once upon a broken heart
- ormund hightower x wife!reader
in the crucible of war, tying the two strongest houses in a holy matrimony is a scheme easier than any other. youâve known ormund hightower your entire life, but he is also the man who has broken your heart... in a play of power and game of love, how will you protect your heart from him?
genre/warnings: suggestive, marriage of convenience, unrequited love, slight enemies to lovers, hurt/comfort, yearning, age gap, mentions of pregnancy, kidnapping, fluff, tyrell!reader (reader is ormund's second wife), takes place during the dance of dragons, spoilers! from house of the dragon season 3
notes: gif by @/alysmond. wc. 5.5k ! so ormund hightower makes an appearance, james norton is hot and i just watched house of guinness... so here's some brainrot concocted in my brain <3
They said... the best fairytale is the one that begins with a wedding.
The lady of the roses and the lord of the high tower. There was no union more perfect in the eyes of the Reach as the drums of war began to echo across Westeros. You were the vision of genteel grace and elegance while Ormund stood beside you as a stalwart protector.
Men mourned the loss, for the fairest maiden of Highgarden was no longer theirs to dream of, while women looked on with envy, wishing for a husband with the strength and stature of the Lord of Oldtown.
If only they have knownâŠ
Had it been ten years past, you would have been the happiest woman in the Seven Kingdoms.
And if fairytales begin with a wedding, then yours was doomed from the startâ because long before the day you wed him, your story had taken root in heartbreak of your own making.
You had known Ormund Hightower all your life, loved him when you were young and foolish enough to believe that your innocent heart mattered to him. For years, you had molded yourself into his idealâyou kept yourself pretty, perfected your manners, and stayed up late reading tedious books just so you could casually strike up a conversation on subjects he cared about.
âOnly you would throw yourself in the studies of the arts of war. What a charming young lady you are.â He would smile and be amused, and you would bite the inside of your cheek, genuinely believing you were winning him over.
You had carefully crafted your image as a prim, intellectual lady, dedicating every ounce of your grace and intellect to a singular, desperate goal: enticing him.
And you really thought you were at the forefront of his thoughts tooâ
âI present my victory to you, my lady. And at my behest, name you as the queen of love and beauty.â
The day you were crowned by the dashing heir of Oldtown right after he won the tourney before the entire court was the day you truly believed your girlhood dreams had come to life.
However... Ormund Hightower was apparently a man of distinct tasteâ and the young flower of House Tyrell was not on his list of potential brides, despite his fondness of you.
âAny good man would be delighted to be the object of your affections, no more so than I.â
It was the night after the news had broken of him asking for the hand of the vivacious Lady Tarly. He had a crooked smile, even as you stared at him with heartbreak shining in your eyes.
âAlas, I am a man soon to be wed. We must cease these meetings, so I ask you not to call on me any longer.â
Your heart died then, and stayed cold for the next ten years.
But fate, working its cruel irony, returned Ormund to you just as the war of succession for the Iron Throne began to tear the realm apart. Although the man before you was no longer the posh new lord of Oldtown, but a seasoned man hardened by politics and a wife who died in childbed.
âDeclare Aegon the rightful heir and commit five thousand of your men. In exchange... my protection and the hand of the Lady Tyrell.â
Your good sister, the Lady of Highgarden, who was the regent for her infant son, had wished to remain neutral amidst the ongoing civil war. But the Hightowers were kin to the queen dowager and had been fiercely loyal since ancient times. Confronted with Ormund Hightowerâs formidable host and the threat of dragonfire, she simply could not refuse his offer.
However, you had not forgotten the man who had broken your heart.
. . .
âWho would have thought that you would remarry? Your poor wife must be weeping in her grave.â
That was the first thing you said to his face after ten years, and he was entirely unfazed and amused instead.
