#clint making up rules and declaring uncle hood
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[ inbox prompts ] accepting ⸻ @monmuses ⸻ [text] This forced open my third eye and I saw the devil (from Charity)
[ Contact ; Charity ⸺ Note ; Banner Jr, the real threat ]
[ sent ] ⸺ OH MY GOD
[ sent ] ⸺ WHY WOULD YOU SEND IT TO ME TOO
[ sent ] ⸺ why do i have suffer too
[ sent ] ⸺ isnt there some by law that you cant make your uncles suffer?
[ sent ] ⸺ kid i write this lovingly
[ sent ] ⸺ what is wrong with you
#clint making up rules and declaring uncle hood#as well as just what is wrong with you char? why must his third eye be opened too?#monmuses#[ ic ] monmuses; charity#[ thr ] monmuses#[ queue ] scheduled post#[ verse ; alt 616 ]
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The Queen's Husband [8/?]
When her reign is threatened, the Queen of Ergona must find a husband to secure her throne.
Word Count: 3.020
Warnings: angst, I'm evil, very brief mentions of violent acts
A/N: f you're interested, I posted some visuals for this story here and here. Many, many, many thanks to @xbuchananbarnes for helping me with this chapter. I hope you like it ♡
Series masterlist
“The man that stabbed your uncle, Baron Zemo. He said something before he killed himself: Hail Hydra. I’ve heard these words before, Your Grace. I’ve heard them from the mouth of Joseph Rogers, the Duke of Arvenia and King Steven’s father.”
“What?” you gasped.
“It’s true, Your Grace. I swear on my uncle's grave! I would never lie to you, especially not about something this serious,” Peter quickly assured. The harsh wind and the deep purple shadows under his eyes made him appear much older than his budding years.
“I don’t doubt your honor, Peter,” you said. “But perhaps you were mistaken about the man you saw?”
The boy shook his head.
“As much as he tries, Lord Rogers is not very discreet, Your Grace. It was him, lurking in the shadows of the Keep. I know what I saw.”
Peter’s words were half a confession, half a desperate plea for you to believe them. You never trusted Lord Rogers - he was pompous and greedy - but he was your husband’s father. That made him your family.
Of course you knew there was at least a small amount of conspiracy in your Court - especially when it came to West Ergonans - but to think of an entire treasonous plot lead by your very own in-law? It was preposterous.
“He mentioned your mother, Your Grace,” Peter whispered.
You turned to him so fast the joints in your neck cracked.
“My mother?”
“Yes. He said a man named Sitwell,” Peter visibly flinched, and not from the cold, “stabbed her. In Geotach. And apparently Lord Rogers was the one to convince your father to announce her death as suicide, because no one would believe otherwise.”
An agonized scream rose from your larynx, spilling past your vocal cords. It nearly escaped from your throat, but you bit your tongue, coating your mouth in pungent, metallic blood. It made your stomach queasy.
Your mother’s death was discredited and you were ruled as a grieving girl, spinning tales to fill the void her absence left. It was told that you were sent to live in Foghar because the memories of Albeon were too much for you to bear, but in reality, it was exile: your father never forgave you for running away that night.
“You were supposed to die, Y/N. Not her!”
He passed without ever speaking to you again, leaving you his throne and his ghosts.
Not many knew the truth of your mother’s murder. Even less fully believed in you. This secret was kept under lock and key, in a vault safer than those beneath the dungeons of the Keep, and not one person would risk your trust by sharing it - not even with a good boy like Peter Parker.
Your uncle held his squire in very high regards, but not even that was enough to divulge your privacy.
“Who would Lord Rogers meet?” you mumbled tentatively. In your mind's eye, the words came out of your lips vermillion-colored.
“Thrice he met with Lord Pierce, the Marquess of Gormes. And in one occasion he met with a man I couldn’t recognize. He was white and dark-haired and visited the Keep in November.”
Your stomach churned with sickness and you desperately wanted to puke from sheer despair. You slapped a hand across your mouth, holding back a gag.
