Game of Thrones: Reign of the Dragonking
Chapter 174 174: [174] The Conqueror's Throne
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The silence hit them first.
It wasn't just the absence of sound. It was the absence of wrongness, of the fundamental violation of nature that had filled every breath for days. The unnatural cold that had seeped into bones and souls alike simply... stopped. Not gradually, but like a candle being snuffed.
On Winterfell's walls, a young recruit named Tommen – no, not that Tommen, just a farmboy from White Harbor who'd never held a sword before last week – watched the impossible unfold before his eyes.
The wights didn't fall. They dissolved.
Like morning frost under the first touch of spring sun, the hundreds of thousands of corpses that had been clawing their way toward the castle simply came apart. Ancient bones crumbled to powder. Frozen flesh sublimated into mist. The terrible blue light in their eyes flickered once, twice, then vanished as if it had never existed.
The entire army of the dead, the force that had broken the ancient Wall itself, reduced to dust and memory in the span of a heartbeat.
"Seven fucking hells," Tommen whispered, then immediately apologized to the gods out of habit.
Lord Umber stood frozen at the battlements, his massive frame trembling. Not from fear now, but from something closer to religious awe. His hand found the hilt of his sword, then released it, as if realizing how utterly pointless steel had become.
"The dragons," someone muttered. "The dragons have won."
As if summoned by the words, a single beam of sunlight pierced the perpetual grey that had choked the sky for days. It fell on Winterfell like a spotlight. Far from there, it also struck the battlefield too, illuminating the field of ash and ancient dust where an army of the dead had stood moments before.
The light hurt. Not physically, but in the way seeing something impossibly beautiful can hurt. Men who'd spent days certain they would die, who'd made peace with becoming blue-eyed corpses themselves, fell to their knees. Some wept. Others laughed with the hysteria of those who'd glimpsed the abyss and somehow survived.
Catelyn Stark gripped the battlements so hard her knuckles turned white. Little Eddard squirmed in her arms, pointing at the sky with childish delight at the pretty lights. She held him tighter, unable to look away from the miracle unfolding.
We're alive. By all the gods, we're really alive.
The thought felt impossible. Fragile. Like if she acknowledged it too loudly, reality would correct itself and the dead would rise again.
A roar split the sky.
Then another. Then a third, harmonizing in a chord that made the castle's foundations tremble.
Three shapes emerged from the parting clouds, blotting out the new sun. Rhaegal and Drogon flew in perfect formation, their jade and obsidian scales catching the light like gemstones the size of towers. But it was the figure between them that stole every breath, every thought, every prayer.
Viserion had grown once again.
Not just larger, but more. Her wingspan was so vast it seemed to eclipse the entire sky above Winterfell. Each beat of her wings created pressure waves that flattened grass and sent loose snow spiraling. Her golden scales didn't just reflect light – they seemed to generate their own radiance, turning her into a second sun descending to earth.
"Mother have mercy," Jon Snow whispered beside Robb. His hand found Longclaw's hilt instinctively, then fell away. What good was Valyrian steel against something that had just ended winter itself?
But even Viserion wasn't the most impossible sight.
Two figures flew ahead of the dragons. Not riding. Flying. Moving under their own power with the ease of birds on the wing.
What a spectacle it was as Daenerys Targaryen descended first. She looked like something from the age of legends given flesh. A Goddess who birthed Dragons.
Her silver hair seemed to float independent of wind or gravity, and every strand glowed with subtle inner light. Her eyes burned violet-bright even from this distance, and when she moved, it was with a fluid grace that suggested her bones had been replaced with something more elegant than mere mortal calcium.
She landed softly, barely disturbing the ash-covered ground. A crater didn't form. The earth simply accepted her presence as if reality itself had decided she belonged there.
Then her brother touched down.
The impact cracked stone. Sent shockwaves rippling outward through the frozen earth. Created a perfect circle of melted snow that steamed in the new sunlight.
Viserys Targaryen stood at the battlefield's heart, and he was changed again.
He'd been tall before. Now he was immense, easily seven and a half feet of muscle and coiled power. Horns curved from his temples, wrapping around a crown that seemed forged from obsidian and captured flame. His eyes blazed with vertical pupils that held the fury of colliding stars. When he breathed, small flames escaped his nostrils.
But it was his presence that truly overwhelmed. Standing near him felt like standing too close to a forge. Not just hot but fundamentally transformative. The air itself seemed to bend around him, as if reality recognized something more real than itself.
