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To borrow from another HBO drama: One member of House of the Dragon’s central family goes full f–king beast, literally, in this week’s episode as the succession to the Iron Throne officially gets underway.
And I welcome it! After eight episodes of talking about who’ll follow Viserys (R.I.P.) in ruling Westeros, things are finally happening in that regard. So without further ado, let’s review what goes down in Episode 9 — and then make sure to check out the finale trailer here and make sure to read our deeper dive into that big moment near the end of the episode.
THE SUCCESSION STARTS | It’s the middle of the night in the Red Keep when Alicent’s handmaiden, Talya, wakes her to tell her of the king’s death. She sobs, dresses and then runs to her father’s quarters, where she reports, “He told me he wants Aegon to be king.” So they call the small council together and let its members know what’s up. Viserys “has left us a gift. With his last breath, he impressed upon the queen his final wish: That his son, Aegon, should succeed him as lord of the Seven Kingdoms,” Otto says. This seems to officially set in motion a plan to which Alicent hasn’t been privy, as she quickly realizes.
Lord Lyman Beesbury wasn’t read in, either, and now he stands and rails about how the plot to put Aegon on the Iron Throne is “treason.” He flat-out accuses the council of committing regicide, and he’s yelling right up until the moment Ser Criston approaches him from behind and slams his skull into the table, crushing his temple on the marble ball before him and killing him instantly. Ser Harrold draws his sword and demands that the younger knight remove his cape and weapon, which causes Criston to raise his own blade against the Lord Commander; only a quick word from the queen defuses the situation — but Harrold continues giving Cole the beetle brow for the rest of the scene.
Otto Hightower won’t let anyone leave or enter the room until they’ve reached an accord, so everyone sits down as if Beesbury’s broken skull isn’t leaking a sticky pool onto the table. Otto says Rhaenyra and her family will be given the opportunity to publicly swear fealty to Aegon, and that they’ll have to be imprisoned in order to keep them from gathering supporters to their side. But Alicent knows they’ll never bend the knee. “You plan to kill them?” she wonders, but she already knows the answer. She rises as she angrily states that the king wouldn’t want his daughter murdered, but then Tyland Lannister asks what she thinks they should do instead, and Alicent doesn’t have an answer. So Otto commands Ser Harrold to take his knights to Dragonstone, “and be quick and be clean.” But the knight instead rips off his white cape and says he recognizes no authority but the king’s, “and until there is one, I have no place here.” (This backs up our estimation that, in a series full of moral gray hats, Ser Harrold is one of the good guys.)
Next thing we know, Otto gathers those who’d sworn loyalty to Rhaenyra and tells them to vow they’ll support the new king. Most do, but those who do not are led out to a grim fate; Larys Strong watches it all unfold. Later, after he turns in a lord who’d hesitated before swearing fealty to Aegon and who was preparing to alert Rhaenyra to what was going on, Larys lets Otto know that his time in the queen’s company also might benefit the Hand of the King himself.
UM, WHERE’S THE NEW KING? | Oh look, there’s another problem: No one knows where Aegon has gone. So Otto sends Sers Erryk and Arryk Cargyll after him, instructing them to bring the young man directly to him — and not to Alicent. But at the same time, Ser Criston informs Alicent of this plan, and she asks him to locate Aegon and bring him to her. Aemond goes with the knight. Meanwhile, Rhaenys is locked in her quarters with no explanation, and Talya and a bunch of other servants are detained in the dungeon.
Criston and Aemond head to the Street of Silk, where the owner of one of the establishments tells them that Aegon’s tastes tend to be “less discriminating.” While they look, Aemond makes it clear that he should be king: After all, he’s the one who studies the histories, trains with weapons and rides the biggest dragon in the world.
As they’re searching, so are Arryk and Erryk, who wind up at an establishment that forces 10-year-olds to fight each other. They note a platinum blonde child sitting in the corner, and the kid has gotta be Aegon’s bastard. “One of many, I’d wager,” one of the twins notes. Eventually, a young woman approaches them and says she knows someone who can lead them to Aegon… for a price.
That someone turns out to be Mysaria, whom Otto refers to as “The White Worm” when he meets her in town. He’s taken aback when she already knows about the king’s death. In exchange for info on Aegon’s whereabouts, demands an end to “the savage use of children in Flea Bottom” — apparently the Gold Cloaks allow the kiddie fighting, etc., and the Crown does nothing to stop it — and he promises to look into it. Sure, Jan.
