One Who is Many - Foxtrot Uniform Charlie Kilo
Ophelia
King's Landing was many things.
A seat of power.
A mark of history for the past hundreds of years.
A cesspool of scum and villainy the sorts this world would seldom see elsewhere.
But above all else….
"This place smells like shit." Her younger sister put it best as they rode in past the gates, nose screwed in distaste as they took in all the majesty of the ancient port-city.
Ophelia agreed, of course. Had agreed fifteen minutes ago when they were still outside of the walls and the wind had blown the stench to them.
She knew that most of the world probably didn't have plumbing at this point. Something she would have to pitch to her father at a later point. The urge to take over and become the Queen of Pipelines was ever so pressing as they passed by a puddle of unmentionables, likely recently thrown out of a window.
It seemed that, as they'd entered through the king's gate - passing by the city's wharf and dock - up until the king himself passed through people had just been… tossing their crap everywhere. Fish guts, literal human feces, barrels of what she thought might be pure in one case. All in all, it was disgusting, stinking, and rotting. Even Robert was a bit more sullen, almost embarrassed, as their party swiftly pushed along River Row.
Of course, this meant her power was alight with new energy.
Just from a bit less than three city blocks alone she could feel thousands if not hundreds of thousands of small critters. Underneath homes, inside them, bussing freely amidst the populace. And that didn't cover the sheer mass of insects. All lured out by the… plentifulness of the city's filth.
She wasn't talking just about the shit, of course.
"Impressed, my dears?" Her father called from the front, a teasing smile on his face as he took in the uncomfortable looks of his daughters.
Jerk probably knew what they were in for.
"It is… quite unique, father." Tyene, the less… blunt of the bunch offered an answer.
"Hear that, Robert. Your city is unique! Quite a unique smell I dare say."
The King laughed, wine red cheeks pulled back as he guffawed.
"More like shitty! Suppose it takes a while for you Dornish folk to get used to. Not much of anything to smell when it's all sand down where you live at!"
Oberyn laughed with him this time.
'At least Father's fingers stopped twitching. I think he might have given Ser Oakheart a heart attack if he kept inching for his spear.'
Their father was a man of great passions. Great love and great hate. He was also a bitter, angry brother who wanted violent revenge on everyone who so much looked at his lost sister poorly. She had actually caught him brooding over thoughts of what he wanted to do to Gregor Clegane and Amory Lorch. Never mind Tywin, the man he held responsible for her and her children's death.
And now he was laughing and making merry with the man who profited the most from the sack of King's Landing.
She knew better than to take him at his word.
Not when it came to his sister.
"Father is acting a mite suspicious, don't you think?"
"I suppose it takes one schemer to know another."
Tyene favored her with a teasing smile, gracing Ophelia with an indulgent smile at her sister's response.
"You flatterer. You know as well as I do that we are all schemers here. Father is just playing a game with the King."
"Hopefully not the one that gets so many people slaughtered like cattle."
"Oh nothing so macabre. They just want to see how far they can push each other. You see it with these soldier types all the time."
Ophelia dearly wanted to know where Tyene had learned about banter.
Because she had an entire lifetime to draw from and had seen plenty of rough around the edges dock workers ribbing and winding up each other to the point they got into fights. Heard about it all the time from Dad too.
"You think father won't push his luck?"
"Oh he might have while we were outside. It would have been easier to dispatch the knights and kill the King then. But here? Surrounded by witnesses and spies? He can't do anything other than make the King give him an excuse to fight."
"The King seems to share his enthusiasm."
"Why wouldn't he? Stuck behind high walls with no enemy to fight but his own court and nowhere to explore but the bottom of his cup. Father is… a welcome break from his usual days I imagine."
"Speaking of welcome breaks… I can't believe it didn't occur to me now."
Rummaging through one of her saddlebags, she pulled out a bundle of herbs. There were several different pouches, even some that would have been identified as rather expensive. A few that would have been considered dangerous. But, instead, she pulled out a small bundle of leaves.
"Here. Tear these up and rub it under your nose."
Tyene, taking the herbs in question, took a whiff of them first.
"Mint? Oh.
Oh. Aren't you a clever one little sister?"
And just like that, the bundle of fresh mint, picked only a day or so ago, was passed along the group. Oberyn and the king both making a gay time of such a minute thing. Though, curiously, it was Marwyn who caught the group's attention when he refused it.
"No need. Made my own balm."
"And you didn't think to share with your king!?"
Robert cried out, blustering and puffing.
"Of course not. You didn't ask."
