Leaving the territory of Jhogo's khas, Dany led her small retinue—Ser Jorah and her four loyal guards—toward the sprawling outskirts of the khalasar. Here, a group of women in stained Dothraki leather vests worked silently, their rough, cracked fingers moving with surprising dexterity. They were weaving massive straw curtains. With methodical motions, they stripped the ears of grain from the tops of freshly cut wheat stalks, tossing the heads into a nearby dustpan. The remaining stalks, still half-green and half-yellow, were then woven into long mats with the same rhythmic motions one might use to knit a sweater.
It was a stark reminder of Dothraki life. Their yurts were made of these grass curtains, and even cloth was a rarity. Leather was everything.
As Dany approached, the women and the hollow-eyed children beside them looked up, their faces blank. There was no greeting, no sign of respect, but also none of the venom she had seen in Lyra's eyes.
"They are slaves," Jorah murmured, riding closer to her. "From Khal Ogo's khalasar."
His words triggered a cascade of information from her new memory, a brutal lesson in the Dothraki's 'ecological environment.' Only a month ago, in the holy city of Vaes Dothrak, Khal Drogo and Khal Ogo had been drinking together in the same tent, feasting like brothers after the dosh khaleen had prophesied that Dany's son would be the Stallion Who Mounts the World.
Nine days ago, they had met again on the banks of the Lhazar. Khal Ogo had been in the middle of besieging a Lhazareen town when Drogo's khalasar appeared on the horizon. Drogo had immediately ordered his warriors to charge—not to help Ogo, but to smash into the rear of his preoccupied army. While Ogo was focused on the town, Drogo destroyed his khalasar from behind. After sweeping Ogo's forces aside, Drogo had then easily taken the crumbling town for himself.
In the ensuing slaughter, Drogo had personally killed Ogo, Ogo's son, and one of his bloodriders. In a fight of one against three, the only price he paid was a slice across his pectoral muscle. A minor wound, he had boasted. A wound that was now festering, killing him.
The memory was chilling. All friendship and peace existed only within the sacred shadow of the Mother of Mountains in Vaes Dothrak. There, all Dothraki were brothers. But out here on the endless grass of the Dothraki Sea, there was only one law: the strong survive, and the weak are eliminated. Drogo had not only killed his "brother" and his nephew, he had enslaved their entire people. Now, he was dragging them west, to be sold to the slavers of Ghis.
A sudden burst of shouting and the sharp crack of a whip pulled Dany from her thoughts. They had reached the edge of the camp.
Under the hazy yellow evening sky, the smoldering remains of several Lhazareen manors clawed at the air with thick fingers of black smoke. Fire still roared within the ruins, the sound a constant, hungry crackle. Dothraki warriors galloped back and forth along the collapsed mud-brick walls, their long whips rising and falling as they herded the dazed survivors from their burning homes.
Dany watched, her stomach churning, as mothers with numb, lifeless faces staggered forward, pulling their sobbing children along. The leather whips drove them toward the slave pens of Drogo's khalasar. There were few men among them, and those she saw were either ancient or crippled. The able-bodied were already dead.
The warriors parted to let her pass, and her presence drew the attention of a group resting by a wall. A moment later, a bloodstained Haggo rode toward them, a cruel smirk on his face.
"Khaleesi," he sneered. "Have you come to snatch more slaves from better men?" He let out a sharp bark of a laugh, and then his eyes gleamed with a jackal's malice. With a sudden, deliberate movement, he lifted the hemp rope that hung from his saddle.
"Ah—!"
The gasp was torn from her throat before she could stop it. A thick, sweet, and cloying smell of blood and rot washed over her, and her pupils shrank to pinpricks.
It was a string of human heads.
Young and old, their faces were frozen in their final moments—some with the slack-jawed terror of death, others with the angry snarl of defiance. Sticky, dark red blood dripped slowly from the hair bound by the rope, soaking the leather of Haggo's thigh. Some of the necks were severed with clean, sharp cuts; others were a jagged ruin of flesh and bone, as if it had taken several hacks to finish the job. She saw one head with a length of white spinal column still dangling from the gory stump, and a horrible thought struck her: had Haggo pulled the head from the body after only half-cutting through the neck?
Their eyes were wide, their mouths open. For a terrible moment, Dany thought she could hear their silent screams, their curses, their accusations. The world tilted. Just this morning, she had been a medical student, celebrating her master's degree on a beautiful university campus. The contrast was so violent, so absolute, that her mind threatened to shatter.
