I do not sleep as I did when I was younger,” Grand
Maester Pycelle told him, by way of apology for the dawn meeting.
“I would sooner be up, though the world be dark, than lie
restless abed, fretting on tasks undone,” he said—though his
heavy-lidded eyes made him look half-asleep as he said it.
In the
airy chambers beneath the rookery, his girl served them boiled
eggs, stewed plums, and porridge, while Pycelle served the
pontifications. “In these sad times, when so many hunger, I
think it only fitting to keep my table spare.”
“Commendable,” Tyrion admitted, breaking a large
brown egg that reminded him unduly of the Grand Maester’s
bald spotted head. “I take a different view. If there is food
I eat it, in case there is none on the morrow.” He smiled.
“Tell me, are your ravens early risers as well?”
Pycelle stroked the snowy beard that flowed down his chest.
“To be sure. Shall I send for quill and ink after we have
eaten?”
“No need.” Tyrion laid the letters on the table
beside his porridge, twin parchments tightly rolled and sealed with
wax at both ends. “Send your girl away, so we can
talk.”
“Leave us, child,” Pycelle commanded. The serving
girl hurried from the room. “These letters,
now . . . ”
“For the eyes of Doran Martell, Prince of Dorne.”
Tyrion peeled the cracked shell away from his egg and took a bite.
It wanted salt. “One letter, in two copies. Send your
swiftest birds. The matter is of great import.”
“I shall dispatch them as soon as we have broken our
fast.”
“Dispatch them now. Stewed plums will keep. The realm may
not. Lord Renly is leading his host up the roseroad, and no one can
say when Lord Stannis will sail from Dragonstone.”
Pycelle blinked. “If my lord prefers—”
“He does.”
“I am here to serve.” The maester pushed himself
ponderously to his feet his chain of office clinking softly. It was
a heavy thing, a dozen maester’s collars threaded around and
through each other and ornamented with gemstones. And it seemed to
Tyrion that the gold and silver and platinum links far outnumbered
those of baser metals.
Pycelle moved so slowly that Tyrion had time to finish his egg
and taste the plums—overcooked and watery, to his taste—before the
sound of wings prompted him to rise. He spied the raven, dark in
the dawn sky, and turned briskly toward the maze of shelves at the
far end of the room.
The maester’s medicines made an impressive display; dozens
of pots sealed with wax, hundreds of stoppered vials, as many
milkglass bottles, countless jars of dried herbs, each container
neatly labeled in Pycelle’s precise hand. An orderly mind,
Tyrion reflected, and indeed, once you puzzled out the arrangement,
it was easy to see that every potion had its place. And such
interesting things. He noted sweetsleep and nightshade, milk of the
poppy, the tears of Lys, powdered greycap, wolfsbane and
demon’s dance, basilisk venom, blindeye, widow’s
blood . . .
Standing on his toes and straining upward, he managed to pull a
small dusty bottle off the high shelf. When he read the label, he
smiled and slipped it up his sleeve.
He was back at the table peeling another egg when Grand Maester
Pycelle came creeping down the stairs. “It is done, my
lord.” The old man seated himself. “A matter like
this . . . best done promptly,
indeed, indeed . . . of great import, you
say?”
“Oh, yes.” The porridge was too thick, Tyrion felt,
and wanted butter and honey. To be sure, butter and honey were
seldom seen in King’s Landing of late, though Lord Gyles kept
them well supplied in the castle. Half of the food they ate these
days came from his lands or Lady Tanda’s. Rosby and
Stokeworth lay near the city to the north, and were yet untouched
by war.
“The Prince of Dorne, himself. Might I ask . . . ”
“Best not.”
“As you say.” Pycelle’s curiosity was so ripe
that Tyrion could almost taste it.
“Mayhaps . . . the king’s
council . . . ”
Tyrion tapped his wooden spoon against the edge of the bowl.
“The council exists to advise the king, Maester.”
“Just so,” said Pycelle, “and the
king—”
“—is a boy of thirteen. I speak with his voice.”
“So you do. Indeed. The King’s Own Hand.
Yet . . . your most gracious sister, our Queen
Regent, she . . . ”
“ . . . bears a great weight upon
those lovely white shoulders of hers. I have no wish to add to her
burdens. Do you?” Tyrion cocked his head and gave the Grand
Maester an inquiring stare.
Pycelle dropped his gaze back to his food. Something about
Tyrion’s mismatched green-and-black eyes made men squirm;
knowing that, he made good use of them. “Ah,” the old
man muttered into his plums. “Doubtless you have the right of
it, my lord. It is most considerate of you
to . . . spare her
this . . . burden.”
“That’s just the sort of fellow I am.” Tyrion
returned to the unsatisfactory porridge. “Considerate. Cersei
is my own sweet sister, after all.”
“And a woman, to be sure,” Grand Maester Pycelle
said. “A most uncommon woman, and
yet . . . it is no small thing, to tend to all
the cares of the realm, despite the frailty of her
sex . . . ” Oh, yes, she’s a frail dove, just ask Eddard Stark.
“I’m pleased you share my concern. And I thank you for
the hospitality of your table. But a long day awaits.” He
swung his legs out and clambered down from his chair. “Be so
good as to inform me at once should we receive a reply from Dorne?
“
“As you say, my lord.”
“And only me?”
“Ah . . . to be sure.”
Pycelle’s spotted hand was clutching at his beard the way a
drowning man clutches for a rope. It made Tyrion’s heart
glad. One, he thought.
He waddled out into the lower bailey; his stunted legs
complained of the steps. The sun was well up now, and the castle
was stirring. Guardsmen walked the walls, and knights and
men-at-arms were training with blunted weapons. Nearby, Bronn sat
on the lip of a well. A pair of comely serving girls sauntered past
carrying a wicker basket of rushes between them, but the sellsword
never looked. “Bronn, I despair of you.” Tyrion
gestured at the wenches. “With sweet sights like that before
you, all you see is a gaggle of louts raising a clangor.”
“There are a hundred whorehouses in this city where a
clipped copper will buy me all the cunt I want,” Bronn
answered, “but one day my life may hang on how close
I’ve watched your louts.” He stood. “Who’s
the boy in the checkered blue surcoat with the three eyes on his
shield?”
“Some hedge knight. Tallad, he names himself.
Why?”
Bronn pushed a fall of hair from his eyes. “He’s the
best of them. But watch him, he falls into a rhythm, delivering the
same strokes in the same order each time he attacks.” He
grinned. “That will be the death of him, the day he faces
me.”
“He’s pledged to Joffrey; he’s not like to
face you.” They set off across the bailey, Bronn matching his
long stride to Tyrion’s short one. These days the sellsword
was looking almost respectable. His dark hair was washed and
brushed, he was freshly shaved, and he wore the black breastplate
of an officer of the City Watch. From his shoulders trailed a cloak
of Lannister crimson patterned with golden hands. Tyrion had made
him a gift of it when he named him captain of his personal guard.
“How many supplicants do we have today?” he
inquired.
“Thirty odd,” answered Bronn. “Most with
complaints, or wanting something, as ever. Your pet was
back.”
He groaned. “Lady Tanda?”
“Her page. She invites you to sup with her again.
There’s to be a haunch of venison, she says, a brace of
stuffed geese sauced with mulberries, and—”
“—her daughter,” Tyrion finished sourly. Since the
hour he had arrived in the Red Keep, Lady Tanda had been stalking
him, armed with a never-ending arsenal of lamprey pies, wild boars,
and savory cream stews. Somehow she had gotten the notion that a
dwarf lordling would be the perfect consort for her daughter
Lollys, a large, soft, dim-witted girl who rumor said was still a
maid at thirty-and-three. “Send her my regrets.”
