The heart was steaming in the cool evening air
when Khal Drogo set it before her, raw and bloody. His arms were
red to the elbow. Behind him, his bloodriders knelt on the sand
beside the corpse of the wild stallion, stone knives in their
hands. The stallion’s blood looked black in the flickering
orange glare of the torches that ringed the high chalk walls of the
pit.
Dany touched the soft swell of her belly. Sweat beaded her skin
and trickled down her brow. She could feel the old women watching
her, the ancient crones of Vaes Dothrak, with eyes that shone dark
as polished flint in their wrinkled faces. She must not flinch or
look afraid. I am the blood of the dragon, she told herself as she
took the stallion’s heart in both hands, lifted it to her
mouth, and plunged her teeth into the tough, stringy flesh.
Warm blood filled her mouth and ran down over her chin. The
taste threatened to gag her, but she made herself chew and swallow.
The heart of a stallion would make her son strong and swift and
fearless, or so the Dothraki believed, but only if the mother could
eat it all. If she choked on the blood or retched up the flesh, the
omens were less favorable; the child might be stillborn, or come
forth weak, deformed, or female.
Her handmaids had helped her ready herself for the ceremony.
Despite the tender mother’s stomach that had afflicted her
these past two moons, Dany had dined on bowls of half-clotted blood
to accustom herself to the taste, and Irri made her chew strips of
dried horseflesh until her jaws were aching. She had starved
herself for a day and a night before the ceremony in the hopes that
hunger would help her keep down the raw meat.
The wild stallion’s heart was all muscle, and Dany had to
worry it with her teeth and chew each mouthful a long time. No
steel was permitted within the sacred confines of Vaes Dothrak,
beneath the shadow of the Mother of Mountains; she had to rip the
heart apart with teeth and nails. Her stomach roiled and heaved,
yet she kept on, her face smeared with the heartsblood that
sometimes seemed to explode against her lips.
Khal Drogo stood over her as she ate, his face as hard as a
bronze shield. His long black braid was shiny with oil. He wore
gold rings in his mustache, gold bells in his braid, and a heavy
belt of solid gold medallions around his waist, but his chest was
bare. She looked at him whenever she felt her strength failing;
looked at him, and chewed and swallowed, chewed and swallowed,
chewed and swallowed. Toward the end, Dany thought she glimpsed a
fierce pride in his dark, almond-shaped eyes, but she could not be
sure. The khal’s face did not often betray the thoughts
within.
And finally it was done. Her cheeks and fingers were sticky as
she forced down the last of it. Only then did she turn her eyes
back to the old women, the crones of the doshkhaleen.
“Khalakka dothrae mr’anha!” she proclaimed in her
best Dothraki. A prince rides inside me! She had practiced the
phrase for days with her handmaid Jhiqui.
The oldest of the crones, a bent and shriveled stick of a woman
with a single black eye, raised her arms on high. “Khalakka
dothrae!” she shrieked. The prince is riding!
“He is riding!” the other women answered.
“Rakh! Rakh! Rakh haj!” they proclaimed. A boy, a boy,
a strong boy.
Bells rang, a sudden clangor of bronze birds. A deep-throated
warhorn sounded its long low note. The old women began to chant.
Underneath their painted leather vests, their withered dugs swayed
back and forth, shiny with oil and sweat. The eunuchs who served
them threw bundles of dried grasses into a great bronze brazier,
and clouds of fragrant smoke rose up toward the moon and the stars.
The Dothraki believed the stars were horses made of fire, a great
herd that galloped across the sky by night.
As the smoke ascended, the chanting died away and the ancient
crone closed her single eye, the better to peer into the future.
The silence that fell was complete. Dany could hear the distant
call of night birds, the hiss and crackle of the torches, the
gentle lapping of water from the lake. The Dothraki stared at her
with eyes of night, waiting.
Khal Drogo laid his hand on Dany’s arm. She could feel the
tension in his fingers. Even a khal as mighty as Drogo could know
fear when the doshkhaleen peered into smoke of the future. At her
back, her handmaids fluttered anxiously.
Finally the crone opened her eye and lifted her arms. “I
have seen his face, and heard the thunder of his hooves,” she
proclaimed in a thin, wavery voice.
“The thunder of his hooves!” the others
chorused.
“As swift as the wind he rides, and behind him his
khalasar covers the earth, men without number, with arakhs shining
in their hands like blades of razor grass. Fierce as a storm this
prince will be. His enemies will tremble before him, and their
wives will weep tears of blood and rend their flesh in grief. The
bells in his hair will sing his coming, and the milk men in the
stone tents will fear his name.” The old woman trembled and
looked at Dany almost as if she were afraid. “The prince is
riding, and he shall be the stallion who mounts the
world.”
“The stallion who mounts the world!” the onlookers
cried in echo, until the night rang to the sound of their
voices.
The one-eyed crone peered at Dany. “What shall he be
called, the stallion who mounts the world?”
She stood to answer. “He shall be called Rhaego,”
she said, using the words that Jhiqui had taught her. Her hands
touched the swell beneath her breasts protectively as a roar went
up from the Dothraki. “Rhaego,” they screamed.
“Rhaego, Rhaego, Rhaego!”
The name was still ringing in her ears as Khal Drogo led her
from the pit. His bloodriders fell in behind them. A procession
followed them out onto the godsway, the broad grassy road that ran
through the heart of Vaes Dothrak, from the horse gate to the
Mother of Mountains. The crones of the doshkhaleen came first,
with their eunuchs and slaves. Some supported themselves with tall
carved staffs as they struggled along on ancient, shaking legs,
while others walked as proud as any horselord. Each of the old
women had been a khaleesi once. When their lord husbands died and a
new khal took his place at the front of his riders, with a new
khaleesi mounted beside him, they were sent here, to reign over the
vast Dothraki nation. Even the mightiest of khals bowed to the
wisdom and authority of the doshkhaleen. Still, it gave Dany the
shivers to think that one day she might be sent to join them,
whether she willed it or no.
