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In The Gloomy Depths [Chapter 5: Ruby]
Series summary: Five years ago, jewel mining tycoon Daemon Targaryen made a promise in order to win your hand in marriage. Now he has broken it and forced you into a voyage across the Atlantic, betraying you in increasingly horrifying ways and using your son as leverage to ensure your cooperation. You have no friends and no allies, except a destitute viola player you canât seem to get away fromâŠ
Series warnings: Language, sexual content (18+ readers only), parenthood, dolphins, death and peril, violence (including domestic violence), drinking, smoking, freezing temperatures, murder, if you donât like Titanic you wonât like this fic!!! đ
Word count:Â 5.5k
đ All my writing can be found HERE! đ
Tagging: @nightvyre @mrs-starkgaryen @gemini-mama @ecstaticactus @chattylurker, more in comments đ„°
đ Let me know if youâd like to be added to the taglist đ
Scarlet dusk spills over the pine planks of the deck like rising water. Sweet little Madeleine Astor invites you to attend dinner with her partyâperhaps there is gossip that you and Daemon have had some sort of a rowâbut you have other plans. As the rest of the first-class passengers descend the Grand Staircase to the dining room on D-Deck, you make your way eastward towards the stern. You pass shipbuilder Thomas Andrews, who is ambling along with a group of chuckling, pipe-puffing gentlemen including J. Bruce Ismay and Benjamin Guggenheim. Mr. Andrews is mentioning the iceberg warnings that the captain has received from nearby vessels today; the other men are agreeing that Captain Smith is right to not be concerned. On a night as calm and cloudless as this one, surely an iceberg would be spotted by the lookouts with more than enough time to steer the ship to safety.
Aegon is waiting by the steel railing of the stern, stolen black coat, face glowing in fading daylight the color of sunstone, a crystal mined in Oregon. His scuffed brown leather portfolio and a folded easel are tucked under one arm; in his fist is clutched the handle of a small wooden box, which must contain his painting supplies.
âSo,â he says, smiling when he sees youâve accepted his offer, this final kindness before you are torn away from each other when Titanic docks in New York Harbor. âWhere should we set up our studio? It canât be in my cabin. One of my roommates is currently fornicating with a Russian girl. She seems nice. I hope she isnât burdened with his bastard child.â
âYou donât think we should join them?â
He laughs. âMaybe Iâm not ready to share you.â
âYouâre not living up to your reputation, prodigal son. I had heard you were an irredeemable miscreant.â Then you turn to leave, and Aegon follows you.
You stop first at the CafĂ© Parisien on B-Deck, which is mostly deserted; itâs very cold outside, approaching freezing temperatures as the sun sinks below the bloodied horizon, and the heaters donât work especially well in the restaurant. You purchase several different sandwiches and a chocolate croissant. No cash exchanges hands, which is good because you donât ever have any; the stewards there recognize you and will add the charge to your illustrious husbandâs bill, to be paid before passengers disembark on either April 16th or 17th, depending on how quickly Titanic arrives at her destination.
Daemon and Rhaenyra will be in the First-Class Dining Saloon for the next several hours, and thereafter will almost certainly steal away into her rooms to commit their incestuous adultery. Rush is eternally prowling nearby in case Daemon finds himself in need of anything: a drink, a gun, a troublesome wife shoved over a railing. Per her nightly tradition, Dagmar has taken Draco to the Verandah Café, which in addition to being a more casual eatery has become a sort of playroom for first-class children. And so in your staterooms, only Fern is present, finishing up some dusting before she journeys down to C-Deck to enjoy dinner in the Maids and Valets Saloon. From above the fireplace, the taxidermied tiger head watches you with eerily still gemstone eyes, a dispassionate witness to your treason.
âHello, maâam,â Fern says when you enter. âCan I make you a cup of tea before I go?â Then she sees Aegon walk in behind you with all his equipment, and she blinks, bewildered. âGood evening, sir. Did we meet on the Boat Deck this morningâŠ?â
âWe did,â Aegon replies a bit sheepishly. Fern looks at you, seeking an explanation.
âI need a favor,â you tell her.
