Chapter 168: The Crown Divided
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The Great Hall of the Red Keep glittered with a splendor unseen since the age of dragons.
Gold and silver dripped from every surface, originating from the wealth reclaimed from the Iron Bank's vaults. Thousands of candles in tiered chandeliers cast their glow on the assembled nobility of the Seven Kingdoms, lords and ladies arrayed in their finest, a kaleidoscope of house colors forming a living artwork beneath Targaryen banners.
Not merely Westerosi lords filled the hall.
Magisters from the conquered Free Cities stood in knots of exotic silks and cautious smiles. Foreign merchants famous enough to travel between Westeros and Yi Ti, their golden masks gleaming, carried chests of spices worth small fortunes. Even an emissary from the Summer Isles had come, his feathered cloak a riot of colors against the stone walls.
The air tasted of power. It crackled between breaths, sharp like lightning yet to strike.
At the high table, carefully arranged like pieces on a cyvasse board, sat the many women of the Dragon King. Margaery Tyrell claimed the position of highest honor with Sansa, her emerald gown catching light with each breath.
The fabric had been specially woven in Myr, infused with real gold thread that seemed to liquefy when she moved. Her chestnut hair was arranged in an elaborate style that recalled ancient Valyrian sculptures, a deliberate choice that few would miss.
"Such a remarkable turnout," she observed to Sansa beside her, voice soft and honeyed with practiced charm. "I don't believe the realm has seen such universal attendance since our King's wedding. No, this is bigger than that."
Sansa, draped in the blue and silver of winter roses, offered a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Let us hope this feast ends more decisively than that one did."
"Yes, this one will end more fortunately. For some of us, at least," Margaery returned, sipping her wine.
Further down sat Arianne Martell, burnt orange silks clinging to her curves in a style that would have scandalized Northern ladies. Yet even her legendary confidence seemed subdued tonight, her gaze occasionally drifting to the empty space where Dorne's banners hung alongside those of houses that had bent the knee.
Yara Greyjoy lounged with the casual disregard of someone who found court politics amusing rather than vital, yawning from time to time. Her modified leather vest and breeches marked her as deliberately separate from the silk-draped ladies. A woman of salt and iron rather than perfume and intrigue.
Lady Alysanne Clegane observed the proceedings with scholarly detachment, her formidable presence drawing occasional stares from lords unused to seeing a woman of her stature in such high position.
Kinvara observed them all. She, draped in crimson robes that matched the ruby pulsing at her throat, watched everything with eyes that seemed to see beyond the present moment. Ah, the flames had shown her this night, though even she could not claim to know its outcome with certainty.
"They're all terrified for some reason," Yara noted, tearing a chunk of bread with her teeth. "Look at Lord Redwyne, he's sweating through his doublet."
"Fear is appropriate," Kinvara replied, her voice soft as smoke. "Our King's stories have reached far. They stand in the presence of living gods."
"Gods? Plural?" Yara raised an eyebrow, "I only see-"
The calculated atmosphere shattered when Drogon's roar tore through the night sky. The sound vibrated through stone, through flesh, through bone, silencing all conversation as effectively as a blade to the throat. Even the most composed lords flinched.
The massive doors to the Great Hall swung open without human hands touching them.
She entered alone, silver hair flowing loose around her shoulders, catching the light in ways that made it seem to hold its own luminescence. Daenerys Targaryen moved with a fluid grace that no longer resembled anything human. What a strange sight it was. Her graceful steps were like poetry, her subtle gestures carrying echoes of the ancient magic that had transformed her.
Her gown, if it could be called such, seemed woven from moonlight and shadow. It shimmered with scales finer than any smith could craft, shifting colors from midnight blue to deep purple with every movement. Her violet eyes burned with inner fire, too bright to be natural, too mesmerizing to look away from.
The reactions rippled through the hall like waves from a stone cast in still water.
Well, that is troublesome. Margaery's perfect composure cracked for a heartbeat. Among all, that woman right there was her greatest challenge. This was competition beyond anything she had prepared for, beyond political maneuvering or courtly alliances.
The bond of siblings, now tied in draconic power.
Sansa studied the transformed Targaryen with fascination tinged with dread. The wolf recognized another apex predator.
Yara's lips curved into an appreciative grin, her eyes roaming over Daenerys with undisguised hunger.
Only Arianne shrugged. This wasn't her game, anyway. She didn't expect to be chosen as his Queen. She was just happy to share this table with these girls, while Myrcella was made to sit somewhere else. Today, she was here to see the others shine. She had no reason to play for scraps while a goddess walked the earth.
Kinvara nodded with satisfaction, her ruby glowing brighter as if in response to Daenerys's presence. And there's the other candidate of Light.
And from the Iron Throne, Viserys Targaryen rose.
His own transformation became more pronounced in his sister's presence. The vertical slits of his pupils expanded in the torchlight, his silver-white hair seeming to float as if underwater. Power rolled from him in invisible waves, making the air thick and charged.
