for dilly

Jan. 27th, 2022 05:58 pm
shieldofrohan: (pic#13979529)
[personal profile] shieldofrohan
Marriage has been far from her mind for a long time. What time has there been for such things, such planning for the future, when there is no future to plan against? There is only the endless drudgery of the now; of stolid duty, of the daily running of the city and the tending to her uncle's ailing health, of bitter shadows and dark dreams as the stormclouds gather. How is she to think of marriage, then? How could she even think of wedding someone, of being a bride in some foreign city, when all her duty and all her life is here? No, marriage has not been on her mind; but only the quiet grind of life when all that she would live for is fading around her.

This changed all at once, when it changed. Two matters precipitated the change: the first, the death of her cousin, so dear to her heart. All of a sudden, she and her exiled brother are all that remains of the dwindling line of Eorl; all of a sudden, that abstracted future is shorter than ever. It is her uncle, her King, who speaks of marriage then; who clasps her hands where he lies in his sickbed, and tells her through tears that he would see her wed, that ere he dies he must see her happy.

And this might not have changed things so deeply - for she will not rush to wed, when there is no man she would call worthy of turning her from duty - were it not for the second matter. Word that comes in dribs and drabs, tangled by distance; letters that capture her, that she returns in kind. They are, to begin with, a distraction; a fantasy, to sustain her through dark days. A lost prince, wrongfully kept from his throne; an ancient line, a terrible wrong, the promise of a right reclaimed. She has visions of her place in this tale, of the glory that has eluded her in these shadowed halls: how there will come a day when, at full strength, the Eorlingas ride to the aid of another kingdom, as once they rode to Gondor's aid so long ago; and she will be at their head, and she will be Queen, and who then will overlook her in the shadows? Who then will turn away, ashamed, from her pain and sorrow? Then will all be restored, and she will linger no more in hollow darkness, but smile again, and be loved.

It is a fantasy. In her heart, she knows this; in her truest mind, she knows that she can promise nothing but an already-embattled army that will not leave its posts, and a king without a throne can promise nothing but more war. But there is glory in war, too, and there is romance in what she has been told; and she is young, for all her hardness, and her blood has ever run too hot. It is a fantasy, but one she sorely needs; and she has come to love the king whose face she has never seen, whose tragedy is the stuff of songs.

And still it might not have changed anything. It is the confluence of the two, the quirk of timing - that the offer of marriage comes so near on the heels of Théodred's loss and Éomer's exile - that turns the tide. How can she do otherwise? She writes in answer, and seals it with her uncle's ring. Come. To wed, to stay, to await the turning of the tide. And what she does not write: Come, and marry me, and make of my life a song. Come: I have waited too long in dreary duty.

And the days pass, and there is a future to await; there is something to hope for, at last, and even her uncle's continued ill-health will not deter her from the strange blossoming of hope in her breast. The war drags on, and the darkness lingers, and all is not well in Edoras; and yet, there is change on the horizon, and she will not always be alone. She will not always be a ghost in her own halls, the White Lady whose beauty and sorrow are all that are known of her. She will be a queen, even if she is a queen in exile; and she will not be alone.

The king, she has heard, has a sister too. This is another spark that brightens her darkness while she waits; for she has never had a sister of her own, and for all the love she bears towards her brother and her departed cousin, for all her fierce devotion to her kinsmen, how fine a thing it seems to have another woman in her life! She has written again to Magister Illyrio; assured him that the Lady Daenerys will be most welcome, and as dear to her as a true sister; and every word of it she has meant. Excited as she is to be wed, to be loved, to be Queen, she is almost as excited again to have some woman in her life who is neither maid nor servant. She imagines a woman like herself, lonely and chafing against the weight of grief; a woman who will understand, as no man ever has, the burden of womanhood. They will sit together, she imagines, and comb and braid one another's hair, and weave and sew and work, and they will laugh, and they will find a companionship that Éowyn, who for so long has been the sole lady of the hall, has craved since her childhood.

She will have a sister. She will have a husband. She will have a purpose, one more glorious than simple house-stewardry. She will be a queen.