âOf course, maâam. Anything.â But Fernâs large dark eyes shift skittishly between you and Aegon.
You give her the paper bag heavy with treats from CafĂ© Parisien. âIâve brought you dinner. I wasnât sure what kind of sandwich youâd prefer, so thereâs ham and GruyĂšre, tomato and chĂšvre, and pĂątĂ© and cornichon. Eat whichever you like, or all three, it doesnât matter. Oh, and thereâs a chocolate croissant as well, nice and flakey and shining with butter. Itâs absolutely massive.â
âThatâs very kind, maâam,â Fern says. Sheâs touched, but sheâs still puzzled.
âFern, Iâm asking you to stay here in the sitting room. It doesnât matter what you do, but donât fall asleep, and for Godâs sake donât leave to go outside, not even for a moment.â
âAlright,â she agrees cautiously.
âI donât think theyâll be back for a few hours, but if somebody does walk through that doorâDaemon, Dagmar, anyoneâall I need you to do is offer to make them tea, as you would on any other night. And offer loudly.â This will alert you to the intruder and give you more than enough time to get Aegon out onto the private deck, from which he can access the hallways of B-Deck and the Grand Staircase.
Fern understands. She nods, studying Aegon thoughtfully. âYes maâam.â
âAnd I didnât have any visitors.â Your voice is grave; it is not only your reputation at risk. Itâs your life.
Fern feigns shock. âOf course not. I havenât seen a soul.â
You touch a palm to her shoulder, fleeting and gentle. âThank you, Fern.â
âItâs no trouble at all, maâam,â she says, and then goes to the small circular table and begins to unwrap one of the sandwiches from CafĂ© Parisien.
As soon as you and Aegon are inside your bedroom, you push Daemonâs writing desk in front of the door, precious extra seconds bought in the unlikely event that your husband returns and Fern canât slow him down. Aegon immediately begins setting up: placing his easel, clipping a piece of fresh linen-like parchment from his portfolio to it, and removing a palette, brushes, and tiny tin tubes of oil paint from his wooden box. He turns off all of the lamps except one, then glances at the unlit white candles on the dresser and the nightstand. Before he can say anything, you take his aluminum lighter from your handbag and light the wicks.
âCan I do anything else to help?â you ask.
âYeah.â Aegon nods to your spacious walk-in closet, where the door is hanging ajar. Itâs nearly as large as his entire third-class cabin. He shrugs off his black wool coat; beneath it he is wearing only a white button-up shirt and dark green corduroy trousers. âGet dressed. Put on something you feel like you look especially good in.â
You gaze blankly at the closet, then turn back to him. âI donât think I look good in anything.â
âWell now Iâm going to make you watch.â He smirks at you, mischievous, teasing, then drops to his knees to squirt beads of paint onto his stained palette: golden like the lamplight, a rich dark brown like the walnut wood of the bedposts.
âHow would you possibly accomplish that?â
âYou have a mirror.â He points to it with a paintbrush, the oval-shaped pool of silver standing upright by the bed.
You gape at it, mortified. âNo, I couldnât possibly stare at myself the whole time.â
âSure you could.â Aegon goes to the mirror and adjusts it until it is filled with your reflection. âNot too bad, right?â
âI suppose,â you murmur, but you have already fled to the closet. As Aegon swirls colors together on his palette, searching for the perfect shades, you sift through your collection of jewel-toned fabrics: lace, cotton, velvet, wool. You think again of the dusk light that turned the decks and waves to rubies, and your eyes catch on a red silk robe: purchased only a month ago, never worn yet, no memories of Daemon or anybody else, a new age like sunset or dawn. You take off your green gown and remove the emeralds from your ears, then don the crimson-colored robe and return to the bedroom to meet Aegon, silk flowing behind you like a riptide, the rustling of your legs beneath the fabric.
Aegon is scrabbling around by the foot of the bed, smoothing out any bumps in the Turkish rug, straightening the white ruffled bed skirt that hangs down to the floor. He peers up at you and freezes, his fretful fingers going still.