“No taste for stuffed goose?” Bronn grinned
evilly.
“Perhaps you should eat the goose and marry the maid. Or
better still, send Shagga.”
“Shagga’s more like to eat the maid and marry the
goose,” observed Bronn. “Anyway, Lollys outweighs
him.”
“There is that,” Tyrion admitted as they passed
under the shadow of a covered walkway between two towers.
“Who else wants me?”
The sellsword grew more serious. “There’s a
moneylender from Braavos, holding fancy papers and the like,
requests to see the king about payment on some loan.”
“As if Joff could count past twenty. Send the man to
Littlefinger, he’ll find a way to put him off.
Next?”
“A lordling down from the Trident, says your
father’s men burned his keep, raped his wife, and killed all
his peasants.”
“I believe they call that war.” Tyrion smelled
Gregor Clegane’s work, or that of Ser Amory Lorch or his
father’s other pet hellhound, the Qohorik. “What does
he want of Joffrey?”
“New peasants,” Bronn said. “He walked all
this way to sing how loyal he is and beg for recompense.”
“I’ll make time for him on the morrow.”
Whether truly loyal or merely desperate, a compliant river lord
might have his uses. “See that he’s given a comfortable
chamber and a hot meal. Send him a new pair of boots as well, good
ones, courtesy of King Joffrey.” A show of generosity never
hurt.
Bronn gave a curt nod. “There’s also a great gaggle
of bakers, butchers, and greengrocers clamoring to be
heard.”
“I told them last time, I have nothing to give
them.” Only a thin trickle of food was coming into
King’s Landing, most of it earmarked for castle and garrison.
Prices had risen sickeningly high on greens, roots, flour, and
fruit, and Tyrion did not want to think about what sorts of flesh
might be going into the kettles of the pot-shops down in Flea
Bottom. Fish, he hoped. They still had the river and the
sea . . . at least until Lord Stannis
sailed.
“They want protection. Last night a baker was roasted in
his own oven. The mob claimed he charged too much for
bread.”
“Did he?”
“He’s not apt to deny it.”
“They didn’t eat him, did they?”
“Not that I’ve heard.”
“Next time they will,” Tyrion said grimly. “I
give them what protection I can. The gold cloaks—”
“They claim there were gold cloaks in the mob,”
Bronn said. “They’re demanding to speak to the king
himself.”
“Fools.” Tyrion had sent them off with regrets; his
nephew would send them off with whips and spears. He was
half-tempted to allow it . . . but no, he dare
not. Soon or late, some enemy would march on King’s Landing,
and the last thing he wanted was willing traitors within the city
walls. “Tell them King Joffrey shares their fears and will do
all he can for them.”
“They want bread, not promises.”
“If I give them bread today, on the morrow I’ll have
twice as many at the gates. Who else?”
“A black brother down from the Wall. The steward says he
brought some rotted hand in a jar.”
Tyrion smiled wanly. “I’m surprised no one ate it. I
suppose I ought to see him. It’s not Yoren,
perchance?”
“No. Some knight. Thorne.”
“Ser Alliser Thorne?” Of all the black brothers
he’d met on the Wall, Tyrion Lannister had liked Ser Alliser
Thorne the least. A bitter, mean-spirited man with too great a
sense of his own worth. “Come to think on it, I don’t
believe I care to see Ser Alliser just now. Find him a snug cell
where no one has changed the rushes in a year, and let his hand rot
a little more.”
Bronn snorted laughter and went his way, while Tyrion struggled
up the serpentine steps. As he limped across the outer yard, he
heard the portcullis rattling up. His sister and a large party were
waiting by the main gate.
Mounted on her white palfrey, Cersei towered high above him, a
goddess in green. “Brother,” she called out, not
warmly. The queen had not been pleased by the way he’d dealt
with Janos Slynt.
“Your Grace.” Tyrion bowed politely. “You look
lovely this morning.” Her crown was gold, her cloak ermine.
Her retinue sat their mounts behind her: Ser Boros Blount of the
Kingsguard, wearing white scale and his favorite scowl; Ser Balon
Swann, bow slung from his silver-inlay saddle; Lord Gyles Rosby,
his wheezing cough worse than ever; Hallyne the Pyromancer of the
Alchemists’ Guild; and the queen’s newest favorite,
their cousin Ser Lancel Lannister, her late husband’s squire
upjumped to knight at his widow’s insistence. Vylarr and
twenty guardsmen rode escort. “Where are you bound this day,
sister?” Tyrion asked.
“I’m making a round of the gates to inspect the new
scorpions and spitfires. I would not have it thought that all of us
are as indifferent to the city’s defense as you seem to
be.” Cersei fixed him with those clear green eyes of hers,
beautiful even in their contempt. “I am informed that Renly
Baratheon has marched from Highgarden. He is making his way up the
roseroad, with all his strength behind him.”
“Varys gave me the same report.”
“He could be here by the full moon.”
“Not at his present leisurely pace,” Tyrion assured
her. “He feasts every night in a different castle, and holds
court at every crossroads he passes.”
“And every day, more men rally to his banners. His host is
now said to be a hundred thousand strong.”
“That seems rather high.”
“He has the power of Storm’s End and Highgarden
behind him, you little fool,” Cersei snapped down at him.
“All the Tyrell bannermen but for the Redwynes, and you have
me to thank for that. So long as I hold those poxy twins of his,
Lord Paxter will squat on the Arbor and count himself fortunate to
be out of it.”
“A pity you let the Knight of Flowers slip through your
pretty fingers. Still, Renly has other concerns besides us. Our
father at Harrenhal, Robb Stark at
Riverrun . . . were I he, I would do much as he
is doing. Make my progress, flaunt my power for the realm to see,
watch, wait. Let my rivals contend while I bide my own sweet time.
If Stark defeats us, the south will fall into Renly’s hands
like a windfall from the gods, and he’ll not have lost a man.
And if it goes the other way, he can descend on us while we are
weakened.”
Cersei was not appeased. “I want you to make Father bring
his army to King’s Landing.” Where it will serve no purpose but to make you feel safe.
“When have I ever been able to make Father do
anything?”
She ignored the question. “And when do you plan to free
Jaime? He’s worth a hundred of you.”
Tyrion grinned crookedly. “Don’t tell Lady Stark, I
beg you. We don’t have a hundred of me to trade.”
“Father must have been mad to send you. You’re worse
than useless.” The queen jerked on her reins and wheeled her
palfrey around. She rode out the gate at a brisk trot, ermine cloak
streaming behind her. Her retinue hastened after.
In truth, Renly Baratheon did not frighten Tyrion half so much
as his brother Stannis did. Renly was beloved of the commons, but
he had never before led men in war. Stannis was otherwise: hard,
cold, inexorable. if only they had some way of knowing what was
happening on Dragonstone . . . but not one of
the fisherfolk he had paid to spy out the island had ever returned,
and even the informers the eunuch claimed to have placed in
Stannis’s household had been ominously silent. The striped
hulls of Lysene war galleys had been seen offshore, though, and
Varys had reports from Myr of sellsail captains taking service with
Dragonstone. If Stannis attacks by sea while his brother Renly
storms the gates, they’ll soon be mounting Joffrey’s
head on a spike. Worse, mine will be beside him. A depressing
thought. He ought to make plans to get Shae safely out of the city,
should the worst seem likely.
Podrick Payne stood at the door of his solar, studying the
floor. “He’s inside,” he announced to
Tyrion’s belt buckle. “Your solar. My lord.
Sorry.”
