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Chapter 153 - [153] The Mother of Norvos

Chapter 153: The Mother of Norvos

The wind bit differently up here.

Arianne pulled her fur-lined cloak tighter beside me as Rhaegal descended through the mountain air, his wingbeat carrying us closer to a city she'd only known through stories. Norvos sprawled across its three hills like a stern matron watching the world below, all grey stone and iron discipline.

"You're tense," I noted, raising my voice slightly over the wind.

"Well, yes. It's my mother's city," she admitted, pressing closer to my side. "She used to tell me stories of the bells. How they ruled every moment of life here. When to wake, when to work, when to pray. She hated those bells."

"And now she's returned to them."

"By choice this time." She didn't say it, but the irony was obvious. Mellario of Norvos had fled Dorne to escape one kind of prison, only to return to another.

The Great Bells began their toll as we approached. It was not the frantic clanging of alarm at seeing dragons, but deep, intentional notes that seemed to shake the mountains themselves. Below, the city moved with eerie calm. 

No screaming crowds, no fleeing merchants. Just orderly ranks of bearded priests forming up in the High Plaza, their long axes held at ceremonial rest.

They've been expecting us.

"Down, boy," I muttered and Rhaegal landed with surprising delicacy for such a massive beast, his jade scales catching the pale northern sun. The receiving party stood in perfect formation, not a man out of place. And there, breaking from the crowd with that familiar swagger was—

"Uncle!" Arianne dismounted quickly, nearly stumbling in her haste.

Oberyn Martell looked content. That was the shocking part. The Red Viper, who'd spent twenty years nursing vengeance like a lover, actually looked at peace despite how I'd seen him last time. Ellaria Sand stood beside him, her hand on his arm, both of them dressed in the somber grays favored by Norvoshi nobility.

"My favorite niece," Oberyn said, catching her in an embrace. "Though I suppose I should say 'My Lady' now."

"Don't you dare." She pulled back to study him with a laugh. "You look well. Norvos agrees with you?"

"It's quiet," he admitted, then turned to me as I approached. There was a silence before he sighed and lowered his head. "Your Grace, it's a pleasure to see both of you doing well. Dorne thrives under Arianne's hand. You gave her what my brother never would, and she's using it well despite not being present all the time."

I inclined my head slightly. "Prince Oberyn. I trust your extended vacation has been enlightening?"

"More than you know." His smile held edges. "I felt rage for a good while, but as your stories spread, I realized we survived a much worse fate. My brother still lives, after all. And my niece looks happy." Then he gestured at the disciplined ranks, the submissive city. "You reshape the world with fire and will, and my niece stands beside you. It's not a bad thing. I can respect that, even if it cost my family everything."

"Your family still rules Dorne," I replied smoothly. "I'd say it cost you nothing and gained you much."

"Pretty words." A new voice cut through the reunion like winter wind. "Is that how you seduce kingdoms, Dragonlord? With pretty words and prettier threats?"

Arianne's breath caught beside me.

Mellario of Norvos stood at the palace entrance like judgment itself. My eyes twinkled in surprise. She's gorgeous. Arianne hadn't gained her beauty from her father's side, it seemed. 

The long years had refined rather than diminished her beauty, those sharp cheekbones, that proud nose, the dark hair now streaked with premature silver. Rather than Norvoshi gray, she was draped in sheer rose veils and golden silk. Her raven curls were adorned with jewels and a red flower, her golden eyes sharp.

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"Mother," Arianne said softly.

For a moment, Mellario's stern mask cracked. She crossed the distance quickly, pulling Arianne into an embrace that smelled of cedar oil. "My sweet, sweet baby, it's been so long…" she murmured. "What has he done to you?"

"Given me everything Father wouldn't," Arianne whispered back.

Mellario pulled away and turned to me, her dark eyes hardening once again. "Viserys the Dragonlord," she said, the title steeped in contempt. "Welcome to Norvos. I trust you'll find our hospitality... adequate for a conqueror."

"It's Dragonking, my lady."

The negotiations were a disaster from the start.

