YESSSS I LOVE BOTH PLS TAG MEEE
me waiting on yall to make these sinner fics đđ§đŸââïž
this was amazing đ«đ«đ«
warnings/tags: 18+, dark themes, DUBCON/NONCON, woc!reader, emperor!lucius, dark!lucius, possessive behavior, forced engagement, implied forced marriage, ignoring a lot of logistics for the sake of the plot so rip, these tags are not exhaustive
wc: 5.4k
summary: An emperorâs favor is no favor at all.
believe it or not this was a writing warm up đ next up is hopefully childhood friends to lovers but letâs see where the plot bunnies go đââïž
please let me know your thoughts and happy reading!!!
This is the fourth time in a mere week the emperor has called you to his chambers.
The guard looks vaguely uncomfortable as he stands outside your room. The flickering flames cast shadows underneath his helmet, making the sympathetic curl of his lip all the more severe.
Ink smudges the paper as you place down your pen. The letter to your brother will have to wait it seems.
âMy lady.â The guard dips his head as he motions for you to step ahead of him.
The strained smile on your face wavers as soon as his eyes are on the back of your head. It is tough to keep your back straight as you make the short trek to the emperorâs room. Too short one can say but you keep those words tucked under the roof of your mouth.
You are a favorite of his, garnering his favor through virtue of your family or so they say. Your status allows you many liberties but these constant calls have crossed the line of propriety and rumors you may not recover from have begun to spread.
It is a foolâs wish to hope his eyes may stray but you cling to it despite his doglike loyalty.
The man of the hour sits with his back turned and a glass of wine balanced on his lips. His head twists when he hears your quiet footsteps enter his domain, softening when he catches a glimpse of you.
Your stomach twists.
You do not miss how the servants scurry out of sight and out earshot when he turns his formidable gaze towards them. You wish you could grab onto the frail wrist of the girl nearest to you. Your fingers flex as she hurriedly walks past you.
âIt is late,â you say when the room is cleared.
âIt is,â he agrees, a small smile on his handsome face. âSit.â
Movements stiff, you take the seat across from him. Heâs stretched out on his seat, robes rucking upwards to expose the strength hidden beneath his royal garb. Scars pucker the meat of his legs and there are faint white lines crisscrossing the skin as if depicting a linear story.
You swallow.
You have heard the tales and have determined what is far-fetched and what is truth.
And Lucius is made up almost entirely of truths.
The moment you cross your legs, he is upright and leaned over the minuscule table separating the two of you. Rather than reach for the half-full bottle of wine, he aims for the water, sharing a secretive smirk with you.
Your attempt at mirroring his playfulness is weak. A vague nausea begins to brew in your gut and you fear even water may be too heavy for you.
âWhispers will begin to spread.â
Lucius pauses. His features harden before he forcibly relaxes his face. âI do not see why that matters,â he says. His smile dims and the jug of water in his hand is quickly abandoned.
Sweat dampens your palms. You smooth them over your dress, wincing as the fabric catches on your peeled skin. A few months in Rome and you still have not adjusted to the weather.
âLucius.â
His name is unnatural and stiff on your tongue. You long to revert back to his formal title but he refuses the honorific.
âIt matters because you must marry wisely,â you say gently. âYou know this. Let us not waste our breaths on the obvious.â
âIs it obvious?â he parrots back.
His voice takes on a cool tone. Heâs not quite combative but you sense you must tread carefully lest his ice be thinner than it looks. But your brother was not made General because your bloodline bowed at the first sign of danger.
You tip your chin up. âIt will not do for your senators to suspect you are looking inwards rather than outwards for your alliances.â
It is quiet for a moment before Lucius huffs out a laugh. He shifts his weight, balancing an elbow on his thigh to better cup his chin. Amusement lightens the blues of his eyes. âAnd if I am?â
You are not nearly as oblivious as your reputation suggests nor are you as great an actress as you believe yourself to be. You know when it admit defeat. There is only one way this conversation will go after all.
But this understanding does not mean you have to go quietly.
âThen I recommend Decima,â you say dryly.
He nods slowly, hiding his mouth behind his palm for a heartbeat before fixing you with a blandly curious look. âThe daughter of the richest man in Rome,â he drawls. âClever.â
He pops a grape into his mouth and chews it thoughtfully. âBut not as clever as marrying the sister of my most loyal general.â
No one refuses the emperor. Try as he may to be benevolent and fair and kind, his status means there are certain words he has not been accustomed to since his rise to power.
âI suppose not,â you say finally.
Tilting your head, you fix the way your dress hangs over your legs. His eyes follow the ripple of the fabric but you pretend not to notice how he searches beyond what he can see.
âIs that why you have called me to your chambers so often? To flaunt your cleverness?â you ask, a touch sharply.
Lucius canât help his grin. He ducks his head and itâs such a genuine display of the boyishness your brother feared his emperor lost, your stomach rolls at the sight.
âDo I not seem to enjoy your company?" he asks with faux surprise.
To your surprise, he slides down onto the ground and shuffles forward until his hands rest upon your knees. The cloth is so thin it feels as if his bare hands are against you. You suck in a breath at the warmth pooling underneath his palms.
âWhat are youâget up!â you hiss, casting a furtive glance behind you.
He blinks up at you innocently. âI am apologizing for misleading my betrothed. I have done a disservice if you think I call for you for the sake of a ploy.â
âAnd you will be doing me further disservice if you think I will believe this to mean anything.â
He moves his hands upwards until they lay upon your thighs. His fingers dimple your skin as he squeezes you. âI do not do things I do not mean,â he says firmly.
You lean down, placing your hands over his. âYou want a family,â you say.
The words are shards in your mouth. It is not a simple matter of children. Lucius wants a home. The losses that haunt him have made his longing a physical thing. And your stubborn devotion lead you across an ocean you had no business crossing. What is a greater showing of love than that?
âI want you,â he corrects softly.
You almost wish heâd tell you he loves you. That would take rationality out of this equation.
But he wants you.
How do you reason with someone who knows exactly what theyâre doing?
-
It was not meant to go this way.
The new ruler of Rome should have been of no personal concern of yours. He existed as a potential threat to your homeland, a story to fear, but not as a real person in your mind.
This remained true until a letter found its way to your familyâs home.
It was written in your brotherâs familiar scrawl and voice. He regaled to your family how he found himself across the world, omitting the worst of his ordeal, while promising his present safety.
With palpable regret, Kahlil declared himself unable to leave Rome, not while she remained under such uncertainty. The new emperor, Lucius Verus, had earned his loyalty having freed him from the clutches of the tyrannical twins and pushing him towards a path of glory.
And you knew at once what you must do.
You had to leave.
You had to feel his heartbeat underneath your hands and see that his blood was the same shade as yours. You refused to move on with your life as it was only knowing your brother existed. You would never be at peace without confirming that mortality ran through his veins.
The journey was brutal. It veered into the territory of being something you could not handle but you had no other choice than to handle it. Days stretched into weeks and weeks stretched into months but soon, you were touching down onto Roman soil.
The months at sea had been beneficial however as the language, while unfriendly to your ears, was familiar enough for you to navigate your way to the city. Hope permeated the air of the reborn city and whispers echoed the streets about a new age of peace.
Frankly, you didnât care.
You asked around for your brother, eyebrows grazing your hairline as you learned of his newfound fame amongst the people. It took less than a week for you to scrounge around for a way to informally meet the beloved general.
It was rather anticlimactic.
There were a handful of places the general frequented with his men and none were easily accessible. Luckily, the innkeeperâs daughter took a liking to you and directed you to whose pockets were light. And so, you found yourself ducking underneath a curtain and into a plume of opioid smoke.
Your nose wrinkled at the acidic scent but paid it no mind as you searched the back room. Feigning confusion as some soldiers called to you, you darted around as each man you ran into did not resemble the one you knew.
On the cusp of marching back to the inn and declaring Caelia a liar, you found him. He was leaning over the balcony, melancholy stretching across his side profile.
His name left you as a breath, carried away by the slight breeze. But somehow, he heard you.
Kahlil lifted his head, a painful sort of resignation weighing down his shoulders, until he made eye contact with you.
In a matter of seconds, he stood before you. And he was okay.
He hugged you. His arms, muscled beyond your imagination, crushed you against his chest but it was a welcome pain, cracking your chest open and burrowing straight into the fragile meat of your heart.
âYou shouldnât have come,â he muttered against your hair. The admonishment is nonexistent, more a reflex to say rather than something from the heart. âBut I am glad to see you.â
You pushed against him. He allowed you to pull back just enough so you could look up at him, vision blurred from your tears.
He was nothing like you remembered and you mourned this. Scars decorated his skin and callouses roughened his hands. But it was him.
His smile was still slightly awkward and the shape of his brows framed his eyes as perfectly as they always did. The kindness you feared was taken from him in his years of fighting remained in the crinkles of his eyes and the softness of his features.
âI missed you,â you said, voice catching in your throat. A fresh set of tears burned at your waterline. âI am so sorry we could not find you.â
His expression crumpled and Kahlil shook his head. âThere is no one to blame but those who took me,â he said firmly.
You shut your eyes, swallowing down the sob that threatened to break free at his forgiveness.
He wiped the stray tears dripping from your face, laughing as if he did not look as foolish as you did. âYou are still a crybaby.â
You laughed, more a hiccup than anything.
Kahlil was kept from saying more when someone uttered his name from behind.
âHighness,â Kahlil said, standing tall.
He wiped your remaining tears and his own before turning the both of you towards the voice.
A handsome man stood in front of you. His hair was dark and his beard thick. His arms were corded with muscle, similar to your brotherâs, but there was a predator type of strength lurking underneath the surface in which Kahlil lacked.
The title registered in your mind as you stared and with an embarrassed look towards Kahlil, you dropped your head in deference.
The man quickly dismissed the formality and motioned for you to lift your head.
âI am Lucius,â he introduced. His gaze flicked to your brother in question.
You gave him your name, voice raw from your tears. He asked you to repeat it and you did so, watching as he rounded his mouth over the syllables.
âMy sister,â Kahlil interjected. âThe one who thinks no consequence too severe to keep her from making reckless decisions.â
At this, he pinched your ear lobe.
âYou talked about me?â you asked, blinking up at him. So many years had passed. It was a wonder he remembered any stories of you to tell.
âYes,â Lucius said, drawing your attention back to him. He stared at you, an unreadable look in his too blue eyes. âQuite favorably too.â
He took in the circles staining your under eyes and how you clutched at your brother as if he were an apparition brought to life. Your hand ached with how tightly you held the fabric of Kahlilâs clothes between your fingers but you could not make yourself relax. You worried you would wake and find yourself back on the boat and under the throes of that fever once more if you let go.
âYou traveled far.â
The observation managed to sound impressive off of Luciusâ tongue as if he found you admirable. It made you squirm.
Memories of the journey flashed through your mind, bringing forth echoes of the anxiety you suffered for months on end. But you shrugged as if it was easy. Because in a way, it was.
Kahlil was at the end of the journey. There was no easier path to take.
âAnd I would have gone further had it been necessary,â you said. âLuckily, it was not. I might have thrown up my stomach if I was stuck on that ship any longer.â
Kahlil made a face. âThe waves are a punishment,â he said sympathetically.
âYou must be tired,â Lucius said. He had not taken his eyes off of you. âCome.â
And that was how it began.
You had a few uninterrupted weeks with your brother before he departed in search of allies for Rome. Kahlil promised you a home wherever he was and Lucius was all too happy to uphold such a promise.
Your quarters were moved to be closer to Luciusâ in Kahlilâs absence. It did not take long before you replaced time spent with him with Lucius.
In the instances you were alone with him, you forgot he was the emperor. His smile was infectious and he had a clever wit about him that kept you on your toes. The stories sprung from his lips kept you enthralled and you found yourself prolonging these moments with him.
Charisma was a necessity for leaders and Lucius had it in abundance.
Slowly, he began encroaching into your space. A hand on your lower back, a brush his fingers against your waist, lingering hugs that involved him burying his face in the hollows of your throat.
He was too close too often.
People began to take notice and sly comments were whispered under breath.
Once the rumors circulated close enough for you to hear, you began to pull back. You ignored the informal requests to see him and found reasons to decline the formal requests to his chambers.
Lucius did not take well to your sudden reticence and the rumors worsened as his demand for you grew.
If you knew being friendly with Lucius would lead to this, you would have made your room a jail in Kahlilâs absence instead.
-
Lucius becomes bold in the days after your engagement is announced.
He pens a letter to your brother of the news. You sign it without reading it. Lucius purses his lips but sends the letter without much complaint.
You write your own letter, minimally mentioning the engagement, and praying Kahlil reads in between the lines and slows his journey back. As your father resided an ocean away, your brother will have to make do and you fear his loyalty for Lucius will override his love for you.
Congratulations are heartfelt and plentiful from the people and ring insincere from the upper echelon. But the pushback is minimal and so, Lucius gleefully goes forward with the wedding planning.
It will be a grand affair, one you know he does not care for in the slightest. If it not for the fact that it would be the greatest showing of ownership, you believe Lucius would have dragged you in front of seven witnesses to declare the union.
The first time he presses a kiss against your temple in front of the most gossipy of his senate, you nearly buck your head back into his nose. His hand rests against your side and he murmurs something against your skin, sealing whatever it is he has said with a gentle kiss.
The sound of your blood rushing is all that fills your ears so you do not know if Lucius requested something of you. It does not matter.
He has made his point.
His affection worsens after that.
The engagement permits him to seek you out as he wishes. His men roll their eyes lightheartedly when he stops what heâs saying to call you over during training. He is quick to leave meetings or lunches if he senses they have turned into leisure rather than productive discussion to make his way back to your quarters now that you rebuff his.
No matter where you are, he finds you.
In the rare moments you are left to your own devices, you find yourself with no friends nor hobbies to keep you occupied.
You notice men do not raise their heads when they see you. Any conversation you try to hold with one ends with excuses as to why they suddenly find themselves too busy to speak to you.
A guard follows you around the clock. You manage to wrangle his name out of himâScipioâbut it is for nothing as a fortnight later, you do not see him again. From then, you have a new guard every day.
The women, few and far between in the palace, are sweet. But it is clear whatever comes out of your mouth goes directly to Luciusâ ear. So you busy yourself with fictional hopes of your future and dabble in petty gossip when you find yourself in their presence.
It is suffocating.
âThere you are.â
The corner of the garden youâve taken a liking to darkens as Lucius blocks the sunlight seeping in through a window.
Heâs angelic under the golden cast of the sun. A man more than worthy of his position.
âAh, Highness,â you greet, offering him a nod.
There is a pinch between his brows.
âWe are to be married,â he reminds you, crouching down. He runs a gentle hand through the flowers you are observing. âYou are my equal.â
âBut we are not husband and wife quite yet, Highness.â
His hand leaves the flowers to cup your cheek. He turns you to face him, thumb brushing against the softness of your lips. Unconsciously, you swipe your tongue over the trail of warmth left behind. A slightly salty taste permeates your mouth.
âYou are my equal,â he repeats. âAnd I expect you to treat me as such.â
The skin around his eyes is dark. Exhaustion makes him look pallid. Your avoidance is the last thing he wishes to deal with, this you are sure, and it tugs at your heart to see him so tired.
âYou should go to bed,â you say.
âWill you join me?â he asks.
You jerk back. His hands falls off your cheek.
Lucius laughs at the stunned look on your face. He moves closer into your space, looking down at you.
âYou are annoying,â you say hotly. âAnd I am busy. Obviously.â
He hums. âWith thinking of ways to delay our wedding, yes?â
âPlease. I have better uses of my time.â
Besides, he has made it nigh impossible to find a loophole. An emperorâs word is law and he has used his to shackle you to him.
âSo you do not conspire to find a way to break our engagement?â he surmises mildly.
A fissure of fear opens within you. Hadrian had promised you discretion but clearly, a bit of luck is needed to escape the ever watchful eye of Lucius. But you have not been informed of any ports closures and so, you choose to hold your cards tightly to your chest.
You twist a petal between your fingers. âHow can I conspire when all I know are these walls,â you motion towards said walls, âAnd the people you install in my circle.â
He watches you for a too long moment, scrutinizing the unnatural stillness of your expression. âThe sense you hope your brother will impart on me will not change anything,â he says eventually.
It takes considerable effort for you to not show any sort of relief at his warning. The more pleading your letters became, the more Lucius clung to your side so you had eased up in the past few weeks. It does not come as a surprise he is actively reading whatever it is you write.
âIs he a confidant in name only, then?â you retort.
âHe loves me,â Lucius says instead. Heâs softened, bearing the weight of a man who knows it takes only a word for blood to be spilled in his name and for it to be spilled gladly. âBut he loves you more.â
Pursing his lips, he fingers a stem. He doesnât flinch when a thorn splits his skin. A droplet of blood runs from his finger and drips into the soil.