Tyrion sighed. “Look at me, Pod. It unnerves me when you
talk to my codpiece, especially when I’m not wearing one. Who
is inside my solar?”
“Lord Littlefinger.” Podrick managed a quick look at
his face, then hastily dropped his eyes. “I meant, Lord
Petyr. Lord Baelish. The master of coin. “
“You make him sound a crowd.” The boy hunched down
as if struck, making Tyrion feel absurdly guilty.
Lord Petyr was seated on his window seat, languid and elegant in
a plush plum-colored doublet and a yellow satin cape, one gloved
hand resting on his knee. “The king is fighting hares with a
crossbow,” he said. “The hares are winning. Come
see.”
Tyrion had to stand on his toes to get a look. A dead hare lay
on the ground below; another, long ears twitching, was about to
expire from the bolt in his side. Spent quarrels lay strewn across
the hard-packed earth like straws scattered by a storm.
“Now!” Joff shouted. The gamesman released the hare he
was holding, and he went bounding off. Joffrey jerked the trigger
on the crossbow. The bolt missed by two feet. The hare stood on his
hind legs and twitched his nose at the king. Cursing, Joff spun the
wheel to winch back his string, but the animal was gone before he
was loaded. “Another!” The gamesman reached into the
hutch. This one made a brown streak against the stones, while
Joffrey’s hurried shot almost took Ser Preston in the
groin.
Littlefinger turned away. “Boy, are you fond of potted
hare?” he asked Podrick Payne.
Pod stared at the visitor’s boots, lovely things of
red-dyed leather ornamented with black scrollwork. “To eat,
my lord?”
“Invest in pots,” Littlefinger advised. “Hares
will soon overrun the castle. We’ll be eating hare thrice a
day.”
“Better than rats on a skewer,” said Tyrion.
“Pod, leave us. Unless Lord Petyr would care for some
refreshment?”
“Thank you, but no.” Littlefinger flashed his
mocking smile. “Drink with the dwarf, it’s said, and
you wake up walking the Wall. Black brings out my unhealthy
pallor.” Have no fear, my lord, Tyrion thought, it’s not the Wall I
have in mind for you. He seated himself in a high chair piled with
cushions and said, “You look very elegant today, my
lord.”
“I’m wounded. I strive to look elegant every
day.”
“Is the doublet new?”
“It is. You’re most observant.”
“Plum and yellow. Are those the colors of your
House?”
“No. But a man gets bored wearing the same colors day in
and day out, or so I’ve found.”
“That’s a handsome knife as well.”
“Is it?” There was mischief in Littlefinger’s
eyes. He drew the knife and glanced at it casually, as if he had
never seen it before. “Valyrian steel, and a dragonbone hilt.
A trifle plain, though. It’s yours, if you would like
it.”
“Mine?” Tyrion gave him a long look. “No. I
think not. Never mine.” He knows, the insolent wretch. He
knows and he knows that I know, and he thinks that I cannot touch
him.
If ever truly a man had armored himself in gold, it was Petyr
Baelish, not Jaime Lannister. Jaime’s famous armor was but
gilded steel, but Littlefinger, ah . . . Tyrion had learned a
few things about sweet Petyr, to his growing disquiet.
Ten years ago, Jon Arryn had given him a minor sinecure in
customs, where Lord Petyr had soon distinguished himself by
bringing in three times as much as any of the king’s other
collectors. King Robert had been a prodigious spender. A man like
Petyr Baelish, who had a gift for rubbing two golden dragons
together to breed a third, was invaluable to his Hand.
Littlefinger’s rise had been arrow-swift. Within three years
of his coming to court, he was master of coin and a member of the
small council, and today the crown’s revenues were ten times
what they had been under his beleaguered
predecessor . . . though the crown’s
debts had grown vast as well. A master juggler was Petyr
Baelish.
Oh, he was clever. He did not simply collect the gold and lock
it in a treasure vault, no. He paid the king’s debts in
promises, and put the king’s gold to work. He bought wagons,
shops, ships, houses. He bought grain when it was plentiful and
sold bread when it was scarce. He bought wool from the north and
linen from the south and lace from Lys, stored it, moved it, dyed
it, sold it. The golden dragons bred and multiplied, and
Littlefinger lent them out and brought them home with
hatchlings.
And in the process, he moved his own men into place. The Keepers
of the Keys were his, all four. The King’s Counter and the
King’s Scales were men he’d named. The officers in
charge of all three mints. Harbormasters, tax farmers, customs
sergeants, wool factors, toll collectors, pursers, wine factors;
nine of every ten belonged to Littlefinger. They were men of
middling birth, by and large; merchants’ sons, lesser
lordlings, sometimes even foreigners, but judging from their
results, far more able than their highborn predecessors.
No one had ever thought to question the appointments, and why
should they? Littlefinger was no threat to anyone. A clever,
smiling, genial man, everyone’s friend, always able to find
whatever gold the king or his Hand required, and yet of such
undistinguished birth, one step up from a hedge knight, he was not
a man to fear. He had no banners to call, no army of retainers, no
great stronghold, no holdings to speak of, no prospects of a great
marriage. But do I dare touch him? Tyrion wondered. Even if he is a
traitor? He was not at all certain he could, least of all now,
while the war raged. Given time, he could replace
Littlefinger’s men with his own in key positions,
but . . .
A shout rang up from the yard. “Ah, His Grace has killed a
hare,” Lord Baelish observed.
“No doubt a slow one,” Tyrion said. “My lord,
you were fostered at Riverrun. I’ve heard it said that you
grew close to the Tullys.”
“You might say so. The girls especially.”
“How close?”
“I had their maidenhoods. Is that close enough?”
The lie—Tyrion was fairly certain it was a lie—was delivered
with such an air of nonchalance that one could almost believe it.
Could it have been Catelyn Stark who lied? About her defloration,
and the dagger as well? The longer he lived, the more Tyrion
realized that nothing was simple and little was true. “Lord
Hoster’s daughters do not love me,” he confessed.
“I doubt they would listen to any proposal I might make. Yet
coming from you, the same words might fall more sweetly on their
ears. “
“That would depend on the words. If you mean to offer
Sansa in return for your brother, waste someone else’s time.
Joffrey will never surrender his plaything, and Lady Catelyn is not
so great a fool as to barter the Kingslayer for a slip of a
girl.”
“I mean to have Arya as well. I have men
searching.”
“Searching is not finding.”
“I’ll keep that in mind, my lord. In any case, it
was Lady Lysa I hoped you might sway. For her, I have a sweeter
offer.”
“Lysa is more tractable than Catelyn,
true . . . but also more fearful, and I
understand she hates you.”
“She believes she has good reason. When I was her guest in
the Eyrie, she insisted that Id murdered her husband and was not
inclined to listen to denials.” He leaned forward. “If
I gave her Jon Arryn’s true killer, she might think more
kindly of me.”
That made Littlefinger sit up. “True killer? I confess,
you make me curious. Who do you propose?”
It was Tyrion’s turn to smile. “Gifts I give my
friends, freely. Lysa Arryn would need to understand
that.”
“Is it her friendship you require, or her
swords?”
“Both.”
Littlefinger stroked the neat spike of his beard. “Lysa
has woes of her own. Clansmen raiding out of the Mountains of the
Moon, in greater numbers than ever
before . . . and better armed.”
“Distressing,” said Tyrion Lannister, who had armed
them. “I could help her with that. A word from
me . . . ”
“And what would this word cost her?”
“I want Lady Lysa and her son to acclaim Joffrey as king,
to swear fealty, and to—”
“—make war on the Starks and Tullys?”