On the battlements, hardened Northern warriors took involuntary steps backward. They couldn't be blamed. It was natural to fear the King of the Dragons. Wildlings who'd fought bears and giants with their bare hands found themselves kneeling without conscious thought.
Robb Stark stood frozen, watching this transformed creature who wore his good-sister's husband's face. This is what saved us, he thought. This is what stands between humanity and extinction. Unbelievable.
The Dragon King surveyed the assembled armies of the living. His gaze swept across Winterfell's walls, across the ranks of exhausted soldiers, across the wildlings and northmen who'd somehow survived the unsurvivable.
He raised one hand. Flames danced between his fingers, casual as breathing.
When he spoke, his voice carried across the entire battlefield without shouting. Not loud, but absolute. As if the universe itself had decided his words deserved to be heard.
"Rejoice."
The word felt physical. Not a suggestion or request, but a command backed by the power to unmake reality itself.
He let it settle, let every soul present feel the weight of it. Then continued.
"Your King has won."
For a heartbeat, only stunned silence answered. The armies of men and wildlings stared at this transformed dragon nearing godhood, trying to process what their eyes insisted was real but their minds refused to accept.
Then a single wildling – Tormund Giantsbane, never one for silence – threw his axe into the air and screamed. A wordless roar of triumph, relief, and life itself refusing to be extinguished.
The dam broke.
A Northern knight joined him, then another, until thousands of voices erupted in a wave of sound that shook Winterfell's ancient stones. Not words or songs, but raw emotion given voice – the primal scream of those who'd stared death in its blue eyes and somehow, impossibly, lived to mock it.
Catelyn found herself weeping, though whether from joy or terror she couldn't say. Lyanna tugged at her grandmother's skirts, asking why everyone was shouting, her child's mind unable to grasp the miracle they'd witnessed.
On the battlefield, Viserys allowed himself a small smile. Not the cruel smirk he often wore, but something genuine. Something that suggested beneath the god and the monster, a man still existed who'd just saved the world and found it good.
In the end, he was a fan of the show. And for a man like that, this was the Season End that made him feel relaxed. He loved this.
Daenerys moved to his side, busy looking like a goddess of moonlight and shadow. She didn't speak, but her violet eyes held questions. What now? What comes after saving the world?
He answered without words, his gaze turning south.
Not to King's Landing or even Westeros, but beyond. To continents unconquered, to empires that had never known the weight of dragon wings.
The game isn't over, his expression said. It's barely begun.
****
Halfway across the world, in a hall where the very air tasted of centuries, something ancient stirred.
The Hall of Celestial Tranquility lived up to its name in the worst possible way. Silence wasn't just encouraged here – it was enforced by magics older than the Wall had been. Courtiers remained in flawless formation, their silk robes forming a kaleidoscope of colors that was almost painful to gaze at directly. Not because the colors were bright, but because they appeared to span more dimensions than human eyes could perceive.
Jade pillars carved with entwined dragons held up a ceiling painted with star charts that showed constellations from skies no living astronomer had ever witnessed. The air hung thick with lotus blossom incense, imported spices worth more than small kingdoms, and something else. Something that pressed against the skin like invisible water.
Power.
Near the base of the dais, barely visible in shadows that seemed deeper than they should be, a bald man in simple grey robes observed everything with eyes that had watched empires rise and fall. Varys had fled from one dragon only to find himself in the coils of something far older, far stranger.
But perhaps, he thought, this serpent can swallow the lizard I fled.
The God-Emperor sat motionless on the Jade Throne. Not sitting so much as being, as if he'd grown there like a crystal formation over millennia. His face hid behind a veil of green pearls, each one worth a fleet of ships, arranged in patterns that hurt to study too long. His robes were cloth-of-gold, but they seemed to ripple and flow independent of any breeze.
For three hundred years, the God-Emperor had ruled in name while a hundred princes squabbled over actual power. His authority rarely extended beyond the palace walls. But his personal might? That was legend made manifest. Stories spoke of him reducing armies to ash with a gesture, of calling down stars to obliterate cities that displeased him.
Varys had dismissed such tales as exaggeration.
Now, standing in this hall where time itself seemed to slow, he wondered if the stories had been understating things.
A gong sounded, deep and resonant enough to rattle teeth. A sorcerer at the throne's base bowed so low his forehead nearly touched marble. That was a strange man, even to Varys. The man's fingernails extended a foot beyond his fingers, and were painted in patterns that seemed to waver when not directly observed. How odd.
"Divine One." His voice echoed strangely, as if the hall itself was speaking. "The Eye of the West has witnessed a great disturbance."