You ask tentavively: âIs this okay?â
He chuckles. âOkay is one word for it. Come over here.â
You go to Aegon and he takes your hands, both of them, and draws you down onto the floor where he is. You sit with your legs bent and tucked to the right, as if youâre a mermaid, your tail the color of blood instead of cool rippling depths. Aegon arranges the hem of your robeâhe wants your bare feet showing, the silk rumpled in some spots and smooth in othersâthen retreats and stands back to study you, chewing the corner of his full bottom lip, his hands on his waist.
âCan I take your hair down?â
âSure,â you say, but when he touches youâeven a graze, even a whisperâyou have to stop yourself from startling a bit, from reaching out to grab his wrist and keep him close.
âI can paint from memory,â Aegon tells you as he works, perhaps filling the quiet to soothe your nerves. âBut it always turns out better if I have the person in front of me.â
âIâll try to stay still.â
âYou can move around if you have to,â he assures you. âIâd rather have you comfortable. I know youâre not a statue.â
âRight.â You smile. âIâm a rock.â
Aegon laughs and places your left hand on the bedpost as if you are clinging to it. âThe best rock. Now letâs see you glimmer.â He goes to the mirror and repositions it one final time, angling it downwards slightly so you are in the center of the glass oval. From behind you on the dresser, flickering dots of candlelight glow like stars. You instinctively avert your eyes from your reflection, but Aegon is insistent. Gingerly, he turns your head back towards the mirror before striding over to his easel.
You do not want to watch yourself, so you watch Aegon instead, his doppelganger reversed in the glass. Heâs mixing paint on his palette, repeatedly glancing at your robe to make sure heâs made the correct shade of red. Heâs absentmindedly tucking a lock of his hair behind his ear. And you cannot stop staring at his hands: the way he holds a paintbrush, the bumps of his knuckles. He is not a man who has ever pillaged or bruised but only created pinpoints of light that gleam through the darkness, music and art and laughter, the gems of human existence. He is far from home, just like you are. His bones are the bars of a prison; you have married into the same one, created new life with it, melded your bloodlines together like forged metal.
Now Aegon is back, his reflection kneeling behind yours, and he begins to reach for your waist before he stops himself. âIs it alright if IâŠ?â
âOf course. However you want me.â
The Aegon that lives in the silver sheen of the mirror settles his hands lightly just below your ribcage. He turns you just barely towards the mirror, only an inch away from where you were before, but he is precise, he is careful. This is the last image heâll ever capture of you.
The warmth of him against you, his weight, his wonder as he gazes at your reflection with eyes like deep water; your breath catches, and at first he fears he has crossed a line and removes his hands. But your fingers areâslowly, like a suggestion that someone could so easily pretend not to have noticedâpulling up the hem of your silk robe, to just above your ankles, to your calves, to your bent knees. Aegonâs right hand covers yours, and thenâas your eyes lock in the mirrorâskates up the inside of your thighs as you part them, displacing the vivid red of your robe, revealing yourself in the glass, and so you can see it as he touches you, not like he owns or commands or uses you but like he is here to chisel you free from the perpetual darkness of the mine youâve been trapped in for millennia.
You gasp in desperate, disbelieving relief, shaking all over, and you move to kiss him; but Aegon catches your face in his other hand and turns you back to the mirror. âNo,â he whispers. âWatch.â And then he presses his lips to the apple of your cheek and lingers there for a moment, tasting you, breathing you in like youâre water filling the lungs of a drowning man.
âAegonâŠâ
âI want you to see how beautiful you are. I want you to see what Iâve been dying to do to you.â
His right hand is still between your legs, his fingers circling, a whirlpool that drags you down like an anchor until you hit the seafloor, an ocean not of pressure and cold but bright, yearning warmth, golden lamplight and flickering candles. You reach back to touch Aegonâs faceâthe stubble of his short beard, the sand-colored strands of his hairâbut still he keeps your gaze fixed on your reflection. Now you are unashamed in a way you havenât been since before your wedding night five years ago, just about the same time Aegon was leaving home. The proof is indelible, inking itself into your memory like a painterâs signature: you are desired, you are loved.