It is a heady thought. It fuels her, and her already industrious days are fuller than ever; she still nurses Théoden through his illness, still oversees the business of the city and the kingdom as she must, but her mind is more thoroughly on the preparations for Viserys' arrival: the feasts to be thrown, and the guests to be called, and how she must be her most regal and her most beautiful, ready for the war to come.

It is, then, a grander hall than ever that greets the Pentosi travellers. She is glad to know that it is a sunny day when they arrive: that they will see from afar how the roof of Meduseld gleams like gold in the autumn light, that the wind that stirs the long grass of the plains and sets the green banners fluttering is not too cold or too harsh. The city bustles with activity; there is music for the first time since the prince's body was borne homewards, and an air of (still muted) festivity; and through the green and white of Rohan's colours, she has contrived to work patches of red and black, a reminder of the union to come.

She awaits them outside the hall itself, and even the presence of Gríma Wormtongue beside her, glowering, will not sink her spirits. Soon, she thinks, you will be nothing to me. Soon, I will see you driven out. When I am queen.

She looks, in truth, like a queen already. She has made sure of it. Her waist-length golden hair is bound back by a silver circlet, her white gown embroidered richly in green and gold, her head held high and her smile both sweet and noble. There is a sorrow in her still, but it is for the moment held at bay, a dim shadow in clear grey eyes. She steps forwards to greet her betrothed, and for a moment, the fantasy seems to hold. He is, perhaps, shorter than she had dreamed, gaunt with hardship, sharp-edged and pinched; but there is a fire in his violet eyes, and he holds himself well enough, and he is handsome in his way. She is not displeased, she decides; he is no Eorl nor Isildur, but he is king enough in his heart, she will not doubt that. She smiles and welcomes him inside, where the firelight plays on carved wood and ancient tapestries, where the tables are set and the lamps are lit, and where her uncle sits (not so tall as once he did; not so kingly now the light has left his eyes) upon the high throne.

It is enough. She will not allow it to be otherwise. Rohan gains by this marriage; there is a bride-price to exchange for her dowry of fine horses and good armour, and there is the promise, too, of renown to come. She gains by this marriage most of all. It is a joy; she will not allow it to be otherwise. Even with her brother gone, it is a joy.

And perhaps, in all of this, she blinds herself to the things that will not fit the tale she wishes to tell. Perhaps there are things she excuses, which she might not otherwise: he is not the most polite, but he is a stranger in a foreign land, and he does not know the customs; he is not the tallest or strongest man she has known, but he is a king; he is a trifle vain, but is she not also too much aware of her looks in this moment? It will be easier, she tells herself, after the wedding. When he comes to know her and her people more fully, to see all the beauty that Rohan has to offer, then it will be easier; and songs are not often sung of these strange early days, when things are between this and that.

His sister is not so impolite. In truth, his sister feels barely present, to Éowyn's admitted grief: a quiet, shy thing, delicate as a bird, too often hastened away. But this, too, will pass - must pass. Daenerys' furtiveness, no doubt a result of that same alien land which brings out her brother's scorn, will pass in time. This will be a home to them, until their own home - her new home - is restored. She will see to it, she determines, with a stubbornness that has seen her through so many trials before; she will not relent, and when the wedding is done, they will know that they are kin here.

The wedding comes soon enough, only a few days later; and she stands before her uncle, dressed again in his robes of state, and she thinks she almost sees him smile through his grief as he blesses their union; thinks, for a moment, that she sees the old spirit return to him. Any doubt is gone. She can only smile, and look at her new husband from beneath modestly-lowered lashes, and think with a thrill of excitement: Queen. I am queen. And they will sing songs of how we reclaimed the throne.

Date: 2022-02-01 03:41 am (UTC)
raedes: (011.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
The kennels are a better place for him, are they? So fixated is he upon this particular insult, petulantly so, that he can think of nothing other than making her recognize her mistake. She will taste the same insult thrust back upon her. She will be the one who is no better than a bitch scrabbling in the straw come morning. It is too flagrant an offence, too abject in the shame it douses him with, to let pass.

