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Our House! Tabling for House of Starstrider at the Other Worlds Expo hosted by Brick Road Coffee was so cool. It was my first time tabling an event, so I learned a lot. We met some incredible people! It’s just really fun to chat with people who are open about their passions. I hope to have chances to meet many more strangers with friend potential. Happy Pride Month! -AlinaIden
…what if I *did* start working of HoS properly again? What if I get these weird ass metaphors and plot points out of my head?
House of Silk Story pairing: Duncan/FemaleOC, Aerion Targaryen/FemaleOC , Daeron Targaryen/FemaleOC, Baelor Targaryen/FemaleOC, Lyonel Baratheon/FemaleOC, Maekar Targaryen/FemaleOC Summary: The Courtesan’s of Ashford Tourney know the tastes of heroes and the weaknesses of villains. They know which knight trembles before battle, which lord misses his wife, which prince confuses cruelty for control. Word Count: 48.3k Read on AO3 Read chapter 8: Slay the Beast ⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹ The laughter shattered like glass as the pavilion flap was ripped aside, sending lanterns rattling on their chains. Heavy boots thundered across the rugs as the men filled the space, red dragons stitched across their surcoats. They were much less polite than the timid page boy who had come a few nights prior. They tore through silk curtains and overturned low tables, scattering cups and cushions alike. One girl shrieked as a bench was kicked aside. Another scrambled to gather her skirts as a mailed shoulder brushed past her without apology. “Where is she?” one barked. “The blonde who belongs to the Prince." The room’s warmth curdled instantly into tension. In her private corner, Tansy straddled across the lap of a noble lord. The thin straps of her dress fallen loose leaving her half naked in his grasp. His hands resting possessively at her waist claiming his Targaryen prize. She had been mid-laugh when the first curtain fell. The nobleman sputtered indignantly. “You cannot simply-” One of the guards seized him by the collar and shoved him backward onto the cushions. “Move.” Maris surged forward, fury flashing in her eyes. “You will show respect in my house,” she snapped, placing herself squarely between them and the dais. A mailed arm shoved her aside firmly. She stumbled back a step, catching herself on a tent pole to stop her fall. “You, get up,” the man growled. A heavy cloak was thrown at her. The noble lord beneath her had gone pale. His hands withdrew as though she had burned him. She rose, redressing and gathering the cloak calmly around her shoulders, concealing bare skin. Her movements were unhurried, as though she were the one summoning them rather than the other way around. Around the chamber, men watched in silence. No one protested further despite their earlier ire. The dragon’s men had come. And when dragons called, no one pretended not to hear. Maris stepped forward again, jaw tight. “She is occupied.” “The prince desires her,” the guard replied flatly. Tansy looked at Maris, trepidation in her eyes. "I’ll go, it’s alright,” she said, drawing the cloak fully around herself and stepped down from the dais, bare feet silent against the rugs. The guard nodded once, satisfied, and turned toward the exit. The pavilion’s music had died entirely. Even the drunkest patron now sat upright, suddenly sober. As Tansy passed through the centre of the chamber, every eye watched her go like a prisoner to the gallows. · · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · · The chamber door closed behind her with a solid, echoing thud. Aerion sat on the low lounge near the hearth, elbows braced on his knees, hands clasped loosely between them. His outer layers and chainmail had been discarded somewhere out of sight; he wore only a loose black shirt, unlaced at the throat. There was dried blood at the corner of his mouth. “Come here,” he said, calmer than she had anticipated. She stepped forward, the heavy cloak whispering around her ankles. “Sit,” he added, without lifting his head. “At my feet.” Tansy obeyed, kneeling on the rug before him, folding herself neatly back onto her heels. The cloak slipped slightly, revealing the pale line of her shoulder beneath. Her hair spilled forward like molten silver. She still looked like a queen, although a little diminished from her place of submission. His eyes drank her in but they lacked their usual sharp edge. She mistook this for disappointment. “I’m still bruised,” she offered lightly, a faint, almost teasing lilt to her voice. “Not fit for you at the moment my prince.” His hand moved to grip her chin, firm enough to silence her. He leaned forward, bringing his face close enough that she could feel the heat of his breath. “Don’t,” he said, silencing her. “I don’t care about bruises.” His thumb traced faintly along the edge of her jaw. “I want to fill my mouth with your name,” he continued, voice dropping lower. Rougher. “I want to eat you whole.” The words did not carry the usual mockery. This was not their usual game. He was not seeking a fight tonight, the violence in the market had not satisfied him, but it stirred a different kind of arousal. Her pulse fluttered, but she did not pull away. “Then say it,” she whispered. His fingers tightened slightly. “Tansy,“ he teased, tasting her name on his tongue. The air between