I stood last vigil for him myself,” Ser
Barristan Selmy said as they looked down at the body in the back of
the cart. “He had no one else. A mother in the Vale, I am
told.”
In the pale dawn light, the young knight looked as though he
were sleeping. He had not been handsome, but death had smoothed his
rough-hewn features and the silent sisters had dressed him in his
best velvet tunic, with a high collar to cover the ruin the lance
had made of his throat. Eddard Stark looked at his face, and
wondered if it had been for his sake that the boy had died. Slain
by a Lannister bannerman before Ned could speak to him; could that
be mere happenstance? He supposed he would never know.
“Hugh was Jon Arryn’s squire for four years,”
Selmy went on. “The king knighted him before he rode north,
in Jon’s memory. The lad wanted it desperately, yet I fear he
was not ready.”
Ned had slept badly last night and he felt tired beyond his
years. “None of us is ever ready,” he said.
“For knighthood?”
“For death.” Gently Ned covered the boy with his
cloak, a bloodstained bit of blue bordered in crescent moons. When
his mother asked why her son was dead, he reflected bitterly, they
would tell her he had fought to honor the King’s Hand, Eddard
Stark. “This was needless. War should not be a game.”
Ned turned to the woman beside the cart, shrouded in grey, face
hidden but for her eyes. The silent sisters prepared men for the
grave, and it was ill fortune to look on the face of death.
“Send his armor home to the Vale. The mother will want to
have it.”
“It is worth a fair piece of silver,” Ser Barristan
said. “The boy had it forged special for the tourney. Plain
work, but good. I do not know if he had finished paying the
smith.”
“He paid yesterday, my lord, and he paid dearly,”
Ned replied. And to the silent sister he said, “Send the
mother the armor. I will deal with this smith.” She bowed her
head.
Afterward Ser Barristan walked with Ned to the king’s
pavilion. The camp was beginning to stir. Fat sausages sizzled and
spit over firepits, spicing the air with the scents of garlic and
pepper. Young squires hurried about on errands as their masters
woke, yawning and stretching, to meet the day. A serving man with a
goose under his arm bent his knee when he caught sight of them.
“M’lords,” he muttered as the goose honked and
pecked at his fingers. The shields displayed outside each tent
heralded its occupant: the silver eagle of Seagard, Bryce
Caron’s field of nightingales, a cluster of grapes for the
Redwynes, brindled boar, red ox, burning tree, white ram, triple
spiral, purple unicorn, dancing maiden, blackadder, twin towers,
horned owl, and last the pure white blazons of the Kingsguard,
shining like the dawn.
“The king means to fight in the melee today,” Ser
Barristan said as they were passing Ser Meryn’s shield, its
paint sullied by a deep gash where Loras Tyrell’s lance had
scarred the wood as he drove him from his saddle.
“Yes,” Ned said grimly. Jory had woken him last
night to bring him that news. Small wonder he had slept so
badly.
Ser Barristan’s look was troubled. “They say
night’s beauties fade at dawn, and the children of wine are
oft disowned in the morning light.”
“They say so,” Ned agreed, “but not of
Robert.” Other men might reconsider words spoken in drunken
bravado, but Robert Baratheon would remember and, remembering,
would never back down.
The king’s pavilion was close by the water, and the
morning mists off the river had wreathed it in wisps of grey. It
was all of golden silk, the largest and grandest structure in the
camp. Outside the entrance, Robert’s warhammer was displayed
beside an immense iron shield blazoned with the crowned stag of
House Baratheon.
Ned had hoped to discover the king still abed in a wine-soaked
sleep, but luck was not with him. They found Robert drinking beer
from a polished horn and roaring his displeasure at two young
squires who were trying to buckle him into his armor. “Your
Grace,” one was saying, almost in tears, “it’s
made too small, it won’t go.” He fumbled, and the
gorget he was trying to fit around Robert’s thick neck
tumbled to the ground.
“Seven hells!” Robert swore. “Do I have to do
it myself? Piss on the both of you. Pick it up. Don’t just
stand there gaping, Lancel, pick it up!” The lad jumped, and
the king noticed his company. “Look at these oafs, Ned. My
wife insisted I take these two to squire for me, and they’re
worse than useless. Can’t even put a man’s armor on him
properly. Squires, they say. I say they’re swineherds dressed
up in silk.”
Ned only needed a glance to understand the difficulty.
“The boys are not at fault,” he told the king.
“You’re too fat for your armor, Robert.”
Robert Baratheon took a long swallow of beer, tossed the empty
horn onto his sleeping furs, wiped his mouth with the back of his
hand, and said darkly, “Fat? Fat, is it? Is that how you
speak to your king?” He let go his laughter, sudden as a
storm. “Ah, damn you, Ned, why are you always
right?”
The squires smiled nervously until the king turned on them.
“You. Yes, both of you. You heard the Hand. The king is too
fat for his armor. Go find Ser Aron Santagar. Tell him I need the
breastplate stretcher. Now! What are you waiting for?”
The boys tripped over each other in their haste to be quit of
the tent. Robert managed to keep a stern face until they were gone.
Then he dropped back into a chair, shaking with laughter.
Ser Barristan Selmy chuckled with him. Even Eddard Stark managed
a smile. Always, though, the graver thoughts crept in. He could not
help taking note of the two squires: handsome boys, fair and well
made. One was Sansa’s age, with long golden curls; the other
perhaps fifteen, sandy-haired, with a wisp of a mustache and the
emerald-green eyes of the queen.
“Ah, I wish I could be there to see Santagar’s
face,” Robert said. “I hope he’ll have the wit to
send them to someone else. We ought to keep them running all
day!”
“Those boys,” Ned asked him.
“Lannisters?”
Robert nodded, wiping tears from his eyes. “Cousins. Sons
of Lord Tywin’s brother. One of the dead ones. Or perhaps the
live one, now that I come to think on it. I don’t recall. My
wife comes from a very large family, Ned.” A very ambitious family, Ned thought. He had nothing against the
squires, but it troubled him to see Robert surrounded by the
queen’s kin, waking and sleeping. The Lannister appetite for
offices and honors seemed to know no bounds. “The talk is
you and the queen had angry words last night.”
The mirth curdled on Robert’s face. “The woman tried
to forbid me to fight in the melee. She’s sulking in the
castle now, damn her. Your sister would never have shamed me like
that.”
“You never knew Lyanna as I did, Robert,” Ned told
him. “You saw her beauty, but not the iron underneath. She
would have told you that you have no business in the
melee.”
“You too?” The king frowned. “You are a sour
man, Stark. Too long in the north, all the juices have frozen
inside you. Well, mine are still running.” He slapped his
chest to prove it.
“You are the king,” Ned reminded him.
“I sit on the damn iron seat when I must. Does that mean I
don’t have the same hungers as other men? A bit of wine now
and again, a girl squealing in bed, the feel of a horse between my
legs? Seven hells, Ned, I want to hit someone.”
Ser Barristan Selmy spoke up. “Your Grace,” he said,
“it is not seemly that the king should ride into the melee.
It would not be a fair contest. Who would dare strike
you?”
Robert seemed honestly taken aback. “Why, all of them,
damn it. If they can. And the last man left standing . . . ”
“ . . . will be you,” Ned finished. He saw at once
that Selmy had hit the mark. The dangers of the melee were only a
savor to Robert, but this touched on his pride. “Ser
Barristan is right. There’s not a man in the Seven Kingdoms
who would dare risk your displeasure by hurting you.”
The king rose to his feet, his face flushed. “Are you
telling me those prancing cravens will let me win?”
“For a certainty,” Ned said, and Ser Barristan Selmy
bowed his head in silent accord.
For a moment Robert was so angry he could not speak. He strode
across the tent, whirled, strode back, his face dark and angry. He
snatched up his breastplate from the ground and threw it at
Barristan Selmy in a wordless fury. Selmy dodged. “Get
out,” the king said then, coldly. “Get out before I
kill you.”
Ser Barristan left quickly. Ned was about to follow when the
king called out again. “Not you, Ned.”
Ned turned back. Robert took up his horn again, filled it with
beer from a barrel in the corner, and thrust it at Ned.
“Drink,” he said brusquely.
“I’ve no thirst—”
“Drink. Your king commands it.”
Ned took the horn and drank. The beer was black and thick, so
strong it stung the eyes.
Robert sat down again. “Damn you, Ned Stark. You and Jon
Arryn, I loved you both. What have you done to me? You were the one
should have been king, you or Jon.”
“You had the better claim, Your Grace.”
“I told you to drink, not to argue. You made me king, you
could at least have the courtesy to listen when I talk, damn you.
Look at me, Ned. Look at what kinging has done to me. Gods, too fat
for my armor, how did it ever come to this?”