âOf course, no one is more delighted than I to accept this most generous proposal,â you followed, your voice dripping with sweet venom as you paced before him. âBut I wish to settle an arrangement first.â
Ormund leaned back, an intrigued glimmer in his dark eyes. He had a small smile and gave you a nod, gesturing for you to continue. âAnd what might that arrangement be, my lady?â
âI wish to maintain my freedom. I expect to be allowed to live on my own terms, and that includes being permitted to keep my own counsel, travel as I see fit, and take my own companions.â
Ormundâs lips twitched, as he tilted his head. âCompanions? Do you mean lovers?â
You lifted your chin and looked down at him with haughty defiance. âI suppose so. Because frankly, I cannot see either of us engaging in romance in our otherwise unfortunate union.â
How was it that the man who once meant the world to you be the one you felt nothing for when fate twisted its narrative so you could become his wife?
âThe rose has grown rather sharp thorns, I see.â
For the first time, you saw how Ormundâs eyes lit with distaste, even if he was ever amused. âAs much as I could imagine, I couldnât possibly allow that. At least for old timesâ sake, shouldnât you grant me the grace of fulfilling the role of your lord husband?â
âLet us speak freely here. If I recall correctly, it is my houseâs bannermen you seek, and ten years is a long time,â you scoffed. âWe might have been fond of each other once, but we are, at present, not.â
âOh, but I am,â he countered smoothly, âstill very fond of you, Lady Tyrell.â
Ormund finally rose from his seat and approached you with ease. His blue eyes narrowed, and a wicked, knowing smile curled his lips.
âAnd I have no intention of sharing what is mine, least of all with men lesser than I am. If it is a lover you want, then you will find I am more than sufficient.â
He stepped into your space, a particular yet pleasant smellâfrom his collection of pomander, no doubtâfilled your senses. Leaning down, he whispered directly into your ear:
âAt least let me prove to you that we donât need romance to find⊠a common ground.â
This man was far more cunning than you had ever given him credit for, seamlessly crafting a trap for you to fall into.
But if he thought he could effortlessly master you like a piece on a chessboard, he was sorely mistaken.
He might have broken your heart a decade ago, but now, you held the shards.
Ormund Hightower, however, seemed intent on making good on his word.
He lavished you with his wealth, stood beside you like a devoted and gallant husband, and before long, even the smallfolk began singing praises of your matchâutterly charmed by the sight of their Lord and the new Lady Hightower.
And he wanted the exclusive rights to your bed? Fine. You would grant him lordly dues, butâ
âseven hells, you would have never expected that sex with him would be this great.
One time, it had started with him pinning you against the walls of your chambers, devouring your lips like a man in heat. The other time he took his time, worshiping every inch of you until you were weeping his name into the silk pillows, begging for a release he purposely delayed.
And nowâ
âHaah...â
The breath hitched in your throat as you sank down onto him, the heat and friction from where the two of you were joined striking like a sudden fever. You sat astride his hips, your skirts pooled around you, anchoring him beneath you.
Ormundâs calloused hands were gripping your waist as he let out a grunt, trying to steady himself against a shifting tide. He looked up at you, his blue eyes hooded, blown wide with a hunger that melted away the facade of composed lord from the war council.
This was him entirely at your mercyâ
You rolled your hips with a fluid, agonizing grace that drew a ragged groan from deep within his chest. You kept your chin tilted high, meeting his lustful gaze with a mocking smile.
âIs this all it takes to render the Lord of Oldtown into submission?â you taunted, your voice trembling slightly with the pleasure of him, though you forced the words out like a dare. âA womanâs touch?â
Ormundâs jaw clenched, a breathless grin on his face. âSince when... have you become so sharp-tongued?â
âSince I realized pretty words are wind and noble lords are fickle liars,â you provoked, leaning forward until your tangled hair brushed his cheek, your breath hot against his ear. âNow, are you content to let me rule your bed just as Highgarden rules over you?â
Crafty little lady. That was his breaking point.
