Storm-Tossed
Twenty-Sixth Day of the Tenth Month 293 AC
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Davos Seaworth wasn't much used to the sight of men gazing upon him with respect, as he made his way through the Keep with a will and purpose known only to himself and his liege. Respect borne of having faced perils that warding gestures or even castle-forged steel couldn't stave off with better chances than a wish and a prayer. He found that martial men were often accepting of danger when it came from familiar quarters but were just as likely to shy away from the birthing chamber for a sport of hawking and hunting, as was the case with the King and his three children... with
Lord Robert Baratheon, he stuttered the correction, even in his thoughts, as if you had asked the former smuggler and seafarer a few weeks past, he would have declared it sheer lunacy, a farce, that his liege lord would ever raise his hand in defiance to his elder brother, much less name him usurper and break bread with his enemies.
Davos was born in Fleabottom. The most he could say about Kings was that it was right and good and proper when they concerned themselves even a small amount with the ills that plagued the common folk, and from mumbling his way through still hard-to-read books and scrolls, the works of some of the better ones had worn down his natural suspicion at the noble intentions simply holding authority and power would seem to imply. Lord Stannis Baratheon demonstratively proved that cleaving to what being a Lord demanded was not actually what was expected, and it had actually won him few friends or allies... except for one boy, a boy no one in the world had thought much of or expected anything from, a lad of an age with his oldest, Dale.
One who had risen to become the new terror of his age, as Daemon Targaryen of old, or so the books described. Who had conquered and talked his way into cities dipping their banners to him as Aegon of old had, and who's words were felt across two lands in their entirety every day from sea to sea. He had taken Lord Stannis' side when his back was pressed to the wall on two occasions, then, a false shade of his brother occupying his ancestral home and once more when he faced hostile and reluctant vassals, who were only a thin margin from outright rebellion, turning them into steadfast allies overnight, letters flying in from all over the Stormlands, not enough to make anyone suspicious, but regular correspondence that seemed a fevered dream.
Lord Stannis was facing an uphill battle to simply gain control of his Kingdom, and Viserys Targaryen's first act as his rightful liege was to... simply erase the problem. Through threats or honeyed words, Davos couldn't be sure, but it was done. Aye, there were still troubles, still suspicious Lords and Knights, but the muttering had become quiet whispers nearly overnight, and
no one spat at his feet anymore--that lot had almost
sprinted their way out of sight the day dozens of other knights had rode up to Storm's End, sent forth from several Lords to make a show of support to some of the Lord's policies and efforts to organize defense against the otherworldly. Now men tried to curry favor with
Stannis, Davos thought, as was proper.
So when he had learned, not long ago, that he would be company to royal blood that night, if only briefly, he had just hoped he wouldn't make a fool out of himself and shame his lord. Princess Daenerys wasn't anything like he had expected of princesses, but she was just about everything he expected of a Targaryen in this age. He had heard the stories that had worked their way across Westeros at this point, and it was a mixed bag, much of it spinning yarns of how she'd turn into a baby dragon just like her brother and steal into the eaves and hollows of people's homes to whisper their secrets into his ear, or how she spun abhorrent sacraments to dark gods to slake the Blood Dragon's thirst for death and destruction. Hogshite, Davos knew then, but still there to hear and quite loudly.
Davos had also spent time in Sorcerer's Deep, and heard all the other tales that got spun in a city which was ruled by their kin, and what struck him was how people didn't bother to embellish stories about the good she did, not when so many of them had the air of "I was there" and "she helped me", "fixed me right quick, she did", "told me a nice story" and "gave me sweets when I was sad", smiles on their faces and proud to talk about all the little things the girl did for the people living there. The Princess had free reign of the city and wasn't at all afraid to get her feet wet or her hands dirty interacting with the common folk. Actually, people would just about worship the ground she walked on, if there weren't laws against exactly that in a city where paying false witness would anger a giant snake that ate demons, fed to it by the King's own hand more often than not.
