The Dragon Ascendant: NO SV: Welcome To Another Viserys Targaryen Quest (A Ck2 Quest)

I am so Glad to see this quest return but I honestly thought you won't be touching the setting until either The Adventures of Dunk and Egg series would revive your interest in the Westeros @Magoose and that we would get a reboot not continuing the quest...
I am being very hard about hbo right now. But…

Someone asked if I would ever come back to this because I set up a really interesting scenario.

Plus Viserys was fun so… let there be fun.
 
[X]The Riverlands: Ahh the Riverlands…a place of chaos and disorder, first order of business, what is this shit you hear about Free Cities in Westeros…the Matter of Harrenhall's future as Lady Whent… is selling the castle, the titles and the lands… and the growing political disunity as a new small landowner class is calling for something called a Carta. Some kind of government document…and there is a massive revolt against the new Frey Lord's (Another Uprising of an elder Claimant) and a massive… What the fuck is this? The Peasants of The Blue Fork are claiming a free territory, and declared the Republic of Forks? Edmure, what the hell did you do!? What the hell are you doing!?
 
Vote closed New
Scheduled vote count started by Magoose on Jan 14, 2025 at 11:38 PM, finished with 8 posts and 5 votes.

  • [X]The Riverlands: Ahh the Riverlands…a place of chaos and disorder, first order of business, what is this shit you hear about Free Cities in Westeros…the Matter of Harrenhall's future as Lady Whent… is selling the castle, the titles and the lands… and the growing political disunity as a new small landowner class is calling for something called a Carta. Some kind of government document…and there is a massive revolt against the new Frey Lord's (Another Uprising of an elder Claimant) and a massive… What the fuck is this? The Peasants of The Blue Fork are claiming a free territory, and declared the Republic of Forks? Edmure, what the hell did you do!? What the hell are you doing!?
 
The Riverlands: (Before the Arrival) New
The Riverlands: (Before the Arrival)

This dream was not your own.

The forests were ancient, their twisted branches clawing at the sky like skeletal hands. The trees were unfamiliar, yet they stirred something deep within you—a memory not yours, a place you had glimpsed only in fleeting visions. You had seen flashes of it from above, soaring over the Crownlands and the Stormlands, but here, rooted in the soil of your dream, the sight unsettled you. It gnawed at you, that peculiar blend of the familiar and the strange, the comforting and the grotesque.

This place was Summerhall.

The ruins lay before you, half-consumed by nature's slow reclamation. A harp rested in your hands, its silver strings glinting faintly in the dim light. You didn't remember picking it up, yet your fingers moved as if guided by another will. The haunting melody of the harp filled the air, and your feet carried you to a simple tree stump near the ruined castle, its jagged silhouette reflected in the still waters of the lake.

This was where you were born.

No. This was where Rhaegar was born.

The distinction twisted in your mind as the harp began to play itself, and a voice, soft, sorrowful, and achingly familiar, sang a song about Jenny of Oldstones.

High in the halls of the kings who are gone,
Jenny would dance with her ghosts.


The melody hung in the air like a whisper from the dead, the notes curling around you, pulling you deeper into the dream. Yet there was something wrong, something deeply unsettling. The words faltered, the once-haunting melody shifting to a dissonant tone that clawed at your mind. It wasn't a song meant to comfort; it was a trap, its beauty a snare designed to keep you here.

A cold dread seeped into your bones as the melodic voice spoke, lilting and ominous.
"Viserys… you shouldn't be here."

You turned toward the ruins of Summerhall, and before your eyes, the broken stones began to knit themselves together. The walls rose, whole and unblemished, the spires gleaming in the sunlight as if untouched by tragedy. The castle stood as it might have in the memories of those who had seen it at its height.

But the illusion was flawed. Flames licked at the edges of the vision, smoke curling from the windows, fire devouring the perfection as quickly as it was conjured.

"Rhaegar," you whispered, your voice trembling. "What is happening?"

From the flames, he emerged, just as you remembered him.

The noble bearing, the haunting beauty, the quiet sadness in his eyes—it was Rhaegar. The Rhaegar who had loomed over your childhood like a ghost, equal parts idol, and shadow, shaping the man you had become. For a moment, the sight of him froze you in place, your heart swelling with the familiar ache of admiration and longing.

But then you saw it.

His smile.

Soft, sorrowful, it struck you like a blade. But it wasn't his smile. It wasn't the warm, quiet kindness that had always softened his presence, the faint curve of his lips that spoke of understanding even in moments of despair.

This smile was hollow. A mockery.

The realization clawed at your mind, unraveling the illusion. This wasn't him.

"I'm sorry, Viserys," he said, his voice resonating with a sense of infinite sadness. It sounded so much like him, eerily so, but you could hear the cracks beneath the surface. It was an imitation, insidious and shallow, trying to mimic the depth of emotion that only your brother could have possessed.

"But Rhaegar is not here right now…" the figure continued, his tone slipping into something darker, something venomous. "He's far away. And I will make sure you meet him soon."

The harp in your hands, which had been strumming soft, mournful notes of its own accord, fell silent. The strings snapped, their sudden discord cutting through the air like the finality of a guillotine.

The dream began to twist.

The flames consuming the ruins surged higher, devouring the castle and the figure standing before you. Rhaegar, or the thing wearing his face, stood motionless, his form blurring and warping, the edges of his body dissolving into smoke. For a fleeting second, you saw through the façade entirely. The indifference on his face wasn't malice. It was something worse—something unbearable.

A lie.

"You aren't my brother," you snarled, your voice trembling with fury. Your hands clenched, and you reached out in anger, as though you could rip the truth from the apparition. "Show yourself. Don't wear his face… don't wear his face, you coward!"

Your words rang out, defiant, yet unanswered. The figure turned away, fading into the inferno, as though it had never been there.

"You shouldn't make a wish for that dear Viserys." The voice taunted. "I will wear the face of the one you trust the most… before I kill you."

The fire consumed Summerhall entirely now, swallowing every trace of the past. The sky itself seemed to shatter, splintering into fragments that tumbled into the void. The world collapsed around you, pulling you into a suffocating darkness.

"You are going to die. And with that… I shall take your place."

Then there was silence.

And in that silence, only the echoes of a song remained.