Arryk and Erryk follow Mysaria’s intel and locate the prince, who’s holed up under the altar in a sept and VERY unhappy about being found. They haul him outside… and run straight into Criston and Aemond, blades drawn. Eventually Aemond gets the best of his brother, who kicks and screams like a toddler that he doesn’t want to rule. Aegon begs Aemond to let him get away and never come back, and it seems like he’s seriously considering it, but then Criston announces that Alicent is waiting, and that’s that.
YOU’VE PUT YOUR FOOT IN IT THIS TIME | After Viserys’ body is prepared for burial, Alicent visits an irate Rhaenys in her quarters. “You are usurping the throne,” the Queen That Never Was instantly intuits upon learning the king is dead. Alicent makes a hard sell for House Velaryon to change its allegiance and back Aegon. She butters Rhaenys up, saying that the older woman should’ve been queen “by blood and by temperament.” She draws on their commonality: “We do not rule, but we may guide the men that do, gently, away from violence and sure destruction and instead toward peace.” Rhaenys flips the tables, though, calling Alicent wiser than she expected and whispering, “Have you never imagined yourself on the Iron Throne?” The queen doesn’t answer, leaving and instructing Rhaenys to ring the bell when she’s come to a decision.
Following Aegon’s capture, and with the almost-king squarely in his mother’s grasp, Alicent informs her father that she’s going to offer Rhaenyra terms that she can accept without shame or bodily injury. “If she lives, her allies will mass behind her banners, looking for her return,” he warns. The queen ignores him, instead rattling off the details of the ascension. Ser Criston will become Lord Commander of the Kingsguard. Aegon will be anointed at dawn, with all of King’s Landing watching. He’ll wear Ageon I’s crown and carry Blackfyre as a sword. “As you wish,” he says after she marches out.
She returns to her quarters to take a much-needed breather and isn’t psyched to find Larys there, waiting for her with a query: How does she suppose Otto found Aegon so quickly? “There is a web of spies in the Red Keep. Along its threads travels news of all our doings. Your father knows this, and has left it in place,” he says. And I’m distracted for a moment by how she takes off her shoes and puts her stockinged feet up on the table as he’s talking. But when she asks for names of those on the web, he pauses… until she removes her hose and shows him her bare feet, which he stares at with a not-small amount of lust. AH, SO THAT’S HOW IT IS.
Larys says her lady-in-waiting, Talya, is one of the “little spiders,” and there are more like her. He suggests taking out the central figure in order to disrupt the gossip network, and she realizes that he’s offering to do so. “If you wish it, it will be done,” he says softly. And then, via what I can only guess is a pre-arranged agreement of theirs, she turns away — though her bare feet remain squarely in his view — as he masturbates (thankfully, out of focus in a shot from over her shoulder) and she looks conflicted/disturbed/annoyed at once more being a woman of power who still has to deal with the whims of gross men.
AND UGH, in one of the grossest cuts since Samwell Tarly first started working in the Citadel, next we see Aegon mopping up some shiny sauce off his plate with a piece of bread as he waits for the morning. To quote Sam: Dry heave! Over in Rhaenys’ rooms, however, things are less peaceful: Erryk Cargyll takes down her guard and unlocks the door, asking her to come with him, because “I cannot let this treachery stand.” His plan is to get her to Blackwater Bay and on a ship before anyone notices she’s gone, but they’re thwarted in their attempt as the people of the city are rounded up and shepherded toward the spot where Aegon officially will be named king.
NOT SO LONG LIVE THE KING? | The crowd winds up at the great sept dragonpit, where Otto announces Viserys’ death and his dying wish that Aegon succeed him. There’s a bit of applause, then the platinum-haired jackass walks in, to great fanfare. (I should note that, though Rhaenys and Erryk were separated in the crush of people, she made it into the building. And as Aegon is anointed, she sneaks out a side door.)
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After the crown is placed on the new king’s empty little head, the crowd is slow to applaud. But eventually their cheers grow, reaching a crescendo as he draws his sword and lifts it in glory. BUT THEN all of that comes to a quick end when a dragon is suddenly in the middle of the crowd and starts bashing, stamping, gnashing and generally laying waste to the people in its way. And look who’s riding it: Rhaenys! Not real sure how she had the time to do all of that just now, but what is time on this show, anyway?
Eventually, Rhaenys and her beast are left to stare down the new king, his mother and the rest of the family. Alicent draws near to Aegon and bows her head, waiting for the High Valyrian command that will turn them into crispy critters. But instead, the Queen That Never Was merely has her mount, uh, yell at them really loudly? Though the dragon opens its mouth and makes a lot of noise, there’s no fire, no “dracarys,” and Rhaenys gives Alicent a pointed look before she turns and flies off into the wild blue yonder.
