sun. The neckline dipped low, modest enough for court but still flattering, drawing the eye. Long flowing sleeves of sheer silk hung from your shoulders, gossamer-thin, moving like water with each gesture. The skirts were layers upon layers of the same pale silk, creating an almost dreamlike effect as you walked, the fabric seeming to float around you.
The walk to the council chamber felt longer than usual. You nodded to the guards, smiled at passing servants, and tried not to think about the fact that Jacaerys would be here today. His first small council meeting. Sitting across from you for hours while you pretended you hadn't watched him fuck Lady Baratheon into the mattress last night.
Gods give you strength.
The council chamber was already filling when you arrived. "Good morrow, niece," Rhaenyra greeted you warmly as you took your seat.
"Your Grace." You settled into your chair, arranging your skirts, trying not to look at the empty seat that would soon be occupied.
Others filtered in quick waves, Lord Bartimos Celtigar, Master of Coin; Ser Steffon Darklyn, Commander of the City Watch; a handful of other lords whose presence was required. The table filled, voices murmuring in low conversation.
Then the door opened again, and Jacaerys entered.
He looked... gods, he looked perfect. Rested and put-together in a way that seemed deeply unfair given what you knew he'd been doing until late into the night. His doublet was his usual black with red embroidery, his dark hair neatly combed, and when he smiled at his mother, it was warm and genuine and completely utterly unbothered.
"Apologies for my lateness," he said, taking the empty seat directly across from you.
Of course. Of course he'd be directly in your line of sight.
His eyes met yours for a brief moment—polite, pleasant, utterly indifferent—before moving on. No recognition. No awareness that anything was amiss. He had no idea what you'd witnessed. No idea that you'd spent the night with your hand between your thighs, imagining it was you in Cassandra Baratheon's place.
"Let us begin," Rhaenyra said once everyone had settled. She gestured to Grand Maester Gerardys. "The reports from the North, if you would."
Gerardys cleared his throat and began reading, something about increased wildling activity beyond the Wall, requests from the Night's Watch for additional men and supplies. You forced yourself to pay attention, to nod at the appropriate moments, to look anywhere except at Jacaerys.
It was going to be a very long meeting. The discussion moved from the North to the Stepstones, where Daemon's efforts to hold the islands remained precarious at best. Then to trade disputes with Pentos, grain shortages in the Reach, and a particularly tedious debate about tax collection methods that made you want to throw yourself from the nearest window.
Jacaerys contributed thoughtfully when asked, his observations intelligent and well-reasoned. He'd been well-trained for this, you realized. Rhaenyra had made sure her heir would be ready to rule, ready to navigate the complexities of statecraft. Of the Realm.
Ready to be the perfect prince while fucking half the women in King's Landing in his spare time.
"There is another matter," Rhaenys said, her voice cutting through your spiraling thoughts. She was looking at you, and there was something in her expression that made your stomach clench. "The matter of our dragons and their war-readiness."
The table went quiet.
"The realm is at peace," Lord Corlys pointed out carefully.
"For now," Rhaenys replied. "But peace is a fragile thing, as we all learned during the—" she paused, choosing her words carefully, "—recent troubles. We cannot afford to be complacent."
"What are you suggesting?" Rhaenyra asked, though her tone suggested she already knew.
"That we ensure our dragons are battle-ready. That we train them for war, even if we pray that war never comes." Rhaenys turned her sharp gaze fully on you. "Cannibal, in particular, has never been tested in true combat. He's large, powerful, but wild and untested."
Your jaw tightened. "Cannibal doesn't need testing. He's—"
"A wild dragon who's only known freedom," Rhaenys interrupted, not unkindly. "I'm not questioning your bond with him, child. I'm suggesting that bond needs to be forged stronger and that will only come through discipline."
"You want me to train him for war," you said flatly.
"I want you to prepare him for the possibility of war." Rhaenys leaned forward slightly. "With drills and formation flying with the other dragons. Learning to respond to commands in the chaos of battle. These things take time and practice."
You wanted to argue. Wanted to say that Cannibal would never tolerate such constraints, that he'd sooner eat the other dragons than fly in formation with them. That forcing him into drills and formations would break something fundamental in the bond between you, the trust that came from respecting his need for freedom.
"I don't think it's a good idea," you said carefully. "Cannibal isn't like the other dragons. He's larger, older in his ways. Trying to force him into formations could be potentially dangerous."
"Dangerous for whom?" Daemon asked, sounding genuinely curious rather than mocking. "For you, or for the other dragons?"
"Both," you admitted. "Cannibal doesn't play well with others. He never has. That's why he lived alone on Dragonstone for so long, why he—" you stopped yourself before saying ate the other dragons, because that seemed impolitic in the moment. "Why he prefers solitude."
"All the more reason to socialize him now," Rhaenys countered. "Before we're in the middle of a battle and he decides another dragon looks appetizing."
A few uncomfortable chuckles around the table. It wasn't really a joke, not one you found particularly funny.
"What about Vhagar?" you asked, grasping for any argument. "She's larger, older. Is Aemond expected to fly formation drills with her?"
"Vhagar is already battle-tested," Rhaenys replied. "She fought in Aegon's Conquest, in the wars since. She knows what's expected. Cannibal has only ever known hunting sheep and being left alone."
It stung because it was true. For all his size and power, Cannibal had never been to war. Had never been asked to do anything more demanding than fly when you called and let you sit astride him while he soared through the clouds.
"What does Her Grace think?" you asked, turning to Rhaenyra. Let the Queen make this decision, let it not be your choice to potentially damage the one pure thing in your life.
Rhaenyra studied you for a long moment, her expression deep in thought. "I think Rhaenys makes valid points. But I also trust your judgment when it comes to your dragon. If you truly believe this would be harmful rather than helpful, I'll take that into consideration."
It was a careful, political answer. She was giving you an out, but also making it clear that refusing would require solid justification, not just childish objection.
"I'll think about it," you said finally. "Perhaps we could start small. Test his tolerance before committing to full formation drills."
"A reasonable compromise," Rhaenys agreed, though she didn't look entirely satisfied. "We'll begin in a week's time. Simple exercises first."
The knot in your stomach tightened, but you nodded anyway.
"What about Vermax?" Daemon asked, his gaze sliding to Jacaerys with lazy interest. "The heir's dragon should certainly be included in this training."
"Vermax and I train regularly," Jace said, and there was the slightest edge of defensiveness in his tone.
"In the training yard, yes," Rhaenys replied. "But have you ever taken him into simulated combat? Flown him through fire and smoke? Tested his response time when startled?"
Jace's jaw tightened. "No."
"Then you'll join us as well," Rhaenys said, brooking no argument. "All dragonriders of fighting age. Baela, Rhaena, Aegon if we can pry him away from his cups long enough."
"Then it's settled," Rhaenyra said, her tone making it clear the discussion was closed. "Rhaenys will oversee the training regimen. All dragonriders are expected to participate." Her eyes found yours. "Including you, niece. I know Cannibal prefers his solitude, but this is necessary."
You bit back a dozen more arguments and simply nodded. "As you command, Your Grace."
The meeting dragged on for another hour, more reports, more discussions, more decisions that needed to be made. Through it all, you were acutely aware of Jacaerys sitting across from you. The way he listened intently when others spoke. The way his fingers drummed absently against the table when he was thinking. The way he looked so effortlessly princely while you sat there trying not to remember the sound of his voice, rough with pleasure, commanding Cassandra to come for him.
Finally, finally, Rhaenyra called an end to it. "Same time in three days. Try not to let anything catch fire before then."
You stood quickly, eager to escape before—
"Walk with me?" Rhaenys said, appearing at your elbow.
Of course because the gods clearly thought you hadn't suffered enough today. You fell into step beside her, following her out of the council chamber and down a side corridor. She said nothing for a long moment, just walked with that regal bearing she'd never lost, even after being passed over for the throne.
"You seem troubled," she finally said.
"I don't think Cannibal will take well to this training. I'm worried it will damage our bond."
Rhaenys studied you for a long moment, clearly unconvinced that was the whole truth. "He'll adjust. The bond between you is strong enough to weather some discomfort."
"It's not just discomfort. He's not like the other dragons. He's—"
"Wild. Yes, I know. But wildness can be channeled, shaped, without breaking it entirely." She squeezed your shoulder gently. "Trust me, and more importantly, trust him. Trust that your bond is stronger than a few training exercises. He did choose you, at the end of the day."
You nodded, not trusting yourself to speak.
"Now," Rhaenys said, her tone shifting to something lighter, "I believe Helaena was looking for you earlier. Something about her insects?"
Right. Helaena. Safe, sweet Helaena who wouldn't ask probing questions about why you looked like you hadn't slept properly in days.
"Thank you," you said quietly. "For everything, Aunt."
Rhaenys smiled, though there was something sad in it. "Go. Spend time with your cousin. The gods know there are precious few people in this world who'll love us without wanting something in return."
You found Helaena in her chambers, which were somehow both cluttered and organized in a way only she could manage. Jars and terrariums covered every surface, each containing some specimen or another, there were butterflies, beetles, spiders, things you couldn't even name. It was entirely Helaena.
"You came," Helaena said, looking up from where she was carefully transferring a large iridescent beetle from one container to another. Her silver-gold hair was loose around her shoulders, and she wore a simple gown of pale green that brought out the unusual color of her eyes. "I wasn't sure you would."
"Of course I came." You settled onto the cushioned bench beside her workspace, careful not to disturb anything. The layers of your pink gown pooled around you like flower petals. "What have you found, dear cousin?"
Helaena's face lit up in that rare, genuine smile she reserved for the things she truly loved. "A stag beetle. Look at his mandibles, aren't they magnificent?"
You looked. The beetle was indeed impressive, its horn-like mandibles nearly as long as its body, gleaming black with hints of deep purple when the light hit them right. "Beautiful," you agreed, and meant it.
For the next hour, Helaena showed you her collection, explaining in her soft, sometimes disjointed way about each specimen's habits and characteristics. You listened, grateful for the distraction, for the simplicity of her enthusiasm. Here, there were no council meetings or dragon training or inappropriate thoughts about cousins.
"Lord Cregan Stark sent me a letter," Helaena said suddenly, interrupting her own explanation about moth wing patterns.
You blinked. "Did he?"
"Yes. He's coming to court for the feasts. The ones for Jace." She was studying a moth wing with intense focus, not meeting your eyes. "He asked if he might call on me. To discuss insects."
Something in her tone made you pause. "Ah, I see, insects."
"He's interested in the wildlife of the North. The creatures that survive the cold. The ice spiders." Helaena finally looked up, and there was something almost vulnerable in her green eyes. "Do you think that's really why he wants to call on me?"
Oh. Oh.
Cregan Stark was young, newly Lord of Winterfell after his father's passing two years past. By all accounts he was honorable, strong, kind, everything a northern lord should be. And if he was expressing interest in Helaena...
"I think," you said carefully, "that Lord Cregan would be very fortunate if you agreed to speak with him. About insects or anything else, dear cousin."
Helaena's cheeks flushed pink. "He's very kind in his letters. Patient and he doesn't mind when I ramble about things most people find boring. He even sent me a preserved ice spider specimen from beyond the Wall. Said he thought I might like to study it."