âThank you,â you moan, so low itâs almost inaudible. Youâre close. Youâre very, very close. âOh my God, Aegon, thank youâŠâ
âShh.â He kisses the side of your face, his eyes on the mirror, transfixed. âShow me.â
Itâs a beam of sunlight refracted and scattered by a ruby; itâs a scalding torrent of blood that crashes through a web of arteries all the way to the heart. And whenâstill shuddering, still fighting for airâyou pull away from Aegonâs grasp, he lets you go without any resistance.
You roll onto the floor and drag him on top of you by his shirt, struggling with trembling fingers to untangle the tie of your robe until Aegon realizes what youâre trying to do and helps you. He opens the blood-red silk and tastes the salt blooming on your belly, your breasts, your throat where your pulse is thudding drunk and maroon in your carotid. Itâs better than cider or champagne or beer or nicotine; he is not a poison but a cure. He is unbuttoning his shirt and his trousers, hurried famished need. He is inside of you, and he is kissing you deeply, your palms on his flushed face, your hips moving with his. You steal a glimpse of the silver-moonlight mirror, and there you both are: lost and far from home, shipwrecked on the same island, castaways and wave crests and mirages. In the end, you know you have not disappointed him. His lungs are breathless and his eyes wet, his muscles just as spent and useless as yours. Neither of you are lost anymore. You have found each other here in the gloomy depths.
Almost immediately, Aegon forces himself off of you and crawls towards his easel, at last staggering to his feet. He grabs his palette and a brush and begins working with frenetic strokes, his damp hair falling in his face, his brow knit with concentration. You donât have to ask what heâs doing. Heâs trying to paint you before the memory begins to fade. He works in thin layers, just enough to cover the white of the parchment. His visions are soft and fragile like dreams, things that can be blown away and forgotten. From where youâre still lying on the floor, you gaze up at Aegon as he paints.
Is it possible that Iâm in love with him? Is it possible that after this voyage Iâll never see him again?
You have no sense of how much time has passed when he finally looks over at you and says: âI think itâs done.â
You stand and wander across the bedroom, your red robe still open and hanging loosely from you like flayed skin. On the paper you find two faces instead of one, you in a golden haze of ecstasy no one else can see the cause of, Aegon whispering as your fingertips reach back for him.
He has written in black in the bottom right corner of the painting: Petra and Picasso.
~~~~~~~~~~
Aegon doesnât want to move it yet. The oil paint needs hours to dry, and heâs worried that if he takes it outside while itâs still wet, the wind screaming down from the Arctic might be cold enough to make the paint freeze and chip away, and the momentary lust-red magic heâs captured will be gone. So with the new painting still clipped to it, you hide Aegonâs folded easel, the leather portfolio, and the wooden box of supplies under your bed, concealed by the white ruffled bed skirt. You both take turns cleaning up in the bathroomâsomeone always listening for the noise of an unwelcome interloperâand Aegon shimmies back into his clothes while you change into a blue dress, velvet for warmth, pale like ice.
âWhere can we go?â you ask Aegon as you put on a coat, heavy white wool. I donât want to say goodbye to you yet.
He must feel the same way. He pushes Daemonâs writing desk back to its original place, unblocking the door. Then Aegon offers his hand and you take it.
You walk together into the sitting room. Fern looks up from where sheâs perched on the sofa and sewing closed a rip in the sleeve of one of Dagmarâs charcoal-colored dresses, her eye wide.
âThank you, Fern,â you say, calm and drowsy. âThat will be all for tonight.â
âYes maâam.â
âHow can I repay you?â You donât have your own money, your own land; even the jewels in your collection belong to Daemon. Youâd give them all up if they could buy your freedom. Youâd let them sink into the dark cold North Atlantic Ocean, emeralds and rubies and sapphires. Randomly, you think of Daemonâs gemstone-studded dagger, the hilt glinting with gold.
Fern replies: âNever send me away to live with people who donât bring me chocolate croissants.â
You dash to the sofa and hug her; Fern is stunned but accepts your embrace, warily patting your back as if the bones beneath might be porcelain or glass. Then you clasp Aegonâs hand again and vanish with him into the hallway.