them felt charged, thinner somehow. Less choreography. More truth. “You enjoyed hurting that girl,” she said softly, thinking of the poor puppeteer. His eyes flashed. “She insulted me.” “It was wood and paint.” “It was mockery.” “And you snapped bone for it.” The fire cracked sharply in the hearth. For a heartbeat, it looked as though he might strike her. Instead, his hand slid from her chin to the back of her neck, fingers threading into her pale hair. He leaned closer until their foreheads nearly touched. “I am not meant to be laughed at,” he murmured. “I would never dare,” she replied just as quietly. She pulled from his grip easily, standing up between his knees, the firelight carving gold along the planes of her body, chains glinting faintly with each breath she took. The cloak dropped to the floor revealing the full extent of the savagery he’d bore against her. For a moment, he savoured the site of her. Then his hands came up fast, gripping her hips hard enough to bruise anew. He pulled her down sharply, forcing her closer between his legs. She caught herself against his shoulders, startled. “My prince-” “Don’t,” he snapped again. The softness from moments before vanished like smoke. His grip tightened. He dragged her down onto his lap with bruising force, fingers digging into the tender yellowing marks already marring her skin. She winced, breath catching. “You think I forget myself?” he said, voice low and dangerous. “You think you can stand there and soften me?” “I-” she tried, but his hand shot up, striking her across the face. The sound cracked sharp in the chamber, her head turned. For a split second there was only ringing, heat blooming along her cheek, copper at the edge of her tongue. She recoiled instinctively, trying to twist away, but his hand was already at her throat. Firm and unyielding. He shoved her back against the lounge, fingers spanning the delicate column of her neck, thumb pressing just beneath her jaw. “Don’t look at me like that,” he hissed. Her hands flew to his wrist, trying to pry him loose. Panic surged, real, sharp, no choreography in it now. She kicked against his thigh, struggling to pull air into her lungs. This wasn’t the game, not her fake resistance. This was something else. He leaned closer, grip tightening. “I am not a puppet,” he growled. Her vision flickered at the edges. Instinct took over as her hand dropped from his wrist and slid blindly toward his waist, toward the familiar weight she had felt a hundred times before. Her fingers closed around the hilt of the dagger at his waist. She did not hesitate, drawing back and slashing in a desperate motion. The steel kissed his skin, a sharp line opened across his forearm. Aerion swore and recoiled, grip breaking as pain cut through whatever storm had overtaken him. Air flooded her lungs and she clambered backward off the couch, hitting the rug hard. The dagger clattered somewhere between them. She scrambled immediately, heart hammering, crawling backward on hands and heels until her shoulders struck the far wall. As far from him as she could get. He stood over her for a heartbeat, blood running bright down his arm, dripping from his fingers onto the floor. They stared at one another. Her chest heaved. One hand pressed protectively to her throat. The other searched blindly for purchase on the floor behind her. His face was no longer rage but shock. She had never cut him before, never drawn blood. The fire crackled between them. She sat pressed back against the wall, throat still burning from his grip, Tansy bared her teeth at him like something cornered and feral. And for the first time since she had known him, Tansy looked like a wild beast that had chosen to bite back. “If you touch me like that again,” she rasped, voice raw but steady, “I will fucking kill you.” The words did not tremble. Blood slid from the cut on his forearm, pattering onto the rug between them. Aerion stared down at her, chest rising and falling hard. His eyes were bright not with amusement now, not even fully with rage. Something more volatile. Something startled. “I could end you here,” he hissed, stepping forward once, looming over her. “No one would miss you.” The threat hung heavy in the firelit air. She did not look away. “If I were that easy to kill,” she shot back, voice breaking just slightly on the edge of breath, “you would have done it already.” It was the truth and he knew it. Her cheek was flushed from his strike. Her throat mottled red where his fingers had pressed. Her chest rose fast beneath the sheer fabric. But her eyes… Her eyes were clear. He could kill her. They both knew it. But he hadn’t. And that was the thing neither of them could deny. Silence stretched thin between them. The fire cracked sharply, sending a spark up the chimney. His jaw worked once. Twice. “You cut me,” he said, almost incredulous. “You choked me,” she replied. He looked down at the blood on his arm, then back at her. The sight of her against the wall wild, furious, breathing hard but still defiant did something to him he did not want to name. His mouth curved slow, dangerous. “You think I don’t like that?” he murmured. Her brows knit in confusion for half a heartbeat. “That you would rather die than submit?” he continued, voice lowering. “That you would carve your way out of my grip?” "Do not touch me,” she seethed as he stepped closer, crouching down before her. “You