The beggar king, the cart king, the barefoot king; too many years of his life had been spent already scrounging through kennels, more cur than prince. Desperate for scraps, cowering in any shelter, no matter how destitute. Never again. From the mires of the Free Cities he had risen, winning the esteem and patronage of a powerful magister, only awaiting the moment to deliver proper justice to those who coveted his throne. He will not be reminded of the years which came before. Once the dragon's shadow falls, those caught within it do not wonder at how long it has taken him to grow.

She is wild as a trout caught in his hands, thrashing and aiming to slip from his grasp, but he makes his hand a fist in her hair, clubbing her head roughly to the table. And she is strong, just as he'd deduced from first looking upon her, displeased by so much contoured muscle and uncouth strength. It is unbecoming in a woman. It is also an annoyance now, as he pares her thighs, but for all of the vigor lent her by horror, he rides still the gathering wave of spite. A spite given full range of the dark, beholden to no man or law, and he knows too well the indignity of letting his possessions slip from his hands. His fingers have all but tapered into talons, dedicated only to losing her in pieces if he must lose her at all.

But he will not. They are alone here while the festivities unfurl still in her simple, merry hall. Her dress he shovels coarsely to her back, and there is nothing then left between him and her open legs. No gods-blessed humility, no pristine honor, no defiance to bare its teeth and chase him away. With one hand twisted in her hair, the other goes to unbuckling and unfastening at his hips. The black breeches are too fine to ever have been worn to so middling an affair, he thinks. His laughter is a thin whip on the back of her words, and he is breathless with the certainty of his victory. Anxious to see it done before it can be taken from him. Determined, at the same time, to savor what is the single delicacy which has been placed before him.

"You are my wife," he reminds her with relish, jerking his body forward to curve above her, to furrow the livid strain of his cock within her, bringing his mouth to her ear with a hot gust of breath. The words which follow catch on a beastly grunt, a shuddering pleasure to feel her body so tellingly tight around him. "And you will not kill me, for you could not live with yourself if you did."

His free hand coils at her hip, forcing that smooth arch of bone up off the table to meet him when next he rams forward against her. His voice curls with velvet-warm mockery, a refashioning of words meant to be spoken in a truer love. "As your avowed husband, I promise that I shall never let you go. Though I may take a dozen whores a day, it will be you I return to each and every night."

Date: 2022-02-01 11:19 pm (UTC)
raedes: (013.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
He will, he decides, of necessity require whores; this woman is far too bleak and composed to ever have appealed to him. Even if she'd been dutiful - if she had never challenged him and never struck him - she would not be enough. A deferential and subservient lady he would need at his side for all the drudgery of court, yes, but she is not what he would have in his bed. What her notion of passion is, he cannot begin to guess, but that is no matter, because he does not care. Who did she dream of, if she dreamt of her unflowering at all? What is it that would drive her to wet pleading? No, she would never do. She would never have truly appreciated him; she is too dim.

Now, maybe, she will scream - now that their oaths to one another are made true, now that she has paid the irrevocable price with her body, now that she will never be as she was; but she does not. Neither does she wail, and neither does she plainly quiver with unspent tears, as was his sister's habit when darkness began to gather in earnest. He does not doubt that it hurts: he can feel her skin break beneath the aggression of his nails, and he can feel how her body balks at the demand thrust within it. Only briefly, and then that breaks too, and there is promptly the tacky smear of blood. She will never be as she was, and he grins as he hauls forward against her, making it true again and again. He wonders how gracefully she will wear her shame. In the sounds that are ripped from her, he suspects there may be the tears of defeat after all.

She does not declare again her vow against his life, does not maintain a proud and vain struggle against him. Her body repeats its same tried and failed refusals: her hand argues against his arm, and the muscles of her thighs glint like ready blades, but they only glint, and cannot be drawn against him. It feels, in fact, as if her cunt is not entirely opposed to the idea of urging him closer - it closes like a mouth around him, seizing the prying length of his cock like an eager tongue, and his laughter spills again, smooth and easy, as if the whole fact of her were little more than an idle amusement.

