
M Y B R O T H E R ' S K E E P E R
"We shared a home and we shared a father. Now, the only thing we share is the field on which one of us must die."
K I N G ' S L A N D I N G : A P R E L U D E “Well, she never did run to anyone else's convenience.” The chamber the two men found themselves within was hardly an ornate one, barely decorated, although the central table was scattered with a great deal of correspondence. This was a place for plots that weren’t meant to the bright light of day in grand courtrooms. Quentyn drank from his goblet in a half toast, and almost flippant motion, as the other man regarded him. “There isn’t much you hold in any regard, is there, Ball?” Aegor’s tone was severe but hardly judgemental, at least by the usually scathing tones of the man. Still, he drank from his own goblet, the brief pause in the continuous planning allowing a more sedate moment between them. “What should I say? She was a fierce woman, took what she wanted and damn the rest of us when we often tried to stop her. Still, I doubt she’d take any pause if either of us were to slip off to the Stranger. I won’t grieve.” Quentyn downed the rest of his wine, setting it aside on the table between a redoubt of maps he’d been examining prior. “Nor does anyone care what you thought of her, what matters is that Daemon grieves.” Aegor continued to sip his wine, studying the Master-Of-Arms as he set about his work. “What boy doesn’t grieve his mother, Aegor. Not everyone’s is as mean spirited a bitch as your’s.” Quentyn didn’t even look up as he spoke, but he would do so shortly as a messenger entered the chambers. Unannounced, his chest heaving with the hurried breath of one who had been running and frantically at that. “Speak.” Bittersteel commanded, although he held over what remained of the wine to the man, who took it immediately and downed the lot before replying. “It’s the King, Ser, he’s dispatched the Kingsguard to arrest Prince Daemon.” His chest heaved a few further times before he continued. “I am on my way to warn him, but Bloodraven has agents across the city, I thought to warn you on my way.” “A prudent plan.” Fireball hummed in quiet agreement as he stepped around the table. “Go, we’ll follow you shortly.” The man nodded before he did indeed turn to leave. He never noticed the arc of Fireball’s blade as it swung from behind, beheading him before he had even taken a further step. Aegor was not a squeamish man, he had fought in many a skirmish in his years and seen men die in far more brutal ways, but still he recoiled from the sudden rush of blood that came so swiftly. “What in the gods name are you doing, Ball?” “Making sure our future King doesn’t have a sudden and sorry change of heart when confronted at his mother’s funeral.” Quentyn paused to wipe his blade on the cloak of the deceased. “If Daemon is warned in advance he may seek a diplomatic resolution. Better he is surprised while Daena still cools on her slab.” The Knight stood, sheathing his blade, before gesturing back to the table. “See about your plans, Bittersteel, I will see to the King.” Aegor watched him leave, before finally whipping the arterial spray from his face. “I presume you believe yourselves to have evidence, to arrive here while last rites are being performed.” The fury burned in Daemon’s quiet voice as he regarded the three knights who now stood in the atrium of his city manse. Since his half-brother had granted him some land of his own he did not spend much time here. Now it would always be writ with sorrows, as the place he had said his final goodbye to Daena the Defiant. “The King has been thoroughly informed, Prince Daemon. Yet, in his good nature, he would have you come before him and explain yourself.” The tone may have been conciliatory, but the underlying accusation still burned. “Good nature? To come to me on this day, of all days?” Daemon’s tone darkened still, some violence of volume tainting his measured tone. His hand fell to the hilt of Blackfyre, although for the moment the Kingsguard before him did not match his motion. “It was the only day you were sure to remain in the city, traitor.” Another of them spoke, without any of the diplomacy of the first. Now they stepped forwards, beginning to cross the long hall. “Step no further, none will threaten the rightful King of the Seven Kingdoms.” The voice pulled the attention of all back to the doorway. The light of the Sun flooded in from the entryhall, igniting the crop of flame red hair in a manner befitting his name. FIREBALL. Three knights of the Kingsguard, against any other man Daemon would have bet what fortune he had against