The old man chortled and everyone else, save for the kingsguard, greatly enjoyed themselves. In truth, it was the sworn sword of the realm that seemed to be struggling the most with the situation. Robert Baratheon, first of his name, lord of the yadda yadda yadda… was playfully bickering with a prince who clearly wanted to skewer him, taking cheek from a crazed old man, and entertaining the bastard daughters of the aforementioned prince. And the angry, drunken, bitter old man they were used to seeing was having the blinking time of his life.
In fact, by the time they were at the castle, Robert brushing off his counselors and practically dragging Oberyn along to tend to their horses, he was in such high spirits that the whole of the Red Keep seemed a bit… awe struck.
Ophelia, however, was still a bit preoccupied as she was deep in a discussion with Marwyn.
"So ambergris, this whale excretion, that's what the great ships are hunting for? I mean, I'm not saying you speak falsely, but they smell almost as bad as this city. How is perfume made from that?"
"With a great deal of effort." He tapped the tin of his own concoction. "I learned more in two months with the perfumiers of Essos than in a year of study with hedge witches."
"I see." She reached out to her swarm, and, once more, was lost in the sheer weight of
filth. Tapeworms, lice, fleas, ticks, and genital crabs were probably the things that bothered her most. Because, even just in the Red Keep itself, she could
feel them crawling
through people. "Perhaps it's even inevitable. Precision and practice ensure that only the best habits survive amongst merchants. More or less."
He made a noise of agreement.
"Greedy bastards charged me more than the hedge witches did too."
Shaking her head, she, after making sure her own mount was being cared for, began to stroll into the almost gargantuan fortification above her. Even then her swarm was surging forward - lizards and rats mapping out the swarming mass of tunnels and secret passages in front of her. And there were a
lot. An absurd amount even. Practically every third room had some kind of secret alcove or hidden trapdoor or blocked passageway!
"I suppose…."
"Hmm?"
"My apologies Maestar, I was thinking out loud."
"Well, do you feel up to sharing with the class?"
She noticed that even Tyene was listening in, though Elia, Obara, Sarella, and the rest were still with their father and the king. Deciding to extend a bit of trust, she inclined her head to the red stone giant looming above them.
"The giant's body is riddled with… oh… no. It can't be."
Ophelia went pale and Tyene was by her side in a moment.
"What is it? What's wrong!?"
Swallowing, the witch edged forward a particular group of rats, already sending a swarm of spiders and roaches down that particular tunnel.
"Get father. Something's wrong. I… I'm not sure but if what I'm seeing is real then we're in danger." Marwyn stepped forward, taking her arm as Tyene nodded and rushed to warn Oberyn, only stopping to give the Mage a meaningful look. One he pointedly ignored. "Marwyn. Wildfire, it's thick and green, yes?"
Slowly, he nodded.
"When cold, aye."
Cersei
The King liked screaming.
That was what he seemed to do most days.
Screamed at whatever displeased him. Screamed when he was bored. Raved madly about the better days of his youth.
Cersei knew that all too well.
Over a decade of her being saddled with the bitter drunkard did teach her about the man's explosive outbursts and need to be heard all across the city when he very well pleased. It was all too predictable by now.
But there were certain occasions.
Rare occasions.
Where the man would go quiet.
'Burning cold.' Was what father would call it.
A sort of rare anger, completely unlike anything she had ever witnessed of the man who'd rather pine for a dead woman than to see how blessed he was. But it happened. And when it did, Cersei knew better than to goad the man who pushed the Seven Kingdoms into war… and came out the victor.
So imagine her shock when she watched that same drunk failure of a King prowl silently into court with all the rage of a storm. She'd been left speechless… for a few seconds and proceeded to watch as he emptied the throne room of everyone he deemed unneeded.
He hadn't bothered trying to shoo her away.
"What's going on husband?"
Her hair was back, her lips painted, her smile carefully neutral, and even her clothes were modest today. After all, she'd expected him to come back sulking and fuming. But there was also no way she'd let any of her children be around a man as mercurial - and as drunk - as Robert was. Even if they had been his sons and daughter.
The king's eyes turned to her, seeming almost to flash with malevolence and disgust for a moment. And they, grudgingly, dismissed her.
"Treachery."
His words were sullen, telling her everything and nothing. She, of course, felt a sudden jolt of panic. Not that it showed. But, instinctively, she looked for her lover, finding a frowning Jaimie suddenly there. And, even more unpleasant, was the fact that all three of their children were assembled in riding clothes too.
"Selmy, you've got command of the children's group. Take three of your brothers and ten gold cloaks. Move swiftly, I've got a letter for you. You'll board a ship and sail for Dragonstone. My brother will be ready to receive you soon enough."