"How many noble knights made your cunt weep in your dreams before this day?" It is not weeping now, that is for certain - every stab into the dry give between her thighs makes evident how unwelcome he is, which only drives him to rougher excitement on the next plunge - but he wants to believe she has dreamt of being taken not so differently from this. That he is, without her consent, the answer to that desire, though she will never confess it.

And he is thinking too of how very much the opposite she is of any fantasy he has ever summoned before him, his fingers spanning in her hair to open his hand against her skull, gripping her there with a violent distaste. Golden is her hair, and not displeasing to the eye, but there is nothing to make palatable her cool courtesy. Regal had been her bearing, but in a way that must clothe only cobwebbed reserve, not a slinking seduction. And she spoke too boldly, thought far too highly of herself, and esteemed him not half as much as he was owed.

His voice grits between his teeth, his jaw tense with rough satisfaction or impatient hatred or both. She does have a fair face, it's true, though that need not be so when he has her held flat against the table, when all semblance of beauty can be stripped from her as easily as her maidenhead. She is, like this, only what he says she is.

"Gods, you are vile. I hope never to see you fully naked. You've probably only dreamt of being mounted by horses."

Date: 2022-02-02 04:56 am (UTC)
raedes: (05.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
He married her, as he'd been advised; he'd known he must, sooner or later, and always for the sake of forging alliances. There did not feel, for him, to be anything extraordinarily binding in it. He must marry, just as men must decide upon a broodmare to bear their stallion's progeny. A logistical imperative. He would marry for armies and for fealties, and he would take into his bed as many women as it pleased him to have. He would not be fool enough to wear his marriage like shackles. He would speak what words must be spoken, take what he needed for his conquest, and think of his sworn lady only when he must. In court, in public appearances, in those hours when he would take from her arms his sons.

She had been nothing to him then, and she is nothing to him now. There had been, of course, the initial novelty - there had been the curious excitement of blazing a romance upon parchment. She existed then as a portrait commissioned by his imagination, painted to his pleasure. To speak of love when the work of love did not yet demand his hand; to revel in their imminent victories just as he reveled in her beauty, not yet blemished by the sight of real flesh; those had been sweet diversions. But now he has been made to see her, to behold her hall and her brutish people, to sit at her paltry table, and he will suffer no more slights.

Her voice wavers, made ugly with what can only be thickening tears, and he does not recognize the name she pins to him. He knows only that it is her insolence speaking still, and he answers with a heavy grunt. The raking of his cock within her deserts its task in an abrupt drag, enough so that he can lift his weight from her hips. His hand wrenches free from the gold of her hair, and he takes her by the arms to twist her onto her back. She will not have the cowardly honor of enduring this ceremony blind.

"I bought armies and allegiance. You factor into it a deal less than you think." She was the emblem of their union, perhaps, her breeding and titles meant to give this wedding more distinction than it could rightly claim. Hers was the body which would make of the agreement a blood oath.

His hands rip now at her bodice. While he is enraptured by no lover's desire to see her laid bare, he will leave no piece of her unaccosted by his incising eye. She will know how thoroughly her supposed beauty has failed to take root here. She will not forget that her glorious titles and prestigious heritage count for nothing in his shadow. His claws are cruel and nimble, shredding at her silks with a heedless, mindless fury. He will bare her breasts, and he will skewer her while she lies on her back, too, lunging forward once more between her legs to sheathe there his angry, undisciplined sword.

His teeth gleam in the sudden gaping of a smile, though in place of humor or mirth there is only a gluttonous scorn.

"You carried yourself so proudly in your dingy halls, my lady. Where is your pride now? Look at me. Your king commands it."

Date: 2022-02-02 10:11 pm (UTC)
raedes: (09.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
The gown is no more resistant than a sigh against his hands, and it seems almost eager to betray her. It was made with delicacy in mind, to be sure: fair and beautiful and diaphanous, as all brides longed to be. For smitten hands coming upon her gently, reverently, this gown would have melted away, he thinks - it would have revealed her inch by pale inch, allowing the light to play across bare skin, a most lovely revelation. When no such fragility is asked of it, the fabric all but evaporates in his hands. There is a dash of gold in the dark, the slipping sensation of silk, and then she is bare.