With a low roar, Ormund seized control. He didnât unseat youâinstead, his hands locked onto your hips like iron clamps, guiding your body into a bruising rhythm that completely shattered your cool. He drove up into you with fierce thrusts, proving with every deep stroke just how formidable he truly was.
The smug defiance bled out of you, replaced by needy gasps of pain as he chased your peak, drowned in his carnal dominance until the world blurred into a haze of white-hot heat and mutual ruin.
. . .
When it was over, the heavy silence of the chamber returned, and you woke to find yourself tangled in his arms.
Ormund lay with his eyes shut, his broad, bare chest pressed against you, holding you fast.
His hair was disheveled, his eyelashes were long, and for a moment you saw your first love again, who stood tall amidst the rose gardens.
How is a man well-known for his faith luring you into thinking of sins?
You immediately tried to pull away as your pride demanded that you re-establish your distance. However, when you moved to swing your leg off him, a sudden ache between your thighs made you wince slightly.
Ormund noticed instantly as his eyes fluttered open. He shifted beside you, his voice unusually soft in the dim light. âAre you sore?â
âI am perfectly fine,â you snapped, brushing his arm away as you reached for the sheets to cover yourself, trying to regain a semblance of independence.
You had expected him to either offer an argument or wear that infuriating smirk. He did neither. Instead, he quietly rose from the bed, and you watched him, expecting him to leave you be.
However, a moment later, Ormund returned to the bedside. He gently pulled back the linen sheet and before you could protest, the soothing, comforting heat of a warm towel pressed against your inner thigh, wiping away the slick remnants with tenderness.
You froze, the sharp retort dying in your throat.
His touch was gentle, devoid of the lust from moments ago and completely stripped of the smugness he wore by day.
âDo not coddle me, Ormund,â you croaked, your voice tight as he pressed another clean, warm towel gently over your lower abdomen for comfort, before pulling the sheets over you.
âYou ride like a wanton, yet you are far from used to it,â he sighed softly, as if lamenting. âI would have been gentler, if I had known.â
You fell silent as shame coiled in your chestâa mirror of when you were just a young girl vying for his attention only to face the news of his impending wedding to another woman.
But he is taking care of you now, and you have become his lawfully-wedded wife. And in this quiet gesture, a dam broke in your memoryâ of a young man who draped his coat over your shoulder as you basked amidst the roses of Highgarden.
âYou must be cold. Go inside already,â he would say, a smile crinkling the corners of his eyes.
You used to dream of his touch, his love, his everything. It was bittersweet how he was yours now, but you were torn between heartache and a desire to pay him back in full for what he had inflicted on youâthe bitter, humiliating pain of not being chosen.
âMust you hate me that much?â
You blinked up at him, caught off guard. Ormund met your gaze with a certain sternness you had rarely seen from him.
â...to the point of hurting yourself?â he went on, his brow furrowing as he looked down at you. If you were bold enough, you would presume that it was concern that you saw in his eyes.
Yet⊠it only made that part of your heart clenched instead.
Why now? Why only after you had hated him enough to last a lifetime? Why only after you had spent nights crying yourself to sleep that he finally turn his eyes on you?
It was so fucking unfair.
âYou presume too much, Ormund Hightower.â
Your response was biting cold, yet so soft and whispery. He blinked, a flicker of surprise crossing his features.
âRest assured, in this very contractual marriage of ours, I have no intention of feeling anything for you,â you continued, your lips curving into a cruel smile. âOther than with my body.â
To your relief, not a single muscle in his jaw twitched, burying whatever thoughts your words had stirred in him.
He shook his head lightly, finally breaking your gaze, a ghost of a smile returning to his lips, though it never reached his eyes.
âSo be it then,â Ormund murmured, his voice dropping to a low baritone that carried no warmth, only the absolute finality. âHow regrettable though. One may mistake you as the rose, whereas you have long since become its thorns.â
Without waiting for your answer, he straightened, turning his back on you to dress, leaving you alone in the quiet wreck of the bedsheets.
You have done it. You had ensured that his affection would forever remain beyond your reach.