“Robert . . . ”
“Drink and stay quiet, the king is talking. I swear to
you, I was never so alive as when I was winning this throne, or so
dead as now that I’ve won it. And Cersei . . . I have Jon
Arryn to thank for her. I had no wish to marry after Lyanna was
taken from me, but Jon said the realm needed an heir. Cersei
Lannister would be a good match, he told me, she would bind Lord
Tywin to me should Viserys Targaryen ever try to win back his
father’s throne.” The king shook his head. “I
loved that old man, I swear it, but now I think he was a bigger
fool than Moon Boy. Oh, Cersei is lovely to look at, truly, but
cold . . . the way she guards her cunt, you’d think she had
all the gold of Casterly Rock between her legs. Here, give me that
beer if you won’t drink it.” He took the horn, upended
it, belched, wiped his mouth. “I am sorry for your girl, Ned.
Truly. About the wolf, I mean. My son was lying, I’d stake my
soul on it. My son . . . you love your children, don’t
you?”
“With all my heart,” Ned said.
“Let me tell you a secret, Ned. More than once, I have
dreamed of giving up the crown. Take ship for the Free Cities with
my horse and my hammer, spend my time warring and whoring,
that’s what I was made for. The sellsword king, how the
singers would love me. You know what stops me? The thought of
Joffrey on the throne, with Cersei standing behind him whispering
in his ear. My son. How could I have made a son like that,
Ned?”
“He’s only a boy,” Ned said awkwardly. He had
small liking for Prince Joffrey, but he could hear the pain in
Robert’s voice. “Have you forgotten how wild you were
at his age?”
“It would not trouble me if the boy was wild, Ned. You
don’t know him as I do.” He sighed and shook his head.
“Ah, perhaps you are right. Jon despaired of me often enough,
yet I grew into a good king.” Robert looked at Ned and
scowled at his silence. “You might speak up and agree now,
you know.”
“Your Grace . . . ” Ned began, carefully.
Robert slapped Ned on the back. “Ah, say that I’m a
better king than Aerys and be done with it. You never could lie for
love nor honor, Ned Stark. I’m still young, and now that
you’re here with me, things will be different. We’ll
make this a reign to sing of, and damn the Lannisters to seven
hells. I smell bacon. Who do you think our champion will be today?
Have you seen Mace Tyrell’s boy? The Knight of Flowers, they
call him. Now there’s a son any man would be proud to own to.
Last tourney, he dumped the Kingslayer on his golden rump, you
ought to have seen the look on Cersei’s face. I laughed till
my sides hurt. Renly says he has this sister, a maid of fourteen,
lovely as a dawn . . . ”
They broke their fast on black bread and boiled goose eggs and
fish fried up with onions and bacon, at a trestle table by the
river’s edge. The king’s melancholy melted away with
the morning mist, and before long Robert was eating an orange and
waxing fond about a morning at the Eyrie when they had been boys.
“ . . . had given Jon a barrel of oranges, remember? Only the
things had gone rotten, so I flung mine across the table and hit
Dacks right in the nose. You remember, Redfort’s pock-faced
squire? He tossed one back at me, and before Jon could so much as
fart, there were oranges flying across the High Hall in every
direction.” He laughed uproariously, and even Ned smiled,
remembering.
This was the boy he had grown up with, he thought; this was the
Robert Baratheon he’d known and loved. If he could prove that
the Lannisters were behind the attack on Bran, prove that they had
murdered Jon Arryn, this man would listen. Then Cersei would fall,
and the Kingslayer with her, and if Lord Tywin dared to rouse the
west, Robert would smash him as he had smashed Rhaegar Targaryen on
the Trident. He could see it all so clearly.
That breakfast tasted better than anything Eddard Stark had
eaten in a long time, and afterward his smiles came easier and more
often, until it was time for the tournament to resume.
Ned walked with the king to the jousting field. He had promised
to watch the final tilts with Sansa; Septa Mordane was ill today,
and his daughter was determined not to miss the end of the
jousting. As he saw Robert to his place, he noted that Cersei
Lannister had chosen not to appear; the place beside the king was
empty. That too gave Ned cause to hope.
He shouldered his way to where his daughter was seated and found
her as the horns blew for the day’s first joust. Sansa was so
engrossed she scarcely seemed to notice his arrival.
Sandor Clegane was the first rider to appear. He wore an olive-
green cloak over his soot-grey armor. That, and his
hound’s-head helm, were his only concession to ornament.
“A hundred golden dragons on the Kingslayer,”
Littlefinger announced loudly as Jaime Lannister entered the lists,
riding an elegant blood bay destrier. The horse wore a blanket of
gilded ringmail, and Jaime glittered from head to heel. Even his
lance was fashioned from the golden wood of the Summer Isles.
“Done,” Lord Renly shouted back. “The Hound
has a hungry look about him this morning.”
“Even hungry dogs know better than to bite the hand that
feeds them,” Littlefinger called dryly.
Sandor Clegane dropped his visor with an audible clang and took
up his position. Ser Jaime tossed a kiss to some woman in the
commons, gently lowered his visor, and rode to the end of the
lists. Both men couched their lances.
Ned Stark would have loved nothing so well as to see them both
lose, but Sansa was watching it all moist-eyed and eager. The
hastily erected gallery trembled as the horses broke into a gallop.
The Hound leaned forward as he rode, his lance rock steady, but
Jaime shifted his seat deftly in the instant before impact.
Clegane’s point was turned harmlessly against the golden
shield with the lion blazon, while his own hit square. Wood
shattered, and the Hound reeled, fighting to keep his seat. Sansa
gasped. A ragged cheer went up from the commons.
“I wonder how I ought spend your money,”
Littlefinger called down to Lord Renly.
The Hound just managed to stay in his saddle. He jerked his
mount around hard and rode back to the lists for the second pass.
Jaime Lannister tossed down his broken lance and snatched up a
fresh one, jesting with his squire. The Hound spurred forward at a
hard gallop. Lannister rode to meet him. This time, when Jaime
shifted his seat, Sandor Clegane shifted with him. Both lances
exploded, and by the time the splinters had settled, a riderless
blood bay was trotting off in search of grass while Ser Jaime
Lannister rolled in the dirt, golden and dented.
Sansa said, “I knew the Hound would win.”
Littlefinger overheard. “If you know who’s going to
win the second match, speak up now before Lord Renly plucks me
clean,” he called to her. Ned smiled.
“A pity the Imp is not here with us,” Lord Renly
said. “I should have won twice as much.”
Jaime Lannister was back on his feet, but his ornate lion helmet
had been twisted around and dented in his fall, and now he could
not get it off. The commons were hooting and pointing, the lords
and ladies were trying to stifle their chuckles, and failing, and
over it all Ned could hear King Robert laughing, louder than
anyone. Finally they had to lead the Lion of Lannister off to a
blacksmith, blind and stumbling.
By then Ser Gregor Clegane was in position at the head of the
lists. He was huge, the biggest man that Eddard Stark had ever
seen. Robert Baratheon and his brothers were all big men, as was
the Hound, and back at Winterfell there was a simpleminded
stableboy named Hodor who dwarfed them all, but the knight they
called the Mountain That Rides would have towered over Hodor. He
was well over seven feet tall, closer to eight, with massive
shoulders and arms thick as the trunks of small trees. His destrier
seemed a pony in between his armored legs, and the lance he carried
looked as small as a broom handle.
Unlike his brother, Ser Gregor did not live at court. He was a
solitary man who seldom left his own lands, but for wars and
tourneys. He had been with Lord Tywin when King’s Landing
fell, a new-made knight of seventeen years, even then distinguished
by his size and his implacable ferocity. Some said it had been
Gregor who’d dashed the skull of the infant prince Aegon
Targaryen against a wall, and whispered that afterward he had raped
the mother, the Dornish princess Elia, before putting her to the
sword. These things were not said in Gregor’s hearing.
Ned Stark could not recall ever speaking to the man, though
Gregor had ridden with them during Balon Greyjoy’s rebellion,
one knight among thousands. He watched him with disquiet. Ned
seldom put much stock in gossip, but the things said of Ser Gregor
were more than ominous. He was soon to be married for the third
time, and one heard dark whisperings about the deaths of his first
two wives. It was said that his keep was a grim place where
servants disappeared unaccountably and even the dogs were afraid to
enter the hall. And there had been a sister who had died young
under queer circumstances, and the fire that had disfigured his
brother, and the hunting accident that had killed their father.
Gregor had inherited the keep, the gold, and the family estates.
His younger brother Sandor had left the same day to take service
with the Lannisters as a sworn sword, and it was said that he had
never returned, not even to visit.
When the Knight of Flowers made his entrance, a murmur ran
through the crowd, and he heard Sansa’s fervent whisper,
“Oh, he’s so beautiful.” Ser Loras Tyrell was slender as
a reed, dressed in a suit of fabulous silver armor polished to a
blinding sheen and filigreed with twining black vines and tiny blue
forget-me-nots. The commons realized in the same instant as Ned
that the blue of the flowers came from sapphires; a gasp went up
from a thousand throats. Across the boy’s shoulders his cloak
hung heavy. It was woven of forget-me-nots, real ones, hundreds of
fresh blooms sewn to a heavy woolen cape.
His courser was as slim as her rider, a beautiful grey mare,
built for speed. Ser Gregor’s huge stallion trumpeted as he
caught her scent. The boy from Highgarden did something with his
legs, and his horse pranced sideways, nimble as a dancer. Sansa
clutched at his arm. “Father, don’t let Ser Gregor hurt
him,” she said. Ned saw she was wearing the rose that Ser
Loras had given her yesterday. Jory had told him about that as
well.