are mine,” he said, not as a threat now, but as a statement of obsession. “Because you choose to stand there and spit in my face.” Her heart was still pounding hard enough she could feel it in her throat. “I am yours,” she corrected harshly, “when I decide to be.” Another dangerous silence. He studied her like a creature he had trapped and then discovered had teeth. He could end her and they both knew it. But she had been in his reach countless times before, vulnerable, alone and she was still breathing. “You’re shaking,” he said quietly. “So are you.” He huffed a sharp breath almost a laugh. His little plaything. Not so easily replaced. He rose slowly to his full height, stepping back at last. “Get up,” he said, reaching his palm out toward her, blood running down his fingers. Despite her instinct, Tansy placed her palm in his. And that, was what truly bound them. · · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · · The night had not softened after their first struggle. Aerion had taken her with a force that was less about conquest and more about obsession as if proving to himself that she was still there, still solid beneath his hands, still defiant and alive. He tore through the fabric of her dress, tossing her to the bed. Tansy was less accustom to this purring beast. They had rarely crossed this line before. Their encounters had been about friction, about sparring, about bruises earned. She sprawled across the sheets on her belly, arching her hips up toward him. His fingers pressed in under the curve of her pelvis, dragging her to the edge of the bed against him. His hand wet with saliva rubbed against her, slicking her entrance. She moaned softly under his touch, savouring one of the rare moments he rewarded her with softness. When he entered her he was rough, concerned only with his own pleasure as he pounded against her. His hand wrapped around the length of her hair pulling her head back with a strangled cry. The blood from his arm dripping down onto the alabaster skin of her back. The chamber echoed with his grunting, her whimpering moan the sound of skin on skin. Her own hands screwed up in the sheets, eyebrows knit together as the warm tingling sensation built near crescendo. Then he shoved her forward and off him, leaving her empty and bare on his bed. She turned to look at him in annoyance, a grin plain across his smug face. He pulled his shirt off smoothly, dropping down onto the lounge where they had first started. “Come here Tansy,” he called and she answered, slinking toward him with her own siren smile. She settled into his lap, sinking him deep inside her again with a groan. His mouth dipped low to engulf her breast, his tongue gently lapping at her nipple. He liked the proximity, his hands could touch all the parts of her, smearing blood across her skin. He bit down softly then harder and she yelped reaching for his hair to yank his head back. He looked up at her with glassy eyes his, lips softly parted. He wanted her to strike him, to cut him again, but he wouldn’t dare say it. She saw it, the devious gleam. She released his hair, ghosting her hand down his check before letting it rest on his throat. She squeezed slightly, a breathy moan escaping his lips. “Good boy,” she cooed reaching down to capture his mouth with her own. Her fingers tightening firmly but not enough to bruise him. He grunted eagerly, thrusting into her with abandon. She tried to keep his pace, focusing on achieving her own release, her fingers moved rhythmically over her clit trying to race him to the finish line. But of course Aerion wouldn’t let her have the satisfaction, the edge of her climax slipped from her grasp as he came inside her, stilling completely. She let go of throat and stood from his lap. Bare skin flush and damp beneath the low firelight. Without invitation she made her way back to his bed. Flopping down unceremoniously on her side, one arm was folded beneath her head, the other resting loosely beside her. Aerion wordlessly joined her. Sinking into the spot behind her. He traced the lines of her back with his mouth, following the path of muscle and bone as though committing her to memory. Slow, wet heat trailing over skin that already bore the history of him. His mouth pressed between her shoulders something in between apology and possession. He lay behind her, close enough that his breath warmed the nape of her neck. His injured arm rested across her hips. The cut on his forearm had slowed to a dark, sluggish seep, but it had not stopped entirely. Every time he shifted, every time his hand slid along her skin, a faint smear followed. Against her pale back, the blood looked startlingly vivid, thin, rust-red streaks dragged across shoulder and waist where his fingers had traced. It marked her more brutally than bruises ever had. Accidental and Intimate. He noticed it when he drew back slightly, the firelight catching on the wet sheen along her spine. His own blood on her. The sight unsettled him more than it should have. “You’re making a mess,” she murmured without turning, voice low and spent. He looked at his arm, flexed his fingers experimentally. The cut had opened wider than he’d first thought. A shallow slice, but long. “You did that,” he said quietly. “You were choking me,” she replied. He reached for the cloth discarded near the bedside and pressed it against his forearm, wincing only slightly. The