âBut he loves Rome more?â you guess, peeking at him from under your lashes.
He watches the blood continue to spill into the soil. Just when you think he wonât answer you, to give weight to the truth you fear more than anything, he says, âKahlil thinks I am a good man.â
And that is a sentencing all on its own, you suppose.
-
The bath water practically scalds your skin as you sink into the tub.
It is refreshing in a way. The slight sting keeps your thoughts from straying.
Kahlilâs recent letter leaves you with no choice but to hasten your escape. Any ship will do for you need to leave before the weekâs end if Kahlilâs timeline is to be trusted.
You allow yourself a few more minutes in the bath, a few more minutes to act as if you are as any other, before you drain the tub and dry off.
You exit the bathroom, towel tucked loosely around yourself. Smoothing the left over oil onto your lips, you pause when you notice a shape out of the corner of your eye.
Lucius lays atop your sheets.
A strangled scream leaves your throat and youâre throwing a candle at him before you recognize it is him in your bed and not some stranger come to make true of your worst nightmares. Though, this is not a much better sight.
He catches the candle with one hand and deposits it on the floor, eyes wide in bemusement.
You hitch the towel higher, fisted fabric at your throat as you take him in. Heâs stretched out lazily, hair wet and skin shiny with cream. The sheet covers his lower half and you force your eyes to rip away from the dark trail of hair on his lower abdomen. For all intents and purposes, he looks ready for bed.
âI brought you a gift,â he says, sitting up. He gestures to the box on top of your vanity. âCome here. Letâs look at it together.â
While said lightly, this is clearly an order.
You stand, shifting your weight. You are hyper aware of how naked you are underneath this flimsy towel. âI need to change, Highness.â
Annoyance flickers across his face. âCome here.â
Shuffling to your vanity, you heft the box as best you can with one arm and make your way to Lucius. The second you are within armâs reach, he shoots out his hand and wraps it around you. He drags you forward and forces you to sit nestled between his thighs.
His cock is a heavy weight at the base of your spine.
You immediately straighten up and try to scoot forward but he doesnât allow for this. He settles the box on your legs and brackets you with his arms.
âOpen it,â he murmurs against your ear, resting his chin atop your shoulder.
Your fingers shake as you pry open the lid. All you can focus on is how the room feels as if it ends and begins with Lucius.
When you get the box open, you donât know what you are looking at. And then Lucius pushes a finger against the object until a set of familiar brown eyes stare back at you, unfeeling and condemning all at once.
You shove the box away from you, turning into Lucius before you can see Hadrianâs head roll onto the floor.
He allows the change in position, letting your weight guide him back down to the bed before he hooks an arm around you and reverses your position. The towel slips and he follows the line of your throat and downwards.
He brings his hand down to push away the towel pooling at your hips. Instinctively, you grab at his wrist, tears beginning to line your eyes.
Lucius stills.
âDid you think I would let you leave?â he wonders.
He sounds genuinely confused and somehow, that little slip of sincerity allows a frigid wave of fear to crash over you. Rationally, you know your skin to still be warm to the touch but you shiver, ice replacing the blood flowing in you.
âI thought you would find me more work than I am worth,â you say quietly. Your heart strains against your rib cage.
The corner of his mouth twitches. âDid you now?â
He easily breaks free of your hold and you can do nothing as he makes quick work of your towel. Lucius slowly runs his thumb along the inside of your thigh, leaving a trail of warmth.
âLucius.â His name is torn from your throat, a plea wrapped up in a warning. âDonât. We are not married yet.â
He laughs, dropping his head down until his forehead lies flat against your collarbone. His breath is hot against you, sending the chill inwards.
"But we will be,â Lucius promises easily. âAnd I will wait no longer.â
Heâs kissing you before you can make an attempt at delaying what is seemingly the inevitable.
His lips are hard against yours, impatiently slipping his tongue into your mouth and finding purchase against your teeth. Lucius is uncharacteristically sloppy, betraying the desperation heâs kept so carefully hidden.
You put your hands against his chest and curl them into fists when pushing only results in him tightening his hold on you.
Recalling what the other women said about their first time, you push down your fear until it settles underneath the acceptance you forcibly yank over yourself like a veneer.
His fingers caress your soft, bare skin as he trails his hands up your thigh. The coarseness of his chest hair against your overly sensitive skin sends static skittering across your nerves.
You stifle a whine when he pulls away from you just enough to let you pant against his mouth. Your stomach gives a sickening lurch when thereâs pressure between your bodies, a dull ache at the apex of your thighs.
He slips his finger into you inch by inch and tears wet your cheeks when he adds a second one. Experimentally, he stretches you out until youâre left with no choice but to let your legs fall open, inviting him in.
The longer he presses into you, the more you feel yourself relax, noting your loosening muscles as if happening from an outsiderâs perspective. Wetness drips down his wrist, pooling in the crease of his elbow and he grins, eyes pointedly going down. You refuse to follow him.
âNot as shy as you like to come off, hm?â he murmurs, circling his thumb over you and drawing out a high pitched moan.
You bite your lip immediately, a harsh breath ricocheting in your chest. You try to stamp down the pleasure beginning to curl into a coil in your belly. It tightens when he digs his teeth into your fluttering pulse.
It is when you are on the brink of something that he eases up, slipping his fingers out and bringing them to his mouth. You almost clamp down on his hand when he pulls out but resist the urge by the skin of your teeth.
You shift, drawing your legs closer in the hopes of chasing that mounting high heâs taken from you. A dizzying sort of heat has set your blood aflame, akin to a fever.
You must be sick, you decide. It must be a sickness that has not yet been discovered that plagues you and leaves you feeling empty where Lucius does not touch you.
He cants his hips up, lining himself up. Your eyes widen when you feel him prod your entrance. The sheer size of him terrifies you because it wonât matter if he doesnât fit as you hysterically believe he wonât.
Heâll find a way.
âLucius, wait,â you hiccup, swallowing down the anxiety thrumming alongside your arousal.
He grinds himself between your thighs, slicking himself with you. He doesnât bother acknowledging your mindless babble and instead, licks away a wayward tear on your cheek.
Lucius sinks in an inch, your name a wrecked sound. He sounds different from what youâre used to, strained and roughened around the edges.
âPlease kiss me,â you beg, curling a hand around the base of his neck. His curls are wet, the space between them almost humid from the heat emanating from him.
His hips stutter and he braces himself against the mattress.
âKiss you?â Lucius repeats hoarsely, peering down at you with his pupils blown wide with a haunting desire.
You nod weakly, urging his face closer. The stretch of him burns and while not entirely unpleasant, it makes your heart quicken and your belly flutter.
He sinks in deeper and catches your gasp in his mouth. You part your lips instantly as he bears down on you, pushing deeper and deeper until heâs seated inside you. Numbly, you wonder if youâll ever be whole again, if Lucius has carved out a space in you only he can fill.
Lucius lets you adjust to him, running a soothing hand underneath your chest. He traces circles around your nipple and itâs a searing heat that takes the edge off.
He kisses you gently. Itâs almost too sweet to bear but you respond in earnest, angling your hips upwards to give the okay. The discomfort has loosened into something you handle and the knot noosed around your heart untangles to leave a bloodied heap in its wake.
He thrusts into you as if to test your resolve. You whimper as pleasure seeps into your core. You break away from his greedy mouth and soothe yourself with pressing kisses against his strong jaw. You nip at the bone as you catch your literal and metaphorical breath. Itâs hard to tell if itâs the lack of air or Lucius himself making you lightheaded.
The thread of restraint heâs meticulously maintained snaps at the strung out noise. Lucius fucks you hard and deep, perhaps a little deeper than intended if the guttural noise that leaves him is any indication.
The pleasure in your belly ratchets up and a strangled moan is gutted from you when his cock brushes against some part of you that sends sparks right up your spine.
Immediately, heâs thrusting into that spot over and over again and doesnât stop until he stiffens with a groan.
He spills into you, cock twitching as you milk him for what heâs worth.
Your name is on the tip of his tongue and branded across his heart.
Lucius chants it, peppering kisses all over your face as he collapses carefully on top of you. Fatigue wears at you and you close your eyes, hating yourself for finding comfort in how he immediately presses a kiss against your swollen eyelids.
âI love you,â Lucius whispers.
It is the worst thing you have ever heard.
this fic is finished. there will never be a part 2. thanks!
Rated: M
Tag: @sansaorgana @ocappreciationtag @stargaryenx @theboyishtree @mercedesdecorazon @arrthurpendragon @darylandbethfanforever9
Or in which Laenor and Rhaenyra were able to keep their agreement resulting in Princess Aemma Velaryon, the second ruling queen of Westeros
Also on Ao3
One shot collection: What Souls are Made of
------
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28(đ nsfwish)
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Chapter 66
Chapter 67
Chapter 68
Chapter 69
Chapter 70
Chapter 71
Chapter 72
Chapter 73
Chapter 74
Chapter 75
Chapter 76
Chapter 77
Chapter 78
Chapter 79
Chapter 80
Chapter 81
Chapter 82
Chapter 83
Chapter 84
Chapter 85
Chapter 86
Epilogue
MY OCs
- Princess Visenya Velaryon second of her name, rider of Meraxes The Sliver Queen, The Darkling, Visenya come again
- Trueborn Daughter of Princess Rhaenrya and Laenor Velaryon
- HOTD
- Aaliyah Valentine daughter of MM ( mothers milk)
- a very powerful supe
- THE BOYS
- Jade Hayward
- pogue/kook
- on/off toxic relationship with rafe
- Outer Banks
this was delicious đ«đ«đ«
one-shot
Remmick x fem!reader
summary: In the heat-choked hush of the Mississippi Delta, you answer a knock you swore would never come. Remmickâunaging, unholy, unforgettableâreturns to collect what was promised. What follows is not romance, but ritual. A slow, sensual surrender to a hunger older than the Trinity itself.
wc: 13.1k
a/n: Listen. I didnât mean to simp for Vampire Jack OâConnellâbut here we are. I make no apologies for letting Remmick bite first and ask questions never. Thank you to my bestie Nat (@kayharrisons) for beta reading and hyping me up, without her this fic wouldn't exist, everyone say thank you Nat!
warnings: vampirism, southern gothic erotica, blood drinking as intimacy, canon-typical violence, explicit sexual content, oral sex (f!receiving), first time, bloodplay, biting, marking, monsterfucking (soft edition), religious imagery, devotion as obsession, gothic horror vibes, worship kink, consent affirmed, begging, dirty talk, gentle ruin, haunting eroticism, power imbalance, slow seduction, soul-binding, immortal x mortal, he wants to keep her forever, she lets him, fem!reader, second person pov, 1930s mississippi delta, house that breathes, you will be fed upon emotionally & literally
tags: @xhoneymoonx134
likes, comments, and reblogs appreciated! please enjoy
Mississippi Delta, 1938
The heat hadnât broken in days.
Not even after sunset, when the sky turned the color of old bruises and the crickets started singing like they were being paid to. It was the kind of heat that soaked into the floorboards, that crept beneath your thin cotton slip and clung to your back like sweat-slicked hands. The air was syrupy, heavy with magnolia and something murkierâsoil, maybe. River water. Something that made you itch beneath your skin.
Your cottage sat just outside the edge of town, past the schoolhouse where you spent your days sorting through ledgers and lesson plans that no one but you ever really seemed to care about. It was modestâtwo rooms and a porch, set back behind a crumbling white-picket fence and swallowed by trees that whispered in the dark. A little sanctuary tucked into the Delta, surrounded by cornfields, creeks, and ghosts.
The kind of place a person could disappear if they wanted to. The kind of place someone could find youâŠif they were patient enough.
You stood in front of the sink, rinsing out a chipped enamel cup, your hands moving automatically. The oil lamp on the kitchen table flickered with each breath of wind slipping through the cracks in the warped window frame. A cicada screamed in the distance, then another, and then the whole world was humming in chorus.
And beneath itâbeneath the cicadas, and the wind, and the nightbirdsâyou felt something shift.
A quiet. Too quiet.
You turned your head. Listened harder.
Nothing.
Not even the frogs.
Your hand paused in the dishwater. Fingers trembling just a little. It wasnât like you to be spooked by the dark. Youâd grown up in it. Learned to make friends with shadows. Learned not to flinch when things moved just out of sight.
But this?
This was different.
It was as if the night was holding its breath.
And thenâ
Knock. Knock. Knock.
Not loud. Not frantic. But final.
Your body went stiff. The cup slipped beneath the water and bumped the side of the basin with a hollow clink.
No one ever came this far out after sundown. No one butâ
You shook your head, almost hard enough to rattle something loose.
No.
He was gone. That part of your life was buried.
You made sure of it.
Still, your bare feet moved toward the door like they werenât yours. Soft against the creaky wood. Slow. You reached for the small revolver you kept in the drawer beside the door frame, thumbed the hammer back.
Another knock. This time, softer. Almost...polite.
Your hand rested on the knob.
The porch light had been dead for weeks, so you couldnât see who was waiting on the other side. But the airâsomething in the airâtold you.
It was him.
You didnât answer. Not right away.
You stood there with your palm flat against the rough wood, your forehead nearly touching it tooâeyes shut, breath shallow. The air on the other side didnât stir like it shouldâve. No footfalls creaking the porch. No shuffle of boots on sun-bleached planks. Just stillness. Waiting.
And underneath your ribs, something began to ache. Something you hadnât let yourself feel in years.
You didnât know his name, not back then. You only knew his eyesâgold in the shadows. Red when caught in the light. Like a firelight in the dark. Like a blood red moon through stained-glass windows.
And his voice. Low. Dragging vowels like syrup. A Southern accent that didnât come from any map youâd ever seenâolder than towns, older than state lines. A voice that had told you, seven years ago, with impossible calm:
"Youâll know when itâs time."
You knew. Your hands trembled against your sides. But you didnât back away. Some part of you knew how useless running would be.
The knob beneath your hand felt cold. Too cold for Mississippi in August.
You turned it.
The door opened slow, hinges whining like they were trying to warn you. You stepped back instinctivelyâjust one stepâand then he was there.
Remmick.
Still tall, still lean in that devastating wayâlike his body was carved from something hard and mean, but shaped to tempt. He wore a crisp white shirt rolled to the elbows, suspenders hanging loose from his hips, and trousers that looked far too clean for a man who walked through the dirt. His hair was messy in that intentional way, brown and swept back like heâd been running hands through it all night. Stubble lined his sharp jaw, catching the lamplight just so.
But it was his face that rooted you to the floor. That hollowed out your breath.
Still young. Still wrong.
Not a wrinkle, not a scar. Not a mark of time. He hadnât aged a day.
And his eyesâoh, God, his eyes.
They caught the lamp behind you and lit up red, bright and glinting, like the embers of a dying fire. Not human. Not even pretending.
"Hello, dove."
His voice curled into your bones like cigarette smoke. You didnât answer. You couldnât.
You hated how your body reacted.
Hated that you could still feel itâlike something old and molten stirring between your thighs, a flicker of the same heat youâd felt that night in the alley, back when you were too desperate to care what kind of creature answered your prayer.
He looked you over once. Not with hunger. With certainty. Like he already knew how this would end. Like he already owned you.
"You remember, donât you?" he asked.
"I came to collect."
And your voiceâwhen it finally cameâwas little more than a whisper.
"You canât be real."
That smile. That slight twitch at the corner of his mouth. Wolfish. Slow.
"You promised."
You wanted to shut the door. Slam it. Deadbolt it. But your hand didnât move.
Remmick didnât step forward, not yet. He stood just outside the threshold, framed by night and cypress trees and the distant flicker of heat lightning beyond the fields. The air around him pulsed with something oldâolder than the land, older than you, older than anything you could name.
He tilted his head the way animals do, watching you, letting the silence thicken like molasses between you.
"Still living out here all on your own," he murmured, gaze drifting over your shoulders, into the small, tidy kitchen behind you. "Hung your laundry on the line this morning. Blue dress, lace hem. Favorite one, ainât it?"
Your stomach clenched. That dress hadnât seen a neighborâs eye all week.
"You've been watching me," you said, your voice low, unsure if it was accusation or realization.
"Iâve been waiting," he said. "Not the same thing."
You swallowed hard. Your breath caught in your throat like a thorn. The wind shifted, and you caught the faintest trace of somethingâdried tobacco, smoke, rain-soaked dirt, and beneath it, the iron-sweet tinge of blood.
Not fresh. Not violent. JustâŠpresent. Like it lived in him.
"I paid my debt," you whispered.
"No, you survived it," he said, stepping up onto the first board of the porch. The wood didnât creak beneath his weight. "And thatâs only half the bargain."
He still hadnât crossed the threshold.
The stories came back to you, the ones whispered by old women with trembling hands and ash crosses pressed to their doorwaysâvampires couldnât enter unless invited. But you hadnât invited him, not this time.