“These are tourney lances,” he told his daughter.
“They make them to splinter on impact, so no one is
hurt.” Yet he remembered the dead boy in the cart with his
cloak of crescent moons, and the words were raw in his throat.
Ser Gregor was having trouble controlling his horse. The
stallion was screaming and pawing the ground, shaking his head. The
Mountain kicked at the animal savagely with an armored boot. The
horse reared and almost threw him.
The Knight of Flowers saluted the king, rode to the far end of
the list, and couched his lance, ready. Ser Gregor brought his
animal to the line, fighting with the reins. And suddenly it began.
The Mountain’s stallion broke in a hard gallop, plunging
forward wildly, while the mare charged as smooth as a flow of silk.
Ser Gregor wrenched his shield into position, juggled with his
lance, and all the while fought to hold his unruly mount on a
straight line, and suddenly Loras Tyrell was on him, placing the
point of his lance just there, and in an eye blink the Mountain was
failing. He was so huge that he took his horse down with him in a
tangle of steel and flesh.
Ned heard applause, cheers, whistles, shocked gasps, excited
muttering, and over it all the rasping, raucous laughter of the
Hound. The Knight of Flowers reined up at the end of the lists. His
lance was not even broken. His sapphires winked in the sun as he
raised his visor, smiling. The commons went mad for him.
In the middle of the field, Ser Gregor Clegane disentangled
himself and came boiling to his feet. He wrenched off his helm and
slammed it down onto the ground. His face was dark with fury and
his hair fell down into his eyes. “My sword,” he
shouted to his squire, and the boy ran it out to him. By then his
stallion was back on its feet as well.
Gregor Clegane killed the horse with a single blow of such
ferocity that it half severed the animal’s neck. Cheers
turned to shrieks in a heartbeat. The stallion went to its knees,
screaming as it died. By then Gregor was striding down the lists toward Ser Loras Tyrell, his
bloody sword clutched in his fist. “Stop him!” Ned
shouted, but his words were lost in the roar. Everyone else was
yelling as well, and Sansa was crying.
It all happened so fast. The Knight of Flowers was shouting for
his own sword as Ser Gregor knocked his squire aside and made a
grab for the reins of his horse. The mare scented blood and reared.
Loras Tyrell kept his seat, but barely. Ser Gregor swung his sword,
a savage two-handed blow that took the boy in the chest and knocked
him from the saddle. The courser dashed away in panic as Ser Loras
lay stunned in the dirt. But as Gregor lifted his sword for the
killing blow, a rasping voice warned, “Leave him be,”
and a steel-clad hand wrenched him away from the boy.
The Mountain pivoted in wordless fury, swinging his longsword in
a killing arc with all his massive strength behind it, but the
Hound caught the blow and turned it, and for what seemed an
eternity the two brothers stood hammering at each other as a dazed
Loras Tyrell was helped to safety. Thrice Ned saw Ser Gregor aim
savage blows at the hound’s-head helmet, yet not once did
Sandor send a cut at his brother’s unprotected face.
It was the king’s voice that put an end to it . . . the
king’s voice and twenty swords. Jon Arryn had told them that
a commander needs a good battlefield voice, and Robert had proved
the truth of that on the Trident. He used that voice now.
“STOP THIS MADNESS,” he boomed, “IN THE NAME OF
YOUR KING!”
The Hound went to one knee. Ser Gregor’s blow cut air, and
at last he came to his senses. He dropped his sword and glared at
Robert, surrounded by his Kingsguard and a dozen other knights and
guardsmen. Wordlessly, he turned and strode off, shoving past
Barristan Selmy. “Let him go,” Robert said, and as
quickly as that, it was over.
“Is the Hound the champion now?” Sansa asked
Ned.
“No,” he told her. “There will be one final
joust, between the Hound and the Knight of Flowers.”
But Sansa had the right of it after all. A few moments later Ser
Loras Tyrell walked back onto the field in a simple linen doublet
and said to Sandor Clegane, “I owe you my life. The day is
yours, ser.”
“I am no ser,” the Hound replied, but he took the
victory, and the champion’s purse, and, for perhaps the first
time in his life, the love of the commons. They cheered him as he
left the lists to return to his pavilion.
As Ned walked with Sansa to the archery field, Littlefinger and
Lord Renly and some of the others fell in with them. “Tyrell
had to know the mare was in heat,” Littlefinger was saying.
“I swear the boy planned the whole thing. Gregor has always
favored huge, ill-tempered stallions with more spirit than
sense.” The notion seemed to amuse him.
It did not amuse Ser Barristan Selmy. “There is small
honor in tricks,” the old man said stiffly.
“Small honor and twenty thousand golds.” Lord Renly
smiled.
That afternoon a boy named Anguy, an unheralded commoner from
the Dornish Marches, won the archery competition, outshooting Ser
Balon Swann and Jalabhar Xho at a hundred paces after all the other
bowmen had been eliminated at the shorter distances. Ned sent Alyn
to seek him out and offer him a position with the Hand’s
guard, but the boy was flush with wine and victory and riches
undreamed of, and he refused.
The melee went on for three hours. Near forty men took part,
freeriders and hedge knights and new-made squires in search of a
reputation. They fought with blunted weapons in a chaos of mud and
blood, small troops fighting together and then turning on each
other as alliances formed and fractured, until only one man was
left standing. The victor was the red priest, Thoros of Myr, a
madman who shaved his head and fought with a flaming sword. He had
won melees before; the fire sword frightened the mounts of the
other riders, and nothing frightened Thoros. The final tally was
three broken limbs, a shattered collarbone, a dozen smashed
fingers, two horses that had to be put down, and more cuts,
sprains, and bruises than anyone cared to count. Ned was
desperately pleased that Robert had not taken part.
That night at the feast, Eddard Stark was more hopeful than he
had been in a great while. Robert was in high good humor, the
Lannisters were nowhere to be seen, and even his daughters were
behaving. Jory brought Arya down to join them, and Sansa spoke to
her sister pleasantly. “The tournament was
magnificent,” she sighed. “You should have come. How
was your dancing?”
“I’m sore all over,” Arya reported happily,
proudly displaying a huge purple bruise on her leg.
“You must be a terrible dancer,” Sansa said
doubtfully.
Later, while Sansa was off listening to a troupe of singers
perform the complex round of interwoven ballads called the
“Dance of the Dragons,” Ned inspected the bruise
himself. “I hope Forel is not being too hard on you,”
he said.
Arya stood on one leg. She was getting much better at that of
late. “Syrio says that every hurt is a lesson, and every
lesson makes you better.”
Ned frowned. The man Syrio Forel had come with an excellent
reputation, and his flamboyant Braavosi style was well suited to
Arya’s slender blade, yet still . . . a few days ago, she had
been wandering around with a swatch of black silk tied over her
eyes. Syrio was teaching her to see with her ears and her nose and
her skin, she told him. Before that, he had her doing spins and
back flips. “Arya, are you certain you want to persist in
this?”
She nodded. “Tomorrow we’re going to catch
cats.”
“Cats.” Ned sighed. “Perhaps it was a mistake
to hire this Braavosi. If you like, I will ask Jory to take over
your lessons. Or I might have a quiet word with Ser Barristan. He
was the finest sword in the Seven Kingdoms in his youth.”
“I don’t want them,” Arya said. “I want
Syrio.”
Ned ran his fingers through his hair. Any decent master-at-arms
could give Arya the rudiments of slash-and-parry without this
nonsense of blindfolds, cartwheels, and hopping about on one leg,
but he knew his youngest daughter well enough to know there was no
arguing with that stubborn jut of jaw. “As you wish,”
he said. Surely she would grow tired of this soon. “Try to be
careful.”
“I will,” she promised solemnly as she hopped
smoothly from her right leg to her left.
Much later, after he had taken the girls back through the city
and seen them both safe in bed, Sansa with her dreams and Arya with
her bruises, Ned ascended to his own chambers atop the Tower of the
Hand. The day had been warm and the room was close and stuffy. Ned
went to the window and unfastened the heavy shutters to let in the
cool night air. Across the Great Yard, he noticed the flickering
glow of candlelight from Littlefinger’s windows. The hour was
well past midnight. Down by the river, the revels were only now
beginning to dwindle and die.
He took out the dagger and studied it. Littlefinger’s
blade, won by Tyrion Lannister in a tourney wager, sent to slay
Bran in his sleep. Why? Why would the dwarf want Bran dead? Why
would anyone want Bran dead?
The dagger, Bran’s fall, all of it was linked somehow to
the murder of Jon Arryn, he could feel it in his gut, but the truth
of Jon’s death remained as clouded to him as when he had
started. Lord Stannis had not returned to King’s Landing for
the tourney. Lysa Arryn held her silence behind the high walls of
the Eyrie. The squire was dead, and Jory was still searching the
whorehouses. What did he have but Robert’s bastard?
That the armorer’s sullen apprentice was the king’s
son, Ned had no doubt. The Baratheon look was stamped on his face,
in his jaw, his eyes, that black hair. Renly was too young to have
fathered a boy of that age, Stannis too cold and proud in his
honor. Gendry had to be Robert’s.