movement left another faint stain across the curve of her hip where his knuckles brushed. She rolled over, facing him. The blood streaked her collarbone now, her shoulder, faintly across her ribs, thin trails where he had touched her thoughtlessly. Against her translucent skin it looked almost ceremonial. As though she had been anointed in something dark. Her eyes dropped briefly to his arm. “You should bind it,” she said. “You cut shallow,” he answered. Her gaze flicked up, cool despite the heat still lingering between them. “I wasn’t aiming shallow.” That drew the faintest curve from his mouth. He took her wrist gently this time, lifted her hand, examining the faint tremor still in her fingers. “You meant it,” he said. “Of course I did.” He did not release her. Instead, he drew her hand toward his mouth and pressed a slow kiss to her knuckles blood and all. The gesture felt strange in the wake of everything. Recognition. “You look like a battlefield,” he murmured, eyes trailing over the streaks of red across her pale skin. “You look worse,” she replied dryly. He rose and retrieved the small basin near the hearth, soaking a clean cloth in cool water. He set both on the side table and without flourish, began wiping the blood from her shoulder. Carefully. The cloth moved across her back, lifting the crimson trails from her skin. The water in the basin darkened. “You don’t have to,” she said. “I know.” He wiped at her collarbone next, gentler than he had ever touched her before. The dragon’s blood, cleaned from the girls skin. When he finished, he pressed the cloth to his own arm again and tied a strip of linen tight around the cut, teeth pulling the knot firm. She watched him silently. “You should have run,” he said at last. “You should have stopped,” she answered. Neither of them looked away. The scent of iron still lingered faintly in the air a reminder of how quickly their games could turn real. He shifted slightly, drawing her closer against him. Just aligning himself with her spine, fitting his body along the length of hers. He had threatened to devour her. Instead, he found himself unwilling to let her leave.
House of Silk Story pairing: Duncan/FemaleOC , Aerion Targaryen/FemaleOC, Daeron Targaryen/FemaleOC, Baelor Targaryen/FemaleOC, Lyonel Baratheon/FemaleOC, Maekar Targaryen/FemaleOC Summary: The Courtesan’s of Ashford Tourney know the tastes of heroes and the weaknesses of villains. They know which knight trembles before battle, which lord misses his wife, which prince confuses cruelty for control. Word Count: 48.6k Read on AO3 Read chapter 6: Bear and the Maiden Fair ⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹ The next morning broke bright and forgiving. Maris was in an uncharacteristically good mood after the previous evening. She waved them off happily. “Go,” she said, flicking her wrist. “Spend your coin while you still have it. The realm will still be debauched when you return.” So Tansy and Lysa shed their more theatrical silks for simpler gowns and slipped into the market lanes that had sprung up along Ashfield’s outer field. The air smelled of frying dough, candied fruits and mud. Lysa stopped at nearly every stall. “Oh, look at this,” she breathed, lifting a gauzy shawl in the softest shade of cream. She held it up to Tansy, squinting critically. “Too pale. You’ll vanish entirely.” “It would look very pretty with your pink gown,” Tansy replied sweetly, taking the shawl and wrapping it around her shoulders. They traded coins for bright ribbons, sugared almonds wrapped in paper twists, a small vial of orange blossom oil that Lysa insisted would fetch triple its price back at the pavilion. Tansy bought herself a lilac-coloured pashmina embroidered with gold threaded flowers. This was just for her. Their small hoard was buried deep into Lysa’s satchel. By midday, they followed the swell of noise toward the lists, joining the press of common spectators lining the outer stands. They found a place along the railing, craning their necks as knights thundered past in plumes and polished helms. Lysa clapped enthusiastically, though her attention drifted more often to the higher tiers than the field itself. Then Lysa saw Rowan. Beautiful, unmistakable Rowan with her blazing red hair. She sat in the shade under the canopy, among the noble guests. Flanked by two well-dressed men who leaned toward her as she laughed at something one of them had said. She wore deep green silk today, the colour making her copper hair burn brighter still. One of the lords had draped a cloak casually across her shoulders. Lysa’s smile thinned. “Well,” she muttered, biting into a sugared almond with unnecessary force. “Look who’s climbed.” Tansy followed her gaze. Rowan tipped her head back in laughter again, utterly at ease. She did not glance down at the common stands, they were beneath her. “She’s working,” Tansy said mildly. “From the shade,” Lysa replied. “With wine brought to her.” A cheer erupted as two lances shattered below, but Lysa barely looked. “I could sit up there,” she added, quieter now. “If I wished.” “You could,” Tansy agreed. But neither of them missed the flicker in her eyes. Envy was an ugly, persistent thing. Tansy felt it too, a small tightening in her chest. Rowan had always been bold about her ambitions. She courted lords, and knights. Tansy adjusted her new pashmina around her shoulders. “It’s only a