"Robert…." Carefully eying the Dornish contingent, the Red Viper and his coterie of bastards, she walked closer to him. "What's going on?"
She had half turned to him, half to the room. Her voice was low, an invitation for privacy, but her question asked openly. The impetus was on him how he wanted to respond and she was actually quite worried. Though that did little to change the situation because, quite simply, she didn't understand
why this particular group had been assembled.
Ser Selmy, Ser Oakheart, her Jaimie, Ser Blount, and Ser Moore were all armed and armored, while Sers Greenfield and Trant had finished shooing everyone but the kingsguard, the Prince, his daughters, a Maestar Cersei didn't recognize, and the royal family out of the throne room. Her mind raced as she tried to figure out what was going on.
"I… well." Robert was conflicted, his eyes flickering from her to Joffrey, who, himself, looked confused and a bit scared. "You're no coward woman. And you, boy, will be king one day. You should know." Practically deflating, he slumped onto his throne, still clearly stewing with rage. "There's wildfire in the castle's tunnels. More than one cache and we don't know how many."
"Maegor's Holdfast!" Her words tumbled out, he blinked. "The Holdfast has no secret tunnels. If it's a plot, they'd be watching for us." Still speaking quickly, she tried to get her idea out before Robert rejected it out of hand. He was a stubborn man like that, a bit like her too. "But the Holdfast has only one escape tunnel. We could move the children there, I'll take the letter to a ship with one of the kingsguard and secure it with gold cloaks. Then row the children out once the ship's been brought around."
Slowly inclining his head, he, grimacing, agreed.
"Aye. If spies are able to smuggle wildfire of all things into the Red Keep, we have no idea who we can trust in this city." Turning to his men, he barked out an order. "Selmy! You're with my wife. Lannister, Moore, with the children. The rest of you are to secure row boats and bring them around!
Now!"
The last word was roared, totally at odds with the low conversational tone of the rest of their discussion. And, as if on cue, a servant with a pitcher of wine pushed open a side door into the throne room. Robert snarled in fury, rising to his feet.
"Those leeches are
listening."
Selmy intercepted the king, stopping him from doing something unfortunate, while Greenfield and Blount snatched the man up and practically threw him out of the room.
Her chest was throbbing, in pain from how her heart was beating a violent tattoo in her chest.
"Ser Lannister. You know something?"
Everyone in the room whirled on the girl who spoke and the man in question. She was tall, but slim, such that Cersei couldn't determine her age with just a quick glance. Still, a curdle of ugly, black hatred began to form in her heart at the girl. How dare the lowborn whorespawn accuse her brother of treachery! It was unthinkable, it was unimagina-
"Please Ser Lannister. I saw you flinch when the king mentioned wildfire in the tunnels."
"I…." Her twin prevericated.
"Jaimie! This is madness! She's a bastard! Surely you know nothing about any of this? Have we even confirmed its there?"
"Peace, sister." His smile was charming and disarming all at once, her heart actually beating a little faster. "Your grace." He turned to Robert. "I swear to you - on the blood of my nephews and my niece - that I had no part in any plot against you." Selmy was eying the Kingslayer hard, fingering his sword even, Cersei was even closer to panic than before as the rest of the room seemed utterly confused. "But I do know where the wildfire likely came from. May I speak?"
Robert was positively thunderous, his face was red and he was nearly on the verge of killing someone. Cersei could see that much. Still, she didn't let her face so much as twitch.
"Speak,
lion."
Bowing his head, Cersei watched her soulmate look… regretful.
"It is related to why I slew your predecessor." The whole room was practically circling now. Watching one another and the confession unfolding before them. It didn't escape the queen's notice that the new comers hadn't had their weapons confiscated.
"King Aerys… rightfully feared my father. Or, rather, that King's Landing would fall. He had negotiated with the Wisdoms of the Alchemists Guild for the production of mass quantities of wildfire. Ser Barristan, you can testify to that?"
"Aye. The Mad King spent vast sums on producing an arsenal that he never used. Unless… Gods."
"It's the truth." Jaimie looked ashamed now. "I was attending to him when he ordered Rossart - his Hand after he burned the last one alive - to ignite caches of wildfire placed around the city. I don't know why there is any in the castle, perhaps a last line of defense, perhaps it was simply stored there, or perhaps he thought he would become a dragon as his ancestor once believed so deep in his madness was he." Swallowing, he forged on, even as the room's reception was mixed. "My deepest regret is that my hand wavered for a moment before I slew him. Rossart, though, I killed without hesitation. Even with my oaths I could not let him destroy the city.'