****

The Norvoshi Magisters sat like carvings, their long beards braided with copper bells that chimed softly with their movements. Since I wasn't here as a conqueror but an ally, they spoke of trade agreements and garrison limits, of taxation and religious freedoms. 

All perfectly reasonable. All completely beside the point.

Because Mellario sat at the table's heart like a stone in a stream, redirecting every current of conversation back to resistance.

"The Dragon King offers protection," one Magister ventured.

"From threats he himself creates," Mellario countered smoothly.

"Our trade would flourish under unified rule," another tried.

"Our trade flourishes now, without dragons burning our neighbors."

Each time I spoke, she twisted my words, painting me as either tyrant or fool. I watched her work with a mix of irritation and admiration. This was the woman who'd stood up to Doran Martell for fifteen years before finally walking away.

This was the woman who'd rather live in exile than bend.

After two hours of circular arguments, I stood abruptly. "The talk is going nowhere with our disagreements, Lady Mellario. I must request everyone else to clear the room."

The Magisters exchanged glances.

"I mean no harm," I clarified, eyes never leaving Mellario's face. "I require a private audience with Lady Mellario to discuss the future of our two houses."

"Your Grace—" Arianne began, but I cut her off.

"Go, Arianne." I didn't raise my voice, but I let the dragon beneath it show. "Your mother and I need to reach an understanding."

Oberyn took her arm gently. "Come, niece. Some battles are best fought without witnesses."

As the great doors closed behind them, I saw Mellario straighten in her seat, every inch a Norvoshi judge awaiting a plea.

She had no idea what kind of fire was about to walk into her storm.

****

The silence stretched between them like a blade.

Mellario of Norvos sat perfectly still, waiting for the threats to begin. The Dragon King would rage, would promise fire and blood if she didn't cease her opposition. It was what conquerors did when faced with defiance. She'd prepared for this, steeled herself against whatever crude intimidation he might employ.

"Your husband was a fool."

The words landed like a slap. Not what she'd expected at all.

Viserys moved to the window, gazing out at the city below. "Prince Doran Martell. The Grass That Hides the Viper, they called him. Poetic, really. A man so careful, so patient, that he forgot patience without action is just another word for cowardice."

"How dare you—" she began, then stopped. Why was she defending Doran?

"Twenty years," Viserys continued, turning back to her. "Twenty years he waited after his sister's death. Made secret pacts, whispered promises, moved pieces on a board only he could see. And what did it gain him? A cell in his own palace while his daughter rules."

Despite herself, Mellario felt a twist of satisfaction. "He always did prefer shadows to sunlight."

"While you burned bright enough to blind him." Viserys moved closer, and she caught his scent. He smelled of smoke and steel and something that was indefinably dangerous. "A woman of passion and fire, wed to a man made of whispers and waiting. No wonder you left."

"...I left for my children." The defense came automatically.

"You left because he was killing you slowly." His violet eyes held hers. "Not only did he send your children away to serve other lords under that foolish culture of Fosterage, but he never listened to you until you refused to harm yourself. I understand why you're so skeptical about me because you love your daughter, but trust me, I probably love her more."

She scoffed at that. Did he know the entire situation? Norvoshi did not follow the foster culture; they did not send their children away. Mellario felt her sons were far too young. Nevertheless, Doran sent Prince Quentyn away, which Mellario never forgave him for. But when Doran planned to send their daughter, Arianne, to Tyrosh to serve as the Archon's cupbearer, Mellario threatened self-harm.

How dare Doran try to take another child from her? This time, Doran yielded, and Arianne stayed in Dorne.

Their marriage, although born of love, was never meant to work out from the start.

The Dragonking added, "Every day in that palace, watching him plot and plan revenge, and yet do absolutely nothing while the world moved on without him. You're Norvoshi nobility, bred for action and decision. He turned you into another of his ornamental pieces."

The truth of it stung. "You know nothing of my marriage."

"I know he let you go." Viserys settled into the chair across from her, casual as a cat. "The Prince of Dorne, who schemed for decades to place a Targaryen on the throne, couldn't scheme his way into keeping his own wife. What kind of man loses such a woman through sheer neglect?"