A song that no longer made sense.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

You awoke with a start, sitting up with a jolt as you felt Arianne's soft hands and arms wrapping around you, causing her to stir in fear.

She noticed you panting heavily, in fear and confusion, but only held you close. And as your heart calmed, matching her own… you laid back, and fell asleep.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Who do you talk to? (The Court):
(Choose 2)
[]Arianne: She's worried about your constant nightmares, and it's affecting Daeron… she has been saying ever since that… incident… every time you sleep, he cries. Like he can't bear the sight of you trapped in your dreams.
[]Dany: You walked over to her with a cool grasp. "Dany… do you have dreams that feel too real?"
[]Aegon: He is… quiet, contemplative. Trying to think about what the hell happened over in the Vale. and who the seven hells were trying to kill you.
[]Bonifar: He was the only one of the court who was still absolutely calm with the strange happenings of the Vale. He wasn't trying to do anything but… Well… keep his sword sharp, and his mind clear. "The Stranger is not trying to visit you today Your Grace…" And he said it with certainty.
[]Oberyn: Both of you looked at the bottle of wine and both looked ready to drink it. "Something tells me that you want to talk?"
[]Jon Snow: There was something about him that you couldn't always read… but you did have a fair few interesting things to say once you were alone. "So Jon… Tell me… Are you afraid of me?"
[]Sansa Stark: She hadn't stopped crying since the incident. But… now she was free of tears. "Something feels wrong." She said. "Something in the west feels wrong."

Who do you Talk to? (The Guard):
(Choose 2)
[] Barristan Selmy (Lord Commander): He coughed. "This is…how the blazes are we going to fight this?"
[] Brynden Tully: "Good steel and firm hearts, Lord commander."
[] Jaime Lannister: Jaime was looking at reports from the Captial. "Well at least Stannis has some Luck. Seems Auran Waters has decided that he would rather pull a rouge prince, and is requesting ships and supplies to take over the stepstones."
[] Arys Oakheart: Arys was quietly singing to your son Daeron. And it was something you didn't expect. He was quite gentle with him, and the song choice was perfect.
[] Mandon Moore: The Silent knight only looked out. "There will be more They won't stop until you are dead." there was a pause. "I heard stories about shades in my youth, but never seen them before with my own eyes."

AN: enjoy and vote in plan format please.
 
[X] Plan: Everything is going to be OK
-[X]Arianne: She's worried about your constant nightmares, and it's affecting Daeron… she has been saying ever since that… incident… every time you sleep, he cries. Like he can't bear the sight of you trapped in your dreams.
-[X]Sansa Stark: She hadn't stopped crying since the incident. But… now she was free of tears. "Something feels wrong." She said. "Something in the west feels wrong."
-[X] Barristan Selmy (Lord Commander): He coughed. "This is…how the blazes are we going to fight this?"
-[X] Mandon Moore: The Silent knight only looked out. "There will be more They won't stop until you are dead." there was a pause. "I heard stories about shades in my youth, but never seen them before with my own eyes."

OK, here is my plan we talk with Barristan and the missus to reasure them, and we talk with Sansa and Mandon to see if we can get some information out of this...
 
The Witch of Elyria New
The Witch of Elyria:

(Vaelyra Valtheon POV)

WARNING: This omake will contain, violence, human sacrifice, and other disturbing scenes from the eyes of someone who did not have Viserys fortitude when we blew up the iron throne. See it caused people who had the potential for power to... at least some of them... get worse. It will be spoilered twice in case you all don't want to read it, but know that this character is... well someone we need to worry about. Because you know all the rumors that Oberyn is talking about that sound far fetched and crazy.

Well this lady is why things are a little bit chaotic in that region of the world.

And not just because the Unsullied have decided to go John Brown on Slavers Bay.

This is what might have happened if Dany was taken from you and you were forced to adventure in Essos alone.

Don't worry, dany is not crazy, at least any more then the averege targaryen. she would study magic in the less. controversial way. like alchemy... or being a fucking bard.

Actually lets hope she dosen't become a bard. then you might have to deal with all the child support. :V

When you were born, you were the last true-blooded Valyrian of Elyria.

A city without dragons, yet still clinging to the ashes of the past, had cherished you as its final ember. Your very existence was a relic, a symbol of something lost. Your father and mother had honored the ancient Valyrian traditions, marrying as siblings to preserve the purity of their bloodline. Even as the world changed and the dragons had long since vanished, your family alone had kept the old ways alive.

And then they died.

Leaving you alone.

Alone among people who did not see you, but only what you represented. They looked at you and saw their savior, the last fragile link to the vanished Dragonlords, to the days when Valyrians ruled the world with fire and magic. They whispered of destiny, of duty, of the weight you must bear.

But all you ever wanted was a friend.

Someone who saw you as more than a symbol.

Someone who believed you could be more than the city's last desperate hope.

You hated it—the pageantry, the weight of expectation, the suffocating responsibility of being Lady of Elyria. They wanted you to look forward, to lead, to uphold what little remained. But your heart yearned to look backward—to the true Valyrian Freehold, to the lost empire that had once cast its shadow over the world.

And so, you dreamed.

You had heard the stories of him—Viserys Targaryen. The beggar king, the last of his line, who had once been mocked and discarded. But he had not faded into obscurity and died as he should have. No, he had become something more. He had fought in Volantis, rising from exile to stand beside Alesander and his army. He had carved a path of fire and steel, not just as a wandering prince, but as a hero.

A hero who had seized his fate with his own hands. A Hero who saved his people when they called, and became a king that would echo forever in eternity, and history.

A hero who could save you from this prison.

Because that was what Elyria had become—a prison of duty, of expectation, of a past that could never return.

And you would do anything to escape it.
-------------------------------------------------------------
You had felt it that night.

The night of the Tears.

Not just you—all the people of Elyria had. It was as if the very air had trembled, as if something ancient and immense had stirred from slumber. A pulse of raw, unfathomable power had coursed through your veins, igniting something primal within you. It was not merely a ripple in the currents of magic, but a surge, a tide that rose and crashed against the boundaries of the world itself.

Something had happened.

Something powerful.

Not the release of Typhoon, the Mother of Dragons, the great beast whispered of in myths older than Valyria itself. If that had been the cause, the world would have shattered beneath its wings. The sky would have burned, the seas would have boiled, and the Doom itself would have come again, wiping all life from the face of the earth.

