Chapter 12: The Csh of Ideals
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Dorne was a beautiful pce. Unlike Vontis, which stank of overpopution, iron shackles, and men’s greed, Dorne was alive—a free, raw beauty that didn’t hide its edges. The su poured its st light through my window, dyeing the sky with an amber glow. But that hardly mattered to me now. The true view stood before me.
Princess Arianne Martell.
"Princess Arianne," I greeted, a slight smile pying at my lips as she approached with that dangerous grace Dornishwomen had perfected. I took her hand, bowing my head to brush my lips across her knuckles.
“Prince Viserys.” Her voice was rich, yered with i and amusement as she withdrew her hand, silver eyes meeting mine. Her smile lingered, and I could see why men lost themselves over her. She was beautiful and hot-tempered, both a pleasure and a danger.
Then we exged pleasantries, it was a formality that her of us truly believed in but performed out of habit. She asked how I liked Dorne, her eyes flig over me as though searg for whatever truth y beh my words. I took a slow breath, giving her a smile as I began.
"Dorne," I said, gng toward the open window where the st hints of sureaked the sky with hues e and gold, “is a pce of undeniable beauty that is impossible to capture in words. It has an edge to it, a rawhat feels untamed yet elegant.” I held her gaze. “The sands are relentless, sculpting this nd in ways that make it unfiving for outsiders, but… there’s beauty in that. The duhe oasis towns, the freedom in the air—every er seems to hide something wild and enting.”
Arianne raised an eyebrow, the fai of smiles pying on her lips as if she was both amused and intrigued. “A poetic observation, Prince Viserys. I wasn’t expeg that,” she said, her voice carrying a hint of tease. "But Dorne isn’t merely the nd. There’s more to it than the dunes and sus.”
I leaned in slightly, letting my gaze linger on her with unmistakable i. “I know,” I replied, my voice low. “In fact, the most beautiful part of Dorne is not the nd or its ndscapes.” My gaze dropped, trailing over her as if trag the curves of the duhemselves, and then rose to meet her eyes. “It’s a beauty that walks among the sands, sharp as the su soft as the evening breeze. The kind that could make a man fet himself if he’s not careful. Did aell you how beautiful your eyes are?”
She ughed softly, though her gaze held a glimmer of i, her pride clearly piqued. “Such sweet words, Prince,” she murmured. “I must admit, you’re different from what I’ve heard.”
I smiled, catg the faint trace of surprise in her expression. I felt bad for the words I’d tell her soon. “Is it such a surprise, princess?”
Her lips curved, her expression turning both coy and daring. “Dorne is beautiful, aye… but…” She let her words hang, her gaze drifting downward to my bare chest before she met my eyes again, amusement fshing in her gaze. “I suppose it’s a bit warmer here than in other pces, isn’t it?”
“Sorry,” I chuckled, apologizing as I ran a hand through my hair. “I had just taken a shower and wasn’t expeg pany. I’ll throw on a shirt if you’d prefer.”
“Oh, no.” She g my chest, then shrugged, her lips curving. “I think you’re just fine as you are.” I caught the slight rise of her brow, the unspoken dare. She was testing the water, assessing me, but I’d already decided I wasn’t here to charm her.
Her attention was fttering, but I had no iion of l myself by pretending to worship the freedom she dressed herself in.
“More importantly, though…” she began, “how did you know I was Arianne? I could have been any woman walking through that door.”
I chuckled, shaking my head. “I’ve heard stories about you, Princess. Stories of your… revealing tastes.” I let my smile fade, my gaze hardening as I added, “Only one person in this pace dresses like a whore while being apanied by a knight. Turns out I was right.”
Her smile faltered, surprise fshing across her face. I saw the slight flicker of anger before she caught herself, rec with a restrained smile. “I, uh… I heard you spent a lot of time in Essos. I imagine jokes there are different?”
I ughed, taking a step back to the table piled with fruits. I plucked an apple and bit into it, sav her gre as I kept my back to her. I could feel her eyes on me, and it was clear she hadn’t expected this. She wasn’t used to being treated with anythihan reverence.
“That knight yht with you—Ser Andrey, isn’t it?” I said, gng at her over my shoulder, a smirk on my lips. “He was looking at you like he wao fuck yht then and there. Maybe he already has. I won’t be surprised given your dressing sense and rumors. Unfortunately, I like my women… well, a bit less public about it.”