Behind the wise women came the others; Khal Ogo and his son, the
khalakka Fogo, Khal Jommo and his wives, the chief men of
Drogo’s khalasar, Dany’s handmaids, the khal’s
servants and slaves, and more. Bells rang and drums beat a stately
cadence as they marched along the godsway. Stolen heroes and the
gods of dead peoples brooded in the darkness beyond the road.
Alongside the procession, slaves ran lightly through the grass with
torches in their hands, and the flickering flames made the great
monuments seem almost alive.
“What is meaning, name Rhaego?” Khal Drogo asked as
they walked, using the Common Tongue of the Seven Kingdoms. She had
been teaching him a few words when she could. Drogo was quick to
learn when he put his mind to it, though his accent was so thick
and barbarous that neither Ser Jorah nor Viserys could understand a
word he said.
“My brother Rhaegar was a fierce warrior, my
sun-and-stars,” she told him. “He died before I was
born. Ser Jorah says that he was the last of the
dragons.”
Khal Drogo looked down at her. His face was a copper mask, yet
under the long black mustache, drooping beneath the weight of its
gold rings, she thought she glimpsed the shadow of a smile.
“Is good name, Dan Ares wife, moon of my life,” he
said.
They rode to the lake the Dothraki called the Womb of the World,
surrounded by a fringe of reeds, its water still and calm. A
thousand thousand years ago, Jhiqui told her, the first man had
emerged from its depths, riding upon the back of the first
horse.
The procession waited on the grassy shore as Dany stripped and
let her soiled clothing fall to the ground. Naked, she stepped
gingerly into the water. Irri said the lake had no bottom, but Dany
felt soft mud squishing between her toes as she pushed through the
tall reeds. The moon floated on the still black waters, shattering
and re-forming as her ripples washed over it. Goose pimples rose on
her pale skin as the coldness crept up her thighs and kissed her
lower lips. The stallion’s blood had dried on her hands and
around her mouth. Dany cupped her fingers and lifted the sacred
waters over her head, cleansing herself and the child inside her
while the khal and the others looked on. She heard the old women of
the doshkhaleen muttering to each other as they watched, and
wondered what they were saying.
When she emerged from the lake, shivering and dripping, her
handmaid Doreah hurried to her with a robe of painted sandsilk, but
Khal Drogo waved her away. He was looking on her swollen breasts
and the curve of her belly with approval, and Dany could see the
shape of his manhood pressing through his horsehide trousers, below
the heavy gold medallions of his belt. She went to him and helped
him unlace. Then her huge khal took her by the hips and lifted her into the
air, as he might lift a child. The bells in his hair rang
softly.
Dany wrapped her arms around his shoulders and pressed her face
against his neck as he thrust himself inside her. Three quick
strokes and it was done. “The stallion who mounts the world,” Drogo whispered hoarsely. His hands still smelled of horse
blood. He bit at her throat, hard, in the moment of his pleasure,
and when he lifted her off, his seed filled her and trickled down
the inside of her thighs. Only then was Doreah permitted to drape
her in the scented sandsilk, and Irri to fit soft slippers to her
feet.
Khal Drogo laced himself up and spoke a command, and horses were
brought to the lakeshore. Cohollo had the honor of helping the
khaleesi onto her silver. Drogo spurred his stallion, and set off
down the godsway beneath the moon and stars. On her silver, Dany
easily kept pace.
The silk tenting that roofed Khal Drogo’s hall had been
rolled up tonight, and the moon followed them inside. Flames leapt
ten feet in the air from three huge stone-lined firepits. The air
was thick with the smells of roasting meat and curdled, fermented
mare’s milk. The hall was crowded and noisy when they
entered, the cushions packed with those whose rank and name were
not sufficient to allow them at the ceremony. As Dany rode beneath
the arched entry and up the center aisle, every eye was on her. The
Dothraki screamed out comments on her belly and her breasts,
hailing the life within her. She could not understand all they
shouted, but one phrase came clear. “The stallion that mounts
the world,” she heard, bellowed in a thousand voices.
The sounds of drums and horns swirled up into the night.
Half-clothed women spun and danced on the low tables, amid joints of
meat and platters piled high with plums and dates and pomegranates.
Many of the men were drunk on clotted mare’s milk, yet Dany
knew no arakhs would clash tonight, not here in the sacred city,
where blades and bloodshed were forbidden.
Khal Drogo dismounted and took his place on the high bench. Khal
Jommo and Khal Ogo, who had been in Vaes Dothrak with their
khalasars when they arrived, were given seats of high honor to
Drogo’s right and left. The bloodriders of the three khals
sat below them, and farther down Khal Jommo’s four wives.
Dany climbed off her silver and gave the reins to one of the
slaves. As Doreah and Irri arranged her cushions, she searched for
her brother. Even across the length of the crowded hall, Viserys
should have been conspicuous with his pale skin, silvery hair, and
beggar’s rags, but she did not see him anywhere.
Her glance roamed the crowded tables near the walls, where men
whose braids were even shorter than their manhoods sat on frayed
rugs and flat cushions around the low tables, but all the faces she
saw had black eyes and copper skin. She spied Ser Jorah Mormont
near the center of the hall, close to the middle firepit. It was a
place of respect, if not high honor; the Dothraki esteemed the
knight’s prowess with a sword. Dany sent Jhiqui to bring him
to her table. Mormont came at once, and went to one knee before
her. “Khaleesi,” he said, “I am yours to
command.”
