Jon Snow (
tooktheblack) wrote in
sixthiterationlogs2016-12-14 07:31 pm
Entry tags:
the song of ice and fire [closed]
WHO: Jon Snow
WHERE: woods
WHEN: 14 December
OPEN TO: Robb Stark
WARNINGS: Starks being stubborn idiots
STATUS: locked post, only open to Robb Stark's thread.
Jon had not really spoken to Robb much over the past several weeks. He'd moved into a house shared with Ygritte, which had worked out to be for the best given the influx of family over the past moon. Sansa and Arya were with Robb now, along with Margaery, and there simply wasn't room in Robb's house for the lot of them to live there together. It was no Winterfell, after all, and after Margaery had accused Ygritte of...whatever she'd accused her of, it had simply been for the best that Jon take a house further away from Margaery in order to simply keep the peace.
Still, he missed his brother. They used to talk quite a bit, especially when they first arrived and it had only been the two of them, and Jon missed that. He had been reminded of how things were before they ever left Winterfell, how they'd been as boys. He wanted that closeness back even though years and battles and politics would ensure that neither of the men would ever be the same as the boys they once were; nostalgia painted things warmer than cold, grey reality.
It was cold today, wet and the snow was the sort that seemed to be changing into a half-melted sleet as Jon went along the lines to check his traps. He had a bow in an attempt to hunt a deer or something but there was no way he'd spot anything in miserable weather like this. The animals had all taken shelter, much like he should, but he had duties to fulfill to the other villagers and one of those duties was trying to ensure they were all fed.
He spotted Robb's red hair along the tree line and cursed under his breath, wanting to avoid him if he could. He was in a foul mood from the cold and wet and didn't want to be reminded that he couldn't exactly just say hello to his brother without opening up the wound of not having spoken with him in the better part of a month so he wanted to avoid the subject entirely. He gripped his bow hard, shocked when it went up in flames. How had that happened?
He'd heard of one person who had this gift, the tall man called Thor Odinson, but this was something Jon had never seen with his own eyes. The fire came again, a towering flame this time, and scorched a tree in front of him. "Seven Hells!" he shouted.
So much for slipping away unnoticed.
WHERE: woods
WHEN: 14 December
OPEN TO: Robb Stark
WARNINGS: Starks being stubborn idiots
STATUS: locked post, only open to Robb Stark's thread.
Jon had not really spoken to Robb much over the past several weeks. He'd moved into a house shared with Ygritte, which had worked out to be for the best given the influx of family over the past moon. Sansa and Arya were with Robb now, along with Margaery, and there simply wasn't room in Robb's house for the lot of them to live there together. It was no Winterfell, after all, and after Margaery had accused Ygritte of...whatever she'd accused her of, it had simply been for the best that Jon take a house further away from Margaery in order to simply keep the peace.
Still, he missed his brother. They used to talk quite a bit, especially when they first arrived and it had only been the two of them, and Jon missed that. He had been reminded of how things were before they ever left Winterfell, how they'd been as boys. He wanted that closeness back even though years and battles and politics would ensure that neither of the men would ever be the same as the boys they once were; nostalgia painted things warmer than cold, grey reality.
It was cold today, wet and the snow was the sort that seemed to be changing into a half-melted sleet as Jon went along the lines to check his traps. He had a bow in an attempt to hunt a deer or something but there was no way he'd spot anything in miserable weather like this. The animals had all taken shelter, much like he should, but he had duties to fulfill to the other villagers and one of those duties was trying to ensure they were all fed.
He spotted Robb's red hair along the tree line and cursed under his breath, wanting to avoid him if he could. He was in a foul mood from the cold and wet and didn't want to be reminded that he couldn't exactly just say hello to his brother without opening up the wound of not having spoken with him in the better part of a month so he wanted to avoid the subject entirely. He gripped his bow hard, shocked when it went up in flames. How had that happened?
He'd heard of one person who had this gift, the tall man called Thor Odinson, but this was something Jon had never seen with his own eyes. The fire came again, a towering flame this time, and scorched a tree in front of him. "Seven Hells!" he shouted.