"The kind who preferred his plans to his family." The words escaped before she could stop them.

"Exactly." He leaned forward, a small smile on her lips. "Tell me, Lady Mellario… when Elia died, what did he do?"

The question unlocked years of buried rage. "He... waited. Always waiting. While Oberyn raged and I demanded action, Doran sat in his chair and made plans." Her hands clenched. "Do you know what it's like, watching your husband accept his sister-in-law's murder with nothing but patience?"

Most sister-in-laws in the world weren't close. No, they often hated each other. That was not the case for Elia and her. They were more than blood-born sisters. The rage, the sadness, she felt when she heard of Elia's death still stung her.

"I watched my entire family burn," Viserys said simply. "The difference is, I did something about it."

"Yes, and you also conquered cities that had nothing to do with your torment." It wasn't quite an accusation.

"In three months, I achieved more than your husband did in twenty years." No boast, just fact. "I hold the Iron Throne. My dragons rule the skies. My enemies hide in Braavos, reduced from lords to refugees. What did Doran's patience achieve? A dead son and a kingdom that bent the knee anyway."

She wanted to argue, but the words wouldn't come. Because he was right.

Damn him, he was right.

"You must hate me," she said instead. "For opposing you."

"Hate you?" Viserys laughed, and the sound sent an unexpected shiver down her spine. "Lady Mellario, you're the first person in months to challenge me properly. Your daughter seduces, your former brother-in-law charms, but you? You fight. It's refreshing."

"Flattery now?" But her voice had lost its edge.

"Truth." He rose, moving around the table with that fluid grace. "You were wasted in Dorne. A falcon caged by a man who preferred sparrows. All that fire, all that passion, locked away in a palace where the greatest excitement was which wine to serve at dinner."

He was close now, close enough that she had to tilt her head back to meet his eyes. When had he gotten so close?

"What do you want from me?" The question came out breathier than intended.

"What I want?" His hand rose, fingertips barely grazing her cheek. The touch sparked like lightning. "I want to know what kind of woman walks away from a kingdom. What kind of fire burns hot enough to abandon everything rather than be slowly smothered."

"Don't." But she didn't pull away.

"Don't what? Don't see you for what you are instead of what Doran tried to make you?" His thumb traced her jawline. "Don't recognize that you're worth a dozen patient princes?"

"Despite being with Ari, you're trying to seduce me." It should have sounded like an accusation. It didn't.

"Am I?" That damnable smile. "Or am I simply the first man in twenty years to see you clearly?"

The worst part was, she believed him. In all her years in Dorne, surrounded by courtiers and schemers, no one had ever looked at her like this. Like she was a force of nature instead of an inconvenience.

"This is manipulation." Even as she said it, her body betrayed her, leaning into his touch.

"Everything is manipulation, Lady Mellario. The question is whether the truth makes it less effective." His other hand found her waist. "Tell me you don't feel it. This recognition. Two people who refuse to apologize for what they are."

"You conquered my daughter." The protest sounded weak even to her.

"I freed your daughter. Ask her yourself. Ask if she's happier ruling Dorne than she ever was begging for scraps at her father's table."

The truth of that hit harder than any threat could have. When she heard of Arianne being with the Dragonking, that she had ordered her father to be sent to the dungeons, she was certain Viserys had manipulated her. But now that she finally saw her lovely daughter after so many years, she looked happier, more alive, more... herself.

"You're dangerous," she breathed.

"To my enemies, yes. To those who accept me?" He leaned closer, his breath warm against her ear. "I can be quite generous."

"And if I don't accept you?"

"Then Norvos resists, and I walk away to plan my conquest in a… different way." Matter-of-fact, without heat. "But we both know that's not what you want."

"What I want?" She laughed, but it came out shaky. "You presume much, Dragon King."

"Then tell me I'm wrong." His lips were so close now. "Tell me you don't want someone who matches your fire instead of trying to smother it. Tell me twenty years of cold beds and colder comfort were enough."

She should slap him. Should call for guards. Should do anything but what her body screamed for.

Instead, she heard herself whisper, "You're not wrong."