better seat,” she said lightly. “When the tourney packs up, she’ll be in the caravan with us. No different.” Lysa huffed a reluctant laugh, “I suppose.” Below, another knight was unhorsed to thunderous applause. Dust rose golden in the sun. Rowan leaned forward in her noble seat, applauding with delicate hands. Tansy forced herself not to measure the distance between where she stood and where Rowan sat. Focussing on the field before them. “Watch the tilt,” she murmured. “It’s free.” Lysa rolled her eyes but complied, leaning against the railing beside her. Still, when Rowan laughed again from above, neither of them could help but hear it. · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · · A ripple moved through the stands before the herald even finished announcing him. Prince Aerion Brightflame, in armour as black as the horse he rode out on. Shining in the sun like oil on water, blackened steel edged in faint red enamel. He guided his stead toward the champion’s tents. Tansy couldn’t help but think about how beautiful he looked, like a real prince. He rounded on the Champion’s tents, closing in on Ser Hardyng. “Come out, come out, little knight,” He called across the churned earth, mocking. “It’s time you face the dragon.” Hardyng’s face, even at a distance, looked drawn, almost haunted. Whether from pride already wounded or fear newly kindled, none could say. But he lowered his visor regardless. Beside Tansy, Lysa leaned in close and stage-whispered, “You face the dragon all the time.” Tansy did not take her eyes off the field. “Yes,” she replied grimly. “But not on horseback with a lance.” Lysa snorted, leaning forward over the rail. “Gods, he does look-“ “Magnificent,” Tansy finished quietly. She couldn’t look away, gaze tracking his every move. She knew the set of his shoulders, the tension in his jaw when he was hunting humiliation. The signal dropped. They charged. The first pass was blindingly fast, thunder of hooves, a splintering crack of wood but neither unhorsed the other. Aerion wheeled first. Harding followed, anger now visible in every line of him. Second pass. The lances lowered. They met in the centre with a sickening sound, not wood shattering, but something wet and wrong. The crowd’s cheering died in their throats. Then Hardyng’s horse screamed. The lance had not struck his shield or breastplate. It had driven through flesh. Straight into the animal’s neck. Blood sprayed hot and thick into the upturned earth. The horse stumbled mid-stride, momentum carrying it forward before its legs gave out entirely. It collapsed violently, its weight pitching Hardyng from the saddle. He hit the ground hard, his horse crushing him under its weight. His scream, animal, shrill and terrible cut through the field like a blade. Lysa made a small strangled sound and turned, burying her face against Tansy’s shoulder. “Gods-“ Tansy wrapped an arm around her automatically, holding her steady as the scene unfolded. The horse thrashed once more before going still. Men ran onto the field, shouting. Hardyng did not rise. Aerion sat tall in his saddle at the far end of the field, breathing hard but unmoved. He did not rush forward in apology. Did not dismount in panic. He watched the spectacle with satisfaction because he had won. Tansy’s fingers tightened against Lysa’s back, though her eyes never left him. That was the man she knew. Vicious. Unapologetic. Cruel in the way only those born to power could afford to be. A murmur of outrage spread through the stands, but none dared shout too loudly. Aerion turned his horse at last, offering the barest incline of his head toward the crowd before riding from the field without ceremony. Dust rose behind him like smoke. Lysa trembled against Tansy. “That was monstrous.” Tansy exhaled slowly. “Yes,” she said. Her gaze lingered on the retreating dark figure. Monstrous and breathtaking in equal measure. She pressed her lips together, steadying Lysa as the stands dissolved into chaos. They left the lists with the crowd still buzzing of outrage, awe, scandal rolling through the market lanes like a second tide. Lysa had recovered quickly. “He’s mad,” she insisted for the fourth time as they wove between spice sellers and ribbon stalls. “Completely mad.” “Be quiet Lysa, that’s treason,” She scalded, drawing the shawl up over her blonde head acutely aware of the anti targaryen sentiment spreading like wildfire. “Everyone agrees with me!” She replied, exasperated. Tansy rolled her eyes and dragged her friend along. The quickly returned to their usual conversation, the horror already softened at the edges by the growing distance. When they rounded a corner too quickly, Lysa walked straight into something solid. She bounced back with a small gasp, nearly losing her balance before a large, calloused hand shot out to steady her by the elbows. “Oh! I beg your-“ She stopped. And looked up. And up. The tallest man she had ever seen stood blinking down at her, broad as a barn door, shoulders like carved oak. His sandy hair fell untidily around a sun-browned face that wore the most apologetic expression imaginable. He was like a bear. Behind one enormous leg stood a tiny, bald child clutching a practice helm almost as large as his torso. “My fault, miss,” the giant said quickly, voice surprisingly gentle. “I should’ve been watching.” Lysa stared for half a breath longer than was polite. “You are