"You donât have permission," you said.
He smiled, eyes flashing red again.
"You gave it, seven years ago."
Your breath hitched.
"I was a girl," you said.
"You were desperate," he corrected. "And honest. Desperation makes people honest in ways they canât be twice. You knew what you were offering me, even if you didnât understand it. Your promise had teeth."
The wind pushed against your back, as if urging you forward.
Remmick stepped closer, just enough for the shadows to kiss the line of his throat, the hollow of his collarbone. His voice dropped, intimate nowâdragging across your skin like a fingertip behind the ear.
"You asked for a miracle. I gave it to you. And now Iâm here for whatâs mine."
Your heart thudded violently in your chest.
"I didnât think youâd come."
"Thatâs the thing about monsters, dove." He leaned down, lips almost grazing the curve of your jaw. "We always do."
And thenâ
He stepped back.
The wind stopped.
The night fell quiet again, like the world had paused just to watch what youâd do next.
"Iâll wait out here till youâre ready," he said, turning toward the swing on your porch and settling into it like he had all the time in the world. "But donât make me knock twice. Wouldnât be polite."
The swing groaned beneath him as it rocked gently, back and forth.
You stood there frozen in the doorway, one bare foot still inside the house, the other brushing the edge of the porch.
Youâd made a promise.
And he was here to keep it.
The door stayed open. Just enough for the night to reach inside.
You didnât move.
Your body stood still but your mind wanderedâback to that night in the alley, to the smell of blood and piss and riverwater, your knees soaked in your brotherâs lifeblood as you screamed for help that never came. Except it did. It came in the shape of a man who didnât breathe, didnât blink, didnât make promises the way mortals did.
It came in the shape of him.
You thought time would wash it away. That the years would smooth the edges of his voice in your memory, dull the sharpness of his presence. But now, with him just outside your door, it all returned like a fever dreamâhot, all-consuming, too real to outrun.
You turned away from the threshold, slowly, carefully, as if the floor might cave in under you. Your hands trembled as you reached for the oil lamp on the table, adjusting the flame lower until it flickered like a dying heartbeat.
The silence behind you dragged, deep and waiting. He didnât speak again. Didnât call for you.
He didnât have to.
You moved through the house in slow circles. Touching things. Straightening them. Folding a dishcloth. Setting a book back on the shelf, even though youâd already read it twice. You tried to pretend you werenât thinking about the man on your porch. But the heat of him pressed against the back of your mind like a hand.
You could feel him out there. Not just physicallyâbut in you, somehow. Like the air had shifted around his shape, and the longer he lingered, the more your body remembered what it had felt like to stand in front of something not quite human and still want.
You passed the mirror in the hallway and paused.
Your reflection looked undone. Not in the way your hair had fallen from its pin, or the flush across your cheeks, but deeperâlike something inside you had been cracked open. You touched your own throat, right where you imagined his mouth might go.
No bite.
Not yet.
But you swore you could feel phantom teeth.
You went back to the door, holding your breath, and looked at him through the screen.
He hadnât moved. He sat on the swing, one leg stretched out, the other bent lazily beneath him, arms slung across the backrest like heâd always belonged there. A cigarette burned between two fingers, the tip flaring orange as he dragged from it. The scent of it hit youârich, earthy, and somehow foreign, like something imported from a place no longer on the map.
He didnât look at you right away.
Then, slowly, he did.
Red eyes caught yours.
He smiled, small and slow, like he was reading a page of you heâd already memorized.
"Thought youâd shut the door by now," he said.
"I should have," you answered.
"But you didnât."
His voice curled into the quiet.
You stepped out onto the porch, barefoot, the boards warm beneath your soles. He didnât move to greet you. He didnât rise. He just watched you walk toward him like heâd been watching in dreams you never remembered having.
The swing groaned as you sat down beside him, a careful space between you.
His shoulder brushed yours.
You stared straight ahead, out into the night. A mist was beginning to rise off the distant fields. The moon hung low and orange like a wound in the sky.
Somewhere in the bayou, a whippoorwill called, long and mournful.
"How long have you been watching me?" you asked.
"Since before you knew to look."
"Why now?"
He turned toward you. His voice was velvet-wrapped iron.
"Because nowâŠyouâre ripe for the pickinâ.â
You didnât remember falling asleep.
One moment you were on the porch beside him, listening to the slow groan of the swing and the way the crickets held their breath when he exhaled, the next you were waking in your bed, the sheets tangled around your legs like they were trying to hold you down.
The house was too quiet.
No birdsong. No creak of the windmill out back. No rustle of the sycamores that scraped against your bedroom window on stormy nights.
Just stillness.
And scent.
It clung to the cotton of your nightdress. Tobacco smoke, sweat, rain. Him.
You sat up slowly, pressing your hand to your chest. Your heart thudded like it was trying to remember who it belonged to. The lamp beside your bed had burned down to a stub. A trickle of wax curled like a vein down the side of the glass.
Your mouth tasted like smoke and guilt. Your thighs ached in that low, humming wayâthough you couldnât say why. Nothing had happened. Not really.
But something had changed.
You felt it under your skin, in the place where blood meets breath.
The floor was cool under your feet as you moved. You didnât dress. Just pulled a robe over your slip and stepped into the hallway. The house felt heavier than usual, thick with the ghost of his presence. Every corner held a whisper. Every shadow a shape.
You opened the front door.
The porch was empty.
The swing still rocked gently, as if someone had only just stood up from it.
A folded piece of paper lay on the top step, weighted down by a smooth river stone.
You picked it up with trembling hands.
Come.
That was all it said. One word. But it rang through your bones like gospel. Like a vow.
You looked out across the field. A narrow dirt road stretched beyond the tree line, overgrown but clear. Youâd never dared follow it. That road didnât belong to you.
It belonged to him.
And nowâŠso did you.
You didnât bring anything with you.
Not a suitcase. Not a shawl. Not a Bible tucked under your arm for comfort.
Just yourself.
And the road.
The hem of your slip was already damp by the time you reached the edge of the field. Dew clung to your ankles like cold fingers, and the earth was soft beneath your feetâfresh from last nightâs storm, the kind that never really breaks the heat, only deepens it. The moon had gone down, but the sky was beginning to bruise with that blue-black ink that comes before sunrise. Everything smelled like wet grass, magnolia, and the faint rot of old wood.
The path curved, narrowing as it passed through trees that leaned in too close. Their branches kissed above you like they were whispering secrets into each otherâs leaves. Spanish moss hung like veils from the oaks, dripping silver in the fading dark. It made the world feel smaller. Quieter. As if you were walking into something sacredâor something doomed.
A crow cawed once in the distance. Sharp. Hollow. You didnât flinch.
There was no sound of wheels. No car waiting. Just the road and the fog and the promise you'd made.
And then you saw it.
The house.
Tucked deep in the grove, half-swallowed by vines and time, it rose like a memory from the earth. A decaying plantation, left to rot in the wet belly of the Delta. Its bones were still beautifulâwhite columns streaked with black mildew, a grand porch that sagged like a mouth missing teeth, shuttered windows with iron latches rusted shut. Ivy grew up the sides like it was trying to strangle the place. Or maybe protect it.
You stood there at the edge of the clearing, breath caught in your throat.
Heâd brought you here.
Or maybe heâd always been here. Waiting. Dreaming of the moment youâd return to him without even knowing it.
A shape moved behind one of the upstairs curtains. Quick. Barely there.
You didnât run.
Your bare foot found the first step.
It groaned like it recognized you.
The door was already open.
Not wideâjust enough for you to know it had been waiting.
And you stepped inside.
The air inside was colder.
Not the kind of cold that came from breeze or shadeâbut from stillness, from the absence of sun and time. A hush so thick it felt like you were walking underwater. Like the house had held its breath for decades and only now began to exhale.
Dust spiraled in the faint light seeping through fractured windows, casting soft halos through the dark. The wooden floor beneath your feet was warped and groaning, but clean. Not in any natural senseâthere was no broom that had touched these boards. No polish or soap.
But it had been kept.
The air didnât smell like rot or mildew. It smelled like cedar. Like old leather. And deeper beneath that, like him.
He hadnât lit any lamps.
Just the fireplace, burning low, glowing embers pulsing orange-red at the back of a cavernous hearth. The flame danced shadows across the faded wallpaper, peeling in long strips like dead skin. A high-backed chair faced the fire, velvet blackened from age, its silhouette looming like something alive.
You swallowed, lips dry, and stepped further in.
Your voice didnât carry. It didnât even try.
Remmick was nowhere in sight.
But he was here.
You could feel him in the walls, in the way the house seemed to lean closer with every step you took.
You passed through the parlor, past a dusty grand piano with one ivory key cracked down the middle. Past oil portraits too old to make out, their eyes blurred with time. Past a single vase of dried wildflowers, colorless now, but carefully arranged.
You paused in the doorway to the drawing room, your hand resting lightly on the frame.
A whisper of air moved behind you.
Thenâ
A hand.
Not grabbing. Not harsh. Just the light press of fingers against the small of your back, palm flat and warm through the thin cotton of your slip.
You froze.
He was behind you.
So close you could feel his breath at your neck. Not warm, not coldâjust present. Like wind through a crack in the door. Like the memory of a touch before it lands.
His voice was low, close to your ear.
"You came."
You didnât answer.
"You always would have."
You wanted to say no. Wanted to deny it. But you stood there trembling under his hand, your heartbeat so loud you were sure he could hear it.
Maybe that was why he smiled.
He stepped around you slowly, letting his fingers graze the side of your waist as he moved. His eyes glinted red in the firelight, catching on you like a flame drawn to dry kindling.
He looked at you like he was already undressing you.
Not your clothesâyour will.
And it was already unraveling.
Youâd suspected he wasnât born of this soil.
Not just because of the way he movedâlike he didnât quite belong to gravityâbut because of the way he spoke. Like time hadnât worn the edges off his words the way it had with everyone else. His voice curled around vowels like smoke curling through keyholes. Rich and low, but laced with something older. Something foreign. Something that made the hair at the nape of your neck rise when he spoke too softly, too close.
He didnât speak like a man from the Delta.
He spoke like something older than it.
Older than the country. Maybe older than God.
Remmick stopped in front of you, lit only by firelight.
His eyes had dulled from red to something deeperâlike old garnet held to a candle. His shirt was open at the collar now, suspenders hanging slack, the buttons on his sleeves rolled to his elbows. His forearms were dusted with faint scars that looked like they had stories. His skin was pale in the glow, but not lifeless. He looked like marble warmed by touch.
He studied you for a long time.
You werenât sure if it was your face he was reading, or something beneath it. Something you couldnât hide.
"You look just like your mother," he said finally.
Your breath caught.
"You knew her?"
A soft smirk curled at the corner of his mouth.
"Iâve known a lot of people, dove. I just never forget the ones with your blood."
You didnât ask what he meant. Not yet.
There was something heavy in his toneâsomething laced with memory that stretched back far further than it should. You had guessed, years ago, in the sleepless weeks after that alleyway miracle, that he was not new to this world. That his youth was a trick of the skin. A lie worn like a mask.
Youâd read every folklore book you could get your hands on. Every whisper of vampire lore scratched into the margins of ledgers, stuffed between church hymnals, scribbled on the backs of newspapers.
Some said they aged. Slowly. Elegantly.
Others said they didnât age at all. That they existed outside time. Beyond it.
You didnât know how old Remmick was.
But something in your bones told you the truth.
Five hundred. Six hundred, maybe more.
A man who remembered empires. A man who had watched cities rise and burn. Who had danced in plague-slick ballrooms and kissed queens before they were beheaded. A man who had lived so long that names no longer mattered. Only debts. And blood.
And youâd given him both.
He stepped closer now, slow and deliberate.
"Yer heartâs gallopinâ like it thinks Iâm here to take it."
You flinched. Not because he was wrong. But because he was right.
"You said you didnât want my blood," you whispered.
"I donât." He tilted his head. "Not yet."
"Then what do you want?"
His smile didnât reach his eyes.
"You."
He said it like it was a simple thing. Like the rain wanting the river. Like the grave wanting the body.
You swallowed hard.
"Why me?"
His gaze dragged down your frame, unhurried, like a man admiring a painting heâd stolen once and hidden from the world.
"Because you belong to me. You gave yourself freely. No bargainâs ever tasted so sweet."
Your throat tightened.
"I didnât know what I was agreeing to."
"You did," he said, softly now, stepping close enough that his chest nearly brushed yours. "You knew. Your soul knew. Even if your head didnât catch up."
You opened your mouth to protest, to say something, anything that would push back this slow suffocation of certaintyâ
But his hand came up to your jaw. Fingers feather-light. Not forcing. Just holding. Just there.
"And youâve been thinkinâ about me ever since," he said.
Not a question. A statement.
You didnât answer.
He leaned in, his breath ghosting over your cheek, his voice a rasp against your ear.
"You dream of me, donât you?"
Your hands trembled at your sides.
"I donâtâ"
"You wake wet. Ache in your belly. You donât know why. But I do."
You let your eyes fall shut, shame burning behind them like fire.
"Fuckinâ knew it," he murmured, almost reverent. "You smell like want, dove. You always have.â
His hand didnât move. It just stayed there at your jaw, thumb ghosting slow along the hollow beneath your cheekbone. A touch so gentle it made your knees ache. Because it wasnât the roughness that undid youâit was the restraint.
He couldâve taken.
He didnât.
Not yet.
His gaze held yours, slow and unblinking, red still smoldering in the center of his irises like the dying core of a flame that refused to go out.
"Say it," he murmured.
Your lips parted, but nothing came.
"I can smell it," he said, voice low, rich as molasses. "Your shame. Your want. Youâve been livinâ like a nun with a beast inside her, and no one knows but me."
You hated how your breath stuttered. Hated more that your thighs pressed together when he said it.
"Why do you talk like that," you whispered, barely able to get the words out, "like you already know what Iâm feeling?"
His fingers slid down, grazing the side of your neck, stopping just before the pulse thudding there.
"Because I do."
"Thatâs not fair."
He smiled, slow and crooked, nothing kind in it.
"No, dove. It ainât."
You hated him.
You hated how beautiful he was in this light, sleeves rolled, veins prominent in his arms, shirt hanging open just enough to show the faint line of a scar that trailed beneath his collarbone. A body shaped by time, not by vanity. Not perfect. Just true. Like someone carved him for a purpose and let the flaws stay because they made him real.
He looked like sin and the sermon that came after.
Remmick moved closer. You didnât retreat.
His hand flattened over your sternum now, right above your heartbeat, the warmth of him pressing through the cotton of your slip like it meant to seep in. He leaned down, mouth near yours, not kissing, just breathing.
"You gave yourself to me once," he said. "Iâm only here to collect the rest."
"You saved my brother."
"I saved you. You just didnât know it yet."
A shiver rippled down your spine.
His hand moved lower, skimming the curve of your ribs, hovering just at the soft flare of your waist. You could feel the heat rolling off him like smoke from a coalbed. His body didnât radiate warmth the way a manâs shouldâbut something older. Wilder. Like the earthâs own breath in summer. Like the hush of a storm right before it split the sky.
"And if I tell you no?" you asked, barely more than a breath.
His eyes flicked to yours, unreadable.
"Iâll wait."
You werenât expecting that.
He smiled again, this time softer, almost cruel in its patience.
"Iâve waited centuries for sweeter things than you. But that donât mean I wonât keep my hands on you âtil you change your mind."
"You think I will?"
"You already have."
Your chest rose sharply, breath stung with heat.
"You think this is love?"
He laughed, low and dangerous, the sound curling around your ribs.
"No," he said. "This is hunger. Love comes later."
Then his mouth brushed your jawânot a kiss, just the graze of lips against skinâand every nerve in your body arched to meet it.
Your knees buckled, barely.
He caught your waist in one hand, steadying you with maddening ease.
"Iâm gonna ruin you," he whispered against your throat, his nose dragging lightly along your skin. "But Iâll be so gentle the first time youâll beg me to do it again."
And God help youâ
You wanted him to.
The house didnât sleep.
Not the way houses were meant to.
It breathed.
The walls exhaled heat and memory, the floors creaked even when no one stepped, and somewhere in the rafters above your room, something paced slowly back and forth, back and forth, like a beast too restless to settle. The kind of place built with its own pulse.
Youâd spent the rest of the nightâif you could call it thatâin a room that wasnât yours, wearing nothing but a cotton shift and your silence. You hadnât asked for anything. He hadnât offered.
The room was spare but not cruel. A basin with a water pitcher. A four-poster bed draped in a netting veil to keep out the bugsâor the ghosts. The mattress was soft. The sheets smelled faintly of cedar, firewood, and something else you didnât recognize.
Him.
You didnât undress. You lay on top of the blanket, fingers threaded together over your belly, the thrum of your heartbeat like a second mouth behind your ribs.