Yet knowing all that, what had he learned? The king had other
baseborn children scattered throughout the Seven Kingdoms. He had
openly acknowledged one of his bastards, a boy of Bran’s age
whose mother was highborn. The lad was being fostered by Lord
Renly’s castellan at Storm’s End.
Ned remembered Robert’s first child as well, a daughter
born in the Vale when Robert was scarcely more than a boy himself.
A sweet little girl; the young lord of Storm’s End had doted
on her. He used to make daily visits to play with the babe, long
after he had lost interest in the mother. Ned was often dragged
along for company, whether he willed it or not. The girl would be
seventeen or eighteen now, he realized; older than Robert had been
when he fathered her. A strange thought.
Cersei could not have been pleased by her lord husband’s
by-blows, yet in the end it mattered little whether the king had
one bastard or a hundred. Law and custom gave the baseborn few
rights. Gendry, the girl in the Vale, the boy at Storm’s End,
none of them could threaten Robert’s trueborn children . . .
His musings were ended by a soft rap on his door. “A man
to see you, my lord,” Harwin called. “He will not give
his name.”
“Send him in,” Ned said, wondering.
The visitor was a stout man in cracked, mud-caked boots and a
heavy brown robe of the coarsest roughspun, his features hidden by
a cowl, his hands drawn up into voluminous sleeves.
“Who are you?” Ned asked.
“A friend,” the cowled man said in a strange, low
voice. “We must speak alone, Lord Stark.”
Curiosity was stronger than caution. “Harwin, leave
us,” he commanded. Not until they were alone behind closed
doors did his visitor draw back his cowl.
“Lord Varys?” Ned said in astonishment.
“Lord Stark,” Varys said politely, seating himself.
“I wonder if I might trouble you for a drink?”
Ned filled two cups with summerwine and handed one to Varys.
“I might have passed within a foot of you and never
recognized you,” he said, incredulous. He had never seen the
eunuch dress in anything but silk and velvet and the richest
damasks, and this man smelled of sweat instead of lilacs.
“That was my dearest hope,” Varys said. “It
would not do if certain people learned that we had spoken in
private. The queen watches you closely. This wine is very choice.
Thank you.”
“How did you get past my other guards?” Ned asked.
Porther and Cayn had been posted outside the tower, and Alyn on the
stairs.
“The Red Keep has ways known only to ghosts and
spiders.” Varys smiled apologetically. “I will not keep
you long, my lord. There are things you must know. You are the
King’s Hand, and the king is a fool.” The
eunuch’s cloying tones were gone; now his voice was thin and
sharp as a whip. “Your friend, I know, yet a fool nonetheless
. . . and doomed, unless you save him. Today was a near thing. They
had hoped to kill him during the melee.”
For a moment Ned was speechless with shock.
“Who?”
Varys sipped his wine. “If I truly need to tell you that,
you are a bigger fool than Robert and I am on the wrong
side.”
“The Lannisters,” Ned said. “The queen . . . no, I will not believe that, not even of Cersei. She asked him not
to fight!”
“She forbade him to fight, in front of his brother, his
knights, and half the court. Tell me truly, do you know any surer
way to force King Robert into the melee? I ask you.”
Ned had a sick feeling in his gut. The eunuch had hit upon a
truth; tell Robert Baratheon he could not, should not, or must not
do a thing, and it was as good as done. “Even if he’d
fought, who would have dared to strike the king?”
Varys shrugged. “There were forty riders in the melee. The
Lannisters have many friends. Amidst all that chaos, with horses
screaming and bones breaking and Thoros of Myr waving that absurd
firesword of his, who could name it murder if some chance blow
felled His Grace?” He went to the flagon and refilled his
cup. “After the deed was done, the slayer would be beside
himself with grief. I can almost hear him weeping. So sad. Yet no
doubt the gracious and compassionate widow would take pity, lift
the poor unfortunate to his feet, and bless him with a gentle kiss
of forgiveness. Good King Joffrey would have no choice but to
pardon him.” The eunuch stroked his cheek. “Or perhaps
Cersei would let Ser Ilyn strike off his head. Less risk for the
Lannisters that way, though quite an unpleasant surprise for their
little friend.”
Ned felt his anger rise. “You knew of this plot, and yet
you did nothing.”
“I command whisperers, not warriors.”
“You might have come to me earlier.”
“Oh, yes, I confess it. And you would have rushed straight
to the king, yes? And when Robert heard of his peril, what would he
have done? I wonder.”
Ned considered that. “He would have damned them all, and
fought anyway, to show he did not fear them.”
Varys spread his hands. “I will make another confession,
Lord Eddard. I was curious to see what you would do. Why not come
to me? you ask, and I must answer, Why, because I did not trust
you, my lord.”
“You did not trust me?” Ned was frankly
astonished.
“The Red Keep shelters two sorts of people, Lord
Eddard,” Varys said. “Those who are loyal to the realm,
and those who are loyal only to themselves. Until this morning, I
could not say which you might be . . . so I waited to see . . . and
now I know, for a certainty.” He smiled a plump tight little
smile, and for a moment his private face and public mask were one.
“I begin to comprehend why the queen fears you so much. Oh,
yes I do.”
“You are the one she ought to fear,” Ned said.
“No. I am what I am. The king makes use of me, but it
shames him. A most puissant warrior is our Robert, and such a manly
man has little love for sneaks and spies and eunuchs. If a day
should come when Cersei whispers, ‘Kill that man,’ Ilyn
Payne will snick my head off in a twinkling, and who will mourn
poor Varys then? North or south, they sing no songs for
spiders.” He reached out and touched Ned with a soft hand.
“But you, Lord Stark . . . I think . . . no, I know . . . he
would not kill you, not even for his queen, and there may lie our
salvation.”
It was all too much. For a moment Eddard Stark wanted nothing so
much as to return to Winterfell, to the clean simplicity of the
north, where the enemies were winter and the wildlings beyond the
Wall. “Surely Robert has other loyal friends,” he
protested. “His brothers, his—”
“—wife?” Varys finished, with a smile that cut.
“His brothers hate the Lannisters, true enough, but hating
the queen and loving the king are not quite the same thing, are
they? Ser Barristan loves his honor, Grand Maester Pycelle loves
his office, and Littlefinger loves Littlefinger.”
“The Kingsguard—”
“A paper shield,” the eunuch said. “Try not to
look so shocked, Lord Stark. Jaime Lannister is himself a Sworn
Brother of the White Swords, and we all know what his oath is
worth. The days when men like Ryam Redwyne and Prince Aemon the
Dragonknight wore the white cloak are gone to dust and song. Of
these seven, only Ser Barristan Selmy is made of the true steel,
and Selmy is old. Ser Boros and Ser Meryn are the queen’s
creatures to the bone, and I have deep suspicions of the others.
No, my lord, when the swords come out in earnest, you will be the
only true friend Robert Baratheon will have.”
“Robert must be told,” Ned said. “If what you
say is true, if even a part of it is true, the king must hear it
for himself.”
“And what proof shall we lay before him? My words against
theirs? My little birds against the queen and the Kingslayer,
against his brothers and his council, against the Wardens of East
and West, against all the might of Casterly Rock? Pray, send for
Ser Ilyn directly, it will save us all some time. I know where that
road ends.”
“Yet if what you say is true, they will only bide their
time and make another attempt.”
“Indeed they will,” said Varys, “and sooner
rather than later, I do fear. You are making them most anxious,
Lord Eddard. But my little birds will be listening, and together we
may be able to forestall them, you and I.” He rose and pulled
up his cowl so his face was hidden once more. “Thank you for
the wine. We will speak again. When you see me next at council, be
certain to treat me with your accustomed contempt. You should not
find it difficult.”
He was at the door when Ned called, “Varys.” The
eunuch turned back. “How did Jon Arryn die?”
“I wondered when you would get around to that.”
“Tell me.”
“The tears of Lys, they call it. A rare and costly thing,
clear and sweet as water, and it leaves no trace. I begged Lord
Arryn to use a taster, in this very room I begged him, but he would
not hear of it. Only one who was less than a man would even think
of such a thing, he told me.”
Ned had to know the rest. “Who gave him the
poison?”
“Some dear sweet friend who often shared meat and mead
with him, no doubt. Oh, but which one? There were many such. Lord
Arryn was a kindly, trusting man.” The eunuch sighed.
“There was one boy. All he was, he owed Jon Arryn, but when
the widow fled to the Eyrie with her household, he stayed in
King’s Landing and prospered. It always gladdens my heart to
see the young rise in the world.” The whip was in his voice
again, every word a stroke. “He must have cut a gallant
figure in the tourney, him in his bright new armor, with those
crescent moons on his cloak. A pity he died so untimely, before you
could talk to him . . . ”
Ned felt half-poisoned himself. “The squire,” he
said. “Ser Hugh.” Wheels within wheels within wheels.
Ned’s head was pounding. “Why? Why now? Jon Arryn
had been Hand for fourteen years. What was he doing that they had
to kill him?”
“Asking questions,” Varys said, slipping out the
door.
