#Valyrian Wedding
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heohl-art · 10 months ago
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ok, nobody asked for it (but I did it)đŸ”„â€ïž
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‱ The Song of Ice and Fire: A Valyrian Wedding ‱
Yes, the Good Omens x House of the Dragon crossover that I HAD TO draw. Please, don't be mad. I had to.
â€ïžđŸ«ąâœš
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gracielikegrapes · 11 months ago
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Targaryen Brides! Averaged over vague time periods within Targ Dynasty. Only have 4 because I didn't like the others :)
Before Conquest : Traditional wedding garb. Spun Canvas. Ref: Rhaenyra in House of the Dragon.
After Conquest 13ac - 48ac : Simple but Tasteful dress more in line with Westerosi traditions. Velvet with Satin trim. Ref: Arwen in Return of the King.
Golden Age 49ac - 120ac : Leading fashion in noble circles and court with a lot of heraldry. Predominately silk with Myrish lace. Ref: Danielle in Ever After.
After Dance of the Dragons 129ac - 180ac : Slightly more demure in cut with less opulence however still showcasing wealth and status e.g. no myrish lace but stoned with citrine, jasper and pearls. Ref: Buttercup in The Princess Bride.
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salialenart · 1 year ago
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Daenys Targaryen, called Daenys the Dreamer
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amoratearte · 8 months ago
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Savannah Steyn as Lady Laena Velaryon at her Valyrian wedding ceremony to Prince Daemon Targaryen. Commission for @laelinc
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whateveryeah · 2 years ago
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â€ïžâ€đŸ”„
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kelleigh-say · 1 year ago
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A true Valyrian Wedding.
“Bound by blood, bound by flame, I am his and he is mine. From this day, until the end of my days.”
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This BEAUTIFUL artwork was commissioned by the amazing Klyuris1 on twitter!
Please follow her: https://x.com/klyuris1?s=21&t=z9MXQtAGPcie3wiIY6Pvnw
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chromiumagellanic06 · 9 months ago
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The Silver Knight: Warrior, Princess, Wife
Daemon Targaryen/Original Fem [Targaryen] Character
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Chapter 29: Complete
MASTERLIST
Summary: Aemond's desires come to truth as Daemon and Naera wed in the way of old Valyria.
Word count: 2.9k
Warnings: NSFW Content! It's not THAT explicit, only vague kissing and fondling, heavy implications, suggestive themes, breeding kink, etc.
Aemond knocked tentatively on the ebony door, feet shuffling as he turned to his back, then each side, not at all calmed by the endless echoing corridors of the Keep. In his hand he held an ornate box that lay carved with ancient Valyrian runes—the result of his escapades in the King’s Stores, that he had taken it upon himself to deliver to his uncle and half-sister as a marital gift.
And then some. He had a question to ask, assistance to seek from the person he had grown to trust may understand. His half-sister was as selfish as he felt, he knew, and his uncle her husband even graver in his deeds. They were the perfect match, in a way—blood and fire, the epitome of what it meant to be Targaryen. The world would know no peace.
“Come!” He heard Naera scream from within, and he turned the heavy door on its hinges, silent. And entered the solar. It was strewn adrift with papers and letters, books and fresh parchment. Pots of ink sat beside collections of quills, ornate and rough-spun huddled alike, beside bottles of Dornish Red and some strange concoctions in twinkling glass bottles that ranged from the looks of curdled milk to liquid jade. He could smell ginger, at his first step, lemon at his second, and ash and embers when he sat.
Naera sat on her chair, eyes trained on a letter. She read it, expression bearing a soft frown that he realised was the natural way her lips fell, until she smiled, crumpled the pages in her hands and tossed it into the fireplace.
“Good morrow, Aemond.” Aemond turned to the window, one good eye watching the sun make its descent into the waters.
“It is to be evening soon, sister.” Naera followed his gaze to the window, to the haze that would soon be ushered with twilight. Her face glowed differently, he saw. Much had changed since they last met, even if only a moon had turned. As for him.