No, this was different.

This was not destruction—it was something far stranger.

You had known of the magical barriers that crisscrossed the world, the invisible laws that held reality together. Since childhood, you had scoured the libraries, your fingers tracing the ancient, crumbling parchment of forbidden tomes, absorbing every scrap of knowledge you could find. The Red Priests of Volantis had spoken of them in hushed tones, weaving half-truths and prophecies into their sermons. The scrolls—so few in number, scattered and incomplete—hinted at a power older than dragons, older than fire and shadow alike.

You had learned what little there was to learn. And yet, on that night, you felt what no text had ever fully explained.

And you were not alone.

Even those whose Valyrian blood had long since thinned, those who bore no claim to the lost Dragonlords of old, had felt it. It had coursed through them like a shockwave, like lightning tearing through their very souls.

They had felt it, and they had screamed.

All except you. You only laughed in delight... because you realized that you were free.
-----------------------------------------------------------

But as the night ended, you realized something.

Perhaps this prison was not a prison at all.

No… it was more than that.

It was a resource. A crucible in which you could forge yourself into something greater.

The blood in your veins still thrummed with the remnants of ancient power, and as you stood in the dim glow of the dying embers, you remembered—truly remembered—the stories and scrolls you had poured over in your youth. The riddles that had once seemed like metaphors, the cryptic passages that scholars dismissed as the ramblings of sorcerers long dead… they made sense now.

A clarity settled over you like never before.

In the darkness, you saw it—the fragility of the world itself. How easily it could be shaped. Morphed, twisted, bent to a stronger will. The very fabric of existence was not fixed, not immutable, but something pliable… something malleable.

Something you could control.

Something that would make you worthy.

The Valyrians had known this. Their legacy was not merely dragons or the towering spires of oily black stone that dotted the world like remnants of a forgotten age. No, that was only the surface. A glimpse of what they had truly mastered.

They had bled for their power. Sacrificed for it. Blood magic had bound them to dragons, and had carved their dominion across the known world.

But even that was mundane compared to the whispers that had been buried deeper still.

The Valyrians, for all their arrogance, had feared something. There were things they had refused to record in their great libraries, knowledge they had hidden away, even from themselves. Forbidden rites that not even the Dragonlords dared to claim.

Yet you had found the truth, scattered in fragments across time, concealed between the lines of innocuous texts. A secret so dark, so coveted, that only those who had sought it with true purpose could begin to grasp its depths.

It was not just power.

It was eternity.

The magic of eternal youth. The Magic of turning those sacrificed into power.

Your power.

A sorcery beyond fire and blood, beyond the simple mastery of beasts. A magic that did not merely rule, but endured.

And as the first light of dawn crept over the horizon, you knew—this city, this legacy, this prison—would no longer bind you.

It would be your foundation.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ou had prepared the woman in front of you, watching as she trembled, her breath coming in short, panicked gasps.

She was young—noble, refined, the very picture of aristocratic grace in another setting. But now, stripped of her poise, she was nothing but fear incarnate.

Moments ago, she had been speaking in hushed tones, sharing gossip laced with treason, whispering of plots in the dark corners of grand halls. She and her kind had spoken of you, of what you had done, of what you would do. Their words had been sharp with fear, but beneath it, you had heard something else—contempt.

They had not merely feared you. They had despised you.

They had spoken of ways to remove you, to undo all that you had built, as if you were some passing nightmare they could banish with a few well-placed daggers and a shared conspiracy.

And to think… you had almost missed it.


You had been so consumed by your vision, so intoxicated by your own ambition, that you had let yourself grow blind to the shadows that gathered at your feet.

How close you had come to losing everything.

How perilously near you had been to let yourself be undone by these… insignificant insects.

But now, in the flickering light of the chamber, with her wide, pleading eyes staring up at you, you saw the truth laid bare.

There was one thing one absolute certainty, you understood in this moment.

They would see you.

Before all else. Before their treason, before their secrets, before their cowardly little schemes.

They would see you.

And they would understand.
------------------------------------------------------------------

The treasonous worms knelt before the great tub, their eyes wide with terror as they beheld the dark ritual unfolding before them. The chamber was thick with the scent of burning incense, the air trembling with the reverberations of ancient Valyrian incantations. Priests and attendants—your devoted coven of nobles—circled the altar, their voices rising in a steady crescendo, speaking the words of power that had not been uttered in centuries.

You walked toward them, slow and deliberate, your presence commanding absolute silence except for the weeping of those about to be unmade.

They sobbed, they pleaded, their voices hoarse with desperation.

"Mercy, my lady—no, my queen, my goddess! Please! We did not mean—"

Lies. Sniveling, pathetic lies.

Their cries fell upon deaf ears.

Each tear, each broken gasp, only deepened the contempt curling in your chest. These were the vermin who had schemed against you, who had whispered poison behind your back, who had dared to dream of your downfall. They had tried to steal your destiny, to wrench you from the divine path you had been born to walk.

And now, they would serve a far greater purpose.

To simply kill them would have been wasteful.

Their blood—their power—was still within them, however, diluted by the taint of outsiders. Even in their frailty, the ancient fire of Valyria still ran in their veins, a lingering ember waiting to be consumed.

And more than that… their deaths would be a message.

A message to those who still doubted, those who still clung to their fragile illusions that they had a choice, that they could deny the will of their new goddess.

Their ruler.

Their progenitor.

Their only savior.

With a single nod from you, the blades flashed.

Gurgled screams were swallowed by the rising hymn of the ritual as their throats were cut, one by one, their life spilling into the great tub prepared for your rebirth. The crimson tide swelled, thick and steaming, swirling with the last remnants of their stolen ambitions. Their bodies were dragged away, discarded like husks, their purpose fulfilled.

You stepped forward, unafraid, standing before the pool of blood that shimmered with arcane potential. You had spent years studying the old texts, deciphering the lost knowledge that lesser minds had dismissed as myth. You had prepared for this moment, and honed your will until it was unbreakable.

And now, it was time.

With steady resolve, you descended into the crimson depths, submerging yourself fully.

The warmth of it seeped into your skin, into your very bones. Then came the pull.