There is little pleasure to be had in this revealing; she is not the first woman he has seen undressed, and there is nothing remarkable about her. More satisfying than the naked swell of her breasts is the burgeoning bruise on her cheek, and on her brow, at her temple, all tales written of how she was thrown down from so lofty and unearned a height. What grace will she summon to explain away these blemishes? He does not have time to humor fantasies of the shame she will invite upon herself with the humble lies she must tell. He does not have time to gloat in wondering who might now hear the arch of her cry through these walls, in those moments when she cannot refuse her pain.

Her spit is a small, hot punch into his unsuspecting eye, and he grimaces at the melting sensation of it. Then he is enraged anew, a dog whose tail has just been swiped at, and her nails bite into his throat, her damned hands left unguarded in his haste to loom above her. Now he does, and he has bullied his way once more between her thighs, jerking in a frenzy which mounts nearly to a sort of hysteria at this hail of insults.

One hand dives across his face to rid himself of her wet blood, the other parries the hands at his throat, and he snarls his own black frustration. The greatest insult comes, once again, in the name she spits at him that he does not know, and then instead of combatting her hand for hand, he grabs at her breast, twisting the tender bud of her nipple when he finds it. The other grasping fingers go again for her own throat, while he strains to keep himself out of her reach, curling where he would shake the words from her if he could. His hips strive to deliver a punishment of their own, making each thrust a gutting blow, if she were a body to be killed.

"I am your king. I am your lord husband, and you love me, and you will say it."

Date: 2022-02-02 11:14 pm (UTC)
raedes: (012.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
He will have this from her. He will hear in her gasping, breathless voice that she loves him, and it will not even be false, for love him she must. She will bow and accept her place as his wife - the gods themselves look down now upon this sanctifying of their vows - and she will assure him that her love is true. She will swear her loyalty and her honor and her respect, all of which he is due, and she will have no choice but to speak true. He will have it from her now, and he will have it from her the rest of their nights lived together. He will hear it whispered and recall this hour, when she was reminded of her worth, and she will deny him nothing.

She shakes her head, even in the narrow vice of his fingers, but she relinquishes, if nothing else, her tears. They make unsteady stars in her eyes, and they burn in what little light is frittered away in this room, and he knows already that she will deny these were ever tears. She will say her body had no choice but to bleed this way beneath his attack, as if she had not beckoned him forward to see it done. Hadn't she, with the back of her hand against his hard-edged cheek, and her ongoing insubordination? All she has received, she has asked for.

He mauls the fresh canvas of her breasts, twisting and pinching so that pleasure must pale before pain, should there be any wayward delights lingering beneath her skin. His hand slides up to fit beneath her jaw, to press against the give of virgin-soft skin, to confront slim bone, and the poison of his fury blazes instead into the poison of ridicule, of laughter. The greedy rutting of his cock has begun to reward him with a swelling anticipation, a hard fist of pleasure that grips tighter and tighter, and for a moment his eyes flutter against the extravagant promise of it. When her own nails do slash into his own skin, it is only spice in the wine, embers hissing.

"Honor me, wife. Tell me you love me, as you so fondly wrote. Say the words, if you are anything at all."

Date: 2022-02-03 12:08 am (UTC)
raedes: (04.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
Still the words she chooses are not the ones he has commanded; still she grasps for pride, as if it is to be found beneath the bark of defiance. She has made perfectly clear that her nobility, where it exists for her own sake, is very thin indeed. If she cared a whit for the honor of her body, or for the dignity she had until this hour worn like fine jewels, she would have done all she could to ward him away. She would have recited whatever was asked of her in the hopes that she would be spared some of this humiliation. She would have roused some effort to preserve herself, to decry that her body was more than the slab of meat it has been carved to resemble on this table.

Her own life is not what she holds most dear, then. No, it will be the lives of those she serves, those to whom she is bound - it is for them that she has any notion of honor or nobility at all. For her uncle, or for the brother he has not yet met, or any of the dumb and solemn lords in her hall. It is for their sake that she might be reminded that submission is serviceable. Perhaps then she will bear the heavy cloak of honor, when it belongs to someone else. When it is not her own life she wields so recklessly, but any of those fools that her word and deed presumably protect.