Your heart softened. A man who would hunt down rare specimens for Helaena's collection was a man worth considering. "That's incredibly thoughtful, Hel."
"Mother says I should consider marriage eventually. That I can't hide in my chambers with my insects forever." Helaena's voice was quiet, tinged with something like resignation. "But most lords look at me like I'm mad. Like I'm something to be pitied or fixed."
"Then they're fools," you said firmly. "You're brilliant, Helaena. Anyone with half a brain can see that."
"Lord Cregan doesn't look at me like that. At least, not in his letters." She turned back to her moths, a small smile playing at her lips. "He asks questions. Real questions about my observations and theories. He doesn't just humor me."
"Will you see him when he arrives?"
"I... I believe I might." She looked back down at her specimens, fingers gentle as she adjusted a butterfly's position in its case. "It's strange. I never thought—I mean, I never imagined someone might actually want to court me. Not really."
"You're a princess of the blood," you pointed out. "Half the lords in Westeros would trip over themselves for the chance."
"They'd trip over themselves for the crown and the alliance," Helaena corrected softly. "Not for me. But Lord Cregan, he talks to me like I'm a person. Not a prize to be won or a madwoman to be managed."
You reached over and squeezed her hand. "Then I hope he lives up to his letters. And if he doesn't, I'll feed him to Cannibal."
Helaena laughed, a rare, bright sound that made you smile despite everything. "The wolf meets the spider in the dark. The spider weaves while the wolf watches. But which one catches which?"
Another one of her strange pronouncements. You'd long since given up trying to decipher them.
"What about you?" Helaena asked, suddenly aware of her surroundings again. "Will you dance with any lords at the feasts?"
Your stomach dropped. You'd almost managed to forget about the upcoming feasts, the parade of eligible ladies who would be throwing themselves at Jacaerys while you watched from the sidelines.
"I doubt it," you said lightly. "You know I prefer the edges of the room to the center of attention."
"The spider watches from the corner," Helaena murmured again, and something in her tone made you look up sharply. "But the spider doesn't know it's caught in a web of its own making."
Helaena suddenly moved on, returning her attention to her beetles, humming softly to herself. Leaving you to wonder if she'd just made an innocent observation or if she somehow knew exactly what you'd been doing in the dark corners of your chambers.
You stayed with Helaena until the sun began to set, letting her soft voice and gentle presence soothe the jagged edges of your thoughts. Here, at least, things made sense. Here, you could almost forget the madness consuming you.
Almost.
When you finally took your leave, pressing a kiss to the top of her silver head, she caught your hand.
"Be careful," she said quietly. "Webs are sticky things. Hard to escape once you're caught."
You had no answer for that. The walk back to your chambers was quiet, most of the castle beginning to prepare for the evening meal. When you reached your door, you found your ladies already waiting.
"We've prepared a bath, my lady," Lysa said with a smile. "Thought you might want to wash before supper."
Gods, yes. Perhaps hot water and lavender oil could wash away the tension coiled tight in your shoulders, the restless energy that had plagued you all day.
"Thank you," you said, letting them usher you inside.
The tub had been set up near the fire, steam rising from the water in lazy curls. Your ladies helped you out of the elaborate pink gown, unlacing the bodice and lifting the layers of silk away until you stood in just your shift. Then that too was removed, and you stepped into the blessed heat of the bath with a sigh.
"We'll be just outside if you need anything, my lady," Maryse said. "Call when you're ready to dress for supper."
You nodded, already sinking deeper into the water, letting it cover you up to your shoulders. The heat seeped into your muscles, and for the first time all day, you felt some of the tension begin to ease.
You closed your eyes, breathing in the scent of lavender, trying to empty your mind of everything, council meetings, dragon training, Helaena's cryptic warnings, and most especially the memory of brown eyes and dark hair and hands that knew exactly how to make a woman fall apart.
Stop, you told yourself firmly. Just stop.
For a few blessed minutes, you succeeded. The water, the warmth, the quiet—it was almost peaceful.
Then something moved at the edge of your vision. You opened your eyes and looked toward the rim of the tub. A spider. But not just any spider, this thing was massive, easily the size of your palm, with thick hairy legs and a body that seemed to pulse as it crept along the wooden edge of the tub. Moving toward you.
The scream tore from your throat before you could stop it, pure, primal terror that echoed off the stone walls.
You shot to your feet, water sloshing over the sides of the tub, your whole body shaking as you tried to scramble away from the creature. But the tub was slippery, your feet finding no purchase, and you nearly fell before catching yourself on the edge.
"My lady!" You heard Lysa's voice, muffled through the door, and then—
The door burst open, but it wasn't your ladies who came through first.
It was Jacaerys. He must have been passing in the corridor, must have heard your scream and thought, what? That you were being murdered? Attacked? He rushed in with his hand on his sword hilt, eyes wild, clearly ready to face down whatever threat had made you scream like that.
And then he froze. Because you were standing there, in the middle of the tub, completely and utterly naked. Water streaming down your body, your silver hair plastered to your back and shoulders, every inch of you exposed in the firelight.
For one endless, horrifying moment, neither of you moved.
His eyes went wide, his mouth falling open slightly as his gaze traveled down and then snapped back up to your face. You could see the exact moment his brain caught up with what he was seeing, the way his cheeks flushed, the way his throat worked as he swallowed.
"I—" he started, his voice rough. "I heard you scream, I thought—"
"SPIDER!" you shrieked, pointing at the creature that was still making its way around the rim of the tub, seemingly unconcerned with the chaos it had caused. "There's a massive fucking spider, Jace!"
Jace's gaze followed your pointing finger, and you watched him take in the admittedly impressive specimen currently terrorizing you.
"That's, yes, that's a spider," he said, somewhat stupidly.
"I KNOW IT'S A SPIDER!" you yelled, still frozen in place, acutely aware that you were naked and he was staring and your ladies were probably right behind him in the corridor and this was literally the worst thing that had ever happened to you.
Your ladies burst in then, Lysa and Maryse and Elaena, their faces panicked, clearly thinking you were dying. They took in the scene, you, naked in the tub. Jacaerys, standing there looking like he'd been struck by lightning. The spider, innocently crawling.
"My lady!" Lysa gasped, immediately grabbing a linen cloth and rushing forward to wrap it around you.
But the damage was done. Jacaerys had seen everything. Every curve, every inch of skin, every part of you that should have remained hidden beneath layers of silk and propriety.
Damn the Gods. Damn you, this is your punishment for being a pervert.
"I'll just—" Jace stammered, backing toward the door, his face now bright red. "I'll—the spider—sorry—I thought—"
He practically fled, the door slamming shut behind him. You stood there, wrapped in the linen cloth, shaking for entirely different reasons now.
"Oh gods," you breathed. "Oh gods, he saw me. He saw—"
"It's all right, my lady," Maryse said soothingly, though she looked rather scandalized herself. "It was an accident. He heard you scream and thought you were in danger."
"I AM in danger!" you gestured wildly at the spider, which had now made it halfway around the tub. "That thing is massive!"
"It's just a spider, my lady," Elaena said gently, moving toward it with a cloth. Within moments she'd captured it and was carrying it toward the window. "See? Harmless."
Harmless. Right. Unlike the memory now burned into both your and Jacaerys's minds of you standing bare-arsed naked in a bathtub while he stared at you like a man who'd forgotten how to breathe.
"We need to get you dressed," Lysa said firmly, already moving to pull out clothes. "Supper will be starting soon."
"I can't go to supper," you said, your voice rising. "I can't face him after—after he just saw me naked."
"You have to go to supper, my lady," Maryse said, not unkindly. "If you don't, everyone will wonder why. And rumors will start."
Worse rumors than "the princess screamed bloody murder over a spider and her cousin saw her naked"? You doubted it. But she was right. You had to go. Had to face him. Had to somehow sit through an entire meal pretending that nothing had happened while knowing that Jacaerys now knew exactly what you looked like without clothes. While knowing that you'd seen the look in his eyes—surprise, yes, but also something else. Something heated that had flashed across his face before embarrassment took over.
"Fuck," you muttered under your breath.
"Language, my lady," Lysa chided gently, but she was already helping you out of the tub.
This was going to be the longest supper of your entire life.
The great hall was already filled with lords and ladies when you arrived, late enough that most people were already seated. The musicians were playing something lively from the gallery, servants moved between tables with wine and platters of food, and the general hum of conversation and laughter filled the space.
You wanted to sink through the floor and disappear.
Somehow you made it to your seat at the high table without tripping over your own feet, a minor miracle considering how unsteady you felt. You'd been dressed in a gown of deep purple silk, your ladies working quickly to make you presentable. Your hair was still slightly damp at the ends, but they'd managed to braid it back in a way that hid the worst of it.
Baela was already seated beside you, laughing at something Rhaena had said. On your other side, Helaena was staring at her plate with that distant expression she sometimes got. And across the table Jacaerys sat beside Lady Cassandra Baratheon.
He was leaning toward her, saying something that made her laugh, that refined, ladylike laugh you'd heard through the stone wall. His hand rested on the table close to hers, not quite touching but near enough to be intimate. He looked perfectly composed, perfectly at ease, like he hadn't just seen his cousin naked less than an hour ago.
You grabbed your wine cup and drank deeply.
"You have no idea," you muttered into your cup.
The meal began, course after course of roasted meats and honeyed vegetables and fresh bread. You pushed food around your plate, barely tasting anything, hyperaware of every movement Jace made across the table. The way he smiled at Cassandra. The way she touched his arm when she spoke. The easy familiarity between them that spoke of more than one night together.
"All right, what's wrong?" Baela asked finally, setting down her fork and turning to face you properly. "You've been sulking since you sat down. Did something happen at council?"
"No," you said quickly. Too quickly.
Baela's eyes narrowed. "Then what?"
You glanced around, making sure no one else was listening. Then you leaned closer and whispered, "Jace saw me naked."
For a moment, Baela just stared at you. Then she burst out laughing—loud enough that several people turned to look.
"Shut up, this is not funny!" you hissed, your face burning with shame.
"It's a little funny," Baela managed between gasps. "How in the seven hells did that happen?"
You covered your face with your hands, mortified beyond measure. "There was a spider. A huge one. He was in my bath and then I screamed and he must have been in the corridor and he came running in thinking I was being murdered or something and I was just—standing there—completely bare-arsed—hh"
Baela was practically crying with laughter now, her hand pressed to her stomach. "A spider," she wheezed. "You're telling me the mighty dragonrider who claimed Cannibal, who sits on the small council, screamed loud enough to bring the heir running because of a spider?"
"It was a very large spider," you said defensively, though your own lips were twitching despite your mortification.
“And, so, he saw everything?" Her voice went low and suggestive, bringing a finger to her mouth and biting the tip of it as her lips curved into a smirk.
"Everything," you confirmed miserably. "Full frontal view. Nothing left to imagination."
"Oh gods," Baela wiped at her eyes. "And what did he do?"
"Stood there like a fish for about three seconds, went bright red, stammered something about the spider, and then fled like the castle was on fire."
"That's amazing," Baela said, still grinning. "That's the best thing I've heard all week."
"I'm glad my humiliation amuses you," you said sourly, but you couldn't quite hold onto your irritation. It was sort of funny, in a horrifying, want-to-die sort of way.
