versigny: π•“π•’π•Ÿπ•˜π•‘π•’π•£π•₯π•ͺ (pic#17636059)
tyrell ([personal profile] versigny) wrote2025-01-15 02:10 pm

open post & overflow




texts ౨ৎ starters ౨ৎ prompts
[ open to random pms if you'd like to plot beforehand! otherwise, feel free to throw something up. (: ]
swage: dnt (Default)

slaps a sneaky πŸŽ€ on this

[personal profile] swage 2025-06-30 03:54 am (UTC)(link)
[He watches her go, of course. Then he pats the spotty dog between the ears and sits for a while longer watching the Rattay men at arms go through the motions of their work while Captain Bernard hollers at them. He pretends to focus on watches their footwork and the way they handle their swords and shields. Luckily, Capon shows up and sweeps him off before the indignity that would have been otherwise inevitable had Henry stayed put until the end of the training session finds him. The questions and cajoling and general fun-making from the young men of the guard for having had the audacity to speak to Lady Tyrell will just have to wait.

They skip archery in the yard, and instead shoot their arrows in Lord Capon's favorite secret glen in the Rattay woods far from the advice of any bow master. For a time, Henry is pleasantly immune or at least unaware of gossip.

It does eventually find him, of course. Though by the time it does, some of the would-be bite has been tempered. The lady has nightmares, they say. Henry knows next to nothing about ladies (particularly mysterious and pretty ones near his own age); but he knows plenty about nightmares. Capon's favorite whore in the bath house below Rattay's walls has been making him a decoction for just that thing.

Thus, some days later a phial appears in Margaery's quarters. It sends her maids all aflutter with concernβ€”Where did it come from? Who left it there? What if it's poisoned?β€”, but the note with it is blatant enough. It's reads:]


From Henry, of skalitz, in servus to Sir Radzig Kobyla
To my Lady Marjery Tyrell, of high garden

Good morneing. Apolugy for the state of this letter. I am writeing it with a lent pen which goes a long diferently from the one I am acustomed to.

In any case I won't go on and on. I have been told to take this to help with uneasy sleepeing. NOT by the parish preest. I can't say who though as it doesn't much befit a lady. But it does help. If you nede more, send one of your girls to me and I will introdoo introdues make sure she knows ware to get it.

If you nede anything else, you're welcum to ask after me otherwise. My leege has me do all kinds of work for Sir Hanush and Lord Divish and I don't see why he'd spite the Tyrells. He would shurly want me to offur.

That's all.

Henry