Lord Pierce was repugnant with his sleazy ways and sexist remarks, but unfortunately that was the normality rather than the exception. Gormes was very close to Arvenia as well, so it made sense that him and Lord Rogers were always together. But still...
Your heart screamed inside your ribcage for you to trust Peter. To storm the Keep to the ground as you scavenged for answers, overturning every stone and every rock. You wanted to take the clay from the bricks and shape them with your bare hands to the form of Rogers and Pierce, just so that you could tear them apart the way they did to you. Yet, your reason - the guiding voice of your reign, trained from an early age to be rational - warned you that there was no actual evidence.
It sounded you so much like your father, haunting your mind like the waves that nearly drowned you.
You wanted it to drown. And your enemies alongside it.
“Peter, I have a mission for you,” you declared. “Ride to the sacred city of Kamar-Taj. Find the Ancient One, tell her everything you just told me. Ride at full speed and stop for nothing. Wear the crown’s colors and hoist the dragon banner - it will ensure you safety on the road. Once you get there, the masters will provide you with food and shelter. If anyone asks, say you're on a special assignment given by Lord Stark before his accident.”
The boy's soft brown irises widened.
"Your Grace, I’m just a squire," he stuttered. "Only knights are allowed to hoist the dragon banner.”
You lowered the hood of your cape. The gale was still blowing fiercely and some pieces of hail slashed your cheekbone, yet you supposed it was more respectful this way.
"Give me your sword, Peter," you asked in the gentlest voice you could muster.
It was no more than a dress sword, more for decoration than anything. Peter was loyal, committed and diligent, but young. Too young. You sent a prayer to the Gods that he didn't pay for the sin you were about to commit.
With a flick of your hand, you mentioned for him to kneel. Natasha and Wanda stopped pretending they weren't paying attention to the conversation and turned, mouths agape with stupefaction.
You touched the sword to Peter's left shoulder, then his right, then his left again, and announced:
"Arise, Sir Peter Parker, Knight of the crown of Ergona," Mother, Maiden and Crone, please protect this boy. "Be safe."
You stood by the window until Peter’s horse disappeared in the foggy wastelands of the surrounding fields. The blood dried in your mouth and in your face, though your gums still tasted sour. There was no sundown, but rather just the sooty grey sky turning inky, as if the death of this day shouldn’t be granted even the simplest of ceremonials.
When night came, you returned to your chambers. People greeted you on your path, bowed their heads in respect, yet the hallways never looked more like a prison than they did then. At some point, Natasha held on to your elbow. Or perhaps it was Wanda. Maybe it was another one of your demons.
“Should we call for the King?” you heard one of them say.
“After what we’ve heard today, do you think the King can be trusted?” the other replied.
Above the fireplace, the Dragon on the tapestry mocked you.
Steve entered without knocking. His hair was longer, almost reaching his chin. He said he had no time for a haircut, but you knew he kept it that way because you liked it. Or so you thought.
He could be a liar.
He could be a traitor.
“Ladies” he greeted, his small smile thinning when he noticed your distress. “My Queen.”
Steve kneeled before you, just like that first afternoon in the rose courtyard. The sight of him made you miss summer and the simplicity of falling in love.
I love you, Steve, you wanted to confess. I love you but that’s not enough anymore.
“What’s wrong, my love?” he whispered and you knew you’d suffer in ways that not even Hydra could conceive if Steve’s love turned out to be a lie.
“We need to talk.”
A bang on his chamber door startled Sam Wilson awake.
In a flash, he grabbed the knife he kept under his pillow and rose, tiptoeing from the bed to the entrance.
“Who is it?” he asked in the most severe voice he could muster.
“It’s Wanda.”
He quickly twisted the lock, sighing when he came face to face with your handmaiden. The candle she was holding made her auburn hair look as if it was painted by the flames of a forest fire. She was hauntingly beautiful.
“You scared me.”
“My apologies, Sir Wilson,” she said. “But the Queen is summoning you.”
Sam nodded.
"I will make myself presentable. Should I meet her at her chambers?"
"No, sir. The Queen requested that you dress appropriately for the weather, and meet her at the stables. She has also commanded you to bring whatever weapons you can carry."