I stood last vigil for him myself,” Ser
Barristan Selmy said as they looked down at the body in the back of
the cart. “He had no one else. A mother in the Vale, I am
told.”
In the pale dawn light, the young knight looked as though he
were sleeping. He had not been handsome, but death had smoothed his
rough-hewn features and the silent sisters had dressed him in his
best velvet tunic, with a high collar to cover the ruin the lance
had made of his throat. Eddard Stark looked at his face, and
wondered if it had been for his sake that the boy had died. Slain
by a Lannister bannerman before Ned could speak to him; could that
be mere happenstance? He supposed he would never know.
“Hugh was Jon Arryn’s squire for four years,”
Selmy went on. “The king knighted him before he rode north,
in Jon’s memory. The lad wanted it desperately, yet I fear he
was not ready.”
Ned had slept badly last night and he felt tired beyond his
years. “None of us is ever ready,” he said.
“For knighthood?”
“For death.” Gently Ned covered the boy with his
cloak, a bloodstained bit of blue bordered in crescent moons. When
his mother asked why her son was dead, he reflected bitterly, they
would tell her he had fought to honor the King’s Hand, Eddard
Stark. “This was needless. War should not be a game.”
Ned turned to the woman beside the cart, shrouded in grey, face
hidden but for her eyes. The silent sisters prepared men for the
grave, and it was ill fortune to look on the face of death.
“Send his armor home to the Vale. The mother will want to
have it.”
“It is worth a fair piece of silver,” Ser Barristan
said. “The boy had it forged special for the tourney. Plain
work, but good. I do not know if he had finished paying the
smith.”
“He paid yesterday, my lord, and he paid dearly,”
Ned replied. And to the silent sister he said, “Send the
mother the armor. I will deal with this smith.” She bowed her
head.
Afterward Ser Barristan walked with Ned to the king’s
pavilion. The camp was beginning to stir. Fat sausages sizzled and
spit over firepits, spicing the air with the scents of garlic and
pepper. Young squires hurried about on errands as their masters
woke, yawning and stretching, to meet the day. A serving man with a
goose under his arm bent his knee when he caught sight of them.
“M’lords,” he muttered as the goose honked and
pecked at his fingers. The shields displayed outside each tent
heralded its occupant: the silver eagle of Seagard, Bryce
Caron’s field of nightingales, a cluster of grapes for the
Redwynes, brindled boar, red ox, burning tree, white ram, triple
spiral, purple unicorn, dancing maiden, blackadder, twin towers,
horned owl, and last the pure white blazons of the Kingsguard,
shining like the dawn.
“The king means to fight in the melee today,” Ser
Barristan said as they were passing Ser Meryn’s shield, its
paint sullied by a deep gash where Loras Tyrell’s lance had
scarred the wood as he drove him from his saddle.
“Yes,” Ned said grimly. Jory had woken him last
night to bring him that news. Small wonder he had slept so
badly.
Ser Barristan’s look was troubled. “They say
night’s beauties fade at dawn, and the children of wine are
oft disowned in the morning light.”
“They say so,” Ned agreed, “but not of
Robert.” Other men might reconsider words spoken in drunken
bravado, but Robert Baratheon would remember and, remembering,
would never back down.
The king’s pavilion was close by the water, and the
morning mists off the river had wreathed it in wisps of grey. It
was all of golden silk, the largest and grandest structure in the
camp. Outside the entrance, Robert’s warhammer was displayed
beside an immense iron shield blazoned with the crowned stag of
House Baratheon.
Ned had hoped to discover the king still abed in a wine-soaked
sleep, but luck was not with him. They found Robert drinking beer
from a polished horn and roaring his displeasure at two young
squires who were trying to buckle him into his armor. “Your
Grace,” one was saying, almost in tears, “it’s
made too small, it won’t go.” He fumbled, and the
gorget he was trying to fit around Robert’s thick neck
tumbled to the ground.
“Seven hells!” Robert swore. “Do I have to do
it myself? Piss on the both of you. Pick it up. Don’t just
stand there gaping, Lancel, pick it up!” The lad jumped, and
the king noticed his company. “Look at these oafs, Ned. My
wife insisted I take these two to squire for me, and they’re
worse than useless. Can’t even put a man’s armor on him
properly. Squires, they say. I say they’re swineherds dressed
up in silk.”
Ned only needed a glance to understand the difficulty.
“The boys are not at fault,” he told the king.
“You’re too fat for your armor, Robert.”
Robert Baratheon took a long swallow of beer, tossed the empty
horn onto his sleeping furs, wiped his mouth with the back of his
hand, and said darkly, “Fat? Fat, is it? Is that how you
speak to your king?” He let go his laughter, sudden as a
storm. “Ah, damn you, Ned, why are you always
right?”
The squires smiled nervously until the king turned on them.
“You. Yes, both of you. You heard the Hand. The king is too
fat for his armor. Go find Ser Aron Santagar. Tell him I need the
breastplate stretcher. Now! What are you waiting for?”
The boys tripped over each other in their haste to be quit of
the tent. Robert managed to keep a stern face until they were gone.
Then he dropped back into a chair, shaking with laughter.
Ser Barristan Selmy chuckled with him. Even Eddard Stark managed
a smile. Always, though, the graver thoughts crept in. He could not
help taking note of the two squires: handsome boys, fair and well
made. One was Sansa’s age, with long golden curls; the other
perhaps fifteen, sandy-haired, with a wisp of a mustache and the
emerald-green eyes of the queen.
“Ah, I wish I could be there to see Santagar’s
face,” Robert said. “I hope he’ll have the wit to
send them to someone else. We ought to keep them running all
day!”
“Those boys,” Ned asked him.
“Lannisters?”
Robert nodded, wiping tears from his eyes. “Cousins. Sons
of Lord Tywin’s brother. One of the dead ones. Or perhaps the
live one, now that I come to think on it. I don’t recall. My
wife comes from a very large family, Ned.” A very ambitious family, Ned thought. He had nothing against the
squires, but it troubled him to see Robert surrounded by the
queen’s kin, waking and sleeping. The Lannister appetite for
offices and honors seemed to know no bounds. “The talk is
you and the queen had angry words last night.”
The mirth curdled on Robert’s face. “The woman tried
to forbid me to fight in the melee. She’s sulking in the
castle now, damn her. Your sister would never have shamed me like
that.”
“You never knew Lyanna as I did, Robert,” Ned told
him. “You saw her beauty, but not the iron underneath. She
would have told you that you have no business in the
melee.”
“You too?” The king frowned. “You are a sour
man, Stark. Too long in the north, all the juices have frozen
inside you. Well, mine are still running.” He slapped his
chest to prove it.
“You are the king,” Ned reminded him.
“I sit on the damn iron seat when I must. Does that mean I
don’t have the same hungers as other men? A bit of wine now
and again, a girl squealing in bed, the feel of a horse between my
legs? Seven hells, Ned, I want to hit someone.”
Ser Barristan Selmy spoke up. “Your Grace,” he said,
“it is not seemly that the king should ride into the melee.
It would not be a fair contest. Who would dare strike
you?”
Robert seemed honestly taken aback. “Why, all of them,
damn it. If they can. And the last man left standing . . . ”
“ . . . will be you,” Ned finished. He saw at once
that Selmy had hit the mark. The dangers of the melee were only a
savor to Robert, but this touched on his pride. “Ser
Barristan is right. There’s not a man in the Seven Kingdoms
who would dare risk your displeasure by hurting you.”
The king rose to his feet, his face flushed. “Are you
telling me those prancing cravens will let me win?”
“For a certainty,” Ned said, and Ser Barristan Selmy
bowed his head in silent accord.
For a moment Robert was so angry he could not speak. He strode
across the tent, whirled, strode back, his face dark and angry. He
snatched up his breastplate from the ground and threw it at
Barristan Selmy in a wordless fury. Selmy dodged. “Get
out,” the king said then, coldly. “Get out before I
kill you.”
Ser Barristan left quickly. Ned was about to follow when the
king called out again. “Not you, Ned.”
Ned turned back. Robert took up his horn again, filled it with
beer from a barrel in the corner, and thrust it at Ned.
“Drink,” he said brusquely.
“I’ve no thirst—”
“Drink. Your king commands it.”
Ned took the horn and drank. The beer was black and thick, so
strong it stung the eyes.
Robert sat down again. “Damn you, Ned Stark. You and Jon
Arryn, I loved you both. What have you done to me? You were the one
should have been king, you or Jon.”
“You had the better claim, Your Grace.”
“I told you to drink, not to argue. You made me king, you
could at least have the courtesy to listen when I talk, damn you.
Look at me, Ned. Look at what kinging has done to me. Gods, too fat
for my armor, how did it ever come to this?”