So much for slipping away unnoticed.

no subject
"Are you trying to bring the whole damned forest down on top of us?" he yelled. He'd been tracking a stag, a good sized one that would have kept the girls fed for weeks, and now it was gone, utterly gone, and there'd been nothing in his traps that morning, either.
And of course it was Jon's damned fault.
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"It wasn't intentional!" Jon shouted back. He looked to his hands, thinking they should be charred from the fire and shocked to see that they were unscarred saved from the old scars he had from the years-old injury in Mormont's chambers. He looked at Robb, eyes narrowing.
"I've never seen anything like it before but, Robb, the fire, it came from me."
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And because of a bloody woman.
"Why are you even out here, Jon? I know it isn't to apologize. Was it just to ruin any chance I have to feed our sisters today? Because if so, you'd done a brilliant job of it."
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When Robb mentions their sisters, Jon's face twisted into a dark scowl. "I help feed them too. I help feed this whole fucking village. I'm not going to let Sansa and Arya starve. What kind of brother do you think I am?"
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For weeks this had been twisting him up, but there was no relief in finally simply saying it. This was beyond even Theon's betrayal, for Theon at least had the excuse of family loyalty. Jon had only the excuse of getting his cock wet.
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"Oh, yes, the kind who leaves my family to fuck a Wildling. That Wildling kept me alive when I was beyond the Wall," Jon said, eyes flinted steel as he glared at Robb.
"And it was Wildlings that took back Winterfell from the Boltons. It was Wildlings who fought alongside the men who took back Stark lands when Glovers and Umbers and Karstarks would not. I would take ten Wildlings over those so-called Northern lords. From what I heard, you betrayed the entire North to fuck some girl too."
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"Aye, I suppose I did, and I paid a price for it, and I came here and I'm still paying for it, will pay for it as long as I'm given a chance to. A chance you'd spit on because you've gone North of the Wall and been Lord Commander of the Night's Watch and King in the bloody North, yeah? Well, you can damned well take it all, Jon. I don't want it if it means I forget where I came from." He frowned, eyes narrowing. "I don't want your help. We don't need your help."
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"I have done nothing but fight and fight and fight my whole life, Robb! I fight for the Watch, I fight for House Stark! I've been trying to keep that Tyrell woman from tricking you since we got here...they didn't side with House Stark in the war, she ended up marrying not one but two Lannisters, Robb, and I don't trust her. Why should she all of a sudden be interested in you?"
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"I hope it's worth it, turning your back on your family to get your cock sucked by some Wildling whore."
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"You don't know anything about what happened after you died, Robb! You died. You were killed on the field and Winterfell was lost to Boltons and it was me and Sansa who took that castle back with an army of Wildlings! Baelish sold her to Ramsay Snow and married her to that filth and she was hurt and tortured, Robb, and she ran to me and it was Wildlings who helped me take Winterfell back for her. It's not the same! Ygritte would do nothing to hurt Winterfell or the Starks. She doesn't care about those things. She loves me."
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"Wildlings nearly killed Bran," he repeated, grinding out the words. "After he woke. He was riding in the woods and was ambushed. I was there. But you wouldn't know that because you weren't. Don't talk to me about what happened after I died, Jon, about what I don't know about, when I was left to tend to a crippled brother and the entire damned North alone because you wanted to get away from our family as quickly as you could. And now you've done it again. I don't know why I expected any different."
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"It wasn't my family I was trying to get away from! It was that woman who attacked Ygritte!"
To Jon, at least, the issue had more been Margaery Tyrell than it had been anything else. He had no desire to fight with his brother and in his frustration, he thrust out his hand and seared a line of fire along another tree, splitting it in two. It crackled and smoked, filling the woods with an acrid scent.
"I don't trust her, Robb, but I have no desire to be away from my family. I'm not abandoning you to take care of Sansa and Arya alone. I see Sansa almost every day. I send her game to bring home. I just don't want to live in the house with Margaery Tyrell."