"What?" he exclaimed. "Did something happen?"
"These were my only instructions, sir. Please don't be long."
Wanda turned and rushed down the dark hallway before Sam could ask her anything else. The clock on his mantel told him it was a little past two in the morning. He'd gone to bed a mere four hours earlier, having spent all day reunited with the King and the Council going over the assassination attempt on Lord Stark. You hadn't joined them, but that was expected considering your bond with your uncle - Sam supposed you wouldn't leave Tony's side bedside until he was fully healed.
It wasn't the first time you called for Sam in the middle of the night. He was the Captain of your Queen's Guard and the Queen hardly worked regular hours. But the request for warm clothes and weapons was unexpected, if not suspicious. Still, Sam was fast to dress himself, tucking two daggers inside his boots for good measure before following the path Wanda took.
The Dragon Keep at night was an eerie, unwelcoming place. He didn't believe the legends surrounding your ancestors, but whenever he roamed the fortress at night Sam thought it might have actually been built out of dragon fire, if only for how hostile the hallways were - as hostile as a dragon's mouth, it seemed.
"It's meant to be a stronghold, not a home," you once said, and he wondered if you thought of that yourself or if you were paraphrasing your father.
Sam didn't encounter anyone on his way to the stables but a few wandering rats, yet when he got there he was surprised to see Clint Barton fixing the harnesses of four Thoroughbreds, attached to a black, inconspicuous carriage. In the corner, you, Natasha and Wanda whispered with your heads together. They looked up when he arrived.
"Finally," you said. "I thought I was going to have to come get you myself."
You were trying to be funny, but Sam could only stare at your tired face and sad-looking eyes. You looked stunning as always, in leather breeches and a cloak as dark as the night that waited beyond the gates, but forlorn, distant. As if your lips had never tasted joy and your spirit never roamed freely under sunlight.
"What is this, Y/N?" he asked. "Where is the King?"
Behind you, Natasha and Wanda glanced at each other.
"The King won't be joining us, Sam," you explained. "I need to go on a journey, and I need my best friend to come with me. My crown won't protect us where we're going, in fact, I don't know if it will be worthy of anything at all after tonight. So if you chose to stay I will understand."
Sam shook his head.
"This doesn't make any sense."
"I know," you whispered. "But I can't tell you anything else right now."
Sam Wilson was your first friend. He'd throw pebbles at the window to get your attention while you were studying at Arauta, the Duke of Foghar's ancestral home.
"How come you never play, just study?"
You told him then that you were the princess, and you had to be prepared for the day your father, the King, commanded you to return to the Capital. He giggled then, such a cheerful, melodic blast of glee that you were the trees still remembered it, and cherished the sound of his happiness.
"Yeah, right," he'd snickered. "If you're the princess, then where's your crown?"
When the crown came, Sam stood by you, as a comrade and Knight. And you couldn't help but feel like you were once again asking too much of him.
"Of course I'll go with you, Y/N,” he exhaled, past and present blending together in the space of his breath. "Someone has to look after your royal ass."
He hardly ever saw you cry, but you did when you hugged Natasha goodbye, whispering her a quiet be safe before the entering the coach. The Master of Whispers soon disappeared as the horses started their gallop.
The carriage was way past the city gates when your tears stopped.
The following morning, Bucky Barnes found the King slumped on an armchair by the fireplace of the royal chambers.
The knight was heading to the Armory when Steve’s valet intercepted him, babbling nonsense about the King being in shock and the Queen being nowhere to be found. At first, Bucky was doubtful. All was as it was in the Dragon Keep and perhaps the only thing out of the ordinary was the heavy snow that fell overnight, covering the lands and roads in a thick icy blanket. The staff was still spooked by the attempt on Lord Stark’s life, but the assurance that he would survive soothed their nerves a bit. Yet, the valet had such a haunted look in his eyes that Bucky caved, turning around and following the man to your quarters.
His first knock was light, and so was the second and third. When the fourth knock returned without even a muffled response, he turned the knob slowly, finding the door unlocked.