The court, disciplined beyond anything Westeros could imagine, allowed not a whisper. But Varys saw shoulders tense, saw hands that had been relaxed now grip sword hilts hidden beneath silk.
The sorcerer continued, and despite his training, his voice trembled slightly. "The Long Night... has ended. The Great Other has fallen."
That got reactions. Tiny ones – a widening of eyes here, a sharp intake of breath there – but in this place, such displays were equivalent to screaming in terror.
"The one they call the Dragon King, Viserys Targaryen, has slain winter itself." The sorcerer paused, clearly struggling with what came next. "He… he commands three dragons of immense size. Witnesses report the largest could darken the sky above Qarth. His power..." Another pause. "Divine One, it bends reality. The Iron Bank is ash. Braavos burned. The Faceless Men are extinct. All of Westeros and part of Essos bend the knee."
Varys allowed himself the smallest of smiles, hidden in shadow.
Isn't this so interesting? He'd gambled everything on finding a power to counter the dragon he'd helped create. The Spider had spun his final web, and if the God-Emperor was what the legends claimed...
Perhaps dragons can be caught in jade.
The God-Emperor did not move. The pearl veil didn't stir. But the temperature in the hall dropped by exactly one degree. Not enough to cause discomfort, but enough to be noticed. Enough to send a message.
He was listening.
The silence stretched. Seconds became minutes. Several courtiers swayed slightly, the strain of maintaining perfect stillness taking its toll. But none moved. To move without permission in the God-Emperor's presence was to invite correction, and correction usually involved several family members mysteriously vanishing.
Finally, the God-Emperor made a single gesture. One jade-ringed finger lifted perhaps an inch, then lowered.
The entire court – generals in golden lacquered armor, sorcerers with staffs of dragon bone, a hundred princes in their house colors, tax collectors with abacuses carved from pearl – bowed as one perfect unit and filed out.
Their exit was absolutely silent. Three hundred people leaving without a single footstep, rustle of silk, or cleared throat.
Within moments, only Varys remained. The Spider and the God.
For the first time in three centuries, the God-Emperor spoke.
His voice was not a voice. It was a chorus. A hundred throats speaking in perfect unison, creating sounds that shouldn't exist in mortal air. Ancient beyond measure, utterly devoid of anything resembling human emotion.
"Another dragon claims the sun," the chorus said. "We have seen this before. They burn brightly. Then they fall."
Varys stepped forward carefully, aware he was likely the first person to speak directly to the God-Emperor in decades. "This one is different, Divine One." His voice, usually so controlled, barely rose above a whisper in the cavernous hall. "He broke the world's rules. Manifested powers that should not exist. He is... an aberration."
The pearl veil shifted slightly. For a moment, Varys thought he glimpsed something behind it. Perhaps eyes that held depths stranger than any ocean.
The God-Emperor raised a hand. The movement was glacially slow, as if he was pushing through invisible water. When his fingers spread, the air shimmered.
A map materialized from nothing. Not drawn or projected, but woven from light and shadow and something that Varys had no idea about.
It showed the entire known world in perfect detail. Every mountain range, every river, every city down to individual buildings.
The God-Emperor's finger, impossibly long and pale as moonlight, traced a path. From the ruins of the Wall, down through Westeros, across the Narrow Sea. Through the Free Cities, over the Dothraki Sea.
It stopped, hovering over the Golden Empire of Yi Ti.
"The world," the hundred voices said, and for the first time something like curiosity entered their tone, "is not large enough for two heavens."
The map vanished as suddenly as it had appeared. The God-Emperor fell silent once more, becoming a statue of flesh and jade and ageless will.
Varys stood in the silence, contemplating the collision of men so strong they claimed to be gods that was now inevitable. He'd played the game of thrones for decades, manipulating kings and kingdoms with whispers and coin.
Now he stood between two forces that made such games look like children playing with toys.
Fire and Jade, he thought. Dragonking and God-Emperor. The world will shake when they meet.
He bowed deeply and backed away, leaving the God-Emperor alone on his throne, a timeless monument to power that had forgotten how to be human.
Outside the hall, Varys allowed himself a moment of genuine uncertainty. He'd set pieces in motion that he couldn't fully control. Created a conflict between powers that dwarfed anything he'd witnessed.
But perhaps, he thought as jade doors closed behind him with soundless finality, that's what the world needs. Not peace, but a reckoning.
The Spider smiled in the shadows, already beginning to spin new webs.
After all, as his bitter rival once said, chaos wasn't a pit. It was a ladder.
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Author Note: One last, SUPER LONG, chapter awaits....