[ sounds good, but she's too paranoid to stop there. she can't keep watching over her shoulder for Cesare – of all people. and whoever else Gilia has in her corner. ]
Gilia, what happened was exactly what I feared. It is why I so desperately begged you to stay away from Aegon.
Your oath honors me and my house, but common men cannot be trusted. And yet you have placed the safety of my family in the hands of one.
[ She pauses. She knows others do not see it, either they know better, or do not understand the language of nobility, honour and duties.
But Alicent does, and for her most of all, she must defend him. ]
Tell me what it is you require but I would ask this to also be remembered, too.
Cesare Borgia honors me, that is why we are married. It was a trick of the void, you see? That is why almost no one knows we were. In the void, we had been married for years and years. We were - well, it was strange, but we had been young and in love, and then he married me, our families were both there, we were to have children.
There was nothing to hold him to that. When we awoke, all of it was false and who should blame him for naming me as nothing at all to him? It was a trick, a dream, bright perhaps, but just that. Yet, he did not. He has done the honourable thing for me, and for our memories. He asked to stay as husband and wife, when as Prince, and as another man here - he need not do any of that.
[ she married her void husband?! Alicent has to stifle a scoff. if she were also to marry hers, she'd be stuck with three - no, four men she hardly knew. it was hardly ideal. ]
It must have been strange for you both. That makes it even more admirable how he has done the right thing by you. I will remember that.
Thank you for being so honest with me, your story has uncovered a side of him I did not know existed.
[ okay, maybe she can respect his commitment a little, but after seeing up close what a scheming weasel Cesare can really be, she doubts their marriage has much to do with honor. but she will worry about that later. first things first: ]
If his word is indeed honorable and true, I ask that you make him swear an oath to me. It would greatly ease my mind to hear him swear that my children will never be harmed by him.
[ She exhales, feeling that familiar roll of her mother's presence at her back when she had to make choices as Queen. Breathing out thinly, she fixes in weighted silence where it's clear she is considering what she requests, what to do about it, how to go about it. ]
And will your sons return the oath? To seek no retribution, and behave honourably?
no subject
Gilia, what happened was exactly what I feared. It is why I so desperately begged you to stay away from Aegon.
Your oath honors me and my house, but common men cannot be trusted. And yet you have placed the safety of my family in the hands of one.
I am sorry, but more needs to be done, Gilia.
no subject
But Alicent does, and for her most of all, she must defend him. ]
Tell me what it is you require but I would ask this to also be remembered, too.
Cesare Borgia honors me, that is why we are married. It was a trick of the void, you see? That is why almost no one knows we were. In the void, we had been married for years and years. We were - well, it was strange, but we had been young and in love, and then he married me, our families were both there, we were to have children.
There was nothing to hold him to that. When we awoke, all of it was false and who should blame him for naming me as nothing at all to him? It was a trick, a dream, bright perhaps, but just that. Yet, he did not. He has done the honourable thing for me, and for our memories. He asked to stay as husband and wife, when as Prince, and as another man here - he need not do any of that.
no subject
It must have been strange for you both. That makes it even more admirable how he has done the right thing by you. I will remember that.
Thank you for being so honest with me, your story has uncovered a side of him I did not know existed.
[ okay, maybe she can respect his commitment a little, but after seeing up close what a scheming weasel Cesare can really be, she doubts their marriage has much to do with honor. but she will worry about that later. first things first: ]
If his word is indeed honorable and true, I ask that you make him swear an oath to me. It would greatly ease my mind to hear him swear that my children will never be harmed by him.
no subject
And will your sons return the oath? To seek no retribution, and behave honourably?
no subject
[
audience laugh track.mp3.]I give you my word.
no subject
[ However she must, whatever she must. ]
no subject