She speaks only her callow ifs, and she hardly has breath enough for that. A luxuriating growl unknots in his chest, and he rips himself back out of her, springing forward so that when his seed spills in a hot, careless spurt, it brands her belly and breasts. This visceral excitement is punctuated with his own wad of spit aimed point-blank at her face, exhilarating and exulting. He does not yet uncinch his fingers from her throat, his hand a rough spasm where it holds her; pleasure is a knot that wrings crudely through him, leaving her amply marked. His words come through gritted teeth, humid, and rife with righteousness.

"Your mistakes this night will be repaid tenfold, my lady. Pride is a costly thing. Your kin will be paying your debts for generations to come."

Date: 2022-02-03 01:20 am (UTC)
raedes: (010.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
Hers are not lone crimes that she will atone for in silence and secrecy, a woman cowed in the bedchambers, suffering no one to see her shame. She has kin aplenty, doesn't she? She has more than he does. She has her uncle, though that man, as he'd already judged, seems not far from death, or at least from the fatal dishonor of weakness. She has her brother, and comrades and smallfolk whom she would not abandon if the choice were hers. Pride binds her where blood does not. And when he does decide to coat her womb with his seed, when the day comes that she does quicken with their child, and the children who will come after the first - then she will have provided her own sweet martyrs for the repayment of debts accrued this night.

Glowing with the certainty of this nearby future in his head, he unlocks his fingers from beneath her jaw. To refuse her the grace of an untimely death, more than anything else. He studies her face, eyes flicking over the fine and regal make of jaw and nose and brow, admiring her much more earnestly than he had at their first meeting, or when she'd stood before him at the altar, sworn to be his. She is fairer, he thinks, for the glistening of his saliva on her cheek, more beautiful in her silence than she was in her railing heroics against him. The sea-strong sweep and ebb of pleasure writes a new smile across his face, one which is appreciative of the marvel before him, as if he is seeing her only for the first time, with every expectation met.

Because this is, now, how she should be: laid flat before him, wearing his spit and his seed and his blood, he's sure, where she'd raked him, and her own blood, where he'd rent her flesh with a devil's scrabbling claws. The plum bruises which will dapple her skin, the furious flush where blood has been driven delirious beneath the skin: this does make a pretty picture. He would be pleased to see her this way often.

Lifting himself from her, trusting entirely that she will lack the energy or the purpose to fling herself at him in any sort of troublesome way, he straightens the ceremonious blacks he wears, his eyes roving her body still, as if she were a mangled stag stumbled upon in the woods, grotesque and strangely thrilling.

"I owe you a compliment. It was not true earlier, but it is true now: you are quite ravishing. I do believe this is the life the gods made you for."

Date: 2022-02-03 03:50 am (UTC)
raedes: (01.)
From: [personal profile] raedes
And now? This question is rasped from her battered throat, and he cannot discern if it is fear or sorrow. It does not much matter; one serves as well as the other, when the speaker is flayed on a table. Near enough to being flayed. He watches her for a moment longer, head tilted as if in gentle consideration of her question, neatly arranging fastenings undone and fine fabric rumpled in the fray. And now? It could almost be taken for a savoring anticipation, this query of hers.

"Now?" It is mused aloud, almost amiably, as if this were one of many quiet evenings shared, a routine of peace to be played out however they like. "Now I expect you will wash yourself, and I, having suffered a day of so few gifts and blessings, will take pleasure at least in a restful sleep, if I can find pleasure nowhere else." At this the appraisal he gives her takes on a flippant edge, discards her from ankle to throat as he takes in the sight of her spent body, and he lifts both hands to perfect the lay of the collar at his throat, as if he has taken from her no pleasure at all.

She does have much to scour from herself - blood, seed, tears, sweat. He would not tolerate lying beside her in this state, if she'd been of a bedraggled mind to stumble into bed beside him. His perusing gaze is honed into a blade once more as he tallies every blemish she has acquired since being introduced to the table.

