dammitmasa (
dammitmasa) wrote in
munebox2013-09-10 12:14 pm
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Call me Out
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- Refer to the list above for an active muse. -
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- Prose or commentspam are fine! -
- Start with a scenario or give a prompt for one you'd like to see.
Preferences:
- I don't play for shipping, fluff, or smut. If it arrives naturally, I'll play it. But not as a starting point.
- In universe, AUs, crossovers, post-game, or other situations are cool.
- I will play prose or brackets, but definitely prefer prose.
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"Does he mean to sacrifice me to the Seven?" There was a touch of bitter irony there. Wherever he was, somebody wanted to spill his blood because of his father.
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"I believe his ambition stretches to you. If madmen and monsters are permitted to sit the Iron Throne, why not a base-born son? He dreams big."
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Gendry gaped at her. Surely she had to be mad. Tommen was Kind of Westeros. And even if he were to die, the throne would go to his uncle, wouldn't it? And if something happened to him...
His knowledge of politics didn't extend that far. But he came back to the idea of it again and then he could only laugh.
"You shouldn't mock a caged man. I'm as likely to become King as I am to sprout wings and fly out of this cell."
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Petyr Baelish understood that to achieve the impossible, you first had to assemble the improbable. And assembling and dissembling where two of his great strengths. Pitch a twice-burned maiden in the direction of a man with a ghost of a claim, and something might come of it. Petyr knew that Gendry didn't even have to be kind-hearted, he merely had to be less awful than all the other men Sansa had known since leaving Winterfell.
She grabbed at one bar with a delicate hand and pushed the thick blanket through a narrow gap. "Then we start small. I'll see you uncaged, at least."
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"If it pleases you, m'lady." He hesitated a moment. "... thank you. For the company. And the blanket."
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She would have work to do. She would have to convince Petyr to let him have the western wing, perhaps. Keep it under guard, if he so desired. But Gendry had to be out of this cell. But before she left, she had one last question: "Did you protect her? Lady Arya?"
Did she even need protecting?
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"Sometimes, I did. She did her own bit of protecting me as well."
She was never as good with a sword as she liked to think she was. But on the whole, she was more a survivor than he ever was. Even before he'd heard about her marriage, he'd never ever once thought that she might be dead. She was too wily for that.
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"It's late." She peered back over her shoulder. "And I fear Mord is growing less and less complacent with my visits -- I know he knows about them. He snores louder when I come up the stairs. But I will be back. Hopefully with your key."
She may not have been the one whose room opened up to the sky, but Sansa was suffering from vertigo i this very moment. These words were some of the most bold and decisive she'd ever spoken. She was a conspirator, now. She was no longer a pawn.
Or so she believed.
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But he didn't really believe it. He smiled one last time, then turned around to sit against the wall. He stared at the empty night sky, but that night he never thought about walking off the edge. He was warm and wanted. He hadn't quite felt like that in some time.
That night he dreamed he was a king. He had a queen with fiery red hair, which made no sense to him at all. The only woman he knew like that was the sorceress.
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For she was ignorant of the fact that -- forty-eight hours later -- Lord Baelish himself unlocked the bastard's cell and stood free of its doorway in order to invite Gendry out from the cold.
"You have a champion," he announced in voice as soft as a hiss. "Pray you show her gratitude, for I have not seen someone fight so hard in a long long time."
It was a chilly greeting, and the once Master of Coin made no attempt to make it any warmer.
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It was hard to believe that this man was Lord Protector of the Vale. Hadn't he heard stories of this man? He had started low as well. Not as low as Fleabottom. But this was a man who had raised himself high. Gendry could see a shrewdness in the man. Something that exceeded even that of Tywin Lannister. Until now, Gendry had never seen a man who seemed more in control of everything. It was hard to believe so frigid a man could have fathered so kind a woman.
"I shall, m'lord. Thank you." Hesitantly he had stepped out of the cell, expecting some sort of trap or trick. But just as it had been with Davos, there was no trick here. In his arms, he had the bundled up blanket that was given to him. It was the only thing of worth he owned in the entire world. "Where shall I go?"
Because even with his freedom, he could not quite imagine being allowed to stay here.
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"Winter is coming," he said with a slight sneer. "Most of our household has left for lower altitudes. I find we have rooms available and work needing to be done before my daughter and I join them at Lord Nestor Royce's table."
He watched Gendry as he walked side-by-side from the Eyrie's dungeons. The trek was not a long one, but it was a good chunk of distance to reach the more noble elements of the castle. The blanket surprised him; he'd known Sansa was visiting the prisoner, but he had not detected the loss of the blanket. Clever girl.
"Alayne is in the library. See to it that she knows you're out."
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This was not the time to dwell on that. Ever humble around so influential a man, Gendry simply nodded. "Yes m'lord."
