ᴛʜᴇ ᴋᴇʏ ᴛᴏ ᴛʜᴇ ɴᴏʀᴛʜ | sᴀɴsᴀ sᴛᴀʀᴋ (
kindlymeant) wrote in
dear_mun2012-01-16 11:57 pm
Entry tags:
at magicdraft; post may contain spoilers for ASoIaF
It is not that I am ungrateful for your attention, my lady, though I cannot share in your renewed enthusiasm. I would have you remember, please, that even away from my lord father - especially then, perhaps - I must be careful to conduct myself as is befitting. I will not give him reason for disappointment, least not when I walk alongside such noble names.
As for - circumstances as they are, it is far better this way. That door may be closed now, as it should be, and so it shall remain.
As for - circumstances as they are, it is far better this way. That door may be closed now, as it should be, and so it shall remain.

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One sword is capable of little, my lord.
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You are wrong, my lady. One sword may make all the difference in the world.
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One sword would not protect me from those who have done me harm and would do so again.
One sword would not take me home.
Sombre, she balls her hand into a fist, as if to quell the thought. It is not the ingrained sense of wrongness that stays her hand, though, not the ideal that ladies should not hold swords, let alone use them - it is the wall built up around her.]
Perhaps, my lord, in the right hands, or against a single foe. [I am being too daring, and the words come too easily.]
...But really, you speak as if it is a story.
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[ Shhhk. Replacing the blade at his side, he surveys her hesitation and makes a mental note not to reach out with a sign of goodwill again without first being plied for one. ]
If a shield-maiden is legend, then I have stories enough to tell but am weak with the words of a scholar. It would make for a poor tale on my account.
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[The words are out before she can stop them, her countenance turning flinty. The grief-stricken girl lingers somewhere in the cracks, but she chides herself for it.
Moments pass, and then she smiles. It is small and wan and rather too knowing, but she gives it all the same.]
You have been kind to me, my lord, but I have no need to be regaled with stories as a child would, and - I doubt I have strength in my arm to even lift such steel.
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You assume, lady, that I would abandon you to lift a blade alone.
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If I thought you a sellsword you would be a poor one, but as it stands you must have better causes than bastard girls, my lord.
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[ A hand touches his chest briefly, a nod given. ]
I am humbled.
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(She should trust her instincts better, but she feels such matters of the heart have only betrayed her before.)]
It is I that is humbled. I shall endeavour not to cut you, my lord, for it would be illdone to spill such noble blood.
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[ He could give her a pseudonym, but since the Argonath ... ]
I am Aragorn son of Arathorn and am called Elessar, the Elfstone, Chieftain of the Dúnedain, the heir of Isildur Elendil's son of Gondor. [ A bow. ] Well met, little lady.
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Forgive me, I did not - [She sucks in a breath, and looks up at him, but does not yet rise.]
As it please your Grace, I am Alayne Stone, daughter to Lord Petyr Baelish, Protector of the Vale and Lord Paramount of the Riverlands. [Sansa Stark is restless within her, but it is not Alayne Stone's place to speak of wolves.]
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[ Uncomfortable even now when people bow their heads, as convicted as he is to avenging Boromir and assuming his rightful place on the throne, he's still very much Strider.
A hand lightly touches her arm. ]
I bid you rise and show me no special deference. I only wished to be honest with you, Lady Alayne.
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Appearances are deceiving, in their way. She cannot picture this man - in travel-stained clothes and with his scruffy hair - wearing a crown, or sitting a throne, and yet she cannot find his claim refutable.]
You are... a strange sort of king then, your Grace. [She says, sure and tremulous in her speaking all at once.