She patted the stuffed horsehide cushion beside her. “Sit
and talk with me.”
“You honor me.” The knight seated himself
cross-legged on the cushion. A slave knelt before him, offering a
wooden platter full of ripe figs. Ser Jorah took one and bit it in
half.
“Where is my brother?” Dany asked. “He ought
to have come by now, for the feast.”
“I saw His Grace this morning,” he told her.
“He told me he was going to the Western Market, in search of
wine.”
“Wine?” Dany said doubtfully. Viserys could not
abide the taste of the fermented mare’s milk the Dothraki
drank, she knew that, and he was oft at the bazaars these days,
drinking with the traders who came in the great caravans from east
and west. He seemed to find their company more congenial than
hers.
“Wine,” Ser Jorah confirmed, “and he has some
thought to recruit men for his army from the sellswords who guard
the caravans.” A serving girl laid a blood pie in front of
him, and he attacked it with both hands.
“Is that wise?” she asked. “He has no gold to
pay soldiers. What if he’s betrayed?” Caravan guards
were seldom troubled much by thoughts of honor, and the Usurper in
King’s Landing would pay well for her brother’s head.
“You ought to have gone with him, to keep him safe. You are
his sworn sword.”
“We are in Vaes Dothrak,” he reminded her. “No
one may carry a blade here or shed a man’s blood.”
“Yet men die,” she said. “Jhogo told me. Some
of the traders have eunuchs with them, huge men who strangle
thieves with wisps of silk. That way no blood is shed and the gods
are not angered.”
“Then let us hope your brother will be wise enough not to
steal anything.” Ser Jorah wiped the grease off his mouth
with the back of his hand and leaned close over the table.
“He had planned to take your dragon’s eggs, until I
warned him that I’d cut off his hand if he so much as touched
them.”
For a moment Dany was so shocked she had no words. “My
eggs . . . but they’re mine, Magister Illyrio gave them to me,
a bride gift, why would Viserys want . . . they’re only
stones . . . ”
“The same could be said of rubies and diamonds and fire
opals, Princess . . . and dragon’s eggs are rarer by far.
Those traders he’s been drinking with would sell their own
manhoods for even one of those stones, and with all three Viserys
could buy as many sellswords as he might need.”
Dany had not known, had not even suspected. “Then . . . he
should have them. He does not need to steal them. He had only to
ask. He is my brother . . . and my true king.”
“He is your brother,” Ser Jorah acknowledged.
“You do not understand, ser,” she said. “My
mother died giving me birth, and my father and my brother Rhaegar
even before that. I would never have known so much as their names
if Viserys had not been there to tell me. He was the only one left.
The only one. He is all I have.”
“Once,” said Ser Jorah. “No longer, Khaleesi.
You belong to the Dothraki now. In your womb rides the stallion who
mounts the world.” He held out his cup, and a slave filled it
with fermented mare’s milk, sour-smelling and thick with
clots.
Dany waved her away. Even the smell of it made her feel ill, and
she would take no chances of bringing up the horse heart she had
forced herself to eat. “What does it mean?” she asked.
“What is this stallion? Everyone was shouting it at me, but I
don’t understand.”
“The stallion is the khal of khals promised in ancient
prophecy, child. He will unite the Dothraki into a single khalasar
and ride to the ends of the earth, or so it was promised. All the
people of the world will be his herd.”
“Oh,” Dany said in a small voice. Her hand smoothed
her robe down over the swell of her stomach. “I named him
Rhaego.”
“A name to make the Usurper’s blood run
cold.”
Suddenly Doreah was tugging at her elbow. “My lady,
“ the handmaid whispered urgently, “your brother . . . ”
Dany looked down the length of the long, roofless hall and there
he was, striding toward her. From the lurch in his step, she could
tell at once that Viserys had found his wine . . . and something
that passed for courage.
He was wearing his scarlet silks, soiled and travel-stained. His
cloak and gloves were black velvet, faded from the sun. His boots
were dry and cracked, his silver-blond hair matted and tangled. A
longsword swung from his belt in a leather scabbard. The Dothraki
eyed the sword as he passed; Dany heard curses and threats and
angry muttering rising all around her, like a tide. The music died
away in a nervous stammering of drums.
A sense of dread closed around her heart. “Go to
him,” she commanded Ser Jorah. “Stop him. Bring him
here. Tell him he can have the dragon’s eggs if that is what
he wants.” The knight rose swiftly to his feet.
“Where is my sister?” Viserys shouted, his voice
thick with wine. “I’ve come for her feast. How dare you
presume to eat without me? No one eats before the king. Where is
she? The whore can’t hide from the dragon.”
He stopped beside the largest of the three firepits, peering
around at the faces of the Dothraki. There were five thousand men
in the hall, but only a handful who knew the Common Tongue. Yet
even if his words were incomprehensible, you had only to look at
him to know that he was drunk.
Ser Jorah went to him swiftly, whispered something in his ear,
and took him by the arm, but Viserys wrenched free. “Keep
your hands off me! No one touches the dragon without
leave.”
Dany glanced anxiously up at the high bench. Khal Drogo was
saying something to the other khals beside him. Khal Jommo grinned,
and Khal Ogo began to guffaw loudly.
The sound of laughter made Viserys lift his eyes. “Khal
Drogo,” he said thickly, his voice almost polite.
“I’m here for the feast.” He staggered away from
Ser Jorah, making to join the three khals on the high bench.