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That the incident over the sheep was Margaery's fault, he well knew -- He'd chastised her for it himself after he'd finally forced the story from her. But yet it still seemed the height of ridiculousness that a grown man couldn't stand to share a space with one Southron noblewoman.
"Your Wildling had no trouble whatsoever in raising a hand to her, so I very much doubt she needs you to worry for her being beset by such a fearsome foe."
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In throwing up his frustrated hands, a soft gout of snowflakes shot into the air and then drifted down upon the two of them, interrupting his outrage. "Seven hells," he hissed, frowning as he looked to his chilled fingertips.
"Perhaps you simply can't fathom someone wanting me for myself," he added, watching as he curled up his fingers around the ice forming in his palms.
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If Robb didn't want to listen to his counsel, fine. Jon was under no obligation to provide further. "But I won't hear you accuse me of being a traitor to my family solely because a woman I lived with and loved and who saved my life countless times over two years has returned to me from the dead. I won't. Think it to yourself, if you must, but don't say another word of it to me."
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"Aye. So did I," he managed, and simply gave up, turning to crunch his way back through the underbrush, swallowing back the bile rising in his throat.
He'd known, of course, that he'd be punished for his carelessness, had known that the simple act of dying, of seeing his men, his mother killed, wouldn't be enough. He just hadn't known it would come to this.
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"All I ask is that you don't immediately think my choice to be with a woman I care about is betrayal, especially when you aren't aware of everything that transpired between us when I was North of the Wall. I don't need you to like her. I don't need you to talk to her. I do, however, need you to stop holding her against me."
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It all felt so pointless, so small and stupid as soon as the words were out of his mouth, and he shook his head, shivering as he looked down to his hands, ice falling away as he curled his fingers.
"I don't care about your damned woman, Jon," he said without looking up.
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It was never about Ygritte. All along, it seemed, this rift had been born of the separation long ago; this was born out of his choice to go to the Wall instead of remaining with House Stark alongside his trueborn brothers and sisters.
"She forced me out," Jon choked out, the words like ash in his throat. "After Bran was attacked, she made it known that I wasn't worthy of seeing him. She made it known I wasn't his brother. I wanted to go somewhere I mattered."
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It was so difficult for him to understand how his mother's chilly treatment of his brother could have overridden his own affection and his own secret hope that Jon might change his mind. He'd held onto that hope until the moment they parted -- Until nearly a week later, even, watching for his brother to return to Winterfell and confess that he'd decided to stay with them after all.
He swallowed roughly now around the understanding that it was all pointless. He was dead and they were all very far from Winterfell.
"You could have told me about Margaery," he continued at length, watching Jon with a steady, if uncertain eye. "You just went. Why didn't you say?"
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"I didn't want to cause strife," Jon said. "I made the wrong choice but I never want to come between you and someone you love. I would not have made you choose sides between myself and Margaery, just as I never would have made you choose between your mother and me."
He paused for a moment. "They're not the same, though. Lady Catelyn was a great woman even though we did not care for one another. I do not know if I can say the same about Margaery Tyrell."
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"You're my brother, Jon. I've known you all my life. I care for Margaery, yes, but I've known her mere months. I'm not—" He sighed, having little idea of how he even felt, and even less of how to explain it.
"I wish you'd come to me. Aren't we supposed to do that, as brothers? Isn't that what Father would have wanted?"
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"Everything I do, I do it to protect House Stark. There's so little of us left in Westeros now and I would lay down my own sword and my own body to keep Sansa safe because she's all that we have left. I have to remember it's different here. It isn't all on me."
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"This is our family, Jon. What's left of it, anyway. We both of us went to war to protect our house, we both understand the need to guard it. We cannot go on quarreling. I don't know if this place is truly a second chance, but with the girls here... We must be united, for them if for nothing else. Father would have wanted it that way."
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"I don't think Father would ever have expected something like this. We've never really fought for more than an afternoon."
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"I'm sorry," he said, looking to Jon. "For leaving you with so much on your shoulders, and for not speaking to you here like I ought to have."
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"No one can sever that bond - not even us."