Most of the men are still at dinner or have moved to the First-Class Smoking Room, the women are still gossiping and sipping their champagne, and so you and Aegon slip through the heated corridors like sharks in warm currents. He leads you towards the stern, to the section of the ship reserved for his chosen people, then down to F-Deck and the Third-Class Dining Saloon. They are just beginning to move the tables out of the way for dancing. You find a quiet corner of the room and take off your coats, then Aegon disappears for a moment and returns with a tray: two plates full of corned beef, cabbage, carrots, and potatoes, two bowls of plum pudding, two cups of tea, a dark bitter pint of Guinness for you. You can feel your face light up when you see Irish food.
âYouâre lucky you werenât down here for breakfast,â Aegon tells you. âWe had fried tripe and onions.â
âOh, awful,â you say, laughing. You take a bite of corned beef and close your eyes, thinking of Saint Patrickâs Day with your family each year, always a cold wet day in March, green hills and grey mist. When you open your eyes, Aegon is smiling.
âA little taste of Ireland.â Now he is wistful. Across the room, the musicians Aegon sometimes plays with have climbed on top of a table and are performing My Wild Irish Rose as couples whirl around the floor. âIâll miss it. I love the music and the people. Perhaps one in particular.â
âWhat are you going to do when you get home?â
âIâm going to tell Aemond he has to teach me how to be a duke,â Aegon says casually as he eats. âI canât really give it up, unfortunately. The title belongs to the Crown, not my family. It can be taken away any time the king decides he wants to. And heâs a strict one, George V. Heâs humorless, heâs harsh. If I refuse my inheritance, I canât just pass it along to Aemond, not unless the king agrees. But the way I amâŠmy failings, my lack of restraintâŠit makes my bloodline look like bad stock, doesnât it? Especially with all that eugenics bullshit floating around. I donât want my mother and siblings to lose everything because of me. My mother has spent her entire life miserable, I figure she should have something to show for it.â
The Hightower branch of the family are phantoms to you. You know them only from newspaper articles and erratic gossip and sneering remarks muttered by your husband. You take a swig of your Guinness, and for the first time in as long as you can remember you donât feel like you want to have another. You donât want to take the jagged edges off this moment, hidden below deck with Aegon for what is almost certainly the last time. You donât want to forget anything about him. âWhatâs Aemond like?â
âSuperior to me in every way,â Aegon says. âDisciplined. Clever. Very tall.â
âI myself favor short, delinquent artists. Those tall clever dragons are nothing but trouble.â
He snickers, shaking his head. âIâm not a real artist.â
âSure you are. Youâre Picasso.â
Heâs watching you with murky blue eyes, dazed and marveling. âWhat are you going to do when youâre back in Ireland?â
Itâs a fantasy, a folktale. Iâll never see Ireland again. âIâm going to help take care of my father. HeâsâŠheâs not well, and he hasnât been for a long time. His memory is failing. I want to make his last years as painless as possible. I want to spent time with my mother again, I want to go on walks and sit in the garden and read books and paint our ugly little pictures. We used to play this game where weâd each paint an animal and then have the other guess what it is. It once took her twelve tries before she realized my grey blob was supposed to be a basking shark. I saw one washed up on the shore when I was little.â
Aegon is smiling. âI could teach you how to paint.â
âYes,â you say softly, knowing it will never happen.
