Aegon "Jon Snow" Targaryen (
northerndragon) wrote in
agogelogs2017-12-23 11:02 pm
Entry tags:
[OPEN] Oh, in dreams I have watched it spin
WHO? Jon Snow (
northerndragon) & maybe you!
WHAT? Open log including dream event prompts.
WHEN? December 2017! Backdated and forward dated are very welcome.
ANYTHING ELSE? Opening summary below cut, detailed prompts in the comments.
WHAT? Open log including dream event prompts.
WHEN? December 2017! Backdated and forward dated are very welcome.
ANYTHING ELSE? Opening summary below cut, detailed prompts in the comments.
The surface of BASE may be unfamiliar, but it doesn't take long -- a few days at most -- for Jon to begin to realize that in its bones, it's a lot like Castle Black. Everything around them speaks of a military organization with stretched resources. The little machines are like builders and stewards and maesters, and he suspects they eat much less than sworn brothers do. And he can see evidence everywhere of attempts to keep everything in good working order and to reuse anything that can be reused.
As such, in spite of those surface differences, he begins to feel more at home.

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"Fire won't hurt me." Still, his concern is touching. How fortunate she truly is, to have those concerned about her wellbeing. She's brushing the backs of her fingers against his cheeks, pressing another light kiss to his lips. "My clothing, on the other hand, cannot attest to the same."
With a quiet sigh, she slips off his lap and reaches for the blanket. Ducking into the space to his side, beneath his arm, insinuating herself against him, curled close. This is fine. This allows her his warmth and she can still watch him. Study him. Learn him.
"It's the only command that I ever truly wish for you to follow." Let him resist and battle her in wits and resolve for all the others.
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"It's also what I would ask of you. That dream... I don't like you facing him. I don't want to send you against him. I wouldn't if I thought we had another choice."
A pause, and he adds, "Drogo returned... for a while. If that's possible, then the other things might be too. The mountains and the seas and the sun."
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"So that you might face him yourself, one day? No. We do it together." Liability or strength? It all depends on the one making the determination. To her, he is a strength. Her feelings could make her hesitate when she might not have otherwise... not a weakness, though. Never with him. "You came to me because you needed allies, and I offer my help to you freely."
Her own pause stretches far longer. And the children. He doesn't say it, but of course this is what he means.
"I would need to become pregnant for his return."
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Or Daenerys will become pregnant at home, in the future. Or all of it is nonsense, nothing by which they should try to live their lives, and children will come when they will, if they will, and Drogo's temporary presence in COST is unrelated.
As to the rest of it... men follow Jon, to a degree that sometimes surprises him, but it's still rare for someone to tell him so bluntly that they won't leave him to face an enemy alone.
"We face the Night King together, but I would rather you didn't have to. Well, I would rather no one had to. I would rather he had never risen.
"How often do we get what we want, when it concerns our enemies?"
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"She spoke highly of you." His words are in reference to Melisandre, she knows it; the Red Priestess had come to Dragonstone and Varys told Dany as much of her faith in Stannis Baratheon. But it is not the Lord of Light who stole her unborn son, nor had this god morphed the only family she'd had into horrible monstrosities.
Of all the times Daario was invited into her bed, not once had she taken child; now is no different. How could it be? Barrenness was not debatable, for there was nothing to do to correct it. And what happened to Rhaego... scales like a lizard, blind with bat-like wings, innards full of graveworms--
"I would rather you didn't have to, either." Easier to focus on the Night King. That terrifying face is easier to think about than a dead child. "As for our enemies... it depends, I suppose. Individually, we've defeated a number of them already. Together, I imagine that will continue."
She was never very good at losing.
"We'll achieve what we want, because we cannot lose. Not against the dead, nor against Cersei."
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The rest can wait.
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Of course, the priestess' disappearance so soon after her arrival was strange, but there were other things to worry about.
"She was the reason you'd been told to attend."
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Where did Melisandre go in the time between when Jon exiled her and when she turned up on Dragonstone? She'd ridden off alone from Winterfell, and any voyage to Dragonstone would have needed a ship, even if she'd taken the Kingsroad most of the way. But she might as easily have sailed from White Harbor as anywhere further south. How soon had she known to go to Daenerys, and why?
"How long had you been at Dragonstone when she came to you? And what did she tell you?"
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What does it matter? The Lord of Light doesn't have many followers in Westeros; its lack of sway on the continent was unsurprising in some ways. Many of the Essosi seemed to be more tolerant to religious differences, whereas the Westerosi were settled in their ways with very few gods to follow amongst the kingdoms.
