Dąεŋεŗγş Sŧσŗɱɓσŗŋ (
song_of_fire) wrote in
farsickness2020-02-08 05:44 am
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Seeing the Wonders of the World
WHO: Daenerys and OTA
WHEN: 02/7 - 2/12
WHAT: Arrival, settling in
WHERE: Gazin and around
WARNINGS: None, will update if necessary.
Arrival
For a time, as she wandered towards the town, Daenerys had assumed that she was still in the Red Sea. Drogon was gone and the Dothraki scout had disappeared, but the vast wilderness was largely the same. But as her senses adjusted and the shock wore off, it was clear that these two worlds were very different. Without a dragon or her silver to ride, she could only walk to the nearest village or safe haven.
"Gazin", a sign had said. It wasn't familiar and didn't sound like anything from Essos, but it was the nearest and only choice. The sun bared down on her as she reached the outskirts, tired and thirsty, exhausted from the walk and after effects of whatever she had eaten. She hadn't reached the town fully, but needed a moment to catch her breath, finding a large stump to lean on. She could see the town better, the outlines of buildings and houses. Soon enough she would hear the people and smell the scents of village life.
Another figure was walking from the opposite direction, a wanderer no different than her. She smiled as they neared, still tired, but hoping perhaps they might have water. It didn't look it. "Are you lost as well?"
Around Town
There was at least an explanation in time. This place was Gazin, it was another world and they had been brought here by outside forces with no clear indication of when they could leave. There were others from worlds she never heard of, creatures and magic that baffled her, but apparently existed in their realms. With that sort of knowledge, it made meeting others easier in her mind.
Apparently coin was a necessity to, but with few skills outside of ruling, there wasn't much she could offer. Thankfully there was an apothecary who needed an assistant to run errands for him and collect herbs in the mornings. He was too old and too fat to manage, allowing her a bit of freedom to move and work, truly learning by action and involvement.
The better part of the day was delivering commissioned potions or ordered herbs. It allowed her to walk through the village and see the others around her, not simply the natives but those settling in as she was. With an empty basket, she loitered near a few stalls, purchasing something to eat.
"Are you hungry? I could pay for it?"
WHEN: 02/7 - 2/12
WHAT: Arrival, settling in
WHERE: Gazin and around
WARNINGS: None, will update if necessary.
Arrival
For a time, as she wandered towards the town, Daenerys had assumed that she was still in the Red Sea. Drogon was gone and the Dothraki scout had disappeared, but the vast wilderness was largely the same. But as her senses adjusted and the shock wore off, it was clear that these two worlds were very different. Without a dragon or her silver to ride, she could only walk to the nearest village or safe haven.
"Gazin", a sign had said. It wasn't familiar and didn't sound like anything from Essos, but it was the nearest and only choice. The sun bared down on her as she reached the outskirts, tired and thirsty, exhausted from the walk and after effects of whatever she had eaten. She hadn't reached the town fully, but needed a moment to catch her breath, finding a large stump to lean on. She could see the town better, the outlines of buildings and houses. Soon enough she would hear the people and smell the scents of village life.
Another figure was walking from the opposite direction, a wanderer no different than her. She smiled as they neared, still tired, but hoping perhaps they might have water. It didn't look it. "Are you lost as well?"
Around Town
There was at least an explanation in time. This place was Gazin, it was another world and they had been brought here by outside forces with no clear indication of when they could leave. There were others from worlds she never heard of, creatures and magic that baffled her, but apparently existed in their realms. With that sort of knowledge, it made meeting others easier in her mind.
Apparently coin was a necessity to, but with few skills outside of ruling, there wasn't much she could offer. Thankfully there was an apothecary who needed an assistant to run errands for him and collect herbs in the mornings. He was too old and too fat to manage, allowing her a bit of freedom to move and work, truly learning by action and involvement.
The better part of the day was delivering commissioned potions or ordered herbs. It allowed her to walk through the village and see the others around her, not simply the natives but those settling in as she was. With an empty basket, she loitered near a few stalls, purchasing something to eat.
"Are you hungry? I could pay for it?"
no subject
He's been here for a few days now, so is no longer wearing his armor but rather something he got from Gazin. There's nothing about him that indicates that he's from Westeros other than the look of a Stark. His sword is at his waist and there's a knife tucked in his belt. He's not comfortable enough yet to go around without them.
He slows as he gets closer to her. "I'm just on my way back into town. I can show you where the inn is, if you need somewhere to stay." Which he's guessing she does.
no subject
She rises from the stump, her legs still a bit wobbly from under her. Her muscles ached and her head still hurt from the sun pouring over her. Was it whatever made her ill in the Dothraki Sea? She can't say, only that she wants to rest so deeply.
"Thank you. Do you know this village?"
no subject
"It seems like any number of villages I might have visited back home." If he had visited a lot of villages.
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"I wish I could say the same." She urged him to pause, taking a moment to gather her breath and let the dizziness pass. "This is nothing like Mereen or the Vaes Dothrak. What does it cost to stay at the inn?"
no subject
"It is possible to get the innkeeper to allow you to delay payment for a few days, though I don't think he'll go much longer than that." He'd managed it, at least, and then had started doing a few odd jobs for the innkeeper until he could pay with coin.
no subject
He was handsome, even on second inspection. It was a difficult fact to ignore, but she knew that handsome faces could hide dark betrayals.
"Who are you?"
no subject
"Jon Snow." He doubts the name means anything to her, but at least it gives away his Northern heritage. "We met -- will meet, I suppose -- on Dragonstone. I came to you for assistance."
no subject
"Dragonstone?" She was almost breathless at the thought. She had set aside those plans for the protection and safety of Meereen. To have someone claim she later sails for Westeros made her heart swell. "I must be very old by then."
no subject
"It wasn't that many months ago." And before she asks: "There's less than a year between us in age."
no subject
"You seem rather young now."