"Khaleesi!" Ser Jorah was beside her in an instant, his strong hand on her arm, steadying her before she could fall from her saddle. He pressed a waterskin to her lips, and she choked down a mouthful of lukewarm water, her body limp and unresponsive as he and Aggo held her upright.
It took a long moment for her breath to return. When it did, she fought back the tears and the bile rising in her throat. She forced the terror from her eyes, replacing it with a cold, murderous fury she didn't know she possessed. Slowly, deliberately, she lifted her head and forced herself to meet Haggo's gaze, to look past him at the grotesque trophy he still held high.
Gradually, the cruel, triumphant smile on Haggo's face faltered. He seemed to grow bored by her silence. He lowered the string of heads, hooking them back onto his saddle. But the quiet, heavy atmosphere seemed to agitate him.
"What are you looking at, Khaleesi?" he suddenly yelled, his voice raw and vicious.
Dany's eyes were now completely devoid of fear. Her violet pupils were as clear and cold as a winter spring. "I am counting," she said, her voice steady. "To see if you have taken the most heads, as Cohollo commanded. It's a pity. Pono has two more than you."
"You—"
The veins on Haggo's neck bulged. He looked as if he was about to charge her, but he stopped. His brutish face filled with doubt. He swung himself off his horse and stomped over to Pono's mount, where he began to count the heads hanging there, his thick, carrot-like fingers moving slowly and clumsily.
Her icy composure was a mask, and it was threatening to crack. The bloodriders were fierce, but this was a low-magic world. Even the strongest warrior could only fight so many men before exhaustion took them. None of the riders had more than twenty heads, yet Haggo stood there counting for nearly a full minute, his lips moving silently. Finally, he returned to his own saddle and brought his string of heads up to compare with Pono's, one by one.
He was missing two.
"Hah!" With a roar of fury, Haggo threw his string of heads to the ground, where they rolled in the dust like grotesque, breaded pieces of fried chicken. He spun around, stalked over to the line of captured 'goat-men,' and grabbed a woman in her thirties. Ignoring her screams and struggles, and with Khaleesi watching from just feet away, he tore open his hide breeches and threw her to the ground.
He took her right there in the dirt, her wails seeming to fuel his triumphant rage. When he was done, he looked up and gave Daenerys a ferocious, provocative grin. It was a challenge. Everyone knew she had tried to stop this very thing before.
Daenerys knew this was a war between them. The smartest move, the only move, was to retreat. To stay would be to lose. To show emotion would be to lose. For her sake, and for the poor, broken woman on the ground, the best choice was to pretend nothing had happened.
"Hya!" She lightly kicked her silver filly's belly, and the horse moved away with light, untroubled steps.
Haggo shouted a few curses after her, but she did not look back.
She guided her horse through the edge of the battlefield. A dying stallion, startled by her approach, lifted its head and gave a weak whinny. Wounded Dothraki lying in the grass licked their chapped lips, their voices hoarse. "Khaleesi… water, please…"
Before she could even react, another Dothraki trotted over. He gave Dany an apologetic smile. "Forgive the interruption, Khaleesi."
He then knelt, and with a flash of his knife, cut the throat of the man who had begged for water. As blood sprayed with a sickening, wet hiss, the wounded man's eyes went dim. There was no pain or fear on his face, only a flicker of regret and confusion, as if his last thought was simply: Why couldn't I have had one sip of water before dying?
This Dothraki was one of the finishers, moving from body to body, harvesting heads from the dead and dying alike.
Following them was a group of little girls, baskets slung over their shoulders. They paused to look at Dany with childlike curiosity before skipping happily toward the corpses. They reached into the bodies with hands stained black and red, pulling out arrows and tossing them into their baskets. The intact ones would be used again. The broken ones would have their valuable metal arrowheads salvaged, to be fitted onto new shafts by the slaves back at camp.
Finally, at the very edge of the carnage, a pack of thin, hungry wild dogs with fierce, intelligent eyes moved in. They sniffed at a corpse near Dany, then looked up at her, waiting. When she didn't move to stop them, they lowered their heads with guttural snarls and began to tear at the warm flesh. They were the final link in the brutal ecological chain of the grass sea.
"Uhh—" A retching sound escaped her lips. She doubled over in her saddle, bile burning her throat. The wild dogs, startled, backed away, dropping the pale meat from their jaws.
"Khaleesi, it is getting late," Ser Jorah said, his hand on her shoulder, his voice thick with concern. "We should go."
"Yes," she whispered, straightening up. "Let's go back."
In the space of a single afternoon, this cruel world had ruthlessly torn away its veil. She now understood, with perfect and sickening clarity, exactly where she was.
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