reignfall: (20)
𝔠𝔒𝔯𝔰𝔒𝔦 π”©π”žπ”«π”«π”¦π”°π”±π”’π”―. ([personal profile] reignfall) wrote2021-09-19 07:09 pm

𝔣𝔬𝔯 π”Ÿπ”¬π”―π”«π”±π”¬π”―π”’π”¦π”€π”«.

In spite of all her terrible fears, it really does seem as though it was naught but the common fever, which had struck her young son. Joffrey Zarek had never known a day's suffering, however, not a lack of rest nor a hint of true hunger, and though he is but few turns away from his third nameday, encroaching upon them in the second month of the year, the disease passed by him quickly. It is the fourth day now, and his appetite was ferocious when she had broken her fast with him on honeyed bread and fruit, he was eagerly chasing a cat he had spotted right thereafter, and only during their walk in the open air did any sort of fatigue catch him. Awake he remained for the waterfalls and his spotting of a large bird of prey, though he was solidly asleep in her arms soon enough on their way back. Before she set him down in his bed, she felt his forehead for the umpteenth time, but it is as the healer had assured her: he is well once more, even the cough is gone.

Relieved, she leaves the boy to his afternoon nap, and goes again to find her husband. Gone had he been in the earliest hours of morning, as was his usual way, though it is strange that he not even been present to ignore her request to join her and their son for their morning meal, nor has she seen hide nor hair of him since.

She finds him in his study, in the end, and it does not take more than a look for her to know what has befallen him. There is a glaze to his otherwise so sharp eyes, a pallor to his skin, dark rings beneath his eyes. The lips dry and cracked, his breath the lightest rasp. "My emperor." She inclines her head, though she is trying fast to suppress a hint of mirth. "If you would excuse me for another moment?"
borntoreign: (He who wishes to be obeyed)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-04-16 06:45 pm (UTC)(link)
The light seems to swim, lancing in strange ways when his eyelids flicker. His frown deepens, and his free hand drifts up, touching the corner of the cloth that she presses so solicitously to his forehead.

"I do not remember the battle." There must have been a battle, surely. But he does not remember it, nor feel the wound that has laid him low. But he is feverish, and he is lying here in the muddled state of a wounded man, and so he must be wounded, surely. His throat hurts. Maybe that is it. But when his damp fingers seek it, they find only old scars. A strange thing. The answer is there, near to hand, but he cannot quite seem to reach it. Sleep still hangs too heavily on him, cobwebs holding him still.

Her hair is gold. He blinks slowly, and her hair is still gold, and her eyes glint green, and she is not his mother. Of course she is not. Who is she? It takes him a moment, a long moment more, to grope through those cobwebs and grasp reality.

"How long was I asleep already?" His voice still murky with sleep, still sluggish and unsteady; but he speaks Westerosi consciously now, albeit with a stronger accent than usual, and there is something clearer in how he looks at her. "Have you checked on the boy?"
borntoreign: (A constant war)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-04-25 09:57 pm (UTC)(link)
He does not, in point of fact, think her weak and gentle: right now, in the absence of any ability to move against her, he has to think her cunning. It is safer to think that her failure to kill him is part of some plan she has. It is safer to think anything, other than that she means it.

"It will break soon," he says at last, as though he can order the fever to pass by force of will alone. Rationally, he knows he cannot. Even he is aware, to some degree, of the limitations of mind over body. That does not stop him from trying to will himself into recovery, trying to drag the sickness out of himself.

And the memories, too. He has a faded, muddied sense of having conversed with her, but he cannot remember what he said, and that troubles him deeply. If, in his muddled state, he let something slip that might be used against him...

It is still hard to keep hold of the thought, or any thought. Everything seems somehow intangible, and it is hard to grasp at reality. He clears his throat, which quickly turns into coughing, and his eyes screw closed for a moment, a look of disgust passing across his face. Ill-temper is still written there when he opens his eyes again. "How many hours?" How much of the day have I wasted?
borntoreign: (How we live is not how we ought)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-05-07 06:30 pm (UTC)(link)
The lack of tenderness in her tone is a relief, swiftly countermanded by the strange gentleness of her touch. He feels, as he rarely allows himself to feel, off-balance: caught between comfort and suspicion, between what he expects and what is happening. It does not help, either, that his mind still feels foggy and slow, as though his thoughts are creeping through a swamp. It irritates him.