"Look at the bright side," Baela said, taking a sip of her wine. "Now you know he's definitely seen you naked. That's more than most ladies can say about the heir before marriage."
You kicked her under the table.
"Ow! I'm just saying—"
"Well don't," you muttered, risking a glance across the table.
Jace was still deep in conversation with Cassandra, his attention completely focused on her. He hadn't looked your way once since you'd sat down. Was probably trying very hard not to look at you, considering what he'd seen.
Your stomach twisted, he'd seen you naked—completely, utterly exposed—and less than an hour later he was here, flirting with the woman he'd been fucking just the night before. Like it meant nothing. Like you meant nothing. Which of course you didn't. You were his cousin, a political piece on the board, same as everyone else.
The fact that you'd watched him through a hole in the wall, that you'd brought yourself to come while imagining his hands on you instead of Cassandra—that was your problem. Your shame to carry, your degenerate shame.
"You're doing it again," Baela said quietly.
"Doing what?"
"Looking like you want to kill someone, dear cousin." She followed your gaze across the table. "Ah. Lady Cassandra."
"You know she's not the only one, right?"
You blinked. "What?"
"Jace." Baela kept her voice low, casual, as she cut into her meat. "He's got quite the appetite, from what I hear. Half the ladies at court have warmed his bed at some point or another."
Your stomach twisted even though you already knew this. Had seen it.
"Why are you telling me this?"
Baela shrugged, a wicked grin playing at her lips. "Just saying, if you ever wanted to... you know. Sample the goods before he's shackled to some boring highborn wife, now's your chance. He's not particularly discriminating."
You nearly choked on your wine. "Baela!"
"What? I'm just saying.” She leaned closer, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "I'm told he's very talented, Lady Cassandra certainly seems satisfied."
"I am not having this conversation with you," you hissed, your face burning.
"Your loss." Baela sat back with a laugh. "Though honestly, I don't blame you for looking. He's annoyingly pretty for someone with such common blood. Those brown eyes, that hair, he’s very brooding hero of a song, isn't he?"
"You're drunk, Baela."
"I'm tipsy," she corrected, "and you're deflecting."
"I'm not interested in Jace," you said firmly. "Not like that anyways."
It wasn't entirely a lie. You weren't interested in romancing with Jace. You didn't want his love or his devotion or whatever pretty words he whispered to the hoards of women in his bed. You just wanted, gods, you didn't even know what you wanted. To stop thinking about him, probably, most likely. And certainly to stop seeing his fucking gorgeous face every time you closed your eyes.
"Whatever you say," Baela said breezily, clearly not believing you but willing to drop it. "I'm just saying, the man's going to be married off soon. If you wanted a taste, the window's closing."
You rolled your eyes so hard it hurt. "You're impossible."
The conversation moved on, Rhaena leaned over to tell you both about some drama involving a lady-in-waiting and a stableboy, and you forced yourself to laugh, despite your gaze kept drifting across the table.
You didn't look through the hole that night.
It took every ounce of willpower you possessed, but you left that carved screen exactly where it was and climbed into bed fully clothed, too exhausted to even call your ladies back to help you undress properly. Sleep came fitfully, plagued by dreams of brown eyes and smirks and the memory of standing naked in a bathtub while your cousin stared.
When you woke, sunlight was streaming through your windows and someone was pounding on your door.
"My lady!" Lysa's voice, urgent and harried. "You need to wake! The lords are arriving and you're expected in the courtyard within the hour!"
Right. The festivities. The celebration of Jacaerys coming of age, of finding him a suitable bride. A full day of feasting and tournaments and watching eligible ladies parade themselves in front of the heir to the throne. Wonderful, just wonderful. Despite yourself, you managed to drag yourself out of bed and let your ladies descend upon you like a flock of determined birds. They stripped away yesterday's rumpled gown, scrubbed you with rose-scented soap, and set about the elaborate process of making you presentable as they did every morning.
The gown they'd chosen was magnificent, it was a midnight blue silk that seemed to shimmer between black and deepest sapphire depending on how the light hit it. But you shook your head.
"No. The white one with the gold and red."
Your ladies exchanged glances but didn't argue. They brought out the dress you'd requested, white as fresh snow, with gold embroidery that traced patterns of dragons and flames across the bodice and down the flowing sleeves. Red accents caught the light like drops of blood, rubies sewn into the neckline and waist. The skirts were layers upon layers of silk and gossamer that moved like water, the train long enough to pool behind you like a bride.
It was a statement, really, like Alicent’s green gowns. A reminder of who you were, a Targaryen, a dragon rider, not someone to be overlooked even as every other woman at court tried to catch the heir's eye. Your hair was left mostly down, falling in silver waves to your calves, with elaborate braids woven through and secured with gold and ruby pins shaped like dragon claws. By the time they finished, you looked like something out of a song.
You barely heard the compliments ringing from your ladies tongues. You were already moving toward the door, trying to steel yourself for whatever fresh hell today would bring.
The courtyard was flooded when you arrived. Banners from a dozen different houses snapped in the morning breeze, there was Stark, Tully, Arryn, Lannister, more. Lords and their retinues filing in through the gates, their daughters dressed in their finest, all of them here for the same purpose.
To win the favor of the Crown Prince.
You spotted Cregan Stark immediately—he was hard to miss, tall and broad-shouldered with dark hair and grey eyes that seemed to take in everything. He was a gorgeous man, and currently he was speaking with Rhaenyra, his manner respectful but not obsequious. A good sign, if Helaena was genuinely considering him. But it wasn't Cregan who made you pause. It was the way every male head in the courtyard seemed to turn as you descended the steps.
Lords, knights, visiting dignitaries, they all looked. Some with open admiration, others with more subtle interest, but they looked. You were used to attention, had grown up beautiful and aware of it, but this felt different. Or perhaps you were just more aware of it now, after everything.
"Seven hells," you heard someone mutter—one of the Tully boys, you thought. "Is that—"
You kept your chin high and your expression serene as you made your way through the crowd. Lords bowed as you passed, their sons stared, and you pretended not to notice any of it. Rhaenyra stood on the dais with Daemon beside her, already holding court. Jacaerys was there too, looking infuriatingly well-rested in black and red, his attention on whatever Lord Corlys was saying to him.
"Cousin," Aegon appeared at your elbow. "You're causing quite the stir. I think Lord Tyrell's son just walked into a pillar because he was too busy staring at you."
"Good," you said flatly.
Aegon laughed. "That's the spirit. Make them all suffer, my dear cousin. "
"Come," Aegon said, tugging at your elbow. "We're expected to stand there and look pretty while Father's old bannermen parade their daughters like prize mares. Should be entertaining enough."
You let him guide you to where the rest of the family was gathering. Rhaenyra sat in the place of honor with Daemon beside her, looking like he'd rather be anywhere else. Helaena was tucked between Baela and Rhaena, already looking overwhelmed by the crowd. And Jacaerys stood at the center of it all, the sun around which this entire day revolved.
"How many do you think there are?" Aegon asked, settling in beside you with his cup. "I'm counting at least fifteen eligible ladies, and those are just the ones I can see from here."
"Shouldn't you be paying attention?" you asked. "You're supposed to be looking for a wife too."
"Gods, don't remind me." He took a long drink. "Mother's been at me for months about it. Apparently being six and twenty and unmarried is some sort of tragedy."
"Is it not?"
"It's called having standards," Aegon replied airily. "Low ones, admittedly, but standards nonetheless."
Rhaenyra stood, and the courtyard quieted. "Lords and ladies," she began, her voice carrying across the space. "We are honored by your presence here today as we celebrate my son and heir, Prince Jacaerys, and his coming of age. Many of you have traveled far to be here, and we welcome you all to King's Landing."
Polite applause. Jace smiled that princely smile, gracious and warm.
"Today marks the beginning of festivities that will last the fortnight," Rhaenyra continued. "Tournaments, feasts, and celebrations in honor of the Crown Prince. And perhaps, by the end, we will have even more to celebrate."
Meaning a betrothal.
"But first," Rhaenyra gestured to where several young ladies stood with their fathers, all of them dressed in their finest, "we have been honored by requests from several noble houses to present their daughters to the Prince. We welcome them now."
"Here we go," Aegon muttered. "The parade of the desperate."
"Aegon," you hissed.
"What? I'm not wrong."
The first girl stepped forward, a Lannister, judging by her crimson gown and golden hair. She was beautiful in that polished, perfect way. You’re certain her Father, and all the other lords of Casterly Rock told her she was destined for greatness. She curtsied deeply before Jace, her father presenting her with all the pomp and circumstance House Lannister could muster.
"Lady Cerelle Lannister," the herald announced. "Daughter of Lord Jason Lannister of Casterly Rock."
Jace took her hand and kissed it, saying something that made her blush and smile. You watched him be charming, watched him perform the role of interested suitor with practiced ease.
"She's pretty," Aegon observed. "Bit too much like looking in a mirror for my taste, all that gold hair and self-rightesnous."
"She seems nice enough."
"Nice and boring are often companions," Aegon replied. "Trust me, I know from experience."
The next girl was from House Tyrell, tall and willowy with dark curls and a nervous smile. Then a Tully girl with auburn hair and freckles. Then another, and another. Each one more beautiful than the last, each one curtsying and smiling and trying desperately to be memorable.
"This is torture," Aegon said after the sixth introduction. "How is Jace keeping that smile on his face? I'd have run screaming by now."
"It's called duty, you idiot."
"It's called martyrdom." He drained his cup and gestured for a servant to refill it. "You know what the problem is? They're all the same. Pretty, accomplished, perfectly trained to be queens. Where's the personality? The fire?"
"You want fire, marry a dragon rider," you said absently, watching as yet another lady—this one from the Stormlands—was presented to Jace.
"Excellent idea. Marry me."
You turned to look at him, startled. "What?"
"Marry me," Aegon repeated, gesturing expansively with his cup. "You're a dragon rider, you're beautiful, you already know all my worst qualities so there'd be no nasty surprises. We could get drunk together and ignore all our duties. It'd be perfect."
"You're not serious."
"I'm never serious. But the offer stands." He took another drink. "If all else fails, if the realm goes to shit and we're all desperate—you and me. We could do much worse."
You studied him for a moment. Aegon was handsome, you could admit that. Pretty in the way Targaryens often were, with his silver hair and sharp features. The drinking was a problem, and the complete lack of ambition, but he was kind in his way. Honest, at least, which was more than most lords could claim.
"If all goes to hell," you said slowly, "and we're both desperate and alone. I suppose I could do worse than you."
"High praise," Aegon said with a grin. "I'm touched. Truly."
"Don't let it go to your head."
"Too late. I'm already planning our wedding. We'll serve nothing but wine, scandalize the Faith, and let our dragons eat anyone who complains."
Despite everything, you laughed. It felt good, like releasing some of the pressure that had been building in your chest since yesterday. Then, another lady was presented, a Manderly girl from White Harbor, plump and pink-cheeked and clearly terrified. Jace was gentle with her, you noticed. He was patient and kind.
"He's good at this," you said quietly.
"He's had practice," Aegon replied, and there was something almost bitter in his tone. "Perfect Jace. Perfect heir. Does everything right, fucks everything that moves, and somehow still manages to look like a hero from a song."
"Jealous?"