“Robert . . . ”
“Drink and stay quiet, the king is talking. I swear to
you, I was never so alive as when I was winning this throne, or so
dead as now that I’ve won it. And Cersei . . . I have Jon
Arryn to thank for her. I had no wish to marry after Lyanna was
taken from me, but Jon said the realm needed an heir. Cersei
Lannister would be a good match, he told me, she would bind Lord
Tywin to me should Viserys Targaryen ever try to win back his
father’s throne.” The king shook his head. “I
loved that old man, I swear it, but now I think he was a bigger
fool than Moon Boy. Oh, Cersei is lovely to look at, truly, but
cold . . . the way she guards her cunt, you’d think she had
all the gold of Casterly Rock between her legs. Here, give me that
beer if you won’t drink it.” He took the horn, upended
it, belched, wiped his mouth. “I am sorry for your girl, Ned.
Truly. About the wolf, I mean. My son was lying, I’d stake my
soul on it. My son . . . you love your children, don’t
you?”
“With all my heart,” Ned said.
“Let me tell you a secret, Ned. More than once, I have
dreamed of giving up the crown. Take ship for the Free Cities with
my horse and my hammer, spend my time warring and whoring,
that’s what I was made for. The sellsword king, how the
singers would love me. You know what stops me? The thought of
Joffrey on the throne, with Cersei standing behind him whispering
in his ear. My son. How could I have made a son like that,
Ned?”
“He’s only a boy,” Ned said awkwardly. He had
small liking for Prince Joffrey, but he could hear the pain in
Robert’s voice. “Have you forgotten how wild you were
at his age?”
“It would not trouble me if the boy was wild, Ned. You
don’t know him as I do.” He sighed and shook his head.
“Ah, perhaps you are right. Jon despaired of me often enough,
yet I grew into a good king.” Robert looked at Ned and
scowled at his silence. “You might speak up and agree now,
you know.”
“Your Grace . . . ” Ned began, carefully.
Robert slapped Ned on the back. “Ah, say that I’m a
better king than Aerys and be done with it. You never could lie for
love nor honor, Ned Stark. I’m still young, and now that
you’re here with me, things will be different. We’ll
make this a reign to sing of, and damn the Lannisters to seven
hells. I smell bacon. Who do you think our champion will be today?
Have you seen Mace Tyrell’s boy? The Knight of Flowers, they
call him. Now there’s a son any man would be proud to own to.
Last tourney, he dumped the Kingslayer on his golden rump, you
ought to have seen the look on Cersei’s face. I laughed till
my sides hurt. Renly says he has this sister, a maid of fourteen,
lovely as a dawn . . . ”
They broke their fast on black bread and boiled goose eggs and
fish fried up with onions and bacon, at a trestle table by the
river’s edge. The king’s melancholy melted away with
the morning mist, and before long Robert was eating an orange and
waxing fond about a morning at the Eyrie when they had been boys.
“ . . . had given Jon a barrel of oranges, remember? Only the
things had gone rotten, so I flung mine across the table and hit
Dacks right in the nose. You remember, Redfort’s pock-faced
squire? He tossed one back at me, and before Jon could so much as
fart, there were oranges flying across the High Hall in every
direction.” He laughed uproariously, and even Ned smiled,
remembering.
This was the boy he had grown up with, he thought; this was the
Robert Baratheon he’d known and loved. If he could prove that
the Lannisters were behind the attack on Bran, prove that they had
murdered Jon Arryn, this man would listen. Then Cersei would fall,
and the Kingslayer with her, and if Lord Tywin dared to rouse the
west, Robert would smash him as he had smashed Rhaegar Targaryen on
the Trident. He could see it all so clearly.
That breakfast tasted better than anything Eddard Stark had
eaten in a long time, and afterward his smiles came easier and more
often, until it was time for the tournament to resume.
Ned walked with the king to the jousting field. He had promised
to watch the final tilts with Sansa; Septa Mordane was ill today,
and his daughter was determined not to miss the end of the
jousting. As he saw Robert to his place, he noted that Cersei
Lannister had chosen not to appear; the place beside the king was
empty. That too gave Ned cause to hope.
He shouldered his way to where his daughter was seated and found
her as the horns blew for the day’s first joust. Sansa was so
engrossed she scarcely seemed to notice his arrival.
Sandor Clegane was the first rider to appear. He wore an olive-
green cloak over his soot-grey armor. That, and his
hound’s-head helm, were his only concession to ornament.
“A hundred golden dragons on the Kingslayer,”
Littlefinger announced loudly as Jaime Lannister entered the lists,
riding an elegant blood bay destrier. The horse wore a blanket of
gilded ringmail, and Jaime glittered from head to heel. Even his
lance was fashioned from the golden wood of the Summer Isles.
“Done,” Lord Renly shouted back. “The Hound
has a hungry look about him this morning.”
“Even hungry dogs know better than to bite the hand that
feeds them,” Littlefinger called dryly.
Sandor Clegane dropped his visor with an audible clang and took
up his position. Ser Jaime tossed a kiss to some woman in the
commons, gently lowered his visor, and rode to the end of the
lists. Both men couched their lances.
Ned Stark would have loved nothing so well as to see them both
lose, but Sansa was watching it all moist-eyed and eager. The
hastily erected gallery trembled as the horses broke into a gallop.
The Hound leaned forward as he rode, his lance rock steady, but
Jaime shifted his seat deftly in the instant before impact.
Clegane’s point was turned harmlessly against the golden
shield with the lion blazon, while his own hit square. Wood
shattered, and the Hound reeled, fighting to keep his seat. Sansa
gasped. A ragged cheer went up from the commons.
“I wonder how I ought spend your money,”
Littlefinger called down to Lord Renly.
The Hound just managed to stay in his saddle. He jerked his
mount around hard and rode back to the lists for the second pass.
Jaime Lannister tossed down his broken lance and snatched up a
fresh one, jesting with his squire. The Hound spurred forward at a
hard gallop. Lannister rode to meet him. This time, when Jaime
shifted his seat, Sandor Clegane shifted with him. Both lances
exploded, and by the time the splinters had settled, a riderless
blood bay was trotting off in search of grass while Ser Jaime
Lannister rolled in the dirt, golden and dented.
Sansa said, “I knew the Hound would win.”
Littlefinger overheard. “If you know who’s going to
win the second match, speak up now before Lord Renly plucks me
clean,” he called to her. Ned smiled.
“A pity the Imp is not here with us,” Lord Renly
said. “I should have won twice as much.”
Jaime Lannister was back on his feet, but his ornate lion helmet
had been twisted around and dented in his fall, and now he could
not get it off. The commons were hooting and pointing, the lords
and ladies were trying to stifle their chuckles, and failing, and
over it all Ned could hear King Robert laughing, louder than
anyone. Finally they had to lead the Lion of Lannister off to a
blacksmith, blind and stumbling.
By then Ser Gregor Clegane was in position at the head of the
lists. He was huge, the biggest man that Eddard Stark had ever
seen. Robert Baratheon and his brothers were all big men, as was
the Hound, and back at Winterfell there was a simpleminded
stableboy named Hodor who dwarfed them all, but the knight they
called the Mountain That Rides would have towered over Hodor. He
was well over seven feet tall, closer to eight, with massive
shoulders and arms thick as the trunks of small trees. His destrier
seemed a pony in between his armored legs, and the lance he carried
looked as small as a broom handle.
Unlike his brother, Ser Gregor did not live at court. He was a
solitary man who seldom left his own lands, but for wars and
tourneys. He had been with Lord Tywin when King’s Landing
fell, a new-made knight of seventeen years, even then distinguished
by his size and his implacable ferocity. Some said it had been
Gregor who’d dashed the skull of the infant prince Aegon
Targaryen against a wall, and whispered that afterward he had raped
the mother, the Dornish princess Elia, before putting her to the
sword. These things were not said in Gregor’s hearing.
Ned Stark could not recall ever speaking to the man, though
Gregor had ridden with them during Balon Greyjoy’s rebellion,
one knight among thousands. He watched him with disquiet. Ned
seldom put much stock in gossip, but the things said of Ser Gregor
were more than ominous. He was soon to be married for the third
time, and one heard dark whisperings about the deaths of his first
two wives. It was said that his keep was a grim place where
servants disappeared unaccountably and even the dogs were afraid to
enter the hall. And there had been a sister who had died young
under queer circumstances, and the fire that had disfigured his
brother, and the hunting accident that had killed their father.
Gregor had inherited the keep, the gold, and the family estates.
His younger brother Sandor had left the same day to take service
with the Lannisters as a sworn sword, and it was said that he had
never returned, not even to visit.
When the Knight of Flowers made his entrance, a murmur ran
through the crowd, and he heard Sansa’s fervent whisper,
“Oh, he’s so beautiful.” Ser Loras Tyrell was slender as
a reed, dressed in a suit of fabulous silver armor polished to a
blinding sheen and filigreed with twining black vines and tiny blue
forget-me-nots. The commons realized in the same instant as Ned
that the blue of the flowers came from sapphires; a gasp went up
from a thousand throats. Across the boy’s shoulders his cloak
hung heavy. It was woven of forget-me-nots, real ones, hundreds of
fresh blooms sewn to a heavy woolen cape.
His courser was as slim as her rider, a beautiful grey mare,
built for speed. Ser Gregor’s huge stallion trumpeted as he
caught her scent. The boy from Highgarden did something with his
legs, and his horse pranced sideways, nimble as a dancer. Sansa
clutched at his arm. “Father, don’t let Ser Gregor hurt
him,” she said. Ned saw she was wearing the rose that Ser
Loras had given her yesterday. Jory had told him about that as
well.