He’d made his moves carefully, spent stollen moments with the object of his every desire. He’d plucked her flowers she had never held before, told her tales of truth and sometimes even of valour, stollen kisses under the cover of shadowy night, and held to his stealth for protection. It wasn’t enough.
“Ah.” She turned to the door to her chambers, and said, aloud, “The sun sets soon, make some haste, dear groom.” He saw that she still wore a gown of black silk, not the garments of their tradition. He heard laughter from the other side, slurred words in their mother tongue that Aemond couldn’t quite decipher, but he recognised that Naera sat blushing and silent afterwards.
Blushing, for all her warrior-like ways. It was rather different from his sweet true sister’s blushes. Naera seemed scandalised, mischievous, a light flush of red on her cheeks, an embarrassed smile on her lips, but Helaena, Helaena blushed so red he feared he’d have to fetch a maester, turned so high and brilliant, eyes sparkling, lips chapped together that he--right.
He set the box down on the table, “A gift to commemorate your union.”
Naera smiled, inching the box closer to herself for a look. “Thank you—” but the door opened with a shudder.
Aemond’s uncle walked in, scuttered, rather—his steps were hasty. He was dressed in traditional garbs—red and cream, his silver-white hair left free to hang an inch above his shoulders, Dark Sister in her scabbard in his hand.
“No,” Naera covered her eyes, “A Tyroshi priestess once told me that gazing upon your betrothed on your day of marriage is considered ill-luck.” A burst of laughter left her lips.
“And a Valyrian book once told me that I may gaze at my wife as often as I wish.” Daemon left his sword on the table, snatched his wife’s hands away from her face and kissed her lips, with lust and haste, then kissed her forehead, and ran out the door. Aemond watched his back as he left, baffled as to when he had retaken the sword.
“I closed my eyes!” Naera screamed after him. Still laughing, she turned back to Aemond, “What can I do for you, brother?” Brother. He smiled back at her, unable to stop himself.
“Tell me, sister,” he breathed, licked his lips, hesitant. That is why he’d come, he knew. Sure, pay respects to his favourite family members after Helaena, congratulate them on their union, but there was always the other cause. “How can I take her?” Her, her, her; his Helaena, splendid, ethereal beauty wrapped in a promise of treason.
Naera sighed, and he was glad that she’d understood without him having to spend more words.
Naera poured him a cup of wine, water the colour of blood settling into a silver cask, like rubies spilling from a dark slate. Naera froze as she filled it, eyes distant, lost. Then, she asked, voice betraying her dreamy loss of the moment, “Does the Trident have Green Waters?”
“What?”
“Nothing.” She shook her head, handed him the cup and returned to her chair.
Aemond swallowed the wine in a breath, eye not leaving his sister’s face. She had paled, that sickly palour returning to her face. She blinked frantically, sipped a cup of water.
“You cannot take her, Aemond,” Take what you want, she had told him some moons ago—and he realised his folly. It was akin to a jerk to wake him from a long sleep.
Gods, what had he been thinking? He couldn’t take her, how could he? Where would they go? What would they do when men came seeking them? Had he been so blinded by his love, that he’d forgone all practicality? He’d hoped that she’d have an answer but—“You can maybe ask her.” He furrowed his eyebrows, a ghostly pain returning from under his eyepatch.
Naera sighed, “A maiden’s word must be your shield if you intend to have her.” Rapers went to the Wall at best, to the headsman at worst. Disgraceful.
“I do not mean to defile her,” Aemond defended, “I wish to wed her—to—” to see her wear the garbs Naera would at dusk, to drink her blood and hold her hand and vow to protect her for all their lives. That was what he wanted.
Naera refilled his cup, “I know, and she knows. The world does not.”
“You could—”
“What?” His sister’s eyes grew cold and cruel, her voice tuned to injure, to pick at his folly and tear him a regretful wound, “Tell the world that you love her? It isn’t so simple.” Aemond looked down, unable to meet those crystal eyes. Every word she spoke was true, and that hurt. Leave the world, he thought, Mother is the one we need convince.