"A well crafted story, but do you have any proof Lannister?"
The name was wielded like a dagger and Cersei was ready to throw herself at her husband's feet and beg for her Jaimie's life when the bastard stepped forward.
"Your Grace, the wildfire is thickened, tacky even. And I have found only the one large stock and a small number of barrels located elsewhere. The side tunnel they're in is mostly earth, leading, I think, to the outside and… down, I'm not quite sure." Her words were measured, slow, the bastard strolling across the chamber to stand next to the still bowing kingsguard. "If it has been so undisturbed for so long that it has thickened, Marwyn the Mage is an Archmaestar and can attest to its violent qualities, then Ser Lannister's words are likely the truth."
Grimacing, she inclined her head as well.
"When I was growing up, I was told the stories of the abuse Aerys inflicted on his sister wife and even on his children and grandchildren. Blinded by insanity such as his… is it truly so unlikely that he would have concocted such a scheme?" Lifting her haid, she met Robert's gaze. "I do remind you, he named fire the royal champion once. Why would he not do so again?"
Slumping backwards, the king considered her small speech.
"Lannister." His voice was low and dangerous again. "Have you any proof at all?"
"None your grace. I hunted down and murdered the other two pyromancers who knew of the plot, Garigus and Belis, and slew them afterwards."
Ser Selmy, grimacing slightly, stepped forwards himself.
"Your grace?" Robert inclined his heading, deigning to let the man speak. "I can only testify that I know the two men in question were found later. One was given a quick death, the other less so. The killing of those men was brought to my attention as they had been part of Rossart's retinue from time to time and their deaths were clearly murders."
"Garigus cried. Begged for his life, but accepted his fate in the end. Belis tried to bribe me."
Actually snorting in laughter, Robert gave a dark smile.
"You are many things Ser Jaimie. But corrupt is not one of them." Nodding, he looked at cersei and the fire in his eyes had returned to a dull simmer. "I suppose I should apologize for alarming everyone." He swallowed. "Get the children's things? Have a room made ready in the Holdfast?"
His order came out like a question and she was stunned. Struck by how much her husband seemed to age before her eyes. In truth, Cersei herself was wavering between shock and awe. Eventually, she smiled, something small and genuine, and turned to her children.
"Come along. Let's get a few things and we'll all stay together tonight. Ok?"
Myrcella looked afraid and was half clinging to sweet Tommen who, not quite understanding what was going on, looked up at her and asked "Might I bring along my cats?"
Joffrey, who was himself shaken too, took her other hand and the four of them walked out of the throne room - three of the kingsguard at their back - as she spoke low and soothingly to her children.
Before she left, however, she turned to the Dornish girl and smiled.
It wasn't much, but Cersei knew she'd have to thank the girl who had just saved her brother's life. Robert truly had been that close to having Jaimie executed there and then, consequences be damned. Instead, from the way the others were speaking, it seemed that he was tentatively being considered a hero.
'I'll have to do something nice for him to celebrate.'
"Ser Trant." One of the attending kingsguard stepped up.
"Yes, my lady?"
"Find us a few servants and have them bring a small meal for the children. I'll also want to make it clear that anything unusual inside the fortress is to be reported immediately. A quick sweep of the Royal Apartments would be appreciated as well."
"Will that be all my lady?"
Pausing for a moment, she shook her head.
"Have the servants bring Robert's favorite pillow to him too. The one with the goose down and purple embroidery."
"Right away my lady."
Oberyn
When he'd agreed to travel to King's Landing, Oberyn expected many things.
For one, he thought he would have tried to kill the King at their first meeting. Something he had surprisingly avoided doing for the time being. Ophelia would be so proud to see him exercising patience, perhaps he might even get a few more free potions as a reward for his good behavior.
Maybe after he tried to kill the King for real.
What he didn't expect, however, was for his clever witch of a daughter to sound the alarm on wildfire caches under the castle as soon as they got there.
Already this trip was turning out to be beyond his expectations.
Of course. While she explained what she found to Marwyn and Pycelle, the king's own maestar, and planned the removal of the wildfire, Oberyn was left to do one of the most important yet dangerous roles of their whole operation.
Babysitting the King.
Or at least stop him from murdering the entire Alchemist Guild.
Scaring them was definitely fine. Maybe killing the most stubborn of them. But Doran had plans and Oberyn had a letter and so he was doing his best to stop another man from crushing a perceived threat to his family.
'Huh. This actually makes me feel a bit dirty.'
