Chapter 16 - Flew Like A Moth To You

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Floris Baratheon could not sit still, clutching her bow and quiver, peering out the carriage window as they approached the Kingswood. "A-hunting we shall go, a-hunting we shall go-"

"Hi-Ho the derry-o, a-hunting we shall go," Abby sang in turn, the song a familiar one from childhood. The Baratheon girl had been quite annoyed that she could not ride a horse the way the other men did, but with the promise that she would not have to sit with her sister in a carriage, she had been content enough.

Abby sat beside Lythene Ryger, who had been quite speechless at the invite to the carriage. Wylla would have normally been with them, but with her soon to be good-sister, Alys Bracken, coming along, she was off playing chaperone and overly curious and mischievous younger sister to Alys and Harrion. Abby was glad she had the opportunity to do so, for her dear friend was giving up much to stay in the south as her Mistress of Keys instead of returning home to the Karhold.

On the other side of Helaena, Margaery Crane of Red Lake sat. Her lush, light brown hair was braided in a crown around her head, and her face was square with large, unnervingly green eyes. Her head was bent towards Helaena's, threads of evergreen and butter yellow woven in her fingers as she taught the princess how to finger knit. It was an easier pastime during the long carriage ride to the camp than Helaena's embroidery. Her twin sister, Desmara, sat on Abby's other side. The only difference between the pair was her dark, chestnut hair and the scar across her full mouth.

"I'm sure if you ask Daeron when he goes out with the party, he'll retrieve the stag antlers for you," Helaena said, her eyes focused on the thread between her fingers. "He'll love the opportunity to prove himself." Floris rolled her eyes in only the way a girl of one and ten could, her black braid wrapped around her head with stubborn tendrils escaping. She tugged on the ties of her raven black cloak.

"Nay, Your Grace," she said primly. "I would show my own mettle, and face the stag myself." Her cheeks were pink all the same. Abby bit her lip to hold back her chuckle, not wanting to tease the girl. She caught Desmara's own amused look, the scar across her mouth pulling at her own smile.

"Well, I don't think they'll let you go hunting the stag, Lady Floris," she said. Floris looked pleased at the kind address from the elder girl. "But we'll be going hawking and the spoils are certainly yours. That's how I obtained the rabbit fur for my gloves."

"That's true," Abby chimed in. "And you are a child of Nightsong, are you not? I'm sure falconry is in your blood." Floris' mother was a Caron, with a lineage of fierce warriors nestled in the Dornish Marches. Lady Ellyn Caron had songs sung of her, and how she, in part with other lords of the Stormlands, defeated the Vulture King. It was exactly the kind of family lineage Abby could see Floris idolizing.

Floris nodded seriously, running her fingers along her bow. "This is true. I suppose I should practice."

"Practice until you come back dragging the stag behind you," Helaena continued. "My elder sister is said to have taken down a boar with her own hands, only a dagger as a weapon. I think you have that same mettle in you."

Floris preened, leaning into Helaena's side to watch the magical weaving of the yarn. Abby's heart ached with fondness for the girl, pleased that she had been taken on as Helaena's ward. The girl was not meant to be stuck behind her three eldest sisters. The Smallest Storm would blossom, she hoped, beneath Helaena's care and attention. It did not go past Abby's notice of Cassandra's harsh attentions to her sister. It reminded her of her own sister's lack of understanding; always critical, always focused on some perception that her behavior would reflect poorly upon her. Floris was exuberant and curious, but she was not into reckless mischief or excessive rudeness.

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