“Your Majesties?” Bucky announced his presence before entering. He couldn’t see the bed from the entrance, but, even so, he didn’t want to accidentally catch you in a compromised position.
Instead, he saw Steve, wearing the same clothes as the night before, turning your engagement ring on his hand. There was no sign of you.
Bucky mentioned for the valet to leave, before shutting the door. Whatever had happened, it was a conversation he didn’t need to hear.
“Steve?” he said, softer this time, approaching the King as one would an animal.
There were deep, dark circles under his eyes, and his face was puffy from crying. His hair was disheveled, rumpled like the linen shirt stretched across the wide expanse of his shoulders and back. The sparkling blue Sapphire of the ring was the only somehow still managed the catch the light in the dull room.
“Steve?” Bucky repeated, finally standing face to face with this best friend. “What happened?”
“She’s gone,” Steve croaked.
“What?” Bucky furrowed his eyebrows. “Who’s gone? The Queen?”
Steve nodded, still not looking up from the ring.
“She said she wanted some time away from the Capital. That what happened to Stark put ‘things in perspective’ for her and that she needed to think about us.”
“But… Where did she go?” the knight stuttered.
“Foghar,” Steve replied. “Sam and Barton escorted her. Her handmaiden went as well.”
Bucky was speechless. He’d bet his sword - hell, his sword and his armor - that you were as in love with Steve as he was with you. You weren’t friends, but after months living in Albeon and watching you interact with various lords and politicians, Bucky could understand why you were so guarded. A Queen’s life was full of hardships and loneliness. Yet, from his conversations with Steve - and how overjoyed he was with your seemingly growing affections - it seemed like your relationship was progressing well. Bucky never expected you to just leave.
“Did she say when she’s returning?” he asked, even though the answer was clear as day on Steve’s desolate face.
The King shook his head.
“I think I was wrong about Y/N, Bucky,” he sniffed. “And I think she was wrong about me, as well.”
“No pal, you can’t mean that,” Bucky exclaimed, leaning forward and gripping Steve’s shoulder. “Perhaps the attempt on Stark’s life scared her. He is very dear to her and maybe she thought it could’ve been you. I don’t know! But you can’t possibly think she doesn’t love you.”
“How can I not think that? She never said it. I gave her everything and at the first hardship she just… Runs.” Steve barked, his voice failing at the end.
He was broken. A thousand battles couldn’t ruin him, but you could.
Another knock came, and Lady Natasha entered.
“Your Grace,” she announced. “Lord Stark is awake. He calls for you.”
Steve gave her an affirmative nod and cleared his throat.
“I’ll see to him right away,” he turned to Bucky. “What are you doing today?”
“I was on my way to see Hill at the Armory. Maybe she can help identify the silver dagger Zemo used to stab Stark.”
For a few seconds, Steve was quiet. Natasha was still waiting by the door, implacable and impassive.
“I need you to do something for me,” the King said. “I need to you ride to Arvenia and escort my father to Court. Leave as soon as possible. I’ll send him a raven explaining that he should expect you.”
It was Bucky’s turn to frown.
“Your father?” he asked, puzzled. “Why?”
“Stark still has months of bed rest,” Steve explained as he laced his boots. “My father was once the Master of Coin. I could use his help.”
It made no sense. Steve’s relationship with his father was strained, to say the least. As far as Bucky knew - and he knew quite a bit when it came to the King - Joseph Rogers was far from being father of the year.
He wouldn't say so as Lady Natasha was still present, but he couldn't help the nagging sensation that this was Steve's way of getting back at you for leaving. And it was a shitty way.
Still, he bowed.
"Anything else, my King?"
Steve looked up, and his handsome face was still flushed and puffy from crying. He was so far from the man that Bucky always knew that it brought a cold dread to his heart.
"No," he replied. "Safe travels, my friend."
Bucky nodded and left the room, without hugging Steve goodbye.
#steve rogers x reader#steve rogers x female reader#king!steve rogers#king!steve rogers x reader#king!steve#king!steve x reader#steve rogers fanfiction#marvel au#king!au
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