Chapter Forty-Six: The Butcher’s Terms (PT. 2)
Added 2025-03-04 06:30:03 +0000 UTCChapter Forty-Six: The Butcher’s Terms (PT. 2)
Lucerys had never liked silence. Too much space for thinking. And thinking, in times like these, was a dangerous thing.
The fog still clung to the dips and hollows of the land, reluctant to part, as if even the mist itself had the good sense to hesitate before stepping onto this field. Rook’s Rest lay behind him, its walls crouched low in the distance like an old dog waiting to see who came out of this mess alive. Before him, open ground, damp earth, a few wind-blasted trees standing lonely on the ridge. And four men waiting in the dull morning light.
Aemond stood at their head, because of course he did. The bastard always wore his importance like a second cloak. One eye, sharp as a dagger, watching as Lucerys and Daemon approached.
To the prince’s left, his younger brother Daeron, softer of feature but standing straight-backed and knightly, as if that meant something. Then the two others, dragonriders both, though neither bore the name Targaryen.
The man—Addam, Daemon had called him once—had the look of a Velaryon, more or less. Silver hair, dark skin, all the hallmarks Lucerys had sought greedily ever since he truly understood what they meant. But the woman? No one knew her name, not even Daemon. She had none of the usual refinements. Rough-hewn, like she’d been carved from lesser stone. She stood apart, her gaze wary but sharp.
The two sides came to a halt, close enough that Lucerys could see the details of their armor, the little movements of their hands. Far enough that a sword wouldn’t reach, but not so far that a quick man couldn’t close the distance if treachery reared its ugly head.
Silence stretched between them.
Lucerys shifted his weight, tried not to feel the way his stomach was tightening like a badly-knotted rope. Aemond’s gaze flicked over him, slow, deliberate, lingering just long enough to let Lucerys know he was being measured. Weighed. Found lacking, most like.
Daemon, never one to let a moment go unspoiled, exhaled sharply through his nose. “Well?” he said, voice rough as the waves against the rocky shore. “You called for a parley. Here we are. I don’t care much for standing in empty fields this early in the morning, so speak your piece.”
Aemond did not so much as blink. “I have come to give you your terms of surrender.”
A pause. Then Daemon laughed, short and sharp. “Surrender,” he repeated, as if the word had a bad taste. “Gods, you’ve been spending too much time with Otto.”
Aemond didn’t react. Might as well have been a statue, save for the faintest tilt of his head.
Sighing, Daemon gave a theatrical wave of his hand. “Oh, by all means, let’s hear what we’re refusing.”
Aemond laid out his demands like he was reading off a ledger.
The dragons, save for Caraxes, would be taken to the Dragonpit in King’s Landing and chained. Hatched, unhatched, eggs still in their nests, it mattered not. All of them would be surrendered.
Rhaenyra would renounce her claim. Not just quietly, but publicly, for all of Westeros to see, at a tourney of all things. She would kneel before Aegon and call him king.
Aegon the Younger would be taken to King’s Landing as a “guest,” though Lucerys had a guess at what sort of guest he’d be. As for himself and his brothers? They’d be required to “acknowledge their true parentage,” and bear the name Strong, rather than Velaryon.
Dragonstone? Gone. Taken by the Greens, no longer Rhaenyra’s by right or might. And as a final flourish, exile. The lot of them—Daemon, Rhaenyra, Lucerys and his remaining brothers—gone from Westeros for good. And should they dare return without explicit royal permission, well, that would be a short conversation.
Then, as if the rest wasn’t galling enough, the indemnity. The cost of war. The price of their rebellion, to be paid in gold and treasures and whatever else Aemond felt was owed. Valyrian steel, if they had it. The last of the gold from the Iron Bank, if it still remained.
Aemond finished speaking.
The wind stirred the grass, made the trees in the distance rustle and snap. No one moved. No one spoke.
Then, at last, Daemon let out a long breath through his nose. He tipped his head, lips quirking. “Is that all?” he asked in a voice low and edged with mockery.
Aemond tilted his head, watching, weighing, measuring. “You should know,” he said, his voice as smooth as still water, “that I offered better terms before. And I assure you the next ones will be worse. For your family’s sake, you would do well to consider that.”
Daemon spat at the ground. His boot crushed the spit into the dirt as he turned. “Come,” he said to Lucerys, already walking away.
Aemond’s voice was slow, careful, amused. “Is that your answer, uncle?”
Daemon did not look back. “Go fuck yourself.”
Lucerys could feel the tension shift, could feel something shift in Aemond’s bearing. He did not need to turn to know One-eye was smiling.
“I had thought you’d be wiser with age,” Aemond said. “But it seems I gave you too much credit.”
Lucerys dared a glance back. Aemond was watching them go, his stance easy, his hands loose at his sides.
“Put on your riding leathers,” The bastard called after them. “We will be coming to take your heads in half an hour. Do make sure the duel isn’t too dull, uncle. I’d hate to be disappointed.”
Lucerys swallowed.
Daemon did not slow. Did not acknowledge the words. Just kept walking, long strides cutting through the damp grass.
Lucerys had to hurry to keep pace. His hands felt cold. His stomach felt hollow.
He had always known this day would come. Had always told himself he was ready.
He had lied.
Comments
TFTC!
Psyren1596
2025-03-04 22:53:02 +0000 UTCGot the four of them posing like a band for their album cover.
JustaDude
2025-03-04 08:23:43 +0000 UTCThanks for the chapter!
Almaz Zakytkazy
2025-03-04 07:10:03 +0000 UTC