them, even himself. “See to your family’s safety, your grace, I will deal with them.” As much as Daemon was loathe to leave others to fight his battles, Quentyn was correct. The sooner he could leave King’s Landing with the limited number of his family present, the better. A shame the Royal Princesses had not yet arrived to pay respects to their departed sister. Before the Kingsguard could intercept him, Daemon was gone. Fireball's blade turned lazily, end over end as he took the few steps to stand between the Blackfyre and the Kings men. “Oathbreaker.” One of the whitecloaks sneered at Quentyn, who simply shrugged. “Perhaps, but what man alive can punish me?” The tone that rebounded within Ball's helmet wasn't even his usual scathing tone. He was simply bored. “Was a place among us really worth forsaking the King?” “You should have a greater reason to detest Daeron than I.” Quentyn's blade finally settled, held in one hand, a slightly downward angle. “And why is that?” Another of the whitecloaks spoke. “If I had taken my vows it would have been improper to fuck your mothers.” The ripple of his words struck the honorable knights and suddenly their swords were free. Any thought of a peaceful resolution lost. “With any good fortune, they shall each have a bastard of flamehair that might not prove so disappointing.” “You were an honorable knight once, Ball, out of respect for our vows I will fight you myself.” “I do suppose the three of you against me is hardly an even affair.” Quentyn seemed to nod, as if in agreement. In the next moment he relinquished his shield, and held his left arm behind his back. The foes before him were honorable men, they did not rush as one, but nor did they entirely forsake the advantage of their numbers. At first they moved to encircle him, but only a more basic swordsman would allow such a thing. Instead Quentyn pushed immediately for a gap between the closing knights. His blade licked out in both directions as he did, two sweeps of his wrist to deflect on coming blows and a third to ring the helm of the Kingsguard as he passed. It was a blow with no real purpose other than as a taunt. Each of the men was well armed and armoured, every fight became a matter of delicate openings and gruelling endurance. It was a balance that no knight alive knew so well as Quentyn Ball. The White Cloaks recovered with the disciplined grace of their order, but their eyes betrayed a burgeoning, red-misted rage that Quentyn found utterly delightful. He danced back a step, his boots whispering against the stone, his left hand still tucked insolently behind the small of his back. The first of them, a man of stout build and storied lineage, lunged with a roar. It was a textbook thrust, aimed at the gap beneath Quentyn’s arm. Quentyn didn’t parry; he pivoted. The steel whistled through empty air. As the knight’s momentum carried him past, Quentyn brought the heavy crossguard of his blade down like a hammer. Not to ring the helm, but the back of the man’s knee, precisely where the plate couldn't entirely shield the joint. There was a sickening pop, followed by a howl. The knight collapsed, his leg buckling at an angle nature never intended. “One,” Quentyn hummed, already spinning to meet the other two. They came at him together now, their honor discarded in favor of necessity. Two blades wove a web of steel before him. Quentyn met them with a flurry of parries that sounded like a blacksmith’s shop at midday. He was a whirlwind of red hair and dark steel, retreating just enough to keep both men in his vision, his single-handed grip allowing him a flicking, serpentine speed they couldn't match with their two-handed stances. The second knight, younger and faster than his fallen brother, overextended a high slash. Quentyn caught the blade near his own hilt, locked the steel for a heartbeat, and stepped into the man’s guard. Instead of the point, Quentyn used his mailed elbow, driving it with the weight of his entire body into the knight’s visor. The metal groaned. The knight staggered back, blood spraying from the eye-slits as his nose shattered into a ruin of cartilage. Before the man could find his feet, Quentyn’s blade licked out—a shallow, cruel draw-cut across the back of the knight’s sword-hand. The tendons parted like silk ribbons. The man’s sword clattered to the atrium floor, his fingers curling uselessly into a claw. The final Kingsguard stood alone, his breathing ragged, his white cloak stained with the blood of his brothers. He looked at the man on the floor clutching a ruined leg, then at the one blinded by his own gore, and finally at Quentyn. “Kill me then,” the