The silence was sharp, and I could feel her mood shift, her i repced with something colder. It ity, really. If only she’d e in here with the disdain she’d left with; that would have been simpler. Her i only made it sadder, the crush fading from her eyes, repced by something bitter and disappointed.
“The rumors failed to capture just how foul your personality is.” Her eyes narrowed, a look of pt hardening her gaze. She sounded angry. “Since you seem to care so much about cs, I think you throw on a shirt now. Or do you hold that bare chests on men are somehow different from a woman’s exposed skin? I’ve always hated how differently men and women are judged. It seems you are no different from the rest of them, Prince Viserys.”
I chuckled, biting into the apple, sav its sweetness before tossing it ba the table. “Men and women have their pces, their roles. It’s not a matter of looking down on you. We just aren’t the same.” I shrugged, my tone dismissive, already tiring of the subject. I didn’t care to expin myself to her; it was her problem if she didn’t like it.
Her eyes remained fixed on me, her anger simmerih her gaze. “Well, " she said with a curt nod, turning sharply on her heel and striding toward the door without another word. She didn’t bother hiding her fury, the insult simmering iep as she swept from the room, leaving the air thick with her rese.
I watched her go, letting the false smile ance drop the door shut behind her. I munched on my apple, “It’s a shame, really.”
She’d been the easiest way to pull Doro my side, the quickest route to gaining support from Prince Doran and the Dornish army. I knew how this looked—pushing away a simple solution, an e that could give me everything. But I had my ow of ideals. For a marriage, I wouldn’t settle for a woman who paraded herself like that.
No, dressing sense was ohing, character another. She was a whore. I wasn’t going to get eo a whore, no matter if people called me a hypocrite.
Now, I’d have to figure out a different way to gain Dorne’s support.
****
Arianne Martell’s head burned with rage.
How dare he insult her like that?
The audacity of that man, standing there with his dismissive tone and those pierg, rexed arrogant eyes. Her hands ched into fists as she stalked down the corridors, barely notig the guards and attendants who quickly stepped aside to avoid her wrath.
When she reached the meeting chamber, she pushed the doors open a bit too hard for royal etiquette. Inside, her father and uncle were still talking, but her uncle Oberyn had freshly bathed, his hair still damp, leaning back with a look of ease. Doran looked as he always did, quiet and ptive.
Wheormed in, her father’s gaze sharpened with curiosity, and Oberyn smiled.
“Oh, you’re back already,” her uncle began, but she cut him off, fixing her father with a hard stare.
“Father,” she said, her voice tight, “I feel dishonored by this meeting with my ex-fiance, Viserys Targaryen. He is just like every other arrogant man from outside Dorne, and I refuse to eain any marriage with him. I am not going to marry someone who looks down on women, someone who would—” Her voice faltered with frustration. “He called me a whore in all but name.”
Doran bliaken aback by her vehemence. He turned his gaze to Oberyn, who cleared his throat, looking away from her while holding back a shrug.
“Maybe I should have prepared you,” Oberyn muttered, running a hand through his hair. “The prince isly... subtle with his words. Men from powerful lineages are often arrogant. Plus you have to uand the culture he es from too. To them, Dornish men and women are… well, not holy.”
Doran shook his head with a sigh. “Arianne, you don’t have to marry someone you don’t like.” His voice was calm, evele. “I have no iion of selling my daughter for a political marriage, certainly not ohat brings us no be.”
Arian her anger fre again, but not toward her father. Her father’s measured words and his unyielding refusal to sacrifice her for mere strategy were reassuring. She was more than relieved knowing that she wouldn’t be forced to marry that bastard. Yet she couldn’t shake the humiliation of that enter, the dismissive way Viserys had spoken as if she were something cheap and unworthy.
“No,” she said, her voice steeling as she straightened. “That’s not enough.”
Doran shook his head, “We ’t punish him for running his mouth. He’s still a Targaryen, and your fiance, even if that part is a past.”
“I don’t want you to punish him,” she said, gathering her breath. “I demand an Honor Trial of bat against him!”
Her father stared at her while Oberyn’s face fell, his hand rising to pinch the bridge of his nose as he let out a groan. She didn’t care if she sounded frustrated. That bastard insulted Ser Andrey Dalt too, didn’t he?
Tomorrow, Ser Andrey Dalt would wipe his fa the floor.
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