Littlefinger shook his head. “There’s the roach in your
pudding, Lannister. Lysa will never send her knights against
Riverrun.”
“Nor would I ask it. We have no lack of enemies.
I’ll use her power to oppose Lord Renly, or Lord Stannis,
should he stir from Dragonstone. In return, I will give her justice
for Jon Arryn and peace in the Vale. I will even name that
appalling child of hers Warden of the East, as his father was
before him.” I want to see him fly, a boy’s voice
whispered faintly in memory. “And to seal the bargain, I will
give her my niece.”
He had the pleasure of seeing a look of genuine surprise in
Petyr Baelish’s grey-green eyes. “Myrcella?”
“When she comes of age, she can wed little Lord Robert.
Until such time, she’ll be Lady Lysa’s ward at the
Eyrie.”
“And what does Her Grace the queen think of this
ploy?” When Tyrion shrugged, Littlefinger burst into
laughter. “I thought not. You’re a dangerous little
man, Lannister. Yes, I could sing this song to Lysa.” Again
the sly smile, the mischief in his glance. “If I cared
to.”
Tyrion nodded, waiting, knowing Littlefinger could never abide a
long silence.
“So,” Lord Petyr continued after a pause, utterly
unabashed, “what’s in your pot for me?”
“Harrenhal.”
It was interesting to watch his face. Lord Petyr’s father
had been the smallest of small lords, his grandfather a landless
hedge knight; by birth, he held no more than a few stony acres on
the windswept shore of the Fingers. Harrenhal was one of the
richest plums in the Seven Kingdoms, its lands broad and rich and
fertile, its great castle as formidable as any in the
realm . . . and so large as to dwarf Riverrun,
where Petyr Baelish had been fostered by House Tully, only to be
brusquely expelled when he dared raise his sights to Lord
Hoster’s daughter.
Littlefinger took a moment to adjust the drape of his cape, but
Tyrion had seen the flash of hunger in those sly cat’s eyes.
I have him, he knew. “Harrenhal is cursed,” Lord Petyr
said after a moment, trying to sound bored.
“Then raze it to the ground and build anew to suit
yourself. You’ll have no lack of coin. I mean to make you
liege lord of the Trident. These river lords have proven they
cannot be trusted. Let them do you fealty for their
lands.”
“Even the Tullys?”
“If there are any Tullys left when we are done.”
Littlefinger looked like a boy who had just taken a furtive bite
from a honeycomb. He was trying to watch for bees, but the honey
was so sweet. “Harrenhal and all its lands and
incomes,” he mused. “With a stroke, you’d make me
one of the greatest lords in the realm. Not that I’m
ungrateful, my lord, but—why?”
“You served my sister well in the matter of the
succession.”
“As did Janos Slynt. On whom this same castle of Harrenhal
was quite recently bestowed—only to be snatched away when he was no
longer of use.”
Tyrion laughed. “You have me, my lord. What can I say? I
need you to deliver the Lady Lysa. I did not need Janos
Slynt.” He gave a crooked shrug. “I’d sooner have
you seated in Harrenhal than Renly seated on the Iron Throne. What
could be plainer?”
“What indeed. You realize that I may need to bed Lysa
Arryn again to get her consent to this marriage?”
“I have little doubt you’ll be equal to the
task.”
“I once told Ned Stark that when you find yourself naked
with an ugly woman, the only thing to do is close your eyes and get
on with it.” Littlefinger steepled his fingers and gazed into
Tyrion’s mismatched eyes. “Give me a fortnight to
conclude my affairs and arrange for a ship to carry me to
Gulltown.”
“That will do nicely.”
His guest rose. “This has been quite the pleasant morning,
Lannister. And profitable . . . for both of us,
I trust.” He bowed, his cape a swirl of yellow as he strode
out the door. Two, thought Tyrion.
He went up to his bedchamber to await Varys, who would soon be
making an appearance. Evenfall, he guessed. Perhaps as late as
moonrise, though he hoped not. He hoped to visit Shae tonight. He
was pleasantly surprised when Galt of the Stone Crows informed him
not an hour later that the powdered man was at his door. “You
are a cruel man, to make the Grand Maester squirm so,” the
eunuch scolded. “The man cannot abide a secret.”
“Is that a crow I hear, calling the raven black? Or would
you sooner not hear what I’ve proposed to Doran
Martell?”
Varys giggled. “Perhaps my little birds have told
me.”
“Have they, indeed?” He wanted to hear this.
“Go on.”
“The Dornishmen thus far have held aloof from these wars.
Doran Martell has called his banners, but no more. His hatred for
House Lannister is well known, and it is commonly thought he will
join Lord Renly. You wish to dissuade him.”
“All this is obvious,” said Tyrion.
“The only puzzle is what you might have offered for his
allegiance. The prince is a sentimental man, and he still mourns
his sister Elia and her sweet babe.”
“My father once told me that a lord never lets sentiment
get in the way of ambition . . . and it happens
we have an empty seat on the small council, now that Lord Janos has
taken the black.”
“A council seat is not to be despised,” Varys
admitted, “yet will it be enough to make a proud man forget
his sister’s murder?”
“Why forget?” Tyrion smiled. “I’ve
promised to deliver his sister’s killers, alive or dead, as
he prefers. After the war is done, to be sure.”
Varys gave him a shrewd look. “My little birds tell me
that Princess Elia cried a . . . certain
name . . . when they came for her.”
“Is a secret still a secret if everyone knows it?”
In Casterly Rock, it was common knowledge that Gregor Clegane had
killed Elia and her babe. They said he had raped the princess with
her son’s blood and brains still on his hands.
“This secret is your lord father’s sworn
man.”
“My father would be the first to tell you that fifty
thousand Dornishmen are worth one rabid dog.”
Varys stroked a powdered cheek. “And if Prince Doran
demands the blood of the lord who gave the command as well as the
knight who did the deed . . . ”
“Robert Baratheon led the rebellion. All commands came
from him, in the end.”
“Robert was not at King’s Landing.”
“Neither was Doran Martell.”
“So. Blood for his pride, a chair for his ambition. Gold
and land, that goes without saying. A sweet
offer . . . yet sweets can be poisoned. If I
were the prince, something more would I require before I should
reach for this honeycomb. Some token of good faith, some sure
safeguard against betrayal.” Varys smiled his slimiest smile.
“Which one will you give him, I wonder?”
Tyrion sighed. “You know, don’t you?”
“Since you put it that way—yes. Tommen. You could scarcely
offer Myrcella to Doran Martell and Lysa Arryn both.”
“Remind me never to play these guessing games with you
again. You cheat. “
“Prince Tommen is a good boy.”
“If I pry him away from Cersei and Joffrey while
he’s still young, he may even grow to be a good
man.”
“And a good king?”
“Joffrey is king.”
“And Tommen is heir, should anything ill befall His
Grace. Tommen, whose nature is so sweet, and
notably . . . tractable.”
“You have a suspicious mind, Varys.”
“I shall take that as a tribute, my lord. In any case,
Prince Doran will hardly be insensible of the great honor you do
him. Very deftly done, I would say . . . but
for one small flaw.”
The dwarf laughed. “Named Cersei?”
“What avails statecraft against the love of a mother for
the sweet fruit of her womb? Perhaps, for the glory of her House
and the safety of the realm, the queen might be persuaded to send
away Tommen or Myrcella. But both of them? Surely not.”
“What Cersei does not know will never hurt me.”
“And if Her Grace were to discover your intentions before
your plans are ripe?”
“Why,” he said, “then I would know the man who
told her to be my certain enemy.” And when Varys giggled, he
thought, Three.