Khal Drogo rose, spat out a dozen words in Dothraki, faster than
Dany could understand, and pointed. “Khal Drogo says your
place is not on the high bench,” Ser Jorah translated for her
brother. “Khal Drogo says your place is there.”
Viserys glanced where the khal was pointing. At the back of the
long hall, in a corner by the wall, deep in shadow so better men
would not need to look on them, sat the lowest of the low; raw
unblooded boys, old men with clouded eyes and stiff joints, the
dim-witted and the maimed. Far from the meat, and farther from
honor. “That is no place for a king,” her brother
declared.
“Is place,” Khal Drogo answered, in the Common
Tongue that Dany had taught him, “for Sorefoot King.”
He clapped his hands together. “A cart! Bring cart for Khal
Rhaggat!”
Five thousand Dothraki began to laugh and shout. Ser Jorah was
standing beside Viserys, screaming in his ear, but the roar in the
hall was so thunderous that Dany could not hear what he was saying.
Her brother shouted back and the two men grappled, until Mormont
knocked Viserys bodily to the floor.
Her brother drew his sword.
The bared steel shone a fearful red in the glare from the
firepits. “Keep away from me!” Viserys hissed. Ser
Jorah backed off a step, and her brother climbed unsteadily to his
feet. He waved the sword over his head, the borrowed blade that
Magister Illyrio had given him to make him seem more kingly.
Dothraki were shrieking at him from all sides, screaming vile
curses.
Dany gave a wordless cry of terror. She knew what a drawn sword
meant here, even if her brother did not.
Her voice made Viserys turn his head, and he saw her for the
first time. “There she is,” he said, smiling. He
stalked toward her, slashing at the air as if to cut a path through
a wall of enemies, though no one tried to bar his way.
“The blade . . . you must not,” she begged him.
“Please, Viserys. It is forbidden. Put down the sword and
come share my cushions. There’s drink, food . . . is it the
dragon’s eggs you want? You can have them, only throw away
the sword.”
“Do as she tells you, fool,” Ser Jorah shouted,
“before you get us all killed.”
Viserys laughed. “They can’t kill us. They
can’t shed blood here in the sacred city . . . but I
can.” He laid the point of his sword between Daenerys’s
breasts and slid it downward, over the curve of her belly. “I
want what I came for,” he told her. “I want the crown
he promised me. He bought you, but he never paid for you. Tell him
I want what I bargained for, or I’m taking you back. You and
the eggs both. He can keep his bloody foal. I’ll cut the
bastard out and leave it for him.” The sword point pushed
through her silks and pricked at her navel. Viserys was weeping,
she saw; weeping and laughing, both at the same time, this man who
had once been her brother.
Distantly, as from far away, Dany heard her handmaid Jhiqui
sobbing in fear, pleading that she dared not translate, that the
khal would bind her and drag her behind his horse all the way up
the Mother of Mountains. She put her arm around the girl.
“Don’t be afraid,” she said. “I shall tell
him.”
She did not know if she had enough words, yet when she was done
Khal Drogo spoke a few brusque sentences in Dothraki, and she knew
he understood. The sun of her life stepped down from the high
bench. “What did he say?” the man who had been her brother
asked her, flinching.
It had grown so silent in the hall that she could hear the bells
in Khal Drogo’s hair, chiming softly with each step he took.
His bloodriders followed him, like three copper shadows. Daenerys
had gone cold all over. “He says you shall have a splendid
golden crown that men shall tremble to behold.”
Viserys smiled and lowered his sword. That was the saddest
thing, the thing that tore at her afterward . . . the way he
smiled. “That was all I wanted,” he said. “What
was promised.”
When the sun of her life reached her, Dany slid an arm around
his waist. The khal said a word, and his bloodriders leapt forward.
Qotho seized the man who had been her brother by the arms. Haggo
shattered his wrist with a single, sharp twist of his huge hands.
Cohollo pulled the sword from his limp fingers. Even now Viserys
did not understand. “No,” he shouted, “you cannot
touch me, I am the dragon, the dragon, and I will be
crowned!”
Khal Drogo unfastened his belt. The medallions were pure gold,
massive and ornate, each one as large as a man’s hand. He
shouted a command. Cook slaves pulled a heavy iron stew pot from
the firepit, dumped the stew onto the ground, and returned the pot
to the flames. Drogo tossed in the belt and watched without
expression as the medallions turned red and began to lose their
shape. She could see fires dancing in the onyx of his eyes. A slave
handed him a pair of thick horsehair mittens, and he pulled them
on, never so much as looking at the man.
Viserys began to scream the high, wordless scream of the coward
facing death. He kicked and twisted, whimpered like a dog and wept
like a child, but the Dothraki held him tight between them. Ser
Jorah had made his way to Dany’s side. He put a hand on her
shoulder. “Turn away, my princess, I beg you.”
“No.” She folded her arms across the swell of her
belly, protectively.
At the last, Viserys looked at her. “Sister, please . . . Dany, tell them . . . make them . . . sweet sister . . . ”
When the gold was half-melted and starting to run, Drogo reached
into the flames, snatched out the pot. “Crown!” he
roared. “Here. A crown for Cart King!” And upended the
pot over the head of the man who had been her brother.
The sound Viserys Targaryen made when that hideous iron helmet
covered his face was like nothing human. His feet hammered a
frantic beat against the dirt floor, slowed, stopped. Thick globs
of molten gold dripped down onto his chest, setting the scarlet
silk to smoldering . . . yet no drop of blood was spilled. He was no dragon, Dany thought, curiously calm. Fire cannot kill
a dragon.