A violent force, clawing at you from within the blood. The souls of the sacrificed, writhing in their last moments of defiance, shrieking as they sought to take their revenge, to drag you into the abyss with them.

Fools.

You had anticipated their final, desperate struggle.

With a single thought, you turned their fury into fuel, consuming them, their lingering essence feeding the inferno of your own power. Their rage, their fear, their pain—all of it was burned away, reduced to nothing but embers that folded seamlessly into your growing strength.

And then, the change began.

You felt it before you saw it—your flesh remaking itself, smoothing, refining, becoming something beyond human. Your limbs stretched, lean and powerful, your form reshaping into something both ethereal and terrifying. Strength coiled beneath your skin like a sleeping dragon stirring to wakefulness.

And then you rose.

The blood sloughed off your body in slow, thick rivulets as you emerged, standing tall before your followers. The chamber was silent, every eye upon you, wide with awe and fear.

You were no longer simply you.

You had become what you were destined to be.

You had grown, not to a towering height that would set you apart from men, but enough to stand above most women with a presence that demanded reverence. Your once pallid complexion, drained from years of delving into the forbidden magics of Old Valyria, had transformed—no longer sickly and ghostly, but luminous as if your skin now held the warmth of firelight within it. There was a richness to your coloring, a depth that had never been there before, a glow that was both unnatural and irresistible.

Your hair, once fine and brittle from years of strain, had become a cascading river of white silk, flowing past your shoulders in thick, shining waves. It shimmered like woven moonlight, each strand imbued with an ethereal luster, as though even your very presence defied the mortal realm. It was longer now, heavier, a mantle of power that framed her sharpened features in celestial radiance.

Your body had reshaped itself into something both breathtaking and formidable. Where you had once been slight, almost waifish, with a frame too delicate to bear the weight of the world placed upon you, you now stood with undeniable strength. your muscles had formed with divine precision—long, sleek, and coiled with power, neither bulky nor brutish, but carved with the grace of a warrior queen. There was a tautness to your flesh, a resilience, a tempered steel beneath the surface that had not existed before.


Your chest, once modest, had filled into a form that was undeniably, almost unnaturally, womanly—full, firm, and statuesque, like the divine figures carved into the oldest temples of Valyria. They were the kind of curves that men would wage wars over, the kind that had inspired sonnets and bloodshed alike, the kind that spoke of both nurture and dominance.

You stepped toward the mirror, and the figure that gazed back at her was no longer the frail girl who had once been shackled by duty and expectation. No.

The woman in the reflection was a goddess of war.

Your cheekbones were sharper, her eyes brighter, burning with an otherworldly intensity that made them impossible to look away from. Your lips were fuller, redder as if kissed by flame itself. Every inch of your body radiates purpose, power, and undeniable allure.

You had become something more than human. Something the world would desire.

Something the world would fear.

You would be the Queen that the World Desires.
 
Last edited:
The Witch of Elyria:

(Vaelyra Valtheon POV)

WARNING: This omake will contain, violence, human sacrifice, and other disturbing scenes from the eyes of someone who did not have Viserys fortitude when we blew up the iron throne. See it caused people who had the potential for power to... at least some of them... get worse. It will be spoilered twice in case you all don't want to read it, but know that this character is... well someone we need to worry about. Because you know all the rumors that Oberyn is talking about that sound far fetched and crazy.

Well this lady is why things are a little bit chaotic in that region of the world.

And not just because the Unsullied have decided to go John Brown on Slavers Bay.

This is what might have happened if Dany was taken from you and you were forced to adventure in Essos alone.

Don't worry, dany is not crazy, at least any more then the averege targaryen. she would study magic in the less. controversial way. like alchemy... or being a fucking bard.

Actually lets hope she dosen't become a bard. then you might have to deal with all the child support. :V

When you were born, you were the last true-blooded Valyrian of Elyria.

A city without dragons, yet still clinging to the ashes of the past, had cherished you as its final ember. Your very existence was a relic, a symbol of something lost. Your father and mother had honored the ancient Valyrian traditions, marrying as siblings to preserve the purity of their bloodline. Even as the world changed and the dragons had long since vanished, your family alone had kept the old ways alive.

And then they died.

Leaving you alone.

Alone among people who did not see you, but only what you represented. They looked at you and saw their savior, the last fragile link to the vanished Dragonlords, to the days when Valyrians ruled the world with fire and magic. They whispered of destiny, of duty, of the weight you must bear.

But all you ever wanted was a friend.

Someone who saw you as more than a symbol.

Someone who believed you could be more than the city's last desperate hope.

You hated it—the pageantry, the weight of expectation, the suffocating responsibility of being Lady of Elyria. They wanted you to look forward, to lead, to uphold what little remained. But your heart yearned to look backward—to the true Valyrian Freehold, to the lost empire that had once cast its shadow over the world.

And so, you dreamed.

You had heard the stories of him—Viserys Targaryen. The beggar king, the last of his line, who had once been mocked and discarded. But he had not faded into obscurity and died as he should have. No, he had become something more. He had fought in Volantis, rising from exile to stand beside Alesander and his army. He had carved a path of fire and steel, not just as a wandering prince, but as a hero.

A hero who had seized his fate with his own hands. A Hero who saved his people when they called, and became a king that would echo forever in eternity, and history.

A hero who could save you from this prison.

Because that was what Elyria had become—a prison of duty, of expectation, of a past that could never return.

And you would do anything to escape it.
-------------------------------------------------------------
You had felt it that night.

The night of the Tears.

Not just you—all the people of Elyria had. It was as if the very air had trembled, as if something ancient and immense had stirred from slumber. A pulse of raw, unfathomable power had coursed through your veins, igniting something primal within you. It was not merely a ripple in the currents of magic, but a surge, a tide that rose and crashed against the boundaries of the world itself.

Something had happened.

Something powerful.

Not the release of Typhoon, the Mother of Dragons, the great beast whispered of in myths older than Valyria itself. If that had been the cause, the world would have shattered beneath its wings. The sky would have burned, the seas would have boiled, and the Doom itself would have come again, wiping all life from the face of the earth.

No, this was different.

This was not destruction—it was something far stranger.