"Robert, the man is clearly about to soil himself. And I know your city already smells like shit, but does your throne room need to as well?"
The king, who was currently glaring at one Wisdom Hallyne - head of the alchemists guild - had, had the man dragged in twenty minutes ago. And then just sat there… glaring at him… while two of the kingsguard held the man on his knees. Frankly Oberyn would have been impressed if he wasn't tired and a bit peckish. And missing his paramour.
"At the very least can we let the servants back in? I'm not trying to complain here, but you have a pillow and I don't. And I'm
very tired."
Grunting, the Baratheon slumped in the Iron Throne, eyes staring out with the slowly dimming embers of black rage that had so recently threatened to consume him.
"I'm still deciding whether or not I should kill the Lannister."
"And that's your right. But you can't exactly blame a pyromancer for making wildfire. It's what they are paid to do."
The king rounded on him, much to the relief of the pyromancer.
"And what, pray tell, should I do about all the wildfire they stored under my castle?"
"Well, you can't kill them all. Who else knows how to move the stuff without turning this place into a burning crater?"
And therein lay the problem. Someone had to be punished for all that mess, but the alchemists were the only ones who knew how to move wildfire without causing an incident. Something they couldn't trust any random worker to do under the Red Keep.
Besides, Doran needed those Alchemists alive.
"You're telling me to just let them go?"
"I'm saying not to kill them now. Wait until this mess is done with. Otherwise, just blame the Mad King. Every mess seems to go back to him somehow." Oberyn yawned. "Besides, my lord-" He nodded to Hallyne. "Do you even have any idea what we're talking about?"
"No sir, I do not."
Despite looking rather terrified, the man's voice was firm, unwavering. Only slightly high from the pain. Oberyn's respect for him went up a good two notches. Commensurately, so did his desire to keep the man alive. If he wasn't absolute trash then just killing him would be a waste. And that was just wasteful.
"Oberyn, why are you laughing?" Robert sounded confused even as he looked at the Red Prince like the man was mad.
"Oh? I was? Sorry about that. Anyways, he says he had nothing to do with it, the Lannister says he butchered the little piggies that did, and there's still Seven knows how many barrels of the stuff in the castle and in the city." Grimacing, the prince continued. "Aside from sand - and I suppose I would include my daughter's minds in that - I know of no way to deal with it if it were to ignite. So maybe we bring him into this… grand conspiracy of ours and let him prove his worth."
Shaking his head, the king still struggled to grasp this opportunity.
"And why should I parlay with witches, no offense to your daughter, she's lovely by the way, and doddering old men playing with themselves and their fancy whale oil?"
Oberyn let his eyes fall to half open, his hooded gaze radiating smugness.
"Because, like I said, you can always blame Aerys if anything goes wrong… or take credit for it if it goes right. Plus the wildfire in question has already been paid for by the crown."
That got a barking laugh for the fat man sitting on the pointy throne.
"You want me to burn my enemies alive!? Speak sense man, I know how to trim my nails!" Slapping his knee, the man was practically besides himself with laughter. "Never mind that magic always has some awful, vague cost that damns you in the end, why wouldn't the whole ruddy guild be supporting the Dragon Spawn and praying for their return."
"Aye. And fire is the weapon of the dragon."
Opening his mouth to retort, what Oberyn was finally hinting at clicked into place.
"Oh.
Oh." Sitting back, he stroked his beard. "A feint. I… hadn't considered that. A feint or a false blow either, all hiding the fact I just want to be rid of all these leeches and cock suckers and fools." Snorting, he shook his head. "No. I'm not mad enough to emulate the dragon. I won't burn my court alive just because I don't like them… no matter how much I may want to at times."
Oberyn could literally see the man's mind at work, churning away under those bushy brows of his, trying to actually think for the first time in years. Thankfully he had never been an unintelligent man, no matter how prone to excess Robert had been.
"Very well. Damn it all, it seems I won't be able to kill anyone today at all." Jabbing his finger at Lord Hallyne he glared at the man as he spoke. "You'll have a work crew of your best here tomorrow at dawn. I want this castle swept, we'll get the witch girl to lead you about the place after I pronounce her innocent."
That got a raised eyebrow from Oberyn.
"While that news pleases me, you're not even going to pretend to deliberate?"
"Would I even be alive right now if she was guilty?"
The Red Viper merely smiled at the question, his fingers twitching towards his knife.
"Hah! Now. Let him up. After you finish clearing my castle, you'll do the same for the city. Selmy will be with you when he can be spared and another kingsguard when he can't. We'll cover this up with a story about… about…."