The heart was steaming in the cool evening air
when Khal Drogo set it before her, raw and bloody. His arms were
red to the elbow. Behind him, his bloodriders knelt on the sand
beside the corpse of the wild stallion, stone knives in their
hands. The stallion’s blood looked black in the flickering
orange glare of the torches that ringed the high chalk walls of the
pit.
Dany touched the soft swell of her belly. Sweat beaded her skin
and trickled down her brow. She could feel the old women watching
her, the ancient crones of Vaes Dothrak, with eyes that shone dark
as polished flint in their wrinkled faces. She must not flinch or
look afraid. I am the blood of the dragon, she told herself as she
took the stallion’s heart in both hands, lifted it to her
mouth, and plunged her teeth into the tough, stringy flesh.
Warm blood filled her mouth and ran down over her chin. The
taste threatened to gag her, but she made herself chew and swallow.
The heart of a stallion would make her son strong and swift and
fearless, or so the Dothraki believed, but only if the mother could
eat it all. If she choked on the blood or retched up the flesh, the
omens were less favorable; the child might be stillborn, or come
forth weak, deformed, or female.
Her handmaids had helped her ready herself for the ceremony.
Despite the tender mother’s stomach that had afflicted her
these past two moons, Dany had dined on bowls of half-clotted blood
to accustom herself to the taste, and Irri made her chew strips of
dried horseflesh until her jaws were aching. She had starved
herself for a day and a night before the ceremony in the hopes that
hunger would help her keep down the raw meat.
The wild stallion’s heart was all muscle, and Dany had to
worry it with her teeth and chew each mouthful a long time. No
steel was permitted within the sacred confines of Vaes Dothrak,
beneath the shadow of the Mother of Mountains; she had to rip the
heart apart with teeth and nails. Her stomach roiled and heaved,
yet she kept on, her face smeared with the heartsblood that
sometimes seemed to explode against her lips.
Khal Drogo stood over her as she ate, his face as hard as a
bronze shield. His long black braid was shiny with oil. He wore
gold rings in his mustache, gold bells in his braid, and a heavy
belt of solid gold medallions around his waist, but his chest was
bare. She looked at him whenever she felt her strength failing;
looked at him, and chewed and swallowed, chewed and swallowed,
chewed and swallowed. Toward the end, Dany thought she glimpsed a
fierce pride in his dark, almond-shaped eyes, but she could not be
sure. The khal’s face did not often betray the thoughts
within.
And finally it was done. Her cheeks and fingers were sticky as
she forced down the last of it. Only then did she turn her eyes
back to the old women, the crones of the doshkhaleen.
“Khalakka dothrae mr’anha!” she proclaimed in her
best Dothraki. A prince rides inside me! She had practiced the
phrase for days with her handmaid Jhiqui.
The oldest of the crones, a bent and shriveled stick of a woman
with a single black eye, raised her arms on high. “Khalakka
dothrae!” she shrieked. The prince is riding!
“He is riding!” the other women answered.
“Rakh! Rakh! Rakh haj!” they proclaimed. A boy, a boy,
a strong boy.
Bells rang, a sudden clangor of bronze birds. A deep-throated
warhorn sounded its long low note. The old women began to chant.
Underneath their painted leather vests, their withered dugs swayed
back and forth, shiny with oil and sweat. The eunuchs who served
them threw bundles of dried grasses into a great bronze brazier,
and clouds of fragrant smoke rose up toward the moon and the stars.
The Dothraki believed the stars were horses made of fire, a great
herd that galloped across the sky by night.
As the smoke ascended, the chanting died away and the ancient
crone closed her single eye, the better to peer into the future.
The silence that fell was complete. Dany could hear the distant
call of night birds, the hiss and crackle of the torches, the
gentle lapping of water from the lake. The Dothraki stared at her
with eyes of night, waiting.
Khal Drogo laid his hand on Dany’s arm. She could feel the
tension in his fingers. Even a khal as mighty as Drogo could know
fear when the doshkhaleen peered into smoke of the future. At her
back, her handmaids fluttered anxiously.
Finally the crone opened her eye and lifted her arms. “I
have seen his face, and heard the thunder of his hooves,” she
proclaimed in a thin, wavery voice.
“The thunder of his hooves!” the others
chorused.
“As swift as the wind he rides, and behind him his
khalasar covers the earth, men without number, with arakhs shining
in their hands like blades of razor grass. Fierce as a storm this
prince will be. His enemies will tremble before him, and their
wives will weep tears of blood and rend their flesh in grief. The
bells in his hair will sing his coming, and the milk men in the
stone tents will fear his name.” The old woman trembled and
looked at Dany almost as if she were afraid. “The prince is
riding, and he shall be the stallion who mounts the
world.”
“The stallion who mounts the world!” the onlookers
cried in echo, until the night rang to the sound of their
voices.
The one-eyed crone peered at Dany. “What shall he be
called, the stallion who mounts the world?”
She stood to answer. “He shall be called Rhaego,”
she said, using the words that Jhiqui had taught her. Her hands
touched the swell beneath her breasts protectively as a roar went
up from the Dothraki. “Rhaego,” they screamed.
“Rhaego, Rhaego, Rhaego!”
The name was still ringing in her ears as Khal Drogo led her
from the pit. His bloodriders fell in behind them. A procession
followed them out onto the godsway, the broad grassy road that ran
through the heart of Vaes Dothrak, from the horse gate to the
Mother of Mountains. The crones of the doshkhaleen came first,
with their eunuchs and slaves. Some supported themselves with tall
carved staffs as they struggled along on ancient, shaking legs,
while others walked as proud as any horselord. Each of the old
women had been a khaleesi once. When their lord husbands died and a
new khal took his place at the front of his riders, with a new
khaleesi mounted beside him, they were sent here, to reign over the
vast Dothraki nation. Even the mightiest of khals bowed to the
wisdom and authority of the doshkhaleen. Still, it gave Dany the
shivers to think that one day she might be sent to join them,
whether she willed it or no.