On the whole, it seemed Lord Baelish had nothing more he wanted to do with him. No surprise, Gendry thought. Without the constant breeze of my cell, I likely smell awful. Once his nose stopped being stopped up from the cold, he'd know that was true for himself. Lady Alayne would likely put her nose up at him once he arrived at the library. But there was not much he could do about that.
When he was left alone, he realized he should have asked where the library was. He had not dared to say any more than he had to, though. So instead, he kept straight along the corridor until he found a serving lady. She was alarmed to see him at first, but when he asked where the library was, she quickly understood who he was supposed to be. Minutes later, he walked into a room surrounded by books. It left him in awe. He'd never seen anything like it. His attention was fixed entirely on the books as he walked into the room, not yet looking for his champion that was waiting for him.
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A pile of books teetered on the desk's edge. One slim volume professed to tell the true tale of Ser Duncan the Tall. She had handpicked it for Gendry, even though her attention had been waylaid these past few nights. Perhaps tonight, she thought. Because this book didn't have any many words as the others and boasted beautiful illustrations. It belonged to Robin, but she didn't think the boy would miss it much.
I'll tell him I did all I could. Petyr would not budge. But her concession speech was interrupted by a foot on the landing and a step beyond the stacks. Sansa twisted in her chair, agitated: "Father...?"
She had to ask after him in this fashion, lest it actually be a member of the house staff and they were made to wonder why Alayne Stone called her father anything but.
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And all I have is this blanket that smells of sweat.
"No," he answered. "It's me."
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But her excitement manifested in other ways. A trembling hand which could no longer hold the quill. A brightness in the eyes. "He released you!" Sansa almost smiled. "I thought for certain he wouldn't. We quarrelled over it."
It was a terribly personal thing to tell anyone, but she had spent nights conversing with him through his bars. She felt as though he was more than a stranger, if not quite yet a friend.
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"He said you were my champion, m'lady. And that I should show my thanks. "
So he took a knee and noted his head. "I'm yours, m'l lady. I have no sword to offer, but you'll have my service, if it please you. "
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"Rise," she commanded in a voice barely above a whisper. "I will have no vows from you." Vows are so easily broken. Only this was a little like receiving a taste of what life would be like with bannermen of her own. Bodies she could count on. Reliable support. No wonder her father had always walked so proudly, knowing the strength at his back. She'd learned only too late what it meant to support him fully.
"All I want are simple assurances that you will stay with us a while."
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I've chosen her, haven't I?
He rose to his feet. "I've nowhere else to go, m'lady. I'll stay as long as you'll have me." He probably should have kept quiet, but he felt compelled to ask one more question. "Why? Why did you help me?"
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She had to tell him something. But all the little truths revealed too much. What was safe to say? "You were a friend to the Stark girl." Her voice clattered upon the name with such passion. "And the North remembers."
The Eyrie was not North, per se. But it was more north than many a place. And the Fingers, where her fake-father was from, was more north still.
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She'd never lie to him. Not like everyone else had.
"I was. But... you really believe all that? If I had told anyone else, they'd think the whole thing was mad. Sometimes I think back on it and think myself mad." And Lords only believe what they want to believe.
"It wasn't a lie. It's just... I've met no highborn who's ever taken me at my word."
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He almost thought to say, You'd make a fine Stark. But they were traitors now. Enemies of the Crown. To say that would be an insult.
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But just to hear someone saying something decent about a Stark? Fantastical.
"I'm afraid a great number of us prove to be unkind." Nobility. She'd gone to court expecting that all lords behaved like chivalrous knights and that princes were paragons. Now she knew that in reality, the heroes rarely won. The victories went to monsters. It was how she knew this fledgling plan was doomed already. "But we have our exceptions." A wary beat. "Not that I dare to include myself amidst their shiniest ranks."
Sansa would not speak the word. Bastard. Nor would she even dare its gentler euphemisms. But she alluded to it, feeling a fissure in her heart for lying to him. If a little lie felt this bad, how would she cope with the bigger ones?
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"I've wondered what it would be like, if I had been a Waters instead of a smith. My father... Robert Baratheon. I saw him once, in the streets. He near ran over me. I recognized him, but he didn't so much as look as me. He was drunk as could be at the time." A drunken fool is what he had thought. But he wouldn't dare say something so treasonous to her.
"But if I'd have been a Waters, maybe he would have kept me in the palace. I wouldn't have been a prince, I know that. But he might have taught me the sword. The sort of things I ought to know to be a man." He touched the picture of the knight. "And my letters, I suppose."
He looked back up at her. "You knew him, right? I'm wrong, aren't I? I know it wouldn't be that way. Your father is kind, to take you in. But mine..."
Don't speak treason.
"Probably better this way. Had I been in the palace, the Goldcloaks would have been able to put a sword in me a lot sooner."
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do note the keywords if you can. they weren't intentional.
Clearly I need more meaningful keywords
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