I do not sleep as I did when I was younger,” Grand
Maester Pycelle told him, by way of apology for the dawn meeting.
“I would sooner be up, though the world be dark, than lie
restless abed, fretting on tasks undone,” he said—though his
heavy-lidded eyes made him look half-asleep as he said it.
In the
airy chambers beneath the rookery, his girl served them boiled
eggs, stewed plums, and porridge, while Pycelle served the
pontifications. “In these sad times, when so many hunger, I
think it only fitting to keep my table spare.”
“Commendable,” Tyrion admitted, breaking a large
brown egg that reminded him unduly of the Grand Maester’s
bald spotted head. “I take a different view. If there is food
I eat it, in case there is none on the morrow.” He smiled.
“Tell me, are your ravens early risers as well?”
Pycelle stroked the snowy beard that flowed down his chest.
“To be sure. Shall I send for quill and ink after we have
eaten?”
“No need.” Tyrion laid the letters on the table
beside his porridge, twin parchments tightly rolled and sealed with
wax at both ends. “Send your girl away, so we can
talk.”
“Leave us, child,” Pycelle commanded. The serving
girl hurried from the room. “These letters,
now . . . ”
“For the eyes of Doran Martell, Prince of Dorne.”
Tyrion peeled the cracked shell away from his egg and took a bite.
It wanted salt. “One letter, in two copies. Send your
swiftest birds. The matter is of great import.”
“I shall dispatch them as soon as we have broken our
fast.”
“Dispatch them now. Stewed plums will keep. The realm may
not. Lord Renly is leading his host up the roseroad, and no one can
say when Lord Stannis will sail from Dragonstone.”
Pycelle blinked. “If my lord prefers—”
“He does.”
“I am here to serve.” The maester pushed himself
ponderously to his feet his chain of office clinking softly. It was
a heavy thing, a dozen maester’s collars threaded around and
through each other and ornamented with gemstones. And it seemed to
Tyrion that the gold and silver and platinum links far outnumbered
those of baser metals.
Pycelle moved so slowly that Tyrion had time to finish his egg
and taste the plums—overcooked and watery, to his taste—before the
sound of wings prompted him to rise. He spied the raven, dark in
the dawn sky, and turned briskly toward the maze of shelves at the
far end of the room.
The maester’s medicines made an impressive display; dozens
of pots sealed with wax, hundreds of stoppered vials, as many
milkglass bottles, countless jars of dried herbs, each container
neatly labeled in Pycelle’s precise hand. An orderly mind,
Tyrion reflected, and indeed, once you puzzled out the arrangement,
it was easy to see that every potion had its place. And such
interesting things. He noted sweetsleep and nightshade, milk of the
poppy, the tears of Lys, powdered greycap, wolfsbane and
demon’s dance, basilisk venom, blindeye, widow’s
blood . . .
Standing on his toes and straining upward, he managed to pull a
small dusty bottle off the high shelf. When he read the label, he
smiled and slipped it up his sleeve.
He was back at the table peeling another egg when Grand Maester
Pycelle came creeping down the stairs. “It is done, my
lord.” The old man seated himself. “A matter like
this . . . best done promptly,
indeed, indeed . . . of great import, you
say?”
“Oh, yes.” The porridge was too thick, Tyrion felt,
and wanted butter and honey. To be sure, butter and honey were
seldom seen in King’s Landing of late, though Lord Gyles kept
them well supplied in the castle. Half of the food they ate these
days came from his lands or Lady Tanda’s. Rosby and
Stokeworth lay near the city to the north, and were yet untouched
by war.
“The Prince of Dorne, himself. Might I ask . . . ”
“Best not.”
“As you say.” Pycelle’s curiosity was so ripe
that Tyrion could almost taste it.
“Mayhaps . . . the king’s
council . . . ”
Tyrion tapped his wooden spoon against the edge of the bowl.
“The council exists to advise the king, Maester.”
“Just so,” said Pycelle, “and the
king—”
“—is a boy of thirteen. I speak with his voice.”
“So you do. Indeed. The King’s Own Hand.
Yet . . . your most gracious sister, our Queen
Regent, she . . . ”
“ . . . bears a great weight upon
those lovely white shoulders of hers. I have no wish to add to her
burdens. Do you?” Tyrion cocked his head and gave the Grand
Maester an inquiring stare.
Pycelle dropped his gaze back to his food. Something about
Tyrion’s mismatched green-and-black eyes made men squirm;
knowing that, he made good use of them. “Ah,” the old
man muttered into his plums. “Doubtless you have the right of
it, my lord. It is most considerate of you
to . . . spare her
this . . . burden.”
“That’s just the sort of fellow I am.” Tyrion
returned to the unsatisfactory porridge. “Considerate. Cersei
is my own sweet sister, after all.”
“And a woman, to be sure,” Grand Maester Pycelle
said. “A most uncommon woman, and
yet . . . it is no small thing, to tend to all
the cares of the realm, despite the frailty of her
sex . . . ” Oh, yes, she’s a frail dove, just ask Eddard Stark.
“I’m pleased you share my concern. And I thank you for
the hospitality of your table. But a long day awaits.” He
swung his legs out and clambered down from his chair. “Be so
good as to inform me at once should we receive a reply from Dorne?
“
“As you say, my lord.”
“And only me?”
“Ah . . . to be sure.”
Pycelle’s spotted hand was clutching at his beard the way a
drowning man clutches for a rope. It made Tyrion’s heart
glad. One, he thought.
He waddled out into the lower bailey; his stunted legs
complained of the steps. The sun was well up now, and the castle
was stirring. Guardsmen walked the walls, and knights and
men-at-arms were training with blunted weapons. Nearby, Bronn sat
on the lip of a well. A pair of comely serving girls sauntered past
carrying a wicker basket of rushes between them, but the sellsword
never looked. “Bronn, I despair of you.” Tyrion
gestured at the wenches. “With sweet sights like that before
you, all you see is a gaggle of louts raising a clangor.”
“There are a hundred whorehouses in this city where a
clipped copper will buy me all the cunt I want,” Bronn
answered, “but one day my life may hang on how close
I’ve watched your louts.” He stood. “Who’s
the boy in the checkered blue surcoat with the three eyes on his
shield?”
“Some hedge knight. Tallad, he names himself.
Why?”
Bronn pushed a fall of hair from his eyes. “He’s the
best of them. But watch him, he falls into a rhythm, delivering the
same strokes in the same order each time he attacks.” He
grinned. “That will be the death of him, the day he faces
me.”
“He’s pledged to Joffrey; he’s not like to
face you.” They set off across the bailey, Bronn matching his
long stride to Tyrion’s short one. These days the sellsword
was looking almost respectable. His dark hair was washed and
brushed, he was freshly shaved, and he wore the black breastplate
of an officer of the City Watch. From his shoulders trailed a cloak
of Lannister crimson patterned with golden hands. Tyrion had made
him a gift of it when he named him captain of his personal guard.
“How many supplicants do we have today?” he
inquired.
“Thirty odd,” answered Bronn. “Most with
complaints, or wanting something, as ever. Your pet was
back.”
He groaned. “Lady Tanda?”
“Her page. She invites you to sup with her again.
There’s to be a haunch of venison, she says, a brace of
stuffed geese sauced with mulberries, and—”
“—her daughter,” Tyrion finished sourly. Since the
hour he had arrived in the Red Keep, Lady Tanda had been stalking
him, armed with a never-ending arsenal of lamprey pies, wild boars,
and savory cream stews. Somehow she had gotten the notion that a
dwarf lordling would be the perfect consort for her daughter
Lollys, a large, soft, dim-witted girl who rumor said was still a
maid at thirty-and-three. “Send her my regrets.”