"Your Highness," Davos kneeled, now that he had lead them into the Keep properly, but she waved him off, then stepped forward and grasped his hand between two of hers in something that almost seemed like a benediction. "I won't be here long, but give this to Shireen for me, will you?" It was a box, like you might place jewelery in. "Actually, show it to cousin Stannis first," she said thoughtfully. Davos blinked at the remark. "He'd appreciate the gesture if he was the one to deliver it, after inspecting it first. Her scars..." she explained.
"Honest truth, your Highness?" She nodded. "He'd probably be chewing iron if he heard gifts were delivered, even by the person who cured her of her greyscale herself, even
after inspecting it." She smiled softly, and nodded. "But even if he does still comb over it with a fine Myrish lens, it's mostly because it's Shireen you see, so don't think too harshly of him..." he trailed off as she kept smiling, their steps taking them away from prying eyes and ears in the Keep, though not too far from where he had to lead her back through darkened hallways.
"I don't," she proclaimed, and it was there and then that Davos realized he was speaking to her like she wasn't a child of ten years, barely half a decade older than Lady Shireen herself. "There are only perhaps two, maybe three Lords in all of Westeros who my brother respects as much as Lord Stannis. And I think that, personally, he would be first among equals in some cases, if not in all matters. You cannot value true loyalty like coin or even a strong wind at your back," she declared in a common seaman's adage to his surprise.
He got the point, however:
If it was good enough for her brother, Davos thought,
it must be so for her. He also understood the other unspoken part, so long as they didn't go against her brother, she would be on their side too.
Davos flicked his gaze to the side, where her companion had remained silent all the while. They wore a white cloak with a blued steel clasp and her grey walking dress was dry despite the earlier rain. The Princess gestured at her, and the woman lowered her cloak. Eyes of storm-cast blue gazed back as his own widened in shock.
He never would have caught it if she hadn't appeared in the Princess' company and hadn't looked at him dead-on, and there were of course plenty of people in keep's surrounds who might have similar features from byblows long past. It took him a moment to place her age, and he decided she probably couldn't be Robert's, as his eldest bastard was barely older than the girl nearby, unless he got started on that damn early. "This Steffon's get, then?" He decided to be blunt, as this mire couldn't get any less tangled if he tried, and it was with that air of resignation he knew he would be explaining all of this to Lord Stannis before the night was over.
"No," the woman replied instantly with a look of brief exasperation, even as the Princess shot her an amused glance. Davos began to relax. "It was actually Ormund Baratheon who sired my father with a maid, unknowing, though his son Steffon never knew of the fact. He had just learned about it not long before he died, since he took father on that campaign in the Stepstones, and I still can't decide if that was to name him worthy or to see him dead." She shook her head in false sadness, "The Gods really do make mockery of all our plans." The Princess shot her another look, though this one Davos was less able to read through.
"Then..." Davos began, then trailed off, realizing the hidden tension that had lifted and reappeared just as quickly.
She breathed out softly, squaring her shoulders and standing a little taller, features even more noble-seeming in the dim torch light. "Lords would say blood only matters when they say it matters. I'm not even a bastard. I'm a
nobody, a bastard of a bastard. But my father matters to me. I'm taking him with me, because I
am somebody now," she proclaimed, and sparks of sky's flame danced across her eyes, and she seemed as if she could unleash the fury of a thunder cloud and shatter stone and sunder earth. "Because my blood is the blood of Elenei, like as not. And even if he is an oafish cad, even if he is a violent brute, even if he is from an old and small world who can barely understand the struggles I've been through..." the lightning in her gaze seemed to vanish and she seemed...
smaller herself, somehow, less sure.
"He's still my father."
Davos didn't dare to breathe for what felt like minutes. Then he nodded. "Aye," he said.
Kin... kin he could understand.
"Let's go find him."
Davos pretended not to see the Princess squeeze the woman's hand.