Your door had no lock. Just a handle that squeaked if turned. And you hated how many times your eyes flicked toward it. Waiting. Wanting.
But he never came.
And somehow, that was worse.
Morning broke soft and gray through the slatted shutters. The sun didnât quite reach the corners of the room, and the light that filtered in was the color of dust and river fog.
When you finally stepped out barefoot into the hall, the house was already awake.
There was a scent in the airâcoffee. Burned sugar. The faintest curl of cinnamon. Something sizzling in a skillet somewhere.
You followed it.
The kitchen was enormous, all brick hearth and cast iron and a long scarred table in the center with mismatched chairs pushed in unevenly. A window hung open, letting in a breath of swamp air that rustled the lace curtain and kissed your ankles.
Remmick stood at the stove with his back to you, sleeves still rolled to the elbow, suspenders crossed low over his back. His shirt was half-unbuttoned and clung to his sides with the cling of heat and skin. He moved like he didnât hear you enter.
You knew he had.
He reached for the pan with a towel over his palm and flipped something in the cast iron with a deft flick of the wrist.
"Hope you like sweet," he said, voice thick with morning. "Ainât got much else."
You didnât speak. Just stood there in the doorway like a ghost heâd conjured and forgotten about.
He turned.
God help you.
Even like this, barefoot, collar open, hair mussed from sleep or maybe just timeâhe looked unreal. Like a sin someone had tried to scrub out of scripture but couldnât quite forget.
"Sleep alright?" he asked.
You gave a small nod.
He looked at you a moment longer. Thenâ
"Sit down, dove."
You moved toward the table.
His voice followed you, lazy but pointed.
"Thatâs the wrong chair."
You paused.
He nodded to one at the head of the tableâold, high-backed, carved with curling vines and symbols you didnât recognize.
"That oneâs yours now."
You hesitated, then lowered yourself into it slowly. The wood groaned under your weight. The air in the kitchen felt thicker now, tighter.
He brought the plate to you himself.
Two slices of skillet cornbread, golden and glistening with syrup. A few wild strawberries sliced and sugared. A smear of butter melting slow at the center like a pulse.
He set the plate in front of you with a quiet care that felt almost obscene.
"You ainât gotta eat," he said, leaning against the table beside your chair. "But I like watchinâ you do it."
You picked up the fork.
His eyes stayed on your mouth.
The cornbread was still warm.
Steam curled from it like breath from parted lips. The syrup pooled thick at the edges, dripping off the edge of your fork in slow, amber ribbons. It stuck to your fingers when you touched it. Sweet. Sticky. Sensual.
You brought the first bite to your mouth, slow.
Remmick didnât speak. He didnât need to. His eyes tracked the motion like a starving man watching someone elseâs feast.
The bite landed soft on your tongueâgolden crisp on the outside, warm and tender in the middle, butter melting into every pore. It was perfect. Unreasonably so. And somehow you hated that even more. Because nothing about this shouldâve tasted good. Not with him watching you like that. Not with your body still humming from the memory of his voice against your skin.
But you swallowed.
And he smiled.
"Good girl," he murmured.
You froze. The fork paused just above the plate.
"You donât get to say things like that," you whispered.
"Why not?"
Your fingers tightened around the handle.
"Because it sounds like you earned it."
He chuckled, low and easy. A slow roll of thunder in his chest.
"Think I did. Think I earned every fuckinâ word after dragginâ you out that night and lettinâ you walk away without layinâ a hand on you."
You looked up sharply, heat crawling up your neck.
"You shouldnât have touched me."
"I didnât," he said. "But I wanted to. Still do."
Your breath caught.
His knuckles brushed the edge of your plate, slow, casual, like he had all the time in the world to make you squirm.
"And I know you want me to," he added, voice low enough that it coiled under your ribs and settled somewhere molten in your belly.
You pushed the plate away.
He didnât flinch. Just reached forward and dragged it back in front of you like you hadnât moved it at all.
"You eat," he said, gentler now. "You need it. House takes more from you than it gives."
You glanced around the kitchen, suddenly uneasy.
"You talk about it like itâs alive."
He gave a slow nod.
"It is. In a way."
"How?"
He looked down at your plate, then back at you.
"Youâll see."
You pushed another bite past your lips, slower this time, aware of the weight of his gaze with every chew, every swallow. You didnât know why you obeyed. Maybe it was easier than defying him. Maybe it was because some part of you wanted him to keep watching.
When the plate was clean, he reached out and caught your wrist before you could stand.
Not hard. Not even firm. JustâŠinevitable.
"You full?" he asked, his voice all smoke and sin.
You nodded.
His eyes darkened.
"Then Iâll have my taste next."
Your breath lodged sharp in your throat.
He said it like it meant nothing. Like asking for your pulse was no more intimate than asking for your hand. But there was a glint in his eyeâred barely flickering now, but still thereâand it told you everything.
He was done pretending.
You didnât move. Not right away.
His fingers were still wrapped around your wrist, light but unyielding, the pad of his thumb grazing the fragile skin where your pulse drummed loud and frantic. Like it wanted to leap out of your veins and spill into his mouth.
You swallowed hard.
"You said you didnât want blood."
"I donât."
"Then what do you want?"
"You."
You watched him now, trying to make sense of what you wanted.
And what terrified you was thisâ
You didnât want to run.
You wanted to know how it would feel.
To give something he couldnât take without permission.
To see if your body could handle the worship of a mouth like his.
Remmickâs other hand came up slow, brushing hair from your cheek, his knuckles rough and reverent.
"You said I smelled like want," you whispered.
"You do."
"What do you smell like?"
He leaned in, mouth near your throat again, his nose dragging along your skin, slow, as if he were drawing in the scent of your soul.
"Rot. Hunger. Regret," he said. "Old things that donât die right."
You shivered.
"And still I want you," you breathed.
He pulled back just enough to look you in the eyes.
"Thatâs the worst part, ainât it?"
You didnât answer.
Because he was right.
His hand slid down to your elbow, then lower, tracing the curve of your waist through the thin fabric. His touch was warm now, or maybe your body had just given up trying to tell the difference between threat and thrill.
He guided you up from the chair.
Didnât yank. Didnât drag.
Just stood and took your hand like a dance was beginning.
"Come with me," he said.
"Where?"
"Somewhere I can kneel."
Your heart stuttered.
He led you through the house, down the long hallway past doorways that watched like eyes. The floor groaned underfoot, the air thickening around your shoulders as he brought you deeper into the homeâs belly. You passed portraits whose paint had faded to shadows, velvet drapes drawn tight, mirrors that refused to hold your reflection quite right.
The door at the end of the hall was already open.
Inside, the room was dark.
Just one candle lit, flickering low in a glass jar, its light catching the edges of something silver beside the bed. An old bowl. A cloth. A pair of gloves, yellowed from time.
A ritual.
Not violent.
Intimate.
Remmick turned toward you, his face bare in the soft light. He looked younger. More human. And somehow more dangerous for it.
"Sit," he said.
You sat.
He knelt.
And then his hands found your knees.
His hands rested on your knees like they belonged there. Not demanding. Not prying. Just there. Anchored. Reverent.
The candlelight licked up his jaw, catching in the hollows of his cheeks, the deep shadow beneath his throat. He didnât look like a man. He looked like a story told by firelightâhalf-worshipped, half-feared. A sinner in the shape of a saint. Or maybe the other way around.
His thumbs made a slow pass over the inside of your thighs, just above the knee. Barely pressure. Barely touch. The kind of contact that made your breath feel too loud in your chest.
"Yer too quiet," he murmured.
"I donât know what to say," you whispered back.
His gaze lifted, locking with yours, and in that moment the whole room seemed to still.
"Ya ainât gotta say a damn thing," he said. "You just need to stay right there and let me show ya what I mean when I say I donât want yer blood."
Your lips parted, but no sound came.
He leaned in, slow as honey in the heat, until his mouth hovered just above your knee. Then lower. His breath ghosted over your skin, warm and maddening.
You didnât realize you were holding your breath until he pressed a single kiss just above the bone.
Your lungs stuttered.
His lips trailed higher.
Another kiss.
Then another.
Each one higher than the last, until your legs opened on instinct, until you felt the hem of your slip being eased upward by hands that moved with worshipful patience. Like he wasnât just undressing youâhe was peeling back a veil. Unwrapping something sacred.
"You ever had someone kneel for ya?" he asked, voice rough now. Thicker.
You shook your head.
He smiled like he already knew the answer.
"Good. Let me be the first."
He kissed the inside of your thigh like it meant something. Like you meant something. Like your skin wasnât just skin, but a prayer he intended to answer with his mouth.
The air was too hot. Your thoughts slid loose from the edges of your mind. All you could do was breathe and feel.
He looked up at you once more, red eyes burning low, and saidâ
"You gave yerself to me. Let me taste what I already own."
And then he bowed his head, mouth meeting the softest part of you, and the rest of the world disappeared.
His mouth touched you like heâd been dreaming of it for years. Like heâd earned it.
No rush. No hunger. Just that first velvet press of his lips against the tender center of you, reverent and slow, like a kiss to a wound or a confession. He moaned, low and guttural, into your skinâand the sound of it vibrated up through your spine.
He parted you with his thumbs, just enough to taste you deeper. His tongue slipped between folds already slick and aching, and he groaned again, this time with something like gratitude.
"Sweet as I fuckinâ knew youâd be," he rasped, voice hot against your core.
Your hands gripped the edge of the chair. Wood bit into your palms. Your head tipped back, eyes fluttering shut as your thighs trembled around his shoulders.
He didnât stop.
He licked you with patience, with purpose, like he was reading scripture written between your legsâeach flick of his tongue slow and deliberate, every pass perfectly placed, building pressure inside you with maddening precision.
And all the while, he watched you.
When your head dropped forward, you found him staring up at you. Red eyes glowing low, heavy-lidded, mouth glistening, jaw tense with restraint. He looked ruined by the taste of you.
"Look at me," he said. "Wanna see you fall apart on my tongue."
Your breath hitched, hips rocking forward on instinct, chasing his mouth. He growled low and deep in his chest, gripping your thighs tighter.
"Thatâs it, dove," he murmured. "Donât run from it. Give it to me."
He flattened his tongue and dragged it slow, then circled the swollen peak of your clit with the tip, teasing you to the edge and pulling back just before it broke.
You whined. Desperate.
He smirked against your cunt.
"You want it?" he asked, voice thick. "Say it."
Your lips barely formed the wordâ"Please."
He hummed in approval.
Then he devoured you.
No more teasing. No more pacing. Just his mouth fully locked on you, tongue relentless now, lips sealing around your clit while two fingers slid into you with that obscene, perfect pressure that made your body jolt.
You cried out, gasping, your thighs tightening around his head as the world tipped sideways.
"Thatâs it," he groaned, curling his fingers just right. "Cum fâr me, girl. Let me taste whatâs mine."
And when it hitâ
It hit like a fever. Like lightning. Like your soul cracked in half and bled straight into his mouth.
You broke with a cry, hips bucking, your fingers tangled in his hair as wave after wave crashed through you.
He didnât stop. Not until your thighs twitched and your breath came in ragged little sobs, not until your body went limp in his hands.
Then, finallyâfinallyâhe pulled back.
His lips were wet. His eyes were feral. And he looked at you like a man whoâd just fed.
"Youâre fuckinâ divine," he whispered. "And I ainât even started ruininâ you yet."
The room pulsed with quiet. The candle flickered low, flame swaying as if it too had held its breath through your unraveling.
Your body felt boneless. Glazed in sweat. Your pulse echoed everywhereâin your wrists, your throat, between your legs where heâd buried his mouth like a man sent to worship. You werenât sure how long it had been since youâd spoken. Since youâd breathed without shaking.
Remmick still knelt.
His hands were on your thighs, thumbs drawing idle circles into your skin like he couldnât bear to stop touching you. His head was bowed slightly, but his eyes were on youâwatchful, reverent, hungry in a way that had nothing to do with the softness between your legs and everything to do with something older. Something darker.
He looked drunk on you.
You opened your mouth to speak, but your voice caught on the edge of a sigh.
He beat you to it.
"Reckon you know whatâs cominâ next," he murmured.
You didnât answer.
He rose from his knees in one slow, unhurried motion. There was a heaviness to him now, a tension rolling just beneath his skin, like a dam about to split. He reached up with one hand and wiped the corner of his mouth with the back of itâthen licked the taste from his thumb like it was honey off the comb.
You watched, breath held tight in your chest.
He stepped closer. You stayed seated, knees still parted, your slip pushed up indecently high, but you didnât fix it. Didnât move at all. The heat between your legs hadnât faded. If anything, it curled deeper now, thicker, laced with something close to fear but not quite.
He stopped in front of you.
Tilted his head slightly.
"Howâs yer heart?"
You blinked.
"ItâsâŠfast," you whispered.
He smiled slow. Not mocking. Not soft either.
"Good. I want it fast."
Your throat tightened.
"Why?"
He leaned in, hands bracing on either side of your chair, body boxing you in without touching.
"âCause I want yer blood screaminâ for me when I take it."
Your breath caught somewhere between your ribs.
He didnât touch you yetâdidnât need to. The weight of his body, caging you in without a single finger laid, made your skin flush from your chest to your knees. Every inch of you throbbed with awareness. Of him. Of your own pulse. Of the air cooling the places heâd worshiped with his mouth not moments before.
You swallowed.
"You said youâd wait," you whispered.
He nodded once, slowly, his eyes never leaving yours.
"I did. And I have. But yer bodyâs already begginâ for me. Ainât it?"
You hated that he was right. That he could feel it somehow. Not just see the tremble in your thighs or the way your lips parted when he leaned closerâbut that he could feel it in the air, like scent, like vibration.
You lifted your chin, barely.
"Iâm not scared."
He chuckled low, and it rumbled through your bones.
"Good. But I donât need ya scared, dove. I need ya open."
He raised one hand then, slow as scripture, and brushed his knuckles along the column of your throat. Just a whisper of contact, a ghostâs touch. Your head tilted for him without thinking, baring your neck.
"Right here," he murmured. "Right where it beats loudest. Thatâs where I wanna taste ya."
You shivered.
He bent down, mouth near your pulse. His breath was warm, slow, drawn in like he was savoring you already.
"I ainât gonna hurt ya," he said. "Not unless you want it."
Your fingers twisted in your lap.
"Will itâ" you started, but the question got tangled.
He smiled against your skin.
"Will it feel good?"
You said nothing.
"You already know."
You did.
Because everything with him did. Every word. Every look. Every touch. It wasnât right. It wasnât holy. But it was real. It lived under your skin like rot and root and ruin.
You nodded once.
"Then take it."
Remmick stilled.
And then his lips pressed to your throat. Not with hunger. With reverence. Like a blessing.
"Thatâs my girl," he breathed.
And then he bit.
It wasnât pain.
It was pressure, first.
A deep, aching pull that bloomed just beneath the skin, right where his mouth latched onto you. His lips sealed tight around your throat, and thenâsharpness. Two points sinking in like teeth through silk. Like sin through flesh.
You gasped.
Not from fear. Not even from the sting. But from the rush.
Heat burst behind your eyes, white and sudden and dizzying. Your hands flew to his shoulders, clinging, grounding, anchoring you to something real while your mind drifted into something elseâsomething otherworldly.
The pull came next.
A steady rhythm, slow and patient, like he was sipping you instead of drinking. Like he had all the time in the world. You could feel it, the way your blood left you in waves, not violent, not greedyâjustâŠintimate. Like giving. Like surrender.
He groaned low against your neck, the sound vibrating through your bones.
"Fuck, you taste like sunlight," he rasped against your skin, voice thick with hunger and awe. "Like everythinâ warm I thought Iâd forgotten."
Your head tipped further, offering him more.
You didnât know when your legs opened wider, or when your hips rocked forward just to feel more of him. But his body shifted instinctively, meeting yours with a growl, his hand gripping your thigh now, possessive and unrelenting.
Your pulse faltered. Not from weakness, but from pleasure. From the unbearable knowing that he was inside you now, in the most ancient way. That your body had opened to him, and your blood had welcomed him.
Your moan was breathless.
"Remmickâ"
He shushed you, mouth never leaving your throat.
"Donât speak, dove. Just feel."
And you did.
You felt every lick. Every pull. Every sacred claim. You felt his tongue soothe where his fangs pierced, his hand slide higher along your thigh, his knee pushing between your legs until your breath stuttered out of you in something like a sob.
It was too much. It was not enough.
And when he finally pulled back, slow and reluctant, your blood on his lips like a mark, like a vow, he stared at you like you were holy.
Like he hadnât fed on you.
Like heâd prayed.
The room was quiet, but your body wasnât.
You felt every beat of your heart echo in the hollow where his mouth had been. A slow, reverent throb that pulsed through your neck, your chest, your thighs. It was like something had been lit beneath your skin, and now it smoldered thereâglowing, aching, changed.