Behind the wise women came the others; Khal Ogo and his son, the
khalakka Fogo, Khal Jommo and his wives, the chief men of
Drogo’s khalasar, Dany’s handmaids, the khal’s
servants and slaves, and more. Bells rang and drums beat a stately
cadence as they marched along the godsway. Stolen heroes and the
gods of dead peoples brooded in the darkness beyond the road.
Alongside the procession, slaves ran lightly through the grass with
torches in their hands, and the flickering flames made the great
monuments seem almost alive.
“What is meaning, name Rhaego?” Khal Drogo asked as
they walked, using the Common Tongue of the Seven Kingdoms. She had
been teaching him a few words when she could. Drogo was quick to
learn when he put his mind to it, though his accent was so thick
and barbarous that neither Ser Jorah nor Viserys could understand a
word he said.
“My brother Rhaegar was a fierce warrior, my
sun-and-stars,” she told him. “He died before I was
born. Ser Jorah says that he was the last of the
dragons.”
Khal Drogo looked down at her. His face was a copper mask, yet
under the long black mustache, drooping beneath the weight of its
gold rings, she thought she glimpsed the shadow of a smile.
“Is good name, Dan Ares wife, moon of my life,” he
said.
They rode to the lake the Dothraki called the Womb of the World,
surrounded by a fringe of reeds, its water still and calm. A
thousand thousand years ago, Jhiqui told her, the first man had
emerged from its depths, riding upon the back of the first
horse.
The procession waited on the grassy shore as Dany stripped and
let her soiled clothing fall to the ground. Naked, she stepped
gingerly into the water. Irri said the lake had no bottom, but Dany
felt soft mud squishing between her toes as she pushed through the
tall reeds. The moon floated on the still black waters, shattering
and re-forming as her ripples washed over it. Goose pimples rose on
her pale skin as the coldness crept up her thighs and kissed her
lower lips. The stallion’s blood had dried on her hands and
around her mouth. Dany cupped her fingers and lifted the sacred
waters over her head, cleansing herself and the child inside her
while the khal and the others looked on. She heard the old women of
the doshkhaleen muttering to each other as they watched, and
wondered what they were saying.
When she emerged from the lake, shivering and dripping, her
handmaid Doreah hurried to her with a robe of painted sandsilk, but
Khal Drogo waved her away. He was looking on her swollen breasts
and the curve of her belly with approval, and Dany could see the
shape of his manhood pressing through his horsehide trousers, below
the heavy gold medallions of his belt. She went to him and helped
him unlace. Then her huge khal took her by the hips and lifted her into the
air, as he might lift a child. The bells in his hair rang
softly.
Dany wrapped her arms around his shoulders and pressed her face
against his neck as he thrust himself inside her. Three quick
strokes and it was done. “The stallion who mounts the world,” Drogo whispered hoarsely. His hands still smelled of horse
blood. He bit at her throat, hard, in the moment of his pleasure,
and when he lifted her off, his seed filled her and trickled down
the inside of her thighs. Only then was Doreah permitted to drape
her in the scented sandsilk, and Irri to fit soft slippers to her
feet.
Khal Drogo laced himself up and spoke a command, and horses were
brought to the lakeshore. Cohollo had the honor of helping the
khaleesi onto her silver. Drogo spurred his stallion, and set off
down the godsway beneath the moon and stars. On her silver, Dany
easily kept pace.
The silk tenting that roofed Khal Drogo’s hall had been
rolled up tonight, and the moon followed them inside. Flames leapt
ten feet in the air from three huge stone-lined firepits. The air
was thick with the smells of roasting meat and curdled, fermented
mare’s milk. The hall was crowded and noisy when they
entered, the cushions packed with those whose rank and name were
not sufficient to allow them at the ceremony. As Dany rode beneath
the arched entry and up the center aisle, every eye was on her. The
Dothraki screamed out comments on her belly and her breasts,
hailing the life within her. She could not understand all they
shouted, but one phrase came clear. “The stallion that mounts
the world,” she heard, bellowed in a thousand voices.
The sounds of drums and horns swirled up into the night.
Half-clothed women spun and danced on the low tables, amid joints of
meat and platters piled high with plums and dates and pomegranates.
Many of the men were drunk on clotted mare’s milk, yet Dany
knew no arakhs would clash tonight, not here in the sacred city,
where blades and bloodshed were forbidden.
Khal Drogo dismounted and took his place on the high bench. Khal
Jommo and Khal Ogo, who had been in Vaes Dothrak with their
khalasars when they arrived, were given seats of high honor to
Drogo’s right and left. The bloodriders of the three khals
sat below them, and farther down Khal Jommo’s four wives.
Dany climbed off her silver and gave the reins to one of the
slaves. As Doreah and Irri arranged her cushions, she searched for
her brother. Even across the length of the crowded hall, Viserys
should have been conspicuous with his pale skin, silvery hair, and
beggar’s rags, but she did not see him anywhere.
Her glance roamed the crowded tables near the walls, where men
whose braids were even shorter than their manhoods sat on frayed
rugs and flat cushions around the low tables, but all the faces she
saw had black eyes and copper skin. She spied Ser Jorah Mormont
near the center of the hall, close to the middle firepit. It was a
place of respect, if not high honor; the Dothraki esteemed the
knight’s prowess with a sword. Dany sent Jhiqui to bring him
to her table. Mormont came at once, and went to one knee before
her. “Khaleesi,” he said, “I am yours to
command.”