There is an enveloping heaviness in the muscles of his arms, and in the stretch of his back; this is what it feels like, he decides with a twinge of pride, to have exerted oneself. Having ridden into no true battle as of yet, he cannot say what the burning and subsequent drunken relief of a rigorous victory feels like. But this has been a victory, and his body basks in its savoring, and once he has had his fill of surveying her ruin, he turns on his heel, striding for the door.

Date: 2022-02-03 08:58 pm (UTC)
kivio: (016.)
From: [personal profile] kivio
The horses of this place are fine - regardless of her brother's open disdain for them, she cannot help but think them more beautiful than any steed she'd seen in the Free Cities. It is not only an artifice of beauty, either; it is not a matter of barding that glitters or a mane brushed to shining. They are built so that their strength is as striking as their coats. Agile and dangerously powerful, she thinks. Perhaps she was beguiled too early by tales of this place, but it seems that these are horses who should boast wings, who should canter quite literally across a sky strewn with stars.

And they make, as do horses wherever she has happened to pass, for kind company. The men of this foreign hall have been gentle, she had been relieved to find: there seemed to be in them no undue bawdiness or carousing. They are a valiant people, so far as she can tell by a relatively slight introduction. That is her brother's preference, as she had known it would be: there is little practical place for her here, where it is his wedding that it is to be celebrated, and the calling to war, the rallying of his new armies, which will follow. Sometimes it is best to be sent from his side, for he can be difficult to read, a sea tossed by a dark storm: either he is rankled by how she lingers, or he is affronted by how she does not often enough praise him, or he sneers at how decidedly unsuited she is to their family name.

His general disappoint in her is ever preferable to his furious efforts to correct her, however, and so she is not terribly subdued by shame when they come. He is occupied by his blustering appraisal of his new allies, of course, and so she has enjoyed a relative freedom in partaking of this storybook kingdom. It is beautiful, though her brother seems to have missed it: its rolling plains, and its strange golden hall which feasts upon the light, and its gentle and open-handed people. Their fare is unlike what she is accustomed to, although in the years spent fleeing one city for the next, before the magister's generous endorsement of her brother, there were a number of dinners made of queer foods. This table, however, was clearly arranged with careful intent, and by a talented hand. The banners flown, the tapestries displayed, the well-kept rooms they borrow; all has been tended, she thinks, with a certain joy.

A wedding ought to be heralded with the people's joy, and indeed the lady her brother weds is one of high breeding, a treasure of this place. It is warming to see, how her people look upon her: with pride and with certainty, the trust of a people for their queen. It crosses her mind, though she would never dream of saying so aloud, that this woman does not need her brother to call herself a queen. She is already queen of this hall; one needs only glance at the faces of the men within it to know that is true. Even the ailing king, for whom she feels a particular sorrow, for it is clear to her too how the White Lady loves her uncle. Surely Viserys can appreciate the lasting loyalty of his new wife's kin, but as she stands in witness at the ceremony, she knows better. There is a humiliated heat atop her own cheeks to know how he looks upon that proud king and sees only a man dying, to know that he looks upon the bounty at the board and sees a peasant's feast, and to know that he looks upon his wife as a woman underserving of his esteem.

She had not, then, despite her habit of lingering quietly, kept herself long at the edges of the feast. The merriment is a sort of salve for these people, she thinks, when they have been long at war, with eyes aching for the beauty of a wedding and throats empty of laughter. Now they shall have at least one night of it, to celebrate their lady's ascension to the dragon's side. Maybe they will, for one night, drink and indulge their cheer and forget that this, too, is only a bridge to the next war.

The true reason she cannot bear to partake any longer is because she sees how unkindly her brother takes his new bride by the elbow when they go, and she knows, with bruises long faded on her own arms, what that unkindness means. He is no master of his temper, and he will not bow to what he perceives as a great indignity. But whereas he would not squander his sister's virtue in his madness, there is no such shield for his bride to flinch behind. She takes no comfort in the certainty that that woman would not flinch, either. This dread only hastens her from the hall all the faster.