You had known of the magical barriers that crisscrossed the world, the invisible laws that held reality together. Since childhood, you had scoured the libraries, your fingers tracing the ancient, crumbling parchment of forbidden tomes, absorbing every scrap of knowledge you could find. The Red Priests of Volantis had spoken of them in hushed tones, weaving half-truths and prophecies into their sermons. The scrolls—so few in number, scattered and incomplete—hinted at a power older than dragons, older than fire and shadow alike.

You had learned what little there was to learn. And yet, on that night, you felt what no text had ever fully explained.

And you were not alone.

Even those whose Valyrian blood had long since thinned, those who bore no claim to the lost Dragonlords of old, had felt it. It had coursed through them like a shockwave, like lightning tearing through their very souls.

They had felt it, and they had screamed.

All except you. You only laughed in delight... because you realized that you were free.
-----------------------------------------------------------

But as the night ended, you realized something.

Perhaps this prison was not a prison at all.

No… it was more than that.

It was a resource. A crucible in which you could forge yourself into something greater.

The blood in your veins still thrummed with the remnants of ancient power, and as you stood in the dim glow of the dying embers, you remembered—truly remembered—the stories and scrolls you had poured over in your youth. The riddles that had once seemed like metaphors, the cryptic passages that scholars dismissed as the ramblings of sorcerers long dead… they made sense now.

A clarity settled over you like never before.

In the darkness, you saw it—the fragility of the world itself. How easily it could be shaped. Morphed, twisted, bent to a stronger will. The very fabric of existence was not fixed, not immutable, but something pliable… something malleable.

Something you could control.

Something that would make you worthy.

The Valyrians had known this. Their legacy was not merely dragons or the towering spires of oily black stone that dotted the world like remnants of a forgotten age. No, that was only the surface. A glimpse of what they had truly mastered.

They had bled for their power. Sacrificed for it. Blood magic had bound them to dragons, and had carved their dominion across the known world.

But even that was mundane compared to the whispers that had been buried deeper still.

The Valyrians, for all their arrogance, had feared something. There were things they had refused to record in their great libraries, knowledge they had hidden away, even from themselves. Forbidden rites that not even the Dragonlords dared to claim.

Yet you had found the truth, scattered in fragments across time, concealed between the lines of innocuous texts. A secret so dark, so coveted, that only those who had sought it with true purpose could begin to grasp its depths.

It was not just power.

It was eternity.

The magic of eternal youth. The Magic of turning those sacrificed into power.

Your power.

A sorcery beyond fire and blood, beyond the simple mastery of beasts. A magic that did not merely rule, but endured.

And as the first light of dawn crept over the horizon, you knew—this city, this legacy, this prison—would no longer bind you.

It would be your foundation.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ou had prepared the woman in front of you, watching as she trembled, her breath coming in short, panicked gasps.

She was young—noble, refined, the very picture of aristocratic grace in another setting. But now, stripped of her poise, she was nothing but fear incarnate.

Moments ago, she had been speaking in hushed tones, sharing gossip laced with treason, whispering of plots in the dark corners of grand halls. She and her kind had spoken of you, of what you had done, of what you would do. Their words had been sharp with fear, but beneath it, you had heard something else—contempt.

They had not merely feared you. They had despised you.

They had spoken of ways to remove you, to undo all that you had built, as if you were some passing nightmare they could banish with a few well-placed daggers and a shared conspiracy.

And to think… you had almost missed it.


You had been so consumed by your vision, so intoxicated by your own ambition, that you had let yourself grow blind to the shadows that gathered at your feet.

How close you had come to losing everything.

How perilously near you had been to let yourself be undone by these… insignificant insects.

But now, in the flickering light of the chamber, with her wide, pleading eyes staring up at you, you saw the truth laid bare.

There was one thing one absolute certainty, you understood in this moment.

They would see you.

Before all else. Before their treason, before their secrets, before their cowardly little schemes.

They would see you.

And they would understand.
------------------------------------------------------------------

The treasonous worms knelt before the great tub, their eyes wide with terror as they beheld the dark ritual unfolding before them. The chamber was thick with the scent of burning incense, the air trembling with the reverberations of ancient Valyrian incantations. Priests and attendants—your devoted coven of nobles—circled the altar, their voices rising in a steady crescendo, speaking the words of power that had not been uttered in centuries.

You walked toward them, slow and deliberate, your presence commanding absolute silence except for the weeping of those about to be unmade.

They sobbed, they pleaded, their voices hoarse with desperation.

"Mercy, my lady—no, my queen, my goddess! Please! We did not mean—"

Lies. Sniveling, pathetic lies.

Their cries fell upon deaf ears.

Each tear, each broken gasp, only deepened the contempt curling in your chest. These were the vermin who had schemed against you, who had whispered poison behind your back, who had dared to dream of your downfall. They had tried to steal your destiny, to wrench you from the divine path you had been born to walk.

And now, they would serve a far greater purpose.

To simply kill them would have been wasteful.

Their blood—their power—was still within them, however, diluted by the taint of outsiders. Even in their frailty, the ancient fire of Valyria still ran in their veins, a lingering ember waiting to be consumed.

And more than that… their deaths would be a message.

A message to those who still doubted, those who still clung to their fragile illusions that they had a choice, that they could deny the will of their new goddess.

Their ruler.

Their progenitor.

Their only savior.

With a single nod from you, the blades flashed.

Gurgled screams were swallowed by the rising hymn of the ritual as their throats were cut, one by one, their life spilling into the great tub prepared for your rebirth. The crimson tide swelled, thick and steaming, swirling with the last remnants of their stolen ambitions. Their bodies were dragged away, discarded like husks, their purpose fulfilled.

You stepped forward, unafraid, standing before the pool of blood that shimmered with arcane potential. You had spent years studying the old texts, deciphering the lost knowledge that lesser minds had dismissed as myth. You had prepared for this moment, and honed your will until it was unbreakable.

And now, it was time.

With steady resolve, you descended into the crimson depths, submerging yourself fully.

The warmth of it seeped into your skin, into your very bones. Then came the pull.

A violent force, clawing at you from within the blood. The souls of the sacrificed, writhing in their last moments of defiance, shrieking as they sought to take their revenge, to drag you into the abyss with them.

Fools.

You had anticipated their final, desperate struggle.

With a single thought, you turned their fury into fuel, consuming them, their lingering essence feeding the inferno of your own power. Their rage, their fear, their pain—all of it was burned away, reduced to nothing but embers that folded seamlessly into your growing strength.