"She asked me to summon you. To listen to what had happened to you, the things you'd seen."
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Could she? She saw things, she said, but she was wrong about them... so unforgivably wrong, and what she'd done --
"I had just exiled her from the North. She -- killed someone. Stannis Baratheon's young daughter. A sweet girl, Ser Davos doted -- " He falls into slightly confused silence. The thought of Shireen's fate still causes a tight knot of anger in his belly.
It would have been reasonable for Melisandre to assume that he might go to Daenerys to ask for her help because of the dragons. If she knew anything about the history of his land and of his family, it would also have been reasonable for her to think he might need an extra push to go, particularly when he had so newly been made king.
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But to murder his daughter? This doesn't align with her impression of the priestess. The Lord of Light's followers had aided her in Meereen. Melisandre spoke in favor for Jon. She'd followed Stannis--and admitted to mistakes she'd made.
"For what reason?"
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"She said Shireen's parents agreed to sacrifice her to their god when they tried to take Winterfell. They all burned her at the stake."
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"Murdering little girls. I wonder just how many times he'd done it in his life." Almost her. Already his daughter. Both innocents. He's a wretched man, and she has no regret that his corpse rots somewhere. Let the worms eat his decaying body, the scavengers rip him to shreds. He is no king.
...But to think that one would sacrifice a child for whatever the cause? It's sickening, much like the Masters and their crucifixion of so many children. Melisandre spoke of being a slave. She should know better. And yet she'd truly burned a girl at the stake...?
"You exiled her, and she still spoke highly of you. Why?"
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"I can't say, but maybe...
"All she was interested in was fighting the dead. She knows what I've seen, and after Stannis died, she thought I was the man to lead the fight. Not hard to say that when I can't think of anyone else who's seen the Night King and could rally support in the North, and from there, it's not much of a leap to think that your dragons might be a great help in the war. I don't think she knew about the dragonglass, but maybe that's something she saw rightly."
He shakes his head slowly, still looking thoughtful.
"Do you know what the Night's Watch vows are? That dream puts me in mind of them. All the lads who take them will remember them as long as they remember anything, though some don't always hold to them."
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Doubtful Jon views Melisandre's aid as helpful in any way, and she cannot blame him for such a stance. To murder a child in such a way is unforgivable.
"I don't know them all, and of those I do, it's details. Like taking a woman to bed."
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If Melisandre comes back, he'll have to kill her, and if he doesn't, Davos will. Exiling her had been mercy: as much as she unsettles him, as angry as her role in Shireen Baratheon's death had made him, he knows that in some way, he owes his life to her, and that had made him unwilling to pronounce a death sentence on her... at the time.
Since then, he's occasionally wondered if he's lied to himself about it. Was it a way to preserve her life for her potential usefulness in the struggle ahead while appeasing Davos at the same time? Or was it only that Jon himself hadn't had the heart to kill her after so much death in taking Winterfell? There was also the memory of the pale, hopeful face Melisandre had turned to him after he'd awoken to a new life on the long table in his quarters at the Wall, her wide, lovely eyes, the awe in them. There is some beauty to her, and there had been some temptation when she'd offered herself to him, but it rides alongside something he finds profoundly unnerving. His body would have been willing, but every part of his instinct had told him to resist her.
For now, he decides not to tell Daenerys exactly what kind of intimacy Melisandre had attempted to establish with him.
"I told you that the Watch had lost sight of its purpose. The vows are old, probably as old as the Wall itself. Taking a woman to bed... well..."
He shrugs expansively, indicating her position in his arms: he's not in the Watch anymore, but she can judge the extent to which he still upholds these vows for herself.
"Night gathers, and now my watch begins. It shall not end until my death. I shall take no wife, hold no lands, father no children. I shall wear no crowns and win no glory. I shall live and die at my post. I am the sword in the darkness. I am the watcher on the walls. I am the shield that guards the realms of men. I pledge my life and honor to the Night's Watch, for this night and all the nights to come."
Whoever holds the North is a fool if he doesn't think himself beholden to the spirit of them, if not the letter.
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"What has she done for you?"
Whatever it is, it must be important to proffer banishment versus death. That was a mercy, was it not? Melisandre did not appear to be in distress upon her visit. She was calm, much like the Lord of Light's other followers in Essos were. Regret swam in her eyes when she hinted to mistakes.
Despite herself, she feels pity for the woman. Perhaps she truly does make it a terrible habit of comparing her own experiences to those around her.
Her mind is quick to jump back to conversations past, and even her questions on Dragonstone with both Jon and Tyrion. The look Jon had given ser Davos...