It frightens him. That irritates him much more.

"I will not be eating supper." He is ill. Very well; he can grant that he is ill. (Eventually, and with very bad grace, but he is hardly about to admit that to himself.) Being ill, then, he should manage his illness, so he does not need her. He cannot need her. And he has a half-remembered sense of what his nursemaids told him, when he was young and prone to such human weaknesses as admitting to illness, before he was the Emperor. "Feed a cold, and starve a fever. A lean day or two will settle the matter."

Also, it will spare him the humiliation of finding out whether he can keep food down. He has absolutely no desire to fill his belly only to empty it again.
borntoreign: (Love and fear cannot exist together)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-05-15 10:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Once again, she is right, and once again, he resents it with an almost petulant intensity - then resents himself for that petulance, for the thought that a passing sickness really has rotted away his self-control so quickly. He should have thought this through by now, should have settled what can and should be done to minimise the issue. He should be several steps ahead of her, not trailing a few thoughts behind.

You were asleep, he reminds himself, and you are feverish, and both have the unpleasant timbre of excuses. It does not matter why he is so slow on the uptake, why he has allowed her to outpace him in considering his own situation. It only matters that it is so, and that cannot be tolerated. He has to recover himself, first and foremost. He has to regain the upper hand.

What he wants to do, then, is to come up with a better idea, one that will silence her and remind her that he knows what is best for him, more than she does. What he wants to do is to reassure them both that he has not weakened, that this passing fog that lays on his mind is... well, passing. He wants to consider her suggestion, and dismiss it out of hand, and put forth something better that will shame her into admitting she had no right to doubt him.

Unfortunately, he cannot actually think of something better. He needs to at least appear to eat: this is true. He needs something that will not upset his stomach or worsen his fever: this is also true. He needs (and how he hates this fact!) for her to hold her tongue, and not throw one of the fits of temper she is so prone to, which means that he probably needs not to push any disagreement too far until he has the means to chastise her properly.

All of which considered, again: she is right.

"Fine." His tone is not exactly gracious. "I will take rosΓ³Ε‚, and a little bread, and then will you shut up?"
borntoreign: (A constant war)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-05-28 09:32 pm (UTC)(link)
He hears that fight in her voice, and where it might sometimes invigorate him, the promise of a cinder to be quashed to ash... where it might sometimes bring the promise of a brief and victorious struggle, here it just makes him feel profoundly tired. To his disgust, he must admit he has no energy to fight, not even with her. If she stripped naked and climbed atop him, he is not sure he would have the energy to fuck, either. No appetite, he laments to himself - no appetite for food, for power, for victory. What is a beast without appetite?

He sighs, with a heaviness that is also unlike him, and settles back against the pillows. His skin seems to burn, prickling with sweat; he shivers as though he were caught in the winter air of the mountains outside. It is, he thinks sourly, her fault he must feel this way, and the fault of her thrice-damned country, which has softened him with its moderate climate and its relative peace. It is the fault of her nannyish fussing, delivered though it may be with such an acid sting, and the fault of the weakness that sees him tolerate it. To his fevered mind, this seems to make perfect sense - but what is to be done? What can be done? The canker of weakness has already set in, eating at him, and he thinks again of the tarnished silver of his father's nose, but there is no silversmith who could cast a prosthetic of a man's power.

"I am still in bed, am I not?" His voice is less sharp than he would like, more peevish. "I have slept half the day away. And I have lived this long without your little reminders."
borntoreign: (The arms of others weigh you down)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-05-31 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)
The compliment, admittedly, mollifies him: not, he assures himself, because it is flattery, but because it is true. He has built a house of cards, and it is fragile - more fragile, he suspects, than she realises - but it is not so fragile that one day's weakness will end it. He is a rational man, and, rationally, he knows this. Rationally, he knows that it is only one day; in his heart, he fears that one day may turn to two, and two to a week, to a month, to a year. Rotting away in a bed, without even the excuse of injury. They will whisper, as they did in his father's time, they will scheme behind his back and he will have no way to follow their plots, and in the end, he will be dead - or, worse, he will be the puppet that they tried to make him thirty years ago, the puppet he has fought against being all his life.