The kiss was inevitable as gravity. His mouth claimed hers with the same certainty he'd claimed kingdoms, and she responded with ten years of suppressed hunger. He tasted of wine and power and every forbidden thing she'd denied herself in the name of propriety. Oh, she missed this. She missed this so much.

When they broke apart, she was breathing hard. "This doesn't mean—"

"It means whatever we decide it means." His hands were doing wonderful, terrible things to her composure. "But right now? It means you're tired of being the dignified lady. It means you want someone who sees the dragon in you, not just the decoration."

"Arrogant bastard." But she was pulling him closer.

"Accurate bastard." He lifted her onto the council table, scattering carefully arranged documents. "The question is, what are you going to do about it?"

For twenty years, she'd been the perfect image of Norvoshi nobility. Controlled. Dignified. Proper.

But the way he looked at her—like she was conquest and conqueror both—shattered those careful walls.

"Come take me," she heard herself say, the words torn from some deep, desperate place. "If you're such a conqueror, then conquer me. Show me what all your pretty words are worth."

His smile was pure predator. "With pleasure."

The maps of empire crumpled beneath them, but neither cared. Empires, after all, were built on more than just paper.

Mellario's spine pressed into the cold stone table as his hands caged her. "You feel it," he murmured, his voice velvet and steel. "The way your pulse jumps when I touch you. Like Norvos' bells finally found a rhythm worth following." 

His thumb dragged across her throat, lingering where her heartbeat thundered. She swallowed, the motion dragging her skin against his calloused grip. 

Let's not enjoy myself too much, she told herself. He's the enemy. But her hips shifted, the fine silk of her gown bunching as his knee pushed her thighs apart.

"I don't—" she started, but his mouth cut her off, bruising in its hunger. Fire flooded her veins, not the slow burn of wine but the white-hot flood of dragon's breath. When he pulled away, her lips felt raw, her breath ragged. 

"Your husband made you wait," he said, nosing along her jaw. "I don't. I take." His teeth nipped her earlobe. "You must want a man who can make decisions, don't you? One who doesn't hide behind scrolls and silence?"

She gasped as his fingers tore the bodice of her dress, baring her breast. His smirk was wicked when he saw her shiver. "You left Doran because he wouldn't ever please you, both physically and emotionally," he said, mouth hovering just above her nipple. "I will." 

The words were a promise. A warning. Then his tongue swept over her, and she clenched his shoulders, torn between arching into him and shoving him away.

"Dragon King," she managed, the title sour on her tongue.

"No. Say my name," he demanded, biting down. Pain flared, sharp and electric, and she whimpered, the sound too close to the ones she'd stifled in Dorne's silent corridors. 

"Viserys," she gasped. "King Viserys you—"

"Mhmm." He approved with a hum against her skin. "Ari learned quickly. You'll learn faster." His hands lifted her onto the table, scattering maps of trade routes and treaties. Norvos' future crumpled beneath their weight. 

His mouth returned to hers, his lips tasting of ash and conquest. She bit him, not out of resistance, but out of lust. Oh, she was loving this. He laughed, the sound low and vicious, and she felt it reverberate in her ribs.

The door could burst open. Oberyn could storm in. Arianne could—

His fingers found the damp heat of her pussy, pressing through silk, and the thought evaporated. "Let's head to a bedroom," she hissed, but her knees locked around his arm.

"Oh no," he whispered. "You needed this. Someone who doesn't ask. Who doesn't wait for your permission." His hand moved harder, relentless. She bit her lip until it bled, the copper tang mixing with his kiss. 

"Oh, gods…" she moaned for him, for the man that had taken everything from her husband.

"Twenty years of pretending you didn't want a man who'd master you, and now you show me this reaction," he taunted. "Tell me you don't like it. That you don't want to kneel to me the way Norvos kneels to its gods."

She didn't answer. Couldn't. Her body arched into his touch, a silent surrender.

"Good," he said, and pulled her down to meet him.

The maps were stained with candlewax. The city outside was still.

But Mellario burned. By the time he was inside her, ravaging her just like she wanted to be ravaged all her life, she answered all his questions, all his taunts, and they were all 'yes.'

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