That may be so, but it did not mean the physical hunger between you regressed in the slightest
You had laid with him a few more times afterwards. Each encounter in his chambers was an exercise in numbing heartsâ he took you with a demanding dominance that left you breathless and slick with sweat and pleasuring you as if you were the only woman he worshipped.
Yet, as soon as the sun rose, Ormund was back to his cynical self, his crooked smile and calculating gaze ever keen on you. He kept you at an armâs length though since that night, strutting through the halls of the Hightower as the proud lord he was.
You truly believed you could kill that fragile part of your heart that still yearned for him, matching his coldness with your own pride.
Until the turn of the moon, at least.
âMy lady... this is strange.â
The pale morning light filtered through the arched windows of your solar as your maid, Ellyn, tugged firmly at the laces of your corset. You stood before the tall silver mirror, waiting to be cinched into your dress.
âWhat is?â you asked, feeling how her fingers slipped on the laces.
Her hands smoothed over the small of your back as she tried once more to force the edges of the bodice together. âThe laces simply wonât meet. It is as though it has shrunk.â
âDo not be foolish. Pull harder.â
âI am pulling, my lady, but...â
Ellyn hesitated, her eyes shifting to your reflection. Slowly, a realization dawned to her as she stepped to the side. âOh, my...â
You looked at your reflection then, and for a moment, you forgot how to breathe.
There, beneath the unlaced corset, your normally slender waist held an unmistakable curveâa slight protrusion in your belly that had not been there a moon ago.
âBless the Mother,â Ellyn whispered, her hands dropping away as a smile broke across her face, entirely unaware of how your breath had caught in your throat. She beamed at you, asking:
âMy lady... your coursesâ when did you last bleed?â
. . .
âWe will march for Tumbleton.â
You were pulled from your daze at the dining hall when Ormundâs voice broke your thoughts.
âYou, however, are to remain in Oldtown,â he continued, adjusting the signet ring on his finger. âYou know the city and the ledgers. I need a steady hand to rule it in my stead.â
His words passed by at first.
âIâm bringing my ward Daeron and his beast. I have also arranged for the merchant boy to have his hair dyed to stand in his placeââ
âA double?â you asked, almost in disbelief. âIf anyone notices the deceptionââ
âThey wonât,â Ormund interrupted smoothly, a cold smile touching his lips. âPeople see what they expect to see. Silver hair, a fine cloth, and the right escort would do to make one a prince. It keeps the boy safe, and more importantly, it keeps our leverage intact. Iâd wager sooner or later theyâre going to demand his head.â
It was this exact cunning that had captivated you. He was a man who saw the board three moves ahead, possessing an intellect forged for the cruelties of war. The fact that your child would have him as father brought a wave of reassurance, somehow.
But at the same time, dread creeped inâ with the news of his departure, the secret beneath your skirts suddenly felt twice as heavy.
Ormund paused, his sharp eyes narrowing as he caught the hollow look in your eyes. His lips crooked.
âNo counsel to give? You already wear the expression of a widow grieving a husband lost to the war.â
The barb pierced through your fog, sparking a sudden flash of ire as you gave him a look. âDo not flatter yourself.â
âThatâs more like it.â He rose from his seat with a low chuckle. He didnât see the ghost that seemed to settle over you, nor the way your hand instinctively wanted to press against the fabric of your skirts.
There were barely two days before his banners moved out, and somehow you didnât have it in you to let him go without any parting words.
âMay the Seven guide your path.â
The hollow blessing tasted like ash in your mouth, but it caught his attention. Ormund paused and turned back to face you.
However, there was no warmth in his expressionâonly an expressionless stare that bore straight through your soul.
âI thank Her Ladyship for her blessing,â he said, his voice dropping into a formal cadence. âThough I find it unnecessary.â
Three weeks had passed since then, and even the air in Oldtown was thick with the apprehension of war.