“No taste for stuffed goose?” Bronn grinned
evilly.
“Perhaps you should eat the goose and marry the maid. Or
better still, send Shagga.”
“Shagga’s more like to eat the maid and marry the
goose,” observed Bronn. “Anyway, Lollys outweighs
him.”
“There is that,” Tyrion admitted as they passed
under the shadow of a covered walkway between two towers.
“Who else wants me?”
The sellsword grew more serious. “There’s a
moneylender from Braavos, holding fancy papers and the like,
requests to see the king about payment on some loan.”
“As if Joff could count past twenty. Send the man to
Littlefinger, he’ll find a way to put him off.
Next?”
“A lordling down from the Trident, says your
father’s men burned his keep, raped his wife, and killed all
his peasants.”
“I believe they call that war.” Tyrion smelled
Gregor Clegane’s work, or that of Ser Amory Lorch or his
father’s other pet hellhound, the Qohorik. “What does
he want of Joffrey?”
“New peasants,” Bronn said. “He walked all
this way to sing how loyal he is and beg for recompense.”
“I’ll make time for him on the morrow.”
Whether truly loyal or merely desperate, a compliant river lord
might have his uses. “See that he’s given a comfortable
chamber and a hot meal. Send him a new pair of boots as well, good
ones, courtesy of King Joffrey.” A show of generosity never
hurt.
Bronn gave a curt nod. “There’s also a great gaggle
of bakers, butchers, and greengrocers clamoring to be
heard.”
“I told them last time, I have nothing to give
them.” Only a thin trickle of food was coming into
King’s Landing, most of it earmarked for castle and garrison.
Prices had risen sickeningly high on greens, roots, flour, and
fruit, and Tyrion did not want to think about what sorts of flesh
might be going into the kettles of the pot-shops down in Flea
Bottom. Fish, he hoped. They still had the river and the
sea . . . at least until Lord Stannis
sailed.
“They want protection. Last night a baker was roasted in
his own oven. The mob claimed he charged too much for
bread.”
“Did he?”
“He’s not apt to deny it.”
“They didn’t eat him, did they?”
“Not that I’ve heard.”
“Next time they will,” Tyrion said grimly. “I
give them what protection I can. The gold cloaks—”
“They claim there were gold cloaks in the mob,”
Bronn said. “They’re demanding to speak to the king
himself.”
“Fools.” Tyrion had sent them off with regrets; his
nephew would send them off with whips and spears. He was
half-tempted to allow it . . . but no, he dare
not. Soon or late, some enemy would march on King’s Landing,
and the last thing he wanted was willing traitors within the city
walls. “Tell them King Joffrey shares their fears and will do
all he can for them.”
“They want bread, not promises.”
“If I give them bread today, on the morrow I’ll have
twice as many at the gates. Who else?”
“A black brother down from the Wall. The steward says he
brought some rotted hand in a jar.”
Tyrion smiled wanly. “I’m surprised no one ate it. I
suppose I ought to see him. It’s not Yoren,
perchance?”
“No. Some knight. Thorne.”
“Ser Alliser Thorne?” Of all the black brothers
he’d met on the Wall, Tyrion Lannister had liked Ser Alliser
Thorne the least. A bitter, mean-spirited man with too great a
sense of his own worth. “Come to think on it, I don’t
believe I care to see Ser Alliser just now. Find him a snug cell
where no one has changed the rushes in a year, and let his hand rot
a little more.”
Bronn snorted laughter and went his way, while Tyrion struggled
up the serpentine steps. As he limped across the outer yard, he
heard the portcullis rattling up. His sister and a large party were
waiting by the main gate.
Mounted on her white palfrey, Cersei towered high above him, a
goddess in green. “Brother,” she called out, not
warmly. The queen had not been pleased by the way he’d dealt
with Janos Slynt.
“Your Grace.” Tyrion bowed politely. “You look
lovely this morning.” Her crown was gold, her cloak ermine.
Her retinue sat their mounts behind her: Ser Boros Blount of the
Kingsguard, wearing white scale and his favorite scowl; Ser Balon
Swann, bow slung from his silver-inlay saddle; Lord Gyles Rosby,
his wheezing cough worse than ever; Hallyne the Pyromancer of the
Alchemists’ Guild; and the queen’s newest favorite,
their cousin Ser Lancel Lannister, her late husband’s squire
upjumped to knight at his widow’s insistence. Vylarr and
twenty guardsmen rode escort. “Where are you bound this day,
sister?” Tyrion asked.
“I’m making a round of the gates to inspect the new
scorpions and spitfires. I would not have it thought that all of us
are as indifferent to the city’s defense as you seem to
be.” Cersei fixed him with those clear green eyes of hers,
beautiful even in their contempt. “I am informed that Renly
Baratheon has marched from Highgarden. He is making his way up the
roseroad, with all his strength behind him.”
“Varys gave me the same report.”
“He could be here by the full moon.”
“Not at his present leisurely pace,” Tyrion assured
her. “He feasts every night in a different castle, and holds
court at every crossroads he passes.”
“And every day, more men rally to his banners. His host is
now said to be a hundred thousand strong.”
“That seems rather high.”
“He has the power of Storm’s End and Highgarden
behind him, you little fool,” Cersei snapped down at him.
“All the Tyrell bannermen but for the Redwynes, and you have
me to thank for that. So long as I hold those poxy twins of his,
Lord Paxter will squat on the Arbor and count himself fortunate to
be out of it.”
“A pity you let the Knight of Flowers slip through your
pretty fingers. Still, Renly has other concerns besides us. Our
father at Harrenhal, Robb Stark at
Riverrun . . . were I he, I would do much as he
is doing. Make my progress, flaunt my power for the realm to see,
watch, wait. Let my rivals contend while I bide my own sweet time.
If Stark defeats us, the south will fall into Renly’s hands
like a windfall from the gods, and he’ll not have lost a man.
And if it goes the other way, he can descend on us while we are
weakened.”
Cersei was not appeased. “I want you to make Father bring
his army to King’s Landing.” Where it will serve no purpose but to make you feel safe.
“When have I ever been able to make Father do
anything?”
She ignored the question. “And when do you plan to free
Jaime? He’s worth a hundred of you.”
Tyrion grinned crookedly. “Don’t tell Lady Stark, I
beg you. We don’t have a hundred of me to trade.”
“Father must have been mad to send you. You’re worse
than useless.” The queen jerked on her reins and wheeled her
palfrey around. She rode out the gate at a brisk trot, ermine cloak
streaming behind her. Her retinue hastened after.
In truth, Renly Baratheon did not frighten Tyrion half so much
as his brother Stannis did. Renly was beloved of the commons, but
he had never before led men in war. Stannis was otherwise: hard,
cold, inexorable. if only they had some way of knowing what was
happening on Dragonstone . . . but not one of
the fisherfolk he had paid to spy out the island had ever returned,
and even the informers the eunuch claimed to have placed in
Stannis’s household had been ominously silent. The striped
hulls of Lysene war galleys had been seen offshore, though, and
Varys had reports from Myr of sellsail captains taking service with
Dragonstone. If Stannis attacks by sea while his brother Renly
storms the gates, they’ll soon be mounting Joffrey’s
head on a spike. Worse, mine will be beside him. A depressing
thought. He ought to make plans to get Shae safely out of the city,
should the worst seem likely.
Podrick Payne stood at the door of his solar, studying the
floor. “He’s inside,” he announced to
Tyrion’s belt buckle. “Your solar. My lord.
Sorry.”