Now it’s your turn. Are you ready for next week’s finale? Hit the comments with your thoughts and predictions!
Ah so she was “the beast beneath the floorboards”
I think the dragon and Rhaenys is a misdirection to the “beast beneath the floorboards.” It’s super obvious and from GOT, the showrunners like their riddles to be more subtle. (Which probably comes from GRRM himself, IMO. It’s been awhile since I read the books.)
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I think it’s either the spy/spider network or Aegon himself. The spy network operates beneath the court and the council and all the men seem to be using it despite pretending to be above it. As for Aegon, he was found literally beneath the sept and also seems to have a double life below the board with bastards, child fighting pits, and familiarity with Flea Bottom/Street of Silk. It’s probably a foreshadowing to what happens to Aegon in the Dance of the Dragons.
i knew something would happen at the last couple of minutes. but im a bit dissappointed. not much action. i guess episode 10 will have to do it. i was hoping of a dragon attack with a sea of fire.
Rhaeny’s decision was odd. She chose uncertain war over an instant assured victory. Other than a season 2 plot devise, it made no sense. But, she did look fierce.
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I still think casting got it wrong and the actors playing Aegon and Aemond should have been reversed. Aegon looks like the much younger brother.
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Ser Criston never ages.
Aegon is supposed to look less like the serious warrior and more like the alcoholic, spoiled, pouty princling that he is. Aemond, on the other hand, us supposed to look like the cold hearted sob that he is. Considering that, it makes the casting more understandable.
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Rhaenys could have wiped out the greens, but Alicent moving in front of Aegon gave a moment of “grieving mom, seeing another fearful mama bear… “ and she responded…that and remember, her feelings about Rhaeynera are complicated. She blames Rhae and daemon for Laenors death and she knows – like everyone else does – that Laenor is not the father of Rhae’s three oldest. I get the hesitation. Also, remember that there was not a guarantee of season 2 until after season 1 began to air…
Her granddaughters were engaged to Rany’s sons. The odds of the Greens not murdering them were low (they are Daemons children after all.) Not to mention the revenge factor for her disrupting the coronation. I don’t know if this was canonical with the book, but overall it feels nonsensical. One word to end a civil war before it starts. One word to save her last remaining family. One word to avenge the imprisonment and subtle death threats she experienced in this very episode. Yet she chooses this critical moment to hold her tongue.
On a practical level, the entire series (and the section of the book it’s based on) centers on the Civil War within the family and the various Lords in the realm that take either side. If Rhaenys BBQ’s the Greens, there is no Dance of Dragons (aka the war) and the series is over.
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On a tactical level, sure, she has a dragon and she could fry the fam and then escape, but she just broke up a massive rah rah rally in a room full of witnesses that would watch her commit reginicide. That’s not just a dicey move for her, it also sets up Rhaeynera’s reign in a weakened position. She’s already got a bunch of high powered chauvinistic lords who think she’s disqualified to rule as a woman. She’s already got a bunch of folks questioning her validity to be queen based on the legitimacy (or lack’ there of) of Luc, Jace and Joff. Adding a massacre to the mix at the coronation where the people were just getting on board with Aegon and his pep rally isn’t a great PR move. It also moves the entire Taragaryen family into a position of weakness as other powerful lords in the realm may see a chance to either seize control if the 7 kingdoms or at least their own fiefdom. . .based again on calling into question Rhaeynera’s claim and the “murder” of the greens to try to unseat what they could position as the rightful heir. It’s kind of what happened to kick off GoT. The Baratheons unseat the Targaryens. The lannisters grab at power. The Starks break off to be their own little kingdom…. Sometimes the easy move isn’t the best move. I like to think Rhaenys is a bit wise and aware of the political games men play…enough to think big picture…but I also think she considered frying ‘em
I am sorry but this is just bizarre. You think Aegon the first talked his way to power? He had dragons. If the Greens are wiped out that means Rany is the only potential monarch with dragons. Those who don’t fall in line get weeded out and killed. The show never should have given her that clean a shot at the whole royal family. It makes no sense that she doesn’t give the order and roast them all. This same family that just hung or imprisoned any noble that wouldn’t bend the knee. This is Westeros not a modern democracy. You kill your rivals or they kill you.
I think there’s a difference between a guy on a dragon aiming to conquer lands and a queen from the existing dynasty trying to ascend the throne and keep it.
If dragons were all it took to stay in control they would have ruled forever.