"Absoloutely." Aegon studied his cousin across the courtyard. "I love Jace, don't get me wrong. But he's playing a game he doesn't even realize he's in. All these ladies throwing themselves at him, and he thinks it's because he's charming. Because they like him."
"That's not why?"
"They like his crown," Aegon said flatly. "They like the idea of being queen. Jace himself? He's just the pretty vessel holding the thing they actually want."
You said nothing, watching as Jace smiled at the Manderly girl, made her laugh despite her nervousness. Was Aegon right? Did all these women only want the crown? Did you? No. You wanted—gods, you didn't even know what you wanted. But it wasn't his crown. It was him. The way he moved, the way he sounded, the way he looked when he was lost in pleasure. That had nothing to do with thrones or politics.
Which somehow made it worse.
"Lady Floris Baratheon," the herald announced, and your attention snapped back to the courtyard.
Another Baratheon girl, younger than Cassandra but with the same dark hair and sharp features. She curtsied beautifully, and Jace took her hand with the same courteous attention he'd given all the others.
"How many fucking Baratheon daughters are there?" Aegon muttered. "Lord Borros must spend half his time just keeping track of them all."
"Four, I think."
"Four. And they're all here trying to land the heir. Ambitious bastard, isn't he?"
You watched Floris smile up at Jace, watched him be charming and attentive. Was Cassandra here somewhere, watching this? Did she care that the man who'd been in her bed two nights ago was now entertaining her younger sister?
Did Jace care?
"This is going to be a very long fortnight," you said.
"Agreed." Aegon raised his cup in a mock toast. "To surviving it with our dignity intact."
"I'll drink to that."
He grinned and passed you his cup. You took it and drank deeply, letting the wine burn down your throat. It was going to be a very, very long fortnight indeed.
Several torturous hours later, you and Aegon were both well into your cups and had devolved into something resembling badly behaved children.
"I'm sorry," Aegon wheezed, barely containing his laughter, "but did that last one actually curtsy to his horse first before approaching Jace?"
"She did," you confirmed, your own shoulders shaking with suppressed giggles. "She absolutely did. I saw it, cousin."
"Maybe she thought the horse was the heir. Can't blame her—Vermax has better hair than Jace does."
You snorted wine through your nose, which only made Aegon laugh harder.
"You two are being disgraceful," Baela hissed from your other side, though her lips were twitching. "Show some decorum."
"Decorum is for people who aren't dying of boredom," Aegon replied, reaching for another cup from a passing servant. "We're performing a public service, really. Someone has to make this bearable."
"By getting drunk before noon?"
"Exactly. See? She understands."
You were about to respond when movement at the courtyard entrance caught your eye. Another arrival, late enough that most of the formal presentations had concluded. But this wasn't some minor lord with a daughter to parade. This was someone who commanded attention simply by existing.
He was tall—taller even than Cregan Stark—with broad shoulders and the kind of build that came from actually using a sword rather than just wearing one for decoration. Dark hair, though not as dark as Jace's, fell to his shoulders in waves that somehow looked artfully disheveled rather than unkempt. And his face—
"Oh no," Aegon said, following your gaze. "Oh, that's not fair."
"Who is that?" you asked, unable to look away.
"Trouble," Aegon replied. "That's Lord Dalton Greyjoy. The Red Kraken himself."
The Red Kraken. You'd heard stories, of course. The young Lord of the Iron Islands, who'd claimed his seat at six and ten after his father's death and had spent the years since becoming a legend. A reaver, a warrior, and by all accounts, devastatingly effective at both. He was dressed simply compared to the other lords—dark leather and salt-stained cloth rather than silk and velvet—but he wore it like armor. Like he had nothing to prove. Salt-and-pepper scruff covered his jaw, and when he smiled at something Daemon said, you caught a glimpse of white teeth.
"He's supposed to be in the Iron Islands," Aegon muttered. "What's he doing here?"
"The same thing everyone else is doing here," Baela said dryly. "Paying homage to the Crown Prince."
But Dalton Greyjoy wasn't looking at Jacaerys.
He was looking at you. His eyes—grey-green like storm-tossed seas—found yours across the crowded courtyard, and he didn't look away. Didn't pretend he hadn't been staring. Just held your gaze with the kind of bold confidence that should have been offensive but somehow wasn't.
Then he smiled. Slow and deliberate and knowing, like you'd shared some private joke.
"Oh, dear cousin, he's definitely trouble," Aegon said. "Look at him. Looking at you like—well, like Jace looks at literally every woman who crosses his path."
"Shut up," you muttered, but you didn't look away from Dalton.
"The Red Kraken," Baela mused. "Now that's interesting. He doesn't usually come to court. Prefers his islands and his ships from what I hear."
"And his salt wives," Aegon added. "Rumor has it he's got three. Or is it four now? I lose count."
"Salt wives aren't real wives," you said absently, still holding Dalton's gaze.
"Try telling him that."
Dalton was moving through the crowd now, making his way toward the dais where Rhaenyra sat. Lords parted for him—whether out of respect or wariness, you couldn't tell. Maybe both. There was something dangerous about him, something wild that expensive clothes and courtly manners couldn't quite hide. He knelt before Rhaenyra with surprising grace for someone so large. You couldn't hear what he said, but whatever it was made Daemon laugh, actually laugh, which was rare enough to be noteworthy.
Then Dalton stood, turned, and those storm-grey eyes found yours again. And the huge bastard, well, he started walking toward you.
"Oh shit," Aegon said gleefully. "Oh this is going to be good."
"If you say one embarrassing thing—" you started.
"Would I do that?"
"Yes. Regularly, you arse."
Dalton Greyjoy stopped in front of you, and up close he was even more imposing. Taller, broader, with the kind of presence that made the air feel heavier.
"My lady," he said, and his voice was rough, like he'd spent too many years shouting orders over storm winds. "Lord Dalton Greyjoy, at your service."
He didn't kneel. Didn't bow. Just stood there looking at you like you were the only person in the entire courtyard.
"Lord Greyjoy," you managed, trying to remember how to be polite while several cups of wine deep. "Welcome to King's Landing."
"Is it?" He glanced around at the crowd, at the elaborate decorations, at the general excess of it all. "Seems like a lot of trouble for a party."
"It's a celebration, my lord," you corrected.
"Of the Crown Prince coming of age. Yes, I heard." His lips quirked. "Eight and ten years to grow up. We do it much faster in the Iron Islands."
"Everything's faster in the Iron Islands," Aegon interjected cheerfully. "Living, dying, marrying your cousin, certainly fucking your cousin."
"Aegon," you hissed.
But Dalton just laughed. "Your cousin speaks truth, if not tact. We're a practical people."
"Practical," Aegon repeated. "Is that what we're calling it?"
"Among other things." Dalton's attention returned to you, and the intensity of it made your breath catch. "I've heard stories about you, Princess. The girl who claimed Cannibal."
"They're just stories."
"Are they?" He leaned in slightly, lowering his voice. "I heard you walked up to him and asked him nicely. That he bowed his head and let you climb on his back like a trained horse."
"More or less," you admitted.
"Terrifying or impressive. I haven't decided which, my lady."
"Can't it be both?"
That smile again, sharp and interested, like a predator seeking its prey. "I suppose it can. I like that."
There was something in the way he looked at you—direct and unashamed—that felt different from the courtiers with their careful glances and veiled intentions. Dalton Greyjoy looked at you like he knew exactly what he wanted and saw no reason to pretend otherwise.
"Are you here for the tournaments, my lord?" you asked, trying to steer the conversation to safer ground.
"Among other things." He straightened, hands clasped behind his back in a posture that should have looked casual but somehow seemed coiled, ready. "I'm here to see what all the fuss is about. The perfect prince, the eligible ladies, the great game of marriage and alliance." His eyes glinted. "And to see if the Dragon Princess lives up to her reputation."
"And does she?"
"I'll let you know," he said, and it sounded like a promise. "May I have the honor of your company at the feast tonight, my lady?"
Before you could answer, Aegon cut in. "She'd be delighted. Wouldn't you, cousin?"
You shot him a look that promised murder, but Dalton was already bowing, actually bowing this time, though it looked faintly mocking. "Until tonight, then."
He walked away, and you could feel his absence like a physical weight. You were certainly going to kill Aegon, kill him and feed him to Cannibal.
"Well," Aegon said into the silence. "That was something."
"I hate you."
"No you don't. I just got you a dinner companion who isn't boring. You should be thanking me."
You should probably be worried, you thought. Dalton Greyjoy had a reputation that made even Daemon look respectable by comparison. But, nonetheless, instead you felt intrigued.
Which was probably dangerous. Definitely dangerous. But after days of watching Jace parade around with other women, of feeling invisible and foolish and consumed by wanting something you couldn't have. Maybe dangerous was exactly what you needed.
The remainder of the day had been a blur of increasingly bold lords and their sons trying to catch your attention. You'd smiled politely through it all, deflected propositions both subtle and explicit, and tried not to drink so much that you'd embarrass yourself at tonight's feast.
You'd failed at that last part.
The great hall had been transformed for the evening, there were now thousands of candles which casted everything in warm golden light, musicians played from the gallery, and long tables groaned under the weight of roasted meats and exotic fruits and wine from across the known world. The air smelled of smoke and spices and the musk of too many sweaty bodies pressed close together. You'd kept the white gown from earlier, the gold and red embroidery catching the candlelight as you moved. Your ladies had refreshed your hair, re-pinning the braids and adding fresh ruby clips, but otherwise you looked much the same as you had that morning.
Which apparently was more than enough, judging by the way heads turned as you entered. Dalton Greyjoy was already there, lounging at one of the lower tables with a cup in his hand and that same confidence he'd worn earlier. He saw you immediately—like he'd been watching the door—and stood.
"Princess," he said as you approached. "Come, sit. I've claimed the best seat in the hall."
"Have you?"
"Good view of the wine." He gestured to the seat beside him. "And now a better one."
You sat, aware of how he took up space without apology, all broad shoulders and long limbs sprawled in a way that suggested he'd never learned courtly posture and didn't particularly care to either. A servant poured wine, and Dalton took his cup, drinking deeply before setting it down with more force than necessary. "Seven hells, that's good. Better than the piss we brew on Pyke."
"I'm sure."
"You've never been to the Iron Islands." It wasn't a question.
"No."
"Good. It's a miserable place. Cold, wet, smells like dead fish and shit." He grinned. "But it's mine."
There was something about the way he said it, simple pride, no need to justify or explain. Just fact that sprung a buzz in your chest.
"You're far from home," you observed.
"Aye. Your aunt summoned, so I came." He reached for a piece of bread, tearing it apart with his hands. "Hadn't planned on it, but then I heard about the festivities. The Crown Prince coming of age, all the pretty ladies competing for him." His eyes slid to you as he brought the bread to his mouth, tongue darting out to catch a crumb at the corner of his lips. He raised an eyebrow. "Thought it might be entertaining."
"And is it?"
"Getting better." He popped the bread in his mouth, still watching you while he chewed. "Tell me something. That dragon of yours—Cannibal. Is it true he ate three dragons on Dragonstone before you claimed him?"
You reached for your wine. "Two that I know of for certain. Possibly three."
"Fuck me." But he sounded impressed rather than horrified. "And you just walked up to him?"