Remmickâs breath was uneven. His lips were stained red, parted just slightly, his jaw slack with something like awe. The burn of your blood still shimmered in his eyes, brighter now. Alive.
He looked undone.
And yet his hands were steady as he reached up, cupped your jaw in both palms, and tilted your face toward him. His thumb swept across your cheekbone like you might vanish if he didnât touch you just right.
"You alright?" he asked, voice quieter now, roughened at the edges like a match just struck.
You nodded, though your limbs still trembled.
"I feelâŠ" you swallowed, the word too small for what bloomed in your chest, "âŠwarm."
He laughed, soft and almost bitter, and leaned his forehead against yours.
"You should. Youâre inside me now. Every drop of you."
The words rooted somewhere deep. You didnât flinch. Didnât pull away. You could still feel the heat of his mouth, the bite, the pleasure that followed. It wasnât just lust. It wasnât just surrender. It was something older. Something binding.
"Does it hurt?" you asked, your fingers brushing the side of his neck, the line of his collarbone slick with sweat.
He looked at you like youâd asked the wrong question.
"Hurt?" he echoed. "Dove, itâs ecstasy."
You stared at him.
"You mean for you?"
He shook his head once.
"For us."
Then he pulled back just enough to look at youâreally look. His gaze swept your features like he was committing them to memory. As if this moment, this very breath, was something sacred. His fingers moved to your throat again, this time to the place just above the bite, and he pressed lightly.
"Youâll bruise here," he said. "Wonât fade for a while."
"Will it heal?"
"Eventually."
"Do you want it to?"
His mouth curved, slow and wicked.
"No," he said. "I want the world to see whatâs mine."
And before you could replyâbefore the heat in your belly could cool or your mind could gather itselfâhe kissed you.
Not soft.
Not careful.
His mouth claimed you like heâd already been inside you a thousand times and wanted to do it a thousand more. He kissed you like a man starving. Like a creature whoâd gone too long without flesh, and now that he had it, he wasnât letting go.
You tasted your own blood on his tongue.
And it tasted like forever.
The house knew.
It breathed deeper now. Its wood swelled, its walls sighed, its floorboards creaked in time with your heartbeatâas though it had taken you in too, accepted your offering, and now it wanted to keep you just like he did. Not as a guest. Not as a lover.
As a belonging.
Remmick hadnât let you go.
Not when the kiss ended. Not when your blood slowed in his mouth. Not when your knees gave and your body folded forward into him. His arms had caught you like he knew the shape of your collapse. Like heâd been waiting for it. Like heâd never let you fall anywhere but into him.
He carried you now, one arm beneath your legs, the other braced around your back, his chest solid against yours.
"Donât reckon youâre walkinâ after all that," he muttered, gaze fixed ahead, voice gone syrup-slow and thick with something possessive.
You didnât argue. You couldnât.
Your head rested against the place where his heart shouldâve beat. But it was quiet there. Not lifelessâjust other.
He carried you past rooms you hadnât seen. A library, long abandoned, lined with crooked books and a grandfather clock that had no hands. A parlor soaked in velvet and silence. A door nailed shut from the outside, something heavy breathing behind it.
You didnât ask.
He didnât explain.
The room he took you to was nothing like the others.
It wasnât grand.
It was personal.
The windows here were narrow and high, soft light slanting through the dusty glass in thin gold ribbons. The bed was simple but large, the sheets dark, the frame iron-wrought and worn smooth by time. A single cross hung above the headboardâbut it had been turned upside down.
He set you down like you were breakable. Sat you on the edge of the bed, knelt once more to remove the slip still clinging to your body, inch by inch, as if undressing you were a sacrament.
"Yâever wonder why I picked you?" he asked, voice low as the hush between thunderclaps.
Your breath stilled.
"I thought it was the blood."
He shook his head, his hands pausing at your hips.
"Nah, dove. Bloodâs blood. Yours sings, sure. But it ainât why I chose."
He looked up then, red eyes gleaming in the half-light.
"You remind me of the last thing I ever loved before I died."
The words landed like a stone in still water.
They rippled outward. Slow. Wide. Deep.
You stared at him, breath shallow, your skin bare under his hands, your throat still warm from where heâd fed. The room held its silence like breath behind gritted teeth. Outside, somewhere beyond the high windows, something moved through the treesâbranches bending, wind pushing low and humid across the landâbut in here, it was only the two of you.
Only his voice.
Only your blood between his teeth.
"WhatâŠwhat was she like?" you asked.
His thumbs drew circles at your hips, but his eyes drifted, not unfocusedâjust distant. Remembering.
"She had a mouth like yours. Sharp. Didnât know when to shut it. Always speakinâ when she shouldâve stayed quiet." A smile ghosted across his lips. "God, I loved that. I loved that she ainât feared me even when she shouldâve."
He exhaled through his nose, slow.
"But she didnât get to finish beinâ mine."
Your brows pulled.
"What happened to her?"
He looked back at you then, and the heat in his gaze returnedânot hunger, not even desire, but something deeper. Possessive. Terrifying in its tenderness.
"They tore her from me. Burned her in a chapel. Said she was a witch on accountâa what Iâd given her."
Your heart dropped into your stomach.
"Remmickâ"
"She didnât scream," he said, voice rough. "Didnât cry. Just looked at me like she knew Iâd find her again. And I have."
You froze.
His hands slid higher, up your ribs, his palms reverent.
"I donât believe in fate. Not really. But youâ" he leaned in, lips brushing your jaw, voice low like a spell, "you make me wanna believe in things I ainât allowed to have."
You whispered against the curl of his mouth.
"And what do you think I am?"
He kissed the hinge of your jaw.
"My penance," he said. "And my reward."
You shivered.
"You said you saved me."
He nodded.
"I did."
"Why?"
He pulled back just enough to meet your eyes, and his voice dropped to a near whisper.
"âCause I ainât lettinâ another thing I love burn."
You didnât realize you were crying until he touched your face.
Not with hunger, not with heat, but with the kind of softness that had no business living in a man like him. His thumb caught a tear on your cheek like heâd been waiting for it, like it meant something sacred.
"You ainât her," he murmured. "But you feel like the same song in a different key."
His voice cracked a little at the edges, not enough to ruin the shape of it, just enough to prove that something in him still bled.
You reached up, fingers trembling, and cupped the side of his neck. The skin there was warmer now. Still inhuman, still not quite alive, but it held your heat like it didnât want to give it back. You felt the ridges of old scars beneath your palm. The echo of stories not told.
"I donât know what Iâm becoming," you said.
He leaned into your hand, eyes half-lidded.
"Youâre becominâ mine."
Then he kissed you againânot like before. Not full of fire. But slow, like he had all the time in the world to learn the shape of your mouth. His lips moved over yours with a kind of tenderness that made your bones ache. A kind of reverence that said this is where I end and begin again.
When he pulled back, your breath followed him.
The room shifted.
You felt it. Like the house had exhaled too.
"Lie down," he said, voice softer than it had ever been. "Let me hold what I almost lost."
You obeyed.
You lay back against the sheets that smelled like him, like dust and dark and something unnameable. The iron bed creaked softly beneath you, and the candlelight trembled with the movement. He undressed with quiet purpose, shirt sliding from his shoulders, buttons undone by slow fingers, trousers falling away to bare the sharp planes of his body.
And when he climbed over you, it wasnât to take.
It was to be taken.
Remmick hovered above you, breath warm at your lips, hands braced on either side of your head. He looked down at you like he was staring through time. Like you were something he'd pulled from the fire and decided to keep even if it burned him too.
Youâre mine, he whispered, but didnât say it aloud.
He didnât have to.
His body said it.
His mouth said it.
And when he finally eased inside you, slow and steady, filling you inch by trembling inchâyour soul said it too.
His body hovered just above yours, every inch of him trembling with a control you didnât quite understandâuntil you looked into his eyes.
That red glow was dimmer now. No less powerful, but softened by something raw. Something reverent.
Not hunger.
Not lust.
Not even possession.
Devotion.
The kind that didnât speak. The kind that buried itself in the bones and never left.
His hand slid down the side of your face, tracing the curve of your cheek, then the line of your jaw, calloused fingers lingering in the hollow of your throat where your heartbeat thudded wild and uneven.
"Still fast," he murmured, half to himself.
"Youâre heavy," you whispered, not in protest, but in awe. Every breath you took was filled with him.
He smirked, the corner of his mouth twitching in that crooked, wicked way of his.
"Ainât even layinâ on you yet."
You didnât laugh. Couldnât. Your body was stretched too tight, strung out with anticipation and need. Every inch of you burned.
He leaned down then, not to kiss you, but to breathe you in. His nose skimmed your cheek, the edge of your ear, the curve of your throat already marked by his bite. His hands traced your ribs, the sides of your waist, slow and steady, like he was trying to learn you by touch alone.
"Youâre shakin'," he whispered, voice low, thick with something close to worship.
"So are you."
A pause.
Then softerâtruthfully,
"Yeah."
He kissed the inside of your wrist, then the space between your breasts, then lower stillâhis lips reverent as they moved over your belly, your hipbone, the softest parts of you.
"You ever had someone take their time with you?" he asked, mouth against your skin.
You didnât speak.
"Didnât think so," he muttered. "Shame."
His hand slid between your thighs, spreading you againânot rushed, not greedy, just gentle. Like he knew heâd already had the taste of you and now he wanted the feel.
"Tell me if itâs too much," he said.
"It already is."
He looked up at you then, his face half-shadowed, half-lit, and something flickered in his eyes.
"Good."
His cock brushed against your entrance, hot and heavy, and you nearly arched off the bed at the first contact. Not even inside. Just there. Teasing. Pressed to the slick mess he'd made of you earlier with his mouth.
He groaned deep.
"Fuck, you feel like sin."
You reached for him, pulled him down by the back of his neck until your mouths were inches apart.
"Then sin with me."
He didnât hesitate.
He began to press inâslow. Devastatingly slow. The head of his cock stretching you open with a care that felt like madness. His hands gripped your hips as if holding himself back took more strength than killing ever had.
He moved in inch by inch, his breath hitched, jaw tight, sweat beginning to bead at his temple.
"Shitâya takinâ me so good, dove. Just like that."
You moaned. Your fingers dug into his back. You were full of him and not even halfway there.
"Remmickâ"
"I gotcha," he whispered. "Ainât gonna let you break."
But he was already breaking you. Gently. Thoroughly. Beautifully.
He filled you like heâd been made for the task.
No sharp thrusts. No hurried rhythm. Just the unbearable slowness of it. The stretch. The burn. The drag of his cock as he sank deeper, deeper, deeper into you until there was nothing left untouched. Until your body stopped bracing and started opening.
You clung to himâhands fisted in the fabric of his shirt that still clung to his back, damp with sweat. He hadnât even undressed all the way. There was something obscene about it, something holy, tooâthe way he kept his shirt on like this wasnât about bareness, it was about belonging.
"Thatâs it," he rasped against your throat. "There she is."
Your moan was caught between breath and prayer.
He buried himself to the hilt.
And stillâhe didnât move.
His hips pressed flush to yours, his breath shaky against your skin as he held himself there, nestled so deep inside you it felt like youâd never known emptiness before now. Like everything that came before this moment had just been the ache of waiting to be filled.
"You feel that?" he whispered, voice thick, almost reverent. "Where I am inside ya?"
You nodded. Couldnât find your voice.
His lips brushed the shell of your ear.
"Ainât no leavinâ now. Iâll always be in ya. Even when I ainât."
You whimpered.
Not from pain. From how true it felt.
He moved thenâbarely. Just a slow roll of his hips, a gentle retreat and return. It was enough to make your breath hitch, your body arch, your legs wrap tighter around him without thinking.
"Thatâs right, dove. Let me in. Let me have it."
You didnât even know what it was anymore.
Your body?
Your blood?
Your soul?
Youâd already given them all.
And still, he took more.
But not cruelly.
Like a man kissing the mouth of a well after years of thirst. Like a thief who knew how to make you feel grateful for the stealing.
He found a rhythm that made the air vanish from your lungs.
Slow. Deep. Measured. His hips grinding just right, dragging his cock against every place inside you that had never known such touch. Every stroke sang with heat. Every breath he took turned your name into something more than a sound.
"Fuck, I could stay in you forever," he groaned. "Like this. Warm. Tight. Mine."
You dug your nails into his shoulders, legs trembling.
"Please," you whispered, though you didnât know what you were asking for.
He did.
"Beg me," he said, dragging his mouth down your neck, over the bite heâd left. "Beg me to make you come with my cock in you."
"Remmickâ"
"Say it."
You were already gone. Already shaking. Already his.
"Make me come," you breathed. "PleaseâGod, pleaseâ"
His smile was sinful.
And then he fucked you.
His rhythm shiftedâno longer slow, no longer sacred.
It was worship in the way fire worships a forest. The kind that devours. The kind that remakes.
Remmick braced a hand behind your thigh, hitching your leg higher as he thrust harder, deeper, dragging guttural sounds from his chest that you felt before you heard. The bed groaned beneath you, iron frame clanging soft against the wall in time with his hips. But it was your body that made the noise that filled the roomâthe gasps, the breaking sighs, the high whimper of his name torn raw from your throat.
He kissed your jaw, your collarbone, your shoulder, not like he was trying to be sweet but like he needed to taste every inch he claimed.
"You feel me in your belly yet?" he growled, words hot against your skin.
You nodded frantically, tears pricking the corners of your eyes from the sheer force of sensation.
"Say it," he panted, each thrust brutal and beautiful.
"Yesâyes, I feel you, Remmick, Iâ"
"You gonna come fâr me like a good girl?"
"Yes."
"Say my fuckinâ name when you do."
His hand slid between your bodies, finding your clit like heâd owned it in another life, and the moment his fingers circled that aching bundle of nerves, your vision went white.
Your body seized around him.
The sound you made was raw, wrecked, something no one but him should ever hear.
He kept fucking you through it, hissing curses through his teeth, chasing his own high with the rhythm of a man whoâd waited centuries for the perfect fit.
And then he broke.
With your name groaned low and reverent in your ear, he came deep inside you, hips stuttering, breath ragged, body shuddering with the force of it. You felt every throb of his cock inside you, every spill of heat, every ounce of him taking root.
For a long, suspended moment, he didnât move.
Only the sound of your breaths tangled together.
Your sweat mixing.
Your bodies still joined.
"Thatâs it," he whispered hoarsely, pressing his forehead to yours. "Thatâs how I know youâre mine."
The house exhaled around you.
The candle sputtered in its jar, flame dancing low and crooked, like even it had been made breathless by what it had witnessed. Somewhere in the walls, the wood groanedâsettling. Sighing. Accepting.
You didnât move. Couldnât.
Your body was a temple razed and rebuilt in a single night, still pulsing with the memory of his mouth, his weight, the stretch of him inside you like a secret only your bones would remember. Every nerve hummed low and soft beneath your skin, like your blood hadnât figured out how to move without his rhythm guiding it.
Remmick stayed inside you.
His body was heavy atop yours, but not crushing. His head tucked into the curve of your neck, the same place heâd bitten, the same place heâd worshipped like it held some holy truth. His breath came slow and ragged, the rise and fall of his chest matching yours as if your lungs had struck the same pace without meaning to.
"Donât move yet," he muttered, voice wrecked and hoarse. "Wanna stay here just a minute longer."
You let your hand drift through his hair, damp with sweat, curls sticking to his forehead. You carded through them lazily, mind blank, heart full.
He pressed a kiss to your throat. Then another, just above your collarbone.
"You still with me?" he asked, quieter now.
You nodded.
"Good," he murmured. "Didnât mean to fuck the soul outta ya. JustâŠcouldnât help it."
You let out the softest laugh, and he smiled into your skin.
His hand slid down your side, tracing the curve of your waist, your hip, the spot where your thigh met his. His fingers moved slowly, not with lust, but with a kind of quiet awe.
"Yâknow what you feel like?" he whispered.
"What?"
"Home."
The word struck something inside you. Something tender. Something deep.
He lifted his head then, just enough to look down at you. His eyes had faded from red to something darker, something richerâgarnet in low light. The kind of color only seen in blood and wine and promises too old to be remembered by name.
"You still think this is just hunger?" he asked.
You blinked at him, dazed.
"It was never just hunger," he said. "Not with you."
The silence between you was warm now.
Not empty. Not tense. Just quiet, the kind that comes after thunder, when the stormâs rolled through and the trees are still deciding whether to stand or kneel.
You felt it in your limbsâheavy, humming, holy. The afterglow of something you didnât have language for.
Remmick hadnât moved far.
He still blanketed your body like a second skin, one arm braced beneath your shoulders, the other tracing idle shapes across your hip as if he were still mapping the terrain of you. His cock, softening but still nestled inside, pulsed faintly with the last of what heâd given you.
