The guest quarters of Sunspear slled of citrus, myrrh, and the faint salt of the sea. Sunlight slanted through latticed windows, painting golden bars across the tiled floor.
Daario Naharis lounged on a cushioned divan, one boot propped on the low table, a cup of Dornish red in his hand. His Tyroshi cloak was draped carelessly over the back of the chair, his arakh resting within easy reach.
He looked perfectly at ease.
The door opened without warning.
No knock. No announcent. Just the soft scrape of sandals on stone.
Daario did not turn at once. He took another sip of wine, slow and deliberate, then set the cup aside before glancing over his shoulder.
Oberyn Martell stepped inside, golden silks whispering against stone. His black hair was freshly oiled, and his eyes were dark, sharp, and dangerous, sothing that did not bother hiding behind courtesy.
Daario didn’t rise. He only smiled, slow and crooked, and lifted his cup in a lazy greeting.
"So," he said lightly, "the famous Red Viper."
He crossed the room with loose, predatory grace and stopped a few paces away, studying Daario as though deciding which part of him to strike first.
"So," Oberyn said, voice smooth but edged with steel.
"You are the man my brother received from across the Narrow Sea. A sellsword from a queen no one has seen in years."
Daario chuckled softly. "Most n would call it a generous gift. Your brother seed to think so."
Oberyn’s smile was thin. "My brother is a careful man. I am not."
He took another step closer, circling slightly. Silence stretched between them.
Daario broke it first.
"You ca to see if I was lying," he said. "About her."
Oberyn tilted his head slightly.
"I ca," he said, voice calm, "to decide whether you were worth keeping alive."
Daario laughed low, amused, unbothered.
"And? Have you decided?"
Oberyn took another step forward. "Not yet."
He circled slowly, like a man inspecting a blade before deciding whether it was worth using or breaking.
He took a slow sip of wine, eyes never leaving Oberyn’s.
Then Oberyn spoke. "You sailed from Slaver’s Bay," he said slowly. "Across half the world. Risked storms, pirates, and worse."
He stopped just behind Daario. "All for a letter."
Daario did not turn. "All for a queen," he corrected.
Oberyn’s lips curved faintly.
"A queen," he repeated. "Or a girl with dragons and a talent for gathering desperate n."
Daario’s smile sharpened.
"Careful, prince," he said softly. "You haven’t t her yet."
Oberyn stepped around him, coming to stand face to face.
"No," he said. "But I have heard stories."
A pause.
"Tell , sellsword... Do you follow this silver queen because she inspires you?" His voice dropped, mocking.
"Or because she pays you well enough to forget that you are still just a whore with a sword?"
Daario’s grin widened, unfazed.
"I’ve been called worse by better n," he said. "And yes, she pays. But not with coins alone."
Oberyn stopped circling. "Then what does she pay with?"
"Belief," Daario answered simply. "She makes n believe they can be more than what they were. Slaves beco soldiers. Cities that once chained their people now call her Mother."
Daario leaned forward just enough to be dangerous. "n follow her because they want to, and because they believe in her."
Silence again. This ti heavier.
Oberyn studied him more closely now, not dismissing, not mocking.
Testing.
"And the dragons?" he asked.
Daario smiled slowly. "Real."
"That is not an answer."
"It is the only one that matters."
Oberyn’s gaze hardened. "Describe them."
Daario did not hesitate.
"The black one," he said, "He is fire given flesh. Growing larger every passing day. Temper like a war god. He burns what he wants, when he wants."
He paused, watching Oberyn’s reaction.
"The others are smaller. Not ta, but gentle and less savage than the black one."
Oberyn said nothing. His fingers tapped once against his arm.
"And she controls them?" he asked.
Daario’s grin returned.
"No," he said. "But they listen to her."
Oberyn’s expression did not change, but sothing shifted behind his eyes, a flicker of genuine interest.
Oberyn turned away, pacing slowly toward the open arch where the last light of the sun spilled through.
"A dragon queen," he murmured. "And she sends a sellsword to court Dorne."
Daario shrugged. "She sends what she has."
Oberyn glanced back. "And what else does she have?"
Daario hesitated. Just for a heartbeat. Then he smiled again, but there was sothing different in it now.
Sothing more careful.
"She has a son," he said.
Oberyn stilled. "A son?" he repeated.
Daario nodded. "The boy’s na is Rhaego." The na hung in the air.
Daario gave a small shrug, unconcerned.
"The Dothraki had a different story," he said. "Around their fires, they spoke of a cursed child... a khal’s son born wrong."
His smile turned sharper.
"They said the boy died."
A beat.
Daario t Oberyn’s gaze, completely unfazed.
"They were wrong."
Silence settled, heavy and deliberate.
Oberyn’s eyes sharpened.
"And yet you speak with certainty," he said slowly. "As if you’ve seen this child yourself."
Daario let out a quiet chuckle.
"I have," he said.
A flicker of amusent crossed his face.
"Though he didn’t seem too pleased to see near his mother."
"You expect to believe that this silver queen survived the east with three dragons... and a son who was said to be dead?"
Daario’s gaze t his.
"Alive and strong the boy is," he said. "And he is not... what you would expect."
Oberyn stepped closer again, interest sharpening into sothing dangerous.
"Explain."
Daario chuckled softly. "No," he said.
Oberyn’s expression darkened. "You refuse ?"
"I invite you," Daario corrected. "Co see for yourself."
A pause.
"So things," he added, "are better believed when they are standing right in front of you."
Oberyn studied him long and hard.
Weighing truth. Lies. Risk. For a long mont, neither man spoke.
Then Oberyn let out a quiet breath. Not quite a laugh. Not quite surrender.
"Interesting," he murmured.
He turned toward the door.
"You have done your part, Captain Naharis," he said. "You brought your queen’s voice across the sea."
He paused at the threshold.
"Now I will see if she is worthy of it."
Daario inclined his head, just slightly.
"I think you’ll find she is."
Oberyn glanced back once, eyes bright with sothing fierce and alive.
"We shall see," he said.
Oberyn left without another word, the door closing softly behind him. Daario took another sip of wine, staring at the empty doorway.
He smiled to himself.
"She’s going to like this one," he murmured.
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