Tyrion sighed. “Look at me, Pod. It unnerves me when you
talk to my codpiece, especially when I’m not wearing one. Who
is inside my solar?”
“Lord Littlefinger.” Podrick managed a quick look at
his face, then hastily dropped his eyes. “I meant, Lord
Petyr. Lord Baelish. The master of coin. “
“You make him sound a crowd.” The boy hunched down
as if struck, making Tyrion feel absurdly guilty.
Lord Petyr was seated on his window seat, languid and elegant in
a plush plum-colored doublet and a yellow satin cape, one gloved
hand resting on his knee. “The king is fighting hares with a
crossbow,” he said. “The hares are winning. Come
see.”
Tyrion had to stand on his toes to get a look. A dead hare lay
on the ground below; another, long ears twitching, was about to
expire from the bolt in his side. Spent quarrels lay strewn across
the hard-packed earth like straws scattered by a storm.
“Now!” Joff shouted. The gamesman released the hare he
was holding, and he went bounding off. Joffrey jerked the trigger
on the crossbow. The bolt missed by two feet. The hare stood on his
hind legs and twitched his nose at the king. Cursing, Joff spun the
wheel to winch back his string, but the animal was gone before he
was loaded. “Another!” The gamesman reached into the
hutch. This one made a brown streak against the stones, while
Joffrey’s hurried shot almost took Ser Preston in the
groin.
Littlefinger turned away. “Boy, are you fond of potted
hare?” he asked Podrick Payne.
Pod stared at the visitor’s boots, lovely things of
red-dyed leather ornamented with black scrollwork. “To eat,
my lord?”
“Invest in pots,” Littlefinger advised. “Hares
will soon overrun the castle. We’ll be eating hare thrice a
day.”
“Better than rats on a skewer,” said Tyrion.
“Pod, leave us. Unless Lord Petyr would care for some
refreshment?”
“Thank you, but no.” Littlefinger flashed his
mocking smile. “Drink with the dwarf, it’s said, and
you wake up walking the Wall. Black brings out my unhealthy
pallor.” Have no fear, my lord, Tyrion thought, it’s not the Wall I
have in mind for you. He seated himself in a high chair piled with
cushions and said, “You look very elegant today, my
lord.”
“I’m wounded. I strive to look elegant every
day.”
“Is the doublet new?”
“It is. You’re most observant.”
“Plum and yellow. Are those the colors of your
House?”
“No. But a man gets bored wearing the same colors day in
and day out, or so I’ve found.”
“That’s a handsome knife as well.”
“Is it?” There was mischief in Littlefinger’s
eyes. He drew the knife and glanced at it casually, as if he had
never seen it before. “Valyrian steel, and a dragonbone hilt.
A trifle plain, though. It’s yours, if you would like
it.”
“Mine?” Tyrion gave him a long look. “No. I
think not. Never mine.” He knows, the insolent wretch. He
knows and he knows that I know, and he thinks that I cannot touch
him.
If ever truly a man had armored himself in gold, it was Petyr
Baelish, not Jaime Lannister. Jaime’s famous armor was but
gilded steel, but Littlefinger, ah . . . Tyrion had learned a
few things about sweet Petyr, to his growing disquiet.
Ten years ago, Jon Arryn had given him a minor sinecure in
customs, where Lord Petyr had soon distinguished himself by
bringing in three times as much as any of the king’s other
collectors. King Robert had been a prodigious spender. A man like
Petyr Baelish, who had a gift for rubbing two golden dragons
together to breed a third, was invaluable to his Hand.
Littlefinger’s rise had been arrow-swift. Within three years
of his coming to court, he was master of coin and a member of the
small council, and today the crown’s revenues were ten times
what they had been under his beleaguered
predecessor . . . though the crown’s
debts had grown vast as well. A master juggler was Petyr
Baelish.
Oh, he was clever. He did not simply collect the gold and lock
it in a treasure vault, no. He paid the king’s debts in
promises, and put the king’s gold to work. He bought wagons,
shops, ships, houses. He bought grain when it was plentiful and
sold bread when it was scarce. He bought wool from the north and
linen from the south and lace from Lys, stored it, moved it, dyed
it, sold it. The golden dragons bred and multiplied, and
Littlefinger lent them out and brought them home with
hatchlings.
And in the process, he moved his own men into place. The Keepers
of the Keys were his, all four. The King’s Counter and the
King’s Scales were men he’d named. The officers in
charge of all three mints. Harbormasters, tax farmers, customs
sergeants, wool factors, toll collectors, pursers, wine factors;
nine of every ten belonged to Littlefinger. They were men of
middling birth, by and large; merchants’ sons, lesser
lordlings, sometimes even foreigners, but judging from their
results, far more able than their highborn predecessors.
No one had ever thought to question the appointments, and why
should they? Littlefinger was no threat to anyone. A clever,
smiling, genial man, everyone’s friend, always able to find
whatever gold the king or his Hand required, and yet of such
undistinguished birth, one step up from a hedge knight, he was not
a man to fear. He had no banners to call, no army of retainers, no
great stronghold, no holdings to speak of, no prospects of a great
marriage. But do I dare touch him? Tyrion wondered. Even if he is a
traitor? He was not at all certain he could, least of all now,
while the war raged. Given time, he could replace
Littlefinger’s men with his own in key positions,
but . . .
A shout rang up from the yard. “Ah, His Grace has killed a
hare,” Lord Baelish observed.
“No doubt a slow one,” Tyrion said. “My lord,
you were fostered at Riverrun. I’ve heard it said that you
grew close to the Tullys.”
“You might say so. The girls especially.”
“How close?”
“I had their maidenhoods. Is that close enough?”
The lie—Tyrion was fairly certain it was a lie—was delivered
with such an air of nonchalance that one could almost believe it.
Could it have been Catelyn Stark who lied? About her defloration,
and the dagger as well? The longer he lived, the more Tyrion
realized that nothing was simple and little was true. “Lord
Hoster’s daughters do not love me,” he confessed.
“I doubt they would listen to any proposal I might make. Yet
coming from you, the same words might fall more sweetly on their
ears. “
“That would depend on the words. If you mean to offer
Sansa in return for your brother, waste someone else’s time.
Joffrey will never surrender his plaything, and Lady Catelyn is not
so great a fool as to barter the Kingslayer for a slip of a
girl.”
“I mean to have Arya as well. I have men
searching.”
“Searching is not finding.”
“I’ll keep that in mind, my lord. In any case, it
was Lady Lysa I hoped you might sway. For her, I have a sweeter
offer.”
“Lysa is more tractable than Catelyn,
true . . . but also more fearful, and I
understand she hates you.”
“She believes she has good reason. When I was her guest in
the Eyrie, she insisted that Id murdered her husband and was not
inclined to listen to denials.” He leaned forward. “If
I gave her Jon Arryn’s true killer, she might think more
kindly of me.”
That made Littlefinger sit up. “True killer? I confess,
you make me curious. Who do you propose?”
It was Tyrion’s turn to smile. “Gifts I give my
friends, freely. Lysa Arryn would need to understand
that.”
“Is it her friendship you require, or her
swords?”
“Both.”
Littlefinger stroked the neat spike of his beard. “Lysa
has woes of her own. Clansmen raiding out of the Mountains of the
Moon, in greater numbers than ever
before . . . and better armed.”
“Distressing,” said Tyrion Lannister, who had armed
them. “I could help her with that. A word from
me . . . ”
“And what would this word cost her?”
“I want Lady Lysa and her son to acclaim Joffrey as king,
to swear fealty, and to—”
“—make war on the Starks and Tullys?”