With Ormund riding out to lead his host, the governing of the city fell upon your shoulders. While it was your first time doing so, you found that you possessed the head and patience for it.
And thankfully, it kept you busy enough to keep the ghost of him out of your thoughts.
Yet at the same time, unbeknownst to you, your devotion to the city made you a conspicuous target.
It happened on a gray morning while you were overseeing the distribution of rice near the harbor. Before your household guards could even draw their steel, men in dark cloaks had surrounded you and cut down the soldier closest to youâ
âLay down your swords!â you screamed, trembling as the smallfolk were sent into a cries of horror after the manâs blood splattered across the cobblestones.
The crowd erupted into a panicked frenzy, scattering like birds before a hawk. Your remaining guards hesitated, their blades shaking in their hands as the cloaked men closed the circle around you.
From the shadows of the docks, a man stepped forward. He wore a dun-colored cloak, his brigandine bore the banners of Targaryen black and red. Men loyal to the Queen Rhaenyra.
âYes, yes...â the leader sneered, his voice cutting through the screams of the fleeing smallfolk. âTell them to keep their steel sheathed, Lady Hightower, or we will turn these docks into a slaughterhouse.â
âYou dare bring violence to Oldtown?â you demanded, your voice finding its steel despite the frantic pounding of your heart. âLord Ormund will have your heads on spikes before the moon turns.â
The man laughed, a harsh, grating sound. âOh donât you know, my lady? Lord Ormund bit off more than he could chew. Even as we speak, he lies dying in a pool of his own blood in Tumbleton.â
The world seemed to tilt beneath your feet, leaving you hollowed out by an icy shock. Without thinking, your hand flew to your abdomen, your fingers pressing firmly against your velvet gown, trying to find something to hold.
Dying. The word echoed in your mind like a funeral knell. The fortress of ice you had built to protect your heart shattered. For all your vows of indifference, the thought of him bleeding into the dirt tore a jagged wound through your chest.
Your captain of the guards stepped in front of you, his sword raised. âMy lady, we can take them. Run for the gates!â
âIf a single blade is drawn, my men will cut these peasants,â the leader warned. âWe will burn these docks, and every innocent soul on them will die because of your pride. Come with us quietly, or watch Oldtown bleed.â
You looked at the terrified faces of the very people you had spent weeks watchingâ the women holding their children close, the old men trembling behind the grain carts.
For years, Ormund had protected them as their lord. Even if he is nowâ No matter how, you couldnât let his city fall.
You placed a firm hand on your captainâs arm , forcing his blade down. âLower your sword,â you commanded quietly.
âBut my ladyâ!â
âI said, lower it.â You stepped past him, lifting your chin, refusing to let these dogs see you tremble. Looking at the leader in the eye, you spat, âI will go with you. Spare the city, and let these people go.â
He gave a mocking bow. âA noble choice, Lady Hightower. The realm will remember your piety.â
A rough hand seized your arm, dragging you towards a waiting carriage. The smallfolk of Oldtown wept aloud as they watched their ladyâthe sweet rose who had looked after them these past few weeksâspirited away into a cage.
Only when the heavy door slammed shut and the iron bolt clicked into place did the stark reality finally crash over you.
Tears welled in your eyes, spilling down your cheeks as you cradled your belly and struggled to breathe under the crushing weight of the very possibility that the man you had once again fallen in love with might well be dead.
There were many things, in truth, that Ormund favored in you.
You always smelled of sweet rosesâ out of everything, that was probably what he liked the most.
The vast gardens of Highgarden suited you, and he remembered the girl you used to be, the one who had been too timid to look him in the eye at first, but who had beautifully worked herself up to be able to do so.
He knew of your affectionsâ he has always known. It flattered him, though none but himself and the Gods would ever know that he, too, harbored a quiet fondness for the innocent Lady Tyrell.