"Sewer renovations, your grace?"
Nodding at the Wisdom's wise excuse, the still rather disappointed man, he really did hate not being able to protect his children, waved his hand.
"Aye. And you're receiving a royal commission to survey the city for that or whatever. Anyways, I want the wildfire secured. If this all goes well I'll see about not locking all your order's members in your guildhouse and setting it on fire."
"You are most merciful, your grace."
Despite undoubtedly being sore, if not bruised and strained, the pyromancer still managed a shaky bow.
"Feh. I'm irritable and angry. Now get out of here. I've got a wife and children to see."
And with that excuses were made, agreements to meet later exchanged, and Oberyn, who had a letter tucked in his coat pocket, quickly jogged towards the exit of Maegor's holdfast. Thankfully Lord Hallyne was an old man and moved slowly, letting him catch up to the pyromancer quickly.
"Prince Oberyn." His eyes were wary, but he clearly didn't think he was about to lose his head this second. That bade well for this conversation. "I suppose I should thank you for my life. But I fear the fact we're having this conversation means I'm still a bit indebted to you."
"Come now, can't a noble prince escort a fellow lord to his horse and men?"
Hallyne didn't even feign a chuckle, simply lifting two white eyebrows in incredulity.
"This is King's Landing my prince. If you were to actually do so out of the goodness of your heart I would fear myself drugged. Still-" The old man relaxed a bit more when Oberyn chuckled. "My entire guild likely owes our continued existence to your words. It is the rare man that can sway Robert when he puts his mind to things."
Waving his hand, the prince dismissed the praise.
"Hardly. It is simple if you know how he thinks. And besides, I do not block his strikes, merely parry them."
Nodding along, the pyromancer agreed.
"Wise when the king swings a hammer and all the world is a nail. Though that does not answer the obvious question. What do you expect in payment?"
Reaching into his coat, he plucked out the letter he'd just been thinking about.
"Read this if you would."
Frowning, the old man did so, picking up a candle sat in a nearby alcove to better see in the dim light of the castle. It took only a short time, it was a short letter after all, and by the end he looked a mixture of wariness and ecstatic joy.
"Is this real? Not some cruel jest?"
Holding his hand over his heart, Oberyn gave a slight bow.
"From my brother's hand to yours."
"I - this - my brothers must know of this." Hesitating for a moment, he glanced at the candle meaningfully. "Should I burn it or can I show it to them?"
Choosing his words carefully, and glad they were still in Maegor's Holdfast, he figured that brutal honesty would be the best solution.
"If this is
discovered before the plans are finalized, and I am fully authorized to negotiate in my brother's name, then I shall reveal it is to be a birthday gift for my daughter. With all the attendant camp expected of a young woman being entertained."
Flinching at the mere thought of his order being humiliated as such, the old man eventually conceded that was a good idea.
"The Martells are indeed well known for your… spontaneity, so I think that would be believed. Still, I will go quickly and summon the other Wisdoms. If this is true, then our very survival will be in your hands." Straightening his back, the old mage bowed as deeply as he could, clutching the letter as tightly as he dared. "Thank you, my prince. We will not disappoint you!"
With the candle replaced, the Lord Hallyne seen to his horse and the escort of several burly apprentices, and his daughters safely in their own room, Oberyn sighed to himself.
"I am an amazing spy. Truly, just a
wonderful master class of subtlety."
In truth, making contact with the Alchemists was a secondary objective he'd been completely willing to ignore in favor of protecting his daughter. Thankfully, though, he hadn't needed to murder the entire court and his daughter would safely be declared innocent by the king tomorrow. That would be best for Robert's health, after all.
"You know, considering how truly awe inspiring my daughters are, I wonder if my next one will be a god?"
Strolling his way down to a brothel he'd been recommended earlier, he couldn't help but wish his paramour was with him. After all, there was nothing like six nubile young women worshipping your body to ease the discomforts of an aching back and tender breasts. And he was also feeling a bit… lonely. He really hadn't been away from his whole family in years now and it was strange not having them by his side.
While on the road, it had been easy to view things now as simply an extended hiking trip. But it could be months or even a year before he returned.
'Still, with one of my daughter's discovering a decade old plot to destroy the city the very day we arrived, I'm sure they'll have proved the existence of grumkins, found a clutch of dragon eggs, dueled a demon, and defeated the Others by the time we leave the capital.'
And with that though, he stepped through the doors of a tastefully gauche whorehouse and started looking for the half dozen most attractive whores he could rut with until he stopped feeling lonely.