Littlefinger shook his head. “There’s the roach in your
pudding, Lannister. Lysa will never send her knights against
Riverrun.”
“Nor would I ask it. We have no lack of enemies.
I’ll use her power to oppose Lord Renly, or Lord Stannis,
should he stir from Dragonstone. In return, I will give her justice
for Jon Arryn and peace in the Vale. I will even name that
appalling child of hers Warden of the East, as his father was
before him.” I want to see him fly, a boy’s voice
whispered faintly in memory. “And to seal the bargain, I will
give her my niece.”
He had the pleasure of seeing a look of genuine surprise in
Petyr Baelish’s grey-green eyes. “Myrcella?”
“When she comes of age, she can wed little Lord Robert.
Until such time, she’ll be Lady Lysa’s ward at the
Eyrie.”
“And what does Her Grace the queen think of this
ploy?” When Tyrion shrugged, Littlefinger burst into
laughter. “I thought not. You’re a dangerous little
man, Lannister. Yes, I could sing this song to Lysa.” Again
the sly smile, the mischief in his glance. “If I cared
to.”
Tyrion nodded, waiting, knowing Littlefinger could never abide a
long silence.
“So,” Lord Petyr continued after a pause, utterly
unabashed, “what’s in your pot for me?”
“Harrenhal.”
It was interesting to watch his face. Lord Petyr’s father
had been the smallest of small lords, his grandfather a landless
hedge knight; by birth, he held no more than a few stony acres on
the windswept shore of the Fingers. Harrenhal was one of the
richest plums in the Seven Kingdoms, its lands broad and rich and
fertile, its great castle as formidable as any in the
realm . . . and so large as to dwarf Riverrun,
where Petyr Baelish had been fostered by House Tully, only to be
brusquely expelled when he dared raise his sights to Lord
Hoster’s daughter.
Littlefinger took a moment to adjust the drape of his cape, but
Tyrion had seen the flash of hunger in those sly cat’s eyes.
I have him, he knew. “Harrenhal is cursed,” Lord Petyr
said after a moment, trying to sound bored.
“Then raze it to the ground and build anew to suit
yourself. You’ll have no lack of coin. I mean to make you
liege lord of the Trident. These river lords have proven they
cannot be trusted. Let them do you fealty for their
lands.”
“Even the Tullys?”
“If there are any Tullys left when we are done.”
Littlefinger looked like a boy who had just taken a furtive bite
from a honeycomb. He was trying to watch for bees, but the honey
was so sweet. “Harrenhal and all its lands and
incomes,” he mused. “With a stroke, you’d make me
one of the greatest lords in the realm. Not that I’m
ungrateful, my lord, but—why?”
“You served my sister well in the matter of the
succession.”
“As did Janos Slynt. On whom this same castle of Harrenhal
was quite recently bestowed—only to be snatched away when he was no
longer of use.”
Tyrion laughed. “You have me, my lord. What can I say? I
need you to deliver the Lady Lysa. I did not need Janos
Slynt.” He gave a crooked shrug. “I’d sooner have
you seated in Harrenhal than Renly seated on the Iron Throne. What
could be plainer?”
“What indeed. You realize that I may need to bed Lysa
Arryn again to get her consent to this marriage?”
“I have little doubt you’ll be equal to the
task.”
“I once told Ned Stark that when you find yourself naked
with an ugly woman, the only thing to do is close your eyes and get
on with it.” Littlefinger steepled his fingers and gazed into
Tyrion’s mismatched eyes. “Give me a fortnight to
conclude my affairs and arrange for a ship to carry me to
Gulltown.”
“That will do nicely.”
His guest rose. “This has been quite the pleasant morning,
Lannister. And profitable . . . for both of us,
I trust.” He bowed, his cape a swirl of yellow as he strode
out the door. Two, thought Tyrion.
He went up to his bedchamber to await Varys, who would soon be
making an appearance. Evenfall, he guessed. Perhaps as late as
moonrise, though he hoped not. He hoped to visit Shae tonight. He
was pleasantly surprised when Galt of the Stone Crows informed him
not an hour later that the powdered man was at his door. “You
are a cruel man, to make the Grand Maester squirm so,” the
eunuch scolded. “The man cannot abide a secret.”
“Is that a crow I hear, calling the raven black? Or would
you sooner not hear what I’ve proposed to Doran
Martell?”
Varys giggled. “Perhaps my little birds have told
me.”
“Have they, indeed?” He wanted to hear this.
“Go on.”
“The Dornishmen thus far have held aloof from these wars.
Doran Martell has called his banners, but no more. His hatred for
House Lannister is well known, and it is commonly thought he will
join Lord Renly. You wish to dissuade him.”
“All this is obvious,” said Tyrion.
“The only puzzle is what you might have offered for his
allegiance. The prince is a sentimental man, and he still mourns
his sister Elia and her sweet babe.”
“My father once told me that a lord never lets sentiment
get in the way of ambition . . . and it happens
we have an empty seat on the small council, now that Lord Janos has
taken the black.”
“A council seat is not to be despised,” Varys
admitted, “yet will it be enough to make a proud man forget
his sister’s murder?”
“Why forget?” Tyrion smiled. “I’ve
promised to deliver his sister’s killers, alive or dead, as
he prefers. After the war is done, to be sure.”
Varys gave him a shrewd look. “My little birds tell me
that Princess Elia cried a . . . certain
name . . . when they came for her.”
“Is a secret still a secret if everyone knows it?”
In Casterly Rock, it was common knowledge that Gregor Clegane had
killed Elia and her babe. They said he had raped the princess with
her son’s blood and brains still on his hands.
“This secret is your lord father’s sworn
man.”
“My father would be the first to tell you that fifty
thousand Dornishmen are worth one rabid dog.”
Varys stroked a powdered cheek. “And if Prince Doran
demands the blood of the lord who gave the command as well as the
knight who did the deed . . . ”
“Robert Baratheon led the rebellion. All commands came
from him, in the end.”
“Robert was not at King’s Landing.”
“Neither was Doran Martell.”
“So. Blood for his pride, a chair for his ambition. Gold
and land, that goes without saying. A sweet
offer . . . yet sweets can be poisoned. If I
were the prince, something more would I require before I should
reach for this honeycomb. Some token of good faith, some sure
safeguard against betrayal.” Varys smiled his slimiest smile.
“Which one will you give him, I wonder?”
Tyrion sighed. “You know, don’t you?”
“Since you put it that way—yes. Tommen. You could scarcely
offer Myrcella to Doran Martell and Lysa Arryn both.”
“Remind me never to play these guessing games with you
again. You cheat. “
“Prince Tommen is a good boy.”
“If I pry him away from Cersei and Joffrey while
he’s still young, he may even grow to be a good
man.”
“And a good king?”
“Joffrey is king.”
“And Tommen is heir, should anything ill befall His
Grace. Tommen, whose nature is so sweet, and
notably . . . tractable.”
“You have a suspicious mind, Varys.”
“I shall take that as a tribute, my lord. In any case,
Prince Doran will hardly be insensible of the great honor you do
him. Very deftly done, I would say . . . but
for one small flaw.”
The dwarf laughed. “Named Cersei?”
“What avails statecraft against the love of a mother for
the sweet fruit of her womb? Perhaps, for the glory of her House
and the safety of the realm, the queen might be persuaded to send
away Tommen or Myrcella. But both of them? Surely not.”
“What Cersei does not know will never hurt me.”
“And if Her Grace were to discover your intentions before
your plans are ripe?”
“Why,” he said, “then I would know the man who
told her to be my certain enemy.” And when Varys giggled, he
thought, Three.