And he had given you something. Not just release. Not just blood. Something older. Something that whispered now in the place between your ribs.
You turned your head to look at him.
His gaze was already on you.
"What happens now?" you asked, barely above a whisper.
He didnât answer right away.
Instead, he ran the back of his fingers along your cheekbone, down the side of your neck, pausing over the place where his mark had already begun to bruise.
"You askinâ what happens tonight," he murmured, "or what happens after?"
You blinked slowly. "Both."
He let out a breath through his nose, the sound tired but not cold.
"Tonight, Iâll hold you. Long as youâll let me. Wonât leave this bed unless you beg me to. Might even make ya cry again, if you keep lookinâ at me like that."
You flushed, and he smiled.
"As for afterâŠ"
He looked past you then, toward the ceiling, like the truth was written in the beams.
"Ainât never planned that far. Not with anyone. Just fed. Fucked. Moved on."
"But not with me."
His eyes snapped back to yours. Serious now.
"No, dove. Not with you."
You swallowed the knot rising in your throat.
"Why?"
His jaw flexed, tongue darting briefly across his lower lip before he answered.
"âCause I been alone too long. Lived too long. Thought I was too far gone to want anythinâ that didnât bleed beneath me."
He leaned closer, forehead resting against yours, his next words no louder than a ghostâs sigh.
"But youâyou made me want somethinâ tender. Somethinâ breakable."
"That doesnât make sense."
"Donât gotta. Nothinâ about you ever has. And yet here you are."
You let your eyes drift shut, just for a moment, and whispered into the stillness between your mouths.
"So I stay?"
He didnât hesitate.
"You stay."
The candle had burned low.
Its glow flickered long shadows across the wallsâyour bodies painted in gold and blood-tinged bronze, limbs tangled in sheets that still clung with sweat and want. The house had quieted again, the way an animal settles when it knows its master is content. Outside, the wind threaded through the trees in soft moans, like the Delta herself was eavesdropping.
Neither of you spoke for a while. You didnât need to.
Your fingers traced lazy patterns across Remmickâs chestâover his scars, the slope of muscle, the faint rise and fall beneath your palm. You still half-expected no heartbeat, but it was there, slow and stubborn, like heâd stolen it back just for you.
He watched you. One arm draped across your waist, his thumb stroking your bare back like you might fade if he stopped.
"You still ainât askinâ the question you really wanna ask," he said, voice rough from silence and sleep.
You paused.
"What question is that?"
He tipped his head toward you, resting his chin on his knuckles.
"You wanna know if I turned you."
Your heart gave a traitorous flutter.
"And did you?"
He shook his head.
"Nah. Not yet."
"Why not?"
His fingers stilled. Then resumed.
"âCause you ainât asked me to."
You looked up at him sharply.
"Would you?"
A long beat passed. Then he nodded once.
"If it was you askinâ. If it was real."
Your breath caught.
"And if I donât?"
His gaze didnât waver.
"Then Iâll stay with you. âTil youâre old. âTil your hands shake and your bones ache and your eyes stop lookinâ at me like Iâm the only thing that ever made you feel alive."
Your throat tightened.
"That sounds awful."
He smiled, slow and aching.
"It sounds human."
You looked at him for a long time. At the man who had killed, who had bled you, who had tasted every part of youâbody and soulâand still asked nothing unless you gave it.
"Would it hurt?"
His hand slid up, fingers curling beneath your jaw, tilting your face to his.
"Itâd hurt," he said. "But not more than beinâ without you would."
The quiet stretched long and low.
His words hung in the space between your mouths like smokeâsomething sweet and terrible, something tasted before it was fully breathed in.
Your chest rose and fell against his slowly, and for a long time, you said nothing. You just listened. To the house settling around you. To the wind curling past the windows. To the steady thrum of blood still echoing faintly in your ears.
And beneath it allâ
You heard memory.
It came soft at first. A shape, not a sound. The slick thud of your knees hitting the alley pavement. The scream you didnât recognize as your own. Your brotherâs blood, warm and fast, pumping between your fingers like water from a broken pipe. His mouth slack. His eyes wide.
You remembered screaming to the sky. Not to God.
Just up.
Because you knew Heâd stopped listening.
And thenâ
He came.
Out of nothing. Out of dark.
You remembered the slow scrape of his boots on the gravel. The silhouette of him under the weak yellow glow of a flickering streetlamp. You remembered the quiet way he spoke.
"You want him to live?"
You didnât answer with words. You just nodded, crying so hard you couldnât breathe. And heâd kneltâright there in the bloodâand laid his hand flat against your brotherâs chest.
You never saw what he did. Only saw your brotherâs eyes flutter. Only heard his breath return, sudden and wet.
And then he looked at you.
Not your brother.
Remmick.
He looked at you like heâd already taken something.
And he had.
Now, years later, lying in the hush of his house, your body still joined to his, you could still feel that moment thrumming beneath your skin. The moment when everything shifted. When your life became borrowed.
You looked up at him now, breathing steady, lips parted like a prayer just barely forming.
"Iâve already given you everything."
He shook his head.
"Not this."
He pressed two fingers to your chest, right over your heart.
"This is still yours."
"And you want it?"
He didnât smile. Didnât look away.
"I want it to keep beatinâ. Forever. With mine."
You stared at him.
You thought about that alley. About your brotherâs eyes opening again.
About how no one else came.
And you made your choice.
"Then take it."
Remmick stilled.
"Donât say it unless you mean it, dove."
"I do."
His voice was barely more than a breath.
"You sure?"
You reached up, touched his face, fingers tracing the sharp line of his jaw.
"Iâve never been more sure of anything in my life."
His eyes shimmeredâdeep red now, alive with something wild and tender.
"Then Iâll make you eternal," he whispered. "And Iâll never let the world take you from me."
He didnât rush.
Not now. Not with this.
Remmick looked at you like you were something rareâsomething holyâlike he couldnât believe youâd said it, even as your voice still echoed between the walls.
Then he moved.
Not with hunger. Not with heat.
With purpose.
He sat up, kneeling beside you on the bed, and pulled the sheet slowly down your body. His eyes drank you in again, but this time there was no heat in them. Just reverence. As if you were the altar, and he the sinner whoâd finally been granted absolution.
"You sure you want this?" he asked one last time, voice soft, like the hush of water in a cathedral.
You nodded, throat tight.
"I want forever."
His jaw clenched. A tremble passed through him like heâd heard those words in another life and lost them before they were ever his.
He leaned down.
His hand cupped the back of your head, the other settled flat on your chest, palm over your heart.
"Close your eyes, dove."
You did.
And thenâ
You felt him.
His breath. His lips. The soft, cool press of his mouth against your neck. But he didnât bite.
Not yet.
He kissed the mark heâd already left. Then higher. Then lower. Slow. Measured. Your body melted beneath him, your hands curling into the sheets.
And thenâ
A whisper against your skin.
"Iâll be gentle. But youâll remember this forever."
And he sank his fangs in.
It wasnât like the first time.
It wasnât lust.
It wasnât climax.
It was rebirth.
Pain bloomed sharp and brightâbut only for a heartbeat. Then the warmth flooded in. Then the cold. Then the ache. Your pulse stuttered once, then surged. It was like drowning and being pulled to the surface at once. Like everything youâd ever been burned away and something older moved in to take its place.
He held you as it happened.
Cradled you like something delicate.
His mouth sealed over the wound, drinking slow, but not to feed. To anchor you. To tether you to him.
You felt yourself go limp. The world turned strange. Light and dark bled into each other. Your breath faded. Your heartbeat fluttered like wings against glass.
And thenâ
It stopped.
Silence.
Stillness.
And in the space where your heart had once beatâŠ
You heard his.
Thenâ
Your eyes opened.
The world looked different.
Sharper.
Brighter.
Every shadow deeper. Every color richer. The candlelight burned gold-red and alive. The scent of the night air was so thick it choked youâsmoke, soil, blood, him.
Remmick hovered above you, lips stained crimson, breathing hard like heâd just returned from war.
And when he looked at youâ
You saw yourself reflected in his eyes.
He smiled.
"Welcome home, darlinâ."
Another issue regarding x reader fics is that some of you weirdos will tag it x reader and then precede to sneak in descriptors of the reader in the storyđ€ą âlong blonde hairâ âher pale skinâ and etc. Hotd and Outerbanks fic writers are the main culprits of this bs
literally, itâs so frustrating cause itâs already rare to find a oc who is black in the hotd or got universe so for people to put the velaryon!oc when they are pale or a bastard is just annoying asf
BLACK HOTD FANS
So as someone who loves to write and read(and my writing being ass) I was wondering and putting this off for a while if yâall want me to continue to write for Aemond and/ or start writing for any other characters?
And to my black authors writing for HOTD I love and appreciate yâall so much, like as a black girl who grew up loving fantasy and not seeing girls who look like me I love yâall so much and this makes me so happy seeing us being written in this genre. đ€
Ps. For is this comes across any other side of the HOTD fandom STOP CALLING YALL OCS VELARYON IF THEY ARENâT DAEMON AND LAENA CHILDREN OR RHAENYRA AND LAENOR CHILDREN!!!
â Thanks Management đ€
donât care what shade just reblog.
Literally
The way Atreides!Reader or Targaryen!Reader basically implies white most of the time lol.
Happy, carefree college days meet their abrupt end when every guy who approaches you mysteriously turns up dead.
Warnings: NON-CON, Stalking, Bimbo!Reader, Clueless Reader, Loss of Virginity, Incel Ethan, Cheerleader Reader, Skin Carving (w/knife), Canon Typical Slashing, Voyeurism, Kidnapping, Forced Masturbation, Filming, Blackmail
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đŠđŠđŠ.
đŠđł.
đł.
đłđŠ.
đłđŠđŠ.
đłđŠđŠđŠ.
đŠđ”.
đ”.
đđđŠđ©đŹđ€đČđą
âThere,â you let your sisters know. âSheâs barren no longer. Sheâll have a child now and fear my pain. Soon sheâll pay. Son for a son. â
THIS GAVE ME CHILLS SHE ATEEEE
A/N- I'M SO EXCITED FOR WHAT'S TO COME!!!
Warning- Sswearing, fluff, incest, violence, ANGST, death!! Dark magic and sacrifice, talks of pregnancy and THERES ALSO CHANGES THAT DRIFT AWAY FROM THE SHOW
Pairing- Jon Snow x Targaryen!fem-reader
(Let me know if you want to be tagged)
ââââ
Thereâs a ruined Red Keep that you stand in, two cradles stand in the middle. Snow falls through the gaps on the ceiling, this time albeit itâs slow and so life-like, the bitter breeze that swirls the snowflakes on the ground actually feels cold. Once again just before you can see the babies inside their cradles, the fire begins to grow around you, but this time it's flames actually provide heat and slightly blind your eyes.
You expect the dream to end there and then as it always does, but this time the fire lingers, you donât abruptly wake up, the fire only grows taller almost as if trapping you inside. The heat intensifies, making you turn your head away and shield your eyes. The silence lingers thereafter and the fire's heat doesnât change anymore, so you slowly turn your head and put your arm down, thatâs when you catch a figure in the fire, it grows taller as it gets closer.
This hasnât happened before, you never stayed this long. This isâŠdifferent, something new. Is it the meaning behind this dream?
You narrow your eyes out of curiosity even if your heart is beginning to race out of fear. The figure grows taller the closer it gets, and then when it reaches the edge a shadow casts on the ground before an armored metal boot breaks out of the fire wall. Instead of stepping away even if you have nowhere to go, you stay put and watch the rest of the figure walk out of the fire, revealing herself as a slim woman with silver-gold hair; braided and bound in golden rings. Her eyes are an intense and unique pale lilac color that almost seems to burn as hot as that fire as her glare pierced in you. She shouldn't be unfamiliar but you do recognize her now as the fires light basks her intense majestic face.
Itâs Queen Visenya Targaryen.
She is your namesake.
What is she doing here? In this dream? This isnât an answer, it's only more confusion.
Yet before you can grow mad with confusion, from the corner of your eye you catch another figure emerging from the firewall at your right side. this time itâs a man, a very tall man with a thick and broad appearance, heâs built like a bull. His hair is blond, and his eyes are a deeper lilac. His gaze is as intense as the Queens, but he looks even more intimidating. And just like before, you recognize him too, heâs King Maegor Targaryen.
But why?
âWhatâs going on?â You ask the pair, the mother and the son.
But thereâs no answer, instead a third person appears this time from your left side. Itâs a woman, sheâs older than the others, slimmer than Queen Visenya, she has a fair complexion and a high forehead. Her eyes arenât the same color as the others, theyâre blue. And like the others there is a name that comes to mind, Queen Alysanne Targaryen.
âWhatâsââ this time you donât finish your repeated question because another figure emerges from the fire between Visenya and Alysanne, itâs smaller and the moment their face shows your face falls with disbelief and your eyes fill with tears, and your heartâŠ.that shattered thing begins to fill with joy and warmth.
âRhaenar?â Your voice quivers.
He moves his arm away from his brown eyes and finds you in the middle of the fire circle, and instantly smiles. âMother!â He exclaims, and before you knew it you were both running towards each other to meet with a tight embrace.
âOh my sweet boy,â you cry and hold onto him, you draw in a deep breath and take in his scent. âMy Rhaenar.â Your breath shudders.
The boy laughs softly and holds onto your neck with force.
âIâm sorry,â you interject and pull back to grab his cheeks and face him, now you notice that his face isnât burnt, his face is okay here. His curls are so neatly formed and all over his face. âIâm sorry. I failed you, Iâm so sorry.â
Rhaenar wipes your tears away and shakes his head with a sweet smile on his face. âItâs alright mother. Iâm okay, Iâll be fine. Donât cry please. Iâll always be with you.â
You shake your head and now grab onto his shoulders. âNo. No Iâm not ready to be without you, I need you with me in real life. Not here, not in my dreams.â
Rhaenar draws out a deep breath. âTheyâre not dreams really.â He scoffs. âItâs all real in a way. This place, itâs just been different for everyone, but for you, grandfather says itâs different, youâre the only one whoâs seeked far enough to reach all of us. This plane.â
Your eyes narrow slightly, and your eyebrows furrow in comfuson. But the first thing you question is what he mentioned moments ago. âGrandfather?â
Rhaenarâs grin widens. âIâm not alone here mother, I have so many people here, family. But most importantly my grandfather! Heâs been with me the entire time.â He nods and then looks back, when you follow his line of gaze you see the man he speaks about with so much glee, Rhaegar Targaryen, your father. He emerges from the fire too, with his long silver-gold hair, his deep blue eyes, and a faint smile on his pale face.
His presence fills you with nostalgia, familiarity, and there is a spark of joy, but that soon gets overpowered by the anger, burning fury.
âI know,â he says in that voice youâve missed hearing sing to you. âI know youâre upset my girl, butââ
âNo!â You cut him off and stand up to your feet to stride towards him. âNo! You!â You sneer and point at him. âItâs your fault! Itâs your fault I grew up without my mother, itâs your fault my sister and brother died!â You reach him and shove him back with that same anger. âItâs all your fault this all happened to us! To our family! You left me! You left us! You left! How could you do that?!â
Your father ducks his head out of shame and swallows thickly. âI will never forgive myself for what happened to your mother and your siblings, but itâs something I wonât regret.â
You scoff and step back.
âIt had to be done. To complete the prophecy. Which it has, Jon, Daenerys, you.â He lifts his head and meets your gaze with awe. âThree heads to our dragon, my darling. We did it.â
You clench your jaw and shake your head. âAt what cost?â You snap at him. âMy son is gone. Heâs dead! Daenerys killed him! He was only 10!â You rebuttal. âItâs true the dead are gone and Iâm glad that they are, but nothing else matters anymore because so is he. So I ask what now?â
âNow you rule,â a different voice cuts in. When you snap your eyes to where it comes from you notice that it was Queen Visenya. âYou will revive the Targaryen dynasty. You will take back what your father destroyed.â
You swallow thickly and rebuttal. âDaenerys rules now. Isnât that enough? I canât lose more, Jon, my children that have yet to be born.â
Footsteps step forward from your left side and a sweeter but still rather stern voice speaks. âYou stay there in Winterfell and youâll die too. Your children will always be a threat to her, will you see them die too?â
You snap your eyes to the left and meet Queen Alysanneâs gaze with a glare. âLike hell. I wonât lose them. But you have her, let her rule, itâs not like our family hasnât killed their own kin before, why not her? Why me?â
âBecause she killed your son,â a different voice adds from the fire.
You look towards the flames again and see a different women come out from within them, this woman had a thicker waist compared to the other two, her silver-gold hair was in a long braid as well. She was ethereal as all the others, but also intensity followed within her gaze. You knew her too, a lot quicker than the others, after all she was one of your favorites, that is before she actually ruled; Queen Rhaenyra Targaryen.