Ophelia
"You've certainly made an impression on them, dearest sister."
Ophelia felt like palming her face in frustration.
"I don't think now is the time for chit chat, Tyene."
"No, it is time to save King's Landing from suffering a fiery death the likes which father must have dreamed over for over a decade now. He must be quite torn over it."
"You and I both know he would never accept anything short of his own spear claiming revenge. We are simply… making sure he has that chance in the future."
"By keeping this place from going up in flames?" Elia chimed in from her bed.
"Your words, not mine."
Pulling a nightgown on, the witch double checked her swarm, making sure that their quarters were actually secure, Ophelia poked her head through the gown and straightened out her still damp hair.
"Also, you know none of the spies can actually see us in here, right?"
Completely nude, Obara was currently looking over and cleaning every single one of her knives. Her whip, already oiled and wrapped up, sat next to her while Sarella maintained her bow, and Elia her spear. Ophelia's own weapons were, of course, just as well maintained, but she didn't quite feel the urge to put on the rather absurd display her sisters were.
After all, the eldest sister was currently working on her
twelfth knife.
"Additionally, I'm a bit confused on where you kept all of those blades."
"You have your secrets little sister, I have mine."
Obara's line actually sounded a bit cool, with utterly bloodthirsty she looked in the flickering candle light, but Ophelia wouldn't think of admitting that out loud.
"I will simply say that anyone that attempts to force entry into this room would be swarmed by every beast in the castle and eaten alive."
Elia giggled at that.
"You already showed off earlier, you don't have to do it again, you know?"
Ophelia did the mature thing. And threw one of her pillows at Lady Lance.
"I'm sorry, next time you wanna stay at a castle, I'm not gonna tell you about the lethal fire traps under it."
Elia's mature response was to grab one of her own and lock swords with the Witch of Dorne. Their sisters laughed as the two youngest began to batter each other with the pillows in some reenactment of a past glorious battle.
"Don't you find it suspicious though?" Sarella cut in. "That Ophelia just happened to run into a plot to set this place aflame? I can't help but wonder if it wasn't set up so that she would find it?"
"Ever suspicious, aren't you." Tyene said. "Not everything has to be a conspiracy, Sarella. Sometimes stupid people do stupid things and are caught. Besides, do you doubt the sincerity of our sister?"
A pillow hit Tyene.
"Don't put words in my mouth, Tyene." The adventurer hissed. "I am just suspicious of the intentions of those around us."
"Ah… so you feel this might be an attempt to target us?"
"Not just us. Don't you think it's strange that Ophelia, the one they wanted to single out, was the only one who could have found the wildfire? There is something strange happening, Tyene, and we don't know what it is."
"Then perhaps we should leave it be?"
The older sister turned to the resident witch.
"You want us to just ignore this?" Sarella repeated, dumbfounded.
"If we don't know enough to suspect anyone, then it doesn't matter how long we discuss this. We'll learn more in the days to come."
"So you do think someone's out to get you."
Ophelia rolled her eyes.
"Everyone has someone out to get them, Sarella. It's the reason I'm here to begin with."
Besides, she had already started the process of seeding every room and corner of the Red Keep with her eyes and ears. Very soon, she would be able to see and hear every plot and scheme being concocted behind closed doors.
Even now, she could feel them.
The thousands of critters and vermin which called the Red Keep their home.
She could almost see them in her mind's eye. Skittering, crawling and buzzing through the hold stone of the castle.
Almost like a web, weaved under the cover of night.
"All we need to do is prepare for when our enemies make a mistake." She concluded.
And that was the final word. Obara, sleeping in the bed closest to the door, was on a low bed and practically spooning a small arsenal of weapons. She, as was her want, slept nude. Sarella and Elia, both wearing night clothes, were sharing a second bed on the far wall. Elia was closest to the wall, with Sarella blocking her from line of sight. Tyene and Ophelia had likewise opted to share a bed.
Or, rather, Tyene had opted to share a bed with her and the witch didn't feel up to telling her no. And right now she was wearing a birthday present she'd actually made her.
It was a rather fine thing, only somewhat sheer, and made of spun golden thread. Unlike cloth of gold it was light and smooth and soft, sliding like water between her fingers. Because the silk was flawless, almost supernaturally so, and matched well with the blonde's coloration. All the product of a thousand wasps working in concert.
The light shift smelled like home.
An ugly feeling gnawed inside her chest.
How long ago was it that Sunspear had started to feel like home? It was where Ophelia was born, raised, taught, and loved by some of the most caring people she'd known from both her lives.
It was natural.
So why… did she feel guilty?
