𝔍𝔢𝑦𝔫𝔢 𝔚𝔢𝔰𝔱𝔢𝔯𝔩𝔦𝔫𝔤 (
goodandtrue) wrote in
driftfleet2016-10-23 04:55 pm
[001 🐚 Action]
Who: Jeyne and YOU
Broadcast: N/A
Action: SS Golden; SS Blue Fish
When: Oct 23
It hadn't been a great surprise when Jeyne had appeared suddenly on the Golden. For all of her intentions of begging to be at her husband's side, she inwardly knew that she would be placed elsewhere. For the few days she had spent on the Marsiva, as well as the brief conversations she had on her strange device, she had slowly become aware of how these Atroma intended to play. Nothing was about her comfort, it was about this show that they had brought her here for.
For her sanity, and for Robb's sake, she would need to make the best of this situation and allow herself to be moved around as a pawn once more.
She had at least been given a room of her own. For the first few days, she had wandered the ship, acquainting herself with her surroundings, but only when she wasn't with her husband. Traveling between the Golden and the Blue Fish was becoming a routine for her. While she wanted to remain with Robb, she had duties to attend to and couldn't neglect her own crew.
So mornings and evenings, she would travel between the ships, slowly become familiar with the faces she passed (even if she didn't know all of their names.)
Stepping through the sealed doors, Jeyne rested for a moment, catching her breath and regaining her composure. No matter how often she passed people or walked the distance between her ship and the Blue Fish, she still managed to become disoriented and drained.
Hearing another's approach, she forced herself back into composure, bringing a smile once more to her features. "Good day," she said, turning to greet the person that had interrupted her solitude. "Am I in your way?"
Broadcast: N/A
Action: SS Golden; SS Blue Fish
When: Oct 23
It hadn't been a great surprise when Jeyne had appeared suddenly on the Golden. For all of her intentions of begging to be at her husband's side, she inwardly knew that she would be placed elsewhere. For the few days she had spent on the Marsiva, as well as the brief conversations she had on her strange device, she had slowly become aware of how these Atroma intended to play. Nothing was about her comfort, it was about this show that they had brought her here for.
For her sanity, and for Robb's sake, she would need to make the best of this situation and allow herself to be moved around as a pawn once more.
She had at least been given a room of her own. For the first few days, she had wandered the ship, acquainting herself with her surroundings, but only when she wasn't with her husband. Traveling between the Golden and the Blue Fish was becoming a routine for her. While she wanted to remain with Robb, she had duties to attend to and couldn't neglect her own crew.
So mornings and evenings, she would travel between the ships, slowly become familiar with the faces she passed (even if she didn't know all of their names.)
Stepping through the sealed doors, Jeyne rested for a moment, catching her breath and regaining her composure. No matter how often she passed people or walked the distance between her ship and the Blue Fish, she still managed to become disoriented and drained.
Hearing another's approach, she forced herself back into composure, bringing a smile once more to her features. "Good day," she said, turning to greet the person that had interrupted her solitude. "Am I in your way?"

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Perhaps most offensive was her family's station as bannermen to the Lannisters. She was hardly an appropriate wife for a man waging a war against the crown.
"It's a miracle to have him here, asleep or not." Jeyne said honestly, reverence in her tone. "He spoke often of you and with a great deal of affection, both he and your mother."
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"He will wake soon enough," Sansa tried to match her hopefulness. It worked by halves. "And he will be so happy to see you. When he speaks of you, my lady, he sings your praises."
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The Others take them both...and all Lannisters for that matter.
She smiled in gratitude at Sansa, hoping that some sort of bridge could be made between them. What she had heard of Sansa had been lovely and warm, the sort of sister that she had always hoped to have. Close to her in age and temperament.
"He's the best of men." Her affection for him plain in her tone. "I love him with all that I am and have only ever wanted to be a good wife to him." Despite all that happened, she would still try. "Have you been in this place long, my lady? Have they treated you well here?"
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"Long enough. And yet also not nearly long enough. Nearly a year, Lady Jeyne. For the most part, I have been treated very well indeed. These people are uncommonly kind, as you'll be quick to learn."