knight spat, his voice trembling with a mixture of disbelief and strain. “Kill you?” Quentyn lowered his sword, the tip tracing a lazy line in the dust. “I think not, the false-King can replace his White Cloaks if they die, but not if I give you a few scrapes beyond your usefulness. He hasn't the heart for that.” The knight lunged in a desperate charge. Quentyn met the steel with a casual deflection and, in a move of blinding speed, stepped on the trailing hem of the man’s own white cloak. As the knight stumbled, Quentyn’s punched his blade downwards with force, at the slight moment the parting of plate exposed the glimmer of a chance at a tendon. A sharp cry rang out, muffled by the stone walls. The third knight fell forward, hitting the ground with a heavy, hollow thud. Quentyn stood over the three ruined men, the light of the sun fading as clouds drifted over the city. He didn't offer a final blow. He simply retrieved his shield from the floor, slung it over his shoulder, and began to walk toward the exit. M O N T H S L A T E R T H E W E S T E R L A N D S The golden lion of Lannister lay trampled in the mud of the valley, its pride broken beneath the hooves of the Black Dragon’s cavalry. From the crest of a low-slung hill, Quentyn Ball sat astride his destrier, watching the remnants of the Westermen flee toward the sunset. The air was thick with the copper tang of blood and the heavy, sweet scent of scorched earth, the familiar perfume of a victory. The heavy rhythmic thud of a horse approaching from the rear didn't make him turn. He knew the gait of the animal and the weight of the rider. “A fine day for the Red Lion, wouldn’t you say, Quentyn?” Wyllis Reyne brought his mount to a halt alongside Fireball. The Reyne’s armor was splattered with the gore of his neighbors, and his face bore the exhilarated flush of a man who had finally seen the sun set on Casterly Rock’s dominance. “The Lannisters always did have more gold than sense,” Quentyn replied, his voice a dry rasp. He gestured vaguely at the valley below, where his own outriders were currently riding down the stragglers. “They fought like merchants defending a ledger. No heart in it. They saw the fire and remembered they had soft beds to return to.” Wyllis let out a short, jagged laugh, but the mirth didn't reach his eyes. He turned his gaze away from the rout, looking instead toward the south and east. “The West is ours, or as good as,” Wyllis said, his tone shifting into something more somber. “But the ravens aren’t all bearing tidings of gold and glory, Ball. The Prince of Dragonstone is a different breed of man than Lord Damon.” Quentyn finally turned his head, his flame-red hair wind-whipped and unruly. “Baelor. I taught the boy how to hold a lance. I suppose I shouldn't have taught him quite so well.” “He’s doing more than holding a lance,” Wyllis countered, leaning forward over his saddle pommel. “He’s rallying the Crownland lords. While we’re here plucking lions, Breakspear is suturing the wounds we’ve made in the Reach. If he secures the south, our victory here is just a stay of execution.” Fireball’s expression remained unreadable, though a flicker of something, perhaps pride, perhaps predatory hunger, danced in his eyes at the mention of his former pupil’s success. “He was always the best of them,” Quentyn mused, turning his horse back toward the camp fires beginning to dot the plain. “And if he breaks the back of our allies before we can reach the capital?” Wyllis pressed, his concern sharpening. “The men are toasted on Lannister wine tonight, but they won't be so merry if they find themselves caught between the Prince and the sea.” “Your mistake, Ser Reyne, is overestimating my concern, both in the chance of that future or in my care for your council.” Quentyn had been known at court for scathing remarks to lords with far more pedigree than he for some time, but it still never got old to see the shock ripple across their features. “These Princes of the Realm; Daemon, Baelor, Maekar. The ones that matter that is, they fight because I taught them, they make a mockery of men who are supposed to be their senior because I made them so. Do you think their swollen forebears gave them these skills? I have no heirs Reyne, except the men who will make history, in all the ways that matter.” He could tell the nature of such an argument was so extreme as to keep the red cat's tongue even longer. “Tell the men to rest,” Quentyn called back without looking. “And tell them to sharpen their blades. Lions are easy prey, Wyllis. We’ll be hunting a Dragon soon enough. W A R R E P O R T T I D I N G S |