His little rose. In truth, he had believed that someone so young and sweet as you shouldnât be bound to a man like him. His late wifeârest her soul, for he had been fond of her too, though it was never a blind, consuming loveâhad been different. She had been compliant, and more than ready to submit herself to her wifely duties, and she was who he needed when he first took on the mantle of the Lord of Oldtown.
The Gods are cruel, as all men know, especially when his dutiful wife died in a tragedy and he had to turn to House Tyrell to aid his house in its conquest for the throneâ only to find you, his rose, still very much beautiful and unwed.
However, that sweet rose has grown thorns. So sharp the thorns that he has almost forgotten how soft the petals are.
You no longer stuttered and conducted yourself with pride that both vexed and captivated him. In the beginning, he had been intrigued by the woman you had become because he was convinced that the gentle little lady of his memories was still there, waiting to be coaxed out.
That was why on the day he took you to his bed and realized the truthâthat you were merely performing and he had been anything but gentleâhe drew the line.
But you merely looked at him with eyes as cold as winter.
âRest assured, in this very contractual marriage of ours, I have no intention of feeling anything for you.â
Every time those words echoed in his mind, it felt as though a dagger were piercing his lungs.
. . .
âLord Ormund! My lord! Thank the Gods youâre back!â
Tumbleton had been a bloodbath, and he barely survived it himselfâa blade having pierced his armor and a hairâs breadth from his heart. But the market city had fallen, the Blacks had been broken there with the betrayals of two of their own dragonriders, and in the grand game of thrones, that was all that truly mattered.
However, the moment he stepped his foot back at Oldtown after six weeks, the atmosphere in his own home were grimâ his household servants were openly relieved, some almost weeping, as if he was a ghost returned from the grave.
âThey told us you were dead, my lord,â the head guard told him somberly. âWe thought all was lost.â
âA blatant lie made to weaken our morale,â Ormund hissed, his hand dropping to the pommel of his sword as his wound ached. âTumbleton has fallen, and Iâm far from the grave.â
Still, he sensed something dreadful had occurred by how mournful the maidservants wereâ
âMy lord!â
Before Ormund could demand what had happened in his absence, a shrill voice cut through. Ellyn, your faithful handmaiden, pushed past the other servants, her eyes were red-rimmed from days of crying.
She fell to her knees, clutching desperately at the hem of his traveling cloak.
âYou must help her, Lord Ormund! You must bring her back!â
A cold knot of dread coiled in his stomach. He looked down at the trembling girl, his brow furrowing deeply.
And the words she uttered next, as she looked up at him with tear-streaked cheeks, made his blood run colder than when he saw dragons burning Tumbleton.
âThe lady! Three weeks ago, while the city was fooled by the news of your death, the false queenâs men took her away!â
They had taken you to Tumbleton.
The market city was ravaged beyond repair. For three weeks now, they had held you hostage in a makeshift holdfast. They gave you barely enough bread and water to keep you alive, and as the days bled together, your hope withered to nothing.
Your unborn child, who grew heavier by the day beneath your heart, was the only thing left to give you the strength to survive this madness.
And as if your situation werenât desperate enough, through the timber door of your cell, the muffled voices of your captors reached your ears. They were conversing in frantic, hushed tones.
âThe smallfolk are rioting in Kingâs Landing. Theyâre storming the Dragonpit. The Queen is fleeing!â
âThen what of us? What of the woman?â another rasped.
âLeave her. If the Hightowers find us here, theyâll flay us alive. Set the fire. Let the ashes cover our tracks.â
Alarmed and struck by a sudden, feral terror, you flung yourself against the door.
âLet me out!â You screamed for help, your voice raw, hitting the wood until your knuckles bled.
But the only response was a thud, followed by the crackling of fire and pitch. Smoke and heat began to seep through, as the chamber was slowly being consumed. You were trapped.
Realizing you would soon meet your demise, the strength left your legs, and you collapsed into the dirt, trembling with tears.
I would die, Ormund already did, and I have never told him.
You bitterly regretted never telling him that you were with his child.