“You can only love for so long without being loved, brother,” Naera sighed, chin dropping to her palm, elbow banging against the table, “You can only run if she wishes it also.” Run with me, Helaena. We’ll wed in the faith of the Seven or that of the Valyrians. We’d be one heart, one soul—just say the word.
“She wants me, I am certain of it.” She hates Aegon, and knows well that their days near quickly. If only mother saw through her schemes.
“It is only mother, even the King—”
Naera shook her head, “Fuck the King,” he smiled at her brashness, “fuck your mother and your cock of a grandsire,” he felt a pang of shame after the moment passed. He hadn’t defended them, he realised. He agreed with his sister. His mother, fuck Alicent, who wouldn’t see past the grey shroud of duty to gaze at the world in all its colour. Love, was the colour he wished to see, he reminded himself. He had caught a glimpse, now he wanted a full look. “Aemond,” she summoned his wits back to her, “Ask her, confide in her, and run, together.”
Dusk hung heavy in the isle of Dragonstone, a curtain of fog descending on the shores as fires were lit and the Blood of the Dragon gathered near the volcanic crypts. It was a cacophony of red and black, the colours of their heritage—silver hair and purple eyes, fire in their veins, all gathered in respect or obligation.
The priest fanned the coal and flames, ornate chalices and candles gathered by Rhaenyra arranged on a block of rock marbled with red and yellow—it was slab of frozen fire mined from the haunted crypts of the Dragons.
Daemon could hear them murmuring through the fog from where he stood on the sandy beach. He could make out the Hightower cunt’s voice, could see her black gown flapping in the breeze even through the fog, and it only irritated him. The Blood of the Dragon had gathered, so why, pray why had the stupid lanterns joined in? His robes were scratchy and cold, the calm breezes did nothing to allay his urgency. The sun was falling into the sea, a streak of gold and saffron following it, and the mists grew pink and red as though the sky itself bled. It was time
The waves rustled the sands calmly as she took his side. Wrapped in a robe nearly identical to his—cream and ruby, adorned with gold, an ornate headdress laid between her braided silver locks. Beautiful. The curve of her nose, the pink flesh of her lips, her eyes—crystals clearer than diamonds painted blue and red, gods.
His ire vapourized, that familiar panging of his heart returning, thud, thud, his heart now beat only for her, it seemed.
He took her hand wordlessly, her chilled touch sending shivers through him, and in his mind, he spoke a prayer.
Let me hold this hand forever.
The rocky shores bristled against her bare feet, reminding Naera of the time she had scaled the ports of Asshai from the rocky ends. It hurt, but it was worth it. Daemon’s hand was warm in hers, his grasp tight and binding, as they crossed the threshold to where their family waited.
The fires flared when they made it to the clearing, the sky reddened like a maiden’s blush—if the Gods could betray more of their intentions, she did not know how. With the cold of the fog, and the warmth of his hand, the serene calmness of this event came a gradual understanding that this was right. She was meant for this—to be his, to hold his hand, to wield her sword for them, to sleep and wake and live beside him. Her uncle who had never cared for her, but now he cared not what the world said as long as he could have her.
Her family stood around the flames; the two branches of the house split over the priest. Viserys stumbled close, wilting hair and face, though he had a guilty smile on. He’d done this in some hope of companionship, but it had grown into a sickly sort of love, he knew.
He took her hand, clasped it in his cold damp one, and pressed a shuddering kiss to her forehead. Naera smiled at him, watched him return to Rhaenyra’s side—Rhaenyra, who smiled in a way most disillusioned, who stood with her husband, her sworn guards, her children, her court, choosing war even in that moment. Across the priest was Alicent, face contorted in distaste for such old ways, her children at her side, all in red and black, a treaty of peace. Aemond gave her a curt nod when she met his eye, a tingling smile on her lips.