âBecause you are the one meant to restore our glory, rule like we couldnât,â she says and begins to approach you. âIf she rules, sheâll commit the same mistakes and wipe out the Targaryen name. Itâs you who is meant to sit on that throne, your children shall follow, the ice and fire that our prophecy foretold. I know,â she mutters softer now. âWhat it is like to lose a sonâŠbut you arenât me, use your anger, use your power, use your kindness and take what belongs to you, for your son. For all of us.â
You let out a shaky sigh, but donât let anymore tears fall now since youâre beginning to be filled with inspiration and anger once again at the memory of what Daenerys did.
âYou have a good heart my dear,â your father interjects, pulling your attention to him again. âUse it, be noble, donât lose what you already have. Those you keep close will carry you through this, but remember to be firm, fearless, stern and unforgiving to those who truly deserve it.â
You sigh but nod. You then look at Rhaenar, but before you can speak your last words to him, a deep husky voice cuts in from your right.
âDonât be like your father, girl,â Maegor says and begins to walk around you, as if heâs stalking you, a prey. âDonât be foolish, and donât live in the clouds,â he scoffs and shoots your father a dirty glare. âUse your fury, your dragon is your best friend, use your strength and power. Take care of business like me.â He stops by his mother and shoots you a malicious smirk before he looks at his mother with a smirk. âBurn her. Burn Daenerys Targaryen.â
You offer him a nod and shoot him a faint smirk before you face Rhaenar one more time. âI will always, always love you my sweet boy. Iâm sorry.â
Rhaenar smiles at you and wipes away that stray tear that falls from your eye. âI love you too, mama. Tell Jon that itâs okay, that Iâll be okay, yes?â
You grin and nod. âOf course.â
He then throws his arms around you and you donât hesitate to hug him back with all your might. You donât close your eyes in hopes youâd stay, and itâs why you notice Queen Visenya approaching you one last time. She meets your watery gaze with an intense and burning determined glare.
âBurn your dead, mourn your losses. You are Queen now.â She mutters before the darkness quickly surrounds you at one second before youâre thrown back to the cruel reality, back to your room, back to the coldness.
At least the sun is out today, itâs light is soft but not warm since it is still dawn. It shouldâve provided an ounce of happiness, but the natural light finally breaking from the clutches of the winter clouds doesnât affect you now.
You sigh deeply and wipe your tears away before you look at the bed and find the spot next to you empty, and when you touch it you notice itâs cold, letting you know that Jon has been gone for a while. And since he is your only source of motivation to keep going right now you get up and change to go look for him.
Yet when you reach the crypts heâs not there. You walk to the gates since maybe heâs out with Rhaegal, yet you donât want to walk all the way over to hills where the dragons are if he isnât, so you look up and speak to the guards at their post. âExcuse me?!â
A man reaches the rail and looks down. âPrincess,â he calls out in surprises and straightens up.
âHas Lord Snow passed the gates?â You ask.
The guard shakes his head. âNo, but I did seem him walk towards the Godswood earlier today.â
You hum and nod. âThank you, sir.â
The guard nods, and you then head towards the Godswood. When you arrive you see the new planted trees begin to sprout where the ashes of the olds ones once stood, leaving a clear view of all the Godswood, and Jon kneeled at the front of the Heart tree.
As to not interrupt his moment of prayer you make sure to slowly approach him, but stop by the frozen lake thatâs by the red leaved tree.
Nevertheless, Jon hears your footsteps and turns around. When he notices itâs you his gaze softens for a moment before the sadness on his dark eyes returns.
âGood morrow,â he greets.
You offer a small smile. âGood morrow,â you return and meet him in the middle of the snow covered field. âIâm sorry I interrupted.â
Jon takes your hands and shakes his head. âI wasâŠdone already. What are you doing out here? Itâs cold.â He touches your belly and smiles. âAre they giving you fuss?â
You grin and shrug. âAlways, but thatâs not what got me to awake up.â
Jon lips pull to a bigger smile and he scoffs softly before he drops his gaze and stares at the snow below his feet with a deep sorrowful frown that makes your sadness return, and brews curiosity.
âWhat is it?â You probe.
Jon lets out a deep sigh and then meets your gaze with a watery look. âI asked for forgiveness from the gods, but itâs you that I truly need to apologize to.â
You slowly knit your brows together in confusion.
âPlease,â he continues with tears escaping out of his eyes. âForgive me. Iâm the reason your son is dead. I didnât reach him in time, I didnât get rid of the men fast enough. Iâm sorry.â Jon drops to his knees and keeps holding your gaze. âI can never make up for what you lost. Iâm sorry.â
Tears threaten to come out of your eyes, but you hold them back and just feel your throat sting more as you slowly get on your knees, and cup his cheeks. âWhat happened is not a guilt you need to carry on your shoulders Jon...â you pause and swallow back thickly. âMy life will never be the same without my boy. It is true, but donât blame yourself. Heâs okay.â You muster a soft smile. âHe appeared in my dreams, he said he was okay, he told me to tell you that itâs okay.â
Jon slowly grows perplexed, but he knows better now so he accepts what you say is true. âBut youââ
âIâllâŠheal soon, but I do know that I have nothing to forgive because I donât blame you, nor should you blame yourself. Please.â
Jon hesitates, so you press your forehead against his and whisper.
âItâs okay, my love. It is. I need you for whatâs to come.â
Jon lets out a shaky breath, and then slowly cups your cheeks and keeps his forehead pressed against yours as he stays silent. You know he wonât doubt you, or try to discourage your new plan so you donât explain whatâs on your mind, you linger in the silence and relish in the warmth that radiates from his hands, from his lips, and from his body.
You donât linger long though since it is cold and the funeral is today. Since you donât have the stomach to eat so much breakfast is quick, itâs the getting ready that takes time. Itâs not easy for you, no matter if you did see Rhaenar in a dream, to get ready for hisâŠfuneral, to mentally get ready to say goodbye one more time. But you still do it, you let the handmaidens dress you in a white dress that is dipped in red at the bottom, so the white-beige color flows to a blood red. You let them put on light makeup and fix your silver-white hair, you put on your gold jewelry, and then before you walk out of your chambers you grab Helios from his cage.
His eyes search the room for the boy he was once bonded to, he calls out for him in soft cries that only smash those heart fragments to smaller pieces. And thereâs nothing you can tell him to comfort him. Absolutely nothing because you know he also knows deep within his little heart.
âCome on,â you whisper to Helios. âLetâs go.â
Once you step out Jon is waiting outside of your shared quarters, he holds your gaze for a moment before he takes your hand to interlace it with his before you begin walking outside, past the gates, to the top of a snowy hill. People begin to part once they see you approach, the Starks and your sisters then break away from their spots behind the crowd and follow you towards the funeral pyre where Rhaenarâs body lays wrapped in a white shroud.
Time moved normally before you walked through the crowd, but once you begin to walk past the people gathered to reach the pyre time began to move slowly as your mind still tries to comprehend that this is all real. That youâre going to say goodbye to your boy forever.
Tears even fail to fall at those moments you walk forward, even when you reach him your tears donât break out from your eyes, no. Even if your heart sinks and a shaky breath escapes from your chest, you donât cry. Instead you let Jonâs hand go and place Helios on Rhaenarâs chest one more time.
The dragon knows, he knew the moment Rhaenar drew his last breath that he was gone and theyâd never see each other again. But the dragon like you held onto hope. Itâs why Helios crawled to Rhaenarâs neck and sniffed him before he began to nudge his jaw so heâd wake up.
You knew you were being foolish, but you waited for a response. When it doesnât come and Helios lets out a broken whine, is when you canât hold back anymore and let a sob escape from your mouth.
Eraxis feeling your sorrow, cries out and fills the silent air with her melancholy song. Helios follows and sings about his own grief, and Rhaegal then joins them too and all three dragons fill the winter air with their sorrow filled songs.
You then drop your forehead on Rhaenarâs and clutch onto his shoulders, you cry and cry until you canât breathe properly, until you canât even stand. Thatâs when Eraxis leans her head forward and tries to wrap her neck around you for comfort and support. It startles some people from the crowd, after all, all they knew about dragons was that theyâre fierce, not that they were also comforting and filled with many complex emotions. It got those who werenât crying already, to shed tears for a boy they hardly knew.
And it was thanks to your dragon's comfort that you were ready, so you scoop up Helios, and as Eraxis raises her head in the sky you turn and walk down the pyre to hand Arya the orange dragon. âItâs okay,â you assure her. âHe wonât harm you.â
Arya pulls the dragon back towards her and holds him fearlessly and with slight pride. Now, as you face Rhaenar again, you take Jonâs hand again and lift your chin to sniffle before you part your lips. Yet you canât muster the word, only sobs.
âItâs okay,â Jon whispers and begins to rub your back. âTake your time.â
Your bottom lip wobbles, and your chest begins to feel tighter and heavier to the point you canât breathe anymore, you turn to Jon and bury your face in his chest. He quickly wraps his arms around you and kisses the top of your head as he caresses your back softly.
âMay he soar the skies in paradise,â Jon interjects. âMay he rest and find peace, may he watch over his family. Iâm sorry RhaenarâŠâ
A moment longer passes before you can face the pyre, before you can part your lips and mutter out the right words that tore at your heart. âDracarys.â
The white dragon draws in a deep breath before she opens her mouth and breathes out fire, bathing the pyre and Rhaenar in her hot and bright red-orange flames.
You stand there in front of the fire, you bask in its heat and let more tears fall out before the anger returns, before that burning fury begins to boil your blood again, bringing back that dream you just had and everything that was said, especially those venomous words spoken by Maegor; âBurn her. Burn Daenerys Targaryen.â
You wonât hold onto hope for your rekindling anymore, you wonât ask for forgiveness. Youâll seek revenge and what truly belongs to you.
Which is why you slowly turn and face the crowd still gathered in front of the pyre. You meet the gaze of Jon before you face them all with a scowl. âI was asked to fight for the throne by all of you,â you interject loud enough so they can all hear. âI declined out of hope, and a dream that I would know a peaceful life and receive Daenerys forgiveness for my future, for the future I carry within me. But now, after she took what I held so dear in my heart, my first born. Now she will know my wrath, and I hope you all can follow me in my path to the throne. It will be another war, devastating no doubt, but once it is done we will finally know peace because she is just like those that came before her, a tyrant lost in her way.â You sigh, but muster a malicious smirk.
âI hope you all follow me. For my son, for you, for me.â You finish.
And thus, without hesitation the crowd begins to cheer, shouting out only one phrase. âQueen Y/N!â
ââ
*DAENERYS. KINGâS LANDING*
A knock raps on her door, echoing in the tense silence that filled her quarters.
âCome in,â she welcomes the visitor, hoping it was successful news of the ambush. Waiting for the news has been keeping her on edge, she could hardly sleep, or keep in one place, she needed to know.
âMy Queen,â a familiar voice she hasnât heard in a long time cuts through the silence.
Daenerys turns quickly on her heels and comes face to face with Daario Naharis, a man she had left long ago in Meereen to enforce peace, a man whoâs appearance hasnât changed, and someone who she canât deny is happy to see. After all he is one of few who hasnât betrayed her, heâs remained loyal even after she broke his heart.
âWhy wasnât I advised you arrived?â She responds with a quirked brow and a faint smirk playing on her lips as he doesnât fail to make her body ignite with lust.
Daario smirks wider and pulls his hand from behind him to show her the wildflowers he held in his hand. âI came on a faster ship apart from the others because I wanted to surprise you.â
Daenerys hums and watches the man slowly begin to approach her.
âIâve brought these,â he says and pushes the flowers towards her.
Daenerys breaks away from her spot to slowly walk towards him, stopping just before she can reach him to let him get close to her instead. He offers her the flowers and she hesitantly takes them from his hand to then raise her chin and hold his warm gaze.
âI would just like to say that you look even more beautiful than before,â he adds. âThe crown suits you.â
Daenerys places the flowers down on the table beside her and crosses her arms over chest to now press him with her gaze alone.
âAh,â he says and clasps his hand behind him. âRight. The ambush happened, yet Iâm disappointed to say that Lord Snow managed to escape with a couple of his men. The ship burned, most of his men aboard died, and a boy traveling with them perished in the fire.â
Daenerys blinks and furrows her eyebrows. âA boy?â She queries.
Daario nods. âYes, Iâm not sure who, but Lord Snow made great effort to take his body.â
Daenerys lips slowly begin to fall, and her arms slowly unfold from her chest as a name begins to circle her mind.
âWere there dragons in the sky?â She asks him with her gaze begining to narrow.
Daario nods. âYes. The creatures burned our ship and helped them escape. There was three of them, a white one, Rhaegal, and a small orange one.â
Daenerys swallows thickly and turns around abruptly to look out at the gloomy white sky, and sighs deeply as sorrow begins to stab at her heart and pain fills her mind.
âWhat is it?â Daario instantly asks and takes a step towards her.
âWheres Greyworm?â She avoids his question.
âI let him take a second break so I could deliver the news to you personally.â
Such a radiant boy he was, young prince Rhaenar. Regardless of the tension that existed towards the end of the relationship between you and Daenerys, he never was rude to her, he was kind and caring. No matter how short of time she had with the boy, she still cared for him because he was family, and now heâs gone and you're heartbroken.
And she canât cling onto the hope that the dead boy is someone else, why else would Jon be so desperate to the take the body, why else would Helios be with Jon. Helios is a small dragon still very much attached to who heâs bound to, that dead boy is Rhaenar.
âThat boy who perished,â Daenerys mutters and approaches her window with tears clouding her eyes. âWas the son of my niece. It was y/nâs son. How did it come to be? I said just kill Jon and the men he was with.â She stops and exhales deeply before she turns to face him.
Daario stays in his spot and shrugs. âI canât be certain. You know how battles are? Unpredictable. All I know is that a fire started on the ship. It was an accident.â
Daenerys scoffs and shakes her head. âShe wonât see it that way. No one on her side will. If she was ready to make peace before, now we can forget about that, especially with Sansa whispering in her ear.â Daenerys clasps her hands in front of her and drops her head.
âYou sit on the throne now,â Daario interjects and steps forward. âTheyâll follow you.â
Daenerys snaps her head up to face him. âNo,â she snaps. âThey wonât. The Reach will rally behind her because of what she gave them, and the future commitment that once bonded them. We canât even count or try and sway Dorne, even dead theyâll never follow another king or queen that isnât her or descended from her bloodline.â Daenerys turns and approaches the balcony to gaze out at the city below.
âThe Vale of Arryn will follow her because of Sansa, meaning the North is also supporting her,â Daenerys continues to tell Daario. âAnd the RiverlandsâŠtheyâll follow the Starks, making for Five great houses rallying behind her, leaving us with two, the Westerlands if I keep Tyrion alive, and the Stormlands...â she pauses and sighs deeply. âThat is if I make our commitment periment with a marriage proposal to the new Warden.â
âAnd so you shall have it,â he assures her with no argument, and finally closes the gap between them to grab her shoulder and turn her to face him. âYou have a fleet, more men. And a dragon experienced in war. You can win this, you only lose if you give up, and I know youâll fight with fire and blood before that happens.â
Daenerys holds his gaze and hums, feeling relieved that she once again had someone she can trust and talk to.
âWeâll get to work right away, fortifying the walls, whipping the men to shape, and making alliances.â Daarios continues to assure her. âNo one will take that throne from you.â
ââ
*WINTERFELL*
Jonâs voice echoes out from the hall, his words are passionate you know they are because he gives good speeches, but right now his words just donât register in your mind, all that you can think about is Rhaenar, the new future that you are now paving with this choice. Anger still fuels you and it's whatâs pushing you, whilst that motivation after seeing your father and ancestors burns in your veins, waking up something that was dorement before, determination to take whatâs yours once and for all.
Itâs why you donât frown, you donât express sadness in your eyes either as Dornish guards make a path and line up across from each other all the way to the end of the hall where Jon, and the maester awaits with your crown. Itâs that burning determination, and that grief that brings you pride as you stand at the end of the lined up guards, with your head up high.
Horns begin to play inside after Jon finishes his speech, letting you finally break away from your spot and create a footprint on the sheet of snow as you begin to stride ahead in between the guards.
The blades they hold above your head begin to fall when you pass them, leaving them to see only your back and the tail of your red dress. When you step inside the warm hall, slowly the people viewing your coronation kneel as you walk past them.
Being here was something you never dreamed about, at least you always thought youâd stand on the platform waiting for your husband to get crowned. Now that youâre here though, now that you see all the people kneel, as you see the guards metal blades glistening against the firelight, you canât help but smile inside. And the moment you take Jonâs hand as you reach the platform a faint smile finally forms on your lips.
Jon mirrors your gesture and then leans forward to press a kiss on your cheek before he shifts to the side and helps you to your knees. Once youâre secured he moves to the side and lets the maester step forward.