âYou could teach me what itâs like to have nice parents.â
âTheyâd adore that. They always wanted more children.â You are distracted, gazing into your Guinness, flecks of foam like constellations in a night sky. âI want to make sure Draco grows up to be a good man. I want him to be kind and gentle.â You look to Aegon, the thought suddenly leaping into your mind like a cat onto a windowsill. âLike you.â
Aegonâs eyebrows shoot up. âLike me? No, Petra. You donât want that. I was a demon.â
âAnd yet you turned out fine in the end.â
âI turned out weak,â he says, abruptly severe. He drags his fingers through his disheveled hair, staring forlornly at the white wall behind you. âI wanted to help you but I canât. I followed you from Galway to Cork, to the first-class decks, to your staterooms, and nowâŠnow when we dock in New York youâre going to get dragged off to wherever Daemon wants you to be andâŠand thereâs just nothing I can do about it.â
âYouâve helped me,â you insist. âBut now youâre too far away.â
Aegon comes over to your side of the table and drapes an arm across the back of your chair, and you lean into him, and together you watch the couples dancing to cheerful Irish music. Below your feet the engines are humming, and outside the waves are crashing against the hull of the ship, and up on B-Deck Daemon is probably crawling like a spider into Rhaenyraâs bed, and Laenor is consorting with his new Parisien companions, and Dagmar is reading some Scandinavian story to Draco before he falls asleep, and husbands are dulling their worries with brandy and cigars, and wives are distracting themselves with gossip about other womenâs lives.
You donât want to leave, not even as the passengers here in the Third-Class Dining Saloon begin to clear out and those left are so drunk they can hardly keep themselves upright, stumbling into tables and chairs and howling uproariously. Aegon doesnât want to leave either. Now his arms have circled around your waist, and heâs nuzzling at your throat and the curve of your jaw, and youâre trying not to notice the weight of your black opal engagement ring on your left hand so you can forget the life youâll have to go back to tomorrow.
I want him again, you think hazily. Where can we go? Where on earth can we go?
There is a sudden jolt, a deafening grinding sound, a tremor that shakes through the steel latticework of the ship. The few remaining dancers shout and cling to their partners. Pints of beer are knocked from tables and spill across the floor. Plates clatter and lightweight wooden chairs slide away.
âWhat the fuck was that?â a drunk man slurs, but then he and his friends begin to laugh about it, pounding on each otherâs backs. You turn to Aegon. Heâs not laughing. His eyes are large and darting around.
âAegon, the ship is fine, right?â
âYeah,â he says quickly, but heâs standing and passing you your white wool coat. âCome on. Letâs go up to a higher deck to see whatâs happened.â
You picture the lifeboats that you have strolled past so many times, not nearly enough space for all the passengers, only the lucky half, the richest half. âThe ship canât sink, can it? Thatâs what everyoneâs been telling me since we boarded, and I didnât believe them because of course any ship can sink, butâŠAegonâŠâ
âItâs probably just a problem with one of the boilers or a propeller or something,â he says as he pulls on his black coat, stolen just like the way heâs stolen you tonight. But he doesnât walk to the hallway and up the nearest staircase; he damn near sprints, dragging you along with him.
Outside the night sky is black and full of stars, bitterly cold, no wind. You emerge near the bow of the ship, and third-class passengers are kicking around chunks of ice as if they are playing Gaelic football. Aegon spins around, searching for the source of the ice.
âEhi, amico! Did you see it?â an Italian man calls to Aegon. Aegon trots over to join him. You look down at the pine planks under your shoes. Is the ship listing towards the starboard side, or is that your imagination?
âNo, what happened?â Aegon is asking the Italian. You can hear voices from the other decks, less alarmed than curious, people rattled awake, stewards helping to retrieve items that have rolled away.
âIceberg, a huge one! We just went right past it! Pieces broke off and fell everywhere. We donât have nothing like this in Napoli!â
âAn iceberg?â Aegon echoes, stunned. He goes to the railing and leans over to squint out into the blackness. âDid we hit it?â
âWe bumped it a little, I think,â the Italian says, unconcerned. Then he returns to the game, kicking a block of ice when it glides over to him.
âLook,â you say to Aegon when he returns to you, pointing skyward. Up in the crowâs nest, you can just barely hear the lookouts shouting back and forth. You cannot decipher their words, but they sound agitated. They sound afraid.
âHit an iceberg,â Aegon murmurs, trying to make sense of it. âBut thatâs not serious, right? No oneâs running for the lifeboats, no oneâs talking about leaks or anythingââ
âAegon, does the ship seem like itâs listing to you?â
He peers down at the deck, shifts his weight from foot to foot. He doesnât have to answer. When he looks up at you again, his blue eyes are panic-stricken.