The priest—one of the old Keepers of the Dragonpit who still followed those old doomed gods—began his droning, hymns sung to Meleys, the goddess of love and fertility, to Teraxes, to Balerion—to nearly every god, but Naera cared not. This had been the scene, she knew—Daemon shrouded in fog, silent and still, calmness in his eyes.
The priest handed him a blade of obsidian, a shard of glass as black as night that glowed in its shadowy beauty. He ran it down her lower lip, skin splitting instantly, blood pooling. He dabbed his thumb on that red, red, red beauty, and smeared a straight line on her forehead.
I name you woman, fire in your veins, it meant.
She took the blade, and did the same for him, his blood warm against her thumb as she drew three bent lines on his forehead.
I name you man, blood in your nature.
He traced the dagger over his palm, striking a wound deep and true to stand out amongst all thousands scars that he brandished. A line of red dripped down his skin. Naera traced the same wound on her own palm—Of my own will, I thus give you myself, and their hands joined in a flash of pain and flame.
The priest began, “Hen lantoti ānograr va syndroti vāedroma,” Blood of two joined as one, lifeblood dripping to mingle and mix, tethering them to each other.
The priest wrapped a ribbon the colour of night and light over their held hands, blood dripping down through the binds.
“Mēro perzot gīhoti elēdroma iārza sīr,” Ghostly flame and song of shadows.
He handed Naera a chalice of stone and glass, as dark as night, and she tilted the vessel till salt and iron flooded her tongue. Our blood to bind.
“Izulī ampā perzī prumī lanti sēteski,” Two hearts as embers forged in fourteen fires.
Daemon mirrored her acts, his face twisting as their blood laced his tongue. He swallowed it bravely, and watched Naera’s eyes. Close, so close.
“Hen jeny māzilarion, qēlossa ozĆ«ndesi,” A future promised in glass, the stars stand witness.
Naera breathed, breaking into a delicate smile again, “I shall be your side forever.”
He took her other hand, eyes never leaving—lilac and lilac, crystal clear and shallow pools of glass. “I shall hold your hand forever.”
“Synroro ĆĂ±Ć jēdo ry kÄ«via mazvestraksi.” The vow spoken through time of Darkness and Light.
She inhaled, cold, wet air flooding her nose in a rush, and she gazed, gazed, gazed at him, his eyes that refused to leave hers, the wealth of his wisdom yet to be cultivated, the gift of his existence forever claimed by her. She said, “I will defend you.” Against the night, against the light, against whatever was to come. Against every wish to exile, every spat with the greens, every ill word with the King, she will stand by him, she will protect his honour as though it was her own.
He smiled, though both love and mischief twinkled in his eye, “I will warm you.” When the night was dark and full of terrors, when the end came and her will faltered, he shall be with her, he shall give her fire and light. He will warm her bed and hers alone, warm her body when the cold came, warm her spirits over every loss and share her joy over every victory.
Naera said, “I will give it all up for you.” Dorne, Volantis, Pentos, the Dothraki Seas, Asshai, and her dreams—Yi Ti, the Jade Sea, whatever lays east of the Shadow, the very wonders of the world could be laid abandon. She loved too easily, but even the gods had proclaimed this union as perfection.
“I will never hurt you.” Not as he once had, no, never. He will never disappoint her, never let her down, never leave her behind, never let her think that he could survive without her.
“I will love you.” Daemon’s heart lost a weight he did not know he bore, a delightful, fiery blaze in his chest, a joy uncontainable. His, his, his. She was his, every flicker on her eyes belonged to him, every mocking word his, every act of bravery, every witted word. He loved already, but he could love better, now that she loved him also.
His hand flew to her face, thumb smearing the blood at her lip, red, red, red, and to show that he cared, that he loved, that he was willing to understand, he said, “For the night is dark and full of terrors.”
She leaned on her toes and kissed his lips.
His laughter would be her lifeblood, she realised as his heaving breaths reverberated through her chest, made her feel warm, made her feel him, his spirit and not just his body.
