You are alive, Sansa, [ he whispers, and he means more than just in love — he means the beat of her heart and soul, of everything that had, for so long, been thought impossible for the likes of the surrogates. (He suspects that the blood through her veins possesses more life and more vitality than his ever did.) And so he holds her, as if his frame might be enough to shield her from the worst of the world, from the world they intend to explore together, made great by the virtue of their love but that he knows is wide and vast and, more often than not, cruel.
As though to delay the fact, he kisses her once more, nothing if not ardent, the taste of mint cold on his lips.
He thinks of nothing but her. No thought of Catelyn, no thought of the riverbanks upon which he had spent his boyhood. Just her, the girl in his arms — Sansa. Not a ghost, not a copy. His heart belongs to her. There is no one moment that he can pinpoint in which it had happened, the feeling both a terrible ache and a dizzying kind of high. How long had he dreamt of something like this? And how long, in turn, had he shunned the notion entirely?
I love you, he tells her, over and over again, and though there is desperation in his voice it is colored by a deep happiness. ]
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As though to delay the fact, he kisses her once more, nothing if not ardent, the taste of mint cold on his lips.
He thinks of nothing but her. No thought of Catelyn, no thought of the riverbanks upon which he had spent his boyhood. Just her, the girl in his arms — Sansa. Not a ghost, not a copy. His heart belongs to her. There is no one moment that he can pinpoint in which it had happened, the feeling both a terrible ache and a dizzying kind of high. How long had he dreamt of something like this? And how long, in turn, had he shunned the notion entirely?
I love you, he tells her, over and over again, and though there is desperation in his voice it is colored by a deep happiness. ]