âMay the Warrior give her courage,â his voice booms throughout the hall before he daps oil on your forehead. âMay the Smith lend strength to her sword and shield,â he continues and adds more oil on your forehead with each saying. âMay the Father defend her in her need. May the Crone lift her shining lamp and light her way to wisdom.â With that last saying instead of oil he dabs blood on your forehead by your request as a sign of your goals, battles to come, and revenge.
When the maester finishes he turns to set the bowls down to instead grab a golden crown forged partly by the gold jewelry that Rhaenar owned so youâll always carry him with you through this journey as Queen. The maester then turns with the shining gold crown in hand, causing the red shining rubies that are decorated around the crown to twinkle against the firelight. As he lifts the crown you see two small winged dragons holding the red ruby at the center. The moment he places the crown on your head you feel the heavy weight fall on your head, bringing some discomfort.
âLet the Seven bear witness, Visenya Targaryen second of her name is the true heir to the iron Throne,â the Maester adds, causing the crowd behind you to quietly agree.
After that is over Jon leans over and offers his hand, you gladly take it and let him help you to your feet. He then quickly lets you go and kneels before you. It catches you off guard for a second, but you have to remember that you are Queen now and itâs going to happen more often.
Alas, Jon then stands up and drifts his gaze to the crowd. âAll hail her grace!â He exclaims. âVisenya, second of her name, Queen of the Andals, and the Rhoynar, and the First Men. Lady of the Seven Kingdoms and Protector of the realm!â
You draw out a small breath and turn, catching the crowd and the guards kneel. You drift your gaze to the right front row and see Elia and Sarella kneel, Sansa curtsy whilst Arya kneels too. You then look to the left front row and see Ser Jaime kneel, Ser Brienne and her ward kneel, Ser Davos takes goes down too, and then as on cue, Eraxis fills the silence and air with her prideful roar, making you finally smirk.
âLong live the Queen!â Elia is the first to exclaim.
âLong live the Queen!â Ser Jaime follows before everyone inside repeats those words as they get up and clap.
Those who carry swords lift their blades in the air and shout. âQueen Y/N!â
Those words fill your ears and bring happy tears to your eyes as you tug your lips to a smile. When you sit on the wooden chair that was placed on the platform more people cheer, and Ser Brienne approaches the stairs that lead to the platform. She gets on one knee and meets your gaze.
You throw your hand out to silence the crowd, and they donât fail to listen, letting Ser Brienne speak.
âI swear toward the Queen,â she interjects in a loud confident voice. âWith all my strength, and give my blood for hers. I shall take no husband, hold no lands, mother no children. I shall guard her secrets, obey her commands, ride at her side and defend her name and honor.â
Chills travel down your spine, and a soft smile tugs on your lips. You rise up again and bow your head, letting her stand.
âI appreciate your loyalty and devotion, Ser Brienne. Iâd trust no one else but you to be my Lord Commander of the Queensguard.â
Ser Brienne breath draws in a small breath and canât help her proud smile at the mention of the title you just bestowed upon her.
âI leave it to your judgment to choose the other six who should join the Queensgard. When you have chosen the right people you may bring them to me.â You let her know.
Ser Brienne nods in comprehension and stands back up to return to her spot, leaving you to address the crowd to give them an announcement. âEvery ruler needs their most trusted advisor at their side, a friend to confide in. A hand when oneâs pair is full. Someone who is not afraid to hide their thoughts or pass judgment. There are many here that I trust to be that with me, but thereâs one person who I know wonât fail me, Lady Sansa Stark.â
It was a choice that you had discussed before, and one she took with the condition that when this war is over, and if it is you who sits on the throne then she would step down to be Warden and Lady of the North.
âLady Sansa, I name you hand of the Queen.â You finish saying, making said person head to the front to kneel. You then turn and grab the pin from Jon to walk towards his sister and hook the golden pin on her chest.
The crowd makes commotion in support of the choice.
âYou honor me, Queen Y/N,â Sansa says and stands back on her feet.
You offer her a smile and watch her return to her spot so you can continue to announce to the people who else will be a part of your court. âNow with these battles to come I trust no one else to be my Master of War but my dear husband, and your King Consort, Jon snow.â
At the announcement of both new titles the crowd cheers for Jon, while you look over at him and grin. He breaks away from his spot to stand before you and bow his head. Your smile widens, and youâre filled with glee as you get to finally reveal your gift.
âArya,â you call out and meet her dark gaze. âIf you may please.â
Jon looks back at his sister in confusion and follows her every move as she makes her way to you. You fill with more joy and excitement as she reaches into her sack and pulls out a silver crown that looks similar to yours, but is a bit thinner, and has a golden dragon and a golden wolf holding a ruby at the center.
âNow,â you continue and take the crown from Arya. âI know that you arenât one to be so flashy, and youâd be content without one, but it is gift from me to you.â
Jon holds your gaze and sighs softly, but he canât help his faint smile before he kneels, letting you carefully place the crown on his head.
âThere,â you say and clasps your hands before you. âHandsome.â
Jon scoffs softly and then stands back up to fall back at your side, letting you continue so you can finally finish and announce your master of whisperers, Bran Stark of course, and lastly your Master of coin Lord Ben Ashfords son, the heir of the Reach, Bernard Ashford. As to the other positions well, you still have yet to fill. Hopefully youâll get to find the right people soon.
With that said you turn away and head to a different chamber where you will have your first small council meeting that consists of your sisters, Jon, Ser Brienne, Sansa and her siblings, and Ser Jaime.
âYou know you did not have to get me this,â Jon breaks his silence as he walks by your side to the meeting quarters. âThis crown is not necessary.â
You glance at him and smile. âYou are my King Consort, my love, a King needs his crown.â
âI wouldâve been fine with a ring,â he counters, making you giggle for the first time since Rhaenar passed.
âI told you,â you retort and hook your arm around his. âItâs a gift. You donât need to wear it all the time, I just wanted you to have one.â
Jon meets your gaze and hums softly before his gaze softens. âYou need to rest, youâve been on your feet for far too long.â
You roll your head to the side and draw out a deep breath. âYes, perhaps I should, but there are meetings to be had now. You know this isnât easy. But for your comfort after this meeting is over we can retreat to our chambers and take a warm bath together, hm?â
Jon nods softly in agreement. âSounds like a plan,â he assures you. âNot like I could actually refuse you now. You are the Queen.â
You scoff and shake your head. âDonât start with me Jon.â You chuckle softly, causing Jon to watch you with a soft and admiring gaze and smile since he likes the look of your smile and the sound of your laugh after seeing how much youâve been suffering.
Yet it is short lived since that sweet look on your face fades away, and gets replaced by a sad confident look when you all enter the meeting quarters.
Now the burden falls on you, after so much that your family did to try and get you on that throne, and after trying to avoid the burden, you wear the crown now and lead thousands. Now rather than listening on the sidelines you sit at the center and have all eyes on you.
âThank you all for coming,â you address the group as they find their seats around the table. âYouâll have to pardon me for the next couple of meetings. As much as I have studied I still am not used to ruling,â you huff softly and clasps your hands together.
The people around the table donât say anything to you so let out a deep sigh and continue.
âLetâs get to business then. I know not so long ago I turned down Ser Jaimeâs requests of retrieving his brother from the clutches of Daenerys, but now with the sides being drawn, the Westerlands are left undecided. The Lannisterâs may not be a strong house, but their name still holds much value, having both men at our side can benefit us. So,â you say and look at Jaime sitting in the middle.
âSer Jaime, I grant your leave. You wonât have men though, it will attract too much unwanted attention.â
Ser Jaimeâs eyebrows furrow in confusion, and you begin to smirk. âSarella,â you name, causing the woman to straighten up. âArya, you are clever, discreet and able to hide well. Will you accompany Ser Jaime to smuggle his brother out?â
Sarella without a fault nods. âOf course, sister.â She assures you, letting you shift your gaze to Arya. And when your eyes land on her a small smirk tugs on her lips.
âI will,â Arya agrees. âThank you, Queen y/n.â
You offer her a smile and a small nod.
âExcuse me, your Grace,â Lord Royce cuts in. âThe plan is great and all, the Westerlands may not be the largest land, but they are the richest. It will benefit us well, but with sides set, and Daenerys with a patch of new soldiers, entering the city will be difficult.â
You nod and canât help your smirk from widening. âYes. I know. Itâs why while the three of them enter the Red Keep, I will lead a distraction.â
The members of the council all share confused and concerned looks at the mention so you explain your plan, and assure their worry. âIt wonât be a big army, there wonât even be men, the distraction will consist of only women. I unfortunately wonât join the battle at the ground, I cannot,â you scoff and reach down to caress your swollen belly. âIâll be in the skies with Jon, while the women go in pretending to seek refuge and help from Daenerys. Her army will come out and provide assistance, they wonât suspect such brutal attacks from women,â you begin to smirk smugly. âTheyâll think of them as weak, fragile. Thatâs when the army women will strike, I will go in later and burn what remains of the small army. After that Jon and I will lead them out before more men can come.â
âIf it pleases your grace,â Ser Brienne interjects as she takes a step forward so you can see her. âI would like to lead the attack on the ground in your stead.â
You catch the disbelieved stare of Lord Royce, but you have faith in her; just because she isnât like every other typical woman doesnât mean a thing. Itâs sad that men here donât see such a thing.
âOf course you can, Ser Brienne, the army will consist of Dornish women warriors and northern women who volunteer. Any other woman from the other armies of different houses can also join if they please, but we need to keep the numbers small.â
âUnderstood,â Ser Brienne agrees.
You drift your gaze back to the other members. âWe will make that our first attack after the lords pledge their loyalty. With that said, Sansa, what can we expect from the Riverlands?â
Sansa raises her head and parts her lips. âMy mother was a Tully. Our uncle still lives and rules now in my grandfathers stead. I expect we will gain their allegiance, but I think we should still go in person and ask.â
You nod. âAlright. We can go after our first attack, that way Daenerys doesnât get word of our attempts until after. What about the Stormlands?â
âGiven Daenerys gave the Stormlands to Gendry and declared him a legitimate Baratheon,â Jon interjects. âI doubt we can count on his allegiance.â
âBut the boy doesnât know a thing about ruling a kingdom or people,â Jaime argues. âNor does he have the right connections.â
âBut he has the Baratheon name now, he may be a bastard but some people will follow his family name,â Ser Davos defends the man. âSurely the staff at the castle would help.â
âI assume not long, any lord could usurp him,â Jaime counters. âWe can use that to our advantage.â
âAye,â Lord Royce agrees.
You look over at Sansa and ask her a question. âCould we send an envoy to any of the other lords?â
Sansa sighs. âWe could, but we have to think about the risks, if Gendry bends the knee it would benefit Daenerys to strengthen the alliance with a marriage. Sheâd burn any rebellion attempts. We have other kingdoms that take priority if it comes down to a battle .â
âWe could get rid of Lord Gendry,â you suggest. âThat breaks the allianceâbut also turns the Stormlands against us.â
âThen we leave them,â Jon adds. âAs far as resources, itâs only fighters they provide. We have the numbers, we donât need them. If a lord reaches out to us then we can think of a plan, until then we count them as traitors.â
âAnyone disagree?â You ask without trying to argue Jonâs suggestion.
The people around the table shake their heads in disagreement, letting you continue on. â Bran, do you know anything?â You ask the quiet boy.
Bran nods stiffly. âOnly confirmation that Daenerys plans to marry Lord Gendry. As soon as he arrives at the capital.â
Just as Sansa mentioned.
âSmart girl,â you comment. âWith the Stormlands off the table, we also canât count on the Iron Islands. With luck we will gain the Westerlands and the Riverlands.â You let out a small breath and then continue. âAnything else someone would like to discuss?â
Everyone looks around, but no one adds anything, thankfully leading this meeting to an end for today.
âAlright, well you all are dismissed, thank you for attending.â
Everyone disperses out of the room, and you wait for them all to leave before you can. However, Ser Brienne, Ser Jaime, Jon and your sisters linger behind.
âExcuse me, your Grace,â Brienne directs and bows her head as she addresses you. âBut is it okay if I take my leave for today? I would like to start finding the other members for the Queensguard.â
Right that.
âOf course uh, Sarella, Elia,â you call out. âMay you introduce Ser Brienne to some of the commanding officers of the Dornish army. There are some great fighters there you can choose from.â
âYes!â Elia exclaims all too excitedly. âI would love to go.â
Of course she would, she likes to gawk and flirt with the men.
Regardless, they leave but Ser Jaime stays behind still. He takes a moment before he says anything, first he slowly makes his way towards your chair before he finally reveals his thoughts.
âI know I have probably said this, but, thank you. You have been too kind, more than I deserve. You have given me a second chance, and itâs one I donât deserve and one I will live my life repaying. So thank you, Queen Y/N.â He reaches for his sword and then kneels with his hands on his pommel. âMy sword is yours, my Queen. I may not be a great fighter anymore, but I have experience that can be just as valuable. I want to serve you.â
You share a small glance with Jon before you stand on your feet. âThen you shall. I need all the help I can get. And I value your thoughts, Ser Jaime. Just promise that when you see me straying from my moral path that you will help rather than betraying me. Remind me of the people I fight for because some rulers tend to forget who really keeps them in power.â
The corner of Jaimeâs lips tug upward before he nods in agreement. âI will. I swear.â
âGreat. Then if Jon wants you can help him with the armies. You may also help train the soldiers.â
Jaime gets to his feet and accepts before finally leaving Jon and you alone.
âNow,â Jon says and take your hand. âCan I have you to myself?â
You grab onto his arm and drop your head on his shoulder. âPlease, I beg you.â
ââ
*LATER THAT NIGHT*
With the anger fueling through your blood, with fury clouding your mind, sleep was impossible, that hunger for revenge kept you awake and raised a desire in you for something to be done. Something that you havenât touched in a long time, dark magic.
Rhaenar was your son, he was your little boy, and Daenerys took him, she will pay with blood, you will rip everything she has ever loved from her hands so she can feel what it is you feel.
So while the castle is sleeping, while no one can interrupt you, you use the chambers where Daenerys had stayed in to conduct a spell.
âDid you bring it?â You ask Sarella.
Sarella nods and unhooks her cloak to show the small baby in her hands.
You trusted no one else but them, besides the others would only judge you for this dark magic. Elia and Sarella wonât.
âItâs sick,â she mentions. âMother dead, father drunk and with no love for this child.â
You nod stiffly and take the blade from the flames, and watch as the metal gleams red and orange with how hot it is.
âA dragon will never compare to the love you have for your own children. I want her to feel that love, that joy when she holds her child in her arms for the first time. I want to see her care for that child so much more than her own life so she feels an ounce of what I feel.â You sneer to the flames. âBlood for blood. Son for a son.â You glare at the flames and clench your jaw.
You then turn to grab the bowl off the floor, but just before you can you come to a sudden stop as you swear you see Rhaenarâs face in the flames, you swear you see his sweet brown eyes. And a small frown on his face. Itâs only for a second, but you swear you do.
âIâll use my blood that connects us,â you mutter and put the bowl over the fire. You then put your palm in front of you and use the sharp edge of the blade to cut a slash on your palm.
The pain stings and burns, but you just clench your jaw and keep quiet as the blood begins to spill out of the cut. After the slash is made you put the blade down and put your hand over the fire and fist your hand to make the blood pour over the bowl.
âNow, Elia give it to me,â you interject and put your uninjured hand out.
Without hesitation the girl comes to you and hands you a brush. One Daenerys had left behind when she left Winterfell.
âNow Iâll use her hair to connect this spell to her.â You add and pull the strands of hair off the brush and throw it in the bowl. âNow,â you sigh deeply and feel some hesitance and regret. But your pain is much deeper, so you turn regardless, and Sarella hands you the sickly baby.
âThe sacrifice to complete this spell,â you continue and pick up the knife from the floor. You swallow thickly and without thinking deeper into what youâre going to do you slice.
The blood trickles out so you push it towards the fire and let the thick scarlet liquid spill over the bowl. Once the bowl is full you hand the lifeless body back to Sarella. âFeed it to the dragons.â You tell her.
âNow itâs time to finish.â You put the blade down, and put your arms out, you close your eyes and lift your head to begin chanting the needed spell in High Valyrian.
At first you start off quiet, but you get louder and louder, whilst the fire suddenly enrages and sends off sparks and thick smoke as it engulfs the bowl and what it contains inside.
The heat intensifies, bringing sweat to break out on your face, making the dress stick to your skin. The fire's light brightens, making Elia and Sarella shield their eyes.
But the act doesnât last long, it then ends and the heat and brightness fades back to what it was before. Now nothing remains in the bowl anymore. Now the spell is complete.
âThere,â you let your sisters know. âSheâs barren no longer. Sheâll have a child now and fear my pain. Soon sheâll pay. Son for a son.
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A/N- Now do you guys think Daenerys will have a child with Daario? Or one with Gendry?
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