To keep with the horses for a while, to steady herself with their warm, whuffling company, and to remind herself that it is no concern of hers. She need not think of it, because there is never anything she can say of it. That this proud lady will be her sister, and her blooming delight at that prospect - it does not matter. Éowyn will always be a wife first. If there is any respite to be found in that, she does not find it. But she is broken from the pang of wondering when a glimpse of motion beyond the stables catches her eye.

A figure walking, though absent the grace and purpose which seems to mark most bodies here. A figure strangely garbed, too, in what looks like ribboning rags more than a proper dress. The golden hair is already familiar to her, and she follows in as careful a silence as she can manage. Up onto the walls they go, and the figure - this figure who is, she is stung to see, the White Lady - looks one direction and then the other, searching. For what? But she cannot pretend not to know this, either. This is the way a person looks upon the horizon when they have begun to accept that no one is going to come riding across it. It is the look of someone who has turned their gaze down and understood that the rocks below are a more faithful answer.

"My lady?" It is tentative, lilting with uncertainty at its end, though there is no mistaking now the stranger before her. There is no mistaking, either, how she came to be this way.

The height of the wall is not so alarming - she has climbed upon high stone walls before, rather thrilled by the fantasy of soaring, however briefly - and it seems a grave injustice that her own gown, hushed blues and whites, is finer now than the bride's own. The wind has teeth here in a way that it does not in the Free Cities, and it chases a chill up her spine when it lifts her hair off her shoulders, cutting where the breezes off the sea only kissed.

"You're hurt. This is no place for you."

Date: 2022-02-05 10:04 pm (UTC)
kivio: (052.)
From: [personal profile] kivio
There is no other place. There is, perhaps, but it lies on the other side of the wall, a deadly drop down. That is no place for a queen, either. Rising to her tongue is a fluttering apology, stung by the other truth: anywhere would be better than this, than right here. Accompanying that understanding is a miserable wonder: what if she had warned her brother's betrothed? What if she had written letters of her own, discreet and purposeful, to warn this helpless woman against the wrath which rode for Rohan? What if she had laid upon parchment all of her brother's madness before this wedding? Then there would have been, she thinks dully, a hunt. Her brother would never have stood to be made a fool. He would have demanded a corpse be laid upon the altar.

And is it so different now? As she steps forward, a hand extended to offset the balance her unannounced arrival might have cost, she looks over her brother's newest work. He would claim that this is the nature of dragons: to leave nothing standing in his wake. The bride's silks are razed, moonlight catches on fair skin and the dark blossoms of bruises, and golden hair has been torn to glimmering rags. She should have written.

But what words would she have found? What would not read as cowardice and dishonor? And had she not hoped, in the cellar of her heart, that she would arrive at this place in her brother's shadow and see his eyes brighten with a new light? Hadn't she hoped against hope that he would behold this hall and these people and his resplendent bride and think, this is nobility? Wouldn't he feel in his own heart a warmth to devour the cold rot? Wouldn't he be, as heroes always were in the songs, overtaken by such love that not even madness could prevail?

Tears gather in her eyes now to witness what such whimsy has cost her, and she comes another step forward, reaching to brush a steadying hand at Éowyn's elbow, trying not to see all the ways she has been so crudely spurned.

For a moment she can only shake her head; there is nowhere to go, and her brother will never be king. He will be killed or he will be consumed by the same madness which laid siege to their father. But her father had once been a good and just king, hadn't he? A man of ambition and laughter? The soil of his mind had been rich and fruitful, generous and beautiful, before the worms had come. Yet it is not the same; her brother has never been anything but worms.

She knows this, and so does he. His blood was never once noble, and he is less a warrior than any stableboy provoked to defend himself with a rusty blade. He will never sit a throne or wear a crown or command an army or be worthy of this woman on the wall. Contrition comes suddenly and too late, her heart a bird with an arrow buried in its breast.

"I am so sorry, my lady. I had prayed that he would see you and forget all the rest. I should have - I should have written, I should have prayed for the gods to stop his heart instead of save it."

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Éowyn

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