“D’you know what they’ll all say,” he spoke into her neck, his nose breathing cool air over the red mark of his bite, “When you grow round and great with my child, again and again?”
She laughed, a fleeting giggle morphing into a ridiculed laugh, “What?” He pulled her into a different corridor, away from their chambers.
“The Princess must really love her uncle’s cock,” the vulgarity made her roll her eyes.
“Maybe they’ll think that the prince has no control over himself,” Naera challenged, “Keeps getting his sweet niece with child, the poor woman.” He pushed her against a wall, cold stone of the corridors of the Keep making her flush and hum, and his hands roamed her flesh like a man starved.
Their lips met, tongues melding, breaths fading until the newly wedded couple panted for breath.
“Poor woman?” His eyes twinkled with the sort of courage that came with deeds best not committed.
“They needn’t know,” she kissed his cheek, arms winding around his neck. “They needn’t know that the idea of bearing her uncle’s seed fills the niece with a selfish joy that she cannot account for.” With a deft flick of his hand, her robes parted, rough linen tearing aloud.
“Oh, but the uncle knows,” he descended on her neck again, “He knows very well how much his niece loves having his spend in her womb.” He hoisted her legs up, lips falling to her breasts.
“Yes, oh, yes he does,” she moaned, wits departing her, fingers tugging at his hair, leading him to the other breast. He complied greedily, nipping, licking, kissing the flesh, leaving red and purple marks on every patch of free skin.
Her garbs were torn and ruined; her headdress abandoned in the hands of Laenor before they had scurried to the corridors in some mad bout of lust. Gods, lust was only one word for what she felt. She felt charged, as though lightning had struck her very soul. She felt fiery, as she often did when he stood beside her.
One kiss to his lips and the sentiment had caught on as a candle-flame blazes into an arsonist’s dream.
Now her swelling flesh was in his hands. She had lapped away the drying blood of his lip, sucked at the tear in his skin till the wound was raw, and now, she was at his mercy once again.
“Daemon,” she called, making him stare into her eyes with his own, lilac flowers and bloody amethysts. Beautiful. His hair was tousled, red streaking his forehead, but his eyes, those eyes that were over a decade older than her own yet were livelier than she had been just moons ago.
“Naera,” he called back, as had become their ritual, and she recalled the sweet bliss of hearing her name from his lips again. Completion, he made her sound complete, made her believe that she could conquer this new land that was marriage and slay this new demon that was mistrust.
Footsteps.
And the moment broke, but he was smiling as he leaned his face close to hers, covering her form from view.
“Fuck off,” he chastised behind himself, swaying his wife slowly. “Can’t you see—” but Naera put a finger to his lips, her eyes trained over his shoulder. Daemon turned tentatively, half-expecting his brother or the Hightower cunt or the cunt lord of hands but no.
He hugged his sweet wife tighter as she gave a subtle nod to Aemond, her half-brother—his sister Helaena’s hand in his, her face caught blushing a bright red, as they rushed through corridors and passageways, hastened and cautious. When their footsteps echoed away, Naera laughed.
“The Hightowers fall on our wedding after all.”
To be, or not to be


continued
MASTERLIST
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rhaenysdagger · 1 year ago
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Rhaenys & Visenya đŸ”„
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russellssaince · 9 months ago
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IMAGINE A FANART OF BROCEDES GETTING MARRIED IN THE VALYRIAN TRADITION, FOR GOD I WILL DO ANYTHING FOR THIS MASTERPIECE 😭😭😭😭😭😭
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sapphirehearteyes · 1 year ago
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Look- I’m a simple girl with simple needs

Is Rhaenyra marrying Alicent in a Valyrian wedding ceremony really so much to ask?