As the heat grew unbearable, your mind drifted away to the sun-drenched rose gardens of your home, where you and Ormund Hightower had first met.
He is devilishly handsome and gentle. Your first love who had broken your heart once, but still owns it to this very day, when you would breath your last.
The black smoke filled your lungs, choking the breath from your throat. Your vision began to tunnel, the edges of the room blurring into darkness as you surrenderred to the Stranger.
Then, through the flames, a sudden, violent crash echoedâ the sharp ring of steel slicing through. Through your fading, tear-blurred sight, a figure burst through the burning doorway.
You could have sworn you saw the shimmering edge of Vigilance cleaving through the smoke, its blade gleaming. That was the Valyrian steel your husband wielded.
Was it a cruel figment of your dying imagination?
But then, the heat of the fire was eclipsed by the fierce, solid weight of heavy arms wrapping around you, lifting you from the ground. And right against your ear, came a trembling voice you recognized:
âI have you,â Ormund whispered, his voice cracking with a raw emotion you had never heard from him before.
âHold on to me. I have you, dearest.â
The next time you awoke, you were in his bedchambers in the Hightower.
The suffocating stench of smoke and pitch was gone, replaced by the familiar, comforting scent of the crisp sea breeze blowing off the Whispering Sound. The moment your eyes fluttered open, you saw him.
He was staring down at you, his dark eyes ringed with exhaustion, but shadowed with a profound relief. He was only in a loose linen tunic that showed the bandages wrapping his chest.
âOrmund...?â your voice was a broken rasp. You reached out a trembling hand, terrified your fingers would pass right through him. âAre you... are you truly here? T-they told me you were slainââ
His eyes softened, and he smiled. Not the crooked one or a smirk, but the sincere, tender smile you had fallen in love with ten years ago.
âIâm here,â he assured, his deep voice and scent wrapping around you as he took hold of your hand.
Your first tear fell, and your voice broke into a sob then. Ormund pulled you gently but fiercely into his arms, tucking your head beneath his chin, and you clung to him, burying your head into his chest, weeping for the horror you had survived and the miracle of his embrace.
Slowly, he pulled away. His hand moved from your hair to cup your jaw, tilting your face up. The sorrow in his eyes flared into something primalâ and he pressed his lips to yours in a deep, passionate kiss.
He drank you in as if you were the only life-giving water in a world reduced to ash, and you kissed him back with everything you had left. You had the man you loved returned to you, and he had the sweet rose he cherished safe in his arms.
When he finally pulled away, both of your breaths coming in ragged gasps. The tender silence stretched between you, but then Ormundâs gaze drifted downwards.
His large, warm palm rested against your belly, a knowing look in his blue eyes.
âMust you hide so many things from me?â he asked softly, his gaze boring into yours with an intensity that made your heart skip.
âI... I wasââ
âWould you continue to do so if I told you that now, it is you who holds my entire heart and soul in the palm of your hand?â
You didnât even dare to blink, and he held your gaze and a bittersweet smile touched his lips.
âI have always longed for that lady amidst the field of roses,â he murmured, his voice dropping to a rough, impassioned whisper. âEven though she knows nothing of it, even though I know she is too pretty for the likes of me, and even though I have broken her heart... I still selfishly wished I could have her for myself.â
âOrmund...â Your lips wobbled, ingesting every word as the tears pooled fresh in your eyes.
His vivid blue eyes, so warm and tender, crinkled faintly as he brushed a fallen tear from your cheek with his thumb.
âSo even if roses bear thorns, I would gladly suffer a thousand cuts from now on⊠so long as I am the only one who gets to hold you.â
That was everything you needed to hear. You surrendered yourself to his embrace again, letting him kiss the crown of your head.
Dragons might continue to dance and the kingdoms would burn, but in that fleeting moment within the walls of the Hightower, the bloodstained game of thrones ceased to matterâ
For the lord had reclaimed his lady, and their story might lead to a fairytale after all.
