"More or less." You took a sip, watching him over the rim of your cup.
"You're either the bravest woman in the Seven Kingdoms or the maddest." He leaned back in his chair, arms crossing over his chest as he studied you."Probably both."
"Most people say it was foolish."
"Most people are cowards." He picked up his wine again, draining half the cup in one go. "I respect it. Taking what you want, consequences be damned. That's how you survive in this world."
The food kept coming—course after course. Servants appeared with platters of roasted duck, honeyed figs, spiced lamb. Dalton ate like a man who wasn't sure when his next meal would be, unbothered by the elaborate presentation. You picked at your own plate, more interested in the conversation than the food.
"You fight in the tournaments tomorrow?" you asked.
"Planning on it. Need to work off some of this." He gestured at the feast. "Can't spend all day drinking and eating without swinging a sword eventually. I'll go soft."
You doubted that. There was nothing soft about Dalton Greyjoy. You let your eyes drag over him, shoulders, arms, the way he took up space.
"Who do you think will win?" you asked. "The tourney, I mean."
"Not me," he said with a shrug. "I'm a better sailor than jouster. Give me a deck that's moving under my feet and I'm deadly. Put me on a horse in full plate and I'm just another idiot hoping not to fall off." He paused. "Your cousin, probably. The pretty one. Jacaerys."
Your jaw tightened slightly. "Jace is skilled."
"Aye, I've heard. Trained by the best, naturally." There was something in his tone—not quite mocking, but close. "Born with every advantage. Dragon, crown, looks that make ladies go weak. Must be nice."
"It has its challenges."
"I'm sure." He didn't sound particularly sympathetic. "Still. I'd take his challenges over mine any day."
A commotion near the high table drew your attention. Jace was standing, Lady Cassandra Baratheon beside him, her hand on his arm as they moved toward the dancing. You watched them go, watched her lean in to say something that made him smile, and your stomach dropped. Your hands curled into fists in your lap.
"There's a look I know," Dalton said quietly.
You turned back to find him studying you, those storm-grey eyes too sharp. He was leaning back in his chair now, one arm draped over the back of it, completely relaxed.
"What look?"
"The one that says you want to set something on fire but you're too well-bred to do it." He tilted his head, watching you like a hawk. "What's he done to earn that?"
"Nothing. I don't—"
"Right." He drained his cup in one swallow and stood, extending his hand across the table. "Come on then."
"Where?"
"To dance. You're sitting here stewing and it's making me uncomfortable." He wiggled his fingers impatiently.
"I'm not—"
"You are." He stepped closer, hand still out. "And if I have to watch you watch him dance with that Baratheon girl for one more second, I'm going to start breaking things." His fingers curled slightly, beckoning. "Dance with me, Princess. Give the court something else to gossip about."
You shouldn't. You really, truly shouldn't.
You took his hand.
He pulled you up—quick enough that you stumbled slightly—and steadied you with a hand at your elbow before leading you onto the floor. Other couples were already moving, swirling past in a blur of silk and jewels. His hand settled at your waist, lower than was strictly proper, fingers spread wide against your back and he pulled you into the rhythm without missing a beat.
He moved with surprising grace for someone who'd just claimed to be better on a ship than a dance floor.
"You lied," you said, looking up at him. "You're good at this."
"I said I'm better on a ship. Didn't say I was shit at dancing." He spun you, sudden enough that you stumbled into his chest. His hand tightened on your waist, steadying you. "My mother made sure all her sons could dance. Said it was the one civilized thing we'd learn."
"Was she right?"
"Aye. Rest of it's all fighting and fucking and sailing." He said it casually, leading you back into the steps. "Not much call for poetry and courtly manners on Pyke."
You shouldn't have laughed, but you did, it was sharp and genuine, the sound surprising you. Something about his bluntness cut through all the careful political bullshit you'd been drowning in for days.
"That scandalize you?" he asked, grinning down at you. His teeth were very white against his tanned skin.
"No."
"Good. I'd hate to waste time pretending to be something I'm not." His thumb pressed against your waist, and you felt it through the silk. "Life's too fucking short for that."
The music swelled around you, violins rising. He pulled you closer, definitely too close now, close enough that you could feel the heat of him through your dress, definitely crossing into improper territory. But you didn't pull away. Just let him guide you through the steps, let yourself focus on the pressure of his hand, the solid weight of his shoulder under your palm. Anything other than Jace and Cassandra somewhere else on this floor.
"Better?" Dalton asked, voice low enough that only you could hear it over the music.
"What?"
"You stopped looking like you wanted to commit murder.” His eyes crinkled at the corners. “I'm taking that as progress."
"I never—"
"You did." He spun you again, pulled you back in. The smile on his face had an edge to it now. "Whatever he did, whoever he is, he's not worth it, Princess."
You wanted to argue. Wanted to defend something you couldn't even name, couldn't admit to yourself. But Dalton's hand was warm and steady against your waist, his grey eyes fixed on yours like you were the only person in the room, and for just a moment, just this one dance, you let yourself pretend. That you weren't obsessed with your cousin. That you hadn't spent the last three nights watching him fuck other women through a crack in the wall. That you were just a woman dancing with a man who looked at her like she mattered.
The song ended far too soon.
Dalton stepped back, but his hand stayed at your waist, lingering, his fingers flexing once against your ribs before he let go. "Thank you for the dance, Princess."
"Thank you for asking." Your skin felt cold where his hand had been.
"I'll be fighting tomorrow. In the melee, not the joust, I told you, I'm shit on horseback." That grin again, cocky and so sure of himself. "Come watch me get my ass kicked by men in fancy armor."
"I might."
"You will." He said it like it was already decided, so much so, that you almost believed him. Then he bowed, properly this time, deep and formal, and walked away, disappearing back into the crowd.
You stood there for a moment, heart still racing from the dance, or maybe from the way Dalton had looked at you, all that damned confidence and heat and completely unbothered by the surrounding propriety. Your skin still tingled where his hand had been, that deliberate pressure at your waist.
He was handsome. You could admit that, at least to yourself. Rough around the edges in a way that was completely unlike the polished princes and lords you'd grown up around. Dangerous-looking. The kind of man your mother would warn you about. The kind you apparently couldn't stop thinking about for entirely different reasons than you should.
You pressed your fingers to your waist briefly, then dropped your hand. This was stupid. You were being stupid about two different men now, which seemed like an achievement in poor judgment.
When you finally turned to head back to your seat, you found Aegon waiting, leaning against a pillar with that knowing smirk plastered across his face.
"Well," he drawled, pushing off the pillar to stand beside you. "That was something."
"It was a dance."
"That wasn't just a dance." Aegon took a long drink from his cup, eyes gleaming with amusement. "That was him fucking you with your clothes on."
Heat flooded your face. "You're drunk."
"I'm always drunk. Doesn't make me wrong." He gestured with his cup, sloshing wine dangerously close to the rim, toward where Dalton had disappeared into the crowd. "Be careful with that one. He's not like these simpering southern lords. He takes what he wants."
"I'm not."
"I know. I'm just saying." Aegon leaned in closer, lowering his voice even though no one was near enough to hear. "The Red Kraken's got a reputation, and certainly not the fun kind like mine."
You looked back toward where Jace was still dancing with Cassandra, her head thrown back laughing at something he'd said.
"Maybe I need a reputation," you muttered.
Aegon raised his cup. "Now that's the spirit."
"Come on," Aegon said, tugging at your sleeve like a child. "Let's get out of here before someone tries to make us be social again."
"Where are we going?"
"Does it matter?" He was already pulling you toward the edge of the hall.
It didn't, not really. The hall was too hot, too crowded, the air thick with wine and perfume and the cloying smell of too many bodies pressed together. Too many people pretending to be things they weren't. You let Aegon pull you through a side door, the sudden quiet of the corridor making your ears ring.
Down one hallway, then another. Your footsteps echoed off stone. Up a winding staircase, too narrow and steep, the kind that hadn't been used in years. You recognized it dimly as leading to one of the old watchtowers, the ones that overlooked the bay.
"Aegon, we're going to break our necks," you said as he stumbled on a step, catching himself against the wall.
"Good." He kept climbing. "Better than dying of boredom down there."
The tower room at the top was small and forgotten. Dust motes floated in the moonlight streaming through narrow windows. There were a few old weapons which hung on the walls, all rusted, decorative, and completely useless. The windows looked out over King's Landing, the city spread below like a carpet of flickering lights.
The sounds of the feast were distant here, muffled by layers of stone and height. You could barely hear the music anymore. Just the wind, and the sound of your own breathing still coming fast from the climb.
Aegon collapsed onto a bench beneath one of the windows, wine cup still in hand, sprawling back against the stone. You leaned against the opposite wall, pressing your shoulders into the cool stone. The breeze coming through the window felt good against your flushed skin, cutting through the wine-warm haze in your head.
"This is better," Aegon declared, gesturing broadly with his cup. "Much better. No one up here but us and the ghosts."
"Are there ghosts?"
"Probably." He took another drink, throat working. "Old tower like this? Someone definitely died here. Hopefully doing something more interesting than attending a feast."
You laughed, the sound strange and too loud in the small space, bouncing off stone. Your head was spinning pleasantly, everything soft and blurred at the edges. The wine had settled warm in your stomach, making your limbs feel loose and heavy. You slid down the wall until you were sitting on the floor, knees drawn up, your dress pooling around you. The stone was cold against your back even through the silk.
"You danced well with the Kraken," Aegon said after a moment. His eyes were on you now, sharper than they should be considering how much he'd drunk. "He looked like he wanted to eat you."
"He looked like he wanted to dance."
"Same thing, with that one." Aegon tilted his head, studying you. His usual smirk had faded into something more serious. Almost sober. "Do you like him?"
"I barely know him." You picked at a loose thread on your dress.
"That's not what I asked."
You considered it, head tilted back against the stone. Did you like Dalton Greyjoy? He was attractive, certainly. Bold. Honest in a way that cut through all the bullshit.
"I don't know," you said finally. "Maybe. Does it matter?"
"Suppose not." Aegon was quiet for a moment, swirling the wine in his cup, watching the liquid catch the moonlight in wave-like ripples. Then, without looking at you: "Can I kiss you?"
You blinked, certain you'd misheard. "What?"
"Can I kiss you?" He did look at you now, and there was something almost vulnerable in his expression beneath the wine-flush. "I want to kiss someone. And you're here. And you're pretty. And you won't make it mean something it doesn't."
You should say no. Should laugh it off, make a joke, change the subject. This was Aegon—your cousin, your friend, the perpetually drunk prince who took nothing seriously.
But your head was spinning and your chest still ached from watching Jace with Cassandra, and Dalton's words kept echoing in your mind—life's too fucking short.
"Fuck it," you said, the words coming out steadier than you felt.
"Is that a yes?"
"It's a fuck it." You pushed yourself up slightly, meeting his eyes.
Aegon set his cup down on the bench and stood. He wasn't quite steady on his feet, swaying slightly as he crossed the small space to where you sat against the wall.
You had to tilt your head back to look up at him as he stopped in front of you, close enough that you could smell the wine on his breath, the faint scent of whatever oil he used in his hair. Up close like this, you could see everything. The wine-flush high on his cheekbones, the slightly glazed look in his purple eyes—Targaryen eyes, the same shade as your own. The way his chest rose and fell, breathing faster than the short walk across the room warranted.