She patted the stuffed horsehide cushion beside her. “Sit
and talk with me.”
“You honor me.” The knight seated himself
cross-legged on the cushion. A slave knelt before him, offering a
wooden platter full of ripe figs. Ser Jorah took one and bit it in
half.
“Where is my brother?” Dany asked. “He ought
to have come by now, for the feast.”
“I saw His Grace this morning,” he told her.
“He told me he was going to the Western Market, in search of
wine.”
“Wine?” Dany said doubtfully. Viserys could not
abide the taste of the fermented mare’s milk the Dothraki
drank, she knew that, and he was oft at the bazaars these days,
drinking with the traders who came in the great caravans from east
and west. He seemed to find their company more congenial than
hers.
“Wine,” Ser Jorah confirmed, “and he has some
thought to recruit men for his army from the sellswords who guard
the caravans.” A serving girl laid a blood pie in front of
him, and he attacked it with both hands.
“Is that wise?” she asked. “He has no gold to
pay soldiers. What if he’s betrayed?” Caravan guards
were seldom troubled much by thoughts of honor, and the Usurper in
King’s Landing would pay well for her brother’s head.
“You ought to have gone with him, to keep him safe. You are
his sworn sword.”
“We are in Vaes Dothrak,” he reminded her. “No
one may carry a blade here or shed a man’s blood.”
“Yet men die,” she said. “Jhogo told me. Some
of the traders have eunuchs with them, huge men who strangle
thieves with wisps of silk. That way no blood is shed and the gods
are not angered.”
“Then let us hope your brother will be wise enough not to
steal anything.” Ser Jorah wiped the grease off his mouth
with the back of his hand and leaned close over the table.
“He had planned to take your dragon’s eggs, until I
warned him that I’d cut off his hand if he so much as touched
them.”
For a moment Dany was so shocked she had no words. “My
eggs . . . but they’re mine, Magister Illyrio gave them to me,
a bride gift, why would Viserys want . . . they’re only
stones . . . ”
“The same could be said of rubies and diamonds and fire
opals, Princess . . . and dragon’s eggs are rarer by far.
Those traders he’s been drinking with would sell their own
manhoods for even one of those stones, and with all three Viserys
could buy as many sellswords as he might need.”
Dany had not known, had not even suspected. “Then . . . he
should have them. He does not need to steal them. He had only to
ask. He is my brother . . . and my true king.”
“He is your brother,” Ser Jorah acknowledged.
“You do not understand, ser,” she said. “My
mother died giving me birth, and my father and my brother Rhaegar
even before that. I would never have known so much as their names
if Viserys had not been there to tell me. He was the only one left.
The only one. He is all I have.”
“Once,” said Ser Jorah. “No longer, Khaleesi.
You belong to the Dothraki now. In your womb rides the stallion who
mounts the world.” He held out his cup, and a slave filled it
with fermented mare’s milk, sour-smelling and thick with
clots.
Dany waved her away. Even the smell of it made her feel ill, and
she would take no chances of bringing up the horse heart she had
forced herself to eat. “What does it mean?” she asked.
“What is this stallion? Everyone was shouting it at me, but I
don’t understand.”
“The stallion is the khal of khals promised in ancient
prophecy, child. He will unite the Dothraki into a single khalasar
and ride to the ends of the earth, or so it was promised. All the
people of the world will be his herd.”
“Oh,” Dany said in a small voice. Her hand smoothed
her robe down over the swell of her stomach. “I named him
Rhaego.”
“A name to make the Usurper’s blood run
cold.”
Suddenly Doreah was tugging at her elbow. “My lady,
“ the handmaid whispered urgently, “your brother . . . ”
Dany looked down the length of the long, roofless hall and there
he was, striding toward her. From the lurch in his step, she could
tell at once that Viserys had found his wine . . . and something
that passed for courage.
He was wearing his scarlet silks, soiled and travel-stained. His
cloak and gloves were black velvet, faded from the sun. His boots
were dry and cracked, his silver-blond hair matted and tangled. A
longsword swung from his belt in a leather scabbard. The Dothraki
eyed the sword as he passed; Dany heard curses and threats and
angry muttering rising all around her, like a tide. The music died
away in a nervous stammering of drums.
A sense of dread closed around her heart. “Go to
him,” she commanded Ser Jorah. “Stop him. Bring him
here. Tell him he can have the dragon’s eggs if that is what
he wants.” The knight rose swiftly to his feet.
“Where is my sister?” Viserys shouted, his voice
thick with wine. “I’ve come for her feast. How dare you
presume to eat without me? No one eats before the king. Where is
she? The whore can’t hide from the dragon.”
He stopped beside the largest of the three firepits, peering
around at the faces of the Dothraki. There were five thousand men
in the hall, but only a handful who knew the Common Tongue. Yet
even if his words were incomprehensible, you had only to look at
him to know that he was drunk.
Ser Jorah went to him swiftly, whispered something in his ear,
and took him by the arm, but Viserys wrenched free. “Keep
your hands off me! No one touches the dragon without
leave.”
Dany glanced anxiously up at the high bench. Khal Drogo was
saying something to the other khals beside him. Khal Jommo grinned,
and Khal Ogo began to guffaw loudly.
The sound of laughter made Viserys lift his eyes. “Khal
Drogo,” he said thickly, his voice almost polite.
“I’m here for the feast.” He staggered away from
Ser Jorah, making to join the three khals on the high bench.