He descended the throne steps with inhuman grace, crossing the distance to his sister. When he took her hand and pressed his lips to it, the gesture carried weight beyond mere courtesy.
"Beloved sister," he said, his voice carrying harmonics that made the candle flames dance. "Queen of Essos. Your presence honors us all."
"Brother," she replied, equally musical, equally otherworldly. "Your invitation was compelling and hard to ignore. I had to leave Dragonstone for it."
Their eyes met, violet to violet, dragon to dragon, and something passed between them. A silent communication beyond the understanding of those watching. Words that only Targaryen siblings could understand.
The court held its collective breath as Viserys led Daenerys toward the high table, placing her at his right hand. That was the position of highest honor that set whispers racing through the hall.
The terrain changed with her presence here. The Targaryen family tradition wasn't a secret, and nobody judged them for it. Therefore, all of a sudden, nobody was certain what his choice would be.
****
The walk back to the throne felt like crossing a battlefield.
Every step carried weight, every gesture would be dissected by historians assuming we didn't burn all the histories first. Standing before the Iron Throne, I didn't sit. Height mattered now, the ability to look down on everyone while pretending to look up to ideals.
"My lords and ladies," I began, letting my voice carry that particular resonance that I'd noticed made spines straighten involuntarily. "We gather tonight not to celebrate what was, but to forge what will be."
Wine stopped halfway to lips. Even breathing seemed to pause.
"The old world died with Tywin Lannister." I let his name hang in the air like a curse made manifest. "The ancient powers that skulked in shadow, the Iron Bank that held nations hostage to gold, the Faceless Men who sold death like fishmongers sell cod. Indeed, all of them are ash and memory."
Lord Mace actually applauded before Margaery's glare could have stripped paint.
"But destruction, however necessary, is only half of transformation." I gestured to the assembled nobility. "Each of you represents not just your houses, but the future we build on those ashes. A future that spans not just seven kingdoms, but continents. Not just one lifetime, but centuries."
I saw understanding dawn on clever faces. Not everyone was an idiot. If a man could fly the skies like a dragon, couldn't he live as long as a dragon too? Margaery's eyes widened fractionally. Sansa's hand found her throat. They were beginning to grasp the scope of what I intended.
"First of all. Allow me to properly introduce the Dragon Queen Daenerys Stormborn, my dearest younger sister," I gestured to my other half. "You've all heard her tales. She has liberated Slaver's Bay, transformed ancient cities, and now rules millions who call her mother."
Cheers and claps came. The pride in my voice wasn't entirely manufactured. I added, "She accomplished this without the Seven Kingdoms' resources, without Westerosi armies, through will and fire alone. She's a powerhouse in her own right."
Daenerys inclined her head, playing modest while radiating power like a forge radiates heat.
"Lady Margaery Tyrell," I continued, finding her in the crowd, "has brought stability to a realm torn by war. The Reach's harvest feeds our people. A lot of you might not realize, but her political acumen has prevented three potential rebellions through words alone."
Well, two rebellions. The third I prevented by burning Lord Roxton alive, but she gets partial credit for suggesting it.
"The Lady Sansa Stark has given King's Landing something it never had. Hope." That earned some reactions. Lords who'd never considered the smallfolk as anything but numbers on tax ledgers shifted uncomfortably. "Every orphan fed, every disease prevented, every life saved strengthens the realm with more than a dozen military victories. You may call me a foolish dreamer, but I'm building a utopia. Not merely ruling a Kingdom. So what Sansa does is in no way inferior to the others' achievements."
Sansa's blush was genuine. She still didn't understand that kindness could be a weapon.
"Princess Arianne Martell has achieved the impossible, bringing Dorne fully into the realm after three hundred years of resistance."
By spreading her legs, some lord whispered too loudly. That was funny. However, I memorized his face for later attention. Nobody insulted my women and lived as if nothing had happened.
"And so," I said, voice dropping to make them lean forward, "we face a dilemma. The realm has grown beyond what one crown can encompass. The old solutions would have us choose, would have us diminish some to elevate others. But we are not bound by old solutions."
The tension could have been bottled and sold as poison.
"However, I am the King. I am the Ruler who changes the Rules. So solutions always exist in my book. Therefore, I make this proclamation." I paused, savoring the moment like fine wine. "The empire shall be divided into three crowns, all under my rule, all bound to the Iron Throne."
The explosion of whispers sounded like dragonfire crackling. This was the solution. As the King, I couldn't be present everywhere. But by having many with the title of 'Queen,' I could rule the entire planet over time. Isn't that what Dany did for me? She ruled Essos for me because I was too busy to be present there.
I'd already seen the results.
This could work.
"Margaery of House Tyrell shall be Queen of the Five Kingdoms, ruling Westeros from the end of the North to Dorne's borders."
Margaery's triumph lasted exactly as long as it took her to process the word 'divided.' Her political mind was already calculating what this meant, what she'd gained and lost in the same breath.