He was handsome. The thought came to you clearly, like you were seeing him for the first time. When he wasn't making an ass of himself, when he wasn't performing for the court or drowning in his cups, when you actually looked at him, Aegon was undeniably, unfairly handsome.
"You're sure?" he asked, and his voice had gone quieter. Careful. Like he was giving you one last chance to back out, to laugh this off and pretend it never happened.
Your heart was pounding. "Stop asking and just—"
He dropped to his knees in front of you.
The movement brought him to your level, purple eyes locked on yours. His hand came up, hesitant at first, then surer, cupping your jaw. His thumb brushed across your cheekbone, and you realized you were holding your breath.
Then he kissed you.
It was nothing like you'd imagined kissing would be. Not that you'd spent much time imagining it, or maybe you had, late at night, alone in your bed, but those fantasies had been vague and shapeless. This was real. This was Aegon's mouth on yours, warm and wine-sweet and surprisingly gentle. His other hand found your waist, steadying himself, or maybe steadying you.
For a moment, you froze. Didn't know what to do with your hands, with your mouth, with any of it. Then something in you gave way. Your hands came up to grip his shoulders, solid, real, there and you kissed him back.
Aegon kissed like he did everything else, without any restraint, without second thoughts, just pure unfiltered fucking want. His mouth was hot against yours, tasting like wine and something hungrier, and his hands cupped your face like you were something precious he was afraid of breaking. He pressed closer, and you made a sound, and his tongue swept into your mouth.
Oh.
Your hands gripped shoulders because you needed something to hold onto, needed to ground yourself before you floated away entirely. He was solid under your grip, all lean muscle and warmth, so much warmer than you'd expected. When he tilted his head to deepen the kiss, to take more, something low in your belly clenched hard enough to hurt.
This was wrong. This was Aegon. Your cousin. Your friend who you'd watched get drunk at a hundred feasts, who you'd laughed with and plotted with and shared secrets with. Who you'd never, not once, not ever, thought of like this.
But his mouth was moving against yours with a desperate kind of hunger, and his hands had slid from your face down to your waist, fingers digging in as he pulled you closer, pulled you against him. And your body was a traitor. Heat was pooling between your thighs, your breath coming in short gasps, your fingers twisting in the fabric of his doublet like you needed him closer, needed more.
One of his hands moved lower, gripping your hip, and you gasped into his mouth. He swallowed the sound, kissed you harder, like he wanted to crawl inside you.
When he finally pulled back, breaking the kiss to breathe, forehead pressed against yours, you were both panting. His eyes were dark, pupils blown wide, and his lips were red and swollen.
"Well," Aegon said, his voice rougher than usual. "That was—"
You blinked at him, trying to catch your breath. His breath warm against your lips. His hand came up to cup your cheek, thumb tracing along your jaw in a way that made your knees weak.
"I'd like to do that again," he murmured, and there was something in his voice, something hungry and real beneath the usual bravado.
Your heart was pounding. His thumb was still moving against your skin, slow and deliberate, and you could feel the heat of him everywhere he touched. He was everywhere at once, and for the first time in your life you weren't looking at your cousin Aegon, you were staring at someone with pure, unfiltered want.
"Yes," you breathed.
He kissed you again—harder this time, more certain. His hand tightened on your waist, yanking you fully against him, and you could feel everything. The hard planes of his chest, the lean muscle of his thighs, and—gods—the unmistakable ridge of his cock pressed against your hip through layers of silk and leather.
You gasped into his mouth, and he swallowed the sound, tongue sliding hot and slick against yours. His hips rolled forward, slow, deliberate and the pressure of him grinding against you sent heat shooting straight between your legs.
Your knees actually went weak. If he wasn't holding you up, you'd have collapsed.
Your hands found his hair—silver silk between your fingers—and you pulled. Hard. He groaned, deep and guttural, and ground against you harder in response. You could feel yourself getting wet, the slick heat gathering between your thighs, soaking through your smallclothes. The knowledge that he was hard, that you'd made him hard, made you clench around nothing.
"Fuck," Aegon panted against your mouth before his lips dragged to your jaw, your throat. His hand slid down from your waist to your ass, gripping hard, pulling you tighter against him. "Fuck, you taste so good. Smell good. Feel so fucking good."
He thrust his hips forward again, the thick length of him dragging against your belly, and you both made sounds that were almost pained.
You should stop this. Should push him away before this went too far. This was Aegon, your cousin, your friend who you'd grown up with—
His teeth scraped the sensitive spot below your ear and you whimpered. Actually whimpered like something desperate and needy, your hips rolling forward to meet his next thrust without your permission.
"That's it," he breathed against your skin, doing it again, sucking a mark into your throat that you'd have to hide tomorrow. His hand on your ass squeezed, angling you so when he ground forward again, the pressure hit directly against your aching cunt. "Gods, feel what you do to me? Feel how hard I am for you?"
"Aegon," you started, voice breaking, but you couldn't finish because he was kissing you again, deeper, filthier, his tongue fucking into your mouth while one hand fisted in your hair, pulling your head back to expose your throat and the other kept your hips pinned against his.
He found a rhythm now, rolling his hips against yours in steady, deliberate thrusts that had you panting into his mouth. Each movement dragged the hard length of his cock against you, the friction even through all the layers making you want to scream, want to hike up your skirts and feel him properly, skin to skin, want things you'd never let yourself want before.
You rolled your hips back, meeting him, matching his rhythm, and he groaned like you'd hurt him.
"Fuck, yes," he panted. "Just like that. Gods, you're so, I can feel how wet you are even through—"
He thrust harder, and you felt it, the heat of him, the thick ridge of his cock grinding directly against your clit through the soaked silk between your legs. The sensation made white spots burst behind your eyelids.
This wasn't gentle. Wasn't sweet or romantic or any of the things you'd imagined in your naive fantasies. This was pure animal want, raw and desperate and hungry. Fueled by too much wine and too many things neither of you wanted to think about. His body moving against yours like he wanted to crawl inside you, like he couldn't get close enough even though you were pressed together so tightly you could barely breathe.
Your hand slid down from his hair to his chest, feeling his heart hammering beneath your palm, then lower, reaching between your bodies toward the hard heat of him—
He caught your wrist. Held it. Both of you froze, breathing hard, hips still pressed flush together.
When you finally broke apart, gasping, flushed, his hair completely destroyed from your hands and your lips kiss-swollen and red, Aegon let out a shaky laugh against your neck.
"Gods," he breathed, forehead pressed to your shoulder. You could still feel him hard against your hip, could feel the answering wetness between your own legs. "We're idiots."
"Probably," you managed, your voice coming out hoarse. Wrecked.
"Definitely." But he wasn't pulling away. His hands were still on you, his body still pressed close, and you could feel him, still hard, maybe harder, against your hip. The evidence of what you'd just done. What you'd almost done. "This is a terrible idea."
"The worst."
"We should stop."
"We should." But your fingers were still twisted in his doublet.
His hand flexed on your hip, thumb pressing into the bone. "One more?"
You pulled him down by his hair and kissed him again. This time there was no hesitation. There was no pretense of this being innocent or simple. Just heat and hunger and his hands sliding down to grip your ass through your skirts, hauling you against him so hard you felt the breath leave your lungs.
You could feel the thick, insistent pressure of his cock grinding against your belly. He rolled his hips, slow and filthy, and you whimpered into his mouth. You wanted release.
"Fuck," he groaned against your lips. "You're going to kill me."
Your back hit the wall—you didn't even remember moving—and suddenly he had leverage. His thigh pushed between yours, spreading your legs, and when he ground forward this time the friction was devastating. The hard muscle of his thigh pressed directly against your cunt through the layers of silk, and you were so wet you knew he could feel it, knew the fabric had to be soaked through.
"Oh gods," you gasped, head falling back against the stone.
Aegon's mouth was on your neck immediately, sucking hard enough to mark, teeth scraping. His hands gripped your ass, pulling you down harder onto his thigh, helping you grind against him.
"That's it," he panted against your throat, moving his leg in rhythm with your desperate rolling hips. "Fuck, you're so wet. I can feel you through everything. Can feel how much you want this."
You should care about the bruises he was leaving. Should worry about questions and propriety and what this meant. You didn't care at all. You just needed more, more, and more.
"Aegon," you gasped, and his name coming out of your mouth broken and desperate seemed to undo something in him.
He kissed you again, dirty and deep and filthy, all tongue and teeth, while his hips pressed forward, grinding his cock against your hip in time with how you were riding his thigh. One hand fisted in your hair, pulling your head back so he could kiss you deeper, the other still gripping your arse and guiding your movements.
"Could fuck you right here," he groaned into your mouth, hips thrusting harder. "Pull up these skirts, sink into you against this wall. You'd let me, wouldn't you? You're so fucking wet you'd take me easy."
The image, Aegon inside you, filling you, fucking you against cold, dirty stone, made you moan and grind down harder. You were drowning in sensation, the taste of wine on his tongue, the heat of his body burning through the fabric, the devastating pressure between your legs, the thick hardness of him grinding against your hip.
"Yes," you heard yourself gasp. "Yes, Seven Hells."
Reality as sudden as a wave crashing against rock, rippled back through you.
What the fuck were you two doing? What were you saying?
You must have tensed because Aegon pulled back, really pulled back this time, stepping away and putting actual space between your bodies. The loss of contact left you cold and aching. You were both wrecked. His lips were swollen and red, his hair completely destroyed, his pupils blown so wide his eyes looked black. There was a wet spot on his thigh from you. You could see the obvious bulge straining against his breeches.
You probably looked worse. Your lips tender and kiss-bitten, your smallclothes absolutely ruined.
"Yes. Back. To the feast." He ran both hands through his hair, dragging it back from his face, somehow making it look even more fucked. "Where we've been having perfectly appropriate cousin conversations."
"Very appropriate."
"The most appropriate." But he was looking at you like he wanted to shove you back against that wall and finish what you'd started. His eyes dragged down your body, lingering on your swollen lips, the marks on your neck, the wrinkled silk of your dress, before snapping back up. "Fuck, your hair's a complete disaster."
"So is yours."
"I'm always a mess. You're supposed to be the put-together one." He reached out, fingers trembling slightly as he tried to tuck a few loose strands back into place. The touch was gentle now, almost tender, so different from five minutes ago when he'd been fisting his hand in it and pulling. "There. Almost presentable."
You caught his wrist, held it. His pulse was still racing under your fingers. "Aegon, please."
"Don't." He pulled away, stepped back entirely, hands dropping to his sides and curling into fists like he didn't trust himself not to reach for you again. "Don't make it something. It was just—we're drunk. That's all."
"Right. Drunk."
"Very drunk." He looked around, spotted his abandoned wine cup on the bench, picked it up and stared at it like he'd forgotten what it was for. Then set it back down. "We should go. Before I do something even stupider."
"Like what?"
His eyes met yours, and they were still dark. Still wanting. His gaze dropped to your mouth. "Don't ask questions you don't want answered, cousin."
Your breath caught. Heat pooled low in your belly again, that ache between your legs flaring back to life.
He saw it on your face—saw the want there—and made a pained sound. "Gods, don't look at me like that. We need to leave. Now."