magnificent,” she blurted. The man blinked again. “I… beg pardon?” “Your height,” she clarified brightly, hands fluttering in animated admiration. “It’s striking. Positively heroic.” The bald boy squinted up at her suspiciously. Ser Duncan the Tall shifted awkwardly on his feet. “Well. I suppose I am tall.” “That is an understatement,” Lysa said earnestly, beaming. Tansy stepped up beside her, lips twitching. “Forgive her. She’s easily impressed.” “I am not,” Lysa protested quickly before turning back to Duncan. “What brings such a tall man to these humble grounds?” The little squire snorted. Duncan scratched the back of his neck, colour rising faintly along his freckled cheeks. “We’re coming from the tilts,” he offered, as though that explained everything. “I’m riding in a day or so.” Lysa’s eyes widened. “You’re a knight?” He hesitated just a fraction. “Yes,” he admitted, with modesty that bordered on embarrassment. “Well,” Lysa declared decisively, already slipping one of her small bell bracelets from her wrist, “then you require proper favour.” Before he could object, she took his massive hand in both of hers and looped the delicate strand of tiny silver bells around his wrist. It looked absurdly small against him. “For luck,” she said warmly. “So you don’t skewer any horses.” Duncan flushed scarlet. “That’s… very kind,” he managed. The little bald squire peered at the bracelet. “He doesn’t need bells.” “He absolutely does,” Lysa said primly. “Every knight does.” Tansy finally allowed herself a small laugh at the absurdity. Duncan gave an awkward but sincere nod. “I’ll ride carefully.” “Do,” Lysa replied, stepping back with a satisfied smile. They parted with polite bows. Duncan ducking his head slightly so as not to loom quite so terribly and continued down the lane. Only when they were out of earshot did Tansy glance sidelong at her companion. “You do realise,” she said mildly, “that boy is still wet behind the ears.” Lysa gasped in mock offense. “He is not.” “He blushed like a novice septa.” “He was being polite.” “He was terrified.” Lysa swatted at her lightly. “You’re just jealous that a valiant knight has my favour!” Tansy smirked faintly, casting one last glance over her shoulder at the towering figure disappearing into the crowd, silver bells glinting at his wrist. “Careful,” she added lazily. “You’ll have him writing poetry before the week is out.” Lysa laughed, linking arms with her again as the market swallowed them whole. The roar of the lists rising once more in the distance.
House of Silk Story pairing: Duncan/FemaleOC, Aerion Targaryen/FemaleOC , Daeron Targaryen/FemaleOC, Baelor Targaryen/FemaleOC, Lyonel Baratheon/FemaleOC Summary: The Courtesan’s of Ashford Tourney know the tastes of heroes and the weaknesses of villains. They know which knight trembles before battle, which lord misses his wife, which prince confuses cruelty for control. Word Count: 48.6k Read on AO3 Read chapter 3: The Dragon Tamer ⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹⊹₊˚‧︵‿₊୨ᰔ୧₊‿︵‧˚₊⊹ A plain wool cloak hid Tansy’s silks as she was ushered from the edge of the tourney grounds toward Ashford Manor under cover of deepening night. The page boy walked two paces ahead, stiff-backed and silent now, the earlier bravado drained from him. They did not approach the grand doors. Instead, he led her down the servants corridor, past kitchens and servants hauling empty casks and platters. A narrow side entrance waited half-concealed behind stacked crates. He knocked twice. A servant opened without a word and gestured them through. The servants’ passage was narrow and dimly lit, stone walls cool and damp against the heat of her skin. Her slippers made no sound against the worn floor. The page stopped before the room at the corridor’s end. “My prince awaits,” he said, voice pitched low. Of course he does. He knocked hard and stepped back immediately, retracing their steps as if the proximity itself might scorch him. Tansy adjusted her cloak only slightly before pushing the door open. The chamber beyond was lit by a scattering of candles and a roaring hearth. Shadows climbed the walls in restless shapes. “My Prince,” she greeted, voice smooth as poured cream. She closed the door behind her softly. Aerion stood near the hearth, restless from the anticipation of her arrival. He looked like a creature caged too long, and only Tansy could set him free. He turned toward her, shoulders tense. “Take it off,” he ordered. She knew this version of him, demanding and impatient to silence the storm that roared inside his head. He paid generously to unleash it on her. So she obliged, letting the cloak slip from her shoulders, revealing the revealing dress beneath. His gaze raked over her slowly, his eyes dark with hunger. Like a rabbit into a snare, she stepped forward with the faintest hint of a smile touching her lips. “Do I please you, Aerion?” she asked sweetly. He loved when she used his name. Aerion reached for her, his hands claiming the bare skin of her waist so he could pull her close against his chest. So tight the air pressed from her lungs. “Very much.” he purred, pressing his fingers hard into her flesh. · · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · · The first time Aerion met Tansy was in the gardens of the rear palace. Moonlight spilled silver across the courtyard, but it was the fire that ruled the night. Tall iron pylons