“These are tourney lances,” he told his daughter.
“They make them to splinter on impact, so no one is
hurt.” Yet he remembered the dead boy in the cart with his
cloak of crescent moons, and the words were raw in his throat.
Ser Gregor was having trouble controlling his horse. The
stallion was screaming and pawing the ground, shaking his head. The
Mountain kicked at the animal savagely with an armored boot. The
horse reared and almost threw him.
The Knight of Flowers saluted the king, rode to the far end of
the list, and couched his lance, ready. Ser Gregor brought his
animal to the line, fighting with the reins. And suddenly it began.
The Mountain’s stallion broke in a hard gallop, plunging
forward wildly, while the mare charged as smooth as a flow of silk.
Ser Gregor wrenched his shield into position, juggled with his
lance, and all the while fought to hold his unruly mount on a
straight line, and suddenly Loras Tyrell was on him, placing the
point of his lance just there, and in an eye blink the Mountain was
failing. He was so huge that he took his horse down with him in a
tangle of steel and flesh.
Ned heard applause, cheers, whistles, shocked gasps, excited
muttering, and over it all the rasping, raucous laughter of the
Hound. The Knight of Flowers reined up at the end of the lists. His
lance was not even broken. His sapphires winked in the sun as he
raised his visor, smiling. The commons went mad for him.
In the middle of the field, Ser Gregor Clegane disentangled
himself and came boiling to his feet. He wrenched off his helm and
slammed it down onto the ground. His face was dark with fury and
his hair fell down into his eyes. “My sword,” he
shouted to his squire, and the boy ran it out to him. By then his
stallion was back on its feet as well.
Gregor Clegane killed the horse with a single blow of such
ferocity that it half severed the animal’s neck. Cheers
turned to shrieks in a heartbeat. The stallion went to its knees,
screaming as it died. By then Gregor was striding down the lists toward Ser Loras Tyrell, his
bloody sword clutched in his fist. “Stop him!” Ned
shouted, but his words were lost in the roar. Everyone else was
yelling as well, and Sansa was crying.
It all happened so fast. The Knight of Flowers was shouting for
his own sword as Ser Gregor knocked his squire aside and made a
grab for the reins of his horse. The mare scented blood and reared.
Loras Tyrell kept his seat, but barely. Ser Gregor swung his sword,
a savage two-handed blow that took the boy in the chest and knocked
him from the saddle. The courser dashed away in panic as Ser Loras
lay stunned in the dirt. But as Gregor lifted his sword for the
killing blow, a rasping voice warned, “Leave him be,”
and a steel-clad hand wrenched him away from the boy.
The Mountain pivoted in wordless fury, swinging his longsword in
a killing arc with all his massive strength behind it, but the
Hound caught the blow and turned it, and for what seemed an
eternity the two brothers stood hammering at each other as a dazed
Loras Tyrell was helped to safety. Thrice Ned saw Ser Gregor aim
savage blows at the hound’s-head helmet, yet not once did
Sandor send a cut at his brother’s unprotected face.
It was the king’s voice that put an end to it . . . the
king’s voice and twenty swords. Jon Arryn had told them that
a commander needs a good battlefield voice, and Robert had proved
the truth of that on the Trident. He used that voice now.
“STOP THIS MADNESS,” he boomed, “IN THE NAME OF
YOUR KING!”
The Hound went to one knee. Ser Gregor’s blow cut air, and
at last he came to his senses. He dropped his sword and glared at
Robert, surrounded by his Kingsguard and a dozen other knights and
guardsmen. Wordlessly, he turned and strode off, shoving past
Barristan Selmy. “Let him go,” Robert said, and as
quickly as that, it was over.
“Is the Hound the champion now?” Sansa asked
Ned.
“No,” he told her. “There will be one final
joust, between the Hound and the Knight of Flowers.”
But Sansa had the right of it after all. A few moments later Ser
Loras Tyrell walked back onto the field in a simple linen doublet
and said to Sandor Clegane, “I owe you my life. The day is
yours, ser.”
“I am no ser,” the Hound replied, but he took the
victory, and the champion’s purse, and, for perhaps the first
time in his life, the love of the commons. They cheered him as he
left the lists to return to his pavilion.
As Ned walked with Sansa to the archery field, Littlefinger and
Lord Renly and some of the others fell in with them. “Tyrell
had to know the mare was in heat,” Littlefinger was saying.
“I swear the boy planned the whole thing. Gregor has always
favored huge, ill-tempered stallions with more spirit than
sense.” The notion seemed to amuse him.
It did not amuse Ser Barristan Selmy. “There is small
honor in tricks,” the old man said stiffly.
“Small honor and twenty thousand golds.” Lord Renly
smiled.
That afternoon a boy named Anguy, an unheralded commoner from
the Dornish Marches, won the archery competition, outshooting Ser
Balon Swann and Jalabhar Xho at a hundred paces after all the other
bowmen had been eliminated at the shorter distances. Ned sent Alyn
to seek him out and offer him a position with the Hand’s
guard, but the boy was flush with wine and victory and riches
undreamed of, and he refused.
The melee went on for three hours. Near forty men took part,
freeriders and hedge knights and new-made squires in search of a
reputation. They fought with blunted weapons in a chaos of mud and
blood, small troops fighting together and then turning on each
other as alliances formed and fractured, until only one man was
left standing. The victor was the red priest, Thoros of Myr, a
madman who shaved his head and fought with a flaming sword. He had
won melees before; the fire sword frightened the mounts of the
other riders, and nothing frightened Thoros. The final tally was
three broken limbs, a shattered collarbone, a dozen smashed
fingers, two horses that had to be put down, and more cuts,
sprains, and bruises than anyone cared to count. Ned was
desperately pleased that Robert had not taken part.
That night at the feast, Eddard Stark was more hopeful than he
had been in a great while. Robert was in high good humor, the
Lannisters were nowhere to be seen, and even his daughters were
behaving. Jory brought Arya down to join them, and Sansa spoke to
her sister pleasantly. “The tournament was
magnificent,” she sighed. “You should have come. How
was your dancing?”
“I’m sore all over,” Arya reported happily,
proudly displaying a huge purple bruise on her leg.
“You must be a terrible dancer,” Sansa said
doubtfully.
Later, while Sansa was off listening to a troupe of singers
perform the complex round of interwoven ballads called the
“Dance of the Dragons,” Ned inspected the bruise
himself. “I hope Forel is not being too hard on you,”
he said.
Arya stood on one leg. She was getting much better at that of
late. “Syrio says that every hurt is a lesson, and every
lesson makes you better.”
Ned frowned. The man Syrio Forel had come with an excellent
reputation, and his flamboyant Braavosi style was well suited to
Arya’s slender blade, yet still . . . a few days ago, she had
been wandering around with a swatch of black silk tied over her
eyes. Syrio was teaching her to see with her ears and her nose and
her skin, she told him. Before that, he had her doing spins and
back flips. “Arya, are you certain you want to persist in
this?”
She nodded. “Tomorrow we’re going to catch
cats.”
“Cats.” Ned sighed. “Perhaps it was a mistake
to hire this Braavosi. If you like, I will ask Jory to take over
your lessons. Or I might have a quiet word with Ser Barristan. He
was the finest sword in the Seven Kingdoms in his youth.”
“I don’t want them,” Arya said. “I want
Syrio.”
Ned ran his fingers through his hair. Any decent master-at-arms
could give Arya the rudiments of slash-and-parry without this
nonsense of blindfolds, cartwheels, and hopping about on one leg,
but he knew his youngest daughter well enough to know there was no
arguing with that stubborn jut of jaw. “As you wish,”
he said. Surely she would grow tired of this soon. “Try to be
careful.”
“I will,” she promised solemnly as she hopped
smoothly from her right leg to her left.
Much later, after he had taken the girls back through the city
and seen them both safe in bed, Sansa with her dreams and Arya with
her bruises, Ned ascended to his own chambers atop the Tower of the
Hand. The day had been warm and the room was close and stuffy. Ned
went to the window and unfastened the heavy shutters to let in the
cool night air. Across the Great Yard, he noticed the flickering
glow of candlelight from Littlefinger’s windows. The hour was
well past midnight. Down by the river, the revels were only now
beginning to dwindle and die.
He took out the dagger and studied it. Littlefinger’s
blade, won by Tyrion Lannister in a tourney wager, sent to slay
Bran in his sleep. Why? Why would the dwarf want Bran dead? Why
would anyone want Bran dead?
The dagger, Bran’s fall, all of it was linked somehow to
the murder of Jon Arryn, he could feel it in his gut, but the truth
of Jon’s death remained as clouded to him as when he had
started. Lord Stannis had not returned to King’s Landing for
the tourney. Lysa Arryn held her silence behind the high walls of
the Eyrie. The squire was dead, and Jory was still searching the
whorehouses. What did he have but Robert’s bastard?
That the armorer’s sullen apprentice was the king’s
son, Ned had no doubt. The Baratheon look was stamped on his face,
in his jaw, his eyes, that black hair. Renly was too young to have
fathered a boy of that age, Stannis too cold and proud in his
honor. Gendry had to be Robert’s.