"Daenerys of House Targaryen shall be Queen of the Eastern Empire, sovereign over Slaver's Bay, the Dothraki Sea, and all lands east of the Narrow Sea that accept our dominion."
My sister's smile held edges. She understood the game, probably better than anyone else in the room. I'd given her a crown but kept her distant, honored her but contained her.
Then I added one surprising contestant. "Arianne of House Martell shall be Queen of the Southern Crown, ruling Dorne as well as the Free Cities, bridging east and west."
The silence that followed was deafening.
Arianne sat up straight, and she looked like someone had hit her with a hammer made of gold. From paramour to queen, from dangerous liaison to legitimate power. Her eyes found mine, and I saw tears she'd never let fall. Not here. Not in front of them.
Arianne Martell. Perhaps my recent actions had clouded her mind about her position. She didn't realize that I truly did enjoy her company. I had fun whenever I spent time with her, and considering everything she'd sacrificed in my name? It'd be a crime not to honor her as my Queen.
Then, because I was feeling particularly dramatic and the wine was excellent, I stood.
"Three queens for three realms, all bound by blood and dragon to the Iron Throne. Perhaps more, when my influence grows. When land grows too large to be contained. Yes. This is the future, a Targaryen Empire that spans the known world."
Lord Tarly, ever practical, asked the question everyone was thinking. "But Your Grace, who inherits? Three queens means..."
"Three bloodlines," I finished. "My children will rule after me, regardless of their mother. The strongest will rise, as dragons always have. Will that cause a civil war? Sure… guess I'd be living my namesake, Viserys Targaryen, to its fullest. Destiny."
Let them fight it out when I'm dead in three centuries. If I die at all.
The feast that followed was fascinating to watch. Alliances shifted like tides. Lords who'd spent months courting Margaery suddenly wondered if Arianne might be more accessible. The Free City representatives huddled together, trying to understand what having a queen specifically for them meant. The foreign merchants smiled and laughed among themselves.
My queens sat at the high table, a study in contrasts and barely controlled emotions.
Margaery had recovered her poise, already working the room with glances and subtle gestures. When she caught me watching, she raised her goblet in a toast that looked grateful but felt like a declaration of war.
To my surprise, Sansa seemed relieved. Genuinely, not as an act. She wasn't the Jaded Sansa from Season 8, she wasn't meant to be queen. She was still my wife of course, my consort, which gave her more power than most. She came to me during the third course, while everyone was distracted by a Lysene contortionist who was doing things that made even Yara blush.
"You knew I didn't want it," she said simply.
"I knew you wanted to matter to the people more than you wanted to rule," I corrected. "There's a difference."
She kissed my cheek, a gesture so simple and genuine it caught me off guard. That caught the eyes of many, and I laughed to show I enjoyed it. "Thank you for seeing it."
That should be enough to let people know that they couldn't just mistreat Sansa because of tonight's events. Arianne hadn't moved from her seat, still processing, even as her mother had come to hug her. When I approached them, Ari grabbed my hand hard enough that a normal man's bones would have protested.
"Is this real?" she whispered.
"As real as the poison your brother drinks daily," I replied, which was probably not the romantic response she wanted, but accuracy mattered.
She laughed wildly and hysterically. "Queen. You made me a queen…. really…"
"You made yourself a queen, Arianne Martel," I corrected. "I just acknowledged it."
The night aged like wine, growing richer and stranger. Daenerys held court at her chair, Free City representatives approaching like supplicants to a goddess. She'd learned to play power like a harp in Essos, each word calculated to bind them closer.
Near midnight, she found me on a balcony, watching our dragons circle the city.
"Three queens," she said, joining me at the rail. "Clever. Keep us all balanced against each other while you remain supreme."
"Would you prefer to fight for supremacy? We could arrange some kind of tournament. Trial by combat, perhaps?"
She laughed, and for a moment she was just my little sister again. "Brother. I love this new humor you've grown since you fled. I love this new you. The brave Viserys… But no, I've had enough of fighting. Ruling is harder and more interesting." She studied me with those impossible eyes. "You've changed more than just physically."
"Power does that."
"No," she disagreed. "Power reveals. You were always this calculating, this careful. You just hide it better now behind the monster."
Monster. The word should have stung. Instead, it felt like coming home.
"Monsters get things done," I said.
"Yes," she agreed, leaning against me in a rare moment of genuine affection. "They do."
We stood there watching our dragons paint shadows across the city, two monsters pretending to be human, ruling an empire built on fire and blood and careful mathematics.
Inside the castle, three queens were learning to share a world. Outside this place, that world held its breath, waiting to see what we'd become.
Let them wait, I thought. We have centuries to surprise them.
The night was young, and somewhere in the Dornish dungeons, Trystane Martell counted his remaining breaths while his sister wore a crown. Somewhere even further, that bald eunuch planned my funeral while I prepared to destroy them all.
Everything was exactly as terrible and perfect as I'd planned. Since the very first day I awakened in this world.
Viserys Targaryen was on a winning streak.
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