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Morning ca to Sunspear like a blade unsheathing—sudden and blinding.

The training yard of the Old Palace was already packed when Rhaegar arrived. Word had spread through the night with the speed that only gossip achieves: The Dragon Prince was going to fight Doran's axeman.

Ser Steffon Baratheon had co. Ser Arthur Dayne had arrived before dawn and claid the front row. Oberyn lounged against a pillar like a satisfied cat, his eyes sharp with anticipation. Even Princess Elia was present, seated in the shade of a silk awning alongside llario of Norvos, who watched everything with the wide-eyed curiosity of soone perpetually discovering that the world is stranger than expected.

Mace Tyrell had sohow procured a plate of honey cakes and was eating them with quiet enthusiasm.

Only Tywin Lannister was absent. He had sent a page to inquire about the outco afterward, which Rhaegar considered the most Tywin thing imaginable.

Doran Martell sat in the seat of honor, his walking stick across his knees, his expression the careful blankness of a man who has made peace with outcos he cannot control.

Areo Hotah was already in the yard.

He stood in the center of the packed earth, the longaxe upright in his hands. The head was wrapped in heavy felt and bound with rope, making it a padded bludgeon rather than an edged weapon. He had dressed simply—no mail, only leather and linen. He was still enormous.

Rhaegar stepped into the yard carrying a blunted greatsword, wide-bladed and heavy. Several of the watching knights exchanged glances. Most expected him to use a lighter weapon.

Oberyn raised an eyebrow. "He picks a weapon that would tire a grown man in ten minutes," he murmured to Arthur Dayne.

"Watch his wrists," Arthur replied quietly. "Not his shoulders."

Rhaegar and Hotah saluted each other. The Norvoshi guard's face was stone. Rhaegar's was calm.

Then Hotah moved.

The longaxe ca around in a horizontal sweep, low and fast, aiming to knock Rhaegar's legs out from under him. It was a devastating opener—the kind of strike that worked because most opponents didn't expect a man that large to be that quick.

Rhaegar stepped over it. Not back. Over. A single, precise step, and the axe passed beneath his trailing foot with an inch to spare.

The crowd inhaled.

"He's light," Oberyn observed, leaning forward.

Hotah reversed the axe into a downward vertical chop. A classic follow-up—if the first sweep caught nothing, the second strike finished it. The padded axehead descended with enough force to crack paving stones.

Rhaegar was no longer where it was aid.

He had moved sideways, almost lazily, the greatsword coming up not to block but to deflect—just enough, just barely, redirecting the axe's montum rather than absorbing it. The iron rang against steel. Hotah's arms trembled with the impact.

There it is, Rhaegar thought, feeling the weight transfer. That's his center.

He didn't strike. He stepped back and gave the Norvoshi guard a mont to reset.

The crowd muttered. So thought it was rcy. It wasn't.

It was study.

Hotah ca again, slower now, more asured. He had recognized that the quick assault had failed. He shifted to a grinding pressure offense—heavy blows designed to exhaust the defender's guard, to make the arms burn until they could no longer hold the weapon.

He hamred.

And hamred.

And hamred.

Each blow rang through the yard like a forge strike. The greatsword held. But the watching knights flinched with every impact, instinctively calculating the weight of those blows against their own arms.

"That axe," Ser Steffon said under his breath, "would break most n."

"Watch Rhaegar's feet," Arthur Dayne repeated.

Rhaegar's footwork was the answer. He never stood square to receive the blows. He was always slightly angled, always half-turning, always moving—so that the force arriving at his blade had already been redirected before it hit. He looked effortless. He was not effortless. He was burning through precise concentration at enormous speed.

Don't mirror the axe, he told himself. Let it pass. Let it spend itself. Flow around it.

The [Dawn Fire] pulsed in his blood, a cool inspiration that sharpened his instincts to a razor edge. Every move Hotah made seed to arrive a half-second before it happened, as though Rhaegar could read the Norvoshi's body like a musical score.

Hotah's rhythm was grinding down. The axe, heavier with each swing, slowed by fractions. His shoulders began to carry the weight wrong.

Then Rhaegar changed.

He stopped defending.

He stepped into Hotah's next swing—inside the arc, where the axe had no leverage—and drove the flat of the greatsword hard against Hotah's ribs. Not a killing blow. A ssage.

Hotah grunted. Adjusted.

Rhaegar hit him from the other side, a back-cut that tapped the Norvoshi's elbow with precisely enough force to cause the nerves to flare. The axe wavered.

The crowd was completely silent now.

Hotah roared and brought the axe down in a two-handed overhead smash—the full weight of his body behind it, a blow that had ended every other bout in his life.

Rhaegar sidestepped to the left. The padded axehead hit the earth and stuck. Hotah lurched forward with his own montum.

The greatsword ca around in a flat arc.

The poml caught Hotah on the nose.

Not hard. Just firmly. A deliberate, surgical tap.

Hotah stumbled back, blood running down his lip. He blinked.

Then Rhaegar's blade was at his throat. The point resting lightly against the great column of his neck. Motionless.

Silence.

"You fight like living fire," Hotah said, his chest heaving. His voice was not bitter. It was the plain assessnt of a craftsman encountering a tool finer than his own. "I cannot touch it."

"Your axe is an honest weapon," Rhaegar said, lowering the blade. "It speaks truth. That is worth more than cleverness."

Hotah looked at him for a long mont, then bent and picked up his longaxe. He held it upright and gave a single, deep nod.

From the watching crowd, a sound began to build.

Quietly at first—from the Dornish soldiers at the back, then spreading to the knights, then to the lords' tables, then to the upper gallery.

"Rhaegar! Rhaegar!"

And then, from sowhere in the crowd, a voice found a new na.

"The Triumphant Silver Dragon!"

It caught like fire in dry grass. Within monts the whole yard was roaring it.

"Triumphant Silver Dragon! Triumphant Silver Dragon!"

Rhaegar reached over and took Hotah's free hand. He raised it, and his own, together toward the crowd.

Hotah looked briefly startled. Then, like a man deciding to accept the weather, he stood straight and let it happen.

The roar doubled.

Oberyn turned to Arthur Dayne, his expression caught between admiration and sothing approaching dismay.

"Is there a ceiling?" Oberyn asked. "Is there anywhere this ends?"

Arthur looked at Rhaegar in the center of the yard, silver hair bright in the morning sun, the crowd chanting his new na.

"I don't think so," Arthur said quietly.

On the other side of the gallery, Rhaegar caught a flash of movent.

Lord Yronwood—the Bloodroyal, elderly and hawk-eyed—was watching. Not the duel. He was watching Oberyn.

And Oberyn was watching him back.

There was a ssage passing between those two n in the silence beyond the cheering, a currency of glances that Rhaegar couldn't quite read.

He filed it away.

A very valuable gift, Oberyn had said.

Soon, Rhaegar thought, as the crowd chanted his new na around him. I will find out what you are hiding, old man.

[New Alias Acquired: The Triumphant Silver Dragon — You are acclaid as the ever-victorious silver knight, the conqueror who rides the tide of fate.]

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