"Okay," you managed.
"Okay." But he didn't move. Just stood there, chest rising and falling too fast, hands still clenched at his sides.
Finally, with visible effort, he offered you his arm, the gesture exaggerated and courtly in a way that didn't quite hide how badly his hand was shaking. "Come on. Let's go back before someone sends a search party and finds us looking like we've been—" He stopped and swallowed hard. "Just. Let's go."
You took his arm, fingers wrapping around his forearm, and you could feel the tension in him. The muscles were tight, coiled, like he was holding himself back. Together you made your way back down the winding stairs. The descent was precarious, both of you still drunk, still unsteady, but now for different reasons. Your legs felt weak. You could feel the slickness between your thighs with every step, a constant reminder of how close you'd come to, god, fucking your cousin. The cousin that was right there, is still right there.
You stumbled on a step and Aegon caught you, arm wrapping around your waist to steady you. The touch lasted a second too long. His fingers pressed into your hip, right where he'd gripped you before and you both froze.
"Careful," he said roughly, then let go like you'd burned him.
"Are we going to be weird about this?" you asked as you reached the bottom, voices from the feast growing louder.
"Are you?"
"No."
"Then neither am I." He squeezed your hand where it rested on his arm, the pressure firm and grounding. "It was just kissing. Doesn't have to mean anything."
"Doesn't have to mean anything," you repeated.
Liar, something whispered in the back of your mind. You could still feel him hard against you. Could still hear him saying he wanted to fuck you against the wall. Could still taste wine on your tongue. But when you made it back through the side door, slipping into the edges of the feast and immediately caught sight of Jace across the hall, still with Cassandra, his head bent close to hers as she whispered something in his ear, and you felt that familiar twist of want and jealousy knife through your chest.
And beneath it, something new. Something confusing.
The memory of Aegon's mouth on yours. His hands on your body, gripping and pulling and claiming. The way he'd made you forget everything else, forget Jace, forget propriety, forget your own name, for those few desperate moments.
And worse of all, the way you'd liked it.
You slipped away from Aegon as soon as you entered the hall, murmuring something about needing the privy. In truth, you needed a moment. Needed to look at yourself, assess the damage. Your chambers weren't far. You practically ran there, heart still pounding, skin still flushed.
Your ladies were waiting, they'd been dismissed earlier but Lysa had stayed, dozing in a chair by the fire. She jolted awake when you burst in.
"My lady! Are you—" Her eyes went wide, taking in your disheveled hair, your swollen lips, the very obvious marks blooming purple on your throat. "Oh."
"I need—" You gestured helplessly at your neck. "Can you please?"
"Of course." But she was grinning as she hurried to mix a paste, calling for Maryse and Elaena.
They appeared quickly, and the moment they saw you, the reaction was immediate.
"Ohhhhh," Maryse breathed, eyes sparkling with delight.
"My lady!" Elaena giggled, pressing her hands to her mouth.
"Don't," you warned, but you could feel yourself flushing deeper.
"Was he handsome?" Lysa asked, dabbing the paste carefully on your neck to lighten the marks. It wouldn't hide them completely, but it would help.
"I'm not discussing this."
"Ohhhhh, he was," Maryse decided, starting to fix your hair with deft fingers. "Look how red she is."
"Was it romantic?" Elaena asked dreamily, adjusting your dress, smoothing the wrinkles.
"It was—" You stopped. What could you even say? "It was nothing. Too much wine."
All three of them made knowing sounds, soft "mmhmms" and "of courses" that said they didn't believe you for a second.
The rest of the night blurred together in a haze of wine and music and laughter. You danced with Aemond, too stiff and proper, unlike his brother, but surprisingly skilled. He didn't speak much, just guided you through the steps like an ever-so-graceful swan, his one good eye tracking everything in the hall like he was cataloging threats.
"You're drunk," he observed.
"Very."
"Good. You're less insufferable when you're drunk.”
"You're a delight as always, cousin."
His lips twitched, the closest thing to a smile you'd ever seen from him. "Enjoy your evening, Princess."
Then Daemon cut in, stealing you mid-step with the kind of casual arrogance only he could manage.
"Having fun?" he asked, spinning you perhaps a bit too fast.
"Trying to."
"That Greyjoy boy's been watching you all night." Daemon's grin was sharp. "Wondering if he's going to do something stupid."
"Aren't we all doing something stupid tonight?"
"Fair point." He laughed, and for a moment you could see why Rhaenyra loved him despite everything. "Don't get yourself killed, niece. Your aunt would be very put out."
"I'll do my best."
Even Rhaenyra danced with you—a slower song, her hands gentle as she guided you through it.
"You look happy," she said softly. "That's good. I worry about you sometimes."
"I'm fine, Your Grace."
"Rhaenyra," she corrected. "When it's just us, I'm Rhaenyra. Your aunt who loves you."
The wine made your eyes sting. "I love you too."
She pressed a kiss to your forehead. "Go enjoy yourself. You're young. These nights don't come often enough."
So you did. You drank more wine, letting the warmth of it blur the edges of everything. Danced with lords whose names you didn't remember and didn't care to learn. Laughed at Aegon's increasingly ridiculous jokes, though you were careful not to stand too close to him, careful not to let your eyes linger.
Every time you saw him across the hall, you remembered. His mouth on yours. His hands gripping your ass. The way he'd ground against you like he couldn't help himself. The things he'd said, could fuck you right here, that still made heat pool between your legs when you thought about them.
And every time you saw Jace, still orbiting Cassandra Baratheon like she was the sun and he was caught in her gravity, you felt that sick twist of jealousy. But now it was complicated by guilt. By confusion. You'd dry-humped Aegon in a tower. You'd been ready to let him fuck you against a wall. And part of you had liked it. Had liked the way he looked at you like you were something he desperately wanted. Had liked feeling wanted, period.
But you still couldn't stop watching Jace. Couldn't stop wondering what his hands would feel like instead of Aegon's. Couldn't stop thinking about the hole in your wall and the things you'd seen through it.
You were a mess. A complete disaster of a person. So you drank more. Let yourself forget, just for a few hours, about holes in walls and wanting things you couldn't have and the fact that you'd apparently developed an extremely inconvenient attraction to not one but two of your cousins.
By the time you decided to retire, the hall was spinning pleasantly and your feet ached from dancing. You waved off your ladies, they were enjoying themselves too, giggling with guards and flirting with servants and made your way through the corridors alone.
The castle was a maze at the best of times. Drunk, it was nearly impossible.
You climbed stairs, turned down hallways, all of it familiar but also somehow wrong. Your chambers should be here? No, maybe down this corridor. Or was it the other way?
Finally, you found a door that looked right. The wood was the same, the handle in the same place. Close enough. You pushed it open, stumbled inside, and didn't bother with candles. The room was dark and quiet. Just kicked off your slippers, fumbled with the laces of your gown until they loosened enough to breathe, and collapsed onto the bed.
The sheets smelled clean. Felt soft. Maybe a bit different than usual but your wine-soaked brain didn't care enough to question it. Good enough, you didn’t give a god’s damn.
You were asleep before your head fully hit the pillow.
Jacaerys was tired, wine-warm, and ready for bed when he finally escaped the feast.
Cassandra had wanted him to stay longer, had made that very clear with the way her hand kept finding his arm, the lingering touches, the invitations in her eyes that he'd politely ignored. He'd begged off with excuses about an early morning. The tournaments started tomorrow, and he needed at least a few hours of sleep before climbing into armor and trying not to get killed in front of the entire court.
He climbed the stairs to his chambers, his thoughts already on collapsing into bed. Maybe he'd been too indulgent tonight. Too much wine, too much dancing, too much of Cassandra's cloying perfume that now clung to his clothes and made his head ache.
He pushed open his door, stepped inside, and froze.
Someone was in his bed.
His hand went to the dagger at his belt, pure instinct, trained response, his body tensing as his eyes fought to adjust to the darkness. The figure was small, curled on their side facing away from him. Too small to be a real threat. Too still.
Then he saw the hair. Silver. Spilling across his pillows, catching what little light came through the window. Long and unbound, the way he'd never seen it during the day when it was always properly pinned and braided.
His heart stopped. Started again, too fast.
It was you.
"What the—" The words died in his throat. He stood there, hand still on his dagger, trying to make sense of what he was seeing.
You were in his bed. His bed. Fast asleep from the look of it, your breathing deep and even, completely unaware of his presence. Jace's eyes adjusted further, and he could make out more details now. Your slippers discarded on the floor near the foot of the bed. Your gown was unlaced and loose around your body.
Very loose. His breath caught as his gaze traced the line of your form. You'd clearly tried to unlace the gown yourself, drunk fingers fumbling with the ties, getting it open enough to breathe easier before collapsing into bed. But you'd only managed to loosen it, not remove it, and now the fabric had shifted in your sleep.
The neckline had slipped down your shoulder. Lower. Low enough that he could see—
Jace's mouth went dry. Your breast. Half of it bare, skin luminous in the moonlight, the curve of it visible where the silk had fallen away. If you shifted even slightly, if the fabric slipped just a bit more… stop, stop right fucking now.
He looked away quickly, heat flooding his face, his chest, lower. His heart was hammering now.
Don't look. Don't be that person. She's asleep. She's drunk. She doesn't even know where she is.
But his eyes were drawn back like a lodestone to true north.
Your leg had escaped the tangle of silk too. One bare leg stretched out across his sheets, the gown rucked up to mid-thigh, higher on the side where you'd rolled slightly forward in sleep. Smooth skin, the elegant line of your calf, the curve of your knee. If he looked, and gods help him, he was looking, he could see almost to your hip where the fabric had bunched.
He could see the shadow between your thighs. Jace's cock stirred in his breeches, and he felt shame burn through him immediately after.
Stop. Stop looking at her like this.
But he couldn't move. Couldn't look away. You were sprawled across his bed like some kind of vision, your lips were parted slightly, your breathing deep and peaceful. You looked nothing like the proper, put-together princess he saw every day. Nothing like his cousin who barely spoke to him, who avoided his eyes at dinner, who seemed to go out of her way not to be alone with him.
You looked undone and vulnerable. Beautiful in a way that made his chest ache and his blood run hot.
He took a step closer without meaning to. Then another. Until he was standing beside the bed, looking down at you.
This close, he could see more. The gentle rise and fall of your chest, your bare chest, your nipple was just barely hidden by a fold of silk, the fabric draped across it so precariously that each breath threatened to expose you completely.
Jace's hands clenched into fists at his sides. His breathing had gone shallow.
What was wrong with him? This was you. His cousin. A princess. A woman who clearly had no idea where she was or what she looked like right now. And he was standing here staring at you like some kind of pervert, getting hard while you slept completely unaware.
He needed to—he should—
Wake you. Get you back to your chambers. Cover you with a blanket at the very least. Do something other than stand here like an idiot with his cock half-hard and his mind conjuring images of what it would be like to slip into that bed beside you, to pull you against him, to—
No.
He forced himself to step back. To look away. To think like a rational person instead of a man who'd drunk too much wine and found a beautiful woman in his bed. You shifted in your sleep, making a small sound and rolled slightly onto your back.