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foedhrass · 4 months ago
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I had an awesome weekend at the Maker Faire in Hannover last weekend showing some of my costumes. Thank you very much to Little_solnyshka who accompanied me, brought her Rhaenyra costume to match Daemon’s Valyrian Wedding outfit and also took this video because my phone failed to produce a non-shaky video. ;)
PS: Now the cat’s definitely out of the bag
 can anybody spot and identify the new cosplay that I’m currently building?
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the-last-poet-in-westeros · 1 year ago
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Rhaegar's wives
@qyburnsghost @valyrianpoem @valyriansilk @valyriqn @asoiafrarepairs @asoiafwomensource @thelastdragonsnet @princessofdragonsandwolves
@love-dragoneyes
@thelastdragonsnet
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the-golden-viper-of-dorne · 1 year ago
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@qyburnsghost @songs-of-love-and-doom @thelastdragonsnet @valyriqn @valyriansilk @princessofdragonsandwolves @valyrianpoem @asoiafrarepairs @asoiafwomensource @asoiaffanart-blog @love-dragoneyes @houseofjaqen @joneryskingdom @forcesmuggler @1nsaankahanhai-bkr @irisewithsunyourisewiththemoon @libby-the-lion
@chemtrailsoverthesun
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feyhunter78 · 2 years ago
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Moonflowers (10/16)
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Description: Jacaerys and Helaena get married in secret
Helaena followed after Jacaerys, her hand in his as he led her through the twists and turns of the secret tunnels she’d never known existed. He moved through them with grace, and Helaena found herself wondering if Aegon ever used these same passageways to slip out of the keep and into Fleabottom. When they stopped at a particular section of the stone walls, Helaena gave her a confused look, but he only smiled and knocked on the wall in quick succession.
“Enter.” Came the voice of her elder half-sister Rhaenyra.
Jacaerys pushed on the wall, and it gave, allowing them entrance to Rhaenyra’s sitting room. The woman in question looked up from the book she was reading and, her husband, Lord Harwin Strong, looked up as well. In his hands was a dagger and a small wooden block.
“Helaena, good evening, I see Jace has shown you some of the passages.” Rhaenyra said, setting her book aside and turning towards them as Harwin went back to carving.
“We wish to marry.” Jacaerys said, holding their intertwined hands for Rhaenyra to see.
“Is that not the reason Aegon is set to die?” Harwin commented, holding the wood block up to the candlelight.
“We wish for you to marry us, sister.” Helaena spoke up, drawing her strength from Jacaerys’ hand in hers.
Harwin set his dagger down and began to chuckle as Rhaenyra reached over and swatted him with her book. “Do not laugh, I think it’s quite sweet.”
“Will you marry us? I know you have the dragonglass daggers.” Jacaerys said, standing firm.
Rhaenyra stood and made her way over to a chest, rummaging around in it until she found what she was looking for. “I will do this, on one condition.”
Both Helaena and Jacaerys nodded.
“You must be married by a septon as well, in front of the court, so no one can dispute the validity of your marriage.”
“Of course, mother, we were going to wait until Aegon was pronounced dead, and then I planned to ask grandsire for Helaena’s hand.”
Rhaenyra nodded then positioned them both across from each other as she began the ceremony, the High Valyrian slipping from her tongue as if she’d performed these rites dozens of times. She handed the dagger to Jacaerys, who cut his lip, then Helaena’s quietly apologizing when she winced. He pressed his lips to hers softly, and she thought she’d recoil at the taste of blood on her lips, but she found when it was Jacaerys’ she didn’t quite mind.
Then they cut their palms, mixing their blood together as Rhaenyra continued her voice steady as they drew the traditional symbols on each other’s foreheads. Once they’d both drunk from the wooden cup they were using to symbolize the golden goblet. She said the final words and smiled.
“It is done, you are now one flesh, one heart, and one soul.”
Harwin clapped from his seat at the table, and Helaena ducked her head to hide her blush.
Jacaerys gently tilted her head up, “no need for that, I wish to look upon my bride.”
Helaena’s heart fluttered at his words, and she pressed a soft kiss to each of his cheeks, hesitant to show affection in front of his parents. “And you shall have all of eternity to do so, husband.”