And then, the change began.

You felt it before you saw it—your flesh remaking itself, smoothing, refining, becoming something beyond human. Your limbs stretched, lean and powerful, your form reshaping into something both ethereal and terrifying. Strength coiled beneath your skin like a sleeping dragon stirring to wakefulness.

And then you rose.

The blood sloughed off your body in slow, thick rivulets as you emerged, standing tall before your followers. The chamber was silent, every eye upon you, wide with awe and fear.

You were no longer simply you.

You had become what you were destined to be.

You had grown, not to a towering height that would set you apart from men, but enough to stand above most women with a presence that demanded reverence. Your once pallid complexion, drained from years of delving into the forbidden magics of Old Valyria, had transformed—no longer sickly and ghostly, but luminous as if your skin now held the warmth of firelight within it. There was a richness to your coloring, a depth that had never been there before, a glow that was both unnatural and irresistible.

Your hair, once fine and brittle from years of strain, had become a cascading river of white silk, flowing past your shoulders in thick, shining waves. It shimmered like woven moonlight, each strand imbued with an ethereal luster, as though even your very presence defied the mortal realm. It was longer now, heavier, a mantle of power that framed her sharpened features in celestial radiance.

Your body had reshaped itself into something both breathtaking and formidable. Where you had once been slight, almost waifish, with a frame too delicate to bear the weight of the world placed upon you, you now stood with undeniable strength. your muscles had formed with divine precision—long, sleek, and coiled with power, neither bulky nor brutish, but carved with the grace of a warrior queen. There was a tautness to your flesh, a resilience, a tempered steel beneath the surface that had not existed before.


Your chest, once modest, had filled into a form that was undeniably, almost unnaturally, womanly—full, firm, and statuesque, like the divine figures carved into the oldest temples of Valyria. They were the kind of curves that men would wage wars over, the kind that had inspired sonnets and bloodshed alike, the kind that spoke of both nurture and dominance.

You stepped toward the mirror, and the figure that gazed back at her was no longer the frail girl who had once been shackled by duty and expectation. No.

The woman in the reflection was a goddess of war.

Your cheekbones were sharper, her eyes brighter, burning with an otherworldly intensity that made them impossible to look away from. Your lips were fuller, redder as if kissed by flame itself. Every inch of your body radiates purpose, power, and undeniable allure.

You had become something more than human. Something the world would desire.

Something the world would fear.

You would be the Queen that the World Desires.
Well fuck me sideways...

The worst about this is that this girl is just one of the crazies, there are other dangerous crazy assholes fucking around in this World and we will hace to face some of them...
 
Well fuck me sideways...

The worst about this is that this girl is just one of the crazies, there are other dangerous crazy assholes fucking around in this World and we will hace to face some of them...
Being Viserys is suffering.

But don't you worry, we'll have some help on our end... eventually.

Our magic kids have to grow up first.

Looking at you Headmaster Bran. :V

And Arya...

Lets just say that dany and the younger kids generation we have (not Viserys himself, other houses) ... are our only line of defense on the magical front.

don't worry though... we have Stannis the Mannis.
 
Last edited:
Vote closed New
Scheduled vote count started by Magoose on Jan 23, 2025 at 12:02 PM, finished with 12 posts and 5 votes.

  • [X] Plan: Everything is going to be OK
    -[X]Arianne: She's worried about your constant nightmares, and it's affecting Daeron… she has been saying ever since that… incident… every time you sleep, he cries. Like he can't bear the sight of you trapped in your dreams.
    -[X]Sansa Stark: She hadn't stopped crying since the incident. But… now she was free of tears. "Something feels wrong." She said. "Something in the west feels wrong."
    -[X] Barristan Selmy (Lord Commander): He coughed. "This is…how the blazes are we going to fight this?"
    -[X] Mandon Moore: The Silent knight only looked out. "There will be more They won't stop until you are dead." there was a pause. "I heard stories about shades in my youth, but never seen them before with my own eyes."
 
The Riverlands Part 2 New
The Riverlands Part 2:

-[X]Arianne: She's worried about your constant nightmares, and it's affecting Daeron… she has been saying ever since that… incident… every time you sleep, he cries. Like he can't bear the sight of you trapped in your dreams. Rolled:D100 => 82

It was a quiet thing, being awake. The room was still, save for the rhythmic sound of Daeron's soft babbling, his little voice rising and falling in incoherent murmurs. But you knew it wouldn't last. He would cry again soon—you could feel it as surely as you felt the pull of your dreams, the ones you never truly escaped.

He always cried when you drifted.

As if something in him knew, as if he could sense the moment your mind crossed the threshold into that other world, the world of shadows and memories. And whatever you became there, whatever specter or nightmare took your shape, frightened him. He could not understand it, but he knew enough to try and stop it. To keep you awake, to hold you here, at least until exhaustion stole him away first.

Arianne was growing weary of it, the sleepless nights, the tension coiling tighter between you like a fraying rope. She never said it aloud, but you knew. You could see it in the way her fingers lingered on Daeron's back longer than necessary as if reassuring herself that he was safe, as if trying to tether herself to something solid while the man beside her became someone she struggled to recognize.

You had changed.

She knew that. Felt that. The man who had once swept her into his arms with reckless devotion, the man who had whispered promises under moonlit skies, was not the same man who lay beside her now, silent and distant. But then again… neither was she the same woman.

Marriage had been a gift, one you had both fought for, one that had been worth every battle waged, every sacrifice made. And yet, it was a fragile thing, too, something that had to be chosen again and again with each passing day. Sometimes, in the quiet of the night, she wondered how things would have been different if you had hesitated if you had not spoken those words all those years ago, if you had stayed your hand, if you had chosen another path. You could see it through the void that sometimes pierced your mind, and let you see them.

Lying in the small, dimly lit room of an inn, staring up at the ceiling as if the answers to your restless soul were etched into the woodgrain above. And she, Arianne, the only one who had ever been able to match you, the only one who had ever dared, finally broke the silence.

"What do you see, Viserys? In your dreams?"

Her voice was soft, careful. Daeron had fallen asleep at last, nestled between the two of you, his tiny body warm and safe between the walls of his parents. It was a question you had been dreading, one you had been running from.