He took a knife in the heart for his people. He gave his own--
He wishes for children with her... and he may very well have children in the future. He wishes to marry her. He's won himself glory, and he wears a crown as King in the North (perhaps not literally).
"You're no longer a Crow, you said."
But he still fights as the sword in the darkness, she thinks, if the undead are that darkness. And he attempts to shield the realms from that evil which had killed Viserion.
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"No, I'm not. Melisandre -- "
As he hesitates, he seeks Daenerys's hand with his own, places his palm against the back of it, and laces their fingers together.
"-- has some kind of faith in me that I didn't have in myself."
But he knows that Daenerys has seen the scars... so many times now, sometimes with a question in her eyes, but never actually asking about them. She seems to be trying to ask about them now.
They're never going to be easy for him to talk about. He's never going to be less reluctant.
"Are you asking about what happened to me that caused me to leave the Watch?" His voice is very soft, hardly above a whisper. But the room they're in now feels safe to him, even though there's no reason it should other than that they're together. "There was a mutiny."
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"Do you have that faith now?" Her fingers shift against his, curling, settling.
Upon mention of leaving the Watch, she intentionally does not look at his chest. The wispiness to his voice, like smoke in the air, makes her think this was a poor line of questioning on her end. But what did he wish to tell her, when he began asking of those vows?
"...A mutiny against who?" She doesn't dare move.
Please don't say him.
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But his hand threatens to tremble a little, something he's able to still; his jaw is tense, and his heart continues to race. What it felt like to die, and what it felt like when life surged into him again: both come rushing back as if they had only happened yesterday.
"Against me. For my decision to allow the Wildlings to pass through the Wall, so no more of them would be killed by the White Walkers."
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"He wasn't exaggerating." Not a question, but it is one all the same. Ser Davos had said he'd taken a knife in the heart, and she'd attempted to ask Jon about this as well before ser Jorah interrupted. The northerners and their fancies...
She feels numb, as if the Night King's touched her and the ice of the Wall's seeped back into her limbs. She doesn't quite realize that the color's drained from her cheeks as she sits up at meets his eyes, the blues of her own reminiscent of a stormy sky. Her grip is tight on his, even as her gaze dips to his chest... even as she reaches out with her free hand to drag the tips of her fingers against his skin. Not on the scar, just on the edge of it, before his skin lifts.
"Are--" She swallows, licks her lips, frowns down at each and every wound. "--are these all from that night?"
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He looks at her, almost apologetic, shifting his grip on her hand so that they're palm to palm. What isn't remorseful in his gaze is haunted and pitiless.
If he thinks about it too much, he can still feel an echo of the sensation of a knife twisting against ribs and cartilage into his heart, and the way everything slowed and went cold. And now there's her hand, warm and welcome, but she can't make the scars less livid or knit them away out of existence. They've been slow to heal, though better than the gaping wounds he'd awoken with, and the one she traces is the one that had been fatal.
"Yes."
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A sharp shake of the head punctuates how very uninterested she is in apologies. He's allowed his secrets. But these wounds... her fingers hover before she balls her hand into a fist. Knuckles soon turn white, four crescent indentations growing more and more pronounced in her palm as she clenches her hand, trembling.
How could they do this to him? His eyes are so very dark and distant, in some ways, despite his hand being so warm and solid in hers.
"How did you survive?"
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She still doesn't understand, he thinks, but he doesn't blame her. Who could understand this? Didn't it sound mad to him, and isn't it embarrassing, in its way, as if anyone who he tells will doubt him, as if they'll think he thinks he's more than a man? What would that say of him?
No one knows better than him that he's only a man.
"I didn't. Survive."
Part of him is distant and separate from all of this. He has to be able to stand aside from it, to look at how the story sounds to others, and in another way, to think of it as something that happened to someone else, to the boy he used to be. The rest of him still feels sorry for what he's telling her, for the way it will hurt her, even though it all happened long before he knew her.
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Or so she's told.
Dany cants her head, outwardly frowning. The longer she stares, the blurrier the scars become until she sniffs, reaching up to shove wispy strands of silver from her forehead. There are none there; it's a useless motion which betrays the tremble to her hand.
"You're here now." Her voice is clipped as she skirts familiar behavior, falling into that neutral mask she wears before all others, all whilst her mind races. How can he have died and stand before her now? How is he not undead? How is he not like ash upon the wind? Drogo, Irri, Rakharo, Viserys, ser Barristan, Rhaegar, on and on the list continues, so many have fallen, and none have returned. Why him?
Her expression waivers as she meets his gaze. Thank gods it was him.
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