Khal Drogo rose, spat out a dozen words in Dothraki, faster than
Dany could understand, and pointed. “Khal Drogo says your
place is not on the high bench,” Ser Jorah translated for her
brother. “Khal Drogo says your place is there.”
Viserys glanced where the khal was pointing. At the back of the
long hall, in a corner by the wall, deep in shadow so better men
would not need to look on them, sat the lowest of the low; raw
unblooded boys, old men with clouded eyes and stiff joints, the
dim-witted and the maimed. Far from the meat, and farther from
honor. “That is no place for a king,” her brother
declared.
“Is place,” Khal Drogo answered, in the Common
Tongue that Dany had taught him, “for Sorefoot King.”
He clapped his hands together. “A cart! Bring cart for Khal
Rhaggat!”
Five thousand Dothraki began to laugh and shout. Ser Jorah was
standing beside Viserys, screaming in his ear, but the roar in the
hall was so thunderous that Dany could not hear what he was saying.
Her brother shouted back and the two men grappled, until Mormont
knocked Viserys bodily to the floor.
Her brother drew his sword.
The bared steel shone a fearful red in the glare from the
firepits. “Keep away from me!” Viserys hissed. Ser
Jorah backed off a step, and her brother climbed unsteadily to his
feet. He waved the sword over his head, the borrowed blade that
Magister Illyrio had given him to make him seem more kingly.
Dothraki were shrieking at him from all sides, screaming vile
curses.
Dany gave a wordless cry of terror. She knew what a drawn sword
meant here, even if her brother did not.
Her voice made Viserys turn his head, and he saw her for the
first time. “There she is,” he said, smiling. He
stalked toward her, slashing at the air as if to cut a path through
a wall of enemies, though no one tried to bar his way.
“The blade . . . you must not,” she begged him.
“Please, Viserys. It is forbidden. Put down the sword and
come share my cushions. There’s drink, food . . . is it the
dragon’s eggs you want? You can have them, only throw away
the sword.”
“Do as she tells you, fool,” Ser Jorah shouted,
“before you get us all killed.”
Viserys laughed. “They can’t kill us. They
can’t shed blood here in the sacred city . . . but I
can.” He laid the point of his sword between Daenerys’s
breasts and slid it downward, over the curve of her belly. “I
want what I came for,” he told her. “I want the crown
he promised me. He bought you, but he never paid for you. Tell him
I want what I bargained for, or I’m taking you back. You and
the eggs both. He can keep his bloody foal. I’ll cut the
bastard out and leave it for him.” The sword point pushed
through her silks and pricked at her navel. Viserys was weeping,
she saw; weeping and laughing, both at the same time, this man who
had once been her brother.
Distantly, as from far away, Dany heard her handmaid Jhiqui
sobbing in fear, pleading that she dared not translate, that the
khal would bind her and drag her behind his horse all the way up
the Mother of Mountains. She put her arm around the girl.
“Don’t be afraid,” she said. “I shall tell
him.”
She did not know if she had enough words, yet when she was done
Khal Drogo spoke a few brusque sentences in Dothraki, and she knew
he understood. The sun of her life stepped down from the high
bench. “What did he say?” the man who had been her brother
asked her, flinching.
It had grown so silent in the hall that she could hear the bells
in Khal Drogo’s hair, chiming softly with each step he took.
His bloodriders followed him, like three copper shadows. Daenerys
had gone cold all over. “He says you shall have a splendid
golden crown that men shall tremble to behold.”
Viserys smiled and lowered his sword. That was the saddest
thing, the thing that tore at her afterward . . . the way he
smiled. “That was all I wanted,” he said. “What
was promised.”
When the sun of her life reached her, Dany slid an arm around
his waist. The khal said a word, and his bloodriders leapt forward.
Qotho seized the man who had been her brother by the arms. Haggo
shattered his wrist with a single, sharp twist of his huge hands.
Cohollo pulled the sword from his limp fingers. Even now Viserys
did not understand. “No,” he shouted, “you cannot
touch me, I am the dragon, the dragon, and I will be
crowned!”
Khal Drogo unfastened his belt. The medallions were pure gold,
massive and ornate, each one as large as a man’s hand. He
shouted a command. Cook slaves pulled a heavy iron stew pot from
the firepit, dumped the stew onto the ground, and returned the pot
to the flames. Drogo tossed in the belt and watched without
expression as the medallions turned red and began to lose their
shape. She could see fires dancing in the onyx of his eyes. A slave
handed him a pair of thick horsehair mittens, and he pulled them
on, never so much as looking at the man.
Viserys began to scream the high, wordless scream of the coward
facing death. He kicked and twisted, whimpered like a dog and wept
like a child, but the Dothraki held him tight between them. Ser
Jorah had made his way to Dany’s side. He put a hand on her
shoulder. “Turn away, my princess, I beg you.”
“No.” She folded her arms across the swell of her
belly, protectively.
At the last, Viserys looked at her. “Sister, please . . . Dany, tell them . . . make them . . . sweet sister . . . ”
When the gold was half-melted and starting to run, Drogo reached
into the flames, snatched out the pot. “Crown!” he
roared. “Here. A crown for Cart King!” And upended the
pot over the head of the man who had been her brother.
The sound Viserys Targaryen made when that hideous iron helmet
covered his face was like nothing human. His feet hammered a
frantic beat against the dirt floor, slowed, stopped. Thick globs
of molten gold dripped down onto his chest, setting the scarlet
silk to smoldering . . . yet no drop of blood was spilled. He was no dragon, Dany thought, curiously calm. Fire cannot kill
a dragon.