Because how could you explain it?

She wasn't like you.

She wasn't like Dany, whom you trusted about as much as anyone else in the world, yet still kept distant to your own silent suffering. She wasn't like Jaime, who looked at you as though he saw only Rhaegar's ghost wearing your skin. Who understood far to well what was… haunting in a mind.

And she wasn't like you, because you never wanted her to be like you.

You didn't want her to share in this pain.

But that was the thing about Arianne, she was never content to remain on the edges of your life. She would not let you keep this from her. She was asking, not as a queen or a princess, but as your wife.

"I—" You faltered, swallowing the words before they could form. You turned away, unable to face her. "You wouldn't believe me."

Arianne's hand found yours, warm and grounding. Daeron stirred in his sleep, his small fingers reaching up, tangling in your hair, tugging just enough to pull you back—to force you to look at her.

She held your gaze.

"Do you remember what I said," she murmured, "the night we were married?"

You could only stare.

"I am yours," she whispered, voice steady and certain, "and you are mine."

The words hit you like a heartbeat, steady and strong, resonating through you.

You searched her eyes, looking deeper than you ever had before, and for a fleeting moment, you saw your own reflection staring back at you. Not the lost prince. Not the dream-haunted king. Just you.

And for the first time, you wondered if maybe, just maybe, she could understand.


You sighed. "I see things… strange things… I dream of monsters that feel to real, of great terrors that are now stalking the West…" You paused. "I dream that I am not strong enough to meet them, to defeat them, to keep you safe. Keep Daeron safe."

You felt your heart quicken with a sense of dread, as you felt the shadows move and shift in the air, as if feeling your tension. You could not see the shatterpoints of the world, not when you were not as focused… but… you could… sense them. See them… feel them morph around you.

Arianne, quietly and wordlessly squeezed your hand… "I'm not strong enough."

The words were enough to make your wife look terrified, though not for herself… but for you. She could sense it all, ever since you both met again after the Second Battle of the Trident, where you defeated Robert… where you were nearly drowned in the Trident… where you saw Rhaegar's ghost come with his ruby armor… and drag you to the surface… to be saved by Jaime… the man who killed your father… and saved you again.

You had never spoken of it. Not to Arianne. Not to Dany. Not to anyone.

But in the silence of the night, when your dreams turned dark, when the weight of ghosts pressed against your chest, you wondered—had it been real?

Or had it been something else entirely?

Arianne's hand was still holding yours, still anchoring you to the present. To her.

She was waiting for you to speak. To tell her more. To let her in.

And for the first time, you wondered if you should.

So you both spoke for another hour—long after the candles had melted low, long after the distant sounds of the inn had faded into silence. You spoke of dreams and fears, of ghosts and regrets. Of the weight you carried, the burdens you had never dared to share.

And Arianne listened.

Not as a princess of Dorne, nor as the wife of a Targaryen prince, but as your Arianne—the woman who had chosen you, who had fought for you, who had stood by you even when the world seemed set against you. She held your hand through every word, through every fractured memory you unearthed, through every shadow that had once seemed insurmountable.

And when, at last, the exhaustion pulled you under, the nightmares did not come.

There was only warmth.

There was only her.

And Daeron, nestled safely between you, his tiny fingers curled around yours.

And your family, standing in the sunlight, smiling, whole.

For the first time in years, you felt something unfamiliar. Something distant—so distant that you had almost forgotten its name.

Peace.

Reward:
Viserys begins his long road to recovery, no longer carrying his burdens alone. He has opened his heart to his wife, to his son, to his family. And in doing so, he has found something he thought he had lost forever.

He is not alone.

--------------------------------------------


-[X]Sansa Stark: She hadn't stopped crying since the incident. But… now she was free of tears. "Something feels wrong." She said. "Something in the west feels wrong." Rolled:D100 => 10

It was impossible to truly look at the young woman before you—Sansa—without feeling the weight of everything she had endured. She sat quietly, her head bowed, her fingers moving with delicate precision as she knitted away at her work. A scarf. A blue scarf, woven from scraps of wool and cloth that she had gathered at every stop along your journey.

You didn't know where she found them, how she managed to collect them with the meager resources at her disposal, but she had. And now, she sat there, focused, the rhythmic motion of her hands the only sound between you.

You had tried to speak to her before. You had tried today, once more.

And as always, she said the same thing, in the same measured, careful voice:

"Your Grace, I do not wish to speak to you right now… I am busy."

There was no anger in her tone, no hatred—only distance. A wall, built stone by stone, word by word, woven just as carefully as the fabric in her hands.

And so, silence settled between you once again.

You wanted to help her. You wanted to say something, to do something. To assure her that she was safe, that she was not alone. But what words could ever be enough? What could you possibly say that she had not already heard, or worse, had once believed and been betrayed for?

So instead, you sat there, watching her knit, listening to the quiet click of needles, feeling the unspoken weight between you.

And for now, that would have to be enough.

Failure: Sansa… is traumatized by her experience… and she does not know how to comprehend it. What madness that has been brought to her life, ever since she entered your court.

This was supposed to be a great adventure. Now… she was trapped in her own private hell.
------------------------------------------------------------

-[X] Barristan Selmy (Lord Commander): He coughed. "This is…how the blazes are we going to fight this?" Rolled:D100 => 79
-[X] Mandon Moore: The Silent knight only looked out. "There will be more They won't stop until you are dead." there was a pause. "I heard stories about shades in my youth, but never seen them before with my own eyes." Rolled:D100 => 100

Ser Barristan Selmy sighed, the lines of age and battle-worn wisdom etched deeply into his face as he turned his gaze from you to Mandon Moore. The other Kingsguard sat across from you, his expression unreadable, as always. The others had been sent to guard your wife and son, leaving just the three of you to ponder what had transpired.

"That was a monster," the Lord Commander said at last, his voice heavy with certainty. "How do we fight that?"

A silence stretched between you, broken only by the flickering of the torches lining the walls. Mandon Moore sat still, seemingly lost in thought, before he finally hummed to himself and spoke in that cold, detached manner of his.

"Steel works," Mandon said simply. "They bleed all the same. Shadow, shade, flesh, and blood."

Both you and Ser Barristan turned to look at him. The old knight raised a weathered brow, his expression caught somewhere between intrigue and skepticism.