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"I'm the oldest of the Starks still living." Which doesn't mean he's not young. It just means there's no one else to go to for this, and protecting the North is now his responsibility. Even if he's not a Stark by name. "I was born not long after Robert's Rebellion ended." Which gives her an idea of his age, and how it compares to hers.
no subject
She pulled away, stumbling back as she looked at him. If they spent time together, she must have trusted him. He never attempted to harm her or betray her as Ser Jorah had. "I have no memory of this."
no subject
"The inn isn't far from here. Anyone should be able to direct you to it." If she'd rather do it that way.
no subject
"I need your help making it there. I fear I will collapse without it."
no subject
He's silent for a moment before finally asking, "Do you have a problem with the Starks?" He'd noticed her pull away, and he remembers the accusations on Dragonstone.
no subject
She doesn't want to live that way, to be as paranoid as Viserys was. But nearly being poisoned hadn't helped.
no subject
"The Mormonts are sworn bannermen of the Starks. Ned's the one who exiled him. I wouldn't put too much stock in what he has to say." At least he'd agreed to help defend Winterfell and all of Westeros, but probably only because Ned wasn't around anymore.
"Ned Stark was the most honorable man I knew. He didn't do things just because he could."
no subject
Life wasn't kind that way.
"If I am to disregard Ser Jorah's bias, do you not speak with bias of your own? Should I countenance that?" It's more a question to see how he responds. She didn't think much of Ned Stark, now or otherwise. Given what Ser Barristan said, she knew the story was more complicated.
But the question would at least let her get a glimpse of Jon's thinking.
no subject
"It's not just me. He was highly regarded throughout the North. All of the Starks are. There's a Mormont named after Lyanna." She'd been the first to call him a Stark, to give him a place to belong in the North, and that was enough for him. "Not just within the North, either. Stannis Baratheon once told me how honorable he thought Ned was." Though he doesn't expect the word of a Baratheon is enough for her either.
"He kept me safe. Protected me, raised me as part of his family, when he didn't have to." He can't imagine Ned Stark doing anything other than protecting his sister's son though, whether she had asked it of him or not. He doesn't know what Ned's opinion on the matter had been, but he'd raised his nephew without complaining. "Not everyone would have done that, and if that gives me bias, then so be it."
One thing that Starks are is loyal.
no subject
She only knew the Starks through stories and it was at their hands her family suffered. Convincing her of their honor was difficult from the outset, and while she would reflect on this later, she wanted to see more how Jon Snow would frame this, how he would approach it. Who he was would be shown more clearly in how he regarded and viewed those he cared for. Viserys would never have spoken softly about her or as tenderly as Jon spoke of his father.
That alone told her that he had a gentleness in him, a kind she had never really known before in her life. "If you were loved then there was love he could give. He was capable of it. Some are not. I am glad for you."
no subject
"He and his lady wife even loved each other, even though they were strangers when they married."
no subject
"I imagine their marriage wasn't the result of a peace agreement. That may have helped."
no subject
"No. She had been meant to marry Brandon Stark, until..." The Mad King burned him alive. "He died."
no subject
"My father was cruel." He was a monster, to be frank, but the words were too frightening to say now. Not when she was still struggling with her own place in the world and with who and what she was.
no subject
"That doesn't mean that everyone else was." He knows the story about Rhaegar isn't true, but he doesn't know what is true. And while he is trying to reconcile things Sam told him about Danaerys with his own feelings, he also realizes that the one he's talking to hasn't done those things yet.
He knows what it means to be a Stark. He has no idea what it means to be a Targaryen.
no subject
"Rhaegar would have made a better king." It was the worst that she could say against her father, her king. Even when Viserys was at his worst, she was still loyal to him and called him her king. She would have given him everything she had just to see him be a better man, but that was too far gone now.
no subject
She never met her brother, but she seems to know something about him.
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"He is still loved and admired even now. Ser Barristan spoke well of him."
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"Robert's Rebellion should never have happened."
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She pressed her hand to her head, feeling the steady thrum of pain at her temples. "I would have had a home, a family."
no subject
They're only a few feet from the inn, where he spots a couple of chairs in the shade outside. He leads her over to one and makes sure she's sitting in it before he continues.
"Ned Stark wasn't my father." He can only hope that this makes sense at some point. He doesn't know how else to tell it. "He was my uncle. Lyanna Stark was my mother."
She must know the story. She must have some idea of what that means, right?
no subject
"I thought you said he was your father?" She asked, her mind finally wrapping a little around what he was saying. It was a paradox, a paradox for a woman still half with fever. "'Rhaegar's lady', that was what Viserys called her. The Usurper's lies never reached Essos."
no subject
Her comments provide further confirmation of what he'd already been told, which he no longer doubts. He can't anymore, not after everything. "She was his wife."
Not that he can prove any of this.
no subject
She closed her eyes, trying to focus and push away the twisting of her stomach.
"Do you mean to say you are a Targaryen?"
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"I expect that dragon would never have let me ride him if I weren't."
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Everything he said, they were just words and the words pained her heart deeply.
"Enough," it was said in a firm voice, but the vulnerability was clear on her face. "My brother's children were killed, slaughtered. There is no one else."
no subject
He doesn't need to be reminded of the children who came before him, either. They had the same father he did, only they didn't have someone to protect them.
"This is the inn. The innkeeper is willing to provide rooms for new arrivals, and meals, and defer payment for a couple of days." So she has some time to settle in before figuring out what comes next.
no subject
She couldn't let herself believe yet, not when it meant risking her heart for more hurt.
"It means I have to find a way to make some coin."
no subject
no subject
"Thank you for your help."
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"If you need anything else, I'll be at the stables."