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"Not nearly long enough? Does that mean that you hope to stay in this place?" She hadn't considered whether or not that was an option open to them. Some had said that others were taken away, but she somehow doubted they had as much choice as they did in coming here.
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Sansa's question was precise. She wondered (naturally) at her good-sister's place in the 'timeline', so to speak. What did she remember? What did she not yet know? Or, if she was as far behind as Robb had been, had her husband shared with her the developments learned from his siblings?
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Robb was here, alive in this world. What did she have to go back to in Westeros? Two years of isolation, surrounded by family that betrayed her husband and her, then an eventual marriage to a Lannister. She would be forced to wed someone from the family that had killed the man she loved.
How could she return to that or a life without Robb?
"I don't want to be without Robb," she admitted softly. "I can't go back to that. How does he feel about staying here? Does he want to?"
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Exhaling, she glanced once more over her shoulder. "Would you join me in my...office? If you would like to talk."
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"Of course."
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Sansa didn't like turning her back on someone who was little more than a stranger. But it wasn't as though she could walk backwards, balancing her tea-tray as she was. So Sansa strode quickly -- nudging the office door open (it boasted her name on a plaque) and stepping aside so Jeyne could join you.
"I could get another cup for tea, as well, if you'd like."
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She stepped inside, wringing her hands nervously as she looked about curiously.
"No, thank you. It is kind of you to offer." She wasn't certain that her stomach would tolerate anything at the moment. "You are a personal as well?"
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"Ever since I arrived. I confess," she puffed her cheeks with a sigh, "I don't know what to do with the duties."
There was so little she could offer these people, aside from her unending gratitude that they should take in her siblings, and herself, and allow them to live on their ship. On occasion, she did a bit of needlepoint for them -- but it hardly sufficed.
There were a trio of chairs in the office. One behind the desk, and two before it. But Sansa, achingly aware of the optics should she sit behind the desk, took one of the pair. She offered the opposite chair to Lady Jeyne.
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Accepting the seat that Sansa offered, Jeyne folded her hands in her lap, trying to conceal her fidgeting and nerves. She had always imagined how it would be to meet her good-sister, but never expected how nervous she would feel.
"The room seems very comfortable." She offered shyly. "You are rather close to Robb's, I think?"
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Sansa genuinely cared for the doctor, and yet her voice was retrained to that superficial, overly-polite tone. It made it sound like a lie, no matter how much she meant the compliment.
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Sansa's tone worried her, leaving her wondering what sort of mood her good-sister was in. Was she imposing on Sansa's patience?
"Do you think it is possible to stay in this place?"
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For her part, she would cherish the time she had. Lock every lovely memory away in the hopes that she might savour it forever.
"Our captain on the Blue Fish has promised me my family could join his world, mayhaps, should a way be found. It seems it may be a happier place than Westeros."
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It was something to consider more seriously when she could think more clearly.
"Sokka?" She asked, carefully pronouncing his name. It still felt strange against her tongue. "I hope there is a way to allow it. Perhaps there is even a chance to spare Robb from what happened."
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"I hope there is," she answered in a small and strained voice. "There is little else I want beyond my family's safety."
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While she hadn't meant to offend Sansa, it wasn't mistrust that caused her to deny the guest right. Were she to eat or drink anything, Jeyne had little doubt that she would be ill. Fear, nerves and anger had twisted her stomach until she felt as though she would be sick. It didn't seem appropriate to subject her good-sister to her discomfort.
"Forgive me for raising such a painful topic," she murmured.
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"Mayhaps you might tell me about your ship, instead," Sansa offered an easy escape from this subject-matter. Delicately, she nudged the conversation away from their shared grief.
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"They have placed me on the Golden," she said, glancing down at her hands. "The crew is very kind. Though, I don't think it is nearly as large as this one seems."
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"Is he well? Does he like it here?"
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And the worst heartaches are still yet to come for Bran. Most, he'd learned through his siblings upon the ship. But in a sense, he was still sheltered from them. For Sansa, however, the best was learning that her two littlest brothers were not as dead as she had feared.
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"I had the pleasure to meet your brother, Jon Snow as well. He was very reassuring when I arrived. I should like to meet Bran too." She would then be more familiar with her good-family.
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