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. -
- To call them out, put their name in the subject line. -
- 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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"... I had six years," he answered in his own whisper. "Near the end of the last winter."
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"Winter is coming. Those are the Stark words, right? My father's words are Ours is the Fury. Seems more fearsome, don't it? At least up until the snow shows up."
What good is fury in the face of winter?
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She lifted her chin. She composed herself. And she pressed into the High Hall with honour on her mind: "As High as Honour. Arryn's words. Lord Robin, I would introduce to you Gendry Waters. The Eyrie has a smith again."
The boy was on his throne; it swamped him. It made him look even frailer than he already was. And he sat huddled on his seat, with barely a care for the two who had just entered. It was almost as though he hadn't heard them at all.
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He was a poor, meek little thing. Even Weasel looked to be more alive than this boy did. This is the Lord Protector of the Realm? Gendry wondered how it was that grown men could learn to suffer having little children as their rulers. Presently the king of all seven kingdoms was a boy hardly older than this one.
"M'lord," Gendry said. He did not look the boy in the eye. "I'm honored."
He then realized he should take a knee, so he did so.
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"Now, Sweet Robin," she chided him with a honeyed voice. A mother, cajoling a son. "This isn't very lordly!"
It was an act. She wasn't the quiet and thoughtful girl she'd shown to Gendry, but a vibrant creature prone to smiling. This was the biggest lie of all, and it was an exhausting one to maintain. "Tell Gendry about what you found in the godswood, yesterday."
Robin was persuaded to stand on his own two feet, separate from Sansa. And he shared his news with such earnestness: "A hare! We found a hare, but its fur had gone all white -- all white! Alayne says they turn like that when winter is come."
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But this Alayne was different. Like an entirely different person. Which is the real one?
Gendry did manage to smile. "She's a smart lady, m'lord." He ventured to stand on his own feet as well.
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Sansa could only suffer the discussion in a haze of beatific silence. To argue with the little lord, or else to invite disagreement into his day...it might bring on another fit. When with Robin, she felt as though she only ever existed to curtail his malady.
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For a moment he noted Alayne's silence. That was more like the woman he'd been coming to know.
"She says you might like a helmet, one like a proper knight. I thought to make you one at your forge. It would be like a falcon, fit for a true Arryn, if it pleases you, m'lord."
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For a moment, the boy seemed to almost smell a lie. A plot. Some contrivance to steal something from him -- permission or compliance or something. But it passed quickly. He remained curious: "A real one?"
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"Made with the best steel in your forge," he promised. He'd yet to go through what was at his disposal here, but there'd be no lie otherwise. He'd make use of the best of what was on hand.
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"Make it so," he commanded. Or tried to command. It always came out weak and petulant when he tried to give orders. It was a good thing he had Petyr to play regent for him, because otherwise the Eyrie would be a wreck.
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Had he already overstayed his welcome? Should he stay longer to entertain the little lord? He felt at a complete loss already. He only knew now that he had orders to work the forge. He needed to get the fires going. Make the steel sing. And try to make himself indispensable for as long as he could manage it.
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But she could be bothered to offer a sly opening to the new resident smith. "Will you be requiring anything at the forge?" She asked, by way of offering to join him there later. If even under the pretext of making a delivery.
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"I've always been an apprentice, m'lady. My master Tohbo did sums. Made sure we had all the metal we needed. If you've a servant what might help me work out what all is to be had..." He trailed off, feeling like a fool to even need such assistance.
Some bastard lord I am. I can't do sums or letters. I'm good only with a hammer in my hand.
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She misread his signals, seeing appreciation where she deeply hoped to see it. Sansa thought Gendry was participating in her little game, praising her learning in as sly a way as she had offered to come to him.
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And so when he was led to the courtyard, he was allowed to go on his way. Having broke his fast before the meeting with his new liege lord, he had little reason to waste time with other things. He wouldn't idle away for her servant to come find him. Sums could come later. He'd gone through some of the supplies already, so he found steel as best as he could find and began the process of heating the force, so it could be melted and shaped. The Eyrie may have been cold, but the forge burned with a monstrous heat. But Gendry barely felt it.
He'd always liked the forge, even as a boy. It was here he had power. It was here he commanded the flames.
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She had left his chambers with fire on her mind. She feared it, certainly. Fire had eaten up her younger brothers, though the Greyjoy traitor had first fled those flames. The Hound had feared fire, too. And she had coincidentally heard that tale from Petyr, as well. She had witnessed the Hound's fear, he had come to her looking for a song and more. He had taken his kiss, and he had left.
Now, in a late hour of the afternoon, she ventured willingly into the forge's heat. She was dressed in pale blue and had worn a shawl over her head to protect her ears from the cold, but had soon realized that it wasn't necessary once she'd reached the narrow wooden canopy signalling the forge's entrance.
"It's hot," she observed -- a little lamely -- when she finally caught his eye. Before then, she'd let him work. And she had watched, fascinated.
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It surprised him to realize she was standing there. He'd expected a servant, not a lady. All at once, he felt self conscious to be exposing himself the way he was. But he felt sillier still when he considered covering himself.
"... it needs to be," he answered warily. He still feared reprise for any small slight. "Or I can't work the steel. Is there something the matter, m'lady?"
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She ought to look away. But somehow, looking away would draw even more attention to his naked torso. So she persisted in keeping her eyes locked with his.
"N-nothing." Her answer was not exactly informative, and she seemed a little stuck in place. "Nothing is wrong."
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"Is there something m'lady needs?"
Gendry could only guess what prompted her visit. He was not stupid enough to recognize she had some fondness for him. Indeed, he was growing very fond of her in turn. But he was not so stupid as to think...
She may call me Waters, but no one else has. It might all be a game still."
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Somehow.
"For now, I am the one who is at your service. The rest of the household is...engaged. But I gave you my word you would have help."
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"You? But--" Do as your told. Don't question things. "It it pleases you, m'lady. I'm sorry you must come out here to do this. The forge is no place for a lady."
Highborn or otherwise.
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"It was this or suffer Lord Robin's games all afternoon. I know which of the two I would prefer."
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Gendry's expression betrayed what he thought of that. It didn't seem appropriate for a lady to be reproaching her liege lord in front of him. At least he knew better than to join in and get himself into trouble by agreeing with her.
"You seem to have a way with him."
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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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