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And if it’s a mistake that causes war it’s the same one Alicent made by not allowing them all killed before word of the king’s death got out.
The big difference is Alicent wasn’t in striking distance of the people trying to kill her entire family. Rany never said she wanted to murder Alicent’s children, in fact based on last week it seems the opposite. Alicent is ruled by fear, yet she is religious enough and human enough to not be Cersei, but that doesn’t make her Tyrion either. She is still a murder and a schemer. End of the day, sparing them endangered herself, her grandchildren, her great grandchildren, and every single friend who will be loyal to her. The Green’s going to war with the Blacks is not better for the realm. I am sorry the writing was inexcusably bad to let her get that close. These are the kinds of mistakes (in the book to if it was there,) that ruin the story completely. Every single death suffered by anyone not on that stage was avoidable.
I mean, they’re all murderers and schemers. Rany (and the complete psycho Daemon who she sided with) killed an innocent guy to fake a death and let his mother believe he was dead so they could get their freak on. They both seemed to be playing nice with each other’s children at the end of the last, but if you think Daemon is one to leave contenders to the crown laying about, who made jokes about his nephew’s death, you’re playing team Rany too hard. And in this episode our big woman power moment has her slaughtering townspeople with her dragon.
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Sure they’re making mistakes by not finishing it now. (Though as someone points out there are political ramification of taking over by regicide.) But as Alicent said, not committing murder is not a mistake. Which might not be true in this world, but what obviously a few believe. Rhaenys had them all to her “guns” but the Greens could have just killed her in her room, and daddy was ready to send the King’s Guard to Dragonstone to quietly slaughter everyone before they even knew anything was up. They both had their shot to be brutal and finish things fast, and their conscience got the best of them, and now they’ll pay for that with war.
There’s an interview out from Hollywood Reporter with the directors worth checking out. They get into her actions (or inactions) and the reasoning behind it. I don’t know if you’d buy it; I’m not sure I buy it. But at least it is their thought process behind it.
Rhaenys didn’t kill them because they’re still her family. Sons and wife of her cousin whom she loved. They haven’t done anything to her yet to warrant their deaths.
“AND UGH, in one of the grossest cuts since Samwell Tarly first started working in the Citadel, next we see Aegon mopping up some shiny sauce off his plate with a piece of bread as he waits for the morning.” REALLY? I would give that honor to creepy Larys “…what I can only guess is a pre-arranged agreement of theirs, she turns away — though her bare feet remain squarely in his view — as he masturbates…”
That’s the point. The cut the recap talks about is from the moment Larys masturbates to the next shot of Aegon mopping up shiny sauce off his plate. That’s what he means by the grossest cut.
I love the look Rhaenys gave at the end as if saying “I could’ve easily take you out with dragon fire right now, but then I wouldn’t get the pleasure of seeing what Rhaenyra and Daemon are going to do to you all”.
An AMAZING episode!!
Where did Rhaenys get the armored getup?
I feel Elisode 9 fell short of the Mark. Dracarys!!
The coronation was NOT in the sept, it was held in the Dragonpit, the largest structure in the city, which is the huge domed building that looks nothing like the sept. Alicent even said Aegon would be crowned in the Dragonpit, when she told Otto her plans. That’s why Rhaenys smiled when she saw where the crowd she was in was being herded, because that was exactly where she wanted to go. As a dragon rider Rhaenys knows her way around the place, she sneaked off downstairs to her dragon, which also appears to be where she got armor. The dragon did not fly in, it came up from under the floor, just as Helaena warned us, twice: “The beast beneath the boards.”
Thanks JV. Came here to say exactly this.
The author of this article seems more obsessed with conjuring her own gross “mopping up some shiny sauce” fantasies that aren’t there. Gross.
She then has the gall to criticize Rhaenys and her dragon because she missed the obvious plot events, locations, and dialogue.
Get a life
Alicent is such a hypocrite. The actress plays her well.
A few episodes back, it’s “bury your gays” plot.
And this episode they’re trying to shame foot fetish, lol….
This has been my favorite episode so far! It has taken time for me to warm up to this series. Why? Character development and humor…so prevalent in the original GOT has been seriously lacking. These later episodes are a step in the right direction. Humor still eludes but I did cheer at the end of the episode…looking forward to the finale!
Dragon burst up through the floor, it did not fly into the sept. An obvious thing that was apparently completely missed by this reviewer.
I’m getting the feeling that the only two who would have been halfway decent rulers are the two who can’t, Rhaenys and Aemond. Only ones who take the job seriously and have the strength to do it.