The movement made everything worse. The gown slipped further. Your breast was fully exposed now, pale and perfect in the moonlight. He could see your nipple, could see the way it had hardened slightly in the cool air of the room. The silk had ridden up higher on your leg too, and now he could see the dark shadow at the apex of your thighs. Gods.
Were you even wearing anything under that gown?
Jace turned away sharply, pressing the heels of his palms against his eyes like he could scrub the image from his mind. His cock was fully hard now, straining against his breeches, and he felt like the worst kind of person. You were drunk. Asleep. Completely vulnerable. And here he was getting hard looking at you, thinking thoughts he had absolutely no right to think.
He needed to cover you. That was the first thing. Before he did anything else—before he even tried to figure out what to do about this situation—he needed to make you decent.
Jace grabbed the blanket from the foot of the bed, hands shaking slightly, and carefully, so carefully, draped it over you. He tried not to look. Tried not to let his eyes linger on all that bare skin before the fabric covered it.
He failed. The image was burned into his mind now. Your breast. Your leg. The shadow between your thighs. The way you looked spread out in his bed like some kind of offering.
Stop it. She's your cousin. She's drunk. This is wrong.
But his body didn't care about wrong. His body only knew that you were here, barely clothed, looking like every fantasy he'd never let himself have. And you had been a fantasy. He could admit that now, alone in the dark with you unconscious and unaware. He'd noticed you. Had tried not to, had told himself it was inappropriate, but he'd noticed. The way you moved. The rare times you smiled. The intelligence in your eyes during council meetings when you thought no one was watching you listen.
He'd just never let himself think about it. About you. Not like that. Now he couldn't think about anything else.
Jace ran both hands through his hair, gripping it hard enough to hurt, trying to ground himself. Trying to think. Okay, good. You were covered now. That was good. Next step was to figure out what the fuck to do.
He should wake you. Should get you back to your own chambers before anyone found out you'd spent the night here. Before servants came in the morning and saw you in his bed. The scandal alone would destroy you. Would destroy any chance you had at a good marriage, would ruin your reputation entirely.
He couldn't let that happen. But waking you meant... what exactly? Touching you? Shaking your shoulder? Explaining that you'd drunkenly stumbled into the wrong room and passed out half-naked in your cousin's bed?
Gods, you'd be mortified.
Maybe it was better to just let you sleep. You were clearly exhausted, clearly drunk enough that you'd mistaken his chambers for yours. In the morning, when you woke, he could pretend he'd just arrived. Could act surprised to find you there. Give you a chance to slip out quietly, save you the embarrassment of a confrontation.
Yes. That was better. Kinder. It had nothing to do with wanting to keep you here a little longer. Nothing to do with the selfish, possessive part of him that liked seeing you in his bed, wrapped in his blankets, surrounded by his scent.
Liar, something whispered in the back of his mind.
Jace ignored it. He'd sleep somewhere else. The chairs by the fire, maybe. Or, there, is eyes landed on the small couch in the corner near the window. It looked deeply uncomfortable, probably meant for sitting and reading rather than sleeping, but it would have to do. He couldn't exactly climb into bed next to you. That would be, well, he didn't let himself finish that thought.
Decision made, he moved quietly toward the corner, trying not to make any noise that might wake you. He'd need to grab a blanket from the chest at the foot of the bed, maybe a pillow.
Something caught his eye. A small gap in the wall near the floor in the corner. He'd never noticed it before, why would he? It was just a shadow among shadows, easy to miss. But now, looking directly at it, he could see it clearly.
A hole. Small, where the mortar had crumbled away between the stones. Jace frowned, crouching down to examine it. Old damage. The kind of thing that happened in castles this ancient, centuries of settling stone.
He should probably mention it to someone. Get it sealed up. Curious, he leaned closer, peering through the narrow gap to see where it led.
His breath caught. It was a room. Your room.
He could see the edge of a bed with a distinctive purple coverlet—the same one he'd seen when he'd accidentally walked in on you in your bath. A dressing table with jewelry scattered across its surface, glinting in the moonlight. Books stacked on a side table. A carved wooden screen positioned in the corner, partially obscuring his view but not completely.
The hole looked directly into your private chambers.
Jace sat back slowly, his heart starting to pound for entirely different reasons now.
This gap in the wall—it went straight through to your room. A perfect line of sight from his corner to yours. Which meant theoretically, someone could look through it. Could see into your private space. Watch you dress, sleep, bathe, lord knows what else.
His jaw clenched hard, a surge of protective anger rising in his chest. Had some servant discovered this? Some guard with ill intentions? The thought of someone watching you while you were vulnerable, unaware, made his blood run hot.
But then again you'd never mentioned it. Never complained about feeling watched or unsafe. Never called for anyone to repair the wall. Which meant either you didn't know about it.
Or you did know, and you'd chosen not to say anything.
Jace turned slowly to look at you, sleeping peacefully in his bed, utterly unaware of his racing thoughts.
The hole was low in his corner. Easy to miss unless you were looking for it, unless you happened to be right here in this spot. But on your side you'd have that screen. Would have moved it at some point, maybe looking for something, and found the gap.
Would have realized where it led. His heart was pounding now, thoughts spiraling.
No. That was insane. You wouldn't. You barely looked at him most days, avoided him at meals, seemed to go out of your way not to be alone with him. But you'd also been acting strange lately. He'd noticed it, couldn't help but notice. The way you flushed when he was near. How you avoided his eyes, like looking at him directly was too much.
And this morning. Gods, this morning when he'd walked in on you in your bath. You'd screamed, yes, but there had been something else in your expression. Something beyond just shock. You'd looked almost guilty, almost. At the time he'd thought he was imagining it. Had assumed you were just mortified at being seen naked. But what if it was more than that?
What if you'd been watching him through this hole, and suddenly he'd burst into your room, and you'd realized how close he was to discovering your secret?
Jace's breath came faster. He thought back over the past few days. The way you'd been flushed at dinner after he'd brought that woman back to his chambers. The way you couldn't meet his eyes the next morning. How you'd seemed distracted, distant, like your mind was somewhere else entirely.
Had you been watching him fuck her? The thought should have made him angry. Should have felt like a violation, an invasion of his privacy.
Instead, heat shot straight to his groin.
His cock, which had softened slightly while he'd been trying to figure out the logistics of where to sleep, was suddenly achingly hard again. He pressed the heel of his hand against his cock through his breeches, trying to will it down, but it was useless. The image was in his head now and wouldn't leave.
You. On the other side of that wall. Eye pressed to the gap. Watching him with some nameless woman, watching him fuck her, watching every thrust and hearing every sound.
Getting wet while you watched.
Fuck. Because you would have, wouldn't you? If you'd been watching—and gods, everything pointed to you watching—you wouldn't have kept coming back to that hole unless it was doing something for you. Unless seeing him like that, uninhibited and raw, was turning you on.
His proper, untouchable cousin. Getting yourself off while spying on him through a crack in the wall. Jace's hand tightened involuntarily on his cock and he had to bite back a groan.
He looked at you again, sleeping peacefully in his bed, completely unaware that he'd figured it out. That he knew. How many times? How many times had you watched him?
That first woman, the dark-haired serving girl. Had you seen that? Seen him bend her over the bed, seen the way he'd made her moan? And the one after. The minor lady whose name he'd already forgotten. Had you watched him spread her legs and bury his face between her thighs?
Gods, had you touched yourself while you watched? Slipped your hand beneath your nightgown, fingers finding your clit while you watched him make other women come? His cock throbbed and he had to close his eyes, had to breathe through the wave of lust that crashed over him.
This was wrong. He shouldn't be thinking about you like this. Shouldn't be getting hard imagining you watching him, wanting him, touching yourself to the sight of him with other women.
But he couldn't stop. Because if you had been watching—and everything in him said you had been—what did that mean?
It meant you wanted him. Maybe didn't want to want him, maybe fought against it, but you did. Why else would you keep going back to that hole? Why else would you watch him fuck other women if not because you wished it was you?
The thought made him harder, made pre-cum leak from the tip of his cock, dampening his smallclothes. He tried to remember the past few nights, tried to think through the wine-haze of who he'd brought back and when.
He'd also been with Cassandra. Right here in this room, in this bed where you were sleeping now.
Had you watched that? His breath came out shaky. He'd been showing off tonight, he could admit that now. Cassandra had been impressed by his title, his dragon, the crown he'd someday wear. She'd made that clear. And maybe he'd wanted to impress her in other ways too. Had made it last longer than usual, had made sure she came twice before he'd let himself finish.
Had you been on the other side of that wall, watching him with her? Watching him kiss her, touch her, spread her legs in this very bed? Watching while your heart twisted with jealousy?
The idea shouldn't thrill him as much as it did.
Jace pressed his palm hard against his cock, trying to calm down, trying to think past the lust fogging his brain. His hand came away damp, he was leaking badly now, his cock throbbing with need.
Stop. Get yourself under control.
He forced himself to breathe. Slow, deep breaths. Forced himself to look away from you sleeping in his bed, tangled in his sheets, still half-exposed despite the blanket he'd draped over you.
This was insane. He was standing here hard as iron, thinking about his cousin watching him fuck other women, getting off on the idea of you wanting him. He needed to calm down. Needed to think rationally about what this meant and what, if anything, he was going to do about it.
Jace forced himself to turn away from you entirely. Grabbed the blanket he'd originally intended to use and moved to the couch in the corner, as far from the bed as he could get in the confines of his own chambers. He stretched out on the too-small surface, the blanket pulled up to his chin, and willed his body to calm down. Willed his cock to soften. Tried to think about anything other than you watching him through that hole.
It didn't work.
Every time he closed his eyes, his mind conjured images. You with your eye pressed to the gap. Your hand sliding beneath your nightgown. Your lips parting as you watched him fuck someone else, wishing it was you. His cock throbbed, still achingly hard, and he shifted uncomfortably on the couch.
This was impossible. He couldn't sleep like this. Couldn't lie here all night with his cock straining against his breeches and you barely ten feet away, half-naked in his bed. He sat up, running both hands through his hair in frustration.
He needed to leave. Needed to get out of this room before he did something monumentally stupid. Like climb into that bed with you. Like wake you up and ask if you'd been watching. Like find out what sounds you'd make if he gave you something real to watch.
Fuck.
Jace stood, moving as quietly as possible, and grabbed his cloak from where it hung by the door. The Street of Silk would still be busy at this hour. He could find someone, anyone, to take the edge off. To fuck this desperate need out of his system so he could think clearly.
He paused at the door, looking back at you one more time. You'd shifted again in your sleep, the blanket slipping down to your waist. Your silver hair spilled across his pillows like you belonged there.
Tomorrow. He'd deal with all of this tomorrow. Would help you back to your chambers, act like the perfect gentleman. Would decide what, if anything, to do about that hole in the wall.
But tonight, he needed to leave before he lost what little control he had left. Jace slipped out into the corridor, closing the door softly behind him, and headed for the castle gates.
To read the remainder of part one (I ran out of space on here), please go to AO3 end of this part is Chapter 5: Consequences. Thank you for reading!
Dreamer
get up, get up ser!
no sleep, no dreams
his hair. his eyes. his hands. oml look at his hands.
DAERON THE DRUNKEN A KNIGHT OF THE SEVEN KINGDOMS 1.06 | The Morrow