"One day." The firmness of it is directed at himself, as much as at her. He is not quite lucid enough, in truth, to keep himself from saying it aloud. "Two, at the most, and I will be on my feet again." His eyes meet hers, and there is a challenge in them, although it is not one he is entirely sure he can rise to: he is still perceptive enough to know some of what she is thinking, and yet feverish enough not to fully keep it to himself. "I am not a child, Cersei. This is not what will kill me. Two days, at most, and I will be myself."

And you will pay for witnessing me otherwise. Even fevered, he does not feel the need to say it. It is already said, just not in words.
borntoreign: (Vengeance should be feared)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-06-13 08:19 pm (UTC)(link)
"You would have no chance to." The barb is lacking from his tone, but he is at least lucid enough to remember (some of) the plans he laid when they were married, when she fell pregnant - that lucidity, at least, must be a good sign. "You cannot think I would let you outlive me long, sweet empress. I am not yet tired enough of life to give you that kind of motive."

Three things occur to him then, muddling together in the sweat-drowned swamp of his thoughts. Firstly, that he may have misjudged: that he should have been more obvious in making that threat clear (and it is a genuine threat, one which she will find traces of if she should care to look into his affairs - hollow threats are more dangerous than none), for it serves its purpose only if she is quite sure that she will not survive his killing. Second, that he is strangely bereft of her fussing, where its absence should come as a relief. And thirdly, that he no longer feels that threat is needed, after all. With the sharpness that only comes with borderline delirium, he is finally aware of the truth of what was said so many nights ago: that she does not want him dead, and he does not want her dead, and they do not hate one another. Madness. They are both mad; and he cannot even blame the fever for it.

He lets out a low, almost unconscious laugh, which turns into a cough, and rolls onto his side, away from her, as best he can without dislodging the cloth on his brow. "Is there still sage tea?"
borntoreign: (The end which every man has)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-07-03 08:29 pm (UTC)(link)
The window will not open more than a crack, and the air that comes in is laced with ice. He does not watch her try, focusing instead on holding the tea cup steady, on willing his hands not to shake as he raises the bitter, earthy tea to his lips.

"It helps." He cannot disguise the resentment in his tone, but it does not seem worth lying. The cloth does help, leeching away some of the aching heat of his fever into temporary, but blessed, cool. He wonders, in the back of his mind, whether it is not false help - after all, he has always been taught that the best thing for a fever is to sweat it out, and perhaps this will only slow the process - but it is hard not to be grateful for the soothing cold.

It is hard not to be grateful for several things. He wants to be grateful for none of them. Gratitude is only a form of obligation, and he will suffer obligation to no cause but his own.

And yet, the glimpse of her from the corner of his eye is oddly comforting, and he is oddly grateful.

"A sincere fight would not help you. You are a long way from home, here." Where threats dwell, surely, obligation does not.
borntoreign: (A constant war)

[personal profile] borntoreign 2022-07-23 08:39 pm (UTC)(link)
He fixes her with an only somewhat glassy stare, and he will not admit to himself how grateful he is that the conversation has shifted back towards more solid ground. Not that anything feels particularly solid just now, with the world blurring and smearing at the edges and the bed seeming to shift queasily beneath him.

"By growing hard." If he has heard the part about cooling his calves, he does not seem about to act upon it. He has fixated on the latter part, instead. That is an answer that has no uncomfortable doubt associated with it. It comes with an answer to his current state, too, which he seizes upon. "That is the trouble with King's Landing. It is too warm and too peaceful, living is too easy, and you all grow complacent in it. See what happens when I spend too long in a soft place like that? Only a few years, and I am already falling prey to a cold on my return."

It is, perhaps, not the best argument he has ever come up with. It also doesn't exactly gel with what he has said up to this point, or with what he would like to express. In the moment, though, it seems very convincing.