It was so long since she thought about Brockton. About her past. She chose to move past it a long time ago, yet now, for some reason, she couldn't help feeling like she was all too quick to forget about that life.
'To forget about….'
She felt herself be pulled, back lying comfortably against the silk of her own making.
"Tyene?" She turned slightly to face her sister.
"You look concerned."
Has she? Her back was turned to the blonde the entire time.
"I'm sorry… I…." She thought of something to say.
"You don't need to tell me." The beatific Snake gave her a warm smile, motherly. "You must have a lot on your mind. It's just how you've always been."
And that was that.
There was no more to say. Tyene slowly rubbed her back, letting Ophelia's mind drift away, slowly seeping into every creature her thoughts touched. Even other humans, in that space between wakefulness and sleep, were not so alien to her. Letting that own sense of peace, of home, of comfort seep through her, into them, she eased nightmares and settled rest. Not that she would remember doing such, mind drifting as it was, and thus it was with a watchful patience that the rest of life in that accursed place settled in.
Spiders many eyes watching from silver threads. Rats squeaking and tussling in corners as their whisker twitched. Even a one eared black tom cat passed by the girl's small window, pushing against the crook of glass and stone to settle in for the warm summer night.
But then sleep fully took her.
The land of life and light was gone, into that other realm where the mind is free to drift and expand.
White snow crunched under her bare feet, but the ice did not bite, did not sting. It was almost comforting, how gentle its touch was. Cold winds cut at her, screaming and crying and wailing in misery and agony as they lashed out. Yet she did not feel them. Their freezing rage was impotent and quickly spent, settling into a sullen, defeated silence. There, then, a blasted, frozen wasteland was revealed to her.
Some massive black stone fortification sat, half rumbled over, as rime crusted battlements and the slumped forms of armor and weapons suggested men.
Though she saw no bodies, smelled no death, for even in a frozen battlefield as this there would still be some stink. Some hint of the slaughter concealed under patches of white, blotting snow. Somehow it was oily and thick, sticking to her skin and sliding off all at the same time. But what struck her was that, in the distance, seated on the back of some great, undulating serpent - though truly her mind could scarcely give name to what it was she saw, other than blackened flesh and bone white scales coiling about far, far too many heads - was a man.
Short, almost, when compared to the vastness of his mount. He seemed gentle, still, as if waiting.
Waiting for a long, long time she grasped.
His hand outstretched she saw, fingers blue and made of liquid, flowing ice.
But it was eyes.
Soulless.
Dead.
Vast.
Powerful.
As if it was a soul so great and terrible as to be beyond anything living, terrible in its might and awe, crowned in an aurora that even then wept as light heralded darkness.
Those eyes grew and grew, glimmers of something
other showing through. A hint at the being beyond the temporal, a glimpse of the truth this ice crowned spirit hinted at. Love, of a sorts, spreading as the dead from thousands of years past stood and saluted him.
With a gastly, rasping noise - dead flesh and brittle bone scraping against one another - they formed into legions. In lockstep they marshalled themselves, ready to take up the piles of arms and armor she saw before. Only now there were shivering, living, frightened men within them. Feral in appearance, there was little too them. Frost bitten, worn down, and utterly fearful, they wavered and prepared to rout when something happened.
A great caw struck her as a swarm of ravens descended, each bird firing darts and felling scores with their weapons of glittering black feathers.
Reaching up, the far monster cried out something that made no sound yet deafened her and the worm her rode did something
blasphemous. The land itself shook, buckling and writhing, and the flock of ravens were struck at over and over again. Each time another bird fell and she saw that it was too a man. Human and bird in one.
But their work had been done.
The legions of the dead had died again on the spear points of the living, though they too had mostly died and lay still, and, by the very end, only one raven remained.
Possessing three eyes, it cawed and struggled and vines and roots burrowed into its flesh, dragging it into the depths of a weirwood tree so vast it seemed to blot out the very sky. Flesh and bark united, the roots of the tree lashed out and grabbed at the mighty worm, strangling it and crushing unholy flesh with a grip as steel. But, before it was victorious, that
thing's master had slain the last of the living, his legion already rising again as they marched north.
Blinking in confusion, her body
freezing, Ophelia woke up.
Realizing she was outside - and in nothing but her nightgown - she had awoken in the roots of an ancient oak. An oak which had a face carved in it. Shivering, teeth clacking against one another, she pushed against the heart tree for warmth like a desperate, dying babe. And, perhaps it was a trick of her mind still caught in that dream, but it almost looked like the boughs of the mighty living temple bent down to shield her.