Jacaerys’ eyes darkened with desire as the title fell from her lips, and she had to look away before her face changed from pink to red. As much as she would like to give into her baser desires, it would not do her well to attempt them here.
Luckily, Rhaenyra’s reappearance holding a small fabric covered item broke the heated tension between her and Jacaerys. “I had two of these made, one for Alyra, and then one for the woman Jace married.” She handed Helaena the item, and she unwrapped it carefully.
Laying on a bed of black velvet was a small hair pin with the Strong family crest set in iron. The craftsmanship was remarkable, and she could see the care that had been put into making it. “It’s beautiful, thank you, sis—I’m not sure what I should call you now.”
Rhaenyra thought for a moment, “I am your good-mother now. You may call me by my name, or good-mother, or just mother if you prefer. Whichever you feel comfortable with.”
Helaena went to answer, but a quick knocking interrupted her.
Rhaenyra bid the knocker to enter, and Aemond and Alyra stumbled through the false wall, giggling. Well, Alyra was giggling, and Aemond was shushing her, his eye filled with mirth.
Alyra spotted the blood on her, and Jacaerys’ skin, and her face fell. “Oh no, did we miss the ceremony?” She turned to Aemond lightly smacking his chest. “I told you we should have walked faster. Now we missed your sister’s wedding.”
Aemond rolled her eye and stepped up to her, taking Helaena’s hands in his own. “It is done, sister, you are free.”
“Aegon is dead?” Jacaerys asked.
“I saw the body with my own eyes, tipped a crownsguard off that the body of a Targaryen lay in the ally, and left.” Alyra said, shedding her cloak, balling it up and throwing it into the fireplace. “By the morning, I’m sure the small council will be informed.” She glanced at Aemond who nodded. “You should go to the king first thing in the morning before the maesters arrive.”
“I will go with you two, father will not be able to say no to all three of us.” Rhaenyra said, taking Aemond’s cloak as well and feeding it to the flames.
Alyra escorted Helaena back to her chambers after seeing the glaze come over her eyes. Once she’d made sure Helaena was dressed for bed, and they were alone, she sat on the bed beside her. “I want you to know that Aegon did not suffer, and that if you wish to mourn him, no one begrudge you that. He may have been awful, but he was still your brother, your husband, and the father of your children. No one will be angry or judge you for feeling grief.”
Helaena rubbed at her eyes; she wasn’t sure if she could put a name to what she was feeling. Joy and relief, anxiety, and sadness. She was happy he was dead, happy to be married to Jacaerys, the man she loved, but she feared it would all fall apart. That somehow it would be traced back to the people she loved, and then what would she do? How many times can a woman be a widow before the accusing finger points to her?
Alyra in silence with her until Helaena had put organized her feelings into some semblance of cohesion. She took a deep breath and focused on the dancing flames of the candles. “I am happy, but I am also so very afraid. How certain are you that you and Aemond will not be blamed.”
“As sure as I am that the sun will rise in the morning and set at night.” Alyra said, her words sound, there was no jesting tone she usually attributed to Alyra. Her voice was steady, firm, her golden eyes lit from within. Aegon was dead.
Helaena rubbed her eyes once more, the chaos of the day pulling her down, begging her to rest. “Will you stay with me? In case he comes back?” She trusted the word of her brother and Alyra, but she found it hard to believe anyone, but Aegon could kill Aegon.
Alyra laid down beside her. “Always, you know my loyalty lies with you. Nothing will change that, Helaena.”
Helaena nodded and closed her eyes, drifting off to sleep, feeling safe with her friend’s warmth at her back.
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amoratearte · 1 year ago
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Happy Christmas 🎄
As a gift, Daemon and Laena’s Valyrian wedding for House of the Dragon
As you can see, I changed the outfits, but I kept the headpiece, the only part of the costume I liked. I also drew the actual glyphs for fire and blood
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whateveryeah · 1 year ago
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