driven into the earth, their flames roaring high and steady, warming the air around them. String music and the hum of nobility intermingled, setting the tone of the evening. Aerion stood apart from the easy laughter and drifting silks, one hand wrapped loosely around a goblet he had not touched. He was thoroughly bored, tired of the endless dance of politeness. It pressed against his skin like a cage too tight. There was a subtle shift first, the music dipping, a hush rippling through the gathered crowd. Heads turned toward the centre of the garden where a circle had been cleared, the pylons arranged like sentinels around it. The girl stepped into the centre, wrapped in silks the colour of flame. Her hair, that striking shade of white blonde, as if touched by the moon. Tansy. He didn’t know her name yet. She moved like a serpent, a baton spinning in her hand, its ends aflame, the fire trailing in bright arcs as she turned it faster and faster until it blurred into a ring of light. The first flicker of interest stirred in him. The girl’s face was set hard in concentration as her hands moved deftly, a second baton joining the first. Twin flames weaving in impossible patterns around her body. She stepped between them, through them, the fire bending to her will. Around him, lords and ladies murmured, impressed and delighted. Aerion leaned forward, something pulling him toward her. She dipped low, one baton sweeping close enough to kiss her hip, the flame licking the silk. Then she turned, sharp and sudden, bringing it to her mouth. A collective gasp rose from the crowd, as she pressed the fire to her lips and seemed to swallow it whole. Just like that, extinguished. For a moment, she basked in the stunned silence of the audience. Then she lifted the still lit baton to her mouth, and exhaled. Flames burst forward from her lips in a brilliant, violent bloom, catching the baton alight once more as if she had breathed life into it herself. Like a dragon. Aerion was enraptured by the trick, in that moment it was him and her in an empty courtyard. And the image of her, face lit from within, fire bursting from her mouth, unharmed. He had spent his life being told what he was. A dragon, fire made flesh. The weight of expectation that had dogged him since birth, burned inside restless and consuming. And then there was her. The girl danced with the fire. Took it into herself and gave it back brighter. He wanted to see it again. The performance ended in a sweep of flame and applause, the court breaking into delighted noise. Coins would follow. Invitations to further parties. The usual currency of admiration. Aerion watched her closely as she stepped back from the circle. The crowd began to close in around her like moths to light. Already, they wanted to touch, praise her, claim some piece of her. His jaw tightened. No, not them, he thought to himself. Aerion set the goblet aside and moved in. They parted for him, laughter dimming at the edges as his presence cut through it. “My prince,” she greeted, bowing her head deeply. He stopped a pace from her, studying her openly now. Up close, she looked more ordinary but the illusion of fire still clung to her. A sheen of sweat at her throat, catching the light. Heat shimmered faintly in the air between them. “You swallowed it,” he said. Her lips curved slightly. “It’s a trick, Your Grace.” “Is it?” His gaze flicked briefly to the baton still smouldering in her hand, then back to her face. “It didn’t look like one.” “It’s meant not to.” She smiled wryly, a twinkle in her eye. Something in him sharpened, interest coiling tighter, darker. “Do you ever get burned?” “No, just a little singed,” She laughed awkwardly, casting her gaze down to the prop in her hand. It was still warm. His gaze dropped briefly to her throat again, as if imagining it. The fire passing over skin, the scorching burn it might leave. But there was none, not a single scar. When his eyes lifted again, something had shifted in them. Hunger, yes but not the easy, careless kind he directed at courtiers and passing amusement. “Will you perform again,” he asked. Her face was puzzled. “If you’d like…” A faint pause, then quickly she added, “My prince.” His mouth curved, he would forgive her small transgression, it was charming. “I would like that.” And already, even as he turned away, the image of her burned behind his eyes. Her open mouth, filled with flame. She had wielded it like magic. He became obsessed with it. He had found, at last, someone worth his attention. · · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · ·· · ─ ·✶· ─ · · If he wanted a pretty wench, there were a thousand girls in King’s Landing who’d lay down for him gladly. But it wasn’t her body Aerion paid for, it was her performance. She had rules he rarely broke; he didn’t strike her face, draw blood or break bones. Three small assurances, and an obscene sum of coins was all she needed to play his leading lady. Their game wasn’t about harm for harm’s sake, though bruises deepened purple and green on her skin. Aerion desired the heat of her body struggling beneath his hands. It made him feel closer to the beast he imagined himself to be. His gaze raked over her slowly, his eyes dark with hunger. Like a rabbit into a snare, she stepped forward with the faintest hint of a smile touching her lips. “Do I please you, Aerion?” she asked sweetly. He loved when she