Yet knowing all that, what had he learned? The king had other
baseborn children scattered throughout the Seven Kingdoms. He had
openly acknowledged one of his bastards, a boy of Bran’s age
whose mother was highborn. The lad was being fostered by Lord
Renly’s castellan at Storm’s End.
Ned remembered Robert’s first child as well, a daughter
born in the Vale when Robert was scarcely more than a boy himself.
A sweet little girl; the young lord of Storm’s End had doted
on her. He used to make daily visits to play with the babe, long
after he had lost interest in the mother. Ned was often dragged
along for company, whether he willed it or not. The girl would be
seventeen or eighteen now, he realized; older than Robert had been
when he fathered her. A strange thought.
Cersei could not have been pleased by her lord husband’s
by-blows, yet in the end it mattered little whether the king had
one bastard or a hundred. Law and custom gave the baseborn few
rights. Gendry, the girl in the Vale, the boy at Storm’s End,
none of them could threaten Robert’s trueborn children . . .
His musings were ended by a soft rap on his door. “A man
to see you, my lord,” Harwin called. “He will not give
his name.”
“Send him in,” Ned said, wondering.
The visitor was a stout man in cracked, mud-caked boots and a
heavy brown robe of the coarsest roughspun, his features hidden by
a cowl, his hands drawn up into voluminous sleeves.
“Who are you?” Ned asked.
“A friend,” the cowled man said in a strange, low
voice. “We must speak alone, Lord Stark.”
Curiosity was stronger than caution. “Harwin, leave
us,” he commanded. Not until they were alone behind closed
doors did his visitor draw back his cowl.
“Lord Varys?” Ned said in astonishment.
“Lord Stark,” Varys said politely, seating himself.
“I wonder if I might trouble you for a drink?”
Ned filled two cups with summerwine and handed one to Varys.
“I might have passed within a foot of you and never
recognized you,” he said, incredulous. He had never seen the
eunuch dress in anything but silk and velvet and the richest
damasks, and this man smelled of sweat instead of lilacs.
“That was my dearest hope,” Varys said. “It
would not do if certain people learned that we had spoken in
private. The queen watches you closely. This wine is very choice.
Thank you.”
“How did you get past my other guards?” Ned asked.
Porther and Cayn had been posted outside the tower, and Alyn on the
stairs.
“The Red Keep has ways known only to ghosts and
spiders.” Varys smiled apologetically. “I will not keep
you long, my lord. There are things you must know. You are the
King’s Hand, and the king is a fool.” The
eunuch’s cloying tones were gone; now his voice was thin and
sharp as a whip. “Your friend, I know, yet a fool nonetheless
. . . and doomed, unless you save him. Today was a near thing. They
had hoped to kill him during the melee.”
For a moment Ned was speechless with shock.
“Who?”
Varys sipped his wine. “If I truly need to tell you that,
you are a bigger fool than Robert and I am on the wrong
side.”
“The Lannisters,” Ned said. “The queen . . . no, I will not believe that, not even of Cersei. She asked him not
to fight!”
“She forbade him to fight, in front of his brother, his
knights, and half the court. Tell me truly, do you know any surer
way to force King Robert into the melee? I ask you.”
Ned had a sick feeling in his gut. The eunuch had hit upon a
truth; tell Robert Baratheon he could not, should not, or must not
do a thing, and it was as good as done. “Even if he’d
fought, who would have dared to strike the king?”
Varys shrugged. “There were forty riders in the melee. The
Lannisters have many friends. Amidst all that chaos, with horses
screaming and bones breaking and Thoros of Myr waving that absurd
firesword of his, who could name it murder if some chance blow
felled His Grace?” He went to the flagon and refilled his
cup. “After the deed was done, the slayer would be beside
himself with grief. I can almost hear him weeping. So sad. Yet no
doubt the gracious and compassionate widow would take pity, lift
the poor unfortunate to his feet, and bless him with a gentle kiss
of forgiveness. Good King Joffrey would have no choice but to
pardon him.” The eunuch stroked his cheek. “Or perhaps
Cersei would let Ser Ilyn strike off his head. Less risk for the
Lannisters that way, though quite an unpleasant surprise for their
little friend.”
Ned felt his anger rise. “You knew of this plot, and yet
you did nothing.”
“I command whisperers, not warriors.”
“You might have come to me earlier.”
“Oh, yes, I confess it. And you would have rushed straight
to the king, yes? And when Robert heard of his peril, what would he
have done? I wonder.”
Ned considered that. “He would have damned them all, and
fought anyway, to show he did not fear them.”
Varys spread his hands. “I will make another confession,
Lord Eddard. I was curious to see what you would do. Why not come
to me? you ask, and I must answer, Why, because I did not trust
you, my lord.”
“You did not trust me?” Ned was frankly
astonished.
“The Red Keep shelters two sorts of people, Lord
Eddard,” Varys said. “Those who are loyal to the realm,
and those who are loyal only to themselves. Until this morning, I
could not say which you might be . . . so I waited to see . . . and
now I know, for a certainty.” He smiled a plump tight little
smile, and for a moment his private face and public mask were one.
“I begin to comprehend why the queen fears you so much. Oh,
yes I do.”
“You are the one she ought to fear,” Ned said.
“No. I am what I am. The king makes use of me, but it
shames him. A most puissant warrior is our Robert, and such a manly
man has little love for sneaks and spies and eunuchs. If a day
should come when Cersei whispers, ‘Kill that man,’ Ilyn
Payne will snick my head off in a twinkling, and who will mourn
poor Varys then? North or south, they sing no songs for
spiders.” He reached out and touched Ned with a soft hand.
“But you, Lord Stark . . . I think . . . no, I know . . . he
would not kill you, not even for his queen, and there may lie our
salvation.”
It was all too much. For a moment Eddard Stark wanted nothing so
much as to return to Winterfell, to the clean simplicity of the
north, where the enemies were winter and the wildlings beyond the
Wall. “Surely Robert has other loyal friends,” he
protested. “His brothers, his—”
“—wife?” Varys finished, with a smile that cut.
“His brothers hate the Lannisters, true enough, but hating
the queen and loving the king are not quite the same thing, are
they? Ser Barristan loves his honor, Grand Maester Pycelle loves
his office, and Littlefinger loves Littlefinger.”
“The Kingsguard—”
“A paper shield,” the eunuch said. “Try not to
look so shocked, Lord Stark. Jaime Lannister is himself a Sworn
Brother of the White Swords, and we all know what his oath is
worth. The days when men like Ryam Redwyne and Prince Aemon the
Dragonknight wore the white cloak are gone to dust and song. Of
these seven, only Ser Barristan Selmy is made of the true steel,
and Selmy is old. Ser Boros and Ser Meryn are the queen’s
creatures to the bone, and I have deep suspicions of the others.
No, my lord, when the swords come out in earnest, you will be the
only true friend Robert Baratheon will have.”
“Robert must be told,” Ned said. “If what you
say is true, if even a part of it is true, the king must hear it
for himself.”
“And what proof shall we lay before him? My words against
theirs? My little birds against the queen and the Kingslayer,
against his brothers and his council, against the Wardens of East
and West, against all the might of Casterly Rock? Pray, send for
Ser Ilyn directly, it will save us all some time. I know where that
road ends.”
“Yet if what you say is true, they will only bide their
time and make another attempt.”
“Indeed they will,” said Varys, “and sooner
rather than later, I do fear. You are making them most anxious,
Lord Eddard. But my little birds will be listening, and together we
may be able to forestall them, you and I.” He rose and pulled
up his cowl so his face was hidden once more. “Thank you for
the wine. We will speak again. When you see me next at council, be
certain to treat me with your accustomed contempt. You should not
find it difficult.”
He was at the door when Ned called, “Varys.” The
eunuch turned back. “How did Jon Arryn die?”
“I wondered when you would get around to that.”
“Tell me.”
“The tears of Lys, they call it. A rare and costly thing,
clear and sweet as water, and it leaves no trace. I begged Lord
Arryn to use a taster, in this very room I begged him, but he would
not hear of it. Only one who was less than a man would even think
of such a thing, he told me.”
Ned had to know the rest. “Who gave him the
poison?”
“Some dear sweet friend who often shared meat and mead
with him, no doubt. Oh, but which one? There were many such. Lord
Arryn was a kindly, trusting man.” The eunuch sighed.
“There was one boy. All he was, he owed Jon Arryn, but when
the widow fled to the Eyrie with her household, he stayed in
King’s Landing and prospered. It always gladdens my heart to
see the young rise in the world.” The whip was in his voice
again, every word a stroke. “He must have cut a gallant
figure in the tourney, him in his bright new armor, with those
crescent moons on his cloak. A pity he died so untimely, before you
could talk to him . . . ”
Ned felt half-poisoned himself. “The squire,” he
said. “Ser Hugh.” Wheels within wheels within wheels.
Ned’s head was pounding. “Why? Why now? Jon Arryn
had been Hand for fourteen years. What was he doing that they had
to kill him?”
“Asking questions,” Varys said, slipping out the
door.