"What?" Mandon asked, his tone almost bemused.

Barristan exhaled sharply. "You seem awfully calm about what just happened to us."

Mandon only shrugged. "We're Kingsguard. We have to be prepared for anything."

That answer did not satisfy the Lord Commander. His jaw tightened, his hands curling into fists against the table. "And how do we prepare for an eventuality such as this? How do we plan for shadowy monsters that move like smoke and strike like nightmares? How do we guard against the unknown threats that may yet come for our king?"

Mandon sighed, as if the conversation itself was a greater burden than the horrors you had faced. "I don't like talking."

"Well, I order you to talk," you said, leaning back in your chair. "Because something tells me—just a feeling—that what you might say could actually be useful."

Mandon studied you for a moment, then nodded, settling into his seat. "I remember an old ghost story my grandmother used to tell me, before she passed. She spoke of how the great knights of old battled such things, back before the septs and the septons, before the Faith took hold. Back when Westeros was still young, when the old magics ruled the land."

His fingers traced the hilt of his dagger before he pulled it free and drove the blade into the wooden table with a dull thunk.

"Black iron. Weirwood spears. Steel set aflame, as the Red Priests do. Or pure faith—unyielding will, the kind that can shatter anything set against it." His voice was steady, measured. "That's how you fight monsters. Even when they are stronger. Faster. More powerful."

You frowned. "That's dreadfully unhelpful. And how does one become a warrior of 'pure faith'?"

For the first time since you had known him, Mandon Moore smiled. It was slight, barely there, but unmistakable.

"Don't fear death," he said. "Because if you do not fear it, then nothing—no monster, no nightmare—can ever cause you to doubt."

Now that was an answer.

"But we all have fears," you said, watching Mandon carefully.

"Yes," he replied without hesitation. "And that is why it is doubly important that those who guard you have none."

Ser Barristan leaned forward, his weathered hands clasped together on the table. His eyes, sharp with the wisdom of decades, studied the younger Kingsguard with an intensity you rarely saw. "And do you have fears, Ser Mandon?" he asked, his voice devoid of jest, his tone heavy with something deeper.

Mandon turned to you, his expression unchanged, his voice as flat and measured as ever. "I like killing, Your Grace. Too fond of it. Can't imagine a world, where I'm not the best at what I do."

A flicker of something stirred in your chest—discomfort, perhaps. A cold wind seemed to pass through the room, though none of the torches so much as flickered.

That was not the answer you had expected. Nor was it one you particularly liked. And yet, something in the way he said it—calm, honest, unashamed—told you all you needed to hear.

Mandon Moore would fight for you. He would kill for you. And when the time came, he would face the monsters that lurked in the dark, the things that turned grown men to cowards and sent warriors fleeing. He would not waver.

And yet, the thought left an uneasy weight in your gut.

Reward:
Mandon Moore now gains a massive bonus to fighting supernatural creatures that stand against you.

(This is temporary… but it may become permanent.)

But something told you that if you encouraged this path, you would not like what he becomes.
--------------------------------------------------

Ah the Riverlands... Westeros' most peculiar kingdom. and one you loved to vist again...

if only the bloody place wasn't on fire. Well you were the king, time for the blood progress to continue, and you have to put out some fucking fires.

Where do you go?:

[]The Blue Forks: The Republic of the Blue Forks, has risen in rebellion, viewing no man but themselves to be the masters of thier fates. You were going to need to deal with that, if only to prevent there being a headache again.

[]Harrenhall's buried Vault: Lady Whent was selling Harrenhall to a bunch of mercenaries. It wasn't the fact that it was illegal, far from it, but you were looking at the men with shovels and carts... and all sorts of building material. "What are you doing?" "Fiding Harren the Blacks Treasure Room?! Old Riverlander legend that when Aegon burned the place, he forgot to loot it, there are entire kingdoms worth of gold in there."

[]Edmure Tully and the Parlimatarians: So... Edmure was gathering his lords and ladies... and is trying to legalize... what is essentially anyone else... treason. The fuck is a parliament... and why the hell does Edmure want to make one for the Riverlands? better question is... why the seven hells are all of his lords agreeing to this?

[]The Frey Problems: Another rising of bastard freys trying to steal the twins. Olyver wants your help to deal with that problem. Again.

[]Septon Meribald and Ray's Sept Building: You found a sept that was under construction... and two septons that were most godly men among them. And Ray smiled. "Welcome your grace..." he then saw your eyes. "It seems you have other reasons to be here... then just helping an old man with his sept?"

AN: enjoy.
 
And once more, Arianne proves to be as capable as she is wholesome. Viserys may falter every now and then, but when that happens, Her Majesty is strong enough for the both of them. Shame about Sansa, though. Hopefully we'll have another shot with her soon.

That said, I suggest we check out the Parliamentarians. Viserys is already a big proponent of freedom. Who knows? If all the Lords of the Vale are so convinced, maybe there's a merit to this whole "constitution" business they're rambling on about. If not, dragonfire is always an option 😊

[X]Edmure Tully and the Parliamentarians
 
Dammit this is a though call...

Considering the problems we are having with the clergy back at King's Landing I think we should talk with Ray and Maribald, these two are the kind of people we need to refom the Faith of the Seven... The alternative would involve a lot of burned fasnatical Septons, alongside their fanatical flocks...

[X]Septon Meribald and Ray's Sept Building: You found a sept that was under construction... and two septons that were most godly men among them. And Ray smiled. "Welcome your grace..." he then saw your eyes. "It seems you have other reasons to be here... then just helping an old man with his sept?"
I'm beginning to seriously question the name of Plan: Everything is going to be OK.
That was mostly wishful thinking...
Being Viserys is suffering.

But don't you worry, we'll have some help on our end... eventually.

Our magic kids have to grow up first.

Looking at you Headmaster Bran. :V

And Arya...

Lets just say that dany and the younger kids generation we have (not Viserys himself, other houses) ... are our only line of defense on the magical front.

don't worry though... we have Stannis the Mannis.
And IIRC we will have our other babie's mammas (the twin slave Assasins) with us soonish... I am a little reluctant to use their talents like that, but it is another good like of defense agaisnt all that crap...
 
I just hope people willvote, I really don't want to... yyou know... just do all the work for nothing.
 
Back
Top