used his name. “Very much.” he purred. He wanted to reach for her, but his favourite part came next. The moment just before the contact, Tansy took a sharp breath before she lunged at him. He was ready, catching her wrist and pulling her against his chest firmly. Her palm struck his shoulder and she twisted against his hold just enough to make him work for it. He loosened his hold slightly so she could break free. When she shoved him hard he was taken off guard, stumbling back into the desk. He let out a delighted laugh and lurched forward. His fingers fisted in her hair, dragging her back to him with a strangled cry. Aerion pressed into the back of her knee, her legs buckled and she landed on the floor with a sickening thud. Tansy rolled onto her back, trying to scramble away but Aerion pressed her down into the floor, caging her hips with his thighs. She seethed in pain as he knotted his hand back into her hair, pulling harshly at the scalp. The sight of her grimace as she tried to wrench free filled him with glee. “Fight like you mean it,” he taunted. She strained against him, bucking her hips hard enough to nearly unseat him but he pushed down firmly. He leant down, pressing his lips to her shoulder, soft and warm. She let out a soft gasp, a warm flutter spreading low in her stomach. Then he latched onto the soft flesh, biting down hard. Tansy let out a sharp cry, hitting her fist hard against his ribs until he let go. He grabbed her wrist, pinning it above her head in his bruising grip. Her free hand fisted into the front of his linen shirt, bringing his lips crashing against hers but when his tongue slipped into her mouth she bit down on it, taking a moment to savour the taste of his blood in her mouth. He reeled back, his hand coming up to his mouth in disbelief. “You bitch,” he said, looking at the blood on his fingers. He’d forgive her for it. “Get off me,” she spat, her body twisting beneath him, hands clawing at his chest. He craved that look of fear in her eyes and loved her hands on him like this, desperate and grunting from her exertion. He wanted to kiss her again, bit her tongue and draw blood. She landed a glancing blow against his jaw and he was stunned momentarily, long enough for her to squirm free. Tansy played her part flawlessly. She resisted, retaliated and succumbed when he needed her to. Their dance was about conquest enacted and re-enacted until she was tamed beneath his touch. At the end of it, when the fire had burned low and the storm in him had quieted, Aerion liked the ritual of aftermath. Tansy stood before the mirror, stripped naked, hair loosened and tangled from his grip. Candlelight softened everything, gilded the edges of bruises just beginning to bloom. Aerion pressed up behind her wordlessly, one hand spanned the delicate column of her neck as if to keep her still. The other traced the long line of her ribs, testing which spots flared with pain when pressed. He rested his head against her shoulder. “Look what you made me do,” he murmured, hands tracing the outline of his work. Tansy met his eye in the mirror, exhausted but still buzzing from adrenaline. Her hands moved up to finger the wet indent of his teeth at her shoulder. He smiled fondly. The conquest of his fire eater, bringing her to heel, made him feel like the Dragonlord he was. When the candles burned low and he dismissed her with coins heavy in her palm, she would gather her cloak, step back through the servants’ passageway. Tansy returned to the pavilion with shadows beneath her eyes and a faint ache of exertion in her limbs, the other girls would watch her with sympathy. By morning she would inspect the marks left on her body. But Aerion paid well, more than what she was owed. Enough that she could refuse lesser men, refuse anyone. Tansy was marked, yes, but she would never be owned again.
Being actually like frfr co-con is so strange, especially with headmates who have a very different headspace form then our body, like I’ll just be walking around minding my own business and now I have to communicate with someone so I don’t hit the wings I can now feel on a doorway, it’s not a bad thing, just strange. -Leafy🐰(he/they)
House Of Solidarity AU explanation: HOS is an au focused on a “good” timeline. In this AU, a lot of the weird things (A good majority of these characters being p3dos???) have been removed/carefully moved around unless it’s someone like Sabertooth… as he’s just uh… In this au, Humans went nearly extinct during the 80s to some unknown disease and now only a small percentage of the population is human. Due to this, mutants no longer need to fight. The timeline is set somewhere between very late 1990s, around 1998 or 1999 and early 2000s. Charles Xavier and Erik Lehnsherr decide to open the school, renaming it “School for gifted”. Erik is also a more active father, he doesn’t touch Rogue with a 80 foot pole, and Charles isn’t a weirdo, if Y’know…. The school is genuinely a school, not a militia organization. They also are able to advance their tech to help mutants incapable of controlling their mutations. Apocalypse is also more peaceful, just like a random deity that appears here and there. Joseph exists as just more annoying little brother and lived with my OC Hazel’s mother, Isla Wolfe. Taking on her last name too… so that’s something. That’s all for now!^^
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