âI have to find the shipbuilder Mr. Andrews,â you say. âHeâll have investigated, heâll know how bad the damage is.â
âIâm going with you.â
I donât know where my jailers are: Daemon, Dagmar, Rush, Rhaenyra. âYou shouldnât be in my section of the ship.â
âIf something really is wrong, theyâll be the first people to know,â Aegon says. Thatâs cruel, but itâs true. First-class lives are worth more than his.
You fly up the steps to A-Deck, where on the Promenade Deck men in black suits are chuckling about the ruckus as they puff on pipes and cigars, and women in beaded evening gowns are pressing their soft pampered hands to their chests as they recall the shock of the earthquake-like shudder that rattled Titanic. Stewards are flitting around fetching tea and pillows. No one is talking about lifeboats or sinking, which you take to be a good sign; but you canât find Thomas Andrews.
When you and Aegon have at last circled back to the bow of the ship, you spot a group of men walking swiftly into the glass box of the bridge. They are speaking in low voices, their hands moving in frenetic gestures. Thomas Andrews is there, you are relieved to see. J. Bruce Ismay and Captain Smith are among those with him.
âMr. Andrews!â you cry, and he stops and turns. He is carrying an armful of rolled-up engineering drawings.
âLady Targaryen,â he says numbly, then seems to lurch out of a trance and hurries to you, standing closer than would be considered proper. In his state, he has not noticed Aegon, lurking a few paces behind you and listening intently. âYour family, Daemon and the othersâŠyou must wake them.â
âI saw the ice on the deck by the bow, did the shipâ?â
âWe hit it,â Mr. Andrews tells you, hushed so others will not hear and become hysterical. âAn iceberg. Scraped along the side, caused the iron plates to buckle below the waterline. Iâve seen the forward cargo holds and theyâreâŠâ He blinks, astonished, as if this is a nightmare he might still wake up from.
This canât be happening. This ship was supposed to be unsinkable. Thatâs what everybody told me, that I was insane to fear the journey. âButâŠbut what about the watertight bulkheads?â He had spoken so confidently of them at dinner just a few nights ago.
âI didnât built them high enough, and seawater is spilling over the tops. The first five compartments are already flooded, too many for Titanic to stay afloat.â
âThe ship will sink?â you whisper, terrified. Aegon moves closer, a palm on the small of your back.
âYes,â Mr. Andrews says.
âWhen?â
âPerhaps an hour or two.â
âAn hour?!â
âCarpathia has answered our distress call, but sheâs four hours away.â
You stare at him. âAnd the oceanâŠitâs freezing.â Anyone left adrift in it will die.
âGet to a lifeboat, Lady Targaryen,â Mr. Andrews says. âDonât wait. Iâm doing everything I can.â He rejoins the other men and goes with them into the bridge. Behind the glass walls, J. Bruce Ismay begins to yell something at Captain Smith.
âHey, hey, listen,â Aegon is telling you, but you canât seem to focus on him. His voice sounds like it is coming from very far away, another coast, another lifetime.
âThere arenât enough lifeboats,â you say, flat with shock.
âI know. I remember what you told Fern when I saw you up on the Boat Deck.â
You race for the steps that lead down to B-Deck where your staterooms are. âI have to find Dracoââ
âWait, wait, listen to me.â Aegonâs hand reaches out and grasps yours, not imprisoning you but imploring you, begging you to hear him. âHalf the people on this ship are going to die.â
âYes,â you agree, the horror of it quivering in your voice. In the frigid night air your words turn to fog like the mist that clings to the Cliffs of Moher, like ghosts captured in the corners of photographs.
âAnd most of the bodies will never be recovered, and there will be no way of knowing for sure what happened to them, and the crime scene will be at the bottom of the ocean.â
Crime scene? Crime scene??? âAegon, what are you talking about?â
âDonât you get it? Petra, this is your way out. Iâll help you. Weâll do this together.â
Draco. I have to get Draco into a lifeboat. âAegon, I donât understand, do what?â
His eyes are gleaming; the grin that